Newspaper Page Text
Good Manners in Children.
It is no wonder that there are so
many ill bred men and women in the
world when one sees the lack of pains
taken by parents to instruct their lit¬
tle ones in forms of table and social
etiquette that are so easily taught to
the pliable infant mind, but which,
left unnoticed, are soon supplanted by
actions that become bad habits in a very
short time.
It is no unnsnal sight to behold a
child drinking from its saucer with no
word of admonition from the mother
or nurse who sits near by. A thirsty
little one will drink from a cup in
which there is a spoon, and later years
will (fee no harm in continuing the
practice. Many a child eats with his
knife, and yet how easily could the
fork or spoon be substituted in its
place if the parents gave but a tiny
bit of attention to this branch of thier
chidren’s education.
Selfishness is fostered so easily
through a lack of watchfulness. The
gentler courtesies that count for so
much are not instilled in childhood,
and in later years file man or woman
is regarded as a bore. Good clothes
are is not everything. the Even good health
not one point desirable in a
child’s makeup. Good manners should
bo added to health and attire in order
. to gain a perfect ensemble that counts
for so much in the world’s judgment.
No one can estimate how great a
factor in life is the possession of good
manners. the They are the open sesame
to best of society. They are the
hall mark of the gentleman or lady,
but they must be acquired in infancy.
—New York Telegram.
The Ilicli Arab’s Dress.
The rich man among the Arabs
dresses richly. His shirt is of fine
linen. His inside vest is buttoned,
the outside one worn loose. A long
paletot often takes the place of the
latter. It is cut part way down from
the neck, and the looso armholes allow
the arms to be held in or outside.
The wide trousers aro bound about the
waist by a rich scarf. Over all is fre¬
quently V worn the long loose tunic, cut
shape at tho neck, and with short
sleeves low down. The hands are fre¬
quently kept inside-—in winter for
warmth—und an Arab reaches out from
the V at tho neck for anything he
wants handed him with a peculiarly
limited motion which at first you fail
to comprehend. Tho burnoose is an
out-of-doors garment, and the fez may
or may not have the turban cloth.
The swell wears European socks,
and his slippers, usually trodden down
at tho heel by the common or careless,
are handsomely embroidered or of fine
morocco, rod or yellow. The calf is
naked. Parts of this dress are drop¬
ped at intervals aooordiug to the
wealth or habit. There aro few por
sons well dressed more really magnificent than a
Arab sheik or a man of
wealth. In our days of business suits
which cloak the godly and ungodly
alike the dress is uncommonly attrac¬
tive—on an Arab. That it would suit
our habits one will scarcely allege.
But the trousers have one manifest
advantage. They do not, cannot, bag
at the knee .—Colonel T. A. Dodge
XT. S. A., in Harper’s. ,
Dainty Splashers.
In a summer cottage quite the effec¬
tive feature of every bedroom .was the
washstand splasher. A wide piece of
cottage gilt drapery, shirred on a slender
rod and suspended by white rib
lion hands, formed the background of
tho toilet Btand, fulling to tho floor
nnd ooming well out on both sides.
The protection of tho delicate wall
paper banners was perfect, and tho graceful
imparted an airy effeot that
added much to tho prettiness of the
rooms .—New York 1 Hines.
Stock From Roasts.
■Tust before tho roast is done pour
into . the in which it is
pan cooking
about a pint of hot water. Remove
the roast and turn the gravy into a
dish. When it is cold, there will bo
found a supply of pure, rich meat
stock ready to flavor sauces or to im¬
prove soup stock.
A Polite Dog,
Mother— “Did you thank tho gentle
man who carried you across the crowd¬
ed street?”
Wee Son—“I tried to, but I didn’t
know what to say—the words wouldn’t
come somehow; hut I guess it’s all
right, ’cause my dog wagged his tail
enough for both of us.”
WHILE IN THE WAR
I wm taken ill with spi¬
nal disease and rheuma¬
tism. 1 went home and
was confined to my bed,
unable to help myself
for 32 months. After
fy //P*nion liyears of misery a com
x machinist advis
ed mo to take Hood’s
Sarsaparilla. bottle and could I got a
note change for quickly the
a
hotter. Alter taking I
Mr. Wheeler. bottles I was well and
______ troubled , with ... have not since been
W my old complaints.” Jas. A.
HEKLKK, 1900 Division St., Baltimore, Md.
Hood s s, ;> Cures
Hood's Pill* cure fiver uk » cents per box.
®2?a’s7ini
A remedy which,
If used by Wives
J m about to experience
the painful ordeal
Irjl Child-birth attendant upon
JY ■ Infallible , proses
an speei-
5 »;5v7i a" 1 "1 fie for, and obviates
the tortures ofewn
Hi fineraent, thedangerstheroor lessening
J U to both mother and
\ child. Sold by all
1 _ druggists. Sent by
, express l; rlcc on *>-50 receipt
fw?n £ y# A' totue, charges ’ per
pi*.
•RADFIELO REGULATOR CO.,' Atlanta, Ga,
LADIES’ DEPARTMENT.
BLACK LACE,
Black laee fans arc now worked in
steel, and have handles of smoked
pearl, the Duchess lace fans being
mounted with mother-of-pearl. Black
laces were never moje the vogue.
They aroused for bretellea, collarettes,
fichne, sleeves and parts of sleeves,
jacket fronts and neck and belt garni¬
tures. Ecru lace enjoys almost equal
favor, and later in the season will be
even more the mode.—[Brooklyn Citi¬
zen.
WEAB A COBONET THUS.
Interesting to American heiresses
who intend to marry titles—How to
keep a coronet on: “Most coronets
are made with velvet strings attached
for tying them in through the hair,
while others have wires, the ends of
which hook and eye into each other,
as the majority break up into separate
ornaments, and are kept in form when
they are required for their original
use by means of this wire. They are
either placed quite forward on the
head, allowing a portion of the fringe
to show, or they are set on the crown
of the head, and then are filled in with
loops of hair or feathers. In every
case the hair should be especially dres¬
sed for them, as they need to be kept
firm.”
THE BIGHT KIND OF GIRLS.
The Argus is pleased to notice the
readiness of a number of young ladies
of Biggs to take employment in orchard
work and who have the pride, self
reliance and industry to earn their own
living and assist their parents in pro¬
viding theifltaff of lifo. Twelve of our
intelligent and accomplished
young ladies, who will bo chaperoned
by Mrs. Baldwin, will commence pick¬
ing fruit for Warren Treat at once.
They wilhoecupy a tent at the orchard,
so as to work evoniugs when necessary
to prepare » carload when hurried.
They are paid two cents a box for
packing, at which rate they can earn
$2 pet? day. We are pleased to see the
girls'doing well.—[Biggs (Cal.) Argus.
THE WOMEN OF FINLAND.
Among the lower classes of Finland
women drive tho market earts, sweep
the streets, mend the roads and row
tho boats. They do not, however,
with a few exceptions, serve behind
tho counter; men are preferred be¬
cause they we thought more civil.
Among the better class of Finns the
women work us hard asthey do in tho
lower. In the banks there aro far
more women than men clerks. The
samo thing is noticeable in thp bureaux
de change. In the postoffice and in
State offices women are in the majority.
Women teach trades to the <pripples
and to the blind, and industrial^ arts to
the little boys and girls who attend
schools established for that purpose.
They a re also splendid linguists,
partly because they have but scant lit¬
erature of their own, and! also because
their ownllanguago is no use to them
when they travel, so that they are bound
to learn another.
Many should not care about Finland
fashions, however. A black silk dress
is tho orthodox garment for old and
young, and !is worn alike at a coffee
party or a wedding, no dainty orna¬
ments being allowed. — [Now York
World.
WHAT' TO WEAR TO THE FAIR.
Do not take any unnecessary bag¬
gage. Take only what you need and
the wisdom, of this advice will be daily
apparent. For a ten-day or a fort¬
night’s stay no more than two dresses
aro absolutely necessary-. Tho travel¬
ing dreab is the more important of the
two, fop that will he worn ovesry day
to the flair. There is no city where
Berge. i» as entirely appropriate as
Chicago. The stiff breezels from Lake
Michigan every afternoon fare as pene¬
trating' >as the cold gusts from the At¬
lantic. A serge dress, therefore, with
am indteflnite number of talk and cot¬
ton shirt waists and a wrap* either a
jacket or cape, with a preponderance
of favor for the!jacket because it has
pockets,,makes (the best traveling rig
possible. An ordinary satchel will
carry oiio other (dress, the extra shirt
waists fund tho other fixings. In Sep¬
tember there ispnore chance of being
too otool than too hot, and a little
heavier clothing will he comfortable.
Just (now it is hot, but not hot 1 enough
for lawns and organdies. It is\ a very
rare thing'to see a well-dressed woman
in Chicago down itowndn a wash, dress.
They keep those dresses strictly for
the bouse.—[Washington Star.
A dress', of glass.
A gown of glass, with fringes * 1 and
Hidings all of spun glass, gleaming
white like tha shewn of ^pearls, daftly
wovenjthat itjmay not break or fray,
is wo rn by^Miss|Georgiy Cayvaii| in
stagelartd since her return from the
Alaskan glaciers.
The fabric woven is not unlike
a coarse-meshed grenadine, only heav
ier, and has a glistening surface . more
brilliant than that of satin. It takes
on graceful lines in the draping like
fine and heavy velvet, and will- not
crease or break in wearing. Only if,
on mischief bent, some one folds it in
a crease sharply and presses it firmly
with the finger nails, the glass threads
snap and cut the warp in a rent that is
difficult of repairing.
Now, this material is not transpar
ent, nor is it brittle; neither is it
moulded to the figure warm, though
the beauty of fit suggests the idea. It
is made up in a carefully fitted lining
of silk, which, after its adjustment, is
ripped • i apart, , spread _
out upon the
glass and its outline traced. The glass
is pasted along the traced lines with a
solution of glass before the cutting to
prevent fraying, and the cut edges
are bound and lapped beneath a gimp
of passementerie, also woven of glass
in an open pattern.
' Twenty-five dollars a yard is the
modest value placed upon this pro
duet, and a score of yards are required
fora trailing gown, SO that there is
little danger of its losing caste by too
great popularity.
With the cloth of glass come won
derful fringes like woven milkweed
floss, ,, passementeries, and braided
bands for girdles and headings. The
material itself may be plated with puffs
and fulled into ruffles, which, with the
soft, fine fringes, are the most effect
ivo decorations for the glass gowns,
Another interesting fact for the woman
who wears the Cinderella dress of
crystal is that when it becomes soiled
in wearing she can wash it off as she
would her parlor windows, and make
it as fresh and beautiful as ever. Miss
Cayvan’s gown is made in the 1830
fashion, with the flaring skirt fitted
closely about tho hips, the gores out¬
lined with a braided gimp of glass.
At tho foot there is a puff of glass,
over it a fall of chiffon, covered with
the exquisite gleaming glass fringe.
Tho bodice is deeply vandyked from
tho bolt toward tho shoulder, and be¬
tween the points are puffs of chiffon
Harrowing toward the belt and broad¬
ening toward the top, where a fall of
chiffon is covered with the glass fring¬
es which finish the low-cut neck. Tho
huge puffed sleeves of the period are all
of gluss, draped in the approved fash¬
ion and finished with fringes.—[New
York Sum
FAShlON NOTES.
Heliotrope and black are one of the
favorite comlfiliations.
Masses of chrysanthemums and birds’
wings trim some of the new hats.
Velvet remains one of the fashion¬
able materials, and is likely to contin¬
ue so.
Tucked yokes, with big frills of the
material, are seen on dresses of cam¬
bric lawn and mull.
Lace lints are among the prettiest
and' most becoming of the season’s
millinery productions.
A bow of accordion plaited gauze
is the only trimming on the front of a
large hat of luce braid.
Dresses of white serge, duck, mohair
and cashmere aro trimmed with passe¬
menterie and large crochet buttons.
New hats have fairly wide brims,
and are pinched up, rolled, twisted up,
and rolled up iu every imaginable
shape.
A hat with the brim bent up in a
sharp point over the front has the top
almost covered with heavy, handsome
ostrich tips.
Tho turban is increasing in popu¬
larity. The favorite trimming is stand¬
ing loops of ribbon with long-stemmed
flowers at the front.
Little girls’ dresses have waists made
of straight widths of material shirred
into a band about three inches wide,
’
with standing ruche above. ,
Narrow brimmed hats, somowhat on
the sailor order, hut with brim narrow
at the back, are trimmed with solid
wreaths of roses, chrysanthemums and
other similar blossoms.
A new bonnet has an enormously
high poke front. The sides come down
well towards the ears, and there is a
pronounced cape, which is evidently
the forerunner of the old-fashioned
gypsy bonnet.
A new waist trimming is made of a
straight piece of material about four¬
teen inches long. This is gathered
in very full at the collar, and
droops of its own free will over
shoulders and bust.
A new dress for a girl is in princess
shape, with full sleeves, shirred cuffs
and bands of trimming from shoulder
seams to the hem of the skirt in front.
This is a one-piece suit, and appropri
ate for a girl 6 f six to nine years.
FOR THE HOUSEWIFE.
HOW TO HAKE JELLY,
To make clear, sparkling jellv that
trill retain its shape, , yet , stand . , quiver
ing when turned out of the glasses,use
fruit that is not only firm, large and
fine flavored, but that which is under
rather than overripe. Wash it
thoroughly, but quickly, and remove
every withered leaf, hull or stem.
fifew, covered closely in the kind of
vessel designate.} above, until it can be
easily crushed, then extract the juice
by pouring the hot fruit into a strong
linen bag that has been soaked and
wrung dry from hot water, and sus
pend the latter in a warm place where
it will hung free and drip into a large
earthen bowl. Do not wring the bag
the least with the hands, . but press
in
against the sides occasionally with two
wooden Indies. Too much economy
in this direction is sure to result in
cloudy, firm, inferior flavored jelly.
Allow three-foufths or one pound of
sugar for every pint of juice; place the
sugar in the oven and boil the fruit
juice steadily, uncovered, for twenty
minutes. Then add the hot sugar, stir
until it is dissolved and boil together
two minutes. When filling the mould 8
strain again through cheesecloth
let the jelly remain uncovered twenty
four hours. Use paraffine as for jam,
and keep 1 in a cool, > dry J place—[New 1 l
York Telegram.
— —- -
SOME GOOD PUDDINGS.
Pine-Apple Pudding.—Line a dish
with rich pastry, peel and grate a large
p i ne „ ftpp ie, or use a can of the fruit;
weigh tho pine . app i e after it is grated
Bml allow an* equal weight of sugar
the weight of butter ; mix the
butter and sugar to a cream, beat‘in
the yolks of five eggs, then add the
grated pine-apple and half a pint of
cream ; last of all, beat the five whites
to a stiff froth, mix them lightly with
the other ingredients and bake tho
pudding in a moderate oven until the
pastry is done. Serve it hot.-[New
York Ledger.
Coeoanut Pudding.—Make a good
pastry and line an earthen dish with it.
Open a coeoanut, saving and strain¬
ing the milk; peel off the skin and
grate the white part of the nut; weigh
the coeoanut after it is grated and
weigh an equal quantity each of butter
and sugar; beat the butter and sugar
to a eream, add to them the grated
cocoauut, the yolks of five eggs, the
milk of the nut and a half a pint of
cream ; last of all, beat five whites to a
stiff froth, add them to the other in
gredients, put tho pudding into the
dish, and bake it in a moderate
oven until the pastry is done. Serve
it hot.
Chocolate Pudding,—Grate two S I
ounces of sweet chocolate; put. it
over the fire in a saucepan and melt it
by gentle heat; heat a quart of milk
quickly, stir it into the melted choco¬
late, and let the mixture cool; sepa¬
rate tho yolks and whites of six eggs;
when the chocolate is nearly cool mix
the yolks with it, add four tablespoon
fuls of sugar or more if required and
hake the pudding in an earthen dish
set in a pan of hot water for twenty
minutes; meantime beat the six whites
to a stiff froth, add to them twelve
heaping tablespooufuls of powdered
sugar, mixing the sugar very gently
with the whites to form a meringue on
the toil of the pudding and return it
to the oven to color. Then take the
pudding from the oven, and serve it
either hot or cold. In summer it is
best cold.
household hints.
Borax water will remove stains from
the hands.
Remove egg stains from spoons by
rubbing with salt.
Cream and acids do not curdle, but j
milk and acids will. 8flturnteJ |
A lump of suga1, with via- :
e S nr win cure hiccoughs.
To remove? fruit stains dip the spots j
several times in scalding milk.
Rendered beef fat makes an excell- j
ent pie-crust, used with butter. j
Emery powder will remove ordinary !
stains from ivory knife handles.
Leather chairs may be revived by !
rubbing with the white of an egg.
A little paraffine rubbed on screws |
will make, them enter wood more
easily.
in tyhen of the cold oven water is too will hot, reduce putting the
a pan
temperature.
Old brass may be cleaned to look
like new by scrubbing with ammonia,
and rinsing in cold clear water.
Pour diluted carbolic acid at once
upon every part of a poisonous wound;
afterward give internal stimulants.
The quicker food of all kinds cools
the longer it keeps. This is particu¬
larly true of soups and bread.
Over Many a league
Spreads the infectious air poison of chills and
fever, a complaint to' the eradication and
Bitters prevention special!y of which Hostetter's Stomach
is Adapted. Vast and fertile
districts ientless malady. are periodically Fortify visited with the by this Bitters re
and prevent it. Rheumatism, constipation,
^S cooqnerawj ^“ e in aDv ^^^ U stLe*by thhfcomprS! ,mead d
n ^ < ^ *
u h 1 he
-
Prayer Is the language ot the heart. Only
soul language is heard in heaven.
if yonr Back Aches, or yon b are all worn out,
£io cu?fy^£ afSl%
appet?t^n>nMthe r nervra. aoii8ive 3r0Uago0(1
])on , t repent oreranythiDg you have doce .
Don’t do a nything to repent of.
Stat* or Ohio, Citv or Toledo, i
Frank XCHisEr^akcs oath that he is the
' coTd^ng'bwincw m“hi city Sf*T?ted£
wHi'pawthe^um oxe’SSjiijjSkd \k)S
Cure. Frank J. Cheney.
**wornto before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6th day of December, ^ a. D. 1886.
| j- A * * CJ *'* ASON »
seal
nlKcatarrh Care is taken interaloiyind^u
ot
Druggiris* 7" & C °” Toledo ' ° -
^Sold by
No mat ter'I* how stl^din*. Write
Hoiii^worth 1 A’c^Oweg^^ioKab^.N. Y.
i>ric ® * 1: mail, Ji.ifi.
produces Worry !s them the great and it fertilizer of troubles. It
maks them grow.
T
want building up, should take Brown's Iron
indigestlon,i)t?touaiMHi« tbe iofrd rich and and Liver Complaints!
mak * s pure.
-w'eepand ww^aughsw^ymir 1111 yoa '"
the
Bceebam —rr:-r~———, s Pills correct bad effects ot over
eating. Beecham’s—no others. 25centsabox.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr- Isaac Thomp-
8on ’ 8 Eye-water.Druggists sell at 23c per bottle.
Table Decoration.
All forms of table garniture are re¬
quired to be low. The tall vases are
used upon mantels in the drawing¬
room, the sitting-room and the little
reception room, but no longer upon
the table, where their height proves a
hindrance to dinner chat. The custom
of putting huge pieces in the centre
was never good, but so long as fashion
declares in its favor it held neverthe¬
less, and only very few had the courage
to denounce it. Now, when it is the
correct thing to arrange tempting bits
of color as low as can he, the wisdom
of the change cannot be denied, and
diners out gam an enlarged view of
their neighbors and vis-a-vis.—AV
change.
Little Dick—“Papa, didn’t you tell
mama we must economize?”
Papa—“I did, my son.”
Little Dick—“Well, I was thinkin’
that mebby if you’d get me a pony I
wouldn’t wear out so many shoes.”—
Street <t Smith’s Good News.
For Summer Cookery
Royal Baking Powder will be found the
greatest of helps! With least labor and
trouble it makes bread, biscuit and cake
of finest flavor, light, sweet, appetizing
and assuredly digestible and wholesome.
((jft jUk _ 8 _ I ft I I 1 . X- j
w
6 ^ 1 I It AY 9 9
Jk JL V/F f f I
My wife suffered with indigestion
and dyspepsia for years. Life be¬
came a burden to her. Physicians
failed to give relief. After reading
one of your books, I purchased a
bottle of August Flower. It worked
like a charm. My wife received im¬
mediate relief after taking the first
dose. She was completely cured—
now -weighs 165 pounds, and can eat
anything she desires without any
deleterious results as was formerly
the case. C. H. Dear, Prop’r Wash
ington House, Washington, Va. ®
♦ McELREES’
i\VINE OF CARDl II
f
? &
$
I! Wv
- „ l v I
t i\i 1 m O' -
\ ♦
t
I ♦
*
If ❖
A
co co co co co cn
OlCIa, ^
SrovtPoLisS
axKS The ta ch staiQ “*
less. Rising Sun Stove Polish Is Brilliant, Odor
Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
ti *
<:1 •:;5
fe;
i !£»
m
r v
KNOWLEDGE
tends Brings comfort personal and improvement and
rightly to The many,’who enjoyment live when
used. bet
tet .nan others and enjoy life more* with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the needs the of physical world’s being, best products will attest to
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Its Syrup of Figs.
excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas¬
ant beneficial to the taste, the refreshing of perfect and truly
ative effectually properties cleansing a the lax¬
dispelling ; colds, headaches and system,
fevers
and It has permanently given satisfaction curing constipation. millions
to and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, Liver because Bowels it act* on the Kid¬
neys, and without weak¬
ening objectionable them and it is perfectly free from
every substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug¬
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man¬
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
and package, being also well the informed, name, Syrup will of Figs,
you not
accept any substitute if offered.
Last AVord,
A young girl once heard a bit of
wisdom from the lips of a very aged
woman—a woman who had rounded
the term of ninety years, and with
eyes still bright and clear looked out
upon the inrolling waters of eternity.
The girl was impressed by the empha¬
sis with which the venerable dame
said to her, “Bessie, never insist on
having the last word.” The determi¬
nation, to have the last word leads to
more quarrels and more bitterness of
feeling at home than almost
anything else in domestic life. The
fact is, that one may so control her
tongue and her eyes that she may al¬
low her opponent the pleasure of this
coveted concluding thrust and yet
placidly retain her own opinion, and
in the homely, colloquial parlance of
the upcounty, where one finds strong
willed people living together in great
peace with the most pronounced diver¬
sity of characteristics, “do as she’s a
mind to.”
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
I THOMSON'S m - IL$
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS. I
No tools required. Only a hammer needed to drlv*
and clinch them eaiiiy and quickly, leaving the clinch
abiolutely amooth. Kequirin* Rivet*. no hole to be made la
the leather nor burr for the Tbey are atron a
tough and durable. Millions now in usd.
length*, uniform or assorted, put up In b oxei.
A*k your dealer for them, or send 40c. lm
stamps for a oox of 100, assorted sizes. Man'fd by
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.,
WALTHAM, MASS.
IAN Indigestion, IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE!
| For Jin longues*. Rad
= Headache. Constipation,
| i and Complexion, all disordei-8 Offensive of the Stomach, Breath, *
= Liver and Bowels,
fact ?e‘n?!? y N et S pXSp%V L ^t § «
■ digestion by druggists follows their use. Sold I
= (6 vials), «5e. Package or sent by (4 mail. boxes), Box $2.
=
I For free JUPAtfa samples-addreas *
s CHEMICAL CO., New York. %
iMiiniMimMtKiiaBiuiiMnntiaanniaBitiLaamnHA ::.Mi'..■Biinimiuiaa
If any one* doubts that
we con cure tho must ob¬
9 BLOOD POISON stinate days, let case him in wr.tefor 20 to 60
* SPECIALTY. .paitieulars and investi¬
gate our x-feliab lity. Our
fin» nclal backing is
1500.000. When mercury,
iodide potassium, sarsaparilla or Hot Springs fail, we
guarantee a cure—and our Masic Cyphileno is the only
thing that will cure permanently. Positive proof sent
settled, free. Cook Rehedt Co., Chicago, I1L
o
CANCER
CURED WITHOUT THE KNIFE
Or use of painful, burning, poisonous plas¬
ters. Cancers exclusively treated. Dr.
P. B. Green’s Sanatorium, Fort Payne, Ala.
o
Xngleside •:* Xfcetreat.
For Diseases of Women. Scientific treatment and
cures guaranteed. Elegant apartments for ladies be¬
fore and during confinement. Address The Keab
dent Physician, 71-72 Baxter Court, Nashville, Tenn,
£|ii|iin ’' T o^rit"mAiTi'- learn "
onT science. You can more
RUPTURE about our methods and Eucces3
CANCER Glared Permanently
NO KNIFE. NO POISON, HARRIS, NO PLASTER. Payne,
JNO. B. Fort Ala.
GOITRE CURED SEND J. N. Klein. for FREE Belleville, Circular. N. J.
a Best, Piso’8 Easiest Remedy to Use, for and Catarrh Cheapest. is the
CATAR R H
50c. Sold E. by T. druggists Hazeltine, or Warren, sent by Pa. mail, a
A. N. U ......... ....... Thirty-five, ’93.