The Lincoln home journal. (Lincolnton, GA.) 189?-19??, October 20, 1898, Image 4

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w——— 4 ; pM Ipok* and loir forever, 1,1ft, be i„»y. jHaml inag K vigor, take No-Tc ffiSOc that makes weak met or II. Cure guaraa Psample F. tree. AiMresa Chicago or Now York, crank and wealth lubri- 80 . 39 Cold In One Day. All End money if It; falls to oure. 25c. f else. cash causes more poverty than ■ Core Con»tlp»tlon Forever. nacarets Candy Cathartic. lOo or 25& 3 . fail to cure, drugs lata refund money. tslerTo full in love than it is to crawl PAi BKinc puny, debilitated infant, fretting away daily, often unable todi Hfood, Wi- mny be MOFFETT’S rescued from TEETIIINA an untime King by UK Powders). Tebthina Aids Di jh, Peculates the Bowels and makes in- easy. ure Blood Good Digestion ttheso a.ro tho esanatials of health. Hood*3 ‘Bwanporilla fis the great blood purifier axnl ‘ntomnah tonic. It promptly expels the jtmgMsrfltQs whioli causa pimples, sores and jwtptieas nuiX by giving healthy action to the stomaeh and digestive organs it keeps the system in perfect order. ‘'Mood’s Greatest Sarsaparilla Medicine. $1; six for 55 Is America’s |3*res»rod only by C.I. Hood&C'o., Lowell. Moos. : ■mm)’ ea JM ^ are the only pills to take al8© with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. A Chinese Typewriter. | A missionary at Tung Chow has in- 1Tented a Chinese typewriting machine. I’The characters number about four j thousand, and are on the edge Twenty of wheels 'about a foot in diameter. or Efforts are being made to revive the glax industry in certain parts of Eng¬ land, where it has fallen into desue¬ tude, especially in the comity of Lin¬ colnshire. SINGULAR STATEMENT. | From Mrs. Bank to Mrs. Pinkham. ' Tho following’ letter to Mrs. Pink ham from Mrs. M. Rank, No. 2,354 ..!Fast Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, ’Pa., is a remarkable statement of re : lief from utter discouragement. She l “Indeed, I thought I would lose my Ictind. No one knows what I endured, t “ 1 continued this way until the last February, when I saw in a paper a [(testimonial [similar mine, of a lady whose case was to and who had been |feured |ble Compound. by Lydia E. I determined Pinkham’s to Vegeta |and felt better after try it, the first dose. I Continued taking it, and to-day am a Well woman, and can say from my eart, Ihauk God for such a medi e. j» ’ Mrs. Pinkham invites all to write to her suffering (Women at Lynn, Mass., jfor Muff aflvlee. answered All by such letters are seen women only. The United States have about 000, 000 telephones in use; Germany. 140, 0(50: England, 75,000; France, 05,000; Switzerland, 30,000. At DID Bock Kill, YOU S. 0., there KNOW is l>uggy THIS? factory envoilug^ | a FIVE A CJEUSS ol ground, and making more buggies than fig auy three factories in the Sou’ll. “A Little Higher in Ira Price, But--" not too high—JUST A FRACTION wheels.gj m ABOVE THE WESTERN TRASH—so that good good point, good leather. Ac. esui be used. See our agentH bestffi In your town or write us. We'll see that you get the «t living prices. C.H ROCK KILL BUGGY CO. # Rock mw '-‘For six years I was a victim of dys •pepsia in its worst form. I ccmiil eat notiling ibut milk toast, rmd at times my stomach would not retain am! digest even that. Last March 1 •began taking CASCAKETS and since then 1 ■have steadily Unproved, until 1 arn as well as I “’’er ev was in my life." Newark. O. 9 David H. Murphy, T CANDY :£Sf M ’ M CATHARTIC i TRADE MARK f?S5J37T!KXD ; Lspsaifer'gag^-^ Li o^ e i». ss ... CURE COWSTIPAT 8 CM. ... RNarliag Resjedy CoaipanT. Chicago, Montreal, New York. 311 lull Tift (ft *5sts Sold and CTTKE guaranteed Tobacco by all Habit. drug to Best Cough Syrup, H bv Tastes Good. Use in Sold COWSU MRTION fibegmi > ■ ■■ ftELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES. Fruit Soup. Soak three tablespoonfuls of sago for one hour in a cup of cold water; add a pint of water and cook in a dou¬ ble boiler until transparent, Now add half a cupful of evaporated ap¬ ples stewed and cut in small pieces, or double the amount of fresh apples, a half-cup each of currant juice and pineapple juice, a tablespoonful of su¬ gar and a little grated lemon rind. Serve hot with croutons. Crown Roast of Lamb. Have the rack of the Iamb cut from the shoulder close to the loin on one side. Separate the ribs to within two inches and one-half of the backbone, then scrape the meat off the ribs a£ for French chops. Make a ring of the rack by joining the two ends with a skewer, having the skin side of the Iamb form the inside of the roast. Stand the lamb after it is skewered in a roasting-pan, rib ends up. Season it with salt and pepper; put the pan in the oven and roast the meat quick¬ ly until a rich brown. Remove it from the oven, place it carefully on a hot platter, fill the hollow iuside the crown with green peas cooked dry, then surround the roast with peas and •serve. Salmon Mayonnaise. Turn out a tin of salmon and ar¬ range the fish on a plate, carefully re¬ moving all skin and bone. Next pre¬ pare the sauce. Place a yolk of a very fresh egg, perfectly free from the white, into a small basin, and stir with a wooden spoon,mixing in at the same time salt to taste, and about half a saltspoonfnl of mustard. Have a small bottle of salad oil in your left hand, cut a hole in the cork so that the oil will drop slowly through it; stir vig¬ orously the whole time. Directly the mayonnaise begins to thicken the oil may be added in larger quantities, though still slowly. When about a gill of oil has been used, add a tea¬ spoonful each of tarragon vinegar and lemon juice, and if the sauce is still too thick, thin it down with a little cold stock. Prepare some lettuce and lay it on a dish, and on this arrange the salmon, pour the sauce over, then garnish prettily with slices of cucum¬ ber and capers. The Best Way to Prepare Cold Meats. Few cooks in this country under¬ stand the art of preparing cold meat dishes. This is a part of cookery in which the French excel. The great¬ est attention is paid by them not only to the cooking, but to the mounting and decorating of these meats, so that a dish is not only pleasing to the eye, but gives an equal pleasure to the partaker in the eating of it. Large pieces of -meat,such as a ham, a galan¬ tine, a noix of beef or a stuffed loin of veal, when served cold are general¬ ly placed on a mound, raised to fit the centre of the platter. This mound should be about the height of the outer rim of the platter. It may be made of various things, such as fat, whipped until cold, then chilled and formed into proper shape, but one of the most appropriate and toothsome articles of diet for this pnrjiose is boiled rice, seasoned and pounded to a paste, and moulded into fiat form. It may be spread with green Montpelier butter, pink lobster butter or simple butter. For a hot dish the mound is egged and browned in the oven. The value of such a mound in raising an orna¬ mental cold dish so it can be more ef¬ fectively seeu will be readily appreci¬ ated. The rice can be decorated as sug¬ gested, with a green butter. This is made of equal parts of chervil, tarra¬ gon, chives and watercress, scalded, drained and beaten to a paste, with two pounds of butter. It is then strained through a sieve. Anchovy butter and lobster and shrimp butter are used with cold fish.—New York Tribune. Honsehold Hints. The odor of onions may be removed by eating a sprig of jiarsley. A little lemon juice or vinegar helps to keep cauliflowers, artichokes and fish whito while being boiled. Throwing the pared fuuit into ice water as soon as the skin is removed keeps it from turning dark colored. Cretonne lamp shades to match the fashionable chintz paper and hang¬ ings for bedrooms are already much in evidence. Essence of pennyroyal effectually keeps away mosquitoes and gnats; the odor is a powerful one, and they will not come near it. Freshly made tea or coffee stains may be removed by at once stretching the part over a bowl and slowly pour¬ ing boiling water through it. In preserving berries or any other fruit liable to fall to pieces, if a small lump of alum is added to the fruit while Cooking, it will make it firm. In baking cakes or gems in gem pans, if there is not enough batter to rill all the little pans, put water into the empty ones before setting in the oven to hake. The lower crust of a fruit pie will not become soaked or sodden if brushed over with white of eggs be¬ fore the fruit is put in and if not al¬ lowed to stand too long after baking. To reipove the smell of new paint, lay a bunch of hay in the room and sprinkle it with a little chloride of lime; close the room for several hours, and when it is again opened the smell of paint will all be gone. It is said that phosphorescent paste, to be purchased of a druggist, is sure death to the small red roaches that sometimes seem to take possession of a house like an iuvadiug army. Phos¬ phorus is dangerous to handle, but the paste is quite safe, only keep it away kora the children. Pertinent Question. It as the first year that Fanner Andrews had taken boarders, and though he conscientiously tried to serve them, he found the task almost beyond his powers. They were fastidious and even “fussy.” They > seemed deter¬ mined to be more than comfortable, and had no hesitation in complaining when they were not so. But evidently the Andrews farm did not altogether displease them, for they not only fin¬ ished the summer, hut stayed on Into tba fall. Then their crying grievance became, not the thickness of cream or the salt nesa of butter, but the difficulty of keeping every corner of the old-fash¬ ioned rooms as warm as a tropical summer. One day Farmer Andrews was called In from the woodpile, where he was vainly trying to do a forenoon’s w.ork. This was the third time he had relin¬ quished ax and patience together. “Mr. Andrews,” said his boarder, somewhat fraetlously, “something must really be done about the temperature of my chamber. This fireplace is not sufficient for so large a room.” The farmer stroked his grizzled beard, and tried to speak serenely. “Put ye up a stove, ma’am!” said he. “But I don’t warjt a stove! I wdnt this open fire, just as I have it now, only I expect it to beat the room. Just look at the thermometer! It has been hanging over here by the window, and I can’t get it above 68." She swept forward, with the tell¬ tale glass in her band, and at that mo¬ ment Farmer Andrews felt his patience snap and fly. “Over by the winder!” be repeated, almost weeping with tho vexation of one who has been unjustly used. “Over by the winder! Why under heavens don’t ye set it here in a warm place?” —Youth’s Companion. Fell From » Scaffold. From the Herald, Watertown, JV. T. John Yeung, of Le Roy, N. Y., is 72 yeai old, and Is wall known in that and neigb boring towns. While putting some weather boards on a barn, standing on a scaffold twenty-two feet from the ground, he felt dizzy, lost his balance and fell to the ground. The side of his face, arm and one entire side of his body, on which he struck, were badly bruised. Picked up and carried to the house, he was under a doctor’s care for sev¬ eral weeks. The doctor finally had came to the conclusion that his patient received a stroke of par a i y sis and was beyond medical aid. / He could not use one arm, or turn over in bed. One day, w h i 1 o lying on the bed, be rend of a case some thing like his ' having been cured with Paralyzed by the Fall. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. He coaxed his grand¬ daughter to get him a box of the pills. After that box bad been used he secured another. In three weeks he began to feel a little life in his arm; at the end of four he could move his fingers; at tho end of two months he could walk, and in three months he could shave himself with the injured hand. As be told his story in the Herald office, he looked the perfect picture of health. He carries a box of the pills in his pocket, and whenever he does not feel just right he takes them. They cured him after doctors had given him up, and his death was daily expected. All the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves are contained, in a con¬ densed form, in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. They are an unfailing spe¬ cific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the aftereffects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in'male or female. Notice to junk dealers—A crown and a throne for sale, cheap. Apply to Uncle Sam. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents* Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 9i. Ail druggist* It is easier to make a record for laziness than it is to make a good living. Piso’s Cure is a wonderful Cough medicine. —MRS. W. Pickert, Van sicklen and Blake Avee., Brooklyn, N. Y„ Oct. 20, 1890. The success of many meat men is due to their use of other men’s brains. yf BdBoat® You* Bewe5« XYttti Caseausta. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. Me, 25c. It 0.0, C. fall, druggists refund money. The marrii^actresa often tries to make a hit by posing as a miss. Lv<m & Co’s “Pick Leaf” Srooklu* Tobacco is tho “best of the best.” 2 ounces and cigar¬ ette book tor 10 cents. Try it. The troubles of her neighbors trouble a woman more than her own. Beauty Is Blenfl Deep. dean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Casearets, Candy Cathar¬ tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring purities up the lazy liver and driving all im¬ from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Casearets,—beauty gists, satisfaction for ten cents. All drug¬ guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. A rolling stone gathers no moss; but there are lots of men who don’t use moss in their business, anyway. Fits permanently enred. No fits or nervous¬ ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Du. R. H. Kline, Ltd,, y‘3I Arch St. Phila. Pa. The Old Bay Dine. After a summer’s sojourn In the North, with Autumn came a desire for Dixie’s Laud, and the question simultaneously arises, by what answered, route? it was almost by the Old having traveled Bay Line on several former occasions. the Hence, one evening found me boarding steamer Geoboia, soon to glide out of whose the harbor into furnish the beautiful Chesapeake, delicacies waters so many of the which appear on the menu to tempt the appetite at the well served meals on this and other steamers Of the Old Bay Line. The "Georgia” Is 4 substantial, com¬ modious, hundred, beautiful handsomely steamer, capacity furnished three to four and well equipped salon and staterooms, giving every comfort for a delightful trip. Old Point also is a sufficient inducement did to the tourist to travel by the Bay Line, which impressed me as the the best line North. With a hope to repeat trip at no far dis¬ tant day, I bow myself from your presence. E. K. R. ■ The Only icre Was. The necessity that there shall be only one man who “has the say” in a military command is thoroughly recog¬ nized in the United States army. A story is told of General Shatter, com¬ mander of the American expeditionary force for the invasion of Cuba, which Illustrates the punctilio of the regulars in this regard. At a certain frontier post at which Shatter, who then held an inferior rank, was commander, many years ago, a discussion arose among several oflicers as to the exact time of day. A captain, with his watch in his hand, said: “It is now exactly three o’clock.” “Oh, no,” said a lieutenant, “by my time it’s eight minutes past three.” A third young officer drew his watch cut of his pocket. "I know my time is exactly right,” he said, “and my watch says two minutes past three.” At this juncture Major Shatter looked at his silver watch. “I don’t know what your watches say,” he remarked, “but I wish you to understand that in this command it is five minutes past three.” Then the young officers remembered that the authority of the commanding officer dxtended even to the time of day.—Youth’s Companion. $100 Reward. $100. The readers of thispaper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis¬ ease that science has been able to cure In all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is tho only positive cure now known to tho medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con¬ stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catrrh Cure is taken inter¬ nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu¬ cous surfaces of the system, thereby destro Ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building np the con¬ stitution and assisting nature much in doing faith Its in work. The proprietors have so its curative power sthat they offer One Hun¬ dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F.J. Cheney & Co., ioledo, 0. Sold b c. Hall’s amlly Pills are the best. Mrs. Winslow’BSoothingSymp forchildren teething, softens the gums, reducing inflama tion,allays pain,cures wind colic, 35o. a botta. Nothing Too Good for Them. No one will be surprised now to read the following from the New York Tri¬ bune: “The question is asked whether ex- Confederate organization* shall be asked to participate in a peace demon¬ stration of National veterans. ‘Ex Confederate?’ That means fellows who used to ride behind ‘Joe’ Wheeler doesn’t it? Well, then, the question answers itself. Room for the ‘Johnny Reb’l No place where the flag flies is too good for ‘Joe' Wheeler, and where he goes his old comrades must likewise go. °F T ■A t && Uf* S 3 v ;i Jmitati MM! TV THE EXCELLENCE OF SYSUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes Known to the California Fig Syrup C o. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par¬ ties. The high standing of the Cali¬ fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi¬ cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken¬ ing them, and it does not gripe nor ./'nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company — CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAK FRANCISCO. Cal. LOUISVILLE. Er. NEW Yohjj, n. T. PATENTS Procured on cash, or easy inHtaluif'Hts.VOWLES & BURNS, Paten t Attorneys, 237 Broadw ay, N. Y. TITAN TED —Case of bad health that RI*PA*N *8 VY win not benefit Heud 5 cts. to Ripans Chemical Co., New York, for Id aam ple.s and 1000 testimonials. mL DRILLING kinds MACHINES for, of ail ana sizes, drilling wells for house, farm, City and Village Water Works, Facto¬ ries, Ice Plants. Brew n erics, Irrigation, Coal and H Mineral Prospecting, Oil and VI Gas, etc. Latest and Best. 30 years experience. WHITE US WHAT YOU WANT. LOOMIS & NYMAN, Tiffin, Ohio. FREE and WATCH.! will 50 fine,long S?»nd vour address we express filler Nickel cigars. When sold, remit us $2.50 and we will mail you, free, a handsome siein wind and set watcli, which retails for S2.5Q. WDfSTOS CIGAR CO.,No. Aiain be. Winston, 39*C. sLy O 8 g% ’fe** O ki CSV » NEW quick relief DISCOVERY; and cures worst fives m, cnBes. Seufi tor book of tesvimonials and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr- H.R.OEEhN'8 EONS. Atlanta. Ga. Send PHOTO date of drt*S"^riW?^ birth, height, weight, b Ho color n r^^rtll“u of hair and 25C. to C. Richards, Box22. station 0, Cincinnati, Ohio The §sst BOOK THE W^Bbonnd BF.AUTTFUDI/T ;indsiuopt- sanding notisly iilnitratedi price * 21 , fro* 41 each to anybody to the Overland two annual subscriptions FRANCISCO. at Samula Overland, 50. Monthly. BAN T 5 ordering goods or making enquiries of ad X.vcrtl*ers it will be to your advantage to So. men¬ Si) tion this paper. A 41 A j Buys a six monffis’ scholarship, fcufore Oct. I. Write at once to WU CtJARLOTTO C0MA1ERC1AL COL l.EGE. CHARLOTTE. NORTH CAROLINA \ SaTisfaetton Mr. J. Morrison, o&Wafcfc-wora- of Woodfenville, King j " / > ing County, his dealing State W with Washington, *‘1 received writes tftfc concern- goods ^ ! us: highly * v' yesterday in good shape and am {y pleased with them. Hereafter when I need v ; anything in your line you will hear from me." . So they come from all Our Catalogue is fifl- who buy from us. A <( < - <sd with Bargains. thousand thousand purchasers satis- ,• mean a < > fied customers and busi- \ < l ness friends. send for Why don't J J you our ww < > i catalogues, anyway? free, \ I> They arc asking.- absolutely ^ ^ for the < ► V Our Carpet catalogue \ ! is colors is colors lithographed mhogr.-ipnra Aniri from hand-painted hflnd-naintcd in in ten ten ^ j j ' plates, that th show fully, the and de- <, signs fai / : show and also draperies art squares, in \ j - • mx ruga, their real colors; it also ■ / contains a superb line of J $1.49 an( ^ not a cent lace curtains, on all of \ more for this Cob¬ which you save half, at / \ bler Seat Rocker, least. f solid Oak or finish¬ Our Furniture cats ed imitation mahog¬ logue is the best ever is- / any. Built like a : sued. If you don't be- ^ railroad bridge, it's l ieve us,write for it. The so strong, ana easily jest of it is the prices, j worth $ 2 . 50 —but our :hey*re bwer than 40 to 60 per cent price you suspect. cata $tAB Write for our l ogu es todav. lay, Madame Maoame, :nd when nen they arrive do not sle ep Address until you have read them, every word. (exactly as below). f e JULIUS 31® HIMES & SON, Dept. Baltimore, MU. GRDVEE ffiSSi •h, :J liiiliiiii ISliSlllS ■.. m V jMii TASTELESS C H 1 L i EM Tali; IS JUST AS GOOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PKICESOcts. GALATIA, ILLB., Nor. 16, 1393. Paris Medicine Co., St. I*ouis, Mo. Gentlemen;—Wo sold last year, 600 bottles of GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC and have bought three gross already this year. In all our ex perience of 14 years, in the drug business, have never sold an article that ghve such universal Balls* faction as your Tonic. Yours trul »iy, CARS & CO Amu KY. 0EED WHEAT FOR SALE! From the greatest crop ever grown in the South. R hree varieties: Fulcaster, a bearded wheat; Red M&y and White Clausen, both smooth or beardless. Wheat is now very free from cockle seed and broken grain, being far superior to the usual run of seed wheat. when We Will, however, reclean the wheat de¬ sired, taking out almost every cookie seed and pieces of broken grain as well as any inferior grain there may Tie in it. Wheat as it now $1.15 is price $1.00 per bushel, recleaned wheat per bushel. These prioes ar8 both on cars at Charlotte, including sacks. Each sack con¬ tains two bushels. Bend in your orders at once if you wish to secure the best seed wheat on the market. Terms: Cash with order. Charlotte Oil & Fertilizer Co,, or Fred Olivor, CHARLOTTE, N. C WOOD? SAWI , :v •,rV- - Why not use the best raacMnery “Electric” < SMALLEY SAWS : s enable the Battle old one way. || m « vjRp 2 M by far the 5 best ®ssi: general sj ; : IT#v® ato Saws ISSfd : Creek i 4|sRf rtxnade. purpose Farm Send for Descrip-1 ever a * If- [ =BSSS® lllSItllSiM SB » gliaiaa T<irii Shelters, 1 j i I „ l ; SMALLEY _ MRS. Cutters CO., and Manitowoc, Horse Powers, WIs. a ! :’ iiiiu9icwiiHa)ai^uiuEiuu^:ffiuiuuiiiuuuiuuaiicuniiiu I 1 If afflicted with I TEoKipson’s £ye Wats? sore eyes, use MRS. PINKHAM’S WARNING TO WOMEN. Neglect is the Forerunner of Misery and Suffering—A Grateful Hus* band Writes of His Wife’s Recovery. Nearly all the ill health of women is traceable to some derangement of the feminine organs. These derangements do not cure themselves, and neglect of the sensations resulting’ from them is oAy putting off trouble. Pathetic stories are constantly coming to Mrs. a Pinkham of women whose neglect has resulted in J serious ligiyt trouble and a whole train of woes, i Here is the story of a woman who was helped j by Mrs. Pinkham after other treatment failed; j mil Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —It affords me very, great pleasure to he able to state that I believe : my wife owes her health to your medicine m w and good advice. For three years her, j tv; - health failed rapidly; she had heart trou mi ''A, ble, often falling down in dizzy and fainting; spells, shortness of breath, Hm I choking and smothering- spells, bloat¬ ^3 ing of the stomach, a dry cough, irreg® dys¬ peptic symptoms, menses'- un* ^—j ular, scanty, and of an natural color. She had becni treated by physicians with but' little benefit. She has taken your treatment and/isbetter according” your directions, w$ in every way. I any well pleased i with the result of your! treatment/ and give'you m s' permission to use my letter, ’ for the benefit of others. I - L - Chas. II. and Mrs. May Butcher, --^ Fort Meyer, Va. The healing and strengthening power of Lydia ., ^ E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for all fe- ‘ male ills is so well established that it needs no argument. For over twenty years it has been used by women with results that are truly wonderful. Mrs. Pinkham invites all women who are puzzled about their health to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice. All such correspondence is seen by women only, and no charge is made. A MUlioa Women Have Bsss Benefited Sy Mrs. PiaKham’s Advice and Medicine ■ THE GOUPIR 9 m m 1 MiPpBL—.- Norfolk, „ Va. 159-163 Bank St., Monuments, .Gravestones. Granite. Cemetery Work in Marble and l,ow r,rices quoted on work delivered *f KL an ing limit y please point as DESIGNS to in state price. the age .South, FHJEE. of deceased When writ¬ and BICYCLIST FRIE -Ill- You ^ Bicyclists Have Seen It? 1 I I UMI PISTOL g|gg**2fi ✓6 50 A * tf'i k \\ Gb. lk\ 'ky'p mm •A i r 4i <o J9. | .3 (ol snapi ,®sr m. AMMONIA, ^QUa WATER, Hi 5 COLOGNE, OTHER I ^OR * LIQUID. & It 38 a weapon which protects travelers bioycttWwa against,rob vicious dogs and foot-pads; bers and adapted toughs; homes other against situations. thieves aud tramps, and is to many It does not kill or injure; it is perfectly safe to handle; makes no noise or smoke; breaks no law and creates no lasting regrets, as does the bullet pistol. It b: imply and undivided amply protects, attention by to compelling himself the for awhile fee to give instead of t-o the intended victim. It >s the only real weapon which proteots and also makes fun, laughter and lotfl of it: it shoots, not once, but many times without reloading; and 11)111 protect bv its appearance in time of danger, al¬ though loaded only with liquid. It does not get out of order; is durable, handsome, and nickel plated. Sent boxed and for post-paid by mail with full direc tions how to use in 2c. Postage Stamps, Post-office Money Order, or Express Money Order. As to our reliability, refer to E. G. Dun's or Bradst,reefs Mercantile agendas. NEW YORK UNION SUPPLY CO., li 15 Leonard Street,, New i ork City, 'Here It & ■ ”5 m ? IF YOU CUT* THEM HELF. | You emmet do to this cater unless their you requirements; underbwmft them and i and know how to i you cannot spend years and dollars knowledge learning acquired by ex¬ perience, tvo you must buy the 25 cents. by others. We offer this to you for only YOU WANT THEM TO PAY THEIR OWN WAY even if you merely keep them as a diversion. In or¬ der to handle about Fowls them. judiciously, To this you must know something giving the experience meet want OKa we are selling a book of a pi'aotioal poultry raiser written for by \ VWIJ who twvi put twenty-five yeare; It was a man all his mind, Chicken and time, aud money to making a suo ceBsof li raieing—not will profit as a pastime, his twenty-five out as a busineefi—and you by Uhlcks annually, j years’ work, yoh can save many dollars for The and make your Fowls earn you. point is, that you must be able to detect trouble In th© Poultry Yard as soon as it appears, and know bow to remedy It. This book will teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for ; eggs and also for fattening; which fowte to save for breeding purposes; this subject and everything, to make it- indeed, profitable. you should know on Sent postpaid for twenty-flvb cents i-a stamps. Book Publishing House 134 Leonabb St- N. Y. City. i" jE y Q I \ w g r* 1 fe B T f £RFE ^ F # ® oft00 p*° ucED. 03 LER EH vet ■-------— And verv LOW PRICES. Large stock. UN.' Alst P1FK, VAI.VKS ami FITTINGS. GINES, BOILERS, MILES and REPAIRS; Lombard Iron Works & Supply Co,;