Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 19 July 1889 — Page 3
POINTS FOR SMOKERS.
Lii
Ts*.
How to Carry Cigars and How tQ Let One Go Out. Ilere is a point for smokers, says the New York bun. It is given by a man who not only smokes cigars very frequently, but sells them. He says if you will carry your cigars in your waistcoat pocket with the mouth end clown there will be less likelihood of the tobacco becoming broken or the wrapper being unrolled than if you carry them with the match end at the bottom. Here is a second point: If vou area billiard-player don't putthem t'i the pocket on the right side, for the instant, moving of the arm in the manipulation of the cue will wear upon side, aud if it does not result, in crushing the tobacco will so loosen the •.vrnppcr that the smoking of the cigar v.
be an annoyance rather than a 'ieasurc. And here is a third point: s: there is a slight feeling of nausea
::xUe
a drink of water to clear the •throat, and if you would be sure absolutely of preventing any serious sickness throw your cigar away arid stop smoking altogether for an hour or so. Another point which a gentleman who heard these three advanced suggested that if by any cause it becomes necessary to let a cigar go otil it will be a -ood scheme not to lake a final puff, Suit to make a blow and expel the moko from the burning end. This clears the roil of tobacco from the smoke, and even if the fire dies out it will be found upon relighting that the cigar is of good flavor. In fact an expert has said that a really good cigar will be improved by letting it go out, following this plan, and then lighting a again.
Marvelous Courage. In a handsome mansion situated in a lonely part of England there resided, a few years ago, a maiden lady
OL
con
siderable wealth, writes a correspondent of the Phiadelphia Press. One morning she was discoverod foully murderd. Her man-servant, named Lee, was suspected, arrested and convicted on circumstantial evidence, and sentenced to be hanged. So conclusive seemed the evidence against the prisoner that no attempt whatever was made on the part of the public to induce the Home Secretary to exercise executive clemency. The day of the execution ha,ving arrived, the prisoner was led forth to suffer the extreme penalty. The rope to be used, the texture of which was silk and Iiemp, had been, as is customary in such ca- cs, tested with the aid of sand-bags, and vva not found wanting-. The bolt was drawn and the prisoner was given a drop of eight feet. The rope broke. The prisoner walked, unaided, up the steps leading to the scaffold, and after the rope had been fixed again and the noose adjusted the bolt was drawn for the second time. The rope broke again.
Lee was by this time considerably stunned. However, after the lapse ol a few moments he again ascended, unaided, the steps, and after doing all in his power to allay the nervousness ol the hangman, assisted the latter in once more fixing the rope. The prisoner placed himself on the trap-door, ine bolt was pulled, and the condemn, ed man dropped once more out of view. The rope parted for the third time. Alter considerable delay Lee oncti more i)l:iced himself into the executioner's hands, but that personage and the other officials, horrified at what seemed a Divine interposition, refused to procead further with the business. The facts were reported to the Homs •Secretary, who at once respited thj prisoner, condemning him to imprisonment for life.
Three years later a woman who was Lee's fellow-servant confessed on her dying bed that it was slie who killed her mistress. She declared that Le«j had no conncction whatever with the affair, and stated facts strongly confirmatory to her confession.
Instances may possibly have occurred in which an equal amount of physical courage has been displayed, bul outside of the pale of fiction ther« can not be cited a single case in which bravery ever played a more conspicu? ous part than in the incident above derailed. ANew Lightning-Rod Swindle.
Farmers along the Hudson are being victimized by a new style of lightningrod swindle. The agent induces the farmer to let him put rods on his house, agreeing, on account of the prominence of the farmer or the beauty of the farm-house, to make him a present of nearly the entire outfit. The contract is signed, rods put up without insulators, and the farmer invited to go on the roof to test the conducting qualities. A battery is applied from the ground, and the countryman is thoroughly satisfied with the shock he receives. Then comes the request to settie. The rods are all right as to price, but points to attract the lightning cost $10 each, and the farmer, who has not read the contract through before, learns that he is bound to pay from $80 to $120 for a set of worthless lightning•ods.—Philadelphia Ledger. v:
The London Zoo.
The total number of animals in the zoological gardens, London, is stated fin the annual report to be 2,290. The (annual income of this society is over $100,000. They lost nearly 1,000 animals last year, but the additions bj purchase and gifts were 1,121.
THE CHINESE FAMINE.
Children Left to Be Eaten by PigsFamilies Killing Tbeniftelres.
A Newchwang correspondent of the North China Daily News gives the following graphic picture of his observation as a lay distributor in one of the famine districts:
Having made three trips into the famine district, I will give a few details relating to one trip: I left Newchwang with Rev. J. Caraon early on March 8 and proceeded toward Tienchwang Tal, and after being pent up in a small inn for two days (weather bound) we got safely across the river, and early on the 11th we began in real earnest at a village about thirty li northeast of Tienchwang Tal, and heie I will copy from my note book. Woman, with child 5 days old, living on husks of millet ground and made into broth. Family of three actually lay down to'die could find not a scrap oi anything in the shape of food had been without three days. I was prepared for this in the shape of several hundreds of native cakes ready to put into their hungry mouths, and gave two to each person. Six in family, eating the bark of the elm tree, chopped up and mixed with the bran or miliet. This I saw them eating. Six in family old lady came and begged me to give to her son and save his family, nevermind her this house nothing to eat.
Another familv of seven foaud no food woman of 48 dying ot hunger the scanty covering was thrown back for me to see her wasted form eight in family eating bark of the elm tree raw, just as it had be cut from the tree, family of eleven, oid lady of 73 crying over her only grandson, who lay on the *ang dying of hunger others were down sick. Alas! my cakes were expended quickly and the cart was a long way off: but the child was too far gone his eyes and face were swollen and his breath very short his mother, a young woman and a widow, was blind, and on hearing that a foreigner was in the room asked if I could save her only son to work for her by and by nothing would comfort the oid lady, and I did not have words at command to tell the poor old soul that the bey had seen the worat of his suffering and soon would be beyond the reach of hunger. Upon inquiry nsxt day I found the child had died during the night.
A family of six women and three children naked, the hut did not seem to be inhabited until I got close to it there was no mat on the kang, and the gale had blown part of the north wall in, altogether it is about the worst house 1 have seen. This was about 25 yards from a house well-to-do with heaps of grain.
In this village I noticed the people grinding the small twigs of both elm and willow trees for food. On the outskirts I saw the bodies of two children thrown out, having died quite recently. ThiB might meet the eyes of those who are not aware that children under 10, unless it is the eldest or only son, are not buried, but simply placed in a field not 100 yards from the public road (I have seen them sot 25 yards) under cover of a small piece of matting and left for the doge or pigs to devour. I am not in a position to say that the children in question died of hunger, although the wasted forms seemed to suggest that ttie young ones could not have had sufficient food to keep life in them.
We were away nine days, and during that time I went into 300 houses and gave relief te 270, the others not being in want total number of persona relieved, 2000 and my companion relieved about the same.
Tho Vicar Apostolic or Manchuria, sends the following details in a letter to the French Consul General at Shanghai: Everywhere in the three provinces of Manchuria, in the midst of a population or about 15,009, I have encountered the most horrible missery. Everywhere the crops have failed, and especially here, in the extreme north, that which the floods have spared has been ruined by the premature frosts. The unfortunate inhabitants are reduced to the last extremity there are very few who can procure millet, the greater number are reduced to feeding on bran, roots and rubbish of all kinds.
Many of the poor creatures at the end of their resources, kill themselves in their despair. Here it is the father ol the family who throws his children into a well, and then follows them himself there entire families, father, mother and children, hang themselves to escape the tortures of hunger. In a word, it is misery and suffering in the most hearttrending forms. Scattered everywhere throughout this vast territory, larger than Franee, my twenty-six missionaries, can honestly say, are spending themselves in purse and person, to come to the assistance of the unfortunates, be they Christians or pagans, who, in constantly increasing numbers, come to implore some aid juBt to keep them alive, as they say. It is impossible to remain unmoved in the face of such sufferings, and so we are devoting everything to the relief or the starving.
If tha testimony of eminent chemists ant medical men is of any value, Dr. Puce's Cream Baking Powder is the most perfect made. These men of uatidin? in theii professions not onlv commend its use, but endorse its perpurity, excellence and wholasomeas by using it in their own families.
,.. FOOD FB0M PBIME SOURCES.
Reasons Why a Strictly Vegetable Diet Is To Be Preferred. Si
Longman's Magazine. Tne food which is most enjoyed is the food we call bread and fruit. In my long medical career, extending over forty years, I have rarely known an instance in which a child has not preferred fruit to animal food. I have been many times called upon to treat children for stomachic disorders induced by pressing upon them animal to the exclusion of fruit diet, and have seen the beet results occur from the practice of reverting to the use of fruit in the dietary. I say it without the least prejudice, as a lesson learned from simple experience, and the most natural diet for the young, after the natural milk diet, is fruit and ^wholemeal bread, with milk and water for drink. The desire for this same mode of sustenance is often continued into after years, as if the resort to flesh were a forced and artificial feeding, which reauired long and persistent habit to establish as a permanency, as apart of the system of everyday life. How strongly this preference taste for fruit over animal food prevail* is shown by the simple fact of the retention of those foods in the mouth. Fruit is retained to be tasted and relished. Animal food, to use a common phrase is "bolted." There is a natural desire to retain the delicious fruit for full mastication there is no sach desire, except in the trained gourmand, for the retention of animal substance. One further fact which I have observed—and that too often to discard it—as a fact of great moment, is that when a person of mature years has, for a time, {iven up voluntarily the use of animal food in favor of vegetable, the sense of repugnance to animal food is soon so markedly developed that a return to it is overcome with the utmost difficulty. Neither is this a mere faney or fad peculiar to sensitive men or over-sentimental women. I have been surprised to see it manifested in men who are the very reverse of sentimental, and who were, in fact, quite ashamed to admit themselves guilty of any such weakness. I have heard those who have gone over from a mixed diet of animal and vegetable food to a pure vegetable diet speak of feeling low under the new system, and declare that they must needs give it up in consequence, but I have found even these (without exception) declare that they infinitely preferred the simpler, purer, and, as it seemed to them, more natural, food plucked from the prime'source of foou, untainted by its passage through another animal body.
Gossip About Women.
Women interviewers are said to be far more successful than men of London newspapers.
Miss Juliet Carson has become so much of an invalid that she is not able to leave her room.
There are eight ladies of title in England who carry on the business of dress and mantel making.
Four of Archdeacon Farrar's daughters have married clergymen, and three out of the four have chosen curates in their father's church.
A gold bangle watch with blue face surrounded with diamonds was the gift of the duke of Portland to each of the nine bridemaids who took part at his wedding.
The woman's exchange at Kansas City is to build a home for working women. The home is to cost $30,000, and a $14,000 lot has already been bought to put it upon.
There are over 3,000,000 women in this country who are engaged in work which is not domestic. Whatever are her "rights" a woman's right to work is evidently unlimited.
At the literary ladies' dinner given in London a short time ago seven gentlemen novelists offered to come as waiters, but they were not admitted.
The second daughter of Gen. Boulanger is to marry the son of the sister-in-law of the ex-king of Naples. Her title ia along way off from royal, however, as she will only be a plain little countess.
The Closing of an Important Outlet. The blockade of a port is not more injurious to its commerce than is even the temporary obstruction of the bowels to the health of the system. Constipation necassarilv arrests the sccretion of bile, impedes and disorders digestion, and poisons the circulation. The safest tind most effective, as it is also the most genial, laxative and anti-bilious medicine in existence is Hostetter's Stomac.h Bitters, and it is more than probable that its sovereign efficacy as a preventative and remedy for intermittent and remittent fever is largely due to its reformatory action upon the liver, an organ prejudicially involved in all malarial complaints. Persons with atendeucy also to rheumatic, neuralgic and kidney trouble cannot do better thaa to antagonize it with Hosttet's Stomach Bitters, which invariably checks it at the outset. The weak, moreover, are invested with strength by this fine invigorant.
The English Princess who is to marry Fife need not be a musician in order to blow her husband.
JACOBS Ol],
For Rheumatism.
N E W E I E N E OF CURE. Several Tears. 247 North St. Paul Street. Rocbanter, N. Y„ June 24,1SSS.
Suffered several yean with rheumatiim nnabll vr. to walk after rubbing* with 8t. Jacob! Oil It dia» :i4: appeared ha* not returned in four yeari. S?¥':• CHAS. OAHTHEB.
In the Knees. Xochecter, N. T. July 0, '88. Had rheumatism ia knoei (our waeki. One bottle of St. Jacobs Oil cured me entirely.
:M,
E. H. MAKK. Pub, of "VolkiMatt."
In the Side. Stockton, Cal., Jane 14,1888. Had rheumatism in aide for over a weak uaid St. Jacob! Oil it cured me and ha* remained cured. JULIUS GEDZXS,
AT PHTJOOISTS AND UIC.VI.GRS.
THE CHARLE3 A. VOQELER CO.. Baltimore. Mi.
A Fair Trial
or
Hood's Sanaparilln will convince any reasonable person that it does possess great medicinal merit. We do not claim that every bottle wi.l accomplish a miracle, but we do know that nearly every bottle, taken according to direcions, does produce positive benefit. Its peculiar curative power is shown by many remarkable cures. "I was run down from clone application to work, but was told I hail malaria and was dosed with quinine, etc., which was useless. I decided to take Hood's Sarsaparilla and am now idling trong and cheerful. 1 feel satisfied it will benlit any who give it a fair trial." W. B. BEAMISH, 61 Spring Street, New York City.
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1 six for *f. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
Two ol Mr. Barnum's Stories. Mr. Barnum's breezy conversation was interspersed at frequent intervals with witty anecdotes and quaint sayings. He spoke of an old lady who was so deaf that, when soaie playful cbaps fired a small cannon near the old lady's door, she merely said "come in." "That was a pretty fair story when I heard it some time ago," said the veteran, "but I heard a good one a day or two since that beats it. Two gentleman were walking along a highway near a railroad. One of the pedestrians was somewhat hard of hearing. Along came a train, and the engine emitted a frightful shriek. 'H'm,' said the deaf one, that's] the first robin I've heard this spring.'"
Climate for Consumptives.
The several
climatoB
of Florida, Col
orado and California have each been much prescribed for sufferers from lung disease, yet thousands of the natives in those States die of this fatal malady. A far more reliable remedy is to be had in every drug store in the land, and one that can be used at home a remedy which is sold, by druggists, under the manufacturers' positive guarantee that, if taken in time and given a fair trial, it will effect a cure, or money paid for it will be promptly returned. We refer to that world-famed remedy for consumption, or lung scrofula, known as Dr. rlerce's Golden Medical Discovery. It is the only remedy for this terrible disease possessed of such superior curative properties as to warrant its manufacturers in selling it under a guaran tec.
Don't hawk, and blow, and spit, but use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Of druggists.
A labor lyceum for women has been organized in 8t. Paul.
We will give $100 for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken internally.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O.
Every chef should be abase ballist in order to catch the flies in the batter. Bead Dr. Barber's card in another column.
How a Convict is Searched. From George Xennan's illustrated article in the July Century we quote the following: "You have ::o idea, Mr. Kennan," said Captain Nikolin, "how unscrupulous they are, and how much criminal skill they show in concealing forbidden things and in smuggling letters into and out of prison. Suppose that you were going to search a political convict as thoroughly as possible, how would you do it?"
I replied that I should strip him naked and make a careful examination: of his clothing. "Is that all you would do?" he inquired, with a surprised air.
I said that no other course of procedure suggested itself to me just at that moment. "Would you look in his eare?" "No," I answered "I should no' think of looking in his ears." "Would you search his mouth?"
Again I replied in the negative. "Would you look in a hollow tooth?" I solemnly declared that such a thing as looking in a hollow tooth for a letter would never, under any circumstances, have occurred to me. "Well," he said triumphantly,"I have taken tissue paper with writing on it outoi a prisoner's ear, out of prisoner's mouth, and once I found a dose of deadly poison concealed under a capping oi wax in a convict's hollow tooth. Ah-h-h!' he exclaimed, rubbing his hands, "they are very sly, but I know all their tricks.".
Josh Billings' Philosophy. Prase is sown with one hand, censure with two.
After all iz sed and done, thare are but phew persons, if enny, ov real merit who fail to be appreshiated in this world.
The gods luv to help them who help themselfs, and so do men. It allwus takes two to keep up a quar rel, and keeps them both bizzy.
Arrows of wit should be shot from a bo ov good sense. Whole volumes hav bin writ praising the beauty ov kontentment and yet we are prone to beleave that thoze who prase it the most hav the least ov it.
He who haz the most virtew haz the least suspishion. I hav known people who had so little karakter that they waz just, az apt to do thing wrong az rito.
When yu hav a ded sure thing, then iz the time to go slo, and keep both eyes on the gun.
Yu kant do a man a grater injury than to wink at liiz faults. Bad luk strengthens our back bone, while good luk often only weakens our stummuk.
Fiddling one string iz no grate accomplishment besides, it unfits a man for eyny thing else.
I wouldn't dri up the tears ov this world if I could: they are often the only things that poor human natur haz to bathe her troubles in.
E O O IN F-UNEQUALED For House. Barn,' and nil out-buMdings.
Anybody can put it on. PRICE LOW. Writefor8ample and Book. 43 S. Pennsylvania St.
INDIANA PAINT & ROOFING CO
Book Keeping, Short Hand, Telegraphy, «tc. Wr.te for Catalogue and full in ormation.
LOVE IN BOSTON.
When summer fair her charms displays And wild flowers gem the leas, And musical are woodland ways
With song birds' melodies
The gentle maid in white arrayed, Then to the picnic hies, And helps to make the lemonade
And carve the custard pies.
She walks with John o'er mead and loa And plucks tike daisies white, And hears his vows of love and she
IMPORTANT.
When visiting New York City, save Baggage Express and Carriage Hire,and stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot. 600 Handsomely Furnished Rooms ot $1 »n] upwards per day. European plan. Elevators, and all Modern Conveniences.
Restaurants supplied with the best. Horse cars and elevated railroads to all depots. You can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other first-class hotel the City.
Seventy-five women in the United States are practicing lawyers.
Taking it altogether there never was a tiim when our country was enjoying greater prosperity than at the present moment, and yet then are thousands of people in the land who art fussing and fuming about hard times. No doub but what many of them are honest in their com plaints, and it'is often because they have not found the right kind of work or the right way to do it. Now, if business is not movine alonu with yon satisfactorily, take our advice anwrite B. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va. It is more than likely that they can help you, any rate, it would cost you nothing but a postage stamp to apply to them.
What are the wild wayes saying' They are probably telling fish stories one another.
If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac Thorn son's Eye Water. Druggists sell it.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castor a. When she was a Child, she cried for Castor ia. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.
•BITFIELDS
FEMALE .REGULATOR
Steow
MENSTRUATION
J500K TO* WOMAN"MA![£D?XEB BRADF/ELD REGULATOR CO.
A
TLA/VTA GA.
taia BY AH tsmacrx
FREE TRADE PRICES!
mOTElTlOS! NO KOKOI'UllKS!
S45«»ISS15
We aro now aellintr our WESTIPBOVED SI1SER SEWItlG Ml--Huma as cut—complete all attachments and warranted for S years tor only $15. bend for circular and sse full description of thin and other stylea to M. A. SCUUKN fi CO., (62 West Lake St., Chicago, 111.
HALF RATES
TO THK
FARMING REGIONS
—OF THL—
WEST, SOUTHWEST, NORTHWEST.
For particulars call on your Ticket Ag«nt or addreea 1*. S. EUST1S, Qen'l Fata. A (ft., C. It. & J. K. K.,Chicago.
prescribe and
dorae Big O as the CT\J specific for the certain OOTJ of this disease. O.H.INORAHAM.H.
D.,
Amsterdam, N. Y.
We have sold Big foi many years, and It has plven the bcii cf lati* faction.
Mrdralykytka isiOhaalMlft.
DONTRIINlHERISK
of losinfe your child by permitting Worms to work out its destruction. When & child in Is tw sleep well, is restlass, unnatural in its ,i]i»ctite and grinds its teeth, yon have strong indications ol Worms the positive cure for tins is It. A. FAHNESTOCK'S VEBMIFUCJb. Ask your druggist for it. Its timely use may save yotit child train its arTave.|
AGENTS WANTED!
We hiro On Nalan nnd pay expenses, lou can earn from SlO «««5 per week. Apply at onr.e stilting ajje. AddreM k. C. PsiasoN A Co., Orove Nurnorlos, Waterloo, N. Y.
..j<p></p>Miiple
»l
(Krttalilinliod IS6rt.)
Johnstown Horror!
ia every. National
uau.v. Terma, 50 per cent.: outlb. Oo„ 1.13 Adams St* Chicago. 111.
For Sbeds and Ponltry Baildings Excellent Roof. Anybody can apply. Price complete $2 per IOO sq. Feet. Improve and protect your out-buildings, fences etc., with Slate Paint. It is durable ornamental, easily applied, and sss costs in barrels only 60 cents a Gallon,
Indianapolis, XTICI.
BRYANT & STRATTON Business College
LOUISVILLE, KY.
Advertisers
Will find our list of Indiana Newspapers the best medium for reaching
400,000:Indiana Readers
At smaller cot-t than by any other plan on earth. For terms and particulars, state snace and time to run.
W. H. Leedy, M'g'r., 20-22 S. Tenn. St., INDIANAPOLIS. IND.
Heturns engaged at night. —Boston Courier.
Don't you want to save money, clothes, time, labor, fuel and health? All these can be saved if you will try Dobbins' Electric Soap. We say "try," knowing if you try it once, you will always use it. Have your grocer order it.
Mme. Patti-Nicolini is dubbed the queen at Craig-v Nos castle.
iWjO'safeardi'O eat green apples!
Yanhrfxfer
JK. OZSRTAXKT OTTaRLDE! i'in Snmiu»r Complaint, Diarrhwn,Cr»m]iColic, Flux, Choli-rit Morbus, Congestion. id Neuralgia of th» Stomach mid Howls, Sour Stomacli nnd various tnrnis of Inilistlon. KVKItY«OTTI,KGUAltA3fXKEl to Ciiv« Satisfaction or Money ItK3"UJIIl£l. Price 25c & fiOc, by PmnKists. 2.-c ni/.e sent by mini tin receipt of price and tie to pay postage, address, (iLOHK MKmciNK CO., Telle Haute, ln«l.
by return mall, lull descriptive circulars of
MOODY'S REV TAILOR STSTCH OFOBISSCUTTIIl. Any lady of ordinary Intelligence can easily and quickly lean to cut
Mid
make
any garment, ta any style to any measure for lady or child.
Addreal
MOODY & CO.,
Cincinnati, O.
Velocipedes, Bicycles, Tricycles
CHILDREN'S CARRIAGES,
Ladies' and Gents' Rattan Chairs and Rockers
At Factory Prices. Goods delivered to all points within 700 miles of Chicago. Send for Catalogue.
CHAS. RAISER, 62 and 64 Clybourrt Avenue, CHICACO, ILL. X33F3-. W.
Giyos fpaclal attention to all dell*
1
ii»-
cat* di«ea»ea of both »exs.. B»gu._ ting r«mediei furnUhed. Cancer*, ourefl ftutrin t®od thou to# kn if
Rupturo, no cure no pay, pay until cured. Piles, Bectol Troubles »uccea«fully treated, cure guaranteed. For the »ucc*^ ^ful treatment of any other iHs nol I'lienttoued call on or address, VB 50it South Illinois Strest,
SK'WfiteiBlndianapolfs, Ind. All lettori containing 2c stamp promptly aMWersa Mid medicines sent to order.
JONES
1113
PAYS THE FREIGHT. ii Ton Wagon 6aiile), Iron Levers. Steel Beatings, Kraas
Tare Beam and Beam Kox tor
S60.
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BINGH ABITOX, N. Y.
-TKKATEP FREE.
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days at least two-tbird* of all symptoms are removed. Send for freo book of testimonials of miraculous cures Ten davu treatment furnished free
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If yon order trial, fend 10 cents in stamp» to pay
Lionbifo. 11. II. UKKE'IN it &ONS, Atlauta, Cra.
faraHparpeses:
Semd 2 Oct&fwr mailing
cftialogueswUft
^particulars^ 6ABMMTE _5T«iAN fljCAMOU,AVI.
CUflFS WHERE ALL tlbfc 1AILS. Couffh Syrup. Tastes good. Uso In time. Sold by druggists
PERFECTION BRONZE PAIKTSWJISI'
Oranac, Kire, Silver Copper, Flesh. Green, Lemon. and Carmine. ickngc bv mail 10 Agentwanted. CU.SIIlNG & CO., Kosc-oft, Miuue. 1 dozen with Camels llmr Bru»h .bCc by mail.
I tnirO Kns. Tansy Tills. Safe, prompt, ef-
LAUILO
D. It. DYCHX JJCO., Chlcaco, III 31.00. Sold by Drus*13»
fectunl. Try the original and onl genu
ine Woman's Salvation. Cir. uiHl Rynn tes iiiionv jih. 1'ks lty .nail »l.M. Warranted. DU. OA ION Box.YiYi, BOSTON, MANS.
DETECTIVES
Wanted in every countv. Shrewd men to act under instruction, in our secret service. Ex per enee not neoessorv. Send Uc
BEstablished
stamp.
Orammo
Detectivo llurrau Co- 41 Arcade, Oil ati, O
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INDIANAPOL.I3,
IND.
37 years. Bestjrfacc to Rcrnre'
thorouuhly practical and sound nn^mcw and Shortlmn Education. CatuJojruo and Commercial Current, IVe»
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BUSINESS
COLLKQK, Buffalo, N.
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When
ISUPI-S
writing to Adv«M ti*«i's renders will
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ter Safety lieiii-Iioliier Company. 110LLV. 3 «i.
