Newspaper Page Text
Selfith Men.
“Su her husband is a caterer.”
“Yes; lie caters to almost every
thing but her pleasure.”—Philadelphia
Bulletin.
Loyalty ip Hi* Employer.
That young man who conssnt'A to have a
portion o’ bin blood lei out to save his em
ployer, set a remarkable example of heroism.
The incident bhows what power there is in
pood blood. There is only one natural way
lo get good bloud, and that is from the stom
ach. If the stomach needs assistance, try
Hostetter’e Stomach Bitters. This wonder
ful medicine cures dygpeusia, indige t on,
constipation, and mukes rich red blood.
The largest enclosure of deer is said to
be the royal park in Copenhagen, 4200
acres. _
Sec advt. of Smithdeil’s Business Collkos
The blind man doesn’t believe in love at
first sight.
| Half- Sick \
“I first used Ayer’s Sarsaparilla j
! in the fall of 1848. Since then I ,
S have taken it every spring as a 1
; blood - purify in g and r.erve
; strengthening medicine.”
S. T. Jones, Wichita, Kans. 1
.. in— ■■■'■— ■ nuimirwr.
If you fee! run down,
I are easily tired, if your i
| nerves are weak and your [
! blood is thin, then begin
5 to take the good old stand- j
ard family medicine,?
| Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
It’s a regular nerve
lifter, a perfect blood
builder. 51.00 a bottfc. A1! druggists. |
Aili v mir doctor wbrt he thinks of Ayer s ]
SarcApariUr. He knows ail *b?>it this rtt.no. 3
M tl tR-inJly iriedieiiio JjVjllow bi 9 advice aau j
we will be satisfied * „ __
.). C. AYK't Co.© Lowell, Mass. |
Liver Pills
That’s what you need; some
thing to cure your bilious
ness and give you a good
digestion. Ayer’s Pills are
liver pills. They cure con
stipation and biliousness.
Gently Alt druggists.
Want your moustache or beard a benutitui '
brown or rich blacl: ? .Then uae
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
feO CTS. OP DRUGGISTS, OH R. P. Hlt A, CQ. ( Ua%HLA, N I H,
X f for More Than a Quarter of a Century
The reputation of W. L. Douglas $3.00
mid $3.50 shoes for style, comfort and
wear has excelled all other makes sold at
these prices. This excellent reputation has
been won by merit alone. W. L. Douglas
abacs have to give better satisfaction than
other .$3.00 and $3.50 shoes because his
reputation for the best $3.00 and $3.50
shoes must be maintained, The standard
has al ways been placed so high that top
wearer receives more value for his money
in the W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.50
tihoes than he can get elsewhere.
W. L. Douglas sell* more $3.00 and $3.50
shoes than any other two manufacturers. *
* W. L. Douglas $4.00 Oilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
Douglas *3.00 'and *3.30
a ho* a are madti of tho mama high
gratia ieathara uaad In C-- and *6
ahooa and aro fust aa
Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere.
Insist upon having W. L. Douglas shoes
•with name and price stamped on bottom.
How to Order by Hail.— if W. 1.. Douglas
ghee* are not sold in your town, send order direct to
factory. Shoes sent anywhere on receipt of price and
t /vt 1 jj-' 1 21 ets. additional for carriage. My
I ••'■o wuftt-B. 1 custom department wilt make you a
pair that will equal $5 and M rus
(Gi# 11 " y\ tom made shoes, in style, fit and
WJbg.: \ wear Take measurements of
a IS' * O. JA foot as shown on model stare
v S. * style (leaned; siieandwldlh
usually worn; plain i.r
L y-rMKi. JvJf 4. • . c l 0?: heavy, me.l-
B •"' &£ Jr *’© 4is \ luin or light soles.
'j ' J
Fast Tolar Eyelets nsed. “
Catalog free. W. h. Pouglas, itrocktou, Mass.
S9OO TO $ 1500 A YEAV<
We want intelligent Men and Women as
Traveling Representatives or bocal Managers;
salary $9lO to >ISOO a year atvi all expenses,
according to experience and ability. We also
want local representatives; salary $9 to fry a
■week and commission, depending upon the time
devoted. Send stflmp tor full particulars and
■ate position prefered. Address, Dept. B.
THE BELL COMPANY, Philadelphia, Pa.
$75 TO $156 PER nONTH
MADE BY A GENT-I. Elegant Premiums Free.
Address SOOTT REMEDY < 0.. Louisville, Ky.
\S lion you write mention tills paper.
Red Rippsr Hay Press
Fall circla; hors© powsr; simole, cheap and dnr
ah'.i. First prijs© at ©covets State Fair, l**od. 1 sea
ami rtt’ornaienied by dsovfia stst© prison farm
Canvutv, Ski bales per hour. Fully guaranteed.
Pri e, tMO. Manafactui'eS by
SillKli BKOb. St Helena, Oeorgls.
“The Sauce that ia ade W eat Point famana.”
tacILHENNY’S TABASCO,
UsECERTA!K^CURE.iI
IfT,UURre WKIHc Alt till iA~S. 03
|sfl Best Cough Syrup, Tastes ttood. Ueb.KM
Led In time, ttiid by irte. - iwl
i-D.tn j’
IN A MUSTARD GARDEN
SAID TO BE the ONLY ONE IN
THE UNITED STATES.
Mustard riant a. a Salad lncidents
Which Attend the Planting and Har
vesting of the Crops—Tlieir Deleteri
ous Effect Upon the Soil.
Lompoc, iu Santa Barbara County,
California, grows mustard for the
whole country. The sauce piquant of
a nation is compressed iu that one
county, and in the spring the fields of
brilliant canary yellow and of-Drown
are sights for tourist eyes, as the
pungent odor of millions of mustard
flowers is grateful to their nostrils.
Iu this region 2000 acres are culti
vated to the seed, the industry em
ploying about 200 farmers No one
employs himself exclusively In culti
vating the plant, because of Its refusal
to yield two successive crops upon the
same land. Accordingly the mustard
raiser can only devote a part of liia
l'ann to It each season. The land from
which lie harvested his crop this year
must next year be planted to beans
or barley, corn, pumpkins or beets.
Indeed, results show that it pays to
skip two years in planting mustard
and only turn the soil to its use every
third season, Wliat active principle
there is iu llie soil that la withdrawn
by this exacting plant to the land's
impoverishment has not yet been de
termined. When it Is (solved, however,
and the salt or other chemical neces
essary to supply to the soil the ex
tracted ingredient is identified, un
doubtedly the growing of mustard will
become a prominent industry in Cali
fornia.
At present It is a comparatively un
known Industry, though mustard lias
been raised la Lompoc Valley for
nearly eighteen years. Attention was
first drawn to the possibility of grow
inig it by the abundance of wild
mustard on the hills and in the valley
sweeps through many parts of Santa
Barbara County.
The land selected for mustard grow
ing lies in the middle of the valley and
along the banks pf the Santa Ynez ,
River. The soil is deep sediment, ;
dark and almost entirely without
grit. Some mustard is grown ou a
light, sandy loam, but the heavier soil
Is preferable, ns it not only produces
larger crops, but Is not so feeble after
the crop is removed, Indications of
rain are important, ns it. js almost use
less to sew mustard for growing dur
ing a dry winter. It requires plenty
pf water and cool weather iu the rip
ening and pod-filling season. It is for
iliis reason that the Lompoc district
is so adapted to its growth; being
close to the sea, it is visited during
much of the year by heavy fogs, which
roll in (every night and precipitate
little rains in themselves, besides keep
ing the hot sun away from the land
and providing the coolness sp much re
quired by the mustard.
The soil being selebtcd, It Is broken
op immediately after the first ralu
of the ppasou. It Is cultivated from
time to time Uf keep It open and to
keep the weeds and grass down until
about the middle of January, tyhen
It is shown to brown, called also
| Trieste, mustard. If It is proposed to
plant it to tbs yellow variety the sow
ing may be deferred until March,
The seed Is sown broadcast, with the
hand, from three and one-half to four
pounds being distributed to the acre.
It is then harrowed iu the ordinary
| way. The mustard presents a pretty
1 sight while growing, - especially w hen
' young, and at this stage it makes pn
1 excellent salad, having a pleasant,
pungent flavor, The white variety Is
often sov,'u in England for mustard
greens, which are used In place pf
spinach, and is also used as food for
sheep after the turnip and rape crops
have proved failures, the plant being
of rapid growth and the profender
fairly nourishing And good. The
Lompoc crops, however, are never
turned to these uses, the ultimat# pro
duct being the only thing in view; as
th b.'tdvn variety produces the most
per acre morp Jand is grown to It than
to the yellow'.
The mustard-stalk is stra\y
growlug from three to five feet }u
height and bearing its characteristic!
flowers. It bears an oblong pod from
an Inch to several inches in length,
and contains one row of seeds. When
the plant is mature and the seeds are
ripe, the hull of the pod becomes dry
and shell-like, and the stalk is very
brittle.
The harvesting is done with a self
raking reaper. This cuts the stalks
and throws them up in bunches, where
they are left to cure in tbcJftjV* the
gathering taking place Inßf' sum
mer, when the fogs have
When dry the stalks are collected in
header wagons and are hauled to
some central place, where they are
dumped upon a large burlap sheet,
50x50 feet in size. Here the stalks
are run over by a large and heavy
roller, drawn by two horses. These
rollers are cf two patterns, one con
sisting of a drum about ten feet long
and four feet high, revolving upon au
axle fixed in a frame to which the
horses are hitched, the other being
u series of half a dozen disks, separ
ated from each other by about two feet
of space, these beiug adjusted on an
axle in a frame as in the other. Upon
both of these instrument* the driver
sits and the disk roller carries two
men.
The roller having thoroughly gone
over and broken up the stalks, the
straw is then raked off with a hand
lake and left upon the sheet, a mass of
seed and chaff. This is quickly,heaped
into a pile by simply lifting-,up the
edges of the cloth and turning its con
tents toward the centre. A fan is
then brought into requisition and the
pile run through. This separates the
light, loose material from the heavier
seed, which falls to the bottom and is
received by another jart of the doth.
The produet is then the merchant
able seed. It is fine stuff, looking al
most tike grains of guirpowder and re
minding one of tbe biblical parable
which declares it to be the “least of all
seeds; but v. ben it is grown it is the
greatest among lierbst” It is shoveled
into sacks, which hold from ninety to
ninety-six pounds eacli, and is then
shipped mostly to San Francisco, al
though some goes East. —San Fran
cisco Chronicle.
Submarine Sifrualinjf.
Of the recently exploited system of
submarine signaling, the successful
demonstration of which marked the
last days iu the career of the distin
guished electrical inventor, Professor
Elisha Gray, it has been said that “it
endows those who go down to t lie sea
In ships with anew sense.” A sub
merged bell struck electrically at one
station can be heard through the elec
trical receiver (submerged from the
deck of a steamer) at a distance of
twelve miles in open sea. Even at
twelve miles the sound received is
sufficient to give a practicable warn
ing signal. In operating this system
seven keys connected by wires are
placed on a keyboard similar to that
of a typewriter. The message is
spelled out on these keys according
to a prearranged system. The sim
plest mode of hearing those submerged
bell signals on board ship is to go be
low Into the hold of the vessel, as
close to the keel as possible, and sim
ply listen without any apparatus
whatever. At a distance of a mile or
more the sound of the bell may be
distinctly hear by the unaided ears.
It comes through the water and passes
through the sides of the ship into the
atmosphere of the bold. Placing one
end of a wooden rod against the skin
of the ship, the other being held
against the ear, the sound Is heard at
even a greater distance. The observer
can hear the bell signals at a distance
of three miles by using a common tin
ear-trumpet screwed on to the end of
a piece of gaspipe, the mouth of the
trumpet being sealed by a tin dia
phragm. For the reception of signals
over much longer distances, up, say,
to twelve miles, an electrical receiver
is employed.
Foods For tlie Summer Dirt.
poods rich In carbohydrates are tq
be selected 111 preference to those
abounding in fat and proteine for the
summer diet, according to Captain Ed,
ward L. Munson, assistant surgeon of
the United States Army. The car
bohydrates aro most fihymdant ip
sweet potatoes, lima beans, white po
tatoes, green corn, parsnips, string
beans, onions, green peas beets, tur
nips, squash and cabbage. Tapioca
also contains a large proportion of the
camp material. Of the fatty proper
ties which are the most heating,
chicken contains only ten per cent, and
most fish less than five per cent. Be
cause most meats comprise a large pert
ten (age pf oily substance, less should
be paten iq summer than at other
times during (he yegr. The foods CPug
posed largely of proteine are the leaq
meats, eggs, cheese, entire wheat,
graham flour, oatmeal, dried beaus and
peas and cocoa. Captain Munson de
clares that fat is a heating food of the
highest .degree, and in consequence
should give place in summer tq sugars
and starches. A hundred parts pf fat,
he says, produce as much heat as 232
parts of starch pr sugar cane,
Uove on the Force.
The miniature b r 9 ocll fa< J has its
humorous side, Th&t "miniatures" are
sometimes as 1)1 g as butter plates—
and, oh! the faces of tljena! A girl
rode uptown in a Sixth avenue elec
tric car yesterday with one pf the
brooches under her pretty, diulpied
Chin, She was a sensible-looking girl,
too, but her feeling for the esthetic
proprieties was evidently pupab,
The brooch w-as as bag us a halUdob
lar, and out pf its round gold frame
glowered the face of pne of : ‘thc
finest," helmet on head, buttons on
coat, his b’g shoulders reaching from
side to side of the “miniature.” One
could see his number as gs his
profession, and of course, his poi>
trait would never have achieved the
distinction of pinning a pretty girl's
collar if he had not beep her sweet
heart,
ghe couldn’t have advertised her
romance more loudly If she had been
a sandwich man,—New York Commer
cial Advertiser.
When to Wind :i Watch.
It is better to wind your watch in the
morning than in the evening, because,
after you have wound it, the spring is
kept tight for some hours, and is grad
ually relaxed during the remainder of
the twenty-four, Thus by winding it
in the morning you have the spring
tight during the day and while you are
on the move; and at night, when the
spring is comparatively relaxed, your
watch remains quite still. You see,
the chances are that if you allow
the spring to be relaxed during the
day your w-atch will not keep such
good time. But whether you wind it
every morning -or every night, bo
sure you do so at regular intervals,
that is to say, have a stated time for
doing so—and stick to 'ft.—London
Express.
The Editor’s Marriage.
For the first time we were married
Wednesday, We have contemplated
tills step for p long time, but lack of
funds has always prevented, until we
finally decided to get married and
trust to Providence for the rest. The
subscription rates of the Record wiil
remain at the same price. Only the
immediate relatives were present at
the ceremony. Our views on the
mouey question will remain the same,
only we need more of it. Will go to
housekeeping in the Asquith home, in
Second street.—Muscotah (Kan.) llec-
SURGERY V6£JTH A MATCH.
Painless Operation That Surprised a Clerk
In a Book Shop
An aged, well-dressed man, with
white side whiskers and a general ap
pearance of substantial prosperity and
eminent respectability, stepped into the
retail store on Fifth avenue of a book
publisher the other day and asked one
of the young clerks in a confidential
undertone:
“Have you a match?”
“Certainly, sir,” replied the young
man, producing a handful of lucifers
from his vest pocket, “but you will per
mit me to say that it is against the
rules to smoke in this shop.”
“Oh, that’s all right,” replied the old
gentleman, amiably, “I never smoke.”
With that he began to fumble in his
pockets. Not finding what he wanted,
he asked the clerk for the loan of a
kr.ife. Then he lit the match, blew it
out immediately and began to sharpen
the burned end into a point.
“Ah, I see you need a toothpick,” re
marked the clerk, as he watched the
whittling process.
The old gentleman made no reply, but
when he had put a nice point to the
match he again spoke.
“Perhaps,” he said, “you have a quiet
place where I could sit dow r n for a few
moments without being observed?”
The clerk, wondering what the old
gentleman might ask for next, politely
led the way to a corner of the store
fitted with easy chairs for the benefit
of such patrons of the firm as might
want to glance over a book before buy
ing it. The old gentleman sat down
and without a moment’s hesitation roll
ed up the left leg of his trousers to a
poin above the knee. Then, using the
back of the knife as a hammer, with
a few well-directed blows he drove the
natch into his knee. Then, readjust
ing his trousers, he handed the knife
back to the astonished young man and
said:
“I am very much obliged to you. You
stc I have a wooden leg, and one of the
pms holding it together fell out. The
match will do very nicely until I can
get home. If you happen to be over in
Newark and have anything the matter
\>!th your leg, just step into my office
and I shall be glad to assist you,"
Then, as he handed the clerk a card
bearing the name of a prominent finan
cier in Newark, lie smiled, bowed po
litely and walked out, —New York
Times,
STEADILY OCCUPIED.
‘‘lt has been said that millionaires are
most unhappy through having nothing to
occupy their minds, but my friend, Der
rick D'Oily has not found himself lack
ing an occupation since he became rich.”
“No?”
“No; he is trying to get next to society
ways, and after making a string of
blunders one day, he spends the next
wondering what he ought to have done.”
—San Francisco Bulletin,
TALLULAH FALLS EXPOSITION
Ono Fare IlourulTrip From All Points
la Georgia
Aeoount Blue Bldge and Tallulah Fulls
Exposition Sept. 17th, 18th and 19th, For
Information apply to R. R, ticket agent or
W, 8. Erwin, Secretary, Tallulah Falls, Ga.
A single American firm has rented six
teen shops in Yiennft, Austria, to sell
Yankee-made shoes.
Pptnasi Fadeless Dyes do not spot, streak
Of give Tour goods an unevenly dyed appear
ance, Sold by all druggists,
Qnly 116 passengers on British shipq
last year lost their lives through ship;
wreck.
A horse drawing light loads can average
twenty miles a day for twenty years.
now’s Tiii j
Wo offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure,
F, J. Chaney A Cos., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F, J. Che
ney for the laat 15 years, and believe him per
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm,
W*T A Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio,
Waldixo, Kinnan A Mabvin, Wholesale
Druggist*, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system, Price, 75c. per bottie.
Spid by all Druggiets, Testimonials free,
Hall’s Family Pills are the best,
Germany has 24,000 friendly societies
and clubs the United Kingdom 22,000;
France only 8000,
Hrat for Iho Bowels,
No matter what ails you, headaohe to a
Maoer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put right, Casoabets help nature,
cure you without a gripe or pain, produce
easy natural movements, cost you just 10
cents to ptart getting your health back, Cas
cabets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up
in metal boxes, every tablet has C, C. C.
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
President Harper announces that the
University of Chicago has begun to es
tablish preparatory schools in Europe.
Are Your Eyes Weak or Sorb?
If so, use Juo, It. Dickey’s Old Reliable Eye
water. It will clear and soothe the sorest eye.
Don’t hurt —feels good. Soots Dickey Drug Cos.,
Bristol. Teun. •
Klondike’s gold output for the year es
timated at $20,000,000.
See advertisement of EE-M Catarrh Cure In
another column the best remedy made.
Herman Elegan, of St. Louis, Mo., has
constructed a Turkish bath house to be
run as a trolley car.
FITS pormanen ily cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day’6 use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 831 Arch St., Phlla. Pa
In one sense of the word a Chinese
laundryman is a man of iron.
Mrs, Winslow’s .SoQthing Syrup for children
teething, soften th 9 gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cqres wind colic, 23c a bottle
The population of Norway is about
2,200,000 souls.
riso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used
for all affections of throat and lung*.—Wm.
O. Endsley, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10,1900.
The German army includes more than
10,000 musicians-
A Chance For Carnegie.
“It’s wonderful nowadays how much
money is given away to the utterly
helpless and deserving.”
“Isn’t it? It wouldn’t be surprising
if some one endowed the Democratic
party.”
Reason For Rejoicing.
Willis —You seem to have a good
opinion of the faith cure.
Wallace —Well, why shouldn’t I? It
cured me of the patent medicine habit.
Is the oldest and only business college in Va. own
ing its building—a grand new one. No vacations.
I,adies & gentlemen. Bookkeeping,Shorthand,
Typewriting, Penmanship, Telegraphy, &c.
Leading businets college south of the Potomeo
river. '—Pfiila. stenographer. Address,
G. M, Smithdeal, President. Richmond. Va.
CURES CAT A RRH, HAY FEVER,
ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS
AND COLDS.
The EE=M Catarrh Cure
A pleasant smoking preparation which posi
tively cures these diseases The greatest med
ical discovery of the age. W arranted to cure
Catarrh and the only known positive remedy
for Hay Fever—purely vegetable. Smokers of
tobacco will find this a satisfactory substitute.
For persons who do not use tobacco the com
pound without tobacco is prepared, carrying
same medical properties and producing same
result-*. One Box, one month’s treatment,One
Dollar, postage prepaid. v.N-M Rl’A-’G. <;o.,
57 S. It road Mrtwt, Atlanta, Gi.
“NEW RIVAL” FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELXS
outshcot all other black powder shells, because they are mads
better and loaded by exact machinery with the standard brands of
powder, shot and wadding. Try them and you will be convinced.
ALL ♦ REPUTABLE DEALERS * KEEP ♦ THEM
WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE, Macon, Ga. IT4A^HI^S:
A Diploma From it is High Honor. Its Graduates are Everywhere.
One of the few high grade Institutions of the South. A quarter of a million dollars
invested in buildings. Ail modern conveniences. Ideal climate. Proverbially healthful.
All Literary Courses of a high order, nud Conservatory advantages in Music, Art and
Elocution. Literary Tuition anu board, including laundry, only $200.00 per year. Fall
Term begius September 18, 1901. For catalogue and full in torn-at ion, address
J. VV. ROBERTS, A. M., D. D., President.
Prevented by Shampoos of CUTICURA SOAP
and light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of
emollient skin cures. This treatment at once
stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and
dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces,
stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots
with energy and nourishment, and makes the
hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy
scalp when all else fails,
MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP
Assisted by Cuticuka Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and 1 beautify
ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and tho
Stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing rod, rough,
and sore hands, for baby rashes, Itchings, and chafmgs, and for all the pur
poses of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women U3O Cuticura
Soap In the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and
excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, In the form of washes for
ulcerative weaknesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily sug
gest themselves to women and mothers. No amount of persuasion can
induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautiflers
to use any others. Cuticura Soap combines delicate emollient properties
derived from Cuticura, the great skin cure, with tho purest of cleansing
ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odours. No other medicated
soap is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying
the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap,
however expensive, is to be compared wiLh it for all the purposes of the
toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines, in One Soap at One J*Bicq,
the best skin and complexion soap, and the best toilet apd baby soap In
the world.
Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour,
i# Consisting of Cuticura. Soap, to cleans* the skin of crusts ana
WISH SII infill IT® scales ana soften the thickened cuticle; Cuticura Oiwpmbwt, to
Si 8. Hla B 8 H ifl Instantly allay itching, Inflammation, and .Irritation, ana soothe
and heal; ui.cfCUTICimA It KSOI.VKNT to cool and cleanse the blood,
-j- I. r r T A Single Set Is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, fits tig.
• fit- SKI uring, Urbina, bu- ning, and scalv skin, scalp, and blood humours,
rashes, ttchlngs.and Irritations, with lons of hair, when all else falls. Sold throughout the
world, British Depot: F. Newbery & Sons, 27 Charterhouse Sq., London, E. C. I’ortKfi
Duutt AND Cuemicajl, CORPORATION, Sole Props., Boston, C. S. A.
n m it. r. ease AND UHDER KM
bepotlt, Guarantee
(L/ wctic&nd/
300 FREE SCHOLARSHIPS. BOARD AT
COST. Write Quick to OA.-ala T
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ASTHMA*MAY FEVER
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ie) FREE TRIAL BOTTLE
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Rtit/ onk ~
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graph College, Louisville. Ky., open the whole
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Mention this P finer In v ' rUir,, J lO advertiser j
UIV.UIUII 11113 I Ujn.l ANU _., hirty-slx-1901