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FORGET ME NOT. 1
v'
Like the breath of the roses, sighing
To slumber against your cheek—
Like a heart pulse, softly dying,
—By passion rendered weak—
Like a whisper faintly heard,
The recoil of a tiny word-.
Into the distance flying—
Dearest, I hear you speak:
Forget me not—forget me nott
’Tis pleasant pain to part
When love is not forgot:
Forget me not—forget me nc
Your words are in my heart;
Forget me not—
Not like an organ, pealing
Down the cathedral aisle,
To the black-robed figure, kneeling.
With the more than earthly smile—
• But an echo that no man knows,
That lingers, and thrills, and goes—
Into the distance stealing—
I hear you all the while:
Forget me not—forget me no
Tis pleasant pain to part
When love is not forgot;
Forget me not—forget me not!
Your words are in my heart;
Forget me not!
Like a Hymn of gladness, showing
The strength of the holy spell—
Like the tearful joy outflowing
At the chime of the vesper tell—
Like a prophecy, told anew,
But ever and ever true—
Into the distance going— '
I hear your sweet farewell:
Forget me not—forget me not!
’Tis pleasant pain to part
When love is not forgot;
Forget me not—forget me not!
Your words are in my heart;
Forget me not!
—Boston Pilot.
PITH AND POINT.
Always on top—The roof.
' The game of authors—Reed birds.
Ofttimes it gives a man a cold chill to
get “fired.”
Was Noah’s celebrated vessel lighted
by an arc lamp?
house Cleaning and upsets two things badly—a
a wateh.
It's a warm day for a man when he
makes a cool thousand.— Life.
The unlucky man declared if it should
rain soup he’d just about be out in the
field with a hay-fork/
There are some people who don’t want
the earth. They belong to cremation so¬
cieties. —Rochester Po t-Expres i.
“Fire!” she yelled in his slumbering ear
At the morning hour bewitchin’,
With a sudden spring he was out: “Where's
Where!”
She replied: “Make one in the kitchen!”
—Detroit Free Press.
Hole-in-the-Snow According to a Tucson hankers paper “ Chief
after mote
scalps.” Up, noble wipe champions of Yankee
Doodle! Let ns the ground with
this red hanker-chief. — Birmingham, Re
pnblimn.
Mrs. Casirfdy—“Why don’t you come
down and see me, Mrs. McGinnis?” Mrs.
McGinnis—“And it’s you that’s talkin’,
Mrs. Cassidy; and not a sight did I see
of ye since last Aister! Sure, if I lived
as near to you as you do to me, I’d be
droppin’ in every week.”— Graphic.
In Washington: Katharine—“ Well,
Charlotte, l hear you are to be married?”
Charlotte—“Yes; it takes place very
soon now. ” Katharine—“Will you
elope? ” Charlotte—“ Of course I won’t,
I’m not in the chestnut business. I shall
get married in the regular way and startle
society.” - Washington Critic.
In the low ceilinged root of a strange hotel,
When a man is changing his shirt,
And jabs his tumb in the plaster above,
He growls, hustling but the is collar not much for hurt; train
But in on a
That’s mad nearly he due by when the clock, button
How gets the goes
down.
Deep down, ’way down in his sock.
—Oil City Blizzard.
A tall Missourian called at the distric
school, and, eyeing the teacher sternly,
said: “My boy Henry tells me you
whipped him last evening.” “Yes,”
assented the teacher, deserved edging toward the
door, “ but he it, I assure you.”
“And he says you used a rawhide on
him.” “ Yes, sir, but-” “And you
slapped him with your hands as well.”
“I did, but I assure you-” “Assure
nothin’ Let me give you a pointer:
When you have to punish that boy use a
club; he doesn’t care for rawhides.”—
Nebraska State Journal.
A New Wkiin.
Nearly all the fashionable of the fair
sex in London, now wear wiist watches!
They are constructed in every form, from
the plaiu leather strap to the magnificent
bracelet, where the face of the watch is
encircled by precious stones. The same
device is also applied to purses, pocket
books, canes, and even umbrellas, which
are made up with diminutive watches at¬
tached.
Blood Will Tell.
There is no question about It—blood will tell
—especially eruptions, pimples if it be an impure blood. Blotches,
find boils, are all symptoms
°J of the impure liver. blood, When due this to important the improper action fails
to properly perform its function of organ
and cleansing the blood,impurities purifying carried
to all parts of the are
above referred system, and the symptoms
to are merely evidences of the
struggle Unless of Nature to throw off the poisonous
germs. her warning be heeded in time,
serious results are certa in--to follow, culminate
sumption. ingin liver or Dr. kidney disorders,or even iii cop
Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis¬
covery will prevent and cure these diseases,by
restoring the liver to a healthy condition.
Mrs. W. H. Vanderbilt’s expenses are said to
aggregate $100,000 a year.
Many People refuse to tf*ke Cod
Liver Oil on account of its unpleasant taste.
This difficulty has been overcome in Scott’s
Emulsion cf Cod Liver Oil with Hypophos
phites. valuable It being remedy as palatable as milk,’ and the
most known for the treatment
of Consumption, Scrofula and Bronchitis,Gen¬
eral Debility, Wasting Diseases of Children,
i hronic Coughs and Colds, has caused physi¬
cians in all parts of the world to use it. Physi¬
cians report our little patients take it with
pleasure. vinced. Try Scott’s Emulsion and be con¬
Never ask a crust of a crusty man. Ask him
for meat, for he’ll give you a cold shoulder.
J>Iy Little Girl
Had a dreadful and a very alarming cough,
that at one time after trying every prescrip¬
tion we feared from her not receiving any
benefit that serious results would follow. I
was advised to try Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy
of Sweet Gum and Mullein. A permanent cure
was the result. T. B. Cox, Big Island, Ya.
French “soldier dogs” are shown men in
German uniforms, and taught to fly at them.
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
‘ Medical and scientific skill has at last solved the
problem debilitated, of the lengr needed medicine for the ner.
vo us, and the ogred, by combining the
best nerve tonics, Celery and Coca, with other effeo
tive remedies, which, acting gently but efficiently
on the kidneys, liver and bowels, remove disease,
restore strength and renew vitality. This medicine is
mrs
eiery
.• irBlls a place heretofore unoccupied, and msrbs
a new era in the treatment of nervous troubles.
Overwork, anxiety, disease, lay the foundation of
nervous prostration and weakness, and experience
has Bhown that tho usual remedies do not mend the
strain and paralysis of the nervous system.
Recommended by professional and business men.
Send for circulars.
Price St.00. Sold by druggists,
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors
BURLINGTON, *VT.
Don’t buy until you
^ find out the new
B ilk Improve-
1 b. ments.
Save the. W
Middleman’s
Profits.
tfrrSencl for Catalogue.
J.P. STEVENS &BR0.,
47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
“OSGOOD”
a U. S. Standard Scabs.
■a uf Sent on trial. Freigld
paid. FullyWarranted.
3 TON $35.
Other size- proportion¬
ately low. Agents well paid. Illustrated Catalogue
free. Mention this Paper.
OSGOOD Ss THOMPSON, Binghamton, M. Y.
MfANTED-A U»from 81100 f« MAN! S200 Can fflonth! Earn n We Salary want
a a
Bl live, energetic man, who is not afraid of work, in
every town in the Southern States. Such a man can
make the abi.ve amount, handling our goods. No capital
required. Work the year round. II. C. HUDGINS
«fc CO.. Publisher*, ATLANTA. GA.
§ VhbUW III* OS Floral Flower Seeds Guide, (SX1 all kinds),witt? for 2 stamps. Park’s New
flowers, Everybody new delighted. engravings, teems with floral hints.
G. W. Tell all your friends. Seud
now. Park, Fannettsburg, Pa.
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Mil*
V
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
._
S WELLS’ BALSAM HAIR
iariJc restores Graf
)3 uum. satin Hair 40 °*W*'
If »«1 color. An
[fUll# irilM elegantdress- in softens
ilMil* K'
sad beautifies
if UniSaj sfllsl oil. eroase A Tonic nor
" # 3 Restorative. Prevents hair
,4a coming out;
raj strengthens,
cleanses and
heals scalp.
SOc. Druggists
E. S. WELLS,
^ Jcritj City, II. 1,
ROU@H°®0ATARRH chronic Unequaled for Catarrhal gagsttss throat
worst cases.
affections, diphtheria, foul breath, tho offensive head. Ask odors, for “Rough sore throat,
cold in oh
Catarbh.” 50c. Drug- & S. Wells, Jersey City, N. J.
mm LOOK YOUNG
s long tendency as you can, wrin» pre¬
rent to
Ides or ageing of tho
tv* skin by using
f *J SSlt youthful,
preserves fresh a condition
« plump, of the features;
rem¬
mo- oves pimples, clews
tho complexion, known the
only will substance and
that arrest pre¬
vent tondoney to wrinkle#
$1. Druggists or Rxp.
K. Jeraey 8. WEI.I.S, City, Ch.mUt, H. J
_
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use
_in time. Sold by druggists. I
CONSUMPTION'
I bolieve Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved
my life.—A. H. Dowf.lu,
Editor Enquirer, Eden
ton, N. C., April 23, 1887.
IPISOI
Tho best Cough Medi¬
cine is Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. Children
take it without objection.
By all druggists. 26c.
HS
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough in time. Syrup. Sold by Tastes druggists. good. Use
Hi r hfc& sst/w* u
UU JsntieyftSrahamSun lfll CJ Wriit^OT C*'rA*Oe 6•.,%!!&& > ’?K. Ci:S ‘
PATENTS 1 ington, I). C. Sendforour book of instructions,
HEBBRAHO FIFTH WHEEL.
Improvement. UERBRAND CO., Fremont, O.
WaterpotGwt . Is Tie Best
None genuine unless _____ ___Era FISH BRAND Bait. SLICKER
tamped with the above Don’t waste your money on a gum or rubber coat The
trade bare. is absolutely water and wind proof, and will keep you dry in the hardest storm
Ask for the “FISH BRAND” sucKKRar.il take mo other. If your storekeeper docf
ot have the "fish brand” send for d e3cr iptive pataloguetoA^LTO WE R. 2^i rtnnonsSt. Bfts ton Mass
100 Doses
Thl~ not catch Is a One
line only
but Is original with and Dollar
true only of Hood’s Sar¬
saparilla, which Is the
very best spring medi¬
cine ajid blood purifier. Now, reader, prove It.
Take a bottle home and measure its contents. You
will find It to hold 100 teaspoonfuls. Now read the
directions and you will find thit the average dose
for persons of different ages Is less than a teaspoon
tul. Thus the evidence of the peculiar strength and
economy of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is conclusive and
unanswerable.
“Feeling languid and dizzy, having ro appetite
and no ambition to work, I took Hood’s Karsaparilla,
with the best results. As a health invigorator and
medicine for general debility I think it superior to
anythin# else.”—A. A. Rxker, Utica,N. Y.
“My wife and myself were both generally run¬
down. Hood’s Sarsaparilla brought us out of that
tired feeling aad made us feel like young people
again. It has done more for us than all other medi¬
cines together.”— Richard ELawkhuhst, Amity villa,
Long Is and, N. Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, gl; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowel], Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
im m
i;
§ I ...
m
. ■.
S SHOE • GENTLEMEN. ■ LAS FOR
The only fine calf $3 Seamless Shoe ia t :e world
made without i tacks or nails. As stylish and
durabl e at those costing $5 or $(!, and hiving no
tacks or nails to wear the stocking or h<irt-the feet,
make s them os comfortable and well fitting as a
hand sewed shoe. Buy the best. None genuine un
less warranted.” siamped on bjtcom “W. L. Douglas $3 Shoe,
XV. hanl If. DOUGLAS welt J?4 SHOE» which the original and
only made shoes sewed costing from $4 shoe, $9. equa:» custom
to
W. Ii. DOUGLAS 82.50 SHOE ia unex¬
celled for heavy wear.
W. L. DOUGLAS *2 SHOE is worn by all
Boys, and La the beat school shoe in the world..
AU the above goods are made In Congress, Button
and Lace, aud if not sol l by your dealer, write
W. h. DOrtiiiA8. Brockton. Ilass.
gl/PERJORI YS.T4S. rQjjAltlTY
IBpia mkmm
FHIMDEH^HIA^Seno -
stamp for Catalogue.
I CURE FITS!
When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop them
lor a time and then have them return again. I mean »
radical cure. I have made the disease of FITS, EPIL«
EPSY or FALLING SICKNESS the worst a life-long study. Because I
Warrant my failed remedy is to cure for not cases. receiving,
ethers hare no reason tTO&tise and now Free Bottle a
cure. Send at enco lor a and a Office.
of hTg. my infallible remedy. d, 183 Give Pcurl Express St. New Post 1 ork.
HOOT* M,
25 Choice 10c. Cigars,
FREE!
Address G. E. BRYSON, Publisher, Key West, Fla,
Biair’s Pills ■ Great Rheumatic English Remedy. Gout and
Oval Mox.ati round, 14 PilU.
Vjk 50S^S8S2aS®£SJf&. p to SS o day. Samples worth 22S8?*«c. $1.50, FREE
cularsfres. HOME SSiattSrgCa KitfA.M s college, IjJ 2iain si., Buffalo,
a. r.
j A. N. U. Eleven, ’SS.