Newspaper Page Text
First W men to Wear • Corset,
The first corset—not counting ancient
modifications of the Grecian zone or
girdle—was iniroduced Into France by
Catherine de Medici. It was a strange
affair, and fashioned after the style
of a knight's cuirass. The framework
was entirely of iron, and the velvet
which decorated the exterior only,
served to hide a frightful and cumber¬
some article of torture. In the days
that followed ladles of the court laced
themselves frightfully and wore the
dreadful prison night and day in their
efforts to obtain what they considered
a perfect figure.
The CrnrlngVor Stimulant*
This question has lately attracted a great
deal of attention from the medical profession.
The use of etimulants seems to he increasing.
This clearly shows an exhausted condition of
the nerves and Llood, which may be remedied
only by strengthening the *tomach. Hostel
ter's Stomach Bitters will do this for you. It
brings all the energy of a stimulant with no
Injurious effects. It cures dyspepsia, consti¬
pation ami nervousness.
He I*ut It Well.
from “Mamma, com, quick," called confined small Willie with
the bed where he was
stomach trouble, “I think I'm Koing to un¬
swallow something.'"—Chicago New,.
44 Take Time by
The Forelock "
Don’t tvad until sickness overtakes you.
When that tired feeling, the first rheu¬
matic pain, the first ’warnings of impure
blood are manifest, take Hood’s Sarsapa
rilU and you <will rescue your health and
probably save a serious sickness. De sure
to get Hood’s, because
3 {ccdd> SaU apatJflq
Never DiSdppaTiits
Men of Mighty Feet.
Was thp great west Inhabited by a
race of giants In prehistoric days? U,
B. Laird, who was In Kansas City re¬
cently, claims to have evidence that It
was. He Is a New England geologist,
who hag Rpent many months in mak¬
ing investigations in the canons, table
lands and gorges of Arizona. lie left
for the east with his evidence In file
shape of a voluminous typewritten
manuscript carefully put away in a
handbag. lie declined to make public
the full purport of the document.
Mr. Laird makes no bonst at having
bad a hand In the Investigation, but
say* the discoveries were made by a
guide who has been a resident of Will¬
iams, Arlz., for many years, nnd who
h«R been In every nook and cranny of
the mountains In that district. Tho
claim that tlmre existed In prehistoric
times a race of giants Is old, but proofs
are not found every day. In this case
they were found in the slmpo of im¬
mense footprints w’hleh have become
hardened In the limestone formations
of the district.
To substantiate his statements Mr.
iLnird carries with him several photo¬
graphs, showing by comparison with
the foot of a miner the relative size of
the giant’s foot. Some Idea of Its
great size can be gained when It Is
«een that the depression In the rock
strata, caused by the great too Is more
than twice as large as the miner's foot.
The fact tliut animals In prehistoric
periods were of such Immense size Is
advanced ns an argument that man
was also abnormally large. Laird Is a
firm believer In this theory.—Kansas
City Journal.
Cutting Off Retreat.
‘‘My Income Is small,” sahl ,t rather
dilatory lover, “and perhaps It Is cruel
of me to take you from your father’s
roof.”
“But 1 don’t live on the roof,” was
the prompt reply.—Harlem Life.
eiL-.- —si — ; ...... .....s™_________ _
Facts
For Sick
Women
First—tho modlolne that
holds tho record for tho
largest number of abso¬
lute Cures of female Ills
Is Lydia Em Plnkham’a
Vogotablo Oompound.
Second Mrs. Plnkham
can show by her totter
files In Lynn that a mil¬
lion women have boon
rostorod to health by her
medicine and advloom
Third-Allletters to Mrs.
Plnkham aro received,
opened, read and an¬
swered by women only.
This foot Is oertlfled to by
the mayor and postmas¬
ter of Lynn and others of
Mrs. Plnkham*s own olty.
Write for free book con¬
taining these oortlfloatosm
Every ailing woman la
lavlted to write to Mrsm
Plnkham and qet her ad¬
vice free of onargom
Lydia K Pinkhaa Med. Co., Lyon. Mas*.
AGENTS WANTED“S^Sss
AJkof Dwl?htL. Moody, the world's Rreateet
evangelist. Terms liberal. Best Moody
Book Moody published. Books, Why send away the north book for
when you can get same
from a home company on better terms, and
save time an l money on orders. Address
T>. E- LUTHE-R’PUB.0O-.
502 English American Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
Lamps I OVELY
iP 3
CM K All hand-painted. No
a handsomer lamp made.
Sold at manufacturer’s
W prices. Wl pay thi
FREIGHT.
Makes a most accepta¬
ble present.
lleautll ul co!orcl oat.
pN • nlogue of liand-painteri BANQUET
PARLOR or
LAMPS, free.
Every Lamp Guaran¬ back if
teed. Money
> you want it
Manafacturwd by
Pittt&arf 61 m C*,,
DESPERATE BATTLE IN JAIL
Murderer Flanagan and Seven Other Jail¬
birds Attack the Sheriff.
ODDS FEARFULLY UNEVEN
Colored Janitor Stood Bravely By
Sheriff’s Side Until Fight
Was Won.
The DeKalb county jail at Decatur,
Ga., was the scene of a terribe fight
Haturdny night between Sheriff Talley
and eight of his prisoners who made a
bold and desperate attempt to escape.
In the fight the sheriff used his pis¬
tol, and Edward Flanagan, the notori¬
ous double murderer, wffs shot.
Among those who took part in the
attempt at jail delivery were George
Bankston and John Pendley, the men
who were mixed up ot one time in the
murder of Policeman Ponder at At
lanta.
Flanagan was one of the leaders in
the assault upon the jailer, and held
as a weapou the heavy padlock which
had been sawed from the jail door.
The affair was one of the most ter
rific hand-to-hand fights that ever oc¬
curred iu a prison between jailbirds
and prison keeper, and but for the
fact that the sheriff acted with the
greatest coolness and bravery, some
noted and desperate prisoners would
now be ut largo, and among them the
notorious Flnnagan.
Tho sheriff was assisted by his ne¬
gro janitor, Jim Smith, and it was the
negro whom Flanagan attacked, trying
to brain him with a heavy padlock.
Tho striking feature of the jail sen¬
sation was tho fttot.'thut tho knife with
which tho lock was sawed or filed was
owned by Hiram Hliarpo, the man who
brutally murdered’iris', wife near Litho
nia about a month ago. With this
part of tho story oomes the statement
from the sheriff that a few moments
beforo tho fight with the prisoners,
Sharpe secretly armed himself with u
henvy iron her, an act the significance
of which was not realized until the en¬
counter was over.
The attack upon the sheriff was sud¬
den and without a word of warning.
Eight prisoners, all charged with gravo
crimes, sprang upon him as he passed
the coll door. The sheriff thought tho
door securely fastened and when ho
Raw it swing open and the eight des¬
perato men rush upon him, ho hacked
off a few feet and cried out to his ne¬
gro janitor to stand by him. The ne¬
gro, displaying ground? wjsiarkabla bravery,
stood his 1 1
For several minutes tho fight lasted.
The prisoners were endeavoring to
beat down the sheriff and the negro,
for if this could .have been accom¬
plished, nothing stood in the way of
their liberty except a run through an
open corridor and a dash through the
residence portion of tho jail which had
only unlocked doors.
Tho sheriff know,- thq 11 situation and
he struggled with his assailants with
a determination to conquer or be
trampled underfoot.
the while, the negro
stood to down by tho withTnim. si M fcfyf his officer ready
go *
For a while tho sheriff could not get
an opportunity to draw his pistol,
which was in Iris hip pockot. When
he finally did, he pulled loose from
the prisoners and backing quickly to¬
ward tho outer door ho began to fire.
Tho negro janitor dropped to the floor
to keep from being shot. Tho sudden¬
ness of the firing dismayed the pris¬
oners. Flanagan reeled and fell. A
bullet hud struck him. Throe shots
were fired, and that was every bullet
the sheriff had iu his pistol, and if the
prisoners had known this they would
not Imve retreated as they did into
their cell. The retreat was what the
sheriff looked for.
He jumped through tho corridor
door, slammed it to and fastened tho
lock. The fight was over. The sheriff
and his loyal janitor had won the day.
The jailbirds were safe.
This was the second time within two
months that Flanuigau had attempted
to break jail. The last time he seized
the sheriff’s child and made a dash for
liberty. He knew that as long as he
ran with the child iu his arms tho
JOHN BUSKIN DEAD.
Wm Great Critic ami Kssayint Hut a Queer
Character.
A London dispatch says: John Rus
kin, Euglish critip and assayistj died
Saturday afternoon of influenza, aged
81 years. 4
One of the most remarkable facts in
his career was his divorce of his wife.
He engaged the great painter, Sir John
Millais, to paint a picture of his wife.
Millais snd Mrs. Ruskin fell iu’Iove
with each other, but they remained
silent. Buskin soon realized that his
wife and Millais were bound by a true
love, but made no objection to it, ar¬
ranging himself a djuNmeJor. his wifo
so that she could marryvne,-painter.
B0EU LOSSES TO DATE.
Figure. Aro Approximately Fixed From
KelUble Report* at 0,4’JS Men.
Advices from Bensburg, Cape Col¬
ony, Friday, state that carefully com¬
piled figures from reliable sources,
some of which have been investigated
and found to be correct, show the
Boer losses up to date are approxi¬
mately 6,425 men, including 2,000
casualties during the siege of Lady¬
smith.
Cuba’s Receipts.
The war department has given out
the statement that the total receipts
for the entire island of Cuba for the
month of December were $1,733,211.
The total receipts for the entire island
for the calendar year ending Decem¬
ber 31, 1809, were $15,217,497.42.
The Yaquis Vanquished.
A battle has been fought between
the Mexicans and the Yaquis, the Ya¬
quis beiDg defeated with heavy loss.
Their killed numbered 200. Five hun¬
dred were taken prisoners
sheriff would not shoot. He was in
tercepted in the jail office and a des
perato fight followed, the sheriff’s
wife snatching her child from the mur
derer’s aims.
Saturday night the sheriff did not
aim particularly at Flanagan, but it
seemed to Tie some direction of fate
that he of the others should be shot
with the name kind of weapon with
which he bad murdered two helpless
women.
It was about 9:30 o’clock Saturday
evening that Sheriff Talley sent Jim
Smith, his negro janitor into the low¬
er floor of the jail to clean up the cor¬
ridor. The negro opened the door
leading into the corridor and placed
his lantern behind it.
The sheriff followed behind the jan¬
itor to see if the prisoners were ail
right for the night. As he passed a
cell Hiram Sharpe, the wife murderer,
confined in a cell across the corridor
in which the eight notorious charac¬
ters were locked up, handed him a
heavy piece of iron five feet long and
four inches broad and half an inch
thick.
“Mr. Talley,” said Bbarpe, “the
man in here with me has been hiding
this piece of iron and I want you to
take it out before it gets us all into
trouble.”
The sheriff thanked the prisoner and
walked down the corridor with the
iron bar in his hand.
Not until after the terrific fight with
the desperate jailbirds waff over did
the sheriff remember tjie, significance
of the act. Bbarpe suspected that the
attack was going to he made and ho
had armed the sheriff so 'he cbfild de-'
fend himself from a sndden assault
which might have meant his death. •
- ..Sheriff Talley walked to the back of
the corridor. The eight prisoners
who had planned the escape were
peering at him, watching for an op¬
portune moment to make the break
for liberty.
Not a suspicion of what wae about
to take place entered the sheriff’s
mind. He had glanced at the doors
of all the cells, and he had not noticed
that any lock had been tninpered with.
But the men had already sawed the
padlock to the door of their cell.
,T'he eight men must have made a
slight miscalculation in tbo distance
the sheriff was from their door, and
the time it would take to walk to the
rear of the corridor. They threw open
the door just as the sheriff was about
to repaHH it. Then the terrific fight
took place.
Before they could pass out the pris¬
oners would have to heat down the
sheriff and the negro, and this they
proceeded to do.
“Stand by me, Jim,” cried the sheriff
to the negro.
And the answer came back;
“I’m with you, Mr. Talley.”
As many men as could get at the
sheriff struck him over the head and
the shoulders with their fists.
Sheriff Talley fought with the mo¬
mentary strength of a giant. He
hurled the desperato jailbirds from
him as fast as they sprang upon him.
Jim Smith was not idle. He stood
by the side of tho shorilT and struggled
to keep off the assailants.
All this time the sheriff had not had
an opportuniiy to draw his pistol.
He at last got off a few steps from
the prisoners ami he drew his pistol
and began to fire into the crowd.
Three shots were fired in quick suc¬
cession, and Flanagan screamed and
fell.
Back into the ce 1 the prisoners
tumbled in more confusion than they
had left it a few moments before.
Sheriff Tally saw his opportunity.
He sprang liackwarn through the cor¬
ridor door, closed it and turned the
key in the lock.
A few minutes later help camo and
the desperate jailbirds who lmd made
the bold but unsuccessful attempt to
escape were safely locked up in their
cell for the night.
Flanagan was placed in a chair in
the corridor and a physician sent for
to dress his wound.
The pistol ball bad entered bis left
thigh about two iuchei above the knee,
inflicting a painful but not very seri¬
ous wound.
BRYAN IN BALTIMORE.
Talk* to Free Stlverite* on ImperinlUm,
TY-fiSt* amt” tHe Currency.
Hon. William J. Bryan delivered an
address in_Baltimoro Saturday night
upon tho political which questions of the day
to an flhdiauce filled the Music
Hall.
The meeting was held under tha
auspices of the Maryland Democratic
Association, one of the free silver
wings of the the Democratic party of
the state, and was not encouraged or
disoouraged in any manner by tho reg
ular Democratic organization. In fact
the latter held strictly aloof from the
affair.
FEX8I0N BILL PASSED.
Many Member. Attack l'en.ion Commie
.loner, While Other. Defend Him.
The pension appropriation bill, car¬
rying $145,245,250, was passed by the
house Friday. It was made the vehi¬
cle of an attack upon the commissioner
of pensious by northern Democrats.
All inveighed against the lack of lib¬
erality in the administration of the
laws. The commissioner was ably
defended by a score of members from
both sides of the house.
KNOXVILLE DEMOCRATIC.
Hon. S. fl. Hri.kell Elected Mayor ol
Tennessee Town by 942 Majority.
In the municipal election at Knox
ville, Tenn., Saturday, the Democratic
ticket carried every voting precinct
Hon. S. G. Heiskell was elected mayor
by 942 majority over G. W. Header
son. Henderson led the independent
citizens, or “Googoo” ticket. The ad
ministration, which is Republican,
backed tbe citizens’ ticket. No Be
publican ticket was out. This is the
biggest victory Democracy has ever
hud in th« city.
Largest Kitchen la tha World.
The last of the works of the much
maligned George IV. to be mentioned
here as the enlarged and improved
royal kitchen at Windsor Castle. It
stands—perhaps the largest single
kitchen in the world—on ground where
royal kitchens have stood from time
Immemorial. George IV. It was who
In 1828 gave It Its lofty roof and top
light ventilators, its splendid clock let
Into the stone walls, and its generally
mediaeval appearance. At either end
of the kitchen is fixed an immense and
venerable smokejack, whose origin Is
lost in the mists of antiquity. One of
these annually has the honor of roast
lng her Majesty’s baron of beef. The
hot-plate table in the centre of the
kitchen measures no less than 14 by 9
feet. The batterle de cuisine, in its
brilliant array of glittering copper, is
large enough to cheer the hearts of a
small army of gourmands, and to show
its office is no sinecure, one may men
tion that it has to make an annual
visit to the manufacturer for restora
tion and repair. Lady Bloomfield says
of this kitchen in 1842:
“The fire was more like Nebuchad
nezzar’s ‘burning fiery furnace’ than
anything else I can think of; and
though there Is now no company at
Windsor, there were at least fifteen or
twenty large joints of meat roasting,
L.iarles Murray, Controller of the
House, told me that last year they fed
at dinner a hundred and thirteen thou
sand persons.”—The Pall Mall Maga
sine.
“Three years ago I was badly afflict¬
ed with Eczema, and used Tetterine
with the most gratifying result. I
made a permanent onre after doctors
had failed to relieve me. I have symp
tons of it breaking out on another part
of my person, so you will please send me
one box Tetterine by return mail for
the 50c. enclosed. W. L. Mounce, 124
St. Marks avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.”
Sold by druggists or by mail for 60c.
by J. T. Shuptrino, Savannah, Ga.
r 1 All the Difference.
An English traveller once met a com¬
panion -sit f?ng in a state of the most
woful despair, and apparently near the
last, agonies, by the side of one of the
mountain lakes of Switzerland. He in¬
quired the cause of his sufferings.
’’Oh,” said the latter, “I was very
hot and thirsty, and took a large
draught of the clear water of the
lake, and then sat down on this stone
to consult my guidebook. To my as¬
tonishment, I found that the water of
this lake is very poisonous! Oh! I am
a lost man—I feel it naming all over
me. I have only a rew minutes to
live. Remember me to-”
“Let mo see the guidebook,” said
his friend.
Turning to the passage, he found,
“L’eau du lac est Men poissonneuse’’—
‘‘The water of this lake abounds in
fish.”
“Is that the meaning of It?”
“Certainly.”
The dying man looked up with a ra¬
diant countenance.
“Wlmt would have become of you,"
said his friend, “if I had not met you?”
“I should have died of imperfect
knowledge of the French language.”—
Titbits. *
Putnam Fadei.kbs Dias do not spot, htreak
or give your goods au unevenly dyed np
pearance. Bold by all druggists.
Did Him Good.
Doctor—Ah. the littleonelooks pretty well:
.the pills seem to have helped him. How did
you take tip in. Johnny?
Johnny—With doctor. my all- rifle; I slioteparrows
with them
llow’* Thi*? •i
We offer One Hundred Dollar* Reward for
*ny case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hair* Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Chunky A ( o , Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che¬
ney for the last J6 year*, and believe him per
foctly honorabjft In nil Imnlnens transactions
and financially nlde to carry out any obllga
tion made pylhclr firm.
\\ bht ,fc 1 rcax, Wfiolosale Druggists, Toledo,
Wai.mno, Nissan A Martin, Wholesale
Hall’s Druggists, Catarrh Toledo, Ohio.
("tire Is taken Internally, act
-iifT directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Testimonials tree.
Hall's Family Pills are the beat.
Mr*. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduce* Inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
I can recommend Piso’s Cure for Consump¬
tion to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D. Town¬
send, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4. 1894.
No Smoke.
“Have a cigar?” asked the paleface.
‘ No,” solemnly replied the redman, “I’ma
smokeless Ingine.”
This is what comes of allowing the untu¬
tored child of the plains to read comic paper*.
DcBulIs Li\n4 lwttnndtr Eau
/%_____|_ _ ilH,„ The best remedy lor
VfOUgn Consumption. ISX Cr
S J y r u p Asthma, Whooping
■ ne*s,
cough , Croup. Small doncs; quick, sure results.
XV. Hulls J MU cure Constipation. Trial, aojorjc.
ie-ff. WAIT A MINUTE !
>* A 1 Don’t be in too big a hurry? If you
. ^ can get the best at only a dollar or so
more, why not take it? It will be
7 cheaper in the end.
^ See our Agent or write direct. ROCK MILL «8?M3a
SUCCESSFUL SHOOTERS SHOOT
WINCHESTER
c Rifles, Repeating Shotguns, Ammunition and
Loaded Shotg-un Shells. Winchester jjuns and
ammunition are the standard of the world, but
they do not cost any more than poorer makes
All reliable dealers sell Winchester g-oods.
FREE : Send name and address on a postal for 156
page Illustrated Catalogue describing all the guns and
V ammunition made by the
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.,
X: 176 WINCHESTER AVE *1 HEW HAVEN, CONN.
f Off|Tr ^ _ ,
j ■ U H tr\ pa fjllS IteWa Bbl, \
"loi B r
A
\ UV," 21A
£ ^LO *. uLmg VER \
All except
bad ones!
There are hun¬
dreds of cough medi¬
cines which relieve
coughs, all coughs ,
except bad ones!
j The medicine which
has been curing the
j worst of bad coughs
for 6 o years is Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral.
Herc is evidence:
“My wife was troubled with a
deep-seated cough on her lungs for
three years. Or,e day I thought
of how Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
saved the life of my sister after
the doctors had all given her up to
die. So I purchased two bottles,
and it cured my wife completely.
It took only one bottle to cure my
sister. So you see that three bot¬
tles (one dollar each) saved two •
lives. We all send you our heart¬
felt thanks forwhaf you hive done
for us.”—J. H. Burge, Macon,Colt,
Jan. 13, 1899. * ■ • •
»
' .«
A
Now, for the £rst time you
cim get a trial bottle of Cherry
Pectoral for 25 cents. Ask
youf druggist.
N O crop can
grow with
out Potash.
Every blade of
Grass, every grain
of Corn, all Fruits
and Vegetables
must have it. If
enough is supplied
you can count on a full crop—
if too little, the growth will be
“scrubby.”
Send for our books telling all about composition of
fertilizers best adapted for all crops. They cost you
nothing.
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York.
Barter's Have you tested It ink
-
No other Ink “just as good.”
BOOK AGENTS WANTED FOR
th* grandest and fastest-sai ling b ook ever puF’shed,
Pulpit Echoes
WR ContSLg” , , VINO TH K Moii?»vS nTn« vim R |”? nvin s”^„ »v„ 5 D "//(.(To
Thrilling Mr ,
Storiei, Incident*, Pertonal Experience, etc. as told
d . ~r k w dlOOtff/ ~m *' »
J h With.wm»lrt«hlstoi7of L'ro^ctloa his lift by ltev.OHAS. T.
Br*nd n d (WOpn.^auttfullf/iUustratcd b,°Rji lviSan'aiiboTt!IL' (T7*l-Oob m
new, more
AGENT* IYANTFID —Men nnd Women. CtT’Sale*
immense-a hn^est time ft>r Agents. Send for terms to
*" 1 " OKT,nNGIO> * co -> u »rm>rd. Conn.
MERCHANTS
Having shoes to buy will find
it to their advantage to cor¬
respond with us. We are sell¬
ing many lines under the
market, Now receiving or
ders for our samples to be fill¬
ed in rotation.
C—i . K. ORR SHOE CO.,
ATLA/NTA, GA.
RBflittf-SSC0llep »»UVA>T Si STRATTON ( Hookkeeping
LOU i,, n“aThy
l#Cbst 2d Ky
no more than class school. Catalog free
DROPSY
cas Bd.>k of test:menT*;& and lO days’ treatment
Frt-e. Dr. H. H. GREEN 8 SOUS. Box B. Atlxnt*. 6a
bUKw WliUit AU ELSt rAllS. v*
Best C^ugh Syrup. Tmetea Good. Use —
lo time. Sold S>t dn»r~r<*Uk i
CONS OM P T»ON m
the bests- cent
Tobacco on Ea rth is
NOT intheTRDST
16 TOBACCO, k TOP
IS THE BRAND.
W Union Made!
//,
MAHUriCTCBrj) BT
BROWS BROS. CO. » WINSTON,
Malsby & Company,
39 8. Broad St., Atlanta, Qa.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heater*, Steam rumps and
Fenberthy Injector*.
I
fy
Manufacturers and Dealers In
S ~X7V IMLIXalLaSB.
Corn Mill*, Feed Mill*, Cotton Gin Machin¬
ery and Grain Separator*.
SOLID nnd INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
l ocks, Knight/* Patent Bogs, Blrdsall Raw
Mill and Kngine Repair*, Governor*, Grate
Bar* and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
' r s=r .22 *-T3 CD & ?=' Is o « ss £ § 2
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j , ■»>
c ) W,>
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i V & ft it
11 i,
t 'SI
X,
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k
4
Itching Burning Scaly
Blotchy Humors
Instantly Relieved
and Speedily Cured by
% -.Cv SSvIl m ■vS > & isoura
The itching and burning I suffered in my feet and limbs for three rear!
were terrible. At night they were worse and would keep me awake a
greater part of the night. I consulted doctor after doctor, as I was trui e -
ling on the road most of my time, also one of our city doctors. None of the
doctors knew what the trouble was. I got a lot of the different samples o
the medicines I had been using. I found them of so many different kiu ®
that I concluded I would have to go to a Cincinnati hospital before I ^ ou
get relief. I had frequently been urged to try CUTICURA REMEDIED,
but I had no faith in them. My wife Anally prevailed upon me to try them
Presto! What a change! I am now cured, and it is a permanent cure- when
feel like kicking some doctor or myself for suffering three years
could have used CUTICURA remedies. H. JENKINS, Middleboro, Ky*
Complete Treatment $1.25,
Consists of CunccRA Soar (25c.), to cleanse the skin of crusts and scales and soften
the thickened cuticle, C vticcba Ointment (50c.), to instantly allay itching, irnta >
and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and Cvticcra Kbsolvkxt (50c.), to coo
cleanse the blood. A SrxoLR Set is often sufficient to cure the most torturinffi
figuring skin, scalp, and.blood humors, rashes, and irritations, with loss of 1 l,r - ^
throughout the world. Potteu ^
physicians, hospitals, and all else fail. Sold
Chem. Corp., Sole Props Boston. “How to Cure Itching Humors, ru
and ,
Millions ot Women Use Cuticura Soap
Exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing these
crusts, scales, and dandruff, and hands, the stopping the of of falling baths hair, for for annoying softening, r ', ^flam
healing red, rough, and sore In form . ieE for
mations, and chaflugs, or too free or offensive perspiration, In the form (0 gg*s»
ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic purposes wh toilet bath,
themselves to women, and especially mothers, nnd for all the purposes ol , n r
Induce those who have once use ose «nd
and nurserr. So amount of persuasion can scalp, an<1 narr ln(aoU
other, especially for preserving and purifying the skin, ^ cirr1 .
children. CmccRa Soap combines delicate emollient properties aen refresh- .
CURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients an compared
lng of flower odors. N'o other medicated or toilet soap evereompou , n ,| bands. **
•with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the * kin -'*“ l P! ' with it for»^
toilet however expensive, is to he p e d
other foreign or domestic sosp, it ~®Wnestu 60AT W**
the purports of the toilet, bath, snd nursery Thu. *»t
P mice, via.. Twnn-riTB Certs, jhe mst sMa ewd complexion soap,
baby soap U tht world. “ —,—--------- v ~ ' 1 ”
Kftl/.er’* l»u
ghesBicfa, Jwu
green ^
25c. toiU at r A jG&V SeISs*^?
<b
■
* fsiipiir *
ISaSSl? 2W SfSrKT" £ s)
'
a 5.
Plen*e h pt|* **geia
send this M^ftSEEfrCO^ •«*<*•» $100. ^ retail*
*dr. with
10c. to Salzer.
mnn
m of HtxUciiie. Ml Arch S,l. ruiLui^.' 1 "^