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MAY STARVE TO LIVE.
POLICY TO BE PURSUED BY
THE CAUTIOUS.
Medical Selene# Is Arbitrary—To Eat
Bread Is Folson—Beef Is Also Bad
and So Is Mutton—Pork Out of the
Question. a
Medical science has taken up the food
question ao closely during recent years
and gone to such trouble and expense
to find out every deleterious quality In
articles of every-day consumption that
the man who studies hygiene attentive¬
ly can only eat—If he believes all he
reads—at the great risk of contracting
disease or poisoning himself. Bread is
not to be thought of as an article of
diet. It is a treacherous compound,
consisting large of alum and potatoes,
and, concocted in some unsanitary cel¬
lar, It is teeming with microbes and to¬
tally unfit for food. No careful man
will touch beef, owing to the number
of tuberculous carcasses which are
constantly being placed on the market.
Mutton and lamb are also being ta¬
booed on similar grounds, and no one
would think of touching pork for fear
the late lamented piggy might have
died of swine fever. The vegetarian
chortles in his Joy and points out that
none of these things, except bread, af¬
fects his style of dining. But hi3
triumph is short-lived. Root vegetables
are to be dreaded because of wire
worm, tomatoes induce cancer, cab¬
bages may become poisonous by the
application of improper fertilizers, and
therefore are best left alone, while, in
addition to the disease microbe which
devotes its attention to the potato,
there is always the risk of damage to
the digestive organs. Butter and milk
are poisoned with boracic acid and
other noxious preservatives, to say
nothing of the artificial coloring mat¬
ter which is frequently added. Eggs
are dangerous, because so many of
them are packed in lime to keep them
good, and recently, too, a French bacil¬
lus has found his way in through the
shell. In addition to other drawbacks,
cheese helps to ruin digestion. Raw
fruit helps along cholera to a great
extent. It also contains prussic acid
around the skin, pips and stone. When
cooked it induces dysentery. Of tinned
and potted stuffs little need be said,
except that the solder of the tin makes
for lead poisoning, and potted meats
have recently been shown to be sim¬
ply a mass of spiced rotten filth and
garbage. Fish, although possessing
highly nutritious qualities, should be
avoided, owing to the large quantity
which is sold in an unfit state for hu¬
man consumption and the difficulty of
obtaining It really fresh. With bever¬
ages the same difficulties present them¬
selves to the careful feeder. Beer,
wines or spirits are not to he thought
of. They affect the brain and eyes
and act injuriously upon the coating of
the stomach. Tea and coffee may set
up insanity, but at the least they are
sure to induce dyspepsia. Water is
full of disease germs, and, if distilled,
becomes dangerous by reason of its
lack of mineral matter in solution.
Poultry, if fresh, appears to be the
most wholesome sort of dish, as there
is only a vague, undecided sort of mi¬
crobe to its account. Therefore duck
and green peas appear to be the dish
to make a stand upon; but let the peas
be fresh, as the tinned sort are poison¬
ous, owing to a solution of sulphate of
copper being employed to give them a
fresh, bright color.—London Mall.
The Secretary Bird.
The secretary bird of South Africa is
useful in destroying the serpent race,
on which creatures it almost exclu¬
sively feeds. It derives its name from
the curious feathery plumes which pro¬
ject from each side of its head, and
have a fanciful resemblance to pens
carried behind the ear by human sec¬
retaries. Undaunted by the deadly
teeth of the cobra, the secretary bird
comes boldly to the attack, and in spite
of all the efforts of the infuriated and
desperate reptile, Is sure to come off
victorious. In Its combats with the
serpent the wing is the most important
weapon, and answers equally all the
purposes of a shield and a club. As
the serpent rises to strike, the secre¬
tary presents the front of its wing as a
buckler and almost immediately dashes
the snake to the ground by a blow
from the same member. It also kicks
with considerable force, and almost in¬
variably concludes the combat by a
violent blow on the head from its
beak, which lays the skull of the enemy
completely open.
Home for Families of I.amllts.
Not actuated by remorse, but by pure
philanthropy, Jim Jenkins, hunter of
outlaws, has concluded to devote all
his money to the maintenance of a
home for the orphans and widows of
men he has run to earth, in particular,
and of criminals of the great South¬
west in general. Jim Jenkins, now of
Kansas, is now 65 years old and has
spent forty years as a scout and hunt¬
er of bandits and train robbers. In this
way he has made about $50,000. Among
the distinguished outlaws he has
chased were Jesse James and his broth¬
er, Bob Ford, Bill Dalton and Bill
Cook, while he was the leader of the
band that caught Cherokee Bill in 1895.
In the Dalton raid in Coffeyville, Kas.,
Jenkins was shot eight times. He esti¬
mates his bag of bad men at about 150.
The home, which Is being built on a
5,000-acre farm owned by Jenkins,
near Pryor Creek, I. T., is to cost $20,-
000.—Buffalo Express.
One doesn’t get rid of bills by tear¬
ing them up, but they are disposed of
for the time being.—Er.
A JEALOUS HUSBAND.
The Gr..n-l£y«d Mounter b Making Him
Wre tolled.
A young woman who lives with her
ferociously Jealous but otherwise
tractable husband on one of the proper
named (as distinguished from lettered
or numbered) streets uptown Is Just
now endeavoring to convince her
spouse' that he is endowed with too
gifted an Imagination, says the Wash¬
ington Post, It all came about through
a 2 a. m. serenade. Before her mar¬
riage a young amateur violinist of the
city had been exceedingly attentive to
her, but when it came to the point of
selection she passed the musician up
for the man upon whom she bestowed
her hand. Her husband’s Jealousy of
the violinist, without any reason what¬
ever, continued after their marriage.
She did not perceive any good reason
why she should cut the young musi¬
cian dead on the street when she met
him, but every time she bowed to the
violinist, no matter how distantly, her
husband stormed and raged. He tore
the fiddler wide apart to her. But I
knew him before I knew you,” she al¬
ways replied, “and what surname am
I known by now, pray?” “But what
do you want to recognize the slob for?”
it was his habit to inquire, with the
beautiful reasonableness of the male
being. “Because I am not hankering
to achieve a reputation for being de¬
void of ordinary good manners,” she
would reply. One beautiful midnight
last week a well-known young vio¬
linist of Washington (not the one who
had aspired to the hand of the heroine
of this truthful tale) and three of his
mandolin and guitar-playing friends
decided to serenade a few of their
young women friends. They engaged
a barouche and went forth. They were
all admirable players and the uptown
streets were made mellow with the
strains from their instruments. The
last young woman on their list of girls
to be serenaded happened to live di¬
rectly across the street from the home
of the young woman whose husband
carried within his bosom a carking
weight of deadly animosity for the
young violinist who had antedated him
in his wife’s list of friends. The ba¬
rouche of the serenading party drew
up in the middle of the street in front
of that young unmarried woman's
house, along toward 2 a. m., and
mournful, passionate strains of wild
regret and hopeless love began to pro¬
ceed from the strings, the tender wail
of the violin rising above it. They
played for half an hour or so and then
drove off. The young matron had to
hold her husband in order to prevent
him from throwing water on the mu¬
sicians, and she has been trying to
convince him ever since that there is
more than one violinist in Washington.
But he doesn’t see it. It is difficult for
green-eyed people to see anything.
AUTOCRATIC JUDGES.
No man probably can be placed in a
more perplexing position than a judge
who has to deal with ignorant and
dull-witted jurors. A jury of this kina
of men in a western court brought in
a verdict of “Not guilty, but recom¬
mended to the mercy of the court.”
The late Justice Hawkins, a learned
but eccentric English judge, when the
verdict did not suit him, sometimes
took the decision into his own hands.
After a long trial of a civil case, in
which the possession of some property
was contested, the jmy, against the
law and the evidence, unanimously
found for the p,aintiff. Justice Haw-
kms listened to the verdict in amaze-
ment, and then, with a shrug, said;
It takes thirteen men to rob a man
of his house. The suit is decided in
favor of the defendant.”
A certain Justice Leet in Pennsyl¬
vania, in the early part of this century,
was equally autocratic in his decisions.
The country was newly settled by
Scotch-Irish Presbyterian, a class of
just and religious, but irascible men.
When they brought . ...... into his court . di-
voree or civil cases which had grown
out of quarrels with their wives or
neighbors, they were not infrequently
met with refusal to listen to their com-
plaints. “I will hear no statement
concerning this case from any lawyer.
Do you two quarrelsome fools go home,
shut yourselves up together, and pray
to Almighty God to help you to see the
truth. Then talk the matter over
quietly alone. If you then can’t come
to an agreement, you may go to law
about it.” Tradition states that but a
small per cent of these applicants ever
came again before him. /
Simple Life at the Elysee*
The rule of life at the Elysee is as
simple as circumstances will permit,
except- when obliged to give official en¬
tertainments, M. and Mme. Loubet
take their luncheon at 12 and their
dinner at 7 in a small dining-room, the
furniture of which is as plain as the
menu on the table, though now and
then they have an intimate friend to
join them at the former meal. M.
Loubet, however, simple as are his
tastes and , frugal , , as is . his , . fare, . is . fully
alive to the importance of maintaining
the dignity of his office; and it may be
taken for granted that he will, when
he returns to Paris from Rambouillet'
and Montelimar, between which places
he will, if all goes well, spend his well-
earned summer holiday, put himself in¬
to training for the severe social duties
which the president of the republic
will have to discharge during the ex¬
hibition year.
Spiders In Japan.
Spiders are a serious plague in
Japan. They spin their webs on the
telegraph wires, and are so numerous
as to cause a serious loss or insula¬
tion. Sweeping the wires does little
good, as the spiders begin all over
again.
ASTONISHED THE DOMINIES.
Sau.atlonal Rmflt of • Fancy Urau
Costume at a Ministerial Gathering.
From the Philadelphia Post: Judge
E. B. Martlndale of Indianapolis, Ind.,
owns one of tho handsomest residences
in that city— a large stone mansion
hidden from the street by a thick grove
of trees. It was in this house that
one of the most exciting functions ever
known in the hoosier capital took
place many years ago, the true story
of which Is now printed for the first
time. Tho Judge, who was one of the
leaders of society and at the same time
was a pillar in the Presbyterian church,
had issued Invitations for a fancy dress
ball, which at the last moment he had
to withdraw because of t;he presence
in this country of a large body of
Presbyterian delegates from Great
Britain on their way to an Interna¬
tional conference In the west. They
were to be entertained at the Judge's
on the night set for the ball. It so
happened that every guest received h s
notice save one, a merchant namcu
Woodward, who was on a trip through
the northwest. It also happened that
Mr. Woodward had hit upon the most
startling disguise of any planned. He
had bought a complete costume of a
Sioux war chief and intended making
up as nearly like the original as pos¬
sible. Mr. Woodward did not return
to Indianapolis until the evening fixed
for the ball, and, therefore, to save
time put on his costume at his office
and drove to the Martindale residence
in his carriage, which he dismissed at
the gate. Through the trees and shrub¬
bery he glided stealthily until he
reached the house. Looking through
the window Mr. Woodward saw some
persons whom he knew and many of
whom he did not, but every one was
in ordinary evening dress. “They've
unmasked,” soliloquized the war chief,
“but I’ll have my fun just the same.”
Thereupon, stepping upon a ledge, he
made one spring through the open
window and landed in the center of a
group of Scotch delegates, meantim
brandishing a genuine tomahawk and
uttering shrill and bloodcurdling wai
whoops. The effect was astounding to
the masquerader. Some of the guests
fainted, others crept under the tables
and sofas or fled to the upper stories
of the house. It took only an instant
for Mr. Woodward to discover that a
terrible mistake had been made. In
order to preserve his identity and make
his escape he gave a few more whoops,
executed a fearful dance and darted
out of the window into the darkness.
It was explained to the foreign guests
that one of the Indianapolis Indian
tribes was evidently restless, but that
no further trouble need be feared. As
for Mr. Woodward, his side of the
story was not known for nearly twenty
years afterward.
THAT MAN J1M1NEZ.
Dispatches from San Domingo have
recently had much to say of Don Juan
Isidro Jiminez in connection with the
succession to the presidential chair of
that little island republic. At one
time Jiminez was perhaps the richest
man of Spanish blood in the western
hemisphere. He owned extensive
plantations - in San Domingo and in
other islands of the West Indies, and
ori acc ount of his great wealth he pos-
gessed wide influence in political af-
f a j rs some time after Heureaux be¬
came presidell t of San Domingo he
Eent for Jiminez and told him there
wag r00m on {he island for'only one
man a t a time. Jiminez was not
convinced tliat this was really the case
until some 0 f t he buildings on his
plantation h ad been burned. Then he
decided that Heureaux was right, and
he sold out to a German syndicate and
retired from the island to wait an op¬
portunity for revenge. He thought
this chance had come when the war
with Spain broke out. Under the pre¬
text that he was going- to organize an
expedition to fight for Cuba libre, he
was allowed by the United States gov¬
ernment to pack a little steamship,
the Fanita, with some San Domingo
and set sa „ Irom Mobile. But
instead of going to Cuba he went to
San Domingo. One dark night he
landed there with his cargo of refu-
r
t-
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$9
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JUAN ISIDRO JIMINEZ.
gees, expecting to find 1,000 insurgents
under arms awaiting him. But his let¬
ter of plans had miscarried, the raid
was unexpected, and no revolution had
teen started for hlm . H e fired a few
shots, but was forced to beat a retreat.
Jiminez boasts that Heureaux was
killed by his agents, and that one ot
these days he intends to go to San
Domingo and take up the presidency.
New Marriage Law in Massachusetts.
A new law has just gone into effect
in Massachusetts forbidding the per¬
formance of the marriage ceremony by
justices of the peace unless they have
been specially designated for that pur¬
pose.
Newspaper Handkerchief.
A Madrid journal is printed on linen
with a composition easily removable by
water, and the subscriber, after de¬
vouring the news, washes his journal
and has a handkerchief.
M. PAUL DE KOULEDE.
HE WOULD BE A ROBESPIERRE
OF TODAY.
Threaten* to Overthrow the Republic and
Root the Rothschilds and Bankers
Out of the Country—Having a Maid
Time of It.
Paul de Roulede, who has lately been
arrested at Paris, was born Sept. 2,
1846. At fifty-three his chief claim for
distinction is that he Is one of the
most violent and most silly of all the
enemies of Dreyfus and the French re¬
public. When the Franco-German war
broke out he went to the front, but
was captured at Sedan. The Germans
carried him to Breslau, but he escaped
and returned to the French army,
where he remained until peace was de¬
clared. Then he wrote novels and
plays, preaching the doctrine against
the Prussians, and tending to the
apotheosis of that army which seemed
to him more noble in defeat than it
could have been in victory. He is tall
and slight, wears a beard, and looks
like an Englishman. He i3 intensely
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PAUL DE ROULEDE.
Under Arrest for Treason,
patriotic, and makes no attempt to
conceal his hatred of all foreigners.
He hates Dreyfus, too, and on Sunday,
Sept. 25, 1898, at a meeting to protest
against the revision of the Dreyfus
case, he presided and delivered a furi¬
ous tirade against Prime Minister
Brisson and all who had shown a de¬
sire for revision. He declared that if
a revolution occurred and the scaffold
was erected in Paris, the first head that
ought to fall was that of Clemenceau,
and that if Dreyfus ever returned to
France he and his partisans would be
lynched. This meeting was In further¬
ance of the reorganization of ths
League of Patriots, which had been
suppressed some years ago by the gov¬
ernment. Of this reorganized league
De Roulede became president, He
hates so much that he hates also the
•constituted government of France, and
at the death of President Faure un¬
dertook to overthrow the republic and
establish a government with the army
as a basis. He Ipd a procession of
kindred spirits through the streets of
the barracks, and was summarily ar¬
rested, not on the charge of treason,
or attempted coup d’etat, of which he
would have been proud, but on the
more common accusation of trespass.
This almost disgusted him with the
profession of patriot. He is, however,
still intensely bitter in his enmity to
Dreyfus, and the formation of the
League of Patriots is largely his own
work. Besides, he is an inspiring
spirit of the anti-Semitic leagues that
have lately been formed in Paris.
Since the affair of the barracks—Feb.
23, 1899—De Roulede has boldly pro¬
claimed his purpose to overthrow the
republic. His present was decided
upon as a means of checking what
otherwise might in time become a dan¬
gerous organization. De Roulede may
know more than he is willing to tell
of the attempted assassination of La-
bori, one of the counselors of Dreyfus,
from ambush recently at Rennes.
The ordinary courtship is a very
weak foundation upon which to erect
the gigantic structure of matrimony.
BUCHANAN’S BIRTHPLACE.
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In Mercersburg, Pa., stands the old
home of James Buchanan, president of
the United States from 1857 to 1861.
Underneath the roof of this ancient
structure Buchanan first saw the light
of day and spent the period of his
early boyhood. Some fifty years ago
the house was moved to the present
location from Stony Patler, several
miles distant. One of the stories of
Buchanan’s early life in this neigh¬
borhood states that his mother tied a
bel! around his neck when he was quite
young so that she might be able to find
him readily if he strayed Into the
woods. The home of Buchanan was a
trading post. It was on the line of the
turnpike that ran from Chambersburg
to Pittsburg, and as the father of the
A "MECHANICAL HOOTER.**
lovr» tienlui <’on*tru,itml • Shriek ifhl«k
He Wanted the Government to Boy
From the New Orleans Tlmes-Dem-
ocrat: "All sorts of freak devices
have been submitted to the govern¬
ment since the beginning of the war,"
said an officer lately on department
duty at Washington, “but the queer¬
est of the lot was undoubtedly the
'mechanical hooter.' You never heard
of It, of course, but you would If you
had been within half a mile of the
war office about a month ago. The
hooter Is the invention of an Iowa
gentleman and consists of a wooden
tube about the size of a 4-inch section
of a bologna sausage. Stretched across
the aperture is a piece of perforated
rawhide, and when blown Into It
emits a strange and blood-chilling
howl-something absolutely indescrlb-
able In words—a sort of cross be-
tween the shriek of a buzz saw when
it strikes a nail and the lower register
of an adult steam calliope. It Is the
sort of noise I imagine a hippopot-
amus might make during an attack
of membranous croup. But the
scheme of the Inventor was really not
so bad. He pointed out in his letter
that the yell played a very prominent
part in .all military operations. The
demoralizing effect of the rebel yell
was freely admitted by all Northern
generals during the civil war and his-
tory has repeated itself in the recent
campaigns. It was tho yell of the
Rough Riders as they went up San
Juan hill that scared the Spaniards out J
of their trenches and the Kansas yell
has spread more terror among the Fil- |
ipinos than all the Gatling guns put j
together. From these facts he argued j
very logically that a mechanical hoot¬
er, plementing augmenting, the magnifying natural voice and would sup- j J
greatly 7 increase the efficiency of our !
troops. A charge, , „ su j
company on a -
denly hooting in chorus, would strike I
dismay into the hearts of the bravest !
foe. All All American American soldier soiaier h'lmnina lumping
and hooting over a rics field would
cause any Filipino alive to immediate-
lv lose interest in the sacred cause ot
freedom and scoot for the far end __. of -
the archipelago. At least such was tl e
clairn of the inventor and after hearing I
the machine tried I am inclined , 1
agree with him. A clerk was in- j
structed to return the sample and say:
that that in m the ine oninlnn opinion nf of the the dennrfmpnt department
it would be a cruel and ' inhuman
weapon and a violation of the rule3
of civilized warfare as laid down in the
conference of The Hague. You may
think this is a fairy tale, by the way,
but it isn’t. It’s cold fact.”
A CItj Beehive.
It seems a little odd to think of
domiciling bees in a great city, yet i
the New York Times has discovered a
man who successfully attempted this,
His name is Joutel, and he is an ardent
naturalist. It was Mr. Joutel’s love for
insects which led him to experiment in
keeping an apiary on the roof of his
home at East One Hundred and Seven- j
teenth street. He procured a hive,
stocked it, and awaited results. In a ]
short time they had combs in process
of construction, and were filling them
with honey. As to where they got thi#
material, Mr. Joutel’s explanation is
of considerable interest. Soon after he
started his hive, he said, he was in
Mount Morris park, some distance from
his house. Here he found some of his
bees hard at work on the few flowers
in sight. He made a trip to Morning-
side park, on the west side of the city,
and observed a few of the honey mak¬
ers there. He was sure they were from
his hive, as they were of a peculiar
variety and easily recognized. Mr.
Joutel believes that they also made
trips to Central park, as well as pa**
ronlzing all the fire-escape conserva¬
tories in the neighborhood. At any
rate they collected a large amount of
honey, and some of the combs have
been exhibited in the American Mua-
eum of Natural History.
Judas was probably a good female
impersonator.
future president was a shrewd business
man, he accumulated there what was
considered a large fortune in those
days. He sent young James to Dick¬
inson college, in Carlisle, from which
he graduated in 1815. The house in
which Buchanan was born is now re¬
built on Fayette street, Mercersburg.
Before it was torn down all the logs
were carefully numbered and when it
was again erected it was made a fac¬
simile of its former self. The house
is a story and a half high, containing
two rooms. It is constructed of large,
roughly hewn logs and is twenty feet
wide on Fayette street and twenty-one
feet deep along an alley. There is a
single window and a door in front
and one window on the alley, side, with
a door at the rear.
" You Can’t Catch the
Wind in a Net."
fMther can you cur* catarrh by local
application*. It it* constitutionaldisease,
and * cured by Hoed’a SsrvaparitU be-
cauaa it is a constitutional remedy, if
upeta from the blood the impurity
which caaaea the disease, end rebuild*
and jfax£i repairs the inflamed membranes.
‘
ft]
I
| Up-to-Dato Tommy Atkins.
Tammy Atkins _ , is still regarded
in the
Boer homestead as the poor man in a
red coat nnd a whit# helmet who
| stands up to be shot nt; whereas if the
Boer were to see the Natal garrison la
h * would be thunderstruck to
that thero la not a rod coat or a
white helmet among them; that Tora-
my I s almost as clever as the Boer
himself In taking cover; and that Uta
uniform is such that he can scarcely
be distinguished from the dry grass
through which he Is wriggling his way.
—Transvaal Critic,
A curious Discovery,
At a depth of twenty-seven feet a
cmdous discovery was made recently ’
a Berl!n paper saygt on the island Q
Qotlilsnd—the skeletons of several
knights In full armor seated on their
(j 01 .* eg Archaeologists think they date
{ 0 the ninth century.
QUALITY AND NEWS.
Fame and Excellence Are Determining
Factors in Suco^Mful Development*
ONE OF THE IMPORTANT FUNCTIONS
OF HLGH-CLA.SS NEWSPAPERS.
In presenting Interesting phase, ofseian-
tlfle and economic problems, high-class
newspapers frequent I v give Information of
u S great value In their advertising columns
as ia those devoted to the publication of
the prlnolpal events of the day, aad when
(he (amo of H product lg „ xt end»d beyond
| tg natural limits into foreign lands, and a
large demand created throughout Great
Britain and tier Colonies and the principal
sea-ports and cities oi Europe, Asia and
A f r ica, it becomes a pleasant duty to oxcel- note
the feet and to toll or the points of
leuoeon which so great a success Is based.
We refer to the now world famed laxative
remedy, 8 nip ot Figs, the product of the
California FigSyrup Company. The merits
of this well-known excellent laxative were
first made known to the world through the
mB(iloal joisrBa , s and ni . wfi pnper 8 of the
u utted States; and Is one of the distinct
achievements of the press. It is now w 11
known that Syrup ot Figs is an ethical
KentTbyslXn*every whore%eoaus« It
i 9 simple and effective, yet pleasant and to
the taste and acceptable to the system,
not only prompt In its beneBcial effects,
but also wholly free from any unpleasant
after-effects. It is frequently referred to as
tbs rsmedy of the healthy, because it is
used by people who enjoy good health and
who live well and feel well and are well
informed on all subjects generally, lnolud-
'ne^wy'to manufactured get the genuine bjr
syrup of Figs, which is
tu* California Fig Syrup Co. only,
When one woncRn praises another the
praise Is usually tinged W ith sarcasm,
How Arc T*ar Stdneyi f
Dr. Hobbs' Sparapus Pills cure all kidney ills.
$le free. Add- Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or Iff. r*
There is poetry in flowers, but the verse
makers fight shy of the chrysanthemum.
/DrB«irs> Cures all Throat and Lung Affections.
COUGH SYRUP
V Vis Get the genuine. surest Rcftise subs titut es. jM
j) r% Bull's Pills cure Dyspepsia* Trial , 2oJ%r j*
BAD
BLOOD
“CASCAKETS do aU claimed for them
waT ' ’ mm baiXie a. Lattrfii,Tann.
/©& mmcmmd ci£Tn= .
TRADE MASH RSai»T»MO JfipT
oSH* ver «« oWX &
... CURS COfcSTIPATiON. ...
Bterltagr Rfi«*e<Sy Cowpiuiy, Clileogo, Montre al, Yorlt.
CURE YOUR HORSE
of Spavin, Curb, Splint, Capped
Hock, Sore Tendons, Cuts, Kicks,
Bruises, etc., by using
SLOAN’S
Also an invaluable romedy for man.
When taken internally it cure*
Cramps and Colic. It is the best
antiseptic known.
Every bottle Is warranted. Sold by dealer*
and drupg-lets generally. Family si *e, »jc.
Horse Slice, 50c. and $1.00.
Prepared by EARL S. SLOAN, Boston, Mm*
/Barter’s ink
m. i Used by millions, sure proof o 1
its quality.
GALESSAEN W5NTE0I 1 or H Good
0ALK9MEK
w iiorirr-VVood Tobacco Co., Grttcn»boro.t\.C.
ai S I if a CAB rUn # $ I I Fortune® In stocks; Invest $6 to
$100 and get $1000 for $100 sure; Pa.
Mfe a» a bank. Heed & Co., 129 8. 6tb Bt., Phlla.,
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35 1:13;:
6UR£S WHERE Syrup. AU Tastes MflAlLSr t7so
Oougn Good.
Is time. Bold by drucsiitt
a N S U M Bt i ON >;
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