Newspaper Page Text
Good Maimers in Children.
It is no wonder that there are so
many ill bred men ami women in‘the
world when one sees the lack of pains
taken by parents to instruct their lit
tle ones in forms of table and social
etiquette that are ho easily taught to
the pliable infant mind, but which,
left unnoticed, are soon supplanted by
actions that become bad habits jn a very
short time.
It is no unusual sight to behold a
child drinking from its saucer with no
word of admonition from the mother
or nurse who sits near by. A thirsty
little one will drink from a cup in
which there is a spoon, and later years
will see no harm in continuing the
practici Many a child eats with his
knife, and vet how easily could the
fork or spoon be substituted in its
place if the parents gave but n tiny
bit of Attention to this branch of thief
chid Ten’s education.
Selfishness is fostered so easily
through a lack of watchfulness. The
gentler courtesies that count for so
much are not instilled in childhood,
and in later years the man or woman
is regarded a - a bon*. Good clothes
are not everything. liven good health
is not the one point desirable in a
child’s makeup. Good manners should
be added to health and attire in order
to gain a perfeet ensemble that, counts
for so much in the world’s judgment.
No one can estimate liow great a
laytor'in life is the possession of good
manners. They are the open sesame the
to the best of society. They are
hall mark of the gentleman or lady,
but they must be acquired in infancy.
—New York Tt legratu.
The If fi ll trnli’s Dress.
The rich man among the Arabs
dresses rilffdy. His shirt is of fine
linen. His inside vest is buttoned,
the outside one worn loose. A long
paletot often takes the place of the
latter. It is cut part way down from
the neck, and the loose armholes allow
the arms to be held in or outside.
The wide trousers are hound about the
waist by a rich scarf. Over all is fre
quently worn the long loose tunic, cut
V shape at the neck, and with short
sleeves -low down. The hands are fre
quently kept inside—in winter for
warmth and an Arab reaches out from
the V at the neck fer anything lie
wants handed him with a peculiarly
limited motion which at first you fail
to comprehend. The burnoose is ail
out-of-doors garment, and the fez may
or may not huvo the turlmn cloth.
The swell wears European socks,
and his slippers, usually trodden down
at the heel by the common or cureless,
are handsomely embroidered or of line
morocco, red or yellow. The calf is
liukod. Parts of this dress are drop
pod at intervals according to the
wealth or habit. There aro few per
sons more really magnificent than a
well dressed Arab sheik or a man of
wealth. In our duys of business suits
which cloak the godly and ungodly
alike the dress is uncommonly would attrac
tive—-on an Arab. That it suit
our habits one will scarcely allege.
Rii$ the trousers have one manifest
advantage. They do not, cannot, bag
at the knee .—('olonel T. A. Dodge,
U. A’. A., in fltir/»r'i<.
Dainty Splashers.
In a summer cottage quite the effec
tive feature of every bedroom was the
washstund splasher. A wide piece of
cottage drapery, shirred on a slender
gilt rod ami suspended l»y white rib
bou bands, formed the background of
the toilet stand, falling to the floor
and coming well out on both sides.
The protection of the delicate wall
paper was perfect, and the grace f ul
banners imparted an airy effect that
added much to the prettiness of the
rooms.—AYic lor A- TVme*.
Stock From Boasts.
Just before the roast is done pour
into the pun in which it is cooking
about a pint of hot water. Remove
the roast and turn the gravy into a
dish. When it is cold, there will be
found a supply of pure, rich meat
stock ready to flavor sauces or to im
prove soup stock.
A Polite Dog,
Mother—“Did you thank the gentle
man who carried you iicross thccrowd
©d street?"
Wee Son—“1 tried to, but 1 didn't
kuow what to suy — the words wouldn't
come somehow; but I guess it's all
right, ’cause my dog wagged his tail
enough for Imtli of us."
WHILE IN THE WAR
1 waa lakou ill with *pl
___ 3| \ n*l-l‘Tir. 1 iu U bod.
vrosconflniHl to my
fQ* fi (•‘““'a Lx Juomhs. 1 AfT.r
iC\ r /‘™ .rn. «r misery » >;”m
i/ ft aoieTct^i' sa^pM-jiia. | ar.hi Kot »
Ur Wh~.i rr . ' i'Vm »-Un"aa.i
L»vs n.vi sine* Irs’h
troubled with my old npU mv" Jas. A.
" M M '
Hoods s, ;>Cures
PUliiurv lit or u (YOU jW box.
jswr's f intutf
A remniy which.
If uacl by " I’n
m about painful to rape etc;,'
it the ordeal
attendant n|x>ti
Child-birth, prowrs
V an Infaillbie a
\ /..J^ - fcfor.andob
the torture* ofooto
.AA v*.--' '<. }'/ 8 Cv-*™ent. ti.c darker.v loaaanlt.^ than
. ^
V w to K tU mother an.l
£_■ Ajd y child. dru*Klai» Sold Seat by all by
? ” eiprcaa on twooii t
* s of price, t I-JM per
botUe, chars** l -w>
jwld.
MtAOmiO RXGUUtTOa CO.. Arcanra. G*.
A STORM’S FORY.
Fearfn; Jjwoc Wrongbt Along the SontH
Atlantic Coast
Savannah Torn anil Sorrow-Stricken,
Havoc at Other i'oints.
A Savannah special says: Almost on
the anniversary of 11881, Savannah wa*
swept Sunday night by one of those
verest storms it has ever known. The
storm, which had been predicted by
the weather bureau for several days,
began early in the afternoon and in
creased from then on until it reached
the climax between ll and 12 o’clock
ypinday night, having blown for eight
hours in a terrific hurricane. It be
gan raining early in the morning, but
only in gusts. After the first fall it
ceased entirely for several hours, and
did not begin again until afternoon,
Then the work of destruction began
and lasted until the storm had spent
its force. At midnight all the wharves
along the river front and Ocean Steam
ship company and Savannah, Florida
umi Western railway wharves were
under water and the tide was still ris
ing rapidly. daylight Mon
A view nf tlie city at
day morning revealed a scent; of wreck
and ruin that surpassed that after the
great hurricane of 1B81. The streets
were impassable from the debris.
Fallen trees, twisted roofs, masses of
brick, fenoes and broken limbs au<l
branches of trees, were piled across
the sidewalks and in the squares, and
broken wires hung in every direction.
It is impossible at present to estimate
the damage, as the result of the.storm,
but it was very general, and it is safe
to say that it will go up in the hun
dreds of thousands, and perhaps high
er. Nearly everyone, if not quite all
the property owners in the city, have and
been damaged to some extent,
some to the extent of thousands.
FIFTY MISSING.
The list of fatalities is gradually
growing, and it is impossible to tell to
what extent it will go. Several bod
n s of drowned persons were picked up
during the morning, anil searches are
now being made for others who are
missing. Every hour seems to bring
some m w s ory o aim i as a n sit
n in s orm.
l ourteen people are known to be
i i in mu or y or i v o u rs an n
,
pur i i missing, am i is suppose! , as
not .ing has been heard from them,
that their bodies will be found later.
A DOZEN VESSELS WRECKED.
Twelve barks and barken tines which
were anchored at quarantine station
wore blown high and dry upon the
marsh, and some of them were carried
by the storm across the marshes on to
an island two miles distant from the
station. One of the vessels at Tybeo
was completely capsized and three of
the clubhouses on the island were
blown entirely down. Others were
flooded and tho people sought shelter
whorever they could. The wires arc
nil down and .Savannah is almost shut
off from telegraphic communication.
QUARANTINE DEMOLISHED.
The ruin at quarantine is iiumens
Urnblo. Nothing is standing whore
one of the finest stations on the south
Atlantic was located except the doc
tors’ house, and how this weathered
the fearful gale is miraculous; the
wharves aro gone, tho new fumi
gating plant which has cost the city
SO much . money is in the bottom of ,
those., and nine vessels which were
waiting there for release to come to
tho city are high and dry in
tho marsh, and no doubt will bo total
wrecks. The Gosnino was the only
vessel which managed to keep afloat.
FOURTEEN DROWNED. !
The tug Paulsen arrived in tho city
at 5 o’clock Monday afternoon. She
brought up about sixty passengers
from Tybeo. Mr. Rovers, one of them,
stated that four negroes engaged in
clearing the r-’l'oad tracks were
drowned. It is reported that eight of
the crew of a terrapin sloop which
went ashore on tho south end were
drowned.
HAVOC ON TYIIKE.
The Hotel Tybeo was eonsiderably
damaged. Her verandas are gone and
so are the bathhouses. Tho Knights
of l’vthias clubhouse was washed
away. Two of tho cottages of tho
Cottage Club aro gone. The Butler
house is gone. Mr. Starr’s house
was washed into tho woods. Tho
Ivauehe aud Humidor clubhouses were
wrecked. The railroad track is clean
ed out. Henry Green's house was
burned. George Bossoll's cottage was
swept out to sea. The north end was
practically cleaned out. The water
swept with tremendous force over this
., ar t 0 { the island, railroad tracks be
ing carried from 200 to 500 feet.
ill fatkd CHARLESTON.
A Charleston special says: While
**»© record of terror and ruin wrought
bv the great disaster of 1885 remaius
nnbroken thTtSA Charleston “ has airain stood
,, atn a cvchme foumlatte” which hM
tWvddUitvteher
stones. The damage to property life can
not be told and the lorn of is un
known.
The eitirens awoke Monday morn
ing and ga.ed upon innumerable wi
deuces of the hnrrieane which swept
over the city teunday afternoon and
night. CpriHitevl trees, fallen roofs,
and ahantie. were found everywhere.
V veritable cveloue with all the ter
row which the word has for the people
of that section, swept up the coast and
acr> >- Charleston. Early Saturday
niorning the vlre^ievl signal was run
up and the eitv held its breath hoping
th»t the storm might pass her bv.
But the weather looked exceedingly
threatening Sunday morning, and
*
within a abort time it became no long
c-r a doubt thut the*ilreaded in'all cyclone
was to decenrl upon the city its
fnrv. The craft lying at anchor in
the'bay were first to take alarm, they and
from ull quarter# of tn6 harbor
hurried to safety. The largest vessels, ;
no lest than the smallest eraft, sought
protection from the angry tempest.
by 1 o’clock the storm burst in
all its furv. Several casualities
'reputed, but" a complete
inveDtorjr can on jy be made after a
oareful inspection of the territory ,£x
tending from the Ten Mile house to
the Battery. Kvory tboiumd. win in ol the city
*u prortr.t«l; tre-.
were denuded of trieir foliage and
limits blown entirely down. A hun
dred houses were unroofed and a nurn
her of frame buildings wrecked. The
Charleston lead works were seriously
damaged, and the property in the
neighborhood of Charleston neck was
injured to the extent of $1,000,000. Es
timates in the city are impossible,
Half of the streets trees,’telegraph are impassable jvoles on
account of fallen
and timbers. Herious fears are enter
tained for the inhabitants of Sullivan’s
a nd the coast 'The former
i,,,. i.,., ir ,i fu.m at u m
Sunday. Communication is now hub
tipndprl
THE BLOW AT AUGUSTA.
An Augusta, O.,, special says:
nunday 7 uifirht 8 Htorni wa« the worn
that ... ever viwited a i AuimHta * . within At • *1 the
recollection .... of .... the oldest f. . citi/eiiH. ... It
was a violent wind storm, accompanied
by over three inches of rain which
fell down with great force. Men and
women w’ere badly and frightened ntul
filled with dread fear of the re
suits. The roaring, blustering wind
traveled at a high velocity and swept
eve rytliing before it. It was a fright
ful night and made strong men timid,
People were not surprised upon look
ing out Monday inerning to see trees
uprooteil. Sidewalls were torn up by
the fulling trees. Electric light, fire
alarm aud telepihonewires were broken
down, and hanging sigiiH were blown
away. All telegraphic communication
was shut off except to Atlanta. Crops
were badly damaged in the surround
ing country. Corn was blown down
and cotton whipped out. There was
no loss of life.
at bbdkbwick.
Following in the wake of the fever
and the famine, the elements heaped
doBtrn ,. tion on the m.fated city of
Brunswick. Streets wore flooded and
made impassable ^ to pedestrians. * The
stom no| gU) untiI daybreak
M()ri(](ly ni orning. Thousands of dol
lars damage was done along the coast,
The durnage to the buildings in the
city is heavy,
FEARFUL IN FLORIDA.
Jacksonville, Fla., was struck by
the ryclono about daybreak Sunday
niorning, which rapidly increased in
force and fury up to 4 o’clock p. m.
It traveled in a northwesterly direc
tion from tho West Indies,
It first struoM'TTnv-i n.nan coast at a
south of Jupiter ... inlet, .
point northwesterly, anil it
cour8 © was still
traversed the whole eastern portion of
tho peninsula, damaging property
more or less in a path forty to fifty
m ji 08 w jj e f ronl tho coast lino west
ward,
In Jacksonville hundreds of trees
were blown down and scores of dwell
ings and public buildings were either
unroofed entirely or had the tin blown
from them. The most serious damage
was to the Park opera house and tho
Qcean Street Presbvterian church,
At Mayport (mo j, t h of St. John’s
river) all tho buildings suffered more
or less, and the old Atlantic houso was
demolished completely, At Pablo
beach the sea encroached upon tho
railroad tracks and the premosis of the
cottagers nud the wind played sad
havoc among them. All the telegraph
and telephone wire* were blown down,
St. Augustine reports the water
coming in over the sea wall and dama
ging residences aud business blocks,
About thirty or forty yachts and small
crafts were badly damaged, or com
pletely destroyed. The fato of other
localities in Florida as well as of the
outside territory invaded by the storm,
is still a sealed book. Tho wires aro
down in every direction from Jack
souville and communication with the
outside world was ausolutely out off.
A Columbia special says: All South
Carolina was in tho very teeth of tho
storm, The state weather observer
says that nearly tho entire early rice
crop has been destroyed and that oot
ton has been injured from 2.i to 30 per
0,,ut The crops in this section are in
a distressing condition. Corn and
peas are ruined. Pasture fences have
been blowu away and the cattle are
scattered everywhere. barns aud
‘’ribs have been blown down, leaving
'h© forage exposed.
particulars.
Specials of Tuesdav from Savannah
»tete that the list of fatalities as the
result of Sunday’s storm is rapidly in
creasing. The t lty of teavannah,
which sailed from Boston Thursday,
is h ^ re overdue and no tidings
her. whatev. r. have been receiv
The Savannah is one of the old
v ^ Balt^rJ 9 relT
0t&Qe m
the eitv Thursday, but m a rather
l t Ch^l^ton naru.wn. Ther! imrt we“e wtr t
^“whdh 1 ‘r^T
of
Savannah is not known, bat the sup
P°®tion is that such was the case, lhe
I'Wseenger list has not yet arrived from
Bo * tou f J >* 18 not ka ‘’ w a who were
OE “ r
Hutchinson I , , s island , , presente a scene
of lhe entire island is still
cojered with water and several houses,
which were on the hub farms across
r * T ‘ r - haTe d**PP<»red from view,
JMjs! bank oouosite the eitv is strewn
mu me wreeKB oi dwelling, sneasana
old boats.
At the lnmlier wharves near Vale
Boyal considerable lumber was floated
off, but most of this can be recovered,
iiad lyoe^islami been waBhed aTiay
the demolition and destruction could
not have been much worse than it is.
Houses were blown down, burned,
washed away and otherwise foolish- j
©d. Six lives were lost on the island,
Hntehinscm’g illand^™ mililg, and
it is believed that many more perished.
A party, consisting of C. A. Gradot,
George Schwarz, Harry Fender, Wal
ter Robider and two others left Savan
».h Smi.l.j m„rni» B o» » "»«roon“
and nave not been heard from fcince.
The steamer Boellevue, sighted an
abandoned boat, Viottom up,
which the friends of those in the ma
rooning party fear was their boat.
River men and others say that the full
list of those who were lost in the
storm will never be known except by
the missing of those who fail to re
turn. !
fifteen wrecks.
Fifteen vessels on the harbor and off
Tyhee were wrecked or badiy dam
*f?cd. More than that number of j
smaller crafts are missing and are be
to LaTe been lo8t -,
lho Iobh of life at Charleaton has
been remarkably slight, considering to'
the fearful ravage which was done
property in every quarter of the city. !
t -the ri total . a , death 7 ., roll ‘ number 8 six per
three of r whom x met , death , ,* the
sons, in
city and three Sullivan’s lt . , island. . , a
on
THE DAMAGE DONE.
It is difficult to give an estimate of
the damage done by the storm. The
following is a rough estimate: To
buildings, 3100,000; vessels wrecked,
8150,000; damage to the railroads
leading out of the city, 8100,000; dam
©g© to the rice crop, 3200,000. The
interior tributary to Savannah is darn
aged probably to the amount of $1,000,
000 or more, as the cotton crop over a j
wide territory has suffered severely
and in many turpentine districts at
least one-fourth of the trees are des
troyed.
onf. hundred killed.
According to the latest dispatches,
the oycJom . on the Atlantic coast Sun
day morning was more severe at Port
Royal, H.C.,thnnat either Charleston or
Savannah, while the neighboring town
of Beaufort was almost wiped away.
The tidal wave struck Port Itoyal and
the damage to property is nothing in
comparison to the loss of life. Over
one hundred are known to have been
drowned and killed in Port Royal,
Beaufort, Seabrook and on Helena is
land.
THE CREW SAYED.
fjjg StCllIllSlliP . S3V3M13ll jS . WfECM
Ull n „ ulIfllluD JT .■ lSIuDu . i„ a
After a .Seven Days’ Battle With An.
gry Dares.
Dispatches of Wednesday night
stato that tho passengers and crew of
the City of Savannah have been res
cued and are safe, though the gallant
steamship is a total wreck.
After a seven days’ encounter with
tho ocean at its angriest, and after
shipwreck on a storm-beaten coast the
passengers of the ill-fated ship were
rescued by the gallant steamer City of
Birmingham off Hunting Island, on
tho South Carolina coast.
Heartily and sincerely did Savan
nah rejoice when the news reached
the city, whose name the fated steam
ship boro, and a nation rejoiced with
her. A day of doubt and anxiety and
sorrow had tho happiest possible
ending. As the gallant City of Bir
mingham steamed up to her dock,
bearing aloft the penuant of her
stricken sister and below that most
precious burden, her human freight,
cheer after cheer rang out from the
assembled throng to give her noble
welcome.
The rescue of the Savannah was the
feature of the day’s news from the
storm-swept coast region. In Savan
nah, in Atlanta, throughout the entire
couutrv, tho deepest interest was felt
the , of , the long-past , .
all ,, day , m fate , .
due steamships. They had been given
up for lost; and just when everybody
began to give up in despair, tho Bir
mingham, with tho Savannah’s people
on board, reached her home.
The City of Savannah was the oldest
ship of the Ocean steamship fleet.
She was built in Chester, Pa., in 1877,
by John Rorch A' bon. She was of
2,029 gross tons and 1,358 net. Her
engines were compound and were built
in 1877. She carried forty-six officers
aud meu. The steamer is a total loss.
No information vet about the cargo.
nFATH f»M THF RAH
---
Two Collisions in Which Twenty-One
People are Killed.
A frightful acculent ■ , , occurred , c Satur- .
, »jht at the I ushwiek juncUon o
Jta: Long IsUnd f
Rattan Beach train about
wreck and
is estimated that the number of in
wl11 r ’ aoh m ^ ^'ghborhood
. t h irtT .five or foitr ptoplf, maav ‘ of
whom, it is believed.'will die.
A head-end collision occurred Sat
nrday near Dykesman station, >. l.,
on the Harlem railroad. The trains
were a northbound express and a
southbound accommodafon. The two
locomotive* cam* together with ter
rifie force, completely w recking them
both and also wrecking the trst p^
senger train. Four people were killed
outright, and a number were more or
less injured.
Over -Mar., a S.eagne and
Spreads the infectious air poison of chills
fever, a complaint to the eradication and
Sitters ...__
is specially adapted. v»«t and fertil*
districts £*£***£$1™$ constipation, &
and prevent it. Rheumatism,
tv tonsne**, liver trouble and nervousness
?«,Tve q 'medicim" tndor* «i%nd l conn^ndiS
by intelligent physicians everywhere.
Pnyer ig the lari(raaire of the heart . only
soul language is heard in heaven,
g^Yof'^oMng'n iT^neSuTbitUy.
appetite—tones the nerves,
Don’t repent anythinc over anything you have done
Don’t do to repent of.
s „„ „ ClTr , ( w
Luca* County. * the
Frank J. Chkhbv inskes oath that ho Is
Ua,°doing n business e in the City of^riflodo,
County and Sum afore*aW,andth»tsaidflrm
LAR>*?or eac'hand J every case of c uarrh that
c.nnot be cured by the use of Haul’s C’atarrh
r worn to before mo and inibKribed^ufmy ad.
preeence, this 8th day of December i»80.
j [real l Notary Public.
, „ ■ . and^hcous^/rface^of .
direeliynlvUie . blood
the system. Send ffir test:monials, free,
' ’
jy Sold by Druggists, 75c.
w * c “ re Ruptor*.
fo? „ 0 frS“treatl^, ^eTtimSSia^eta? to^j! Y.
Hollensworth & Co., Owego, Tioga Co., N.
by mail, $1.15.
Worry is the great fertilizer of troubles. It
Prolu.e, t hem and it maks them g row.
Ladies needing a tonic, or children who
want building up, should take Brown's Iron
Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
Indigestion,Biliousness and and Liver Complaints,
makes the Blood rich pure.
“Laueh and the world laughs with you.”
Weep and the wor d laughs at you.
Beecham’s Pills correct bad effects of over
eating. Beecham’s—no others. 25 cents a box.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr- IsaacTiiornp
son’s Eye-water-Druggi8ts sell at 25c per bottle.
Table Decoration.
All forms of table garniture are re
qnired to be low. The tall vases are
used upon mantels in the drawing
room, the sitting-room and the little
reception room, but no longer upon
the table, where their height proves a
hindrance to dinner chat. The custom
of putting huge pieces in the centre
was never good, but so long as fashion
declares in its favor it held neverthe
less, and only very few had the courage
to denounce it. Now, when it is the
correct thing to arrange tempting bits
of color as low as can be, the wisdom
of the change cannot be denied, and
diners out gain an enlarged view of
their neighbors and vis-a-vis.— Ex
change.
Little Dick—“Papa, didn’t you tell
mama we must economize?”
Papa—“I did, my son.”
Littlo Dick—“Well, I was thinkin’
that mebby if you’d get me a pony I
wouldn’t wear out so many shoes.”—
Street d- Smith's Good News.
<3 <a For Summer Cookery I, f>
<3 f£
<1 Royal Baking Powder will be found the
^ greatest ol helps. With least labor and ^
f>
^ trouble it makes bread, biscuit and cake ^ B>
<3 jj£
<2 of finest flavor, light, sweet, appetizing
<3 ^ and assuredly digestible and wholesome. ^
‘August Flower”
Mv wife suffered with indigestion
and dyspepsia for years. ‘ Life be
came a burdeu to her. Physicians
failed to give relief. After reading
one of your books, I purchased worked a
bottle of August Flower. received It im
like a charm. My wife
mediate relief after taking the first
d ose. She was completely cured—
now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat
thi she desires witbout any
deleterious results as was formerly
the case. C. H. Dear, Prop'r Wash
ington House. Washington. Va. ®
£ McELREES’ ♦
♦
♦ ♦
♦WINE OF __ CA-RDUI.^
! A V Ml# P rT r*V ♦ ♦ + ♦
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P\WV1 Si
♦ V ♦
♦
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♦ c ♦
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♦ .M3 ♦
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♦
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©
^ ♦ pflT T 01 FPITlfflP T 8111318 JJiSBaSBb. ill^PP^P^ ♦ i
*
RSttiuf Stove polish
Do Set Be Deceived
with Pastes, Enamels and Paints which st&in the
taods, Injurs tlx* iron and hare red.
The Rislnx *un Store Pol tab a Brilliant, Odor*
leaa. Durable, aod the ooosnmer pay» lor no Un
or flaas pachace with every porrtm
*
A
a j 2a
&
e
&
Oj
< m m
/
m m.
Af m ■K m
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and 8
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly useu. The many, who live bet*
tei .nan others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more producti promptly
adapting the world’s best to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of embraced the pure in liquid the
laxative principles of Figs.
remedy, excellence Syrup is due to its presenting
Its and pleas
in the form most acceptable refreshing and truly ‘
ant to the taste, the
beneficial properties of_ a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and feters
a permanently curing constipation. millions and
It has given satisfaction to medical
met with the approval of the
profession, because it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drag*- nkut
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is
ufactured by the California Fig Sjfup
Co. only, whose name is printed Syrup on of e^ery Figs,
package, also the name,
and being well informed, you tv ill not
accept any substitute if offered.
Last Word.
A young girl once heard a hit of
wisdom from the lips of a very aged
woman—a woman who had rounded
the term of ninety years, and with
eyes still bright and clear looked onv
upon the inrolling waters of eternity.
The girl wusVimpressed by the empha
sis with which the venerable (lame
said to her, “Bessie, never insist on
having the last word. ” The determi
nation to have the last word leads to
more quarrels and more bitterness of
feeling at home than almost
anything else in domestic life. TI(a
fact is, that one may so control her
tongue and her eyes that she may al
low her opponent the pleasure ol this
coveted concluding thrust and ye$ 7
placidly retain her own opinion, and
in the homely, colloquial purlance of
the upcounty, where one finds stiong
willed people living together in great
peaco with the most pronounced diver
sity of characteristics, “do as she’s a
mind to.”
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS I
1 THOMSON’S SLOTTED WITH ■n rtP : - T r .< ■ ’ >
CLINCH RIVE1S.
No fnci* requimi. Only a hammer needed » drlr«
and clii&**\ them eaaiiy and quickly, leaving iMclincA
•baoiutely ttnooth. Enquiring no ho e to be mde in
the leather nor burr tor the Rivet*. They are ntong.
lough and durable. Mlllion« now In u*. AA
ienkfth*. uniform or assorted, put up in boxes.
Ask your dealer for them, or sendlOfl. in
•tamps for a box of iOO, assorted »izes. Jdan fctj
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFQ. Kb,
WAI.THITI, MASS.
Ian ideal family mediciiei
| |Complex.ion. For In^lsrc»ilon. Offensive ^ BiIlon?mrRg| Brenth, f
I And all disorders of tiie Stomach, ‘
§ Liver and Bowel '
v- Perfect S’j
= art digestion gently follows yet promptly. their Sold
■ 1 by drusrsrist3 sent by mail. use. Box . ^ i
or :
| (6 vials \T5e. samples-address Package 4 boxes), $4. '
I For free CHEMICAL CO., •L J^J
0W
hraiiBA.'iiM ' m me am ma
If any ono donbl that
•w© can cure the n*tob
BLOOD POISON stlnate case m z to 60
days. Jet him w^«for
A SPECIALTY. particulars and Desti
pate our reliub Our
_financial tackin is
1500,000. When to-mry.
iodide potAssium, sarsapirillA or Hot Eprinjjs fa, wo
guarantee & cure—and our Mjuric Cyphilene is tboniy
thin?? that will cure permanently. P sitive proocenS
Sealed, free. Cook Hkmxdt Co., Chicago, IiL
o • O
CANCER
CUBED WITHOUT THE KMB
Or use of painful, exclusively burning, poisonous treated. ply If.
ters. Cancers Payne.
P. B. Green's Sanatorium, Fort A A.
Xngleside *:* K,etreat.
For DiSaws of Women. Scientific treatmei for Sad-a and no
cures iruaranreeJ. Elegant apartmenu Tb< Reas
fore and dnrlnr conflnemene Address
dent Physician. Ti-Ta Baxter Coart, NaahviUe.Tenn.
GliR N 6 B y ^ ... ‘.'Ailn Mwt . „
I
0 ,, 0T P 1 || Uh D C t ^ >
---—— ---
CANCER' 11 ^ Iterma.rntly
GOITRE CURED ? e ^L f b r ^*^;
Pfso*s Benedy for Catarrh is liw
Be<T. Easiest to Use. and Cheapest
catarrh
50c. SoM E. by T. droggislB H&xelUnc, or Warren, sect by mail p». H
X. C. Thirty-| ’33. *
A. tj,