Newspaper Page Text
THROUGH DIXIE.
NEWS OF THE SOUTH BRIEFLY
PARAGRAPHED
Forming 1 an Epitome of Daily
Happening’s Here and There.
Four prisoners overpowered the jailer
at Lexington, Miss., and made their es
cape Saturday.
A mass meeting was held at Norfolk,
Saturday night by t e citizens to expre-s
their gratification of the settlement of the
state debt.
An election was held Saturday in the
second congresional district of Tennessee
fur electing a successor in congrtss to the
late L. (’ Ilnuk The republican can
didate,John C. II >uk,was elec ed.
At Mentoga. Teun., Frid iy. a saw mill
boiler expl ded, insta tly ki ling two
young sons of the propri tor, T. P, bat
tens. A saw dust wheeler hd his le-r
broken and Mr. Batters hud an arm
broken in two pla< es. Portions of the
boiler were thrown three hundred fat.
The Savannah, Florida and W< 3tern
railway and other roads live put on a
through sleeper from Cincinnati to
Tampa, Fla., via Thom-i-ville, and new
trains were put on known as the Louis
ville and Nashville limited, which carry
the sleeper. The tia.n goes to Florida
from Th masville, Ga., over the Mouti
cello branch.
A Nashville dispatch says: The La
dies’ Auxiliary of the confederate home
concluded tin ir work of the chry-anthe
mum fair Suturday and turned over to
the general ng-n 1 of the J fferson Davis
monument fund $ 1.130 net profit. This
added to former sums laised t Nashville,
gives an aggregate of $3,944 raised in
that city. The entire fund amounts to
about thirty thousand dollars.
At a met ting of the stockholders of the
Northeastern railroad, held at Charles
ton, S. C., Friday, a semi-annual divi
dend of 3 per cent was declared. The
reports show the following remarkable
figures: Gross receipts, $734,643; oper
ating expenses, $330,296; taxes, $24,297;
total expenses, $400,594; balance, $274, *•
048, which, with the in erest, dividend,
etc., foots up net earnings aggregating
$311,277.
The phosphate ronvention, which has
been in session at Oca'a, Fa., a j turned
sine die Friday. The only outcome of
its deliberations was an agreement signed
by about twenty-five different companies
and individual minets to go into a com
bination for con troll tig the output and
regulating the sales of the produce, both
hard rock and pebble. It is ibought
that at least twenty five more will sign
the agreemi nt eventually.
The census bulletin of North Carolina
by counties and minor civil divisions
show the population in 1890 was 1,017,-
947, an increase during the decade of
218,19?, cr 15 59 per cent. Of ni ety
six counties, twelve show a decrease. t
Twenty three cities . and towns show a
population of 20,000 or more. The
largest numerical increase in urban popu
lation, ns well ns the largest percentage
of increase, is found in Con
cord, Hcnderso , Wim*ton, Durham,
Reidßville, Statesv lie, Oxford and Salem
all show more th n 100 per cent increase.
In only one town is a decease shown, and
that is v< r slight.
TO HELP THE MINERS 1
In Their Fight J gainst the Convict
Laws of Tennessee.
ANishvnle tlisp tcli says: The Cen
tral L ibor Union, composed of delegate*
from every branch if ortauiz and labor
met Saturday for the purpose of naming
delegates to attend t e meeting of miners
at Newco i b to consider the troubles
growing out of the competition with con
vict labor iu E>st Tennessee.* three dele
gates were se ected and tire following re
solu ions adopt) and :
lies Ived, by the Central Labor Union
of Nashville, That we heartily sympa
thize with the n iners in their present la
bor trouble- and with ad others who come
in competition witfi convict la 1 or, and
will use ail of our influence to seture an
abrogation or modification of the hare
sys ein at the nt xt meeting of the state
legi-lature.
Resolved, That while we sympathize
with the miueiß of E st Tennessee, and
will do all in our pow. r to ps ist them
whi n in trouble, we feel that i o perma
nent good can result iu lawle-sness or in
defiance of the law, either to the miuers
or to o gauiz and labor, but wili naturally
result in a oss of re-pect and sympathy
for our cause. Th refore, we believe
that the best intere-ts of all is to demand
that a conservative < otirse be pursued,
and all interested agree to abide by the
law as it exi-ts, until we can secure leg -
islativc action.
BRITISH EXPORTS
To the United States Show a Decided
Falliug Off.
A London cablegram of Friday says:
The to'ai expors of the United Kingdom
to ihe United Stat< s for three monh
this year were $44,465,841; last year $53,-
329.000, thus showing a falling off of
nearly nine million dollars. Only six of
the twenty-four towns exporting to the
United States sbow an increase of these.
Cardiff heads the list, her exp rts for the
quarier til's year being $5,890 590 as
against $3 055,158 last year. Tinplate
was the pri cipal item, amounting to
$5,638,141. Liverpool follows with an
increase of nearly two and a half millions.
Other towns which show an incresseare
Tunstall, Bristol, Plymouth and South
ampton. L ndon shows the greatest
decrease—over five million dollars.
STRIKING MINERS.
More Trouble Expected in the Indiana
Coal Fields.
Asa result of a miners’ meeting, held
at Washington, David county, Indiana,
Friday night, 500 more miners struck
Saturday morning. This brings the num
ber of mil ers now on strike in Indiana up
to about f'ur th usmd There is great
rejoin ng among the Brnzii miners, as the
Washington coun y men had held out
against all overtnr' B up to the pres -nt
time. While the Indiana miners are idle
this 1 it a< cession o the a rikers’ ranks
will mke the supply of Indiana coal
practically nothing.
Deaf for a Year
Heartny Restored and t'atarrh
Cured by lino I’s **nrsa i>arillo.
"Rochester, N. Y., July 27, 1891.
"Three years ago, as n result of catarrh, I lost my
hearing entirely am! was deaf for more than a year
I tried various things to cure It, ami had se.-. rai
physician*, hut no Improvement was apparent. I
ouuid
Distinr/uiHh .Vo bound.
I Va* Intending putting myself under the care of a
specialist when some one suggested that possibly
Hood's Sarsaparilla would do me some good. I be.
gan taking It without expecting much help. To my
surprise and great Joy I found when I had taken
three bottles that my hearing was returning. 1 kept
on taking
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Till I had taken three more, when I stopped. It is
now over a year, and ! am troubled but very Uttle
with the catarrh. I consider this a very remarkable
case.” Hkuhas Hicks, 30 Carter St. .
Hood's Hi Is. —For the liver and bowels, act
easily yet promptly and efficiently. Price 35c.
[“MOTHERS’
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! To Young
( Mothers
i Nakes Child Birth Easy*
Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain,
; Endorsed by the Leading Physicians.
| Book to “Mothera”mailed FREE.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA, GA.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
“August
Flower”
Perhaps you do not believe these
statements concerning Green’s Au
gust Flower. Well, we can’t make
you. We can’t force conviction in
to your head or med-
Doubtlng icine into your
throat. We don’t
Thomas. want to. The money
is yours, and the
misery is yours; and until you are
willing to believe, and spend the one
for the relief of the other, they will
stay so. John H. Foster, 1x22
Brown Street, Philadelphia, says:
“ My wife is a little Scotch woman,
thirty years of age and of a naturally
delicate disposition. For five or six
years past she has been suffering
from Dyspepsia. She
Vomit - became so bad at last
that she could not sit
Every Meal, down to a meal but
she had to vomit it
as soon as she had eaten it. Two
bottles of your August Flower have
cured her, after many doctors failed.
She can now eat anything, and enjoy
it; and as for Dyspepsia, she does not
know that she pvi-t lmd it.” @
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Buy or sell your Cotton ° n JOiTES
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▼ W W BINGHAMTON. N. V.
SSO FEJVARDIK?
ba<-co than TURF BAVaNA Cuttings In the
fillers of our DON’T brand of c.gais.
WL jag f Sfiß buy a 10 cent Cigar when you
BElgß| R can get as good a one for 5
lL£ lit if Sa ■ cent*, liuny smokers now
US WBW 1 use A Sdj 'TT !u prefer
ence to 10 cent cigars. U I S I
W. B. ELLIN Sc CO.,
WINSTON, NORTH CAROLINA.
• I Eft to SOOO We want a wide-avake honest fc
0 I JU l I 0 L ’J U man or woman in every county H
a ln the U s.,\ o introduce *n aril H|
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MONTH Mi to tow or country. No pat
a , Y. 11 B n ent nedlciiieorc eap lewelrt fg
Splendid opening f>r the light per non. Good job* §§
are ararea -ml 4®a'l wall Inn* for Ukrrt. Even i v w ■
can >arp a few hour* a werk, write ai once to B. F. ■
JOHNSON & CO., Klchmond, Va., for information
about ine thiag oa rnrili -som* tning that will
'Hi HUN UNU l
YOI T N(J OR OLD—why waste time and money
with worthless, expensive remedies, w’hen I will glad
ly send you (sealed) rg -r the prescription of a new
ly discovered reme- ill -L dy which speedily and
permanently cures Lost or Failing Power,lmpotency,
Wasting, Weak ness, Lack of Development, Emissions,
Varicocele? Write at once and te your own physician.
CiiAS* E GALB, Box 24, Marshall. Mich.
BALD JESS PREVENTED
in registered package on receipt of two dollars.
Send Money Order or Registered Letter. A complete
Htop put to Growiug Bald after three days’
use. EASILY AITLIED WITH A BRUSH. Pamph
let scut with the Compound, giving full information
how to stop and how to avoid baldness.
W. VV. WOOD,
Eibridgc, Onondago Cos., New York.
an ARPl end toT I,ow I Made a
L MUCIIIO House and Lot in One
■a >’car. Our copyrighted methods free to *ll
J desiring a Home, or business chance $75
Hu to SIOO Monthly. Teachers and 1 adies find
Sj big pay for spare hours. Treasury Fur
m chasing Agency, 27 4th Ave., hew York.
nil B K,£!:: fnd Whiskey Habit* -
Eg • jb ’AJt p g w cured at home witn
t H ‘-V i4 fill ran out pain. Book of par-
B aw dWB ticulars sent B-'RKE.
&Jh;■nanuauß U.M.WOOLLEY.M.D
Allantn.Ua. giCl-u Whitehall 8t
PENSIONS~Due all SOLDIERS! H. dis
n led Fr Kf ir iucre >so. kt* pcti>o *Tp*rienc€,
White fo l,.ws A. \V. M,i UKMK K &
SUN’S, W/.SHINIITOS. D C. & CINCI NATI. O.
N° P®ion. No Fes.
rtnoiun JOSEPH 11. II ENTER,
*_ WASniNGTOK, - P. C.
" A Unique Corner or the Earth."—Chas. Dudley
Warner writes of Coronado Beach, Calif. Hotel del
Oaronado,—largest seaside retort Uoktl is the world.
household matters.
OMELET.
A nice omelet is made from five csrgs,
one cup of milk, one tablespoonful of
butter, and one tablespoonful of flour.
Melt the butter, beat the yolks of the
ewgs and add the milk, a little salt and
the flour; beat the whites and last
ly (see that tiie butter is melted, but not
browned,as that would spoil the omelet),
pour in spider and cook on top of stove
until neatly done, then set in oven to
brown. Take out with'pancake turner
on a warm plate. Serve as soon as done
if you wish them prime.
TO PREPARE MUSTARD.
To prepare mustard for the table take
two tablespooufuls of mustard and one
teaspoonful of flour. Mix this smooth
with a little cold vinegar. Mix togethei
four tablespoonfuls of vinegar, one table
spoonful of olive oil, one teaspoonful of
sugar, one teaspoonlul of salt and one of
black pepper. Set this on the stove in a
suitable dish and let it come to a boil,
stirring it all the time. Pour the boil
ing mixture into the other, stir it well,
and as soon as it is cold it i3 ready for
use, —Washington Star.
FRIED CHICKEN WITH OYSTERS.
Joint a tender chicken, season rather
highly; sprinkle over very finely
minced parsley and onion, a little table
oil and a teaspoonful of lemon juice; let
them lie in this marinade, turning every
now and then for several hours; then dip
in flour and fry until brown and tender.
Lay out the pieces as fast as done, keep
ing hot in a covered-earthen dish. Whet
all are cooked, if there is more than a
tablespoonful of fat in the pan turn the
rest out, add a large tablespoonful of
butter, a gill of hot cream and a pint of
thoroughly drained oysters. Season
lightly with salt and pepper, and as soon
as the beards of the oysters begin to
open, by which time the gravy will have
thickened slightly, pour all over the
fried chicken. In frying the chicken
care must be taken that there are uo
burnt particles left in the pan, as this
would spoil the delicious flavor of the
oysters and cream sauce. —American
Agriculturist.
LIME AS A FRUIT PRESERVATIVE.
Any discovery simplifying or making
more possible the preservation of green
fruit is of very great moment to our fruit
growers, dealers and shippers. A Mr.
Monclar, of Mandals, France, has dis
covered that common lime is a rare pre
servative of fruits and - vegetables. His
first discovery was made by layering a
lot of diseased potatoes with two cubic
metres of powdered lime. He found
that after the potatoes had been in con
tact with the lime for fourteen months
they were in as perfect a state as when
dug. He then layered a lot of beets,carrots
and onions in the same material, and
found that tney too kept in a perfectly
fresh state for months. In experiment
ing with fiuits he found that grapes kept
perfectly for seyi and one-half montn?
and were taken out iu an astonishing
state of freshness. Five kinds of apples
and several varieties of winter pears aud
quinces gave the same result.
The lime used tor these experiments,
which had slack™ itself in an open shed,
explains the California Fruit Grower ,
was tu a finely powdered form aud was
intended to be applied to the ground as
a fertilizer; but other experiment!
showed that unslacked lime was just as
good for the purpose as that which had
been slacked, neither seeming to have any
effect upon the fruit itself further than
to prevent any exterior decay. Duchess
pears failed to keep more than one and
one-half months on account of their dis
position to rot at the core. The use of
lime for this purpose prevents the ab
sorbing of unpleasant odors by the fruits,
keeps away moisture, gives them an
equitable temperature aud destroys any
microbes which may have found a rest
ing place upon the skin or stem. It is
also a preventive against damage by rats
or insects. Of course, in storing the
fruit under treatment, temperature and
dryness of the air should be considered.
The lime is not injured by being used to
preserve the fruit, and is just as good
for application to the land after being
used as before. —New York World.
RECIPES.
Fried Green Tomatoes—Slice full
grown, green tomatoes; soak in salt and
water half an hour, drain, roll in cracker
dust; fry in boiling lard, sprinkle with
salt. Serve hot.
Clam Soup—Chop fine a pint of round
clams; put in a stewpan with a pint of
water, and when it boils add the same
amount of milk and boil upagaia; sea
son with butter, pepper and salt, and
two crackers rolled fine are to be put in
when the soup is dished.
Oyster Stew—Boil one cup of strained
oyster liquor and half a cup of water.
Skim, add half a teaspoon of salt, half a
saltspoon of pepper, one tablespoon of
butter and one tablespoon rolled cracker.
When it begins to boil, add one quart
of oysters. Boil one minute. Put half
a cup of cream or cold milk into the
tureen,and pour the boiling stew over it.
Corn Soup—Grate the corn from half
a dozen ears; put the cobs in a kettle and
cover with half a gallon of water; let
boil slowly for half an hour, take out,put
in the corn and boil until done. Press
through a sieve, season with salt and
pepper and let simmer. Rub three
tablespoonfuls of butter and two of flour
together; stir into the sou}i, pour in a
pint of hot milk, cook one minute; add
the beaten yelks of two eggs and serve.
Tomatoes With Rice—Scald and peel
three large, smooth tomatoes, Cut them
in halves, scoop out the seeds and juice,
without breaking the pulp. Scald the
juice enough to strain out the seeds. To
the juice add sugar to taste, and mix
with it as much warm boiled rice as it
will absorb; add salt and a little butte”.
Fill the tomatoes with the mixture.
Place each half tomato on a round of
bread, buttered. Pat them in a shallow
pan and bake ten minutes, or until the
bread is browued*
The Wrong Man Found.
Citizeness—“Did you go aud thrash
that editor for printing those things
about you?”
Citizen—“l went to the office, but I
couldn’t find him.”
“Whom did you find (here?”
“No one, but a great bull-necked fel
low who pretended he was responsible for
that article, but I knew fMm bis looks
that he couldn’t write.”—Street & Smith’s
Good News.
Young Lady—“ The astronomers have
found snow on the moon.”
Old Lady—“ That explains it. I never
could make out what that man in the
moon was doing with a bundle of brooms
over his shoulder. They mut be snow
shovels.”—Street & Smith’s Good News.
The Lovell Safety.
A NEW BICYCLE WUICH THE PUBLIC LTKES.
While thousands within the lat dt-rads
have enjoyed the sport of cycling, the fact i<
nevertheless obvious that manv thousands
moie have been de erred from enjoying it in
consequence of the high prices demanded for
a really good wheel.
it remained for the John P. liovell Arms
Company of Boston to change Ibis state of af
fairs. It was last year that the public first be
came aware that i here was anew low-priced
safety bicycle on the market, a wheel strictly
high grade, and equal in every particular to
any manulactured in America or Europe. As
previous to this all manufacturers had
charged a vety large price for a tirst-clas*
wheel, the John P. Lovell Arms Company is
there lore the llret house that has ever offered
tee public such a wheel at a price tha doo
not p ace it beyond the reach of the average
person’s purse, the company that manufac
tures this wheel (the Loveil Diamond >afet>)
is one of the oldest of all the manufacturing
and mercantile houses in New England, hav
ing been established in 1840.
Be-ides being now one of the lending bicycle
firms In the United btate-. the John P. Lovell
Arms Company is and has been for years a
well-known manufacturer and dealer in tire
arms and sporting goods of every description.
on June 13 of last year, the llrm celebrated
its half-century anniversary. The founder of
this enterpri-ing house, Mr. John P. i.ovell,
although over 70 vears of age, is still an im
portant, and active member of this world
famed house.
Wo know of an organ grinder who is so sus
p'c ous that he compels his monkey to carry a
Dell punch,
Many persons are broken down from over
work or lion eaold cares. Brown’s Iron Bit
ters rebui ds the system, aid- digestion, ie
moves excess of bile, and cures malaria. A
spendid tonic for women and children.
High tied—the couple that were married in
a balloon.
Big Fish
Are not caught in a cistern; yet how many
men are spending their time day after day
fishing in a rain-barrel. The man who works
month in and month out on a few acres 01
ground, trying to make it produce enough to
support himself and family, when common
sense and his past experience tell him it
won’t do it, is one of them. The man tvho
works year after year in a shop at *:;o a
month, when his family expenses are s3l, is
another. My friend, you cannot buckle a
seven-and-a-half foot saddle girth around an
eight- oot horse —you cannot bring the ends
together and keep them there without killing
the animal, if your income is not large
enough to keen you and your family, or if you
■eant to save money nnd can't do it on y*our
S resent salary, write to B. F. Johnson & Cos.,
Jchmond, Va., and thev will siow you how
to add i4O or $ 0 a mouth to it; or if you can
pive them all of ynur time they will put you
in a position to establish a paying business of
your own where you can make from $101) to
ISO i per mouth. Don’t wait to turn it over in
your mind a few days. “ITocrastinntion is
the thief of time," and many a golden oppor
tunity slips trom our grasp forever through
the want of promptness, imte them at once.
(STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF XOLEDO, (
Lucas County ; **•
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is tbs
senior partnei of the firm of F. J. Cheney &
Cos. doing business in the City of Toiedo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of SIOO for eacn and every
case of catarrh that cannot be cured Dy the
use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this Uth day of December, A. D., -.880.
i -— l —, A. W. Gleason
•(seal >
’ —. — ’ Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, O.
FC" Sold by Druggists, 75c.
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits nfter first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
bottle free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. Phila.. Pa-
Stanley has proven that the river Nile is
4,100 miles long.
Ladies nee in? a tonic, or children wno
want building up, should take Brown's Don
Bitters, it is pleasant to lake, cures Malaria.
Indigestion, Bilio -ness ami Liver Com
plaints, makes the Blood rich and pure.
Fashions run so much to the decollete that
even the popular gloves are undressed.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 26 • per bottle.
TteYOUirs
The Full Prospectus of Notable Features for 1892 and Specimen Copies will be sent Free.
Brilliant Contributors.
Articles have been written expressly for the coming volume by a host of eminent men and women, among whom are
The Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone—Count Ferdinand de Lesseps Andrew Carnegie. Cyrus W. Field.
The Marquis of Lome. Justin McCarthy, M. P. Sir Lyon Playfair. Frank R. Stockton.
Henry Clews. Vasili Verestcliagin. _ VV. Clark Russell. The Earl of Meath. - Dr. Lyman Abbott.
Camilla Urso. Mrs. Henry M. Stanley, and One Hundred Others.
. The Volume for 1892 will Contain
Nine Illustrated Serial Stories. 100 Stories of Adventure. The Best Short Stories.
Articles of Practical Advice. Sketches of Travel. Hints on Self-Education.
Glimpses of Royalty. Popular Science Articles. Household Articles.
Railway Life and Adventure. Charming Children’s Page. Natural History Papers.
700 Large Pages. Five Double Holiday Numbers. Illustrated Weekly Supplements. Nearly 1000 Illustrations.
“A Yard
nt Roses."
DONALD KENNEDY
Of Roxbury, Mass., says
Kennedy’s Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep-
Seated Ulcers of 40 years’
standing, Inward Tumors, and
every disease of the skin, ex
cept Thunder Humor, and
Cancer that has taken root.
Price, $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the United States
and Canada.
£> i rf* Weak, Nkrvocu, Wretched mortal* .cot
well and keep well. Health Helper
-- leiis Row. 50 cu. a year, Sample copy
Crfc Sr.i J. H. 1) YK. Uliac. N. , .
Punishment iu (lie Time of Elizabeth,
During the life of Queen Hess, in the
matter of punishments, we have entered
upon a time of greater cruelty than pre
vailed under the P antagenets. Men are
boilt and an I women burned for poisoning;
heretics arc still burned—in 1585 one tnus
suffcied for denying the d.vinity of
Ch ist - ears are nail and to the pilloiv and
sliced off for defom ition and seditious
words; long and cruel whippings are in
flicted—in one case ihr nigh Westminster
and London for forgery. An immense
number urn luin.ed every year; the
chronicler Machyn confirm dly sets
down such a fact as that “on this
day XII were hanged at Tyburn, VII
men cud V women.” Mariners were
hanged at low water at Wapping for of
fenses commit led at sea; the good old
cus'om of pill, rizing was maintained
wi h zeal, and the parading of back
slid rs in carts or on li rseback was
kept up.
Thus one woman, for selling fry of fi3h
unlawfully, r de triumphantly through
the town with yariands of fish decorating
her head and shou ders and the tail of the
horse, while o- e went before beating a
brass bason. Another woman wascarriid
ar uud, a dis aff in her hand and a blue
hood on hi r head, f-r a common scold.
A man was simiiady honored for selling
measiy pork; and another, riding with
his head to the animal’s tail, for doing
some hing sinful connected with lamb or
veal.—Walter Besant in H.rper’s.
A Great Comfort.
Conductor—“We have missed the con
nection, and you will have to wait at thie
station six hour-.”
Old Lady (who is a little nervous on
the railroad) —“Well, I’m safe for six
hours anyway.”—New York Weekly.
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs ifl the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in
its action and truly benencitu t* its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 600
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Col
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KV. NEW YORK. 9.V.
ppilllidS— ELY’S CREAM BALM—Cleanses the Nasal i hCTTVl
Passage*, Allays I’ain and Inflammation, Heal* Fo*
FREE TO JAN. I, 1892.
To New Subscriber* who will cat out and end ua tlii* slip with name
and address and 5t.75 we will send The Cotnpnnion Free to .Inn., ISO”,
and for a Full Year from that Dnte. This offer includes the THANKS
GIVING, CHRISTMAS and NEW Y’EAR’S Double Holiday Numbers.
We will also send a copy of a beautiful paintimr. entitled ‘‘A YARD OF
ROSES.” Its production has cost TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS.
Send Check, Poet-offlce Order, or Registered Letter at our risk. Address,
is The YOUTH’S COMPANION, Boston, Mass.
COLDS.
COUGHS. ,
HOARSENESS,
* CONSUMPTION
ALL AFFECTIONS OF THE THROAT AND LUNGS,
TAYLOR’S CHEROKEE REMEDY OP
SWEET GUM and MULLEIN
ts the BEST KNOWN REMEDY.
Ask your druggist or merchantXor it, and take no substitute,
as nothing else can take its place.
BtHESM
*DPVRfr IBM
Big, but bad
the old-fashioned pill. Bad to
take, and bad to have taken. In
efficient, too. It’s only temporary
relief you can get from it.
Try something better. With Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets the benefit
is lasting. They cleanse and regu
late the liver, stomach and bowels,
Taken in time, they prevent trouble.
Iu any case, they cure it.
And they cure it easily; they’re
mild and gentle, but thorough and
effective. There’s no disturbance
to the system, diet or occupation.
One tiny, sugar-coated Pellet for
a laxative three for a cathartic.
Sick and Bilious Headache, Consti
pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks,
and all derangements of the liver,
stomach and bowels are promptly
relieved and permanently cured.
They’re purely vegetable, per
fectly harmless, the smallest, and
the easiest to take —but besides
that, they’re the cheapest pill you
can buy, for they’re guaranteed to
give satisfaction, or your money is
returned. You pay only for the
good you get. This is true only
of Dr. Pierce’s medicines.
DO YOU GROW
VEGETABLES FOR f/ONEY?
OUR VALUABLE New Book, 20c.
Tin; SI OO 1’ it IZEESSA YS, Written
by Practical Market Grdeners and Vegetable
Growers, treats on the following subjects In a
concise and practical manner. •• llow and
what to Grow in the Month for North
ern Markets,” also ‘•L'liltui-eofCab
hnge and Onions with Hints lor Mlorinz
and Marketing:,” making a nest illustrated
volume of 04 pages of vital Interest to every
gr. iwer. MAI LED FREE ON RECEIPT OF on 1 v
•JO cents, IN STAMPS OR SILVER. OU)t
Sf.KD CAI -a LOO UK MAILED FREE. Address,
JOHNSON & STOKES, Seedsmen,
Philadelphia. Pn.
PAPER CUTTERS!
IF THIS MEETS THE EYE OF ANY
Printer, Bookbinder, Lithographer,
Paper Maker or Paper Box Maker,
WHO MAY BE IN WANT OF A FIRST-CLASS
PAPER CUTTER,
HE WOULD SAVE MONEY BY WRITING TO TILB
HOWARD IRON WORKS,
BUFFALO, X. Y„
FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE AND PRICES.
PISO’S CURE FOR
. Consumptives and people
who have weak lungs or Asth
ma, should use Piao’s Cure for
Consumption, it has cured
thousand. . It has not injur
ed one. it is not bad to take,
it is the best cough ayrup.
Sold everrwhere. 85c.
CONSUMPTION.
PATENTS ifc putfcfbooU free*
F'tliC deni'i ipi on and price ot tne rich gricul
turalnud timber lauds of Moreh< use Par isn, ad
dress Secretary Immigration Asso'n, Bastrop, Lt
A. N. U .... Ft >rty-efcht.
This Slip
and $1,75.
In seed of BOOK-KEEPERS, BTERO
QRAPHER3, or any other office help
can be nopptied by addresjinr
BRYM& STRATTON