Newspaper Page Text
i
M m
<:U llyj
1m V A
KNOWLEDGE
tends Brings comfort and improvement and
to personal enjoyment when
ter i/ian others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the needs the of physical world’s being, best products will to
attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Its excellence Syrup of is Figs. due Us presenting
to
. the form most Acceptable and pleas
m
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling and permanently colds, headaches curing constipation. and fevers !
It has given satisfaction to millions and
profession, met with the because approval it of the the medical Kid¬
acts on
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every Syrup objectionable of Figs is substance. sale by all drug¬
for
gists ufactured _ in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man¬
Co. only, by tho California printed Fig Syrup
whose name is on every
and package, being also well the informed, name, Syrup will of Figs,
you not
accept any substitute if offered.
m -Z'w OCX — o 5 11/7 3 to
Do Not Be Deceived _
with CMttfs, Enamel* and Faint* which atatn the
u&ndSf Tho Ftlslnjf Injure tho iron and burn red.
Sun stove Polish I* Brilliant, Odor
i«is, Purablo, and tho oonaumer r»ayn for no tin
or glass package with ©very imrchftMe.
Every ian
His Own Doctor.
A Valuable FAMILY DOCTOR Book
by J. Hamilton Ayers, M. J)., of six
hundred pages, profusely illustrated
and containing knowledge of how to
CUBE Disease, Promote Health and
Prolong Life. Tho book also contains
valuable information regarding mar¬
riage and tho proper care ami rearing
of children.
SEND 60 CENTS
—TO—
Tie Atlanta PdIsMii House :
116 Loyd St., Atlanta, Ga., and they
will forward you the book by mail,
postpaid.
AN ASTONISHING
TONIC FOR WOMEN.
BScKI.KJBXS’B
W! OF
CAM
It Strengthens the Weak, Quiets the
Nerves, Relieves Monthly
Suffering and Cures
FEMALE DISEASES.
A«K YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT.
•1.00 PER BOTTLE.
CHATTANOOGA MED. CO., Chattgnoogi, Turn.
COTTON SCALES.
r 5-TON
FREIGHT PAID. BEAM BOX. Tam Beam
A complete Scale. Sold on trial. For tact* writ.
JONES OF BIN GHAHTON,
BINGHAMTON, N. Y,
!g>? r. lIcndHuh©, lld&uL. ConMttpution* F lUu!u»«^ Hud M E D ' C , * E jj
■ tlompU'xton, Offensive Dreath, V
f »nd Liver oil disorders of tho Stomach,
e and Bowels.
■ F digestion bydruRtflatsor follows their use. gold -
I W»yTCc. Package sent by mail. boxes), Box
I For free samples nd.lross 02. - |
1UPANH CHEMICAL CO., New York. 1
HOMES FOR THE POOR
AND RICH ALIKE
Large and small farms in Alabama, South
chaeero larstoT. fonmue a colony. Write for parties-
3, * ELDER, Atlanta. Ga.
TRUSSES ISEELEY’S HARD RUBBER
CURE RUPTURE
CANCER fared Permanently
NiO KNIFE. JNO. NO POISON, HARRIS, NO FI.ASTRIt.
B. Fort Payne, Al».
REFRIGERATORS u"not“I satisfactory the Freight re¬
turn at once and get your money back. I{. l\
KANO ALL. < arriage Repository, New Orleans.
A7E W Tosasa J fj iiuthnthst',nd,v» can t>r matie monthly
▼ * w«
m SEND J.N.Ktein.BeiiCTiUe.N.j! forl^M Cireui
Plao’s Remedy for Catarrh is '
the
Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest.
CATAR R H
I 60c. Sold K. by T. druggists Hazel Hue, or Warren, sent by mail, Pa. W
A. N. C....... ........Thirty-one, ’93
MIC - m - A k
m r 7.M w m /I m V ftl
.
l'
CUBING HORSE HAIR.
Forthe curled hair used for mat¬
tresses the following process is used:
The hair is first washed in hot water
and softened, and it is then spun into
; ropes while wet and warm and kept so
j until it gets the required set and curl.
It is prepared for use by picking it
apart, lhe ropes are hard twisted, so
that when they are taken apart the hair
curls up and becomes qnite elastic. It
will hardly pay to curl one’s own hair,
as it may be purchased more cheaply
than it can be gathered by any person
not in the business. Most of “
“horse” hair in the market is the pro
duct of horned cattle, the switch of the
tail being used for this purpose.—New
York Times.
I AN INDEFATIGABLE INSECTICIDE.
A crow had a nest in the woods just
before my door, and drew his mate’s and
young ones’ food from my pasture,
writes E. 8. Gilbert. He would walk
along picking up insects or something
right and left, often having to make
quite an effort to swallow them. A few
minntes, and he Hpread his wings for
home and the squawing of his mate
showod that she was being fed. Then
back he came for more. How many
trips he made per day I do not know,
but a good many. I often tried to
what he was picking up, and he allowed
mo to come within three rods; but he
was so quick I couldn’t see and my big,
shiny telescope was just as had as a gun
in his opinion; he started for the
woods tho moment he saw it coming.
Thus he worked steadily day after day,
and though it seems incredible thut
his big mouthfuls were all out worms
or white grubB, I do not know what
else they could have beon.—New York
Tribune.
FOOD FOR POULTRY.
The most expensive of all food we
find to be barley, au nature! Not
only is a considerable proportion
thrown about and wasted but much
that is swallowed is never digested,
Wo thereforo give it as a change and
an indulgence, and by no means as the
staple of their food. Indian meal is
the best staple, according to our ex
perience. It is well scalded, that tho
swelling instead may be done before eating,
of after, thus avoiding various
maladies and perils from overeating.
Broken rice, well boiled, is good to a
certain extent.
Malt dust is a valuable rcsourco.
The demand is becoming so great thut
probably it will soon cease to be a
cheap food; but while it remains so it
is a realboonboth to the fowls and their
owners. thing They will eat almost any¬
that is sprinkled with malt dust,
and a six-shillings sack of it goes a
long way. A certain proportion of
green food, and also of animal food, is
indispensable. Lettuce leaves, turnip
tops, cabbage leaves, celery, should be
thrown to them. They should huvo
uccess to grass, to pick seeds and in
Eects; and it is well to put a fresh sod
into tho poultry yard whenover such a
valuable thing may bo spared,
All the worms and insects that come’
in the gardener’s way should be pre¬
sented to them; and when insects are
scarce scraps of raw meat minced as
tino as pin’s heads should be given.
Add finely chopped eggs for infant
chicks and I think the bill of fare is
complete. As for tho pepper corn,
which old wives recommend as the first
thing to be swallowed, we reprobate
tho notion as we should iu the case of
any other newborn creature. In fact,
it irritates the crop very mischiev¬
ously if it gives out its savor, and if it
does not, dissolve it is nothing.—
American Poultry Yard.
WHICH IS THE BEST COW?
Every ouee in a while some dairy¬
man remarks that ho does not need a
test to tell him which are the best
dairy cows; he can tell by looking at
them. He just sells the fat ones and
keeps the thin ones. Quite often this
is the standard by which cows arc
judged: the thinner they are when giv¬
ing milk the better dairy cows they are
considered. There is, of course, some
reason in this. We know that a i cow
that uses her food to put flesh on her
back, instead of putting milk and fat
into the pail, is not the most profit¬
able cow for tho dairy. But to jump
to the conclusion that because a cow
is poor in flesh she must of necessity
be a good dairy cow is drawing a con
elusion that is not justified by facts.
There are some beef cows that will
oa * «■ good ration every day and keep
j? there i ust are others good m the condition, same herd while that
on the same feed keep tlieir ribs
and backs nicely covered with flesh.
* a ** ter are 8 00< i feeders and the
tzssssfpr’ it is just the same with dairy cows, **
some are good feeders and some are
poor feeders. Some keep thin in flesh
because they are using the greater
part of their food to make milk and
lat while others stay ia poor flesh sim
l d y because they have not the natural
their feeding quality to assimilate and digest
food. It is folly to judge of the
dairy qualities of a cow by the amount
j of flesh she carries. There is but one
accurate way to determine the value
of a cow for the dairy, and that is to
ascertain the number of pounds of
butter fat she yields in a year from a
given amount of feed.
The cow that yields the greatest
amount of butter fat per year for the
least coat per pound is the most valu¬
able cow for the dairyman, and it
does not matter whether she keeps fat
enough for the butcher or bo thin that
her ribs can be counted. It does not
matter whether she weighs five hun¬
dred pounds or a ton; whether she
has the beef form or the so-called dairy
form ; whether she is black or white,
spotted or fawn colored, red or brin¬
dled. Performance is the only reliable
standard.—Kocky Mountain Husband¬
man.
THE BEST BEANS.
C. E. Hnnn, of Geneva, N. Y., writ¬
ing in Garden and Forest, says:
“Few vegetables have been hybrid¬
ized or selected with greater care than
tho bean, and varieties suitable for
several purposes have been developed,
until little improvement now seems
possible. Among snapbeans, the Ql a
yellow-podded wax varieties, which
are almost cylindrical in shape, solid
yet tender, and of the finest fibre and
flavor, arc quite superior to the old
time flat, green-podded and stringy
varieties. Among the best varieties
are Wardwell’s Kidney Wax, Yosemite
Mammoth Wax, Golden Wax and Per¬
fection. Of shell beans, the best are
Dwarf Horticultural; Golden Cluster,
which is very productive and bears flat
beans about two-thirds as large as
Henderson’s Bush Sieva, meaty and
well flavored; Hemisphere, a bean al¬
most rounib but solid and of extra
quality, half of it being light brown in
color, splashed with red. This color
would detract from its value as a mar
ket variety, but in the process of cook¬
ing the color to a great extent disap¬
pears, so that it is one of tho very best
for the kitchen garden, On the eta
tion grounds, as the main experiment
crop for the past four years, a pure
white bean has been grown which has
proved of extra quality and produc¬
tiveness. It is very hardy and is proof
thus far against the anthracnose, so
prevalent throughout this section. It
lias been called the Hatt bean, after its
originator, but I am not aware that it
has been offered for sale under any
name, although it should bo more
generally known.
“The search and selection necessary
for a true Dwarf Lima bean has been
successful, and it would now seem
hardly necessary to grow the pole Lima
bean. The latter come to maturity a
trifle earlier than the bush type when
both are planted together, it is true,
but the dwarf varieties may be started
earlier, either in common beds or in
inverted sods, or in pots in the kitchen
or greenhouse. When planted out
they can be protected from early or
late froBts with ease so that the season
of bearing can bo lengthened out by
the same method. Cheap cloth pro¬
tection or wide boards can be used
against frost. Two distinct types of
these beans are now offered by seeds¬
men, Burpee’s Bush Lima, with large
flat pods, well filled with beans, and
resembling the old garden Lima, and
Dreer’s or Kumerly’s Dwarf Lima,
w ith shorter pods and beaus resembling
in shape Dreer’s Improved Lima.
Either of these can be grown in the
kitchen garden, and for market they
will certainly crowd out the climbing
varieties, since many more can life
planted on the same area and no ex¬
pense is necessary for poles.”
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
For chapped or scratched teats ap¬
ply cream or fresh butter.
Give the colt some nice, bright oats,
where it can get at them handy.
The colt should have a good yard,
lot or pasture to feed and exercise ny
It is not necessarily true that “skim
milk calves make pot-bellied ear
suckers.”
If you raise sheep for wool, breed
merinos; if lor mutton, breed tho
heavy type.
Market only the best of your pro¬
duce anti put it up in the most attrac¬
tive manner.
Pet the colt, so it will learn to know
that you do not mean to hurt it. Do
not soare nor tease it.
Do not skim-milk your calves too
soon. Let them have some new milk
for at least two weeks.
A cow abused will not. do her best.
To make yon money each cow should
be allowed to do her best.
A nervous cow will “give down”
milk better if in a quiet place securely
fastened and milked very gently.
Early shearing is very desirable. It
relieves the sheep of ticks and enables
the owner to take precautions against
scab.
CM*---* * -> -
r , 1 ' e, l uirds gram ... to make pork
or
leot . >ut mutton of the finest quality
’
Can be made of mbblps here and there
of such stuffs as would otherwise be a
^
Packyour fruit honestly ifyou want
to succeed. When you think you have
secured a good customer don’t palm
off aT1 inferior article on him. If you
do y° u are sure to lose him.
In buying or exchanging sheep give
a ticks, thorough examination for scabs,
lice and foot rot before turning
them into the flock, or you may be
getting more than you knew of,
Scorched Cloth.
What to do with scorched places on
cloth is a question that sometimes
puzzles the careful housewife. If the
scorch is not too bad, dipping the ar¬
ticle in soapsuds and hanging it in the
sun for some hours will be likely to
remove it. If the day is dull,hang the
piece before the grate fire. Scorched
spots that are very bad and yet have
not consumed the fiber of the goods,
are said to be re-storable by repeated
dripping in a saturated solution of bo¬
rax. The saturated solution as the
chemists call it, consists of as much
salt or crystal as the water will dissolve.
It is always safe to put in a little - ex¬
tra; if the borax stands undisturbed
in the bottom of the bottle, one is sure
of the full-strength solution. Repeated
dippings of this, with exposure to sun
or fire light, will remove what are by
most discolorations. housekeepers considered hopeless
Good Position In a Bank.
The following letter explains itself :
Merchant's National Bank, Home
(l a., April 27, 1833.—Professor R. W,
Jennings, Nashville—Dear Sir: No
doubt you will be surprised to hear
from me, but as I know you are al¬
ways glad to hear from your “boys,”
I will tell you that I have been elected
book-keeper in above named batik. I
don’t say it because I am writing to
you, but I have said to many others
that the three months I spent with
you was worth as ranch to me as was
the twelve years’ schooling I had got¬
ten previously. I have compared my
books which I used at Jennings’ Busi¬
ness College with the books of several
other colleges, which other young men
from this section attended, and they
all acknowledged that your course is
much more thorongh and practical
than the schools they attended.
Yonrs truly, T. J. Simpson.
Write for catalog with names of 1,000
students from 23 States. Address
B. W. Jennings, Nashville, Tenn.
An Electric Fan.
The electric fan has come to be
such an indispensable element of com¬
fort, if not of existence, during the
summer months that now and improv¬
ed forms are constantly making their
appearance. One of these adds the
very decided recommendation of ex¬
treme economy to that of efficiency. Its
first cost, with battery complete, is
small, and the cost of operating it af¬
terward is put at 2 3-4 cents an hour. It
is claimed thut the battery will last ten
weeks without renewal at one hour’s
work daily, or ten days at a steady op¬
eration of 7 1-2 hours per diem.
It is designed to be suitable for ths
parlor or dining table, being both or¬
namental and noiseless. It will not
drop grease on the tablecloth and car¬
pets, for its bearings are self oiling
and carry on their own lubrication
without loss of lubricant. The whole
outfit packs up in a small box and can
be carried without inconvenience —New
York Telegram.
True Marriage.
A happy wedlock is a long falling
in love. I know young persons think
love belongs only to brown hair anil
blump, round, crimson cheeks. Bo it
does for its beginning, just as Mount
Washington begins at Boston Bay.
But the golden marriage is a part of
love which the bridal day knows noth¬
ing of. Youth is the tassel and silken
flower of love; age is the full corn,
ripe and solid in the ear. Beautiful
is the morning of lovo with its proh
etic crimson, violet, saffron, purple
and gold, with its hopes of days that
are to come. Beautiful also is the
evening of love, with its glad remem¬
brance and its rainbow side turned
toward heaven as well as the earth.—
Theodore Parker.
What He Had Heard.
Neighbor—“Your sister is going to
marry a very nice man, I hear.”
Boy—“His father has got fifty
thousand dollars, and liasu’t any other
childrens, and he’s got a rich bachelor
uncle wot’s too old to get married, and
he’s inherited a lot o’ money from his
Aunt Jane on his mother’s side,
and-”
Neighbor—“I mean he is a very nice
man morally, and has good, steady
habits.”
Boy—“Mebby, I don’t know. I
haven’t hearn anything about that.”—
Street <£• Smith’s Good News.
The Nervous System.
The average weight of the brain of
an adult malo is 3 pounds and 8
ounces; of a female, 2 pounds and 4
ounces. The nerves are all connected
with it directly or by the spinal mar¬
row. These nerves, together with
their branches and minute ramifica¬
tions, probably exceed 10,000,000 in
number, forming a “bodyguard’, out¬
numbering by far the greatest army
ever marshaled .—Popular Science
Monthly.
Wishing to become rich without wor¬
thy effort is wishing that others may
be impoverished without an equiva¬
lent.
Sustain the Siiiliinj; System.
This common sense injunction is too often
unheeded. Business anxieties, overwork, ex¬
ical posure must and do cause mental and phys¬
exhaustion, which lessens vigor and tells
injuriously efleient touiesand upon the system. restoratives, That Hostetter’s most, ben
of
Stomach Bitters, effectually compensates fora
drain of strength and oss of nerve power,
regulates impaired and renders digestion, the bowels arouses the dor¬
mant liver active. It
is, besides, ailments. a preventive of malarial and rheu¬
matic
Go to the devil in your private life and ycur
business will follow you.
If your Back Aches, or you are all worn out,
good for Iron nothing, Bitters will it is general debility.
Brown’s cure you, make you
strong, cleanse your liver, and give you a good
appetite—tones the nerves.
Politeness sometimes hurts an enemy more
than savage words.
RICH RED BLOOD
“For feeling of dead
ness of the Drabs, consti¬
pation and poor circula¬
tion of the blood. Hood's
f* * Sarsaparilla has no rival.
My blood was in very
'mk*- poor condition. Since
taking Hood’s Sarsapar
Ua I have good .rich, red
blood .and do not bloat as
fflrr rrbmjcK I used to. Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla has proved its
merit to me as it will to all who take it fair¬
ly.” Mrs. M. F. Toms, STiantic, Ct.
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA CURES.
^Hood’s Pill, Cure Sick Headache, 25 ceau.
Microscopic Writing-.
In answer to a prize offered by a
French paper, for the best examples
of microscopic writing, a constant
reader sent in the whole history of
Christopher Columbus written on an
egg- Another wrote an the back of a
cabinet photograph Francois Coppee’s
novel of “Henriette” of twelve thous¬
and words. The prize was won by a
man who sent in the contents, written
at length, of the iirst two sheets of a
great newspaper, written on a post
card. The people who will ultimately
be benefitted by this strange competi¬
tion are the Paris oculists.
i
The Woman of the Future. |
-- i
Susan B. Anthony is of the opinion
that we are on the verge of an era of
unmarried women. Our civilization,
she says, is changing. Daughters can
not be supported at home, and there
is nothing there to busy them. The
women used to spin and weave, make
carpets and soap, but now all that is
done for them in the factories. Young
men do not make enough money to
support their wives, and there is such
a craze for dissipation ‘ among ® them
.i mat i the .. women would , . rather , go into . |
ft store for almost nothing than to {
marry .—Reading Times. |
l
IIow They Learn.
Litle Dot— “I don’t see how COWS
can eat grass.”
Little Dick—“I s’pose when they is
young the mother cow keeps savin’ to
their childrens, ‘If you don’t eat grass
you sha’n't have any pie. » »»
At Chicago
Royal Leads All.
As the result of my tests, I find the
ROYAL BAKING POWDER superior to all
the others in every respect. It is entirely
free from all adulteration and unwhole¬
some impurity, and in baking it gives off
a greater volume of leavening gas than
any other powder. It is therefore not only
the purest, but also the strongest powder
with which I ant acquainted.
WALTER S. HAINES, M. D.,
Prof of Chemistry , Rush Medical College,
Consulting Chemist, Chicago Board of Health.
AU other baking powders are shown
by analysis to contain alum,
lime or ammonia.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
“August Flower”
I used August Flower for Loss of
vitality and general debility. After
taking I two bottles I gained 69 lbs.
have sold more of 3'our August
Flower since I have been in business
than any other medicine I ever kept.
Mr. Peter Zinville says he was made
a Flower, hew man by the use of / -••just
recommended by I
have hundreds tell me that August
Flower has done them more good
than any other medicine the}' ever
took. George W. Dye, Sardis,
Mason Co., Ky. @
o
Can CANCER. be Cured 4
• Or Without the Knife
9 A use of painful, burning, pois
onous plasters, cancers ex
f A clusiveiy larsaddress treated. Forparticu- 0 A
^irmtoriurri^ DR. P. B- GREEN’S
^ ^rt P a y ne. ^
RADFI ELD’S
FEMALE
REGULATOR
proven an Infallible
specific for all derange¬
ments peculiar to the
female sex,such as chronic
SS? ffiSSSSSJ'S
L] ilrH tions of the generative
organs. Young ladies at
the age of pubertv, and
pause, Will findin it older ones at the *meno
The highest a healing, soothing tonic.
neut recommendations from promi
Tt rite physicians for book and those who have tried it. t.
“To Women,” mailed free. Sold d
by all druggists. Brapf ielp Regulator Co '*
proprietors» Atlanta, Ga.
A SALARY OF $5,000.
A Business College Graduate Gets a
Position as Bank Examiner.
Thomas E. Jennings, late of Nash¬
ville, has been appointed Bank Exam¬
iner for the States of California, Ore¬
gon, and Washington, at a salary of
85,000 per annum. He is a son of
Prof. It. W. Jennings, of Jennings’
Business College, Nashville, and this
appointment can be largely attributed
to the business training he received
from his father, as well as to the latter’s
influence in securing positions. This
is perhaps the most thorough and in¬
fluential school in the United States.
Its graduates nearly always get good
positions.
The Business Age.
Friend—“Why the didn’t you exhibit
at World’s Fair?”
business. Manufacturer—“Business, See?” old boy,
“Humph! I don’t see.
“You are away behind the age. By
refusing to exhibit I got half the pa¬
pers half to denouncing me, and the other
about to defending me, until I’ve had
a million dollars’ worth of first
class advertising, and it hasn’t cost mo
a cent.”
Student*, and others Teachers (male or female', Clergy.
then in need of change f&'SES of employ
"hows that they bare got the true ideas about
5$^ oddSSm proiitabYy. Sh ° W r ° u how t0
We c,n ' 0 na » ,ur «
v , toT$
HoHensworth Pr & Co., Onego, Tioga Co., N. Y,
‘ ce$1; by ™ li1 ’ $1 ' 15 ’
You ran boast of noble blood when you ara
the hero of noble deeds.
For impure or thin Blood, Weakness. Mala
I’t Ind L*»S? ti0T * au 4 Biliousness
mke Browns Iron Bitters—it . gives strength,
making old persons feel young—and young
1H-rHUIls str ong; pleasant to take. -
makes Suspect and ake. watch the man who never
a mist
\\. H. Griffin, Jackson, Michigan, writes :
buffered with Catarrh for fifteen years,
Hall's Catarrh Cure cured uie." bold by Drug¬
gists, 75c.__
Beecham’s Pills are better titan mineral m a ■
ten. Beecham’s-no others. 25cts. a box.
If afflicted with sore eyes use I)r- Isaac Thnmr
son’s Eve-water.Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
DRINK • EASIER THAN MADE
(l#h- A # LEMONA
•J • I 1
I
Chttr* AOuIetiT th« Notm.1
tpoonful tugar, mixed with HCooiS the Blood,
either cold or hot water. A«k HQuencheS Thirat. _I
SLSrSfSME“4S»t: for by
$1.00 stamps aaxnple, mail, or __ _________
for two 50c. bottles, by express, prepaid,—enough to
make several gallons. (Agents make big pay with us.)
FRANK E. H OUSH j CO. 235 Wash’n si. Boston, Mas t
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
THOMSON'S Lf , f*r
4 S i '
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tools required. Only a hammer needed to drive
and clinch them easily and quickly, leaving the clinch
absolutely smooth. Requiring no hole to be made In
the leather nor burr tor the Rivets. Th«y are atrOng.
tongh kngtha, and durable. Millions now in uae. Afll
uniform or assorted, put up in boxes.
Ask your dealer for them, or send 40c. la
stamps for a box of 100, assorted sizes. Man’fd by
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO..
WAXTHAM, MASS.
If any one doubts «iat
1 blood poisom 1 I stinate we days, can let cure case him the in write must 20 to ob¬ for 40
A SPECIALTY. particulars and investi¬
gate our reliab lity. Our
financial backing ia
•• fiioo.ooo. When mercury,
lOilide potassium, sarsaparilla or Hot Springs fail, wo
sruarantee a cure—and our Magic Cyphilene is the only
tiling that will cure permanently. Positive proof sent
8eale< ** tree ‘ COOK Remedy Co., Chicago, Ill.
1 AS A Pit"Young man acquainted with
VW r&lw I CilSf groc ^y and liquor trade on
Enterprise Cigar Co.,377 Palisade Av.,Jersey City.N*J.