Pike County Democrat, Volume 31, Number 32, Petersburg, Pike County, 14 December 1900 — Page 7
WHY MRS. PINKHAM 'i - Xb Able to Help Sick Women When Doctors Fail. - \ ■
How gladly would men fly to woman’s aid did they but understand a woman’s feelings, trials, sensibilities, and peculiar organic disturbances. Those things are known only to women, and the aid a man would give is not at his command. To treat a case properly it is necessary to know all about it, and full information, many times, cannot be given by a woman to her family phy»
Mbs. G. H. Chappell. sician. She cannot bring* herself to tell everything, and the physician is at a constant disadvantage. This is why, for the past twenty-five years, thousands of women have been con* tiding their troubles to Mrs. Pinkham, and whose advice has brought happiness and health to countless women in the United States. Mrs. Chappell, of Grant Park, 111., whose portrait we publish, advises all suffering women to seek Mrs. Pinkham's advice and use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, as they Cured her of inflammation of the ovaries and womb; she, therefore, speaks from knowledge, and her experience ought to give others confidence. Mrs. Pinkham’s address i6 Lynn, Mass., and her advice is absolutely free. Mixed Emotions. To illustrate the feeling of Ireland toward the predominant partner, an actor who hac \ately been touring tells the story of an old waiter in a Dublin hotel. "When are you going to get home rule in Ireland, John?" was the question. "See ye here, sorr,” said the old man, “the only way we'll get home rule for ould Ireland will be if France—an’ Russia—an’ Germany—an' Austria—an' maybe Italy—if they would all join together to give those blaygiards of English a rare good hiding. That’s the only way we’ll get none rule, annyway.” Then, as he looked captiously around, a twinkle of cunning and a smile of courtesy were added to the expression. “And the whole lot of ’em shoved together couldn’t do it,” he said. “Oh—it’* the grand navy we’ve got!”—London Chronicle. Time to Go Sontli. , For the present winter season the Louis ville & Nashville Railroad Company has improved its already nearly perfect through service of Pullman Vestibuled Sleeping Cars and elegant day coaches from Cincinnati, Louisvihe, St. Louis and Chicago, to Mobile, New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, Thomasville, Ga., Pensacola, Jacksonville, Tampa, Palm Beach and other paints in Florida. Perfect connections made with steamer lines for Cuba, Porto Rico, Nassau, West Indian and Central American Ports. Tourist and Home Seekers’ excursion tickets on sale at low rates. Write C. L. Stone, General Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ky., for particulars. Plain Evidence. Wife—What shall we name the babv, John? Husband—I have decided to leave that entirely to you, my dear. “John, you’ve been drinking again.”— Smart Set. * Jell-O, The New Dessert, pleases all the family. Four flavors:—Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grooers. 10 cts. Try it to-day. Strictly speaking, of course a man can’t be ready to die for two different girls without leading a double jife.—Detroit Journal. The stomach has to work hard, grinding the food we crowd -into it. Make its work easy by chewing Beeman’s Pepsin Gum. Few men nowadays know how to lend money so that a gentleman can borrow froir them without losing his self-respect.—Puck. I do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption has an equal for coughs and colds.— John F. Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. Courtesy is never costly, yet never cheap. —Ram’s Uorn. To Cure a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails tocure. 25c. Knowledge comes with what we learn; wisdom, with what we unlearn.—Judge. The Public Awards the Palm to Hale’s Honey of Horehound and T jr for coughs. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. It is hard to do, of course; still, yon can be fooled.—Atchison Globe.
Tied Up When tbt muscles feel drawn and tied up and the flesh tender, that tension is * Soreness and Stiffoess from cold or over exercise. It lasts hnt a short time after St Jacobs Oil is applied. The cure is prompt and sure. •0*0*0«0>0«0«0»0«0»0«0«09 |0*0#0«0*0#0#O#0«O#0*0#0#0#0*0*0©0*0'
YOUNG BELGIAN HARES. Thtr Are Terr Saeeeptlble to Dranghti and Cannot Stand as Much Cold as the Old Onei. i, From the time of weaning until the young have passed through their first moult, is, perhaps, the time the most care should be taken in feeding, of any time during the animal’s entire life. It depends somewhat on the kind of feed the mother had been given as io what the little hares can be fed. If the mother had been fed green weeds with a little hay and grain the young ones can be fed the same kind of feed, only the quantity of green feed should be diminished and the dry hay and
grain increased in proportion. It is well for the first week or two to feed a little swee^ milk or milk and bread after weaning. The little hares soon learn to eat, and look forward td feeding time the same as the older ones. They are perhaps the most easily, reared after the stage of weaning of any domestic animal. We find it better to feed a little oftener at this age than we feed our older hares, or at least to keep plenty of good, sweet hay before them all the time. When they reach the age of three months we feed them as we do the others. At three months of age they should be gone over carefullj', and the does and bucks separated. Those not good enough to use as breeders may bo sent to the table or saved until they are older and heavier, and then killed. Young hares are susceptible to draughts and cannot stand as imich cold as grown ones. To keep snuffles out of your rabbitry H is important that you provide comfortable quarters for the young hares. Plenty of room for exercise should be given the growing stock, for they enjoy a good run quite as much as they do a good feed of oats, and will run in a circle around a pen five feet "by five feet if a larger pen is not provided to get the required exercise. Hares that have all the room they need in which to exercise will not cause their owners as much trouble as those penned in small hutches or runs. The large run does not have to be cleansed as often as the hutch, and all kinds of green stuff is fed with impunity‘a? long as they have a variety to choose from. We always keep a lump of rock salt where our hares can get it at any time, and whenever feeding corn chop we mix a little salt in it and occasionally add a spoonful of oil meal to each quart of the chop, moistening all slightly with hot water. The maslf is still warm when it reaches them, and is an excellent food for hares of any age, but more particularly those just weaned.—National Rural. VENTILATING A STACK. A. Stake and Troujjh System Which Some Farmers Consider to Be Without an Equal. Many farm products are stacked in the field to dry out before they are taken into the barn or other buildings. If three stakes are driven into l\3 m « >
HOW TO BUILD A STACK. the ground and a V-shaped, inverted trough is placed, as shown in the cut, and the stack built about the stakes, the air will have, access to the interior of the stack, whence it will pass out at the top, if stakes sufficiently long have been used. The stakes also serve a useful purpose in giving stability to the stack when being built, and in holding it up against the effeet of ^finds thereafter.—N. Y. Tribune. Corn Meal la Expensive, A communication from the Vermont experiment station says: Corn meal is the cow feed bought by a great majority of Vermont farmers when they are short on the grain ration. This is really about the most expensive concentrate that could be found in the market. Its expensiveness results not from its high price, but from the fact that it contains such very small quantities of the protein needed in milkmaking. Just one look at a table showing the chemical composition of standard feeding stuflfs ought to convince any dairyman of the extravagance of buying corn meal. The feeding stuffs inspection at the Vermont experiment station calls particular attention to this one fact.
Milk Card for Poaltry. Ill cases where milk is very plenti* ful, and only a portion is needed for fowls, it will be well to give the milk in the form of curd, by heating it until the whejf saparates from the more solid portions. This is very nutritious and its constitutents so nearly resemble the white of the egg that it is really an excellent article of food. Let no one hesitate to take from his waste milk whatever his hens will use, assured that they will yield five times over the returns that swine or other stock would give for the same amount, j —Farm and Fireside. Green bone is a valuable food for growing clucks and matured fowls.
IN FOREIGN CITIES. Within a year the taxable property of Hamburg has increased by $600,000. The aggregate wholesale traffic in geese at Berlin amounts annually to nearly $2,000,COO. The city of Moscow will expend 48,000,000 roubles, or about $24,600,000, on new waterworks. The city has now a ! population of over 1,000,000. The barbers in some to&ns in Germany are compelled by law to cleanse and disinfect their combs, brushes and razors immediately after use, and before they are applied to the hair or head of another customer. A new Cigarette factory was formally opened in the city of Mexico last month. President Diaz attended, with a great’ throng of distinguished guests. The police turned out in dress uniforms. A company of infantry paraded. WORTH A PASSING THOUGHT. The average ; baby weighs 7 9-10 pounds and is 19% inches tall. One-fourth of the laboring population of Colorado is said to belong to labor organizations. Artificially produced indigo is now better in quality, cheaper in price and consequently much more popular than the natural article. Denton’s *‘Xew York,” the first book dealing with that locality, brought $2,000 at a sale in London a few days ago. It is a small quarto volume and was published in 1670. Six young Japanese artists have arrived in Boston to pursue their studies. They wear the native costume, a loose robe of silk over a skirt of steel gray silk, and a capelike jacket into which is woven the family coat-of-arms.
VARIOUS MATTERS. Spain has only 11,500 miles of railway, while France, of about the same area, has 36,000. f The latest fad of women in London is to have delicate little paintings on the shoulders when in evening dress. Queen Victoria has a family of over a hundred members, representing, with herself, four generations of the royal blood. Bret Harte is planning to return to America next year for the purpose of revisiting western scenes which he has rendered immortal with his pen, and to note the later developments in that section. - The first great‘English dictionary appeared in the year 1750. It was compiled by Samuel Johnson at a cost of £1,575, and contained 50,000 defined terms. One of the latest dictionaries out cost over £200,000, and contains 304,000 terms. IN BRITISH AMERICA. Canada expects a population of 6,000,• 000 in its census returns next year. Anticosti island, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, though owned by a Frenchman, is under the British flag and subject to the Canadian laws. “The Canadians are far ahead of us in the matter of packing fruit for export,” says a Maine business man, “and consequently they have less trouble in disposing of their fruit.” Political buttons cannot be worn in Canada during the heat of a campaign. This is due to a clause in the dominion franchise act which says that no person shall exhibit any sign of his political faith after the official nominations are made.
TRADE AND INDUSTRY. About onc-half of the total silver used by the world is produced in Mexico and the United estates. The latest triumph in the industrial world is the stone lathe. It is S6 feet loner and weighs many tons. THE MARKETS. New York, Dec. 10. CATTLE—Native Steers....$ 4 .5 @S 5 60 COTTON—Middling . <y> FLOUR—Winter Wheat.... 3 25 ^ WHEAT—No. 2 Red. 77*# CRON—No. 2. # OATS—No. 2. # PORK—Mess New... 12 00 # 13 00 SI. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling .. 9%# BEEVES—Steers .. 4 25 # Cows and Heifers. 2 60 @ CALVES (per lOOi. 4 25 # HOGS—Fair to Choice...... 4 65 # SHEEP—Fair to Choice.... 3 50 # FLOUR—Patents (new).... 3 55 # Other Grades. 2 75 # WHEAT—No. 2 Red. 72 © COUN-No. 2. 36%# OATS-No. 2.. .... & RYE—No. 2.i... & TOBACCO—Lugs . 3 50 Leaf Burley.... 4 50 HAY—Clear Timothy. 11 00 BUTTER—Choice Dairy.... 17 BACON-Clear Rib. EGGS—Fresh . _ PORK—StandardMess(new) ...._ © 13 00 10* 00 78* 40 20* 0* 6 00 3 90 6 00 5 05 4 00 3 55 3 45 73 37 24 50 <U> S 50 # 12 00 # 14 00 <Li 20 & 8* 6%# I.ARD—Choice Steam CHICAGO. CATTLE—Native Steers.... 4 75 I HOGS—Fair to Choice. 4 50 ( SHEEP—Fair to Choice.... 3 25 < FLOUR—Winter Patents... 3 65 ( Spring Patents— 3 40 < WHEAT—No. 3 Spring. 64 < No. 2 Red.... I CORN—No. 2. i OATS-No. 2. i PORK—Mess .11 37*( KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Native Steers.... 4 50 i HOGS—Fair to Choice. 4 60 I WHEAT—No. 2 Red. 68* OATS-No. 2 White. < CORN—No. 2.. 34 I NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR—High Grade. 3 40 I CORN—No. 2.. 51* OATS—Western .. 31 HAY—Choice . 17 50 I PC*RK—Standard Mess—. .... i BACON—Short Rib Sides... 9*' . WHEAT—No. 2 Red CORN—No. 2. 38 OATS-No. 2._ 24* PORK- New Mess.12 00 BACON—Short Rib.. 8 Cl>»''iv%V_TlTidvUing . 8*i
Stat* car Ohio, Citt oh Toledo, I— Lucas Coohtt, | Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is tha senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney ft Co., doing business in the city of Toledo County an<f SUte aforesaid, and that said firm anil pay the sum of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. , A. W. GLEASON, [Seal] Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. In Society. News Note—The earl of Makearaise has arrived in New York. Many Rich Fathers—What’s his price?— Detroit Free Press. Best for the BoucU. No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you tfrill never get well until your bowels are put right. Cascarets help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. Photographer—“Now, smile, please.” Sitter—“I can’t; I am a humorist by profession.”—Ally Sloper. Excursion Sleepers Tin M., K. Ok T. By. Weekly Excursion Sleepers leave St. Louis via Katy Flyer (M. K. ft T. Ry.) every Tuesday at 8:16 p. m. for San Antonio, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Weekly Excursion Sleepers leave Kansas City via the M. K. ft T. Ry. every Saturday at 9:05 p. m. for San Antonio, Los Angeles and San Francisco. “Some folks,” said Uncle Eben, “nebber stahts in gittin’ downright industrious until dey ’* doin’ sumpin’ wrong.”—Washington Star. What Shall We Have for Deaaertf This question arises every day. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, delicious and healthful. Prepared in two minutes, No boiling! no baking! add boiling water and set to cool. Flavors:—Lemon, Orange, Raspberry, Strawberry. At your grocers. 10c. Bric-a-brac is hard to define precisely. But anything that you can afford and that there is room for in your house is not, strictly, bric-a-brac.—Puclc. Your Storekeeper Can Sell Yon Carter’s Ink or he can get it for you. Askhim. Try it. Car loads are sent annually to every stAte in the Union. Do you buy Carter’s? The true use of speech is not so much to express our wants as' to conceal them.— Goldsmith. SWOLLEN FEET
-and hands usually indicate an ad* vanced stage of Kidney disorder. It is one of the last special pleadings of nature to seek a remedy. Look out also for backache, scalding urine, dizziness, headache and brick-dust or other sediment in urine which has been allowed to stand. Heed these warnings before it is too late. MORROW'S KID-NE-OIDS are guaranteed under oath to be the best remedy in existance ior Bright’s Disease or any other form of Kidney Trouble. A eash forfeit is offered for any case Kid-ne-oids will not cure. MISSOURI AND ILLINOIS People ei red by KID-NE-OIDS. Is writing them, please enclose stamped addressed envelope. J. W. Powers, Lamar, Mo. Mrs. A. R. Winters. 520 Porter St.. Moberly, Mo." Mrs. Mary Alnut, N. Cherry St.. Chillicothe. Mo. Mrs. M. M. Christian. SIS K. 9th St.. Serial ia, Mo. R. C. Green. Grand Are.. Waukegan, 111. W. R. Beebe, Centralla, 111. Mrs. C. A. Hew 1 tt,Wilson Ave. A 10th St., Sterling, UL J. Cavendish. 709 Douglass St., Paris. 111. Mrs. A. J. Lansaw, 513 S. Marshall St., Paris, 111. Morrow’s Kid-ne-oids are not pills, but Yellow Tablets and sell at fifty cents a box at drug stores. JOHN MORROW ACO„ 8PRINQFIILO, O*
The real -worth of W. Im Douglas 93X10 and 83X0 shoes compared -with other makes is •4.00 to 96.00. Our94 Gilt Edge tine cannot be equalled at any price. Over1,000,000 satisfied -wearers.
We are the lufMt makers of men’s S3 udt340 shoos in the world. We make and sell more 33 and S3JS0 shoes than any other two mannfactnrers In the U- S*
BEST $&50 SHOE
Douglas *3JX> and «3.«0 shoes for style, comfort, and wearis known erery where throughout the world. They hereto rtre better satisfaction than other makea because the itandard has always been placed so high that the wearers upcel more for their money than they can get elsewhere.
BEST $3.00 SHOE
hem in give on___ Take no mshetitute S Insist on baring W. L. Douglas shorn with name and price itamped on bottom. 11 poor dealer w*ll not get them lor 70a, send direct In jMtarjr, enclosing price end 85c. extra tot carriage. State kind©! leather, aise, and width, plain or cap toe. ^.S^SheSiSS^£Sn£S:’
HRS. BREWER RECOMMENDS PERUNR FOR GRIP AND FEMALE CATARRH
The Home of Mrs. Lizzie X. Brewer at Westerly) B. L
In a letter to Dr. Hartman concerning the merits of Pe-ru-na, Mrs. Brewer writes, among other things: Westerly, R. I. "Dear Dr. Hartman—I find Pe-ru-na a sure cure for all catarrhal affections so common in this part of the country. It cures a cold at once. There is no cough medicine that can at all equal Pe-ru-na. As for la grippe, there is no other remedy that can at all compare with Pe-ru-na. “I am among the sick a greet deal in our city and have supplied many invalids with Pe-ru-na, simply Decause I am enthusiastic in my faith as to its results. I have never known it to fail to quickly and permanently remove that demoralized state of the human system which follows la- grippe. “In all cases of extreme weakness I use Pe-ru-na with perfect confidence of a good result. In cases of weakness peculiar to my sex I am sure that no other remedy can ap
proachin good results the action of Pe-ru-na* It meets all the bad symptoms to wlpeh fa*, males are subject. The irregularities am# nervousness, the debility and miseries whidl afflict more or less the women from girlhooa to change of life, are one and all met an* overcome by this excellent remedy. I wisl|> every young lady in our city could read yout book. “Mra^ Lizzie M. Brewer.” { Pe-ru-na will cure the worst cases of caa, tarrh. La grippe is acute epidemic catarrW for which Pe-ru-na is a specific. Mrs. J. W. Reynolds, New Lisbon, Ohiew suffered for many years with chronic caw tarrh of the lungs, head and threat; coqa tinuous cough; many physicians failed tH cure. Permanently cured by Pe-ru-na^ Thousands of testimonials could be pro*, duced. A valuable treatise on catarrh send free by The Pe-ru-na Medicine Company, Ga* lumbus, O. —----4
An Opportunity! ™! REVIEW OF REVIEWS Tog«h« (FOR ONE YEARf LITTLE MASTERPIECES 12 VOLUMES, -
i ALL I For only 50 centa down and 50 cents * permonthforeleven 1 months. Only $4 I altogether*
Twelve Exquisite Volumes of the World’s Choicest Productions in English Literature.
SELECTIONS In the Masterpiece Library. POE........Fall of the House of Usher—Ligeia The Cash of Amontillado—The Assignation—MS. Found in a Bottle—The Black Cat—The Gold Bug. • UTINfi.BIp Van Winkle; Legend of Sleepy Hollow—The Devil and Tom Walker—The Voyage—Westminster Abbey— Stratford-on-Avon—The Stout Gentleman. WEBSTER.Adams and Jefferson— Reply to Hayne. HAWTHOBNE. .Dr. Heidegger's Experiment—The Birthmark—othan Brand— Wakefield Browne's Wooden Image—The Ambitious Guest—The Great Stone Face— The Gray Champion. LINCOLN.Speeches — Letters — * Lincoln's Lost Speech ’* FRANKUM....Autobiography—Poor Richard's Almanac—Selected Essays—Letters. CARLTLE.Essays—Life of Sterling— The French Revolution—Cromwell’s Letters and Speeches—Sartor Resartns—Past and Present. MACAELAT... Essays—History of England^ BESKIN..The Two Boyhoods—The Slave-Ship—The Mountain Gloom«The Mountain Glory—Venice: St. Mark's—Art « and Morals—The Mystery of Life—Peace. .The Two Races of Men—New Year’s Eve — Imperfect Sympathies — Bream Children; A Reverie—A Bissertatlon Upon Roast Pig—On Some of the Old irs—Detached Thoughts on Books and Actors__ Reading—The Superannuated Man—Old China—Letters. DE QTTIXCEX_The Affliction of Child-hood-Confessions of an English OpiamEater: The Pleasures of Opinm, The Pains Of Opium—On the Knocking at the Gate In Macbeth—The Englisu MailCoach: Going Down With Victory. The Vision of Sudden Death—Levana and Our Ladies of Sorrow. Each 'volume has an Introdnetloa by BUSS PERKY.
The Little Masterpiece Library is edlte# by PROFESSOR BLISS PERRY. formerljf Professor of English Literature in Prince* ton University, now Editor of The Atiantlfr Monthly. It is no hastily selected compilsk tion for an ephemeral sale. The Editor hag chosen, with the greatest care and- con* scientiousness, those CHEFS D’OEUVRE® of the greatest English-speaking writerg which are of such beauty and value as tg be at the foundation of English culture. t Yet hdto many people can say that they have iho*a oughly assimilated, or even hastily read alt of *kit immortal works? The binding and printing of the volumes trf beautifully executed. The siie and shape are •# convenient that the books fairly invite the reacting that every intelligent American would want to hay# as a part of his or her intellectual culture. Xjasg volume, bound in handsome red cloth, contains u really tine and artistio photogravure frontispiece of the celebrated writer whose masterpiece it cone tains. t A more charming addition to a library^, one that will be REALLY READ, or at more tasteful Christmas gifb-or twelve Christmas gifts, for the volumes are nof numbered*—could not be imagined. The publishers of the Masterpiece Library have sold it at the rate of $8.00 for the 12 volumes, and havdl claimed it was at that rate au exceya tional bargain. THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS, t Under Dr. Albert Shaw‘s editorship Thg Review of Reviews has come to be coad sidered “indispensable” by thinking Amefd leans. It has monthly— 1. Or. Shaw’s comprehensive, impartial history of the current month. < a. important contributed articles to the amouag of an ordinary magaslne. , S. The gist of the other notable magastaes amt reviews of five continents. 4. “Current History in Caricature." ** A Record of Current Events.” “ The hew Books,” and other always valuable departments. 5. An average of over a hundred timely pictures to the number.
The regular price for The Review of Reviews one year and The Little MasteiV] piece Library, isJS1Q.50, and it is an exceedingly low price. ' By cutting out this offotf, and sending it with 50 cents In stamps, you will receive The Little Masterpiece Librarjf in its entirety at once, also The Review of Reviews throughout 1901, and the balano# of the payment can be completed by sending 50 cents a month for eleven months. If you desire to make a cash remittance, 15.75 will close the transaction. Address THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO., 13 Astor Place, New Yorfcj nmiuif u llnDI I Whiskey,Beer,Eft.,OMots. Cares relapses from other treatments; endorsed bv business firms of National Reputation. Writtf for convincing evidence. THE PAQUM IMMUNE CO., Dept. 28, St. Louts, M*9.
m Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. 5ft absorbs the tumors, allays the Itching at once, acts as a poultice, gives instant relief. Prepared for Piles andltchingof the private par's, AtdruggUts or by mall on receipt of price. SO cents and Sl.OO. WILLIAMS MFG.. CO., Props., CttviUKD, OHIO. OLD SORES cured Allen’s Ulcerine Salve cures Chroale Ulcer*. Bone Clecru, BeroMoas fleers, Vsrleose Clean, ladoleut fleers, Mereiarisl fleers, White Swelling, Milk Leg, Intel, Sell Hbeaw, Fever Sere*, all eld sore*. Positively ad failui-e, eo waiter how low etaadlag. My wall, 63c. J. P. ALLEN, ST. PADL.1T.NN. DROPSY f"5"DISC0VEST? *** quick re Uef and cures worst _Cook of testimonials and to day a* treatment Free Dr. H. H. UKEEN*8 SONS. Box D, Atlanta, Ga. WHISKY and other dm* OPIUM ■■■■■ treatment. Book and particulars J ,_habits cured iu 90 days. Sunatorium treatment. Book and particulars FK SJB. E ML WOOLLEY, ML. i, Atlaata, tiMb Use CERTAIN ISIT CORE. iiOo '.’Sc tie
READERS OF THIS desiring to but ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING WHAT THEY ASK ALL SUBSTITUTES A. N. WHEN WRITING please Meat li
La Creole Hair Restorer is a Perfect Dressing and Restorer. Price ^1.00
