St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 23, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 26 December 1891 — Page 6
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CHRISTMAS DAY.
GOOP old- fashioned . Chris’mas, with the I । logs upon the hearth. The table filled with ' feasteis, f an’ the i room ’’a-rotr 'ith mirth. With the stock in’s > crammed to bu’sty in’, an’the medders J piled ’lth snow — * A good old- fashioned, like . haTSTTong agoijir
Now that’s the thing I’d like to see ag’in afore I die. But Chris’mas in the city here—it's different. oh my! With the crowded hustle-bustle of the slushy, noisy street. An' the scowl upon the faces of the strangers that you meet Oh, there's buyin', plenty of it, of a lot o' gorgeous toys; An’ it takes a mint o’money to please modern girls and boys. Why, I mind the time a jack-knife an’ a toffy-lump for me t Made my little heart an’ stockin’ jus chock-full of Chris’mas glee. An’ there’s feastin’. Think o’ feedin’ with the stuck-up city folk! Why, ye have to speak in whispers, an ye dar’sn’t crach a joke. Then remember how the tables looked a.l crowded with your kin, When you couldn’t hear a whistle blow across the merry din I You see I’m so old-fushioned-llke I don’t case mudi for style. An’ to eat your Chris’mas banquets here I wouldn’X go a mile; I'd rather have, l.ke Solomon, a good yarbdlnner set With real old friends, than turkle soup with all the nobs you’d get. There’s my next-door neighbor Gurleyfancy how his brows ’u’d lift If I’d holler “Merry Christmas! Caught, old fellow, .Chris’mas gift!” Lordy-Lord, I’d like to try It! Gu * he’d nearly have a fit. Bang this city stiffness, anyways, I can’t get used to ic. Then your heart it kept a-swellin' till It nearly bu’st your side, An’ by night your jaws were achin’ with your smile four Inches wide. An* your enemy, the wo’st one, you'd just grab his hand and say: “Mabbe, both of us was wrong. John. Come, let’s shake. It’s Chris’mas day!” Mighty little Chris’mas spirit seems to dwell 'tween city walls, Where each snowflake brings a soot-flako for a brother as it falls; Mighty little Chris’mas spirit! An’ I’m^ £ -..--rj T --------- JU - - - CHRISTMAS ROMANCE
^VE NT Y-FIVE yea: 3 ago this Christinas Dorothy Hope stood before a glass In her own room at her father’s house in New En-. gland dressing for her wedding. Sud'denly she cried: “Oh, you wicked । creatures! Y’ou, who were my schoolmates, willing to marry me to that w: etch!”
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“Pray, Dorothy, if you do not want to marry Mr. Pulsiver, why d d you go so far as to engage-yourself to him?” inquired the tallest of the bridesmaids, gravely. “My father bade me do it, Hester,” said Dorothy. “Oh, indeed, he did. but I did not care. I did not know what love was, and the wedding day was set, and 1 met ” “Go on. Whom did you meet?” “Charles Pulsiver,” sobbed Dorothy. “But he is your bridegroom,” broke in the other girls. “No,” said Dorothy. “It is o'd Mr. Charles Pulsiver 1 am to marry. It is his young cousin I met and loved; but he promised to save me, and the hour Is a most here and he has not done so Ob, what shall I do?” At this moment something struck the window. Dorothy started up, her cheeks all aglow, and d ew aside the curtain and threw -up the sash. A piece of paper wrapped about a stone lay on the till, She opened and read: “Your bridegroom will not come tonight Don’t’retire until you hear this signal once more. Charles. " I She thrust the note into her pocket I and turned to the bridesmaids Time passed on and no bridegroom ' appeared to celebrate the pretty Christ- j mas wedding. At midnight the bridesmaids kissed,the bride, who had already changed her wedding dress for another,' and departed. The girl waited patiently, and presently hea d the signal repeated. The note read: “As soon as you can, come to me at the side gate under the sycamore. “Charles. ” Dorothy was not long in complying with this request, and she soon joined her lover, who, with a saddled horse In readiness, was waiting at the p a'-e appointed. ****** “It’s two o’clock. Whatacan they want out of a Christmas night in such weather?” said old John, vzho kept the toll-gate, to his wife. He stepped out and shouted: “Toll-gate, two pence.” “Pere, keep the change,” said the horseman, who tossed him a coin and passed through the gate only to halt a little beyond. “There is someone following us,” he sa d to the girl who rode behind him and clasped her arms around him tightly, “and we had better stand here under the trees until he goes hy." It was young Charles Pulsiver who spoke, and Dorothy Hope who answered. “It may be my father, Charles. If he finds me I am undone.”
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Then they saw tho toll-man hold out his lantern, and ’ card him cry: “Tollgate; tuppence.” “Here It is, Mr. Tollman!” said an amiable voice, deop toned but so fit “Poor old com in, he's tied to a big tree in his park,” said Charley, “where a very fierce highwayman in a very fierce mustache overtook him as he rode to his wedding. Meanwhile the mustache is im my pocket. But then, ‘al is fair,’ and so forth. ” The tollman had discovered that the last arrival was the minister, who was !< b lated, and insisted that he alight and remain all night, which his reverence proceeded to do The horse was led to the stable and then all was'quiet. “Dorothy, heaven favors us. Here’s a parson to marry us. Say nothing, but let me tell him wliat I please,” said Charles, in a whisper, as he helped Dorothy to alight, and taking her by the . and led her to tho tollma’ii's^door. “Hello! have you seen .a clergyman ride through here?” he asked, as John j answered his sanimons. “Tho Kev. Timothy Narroway would ' have ridden through.” replied the old ! man, “but the road is beset with high- | waymen to night and I bogged him to remain hero, ” “Sir,*” said Charles to the Rev. Nar- | roway, as ho appeared, “you wont to marry a couple at the house of Mr. ' Hope, and tho bridegroom did not show himself. Have you ever seen Mr. , Charles Pulsiver?” “Never,” replied tho clergyman. “The girl’s father is my friend.” “This is my card,” said the young man, drawing one from his po.'ket. “Mr. Charles Pulsiver,” sa d Mr. Nar- ■ roway, reading. “I am glad to see yon; and you, too, , Miss Dorothy. ” “Sir,” said Charles, “I am most un- I happy at having been delayed from being present at my wedding to-night, but 1 have brought my Christmas pres- i ent with me, hoping to overtake you, । an 1 desire that you should marry us. John and his wife will be our witnesses.” “I shail be very happy to do so,” said Mr. Narroway, “and to turn our misadventure into a romance.” Tho ceremony was performed in the little back parlor, and the bridegroom had just saluted his bride, when clattering over tho bridge and along the road, came two horses with riders who spurred them on in hot haste. “Tollman John,” cried a voice they knew to be Mr. Hope's. “There is trouble at my home,” said that gentleman, as he opened the door a moment later, accompanied by the elder Mr. Pulsiver. “Has any woman ridden through the gate to night? I am looking for my daughter,” he went on excitedly. “My dear friend,” said Mr. Narrowayadvancing, “it is all rigl’t. Yourdaugh, ter is here. I have just married her to that gallant little gentleman, Mr. , Charles Pulsiver, who has brought good 5 luck upo i his m_ k—U-eginning J jt on Christmas. ~wjfe-tjWi&iii "TT I ’’h” first to congratulati you, ’he said, and the two men shoot • hands.
3 CHRISTMAS TREES, s - How People In tho Country May Trim 1 Them at Little Expense.
1 5 U s >-/^\ if I 11 r 4 *<s v/1 i > t‘R yiii • . I 'i-
those with colored balls at the bottom, but in case of emergency, the candles can be wired to the twigs of the tree with very fine hair wire, apd will do nicely. There were nearly 300 ornaments on our tree before any of the presents went on. They were nearly all home-made, and of the following varieties: First, we cut out of rather stiff bristol board some five-pointed stars, little boots, Maltese * crosses, butterflies, shields, arrows and horSeshoas. Several of each kind were made, a large bowl of boiled paste prepared, and each was covered on both sides with colored paper, mostly silver and gilt, and^some with red and ,bln \ The arrows, shields and butterflies were voted the prettiest The latter were made flat, one side covered with plain gilt paper, the other with all kinds of brilliant colors, and little round black spots pasted on, to I , look like nat ure;' the wings were then | , bent up as it the insects were flying, and | j with the, prettiest sides out; some’were wired on to the branches and others I hung by threads of dark green, which could not be seen; and they looked as if poised in the air. We next found a piece’ of broken look-ing-glass in the attic, and had it cut up into many little pieces; bound each one with lute-string ribbon pasted on, and when dry furnish*ed each with strings by d which to hang them up. They reflected all the lights, and made the effect very brilliant Cornucopias we were able to make I very easily, for we had a carpenter to j prepare us a slender wooden cone, just । the shape of one, and it is very pleasant I work to paste^them together over this | model; put a pretty embossed picture on i each, and then slip off to dry. The prettiest of all trinkets we made | as follows: Taking a quantity of English I walnuts, we split them (one at a time) ; into’ halves, t lied one half with little ! “caraway comfits,” glued on the other , ha'f, fir t slipping in aMitt'e loop of ribbon at the top, and laid ea h one aside : till dry. Then each was gilded with liquid gilding. These litt e “rattleboxes” are lovely, and everybody will > want one. A lot of tiny, rosy-cheeked apples were , polished up end furnished with strings; also some red ba Is from a plant called . the “Solanum, ” which grows wild here: they look very much like small, round
T J tomatoes.' Not having these, of strung cranberries look very । Owls were made out of peanut?^' 1 putting in two black pins for eyes the pins projecting below the f ee t L gould bo stuck on the branches. they ^Perhaps you could succeed with 1 corn I alls better than I did; ours 1 not stick together, and we were much 1 disappointed.. Wo had some little th, Japanese parasols among our knick- I knacks, and some,.small pictures, and i there were also fastened on to this re- ■ markable tree some little bits of flasg- I you can got quite a roll of them Tor ten cents, and they were very showy I Rut the prettiest of all were the ’ “crystallized ornament First I made 1 some small J askots of annealed wire I and wound them very profusely with ' bright-colored zephyr; the rose-colored and lignt green proved to be the prettiest, also one that I wound in shaded green, with little dots of rod—but the light blue and kmon-colored were not to bo despised Then I proeur- UtQ pounds of alum and a largo, stop oc k and made a hot solution of alum and put in the crock—laid a stick ^across the top and suspended my baskets, one at a tinm. In the hot alum water, leaving them about twelve hours undisturbed. Sometimes I had bettor success than others, but generally they looked like the most luscious French candy ^hen taken out, as the color of the showed through the frosting. TJ^ ' hung the basket up to dry, reheat—.—, ’ solution, sometimes making It st iWger. । and started again I also crystallized grasses and branches with lovely Afect, some of which are on our mantel -jdece to-day; I made a fringe of bright zephyr, and crystallized that, and, in fact, everything that bld fair to be pretty, I put into the alum bath. When the candles were lighted, how everything did sparkle! And so we had our “frostwork and icicles,” even though we live in a Southern climate. Our way of mounting the tree proved very substantial and strong: Two pieces of scantling, six feet long and two inches by four, were morticed and put together in the form of a cross. At the point where they crossed, tho tree was fastened upright by being nailed on with long spikes Four braces were then added, making the whole very strong. Laying stout brown paper underneath we covered the boards from sight with quantities of gray moss and trailing vinos, and sprinkled with the watering-pot, as a precaution against tire, should any ornament blaze up and fall. When the curtains were puMed asld^, and “our tree” stood revea'od to all tho eager and expectant little people, it was truly a beautiful sight Obeying Orders. “Government employes Include a good many very odd men,” said a chief clerk of a government bureau, lately. “Some of them are very hard to manage, and none more so than the painfully matter-of-facY and over-exact men, who require an explicit order for every bit of work they undertake, and literally can do nothing at all without a copy. “Ono of the most singular of t *' is was Blifkins —Granny Blifkins, as-*«* used to call him, somewhat unk’ndisIle was the most literal man knew. . “Once, before I became - fault at all. “One time he camo into tlK®>m and, looking over Blifkins' shoWr, found him making a small official ♦computation on a large sheet of wfite 1 paper. ' “ ‘When you have a memorandum or a computation to make,’ said'the chief, pleasantly, ‘it would be better to take a “small piece of paper hr it than a large one.’ “ ‘Yes, sir,’ said Blifkins, respectfully., “Then he proceeded to tear up the large sheet and throw.it in the wastebasket, and taking out a small piece, recommenced his computation on that.”
i UR nearest store of kany size is some tif■teen miles away, rand a crowd of lit- ' tie people In the house, who are expeeting to see a ’ most wonderful ’ tr< e. Our gifts ha 1 been bought during a visit to a Northern city, and were laid aside awaiting the happy day. Wo also bought a box of wax candles and some holders for them. The prettiest are
Like London. San Francisco resembles London s unewhat. It has a fog almost every afternoon, and the wintTbiows from the ocean at a high rate. ■w /TV J H <5 yov BtW.qHT / 6*l£D ^ru i '‘'w .... • —S —St. Nicholas. if
-- A Flag of Truce I had been told that Jessup and the VI hites had a feud which extended back to 1865, and three or four men had been killed on either side. Therefore when I reached Jessup's, where 1 was to stay a couple of days, I determined to find out the particulars. The opportunity came as the old man, who was over sixty, and 1-sat smoking on the veranda. 1 referred to what 1 had heard, and asked him how it began. “Let’s see,” he replied, as he scratched his head. “It’s dun bin so long I've about forgot. I reckon old man White took up my mewl for a stray and wanted to charge me a couple of dollars. We had a font, and 1 took the mewl away. Then we begun fussin’ and are at it yit.” “Is it true that several men have been killed?” “Jist six.” he replied as lie slowly counted up. “Three Jessups and three Whites.” “Whenever you meet a White do you begin shooting’?” “Oh, no. It’s this way: If Igo to town and get three or four drinks, thea-lluok fur one o’ the crittersand Try to kill him. It's about the same way with them, I reckon. We is alius ready to shute, but we don’t alius pull trigger.” “When was the last shooting?” “Six months ago. See thar?” He rolled up his pants leg and exhibited a bullet wound which had just nicely healed. “I met obi White in town and we was both purtv full. I shot an’ he shot. He hit mo in the leg and 1 hit him in the shoulder.” “Now, then, Mr. Jessup,” said I, “this must he a very uncomfortable way to live?” “Sart in.” “You'd much rather be at peace?” “I would.” “1 presume White feels the same way. There has been enough blood shed over one old mule.” ••There lias” •■Suppose 1 go up and see White and talk it over with him? If I find he wants peace why can’t I bring you two together to talk matters over and become friends?" “Y-e-s: 1 see.” “Shan't 1 set about it?” “Loqk-a-here." he said, after think- । ing it over, “it can’t l>edun. Yo’ see. ' yo’d tlx it fur us to meet in the road 1 halt way. I wouldn't trust him. and should take my gun. He wouldn't trust me. and he'd take his. When we met we'd begin to talk alxmt that mewl, of eo'se I'd say the critter | dun broke out of my lot and walked loth IL 'd si> lie thought it was a . mewl from over in the cove.” “Well, wouldn't that be all right?" “Os co'se it would, but right that ‘'would come the trouble.” - - ■nt U D
x, . I' ' T Tit: ve goL to keep shuimg oVAPdOj ajiijcs till thev all or we all is wiped out.’’—N. 1 Y. World. Unexplored Labrador. । The Labrador peninsula or Northeast Territory contains 289,000 square miles. This is more than twice the area to Great Britain and Ireland ; with an added area equal to that of NewioundiamL Several lines of cxIploratim and survey have been carried for a certain distance into the • interior of this great peninsula, i among which may be mentioned those of I’rof. Hind. Mr. A D. Low ! and Mr. 11. F. Holme. The limits jof the unexplored area have been drawn so as to exclude all these. The ' area regarded as >till unexplored has, however, it is true, been traversed in several directions at different times by officers of the Hudson Bay Company. particularly on routes leading from the vicinity of Mingan on the , Gulf of St. Lawrence to the head of | Hamilton Inlet, and thence to UnI gava Bay. These routes have also, according to Mr. Holme, been traveled by a missionary: Pere Lacassee; but the only published information which I have been able to find is contained in a book written by J. McLean, and in a brief account of a journey by Rev. E. J. Peck. Mr. McLean made several journeys and established trading posts between Ungava and Hamilton Inlet, in the year? 1838-1841. while Mr. Peck crossed from Little "Whale River, on Hudson Bay, toUngava in 1884. Something may be gathered as to the general nature of the country alone certaii lines, from the accounts given lo but there is little o1 I character, while neither has made any attempt to ID positions or to delineate the feature! of the region on the map. In al probability this entire region consist of a rocky plateau or hilly tract o rounded archman rocks, highest on th< northeast side and to the south, ant sloping gradually down to low lam towards Ungava Bay. It is known t< be more or less wooded.'and in som< places with timber of fairgrowth, bin if it should be possessed of any rea value, this may probably lie in its metalliferous deposits, in this tracl of country part icularly there is reasor to hope that ores like those of Till Cove, in Newfoundland, or those o Sudbury, in Ontario, may occur.— Goldthwa.te's Geographical Magazine. Neii York’s Social Whirl. In the gi re-and-take of social intercourse in New York, society womei have as much as t hey can do to paj debts incurred, to return civilities, tc attend to th? vast correspondence entailed by th? growth of their circle and responsibilities, and worse that! all, to daily go upon rounds of calls among people scattered betweec
Washington and Stuyvesant’Squares, and the neighborhoods on either side of Central Park, writes Mrs. Burton Harrison in an article on “Social Life in New York,” in the Ladies’Home Journal. The matter of days which, inscribed on the cards of one’s acquaintances, stare one in the face from December to April with unrelenting reminder that there is no eluding the vista of sociability thus opened, might occupy a chapter to itself. Dinner calls are obligatory; visits of condolence and congratulation as recurrent, as ocean tides. A thousand and one minor claims absorb the ' hours set apart for outside service; ‘ and with all this, many women find f time for classes, courses and lectures, I and often keep up studies in which their young people are employed. ’ Those who talk of the rush of the : London season should reflect that what the English concentrate into three months, and put aside in favor of a more leisurely and rational existence, is by us spread over the entire year. For, in one way or another, our business of pleasure goes on until June, and is transferred to Newport or Bar Harbor. Not Gowl to Swallow. Rattlesnakes are generally credited with having more scuse than to attempt to feast on spine-covered horned toads, but there was one snake that allowed hunger to overcome discretion down in Inyo County a few weeks ago. It surrounded a halfgrown horned toad that would have eventually caused its death had not a hunter saved it the trouble, relates the San Francisco Examiner. The specimen was saved and is now at the Academy of Sciences in alcohol. The snake is called crot al us cerastes, one of those vicious little prairie rattlesnakes that is called the “hornet 'rattler” and the “side winder.” On ' either side of the head is a horny , projection above the eye. In striking it swings its body sidei ways, and does not strike out straight before it as other large varieties of the crotalus do, hence the term “side winder.” It is considered by some to be the most ag- j gressive of the family to which it be- | longs, and is dangerous because of the small size and dull bolor which prevents it being readily seen. The one in question has six rattles and is about sixteen inches in length. I One-third of the lizzard had been swallowed when it resorted to the tricks of its species. The horned toads always run to escape, but when caught close their eyes and remain : passive for a short time before making 1 a sudden break to get away. This ! particular specimen allowed, himself ! to be taken in by the snake until it Xhad thought the matter had gone far icnough. Then it, began to wiggle and LUj back oul. ItcuulduT back out be- I ''niie hi>rni tore a hole tlin'iiyl> > ■•<... a-li|. Tn this position I they w. re found, ’lite snake nearly i •'• "I "><l I 1,,. , nt i,-. lx S( , 'I 11,. 1 ^Academy y>r schm-.■ i,.-. .pi,.'... ., ls xi< r n ! a rare and interesting specimen.
Curing a Had Habit. The boys were suspicious that Pro- . fessor Spire has formed the habit of [ going up stairs every evening about ■ !»:30 o'clock to creep along the halls in his stocking feet and listen at their doors, says the Boston P<>s.t. They J thought, however, that his case was . not incurable if strong measures were . I taken. They made their preparations 1 and they waited in silent expectation.
When Prof. Spire came out of his room and began to mount the strips a ' cold, galvanized carpet tack penetrat- I ed his very soul. He uttered a subdued howl of agony and sat down on the step above to investigate. But tacks were there also, and they began to investigate before he did. He rose with promptness, and this time the howl was not subdued. Doors flew open and anxious faces looked down from above. “What is it?’’gasped the professor’s pet, a beautiful blue-eyed lad, who scorned to do a base act. He had refused to contribute more than a cent toward buying tacks. “Nothing serious,” replied the professor, with a dismal effort at cheerfulness. “I found the wind rather against me going up these stairs and had just started on another tack that’s all. But it is almost 10 o'clock and yacht to be abed boys.” As Mad as a Kins;. The advocates of marriage law reforms found a strong argument on the I mental condition of hereditary aristo crats in certain parts of Europe, where social prejudice compels prince* and nobles to restrict the choice of their matrimonial unions to a limited number of families. The Grand Duke of Hesse Darmstadt, for instance, is said to trace his relationship to every reigning house of Christian Europe, the parvenu dynast.'.- of Sweden alone excepted. ami as a natural consequence that dynasty alone can boast its complete exemption from the taint of hereditary insanity. King Ludwig, of Bavaria, escaped ;i lunatic asylum only by suicide; his j successor is an idiot. Crown Prince Rudolph^uf Austria. ' was afflicted with eccentricities by nc , means limited to his amours. Goorge 111. had a la”ge assortment of manias, unfortunately not including that of suicide. I’iederick Milhelm, the brother and predecessor of the conqueror of Sedan, was undoubtedly crazy, and both his present successor and the present czar seem to have considerable bees in their helmets. We speak of hope, but is not nope only a more gentle name for fear. Landon
> i It isn't done by others —that’s why the guarantee of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrmtion should command attention. It’s a guarantee that means something. If the medicine doesn’t give satisfaction, in every ease for which it’s recommended, the money is promptly. refunded. Remarkable terms — but itjs a remark-able medieine. All the functional irregularities and weaknesses peculiar to womankind are cured by it. For lencorrhea, periodical pains, weak back, prolapsus and other displacements, bearingdown sensations, and ail “ female complaints,” it’s an unfailing remedy. It is a powerful, re^^MM tive tonic and nervine, impartin'^ strength and vigor to the whole system. Try it, if you’re an ailing woman. If it doesn’t help you, you have your money back. As a regulator and promoter of functional action, at that critical period of change from girlhood to womanhood, “ Favorite Prescription ” is a perfectly safe remedial agent, and can produce only good results^ IVORY SOAP 99~ ? ure ’ THE BEST fOR EVERY PURPOSE. HBhH llottl.'H Curc.l VT I J«ly, 1881. I suffennglOyoors from shocks in my head, bo much so that at times I didn't expect to recover. I took medicines from many docnot^.ot ar ‘y r °lief until I took Pastor I lon io; the second dose relieved | me and z bottles cured me. s. w. x-kck. Sprin-g Grove, McHenry Co., 111., May, '9O. During the last two years I suffered lor a few days every month or two from fainting spello, of which three doctors could not relieve me, but made it worse. It is six months now since I took Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic, and have had no more spells. OTTO MAN. P. J. Sherlock, of Stewart, Lee County, 111., found Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonio to be a good remedy. He says : Could not sleep after midnight f. r several months, sleep now very weU. have Lot taken any for two souths. A Valuable Book on Nervous LULL Diseases sent free to any address, rK j r and poor patients can also obtain | llkla this medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., since 1876. and Is now prepared underhis direction by the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. sforSs< Large Size, 51.73. 6 Bottles for SB. Many a life has been lost because of the taste of cod-
liver oil. If Scott’s Emulsion did nothing more than take that taste away, it would save the lives of some at least of those that put off too long the means of recovery. It does more. It is halfdigested already. It slips through the stomach as if by stealth. It goes to make strength when cod-liver oil would be a burden. Scatt & Downs, Chemists, 13a South sth New York. Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion of ©il — all druggists everywhere do. si. * Yoimg Mothers I We Offer You a Remedy which Insurec Safety to Rife of Mother and Child. -MOTHER’S FRIEND" Robs Confinement of ita Pain, Horror and 111 k. Afternslngoncbottleof “ Mother’s Friend" 1 Buffered but little pain, and did not experience that weakaess afterward usual in such cases.—Jirs. Anxis Gaqe, Lamar, Mo., Jan. l*th, 1891. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. Book to Mothers mailed tree. BBADFIELD BEGULATOB CO., ATLANTA, GA. BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. AN A KE SIS gives Instant relief, ^d is an INFALLIBLE CURE for PILES. W Price. $1; at druggists or Vk bv mail. Sample fu?®: R B Address “ANAKE^S, _ MF Box 2416. New YouK CiTY. M/HUTEn! MEN TO TRAVEL. We pay #SO YvAnltUi to #IOO a month and expenses. STONE & WELLINGTON, Aladison, *» ** Piso’s Remedy foi Catarrh Is the ■■ Tlnsipst to rind itoasEKinHfi ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mail, « 50c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren Va. HI
