University of South Carolina Libraries
' i . 1 ? & rj ^ I Tobacco Caoood Conanmptlon ? J?o-to? ' kac Cores the Tobacco Hoblt and Consumptive Gets Well. Two RrvTBS, Wis., Aug. 25.?[Special.]? Great excitement and Interest has been manifested in the recovery of an old-time resident of this town. Mr. Jos. Bunker, who has for several years been considered by all his friends a hopeless consumptive. Investigation shows that for over thirty-two years he nsed three and a half pounds of tobacco a week. A short time ago he was Induced to try a tobacco-habit cure called "No-To-Bac." Talking about his miraculous recovery today he said: "Yes, I used No-To-Bac, and two boxes completely cured me. I thought, and so did all my friends, that I had con * * as ?An BQTT (hrtW BULUJJWUil. nuw lUC^ jwu y ? , healthy and strongyou look, Joe,' and whenever they ask me what cured my consumption I tell them No-To-Bac. The last week I used tobacco I lost four pounds. The morning I began the use of No-To-Bac I weighed 127# pounds; to-day I weigh 169, a gain of 42% pounds. I eat heartily and Bleep well. Before I used No-To-Bac I was bo nervous that when I went to drink I had to hold the glass in both hands. To-day my nerves are perfectly steady. Where did I get No-To-Bac? At the drug store. It is made by the Sterling Remedy Company, general westernoffloe. 45 Randolph street, Chicago, New York office, 10 Spruce street, but I see by the printed matter that it is sold by all druggists?I know all the druggists in this town keep it. I have recommended it to over one hundred people and do not know of a single failure to cure." The war over Korea has practically put a Stop to migration of Chinese to Canada. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Blnghamton, N. Y. There is one milch cow in this country to every four inhabitants. Walter Baker & Co., of Dorchester, Mass* the largest manufacturers of pure, high grade, non-chemical ly treated Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent, have just carried off the highest honors at the Midwinter Fair in San Francisco. The printed rules governing the Judges at the Fair, states that "One hundred points entitles the exhibit to a special award, or Diploma of Honor. The scale, however, is placed so high, they Bay 'that it will be attain"*J 1^ /?*??.onf?Anol OODOC ' " All Cit OU UUiJ iU vmow. TTaW?r Baker & Co.'n goods received one hundred points, entitling them to the special award stated in the rules. Beware of Ointment* for Catarrh That Contain' Mercnrr. ?. as mercury will surely destroy the sense of Bmell and copipletely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you * can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken Internally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. EVsold by Drujcsrists, price 75c. per bottle. ? The True Laxative Principle Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleas, ant remedy. Syrup of Figs, has a permanently beneficial effect on the human system, while the cheap vegetable extracts and mineral sola tions, usually sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Being well informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Dr. Hoxsie's Certain Cronp Cnre Acts directly on the membranes of the throat, and prevents diphtheria and membraneous croup. A. P. Hoxsie, Buffalo, X. Y., M'f'r. w ^ v "? TK.Aef +Vt* Vuaof mA(1L r OR H VUUi'U Ul CUir iiuuat uw. ? rine is Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Core In one minute, : Karl's Clover Root, the (Treat blood purifier, Ives freshness and clearness to the complexKin and cures constipation. 25 ots.. 50 cts., SI. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle A Good Appetite Its essential to good health, and when the natural desire for food is gone strength will soon fail. For loa3 of appetite, indigestion, lick headache, and other troubles of a dysMood's SarsaA *%%%%%? parilla peptio nature, Hood's v ^ _ SarsaparlUa Is the / ^ 11f*AC remedy which most j certainly cures. It (%%%%% I quickly tones the stomach and makes one "real hnr.Try." Be sure to get Hood's and AWIV TTaaii J Qnvan^nH 11a Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, 25c. DAD WAY'S " PILLS, Always Reliable, Parely Vegetable. Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated, pane, rezalate. parity, cleanss and stren^taen. RAD *Vay'3 , ptt t.s for the care of all disorders of the Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Dullness, Vertigo, Costlveuesd, Piles, SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION A VT\ _ All Disorders of the LIVER. Observe the follow-in? symptom*, resulting from diseases of the digestive organs: Constipation, Inward piles, fullness of blood la ttte heal, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, fullness of weight of the stomach, sour eructations, or fluttering of the haart, chocking or suffocating sensations wneu la a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or wet>.< before the sight, fever and doll pain In the head, deficiency of perspiration, yellowness of the Hkln and eyes, pain In the side, cnest, limbs, and sudden flushes of heat, burning In tha flesh. A few doses of RADWAY'3 PILLS will free the system of all the above named disorders. Price 43c. a Box. Sold br Prugglsts, o> sent by mall. Send to DR. RAD WAY & CO., Lock Box 363, New *- York, for Book of Advice. WALTER BAKER & CO. I The Largest Manufacturers of Qm pure, high crade 2&C0C0AS AND CHOCOLATES On this Continent, hive received special and highest sjpt awards S on their Goods at the m california b ! f}m midwinter exposition. ii 11 m ^ltheir breakfast cocoa, El ! iffer' ell ^hleh, nnllke the Dutch Proem, Bud ' I KFe 1 tr: Is m*de without the u?e of Alkellee bnLL J|orother Chtmlcoli or Djti. iiaUolutelr pure and eoluble, and coete ilui thin out cent a cup. ~ OLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER&CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. W. L. Douclas CUHP ISTHCBC8T. ?? ^nVb NOSQUEAKINfc *5. CORDOVAN, ; FRENCH&.ENAMELLEDCALF tm ^4-*3.5? FlNEGAlf&K&NUARQll ?3.ay?0LicE.3soles. *2AgBTOSg!gLSHQ?i SEN^^fcATALDGUE^ % DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. Toa can aare money by wearing the W. L> Donlai 83.00 Bhoe. Became, we are the largest manufacturers 04 this gradeof shoes in tbe world, and guarantee their mine by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protect yon against high prices and the middleman's profits. Our ahoee equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We hare them sold everywhere at lower prices for the value glvqp than any other make. Take no substitute. U your dealer :anaot supply you, we can., FMRT.EM OF WISDOM. OWLS STUFFED TO POSE AS SAGES. Very Crafty Birds They Are?The Night Owl of Nova Sootia?Better Weather Prophets Than Groundhogs* ^ pJHOSE who talk of the preI j science ol the blue bird and I robin and groundhog in the 6 matter of spring predictions know not whereof they speak, the New York Herald maintains. The groundhog is not in the race for spring wiedom with the owL On the first bright day in spring yoa may hear the dislocated staccato notes of some redbreast, actively gathering twigs for a prospective honeymoon. If at the same time yon fail to hear the lovemaking night whoop of the owl you may make np your mind that the robin's nest will be full of snow in a few days. fYr? Drtmo An a fVa nn'ad nlfl ntrl will rent the top flat in some hollow tree as early as the middle of February, with the snow lying a foot deep over everything. When this oocurs you may rest assured that spring weather will set in early, and that by the time the trees are green the abstruse problem of owl multiplication will have been well under way. Owls are the favorite birds of the taxidermists. They are ignobly and incessantly filled with sawdust by every disciple of f>tuffology in the land. They are furnished with abnormal yellow ejes, and are placed in unnatural attitudes to glare at passers by. It would be a wise owl that could recognize its own effigy in the window of the average bird staffer. According to those who ought to know this is a great owl country. There are big owls, little owls, horned owls and hornless owls, owls that whoop and owls that whistle, and in short every kind of owl that one could wish for. VIRGINIAN EARED-OWXi. Away up in Maine among the snow burdened cedars lives the hawk owl. He is a slim, brownish black little chap, full of confidence and claws. His specialty is ptarmigan and grouse, and there are but few days in the year when they do not figure in his menu. Although he is the dude of the tribe, he can fight. His breast is barred with brown and white, and his faoial disks are of mottled gray. He keeps up the reputation of the family for wisdom. Sometimes a party of hunters plodding through the snow may observe his owlship flying along at a safe distance in the rear, waiting for the escape of some' wounded bird. It can hunt by day as well as night, and will hover around camp fires for hours. Many is the tid-bit it'purloins from the camp larder. Another resident of the extreme North is the great snowy owL You have seen them in taxidermists' windows, sitting white and solemn on a dead branch, with staring yellow eyes, a gray mottled baok and feather hidden claws. This owl is only a winter visitor to the United States, but sometimes daring an especially cold Bnap it is seen as far south as Georgia. It hunts by day as well as night It probably acquired this habit from necessity, as the polar day is six months long. Its flight is as noiseless CANADA OWL. as a floating feather or a bit of down. It looks harmless enough, but it can strike with the speed and force of a peregrine falcon, and many is the duck and grouse it takes on the wing. It is said to be especially fond of fish, which it obtains after the manner of a fish hawk. There is probably no bird in the northern regions so heartily detested by trappers. It knows a good thing when it sees it, and a trap is its especial object of regard. It watches the traps set by the furhunters, and woe to the animal caught therein. If not too large and fierce the snowy owl will stow it away in short order. It regards a trap as an invention created for its essential enjoyment. The little night own is a denizen of Nova Scotia and Labrador. It is sometimes eaten by the Esquimaux. It is ringed with chocolate brown bands, between wbicb are a series 01 redish white spots. A band of white across the throat gives it the appearance of wearing a linen collar. It is a murderer of field mice, and the death of many a hare can be laid at its door. Catch it in your hand and it becomes a feathered buzz saw. Its beak pops like a nutcracker, its claws grab hold of anything that comes their way and it develops into a picture of outraged dignity. The Columbian owl, which is a denizen of the great forests of British Columbia, is a serene, comfortable and aldermanic little ohap that lives high on those heavy humming night beetles <md moths that haunt the cocses in the rammer time. It is more timid ; than many of its kind, and less dis- i posed to crack its beak and make 1 bluffs. This may be due to an excess t of wisdom. It is a remarkably handsome bird. Its head is dotted with < GREAT OWTi. yellowish white spots, its back is olive brown and its tail is barred with rows of transverse white markings. Its facial discs are brown, and it has pale reddish spots on the wings. Everybody has heard of the bnrrowing owl, the side partner of the ? prairie dog and rattlesnake. Throughout the West it is called the prairie owL Apparently it has less to# brag about in the way of wisdom than any 1 of its kind. No bird can be right men- t tally that will take up its residence z with and make a confidential friend of t a rattlesnake. Even it# animated bill 1 of fare, the prairie dog, marvels at it. i On approaching a dog town you can i see dozens of these owls blinking on t top of the burrows. It has long feet 1 and light yellowish brown plumage, i spotted with white. Its tail is barred with white, and its face, throat and ] ruff are a light gray. It is not a thing 1 of beauty, because it looks like a sort i of albino, or a feathered mistake. On 1 being approached it utters a low chat- i BB0WN OWL. j ??????????????? , tering sound not anlike that of a i prairie dog, starts and skims swiftly i over the plain toward a certain burrow from which it has ousted the law- ( ful occupants. Down it goes into the 1 depths, and you could not get it oat ] with a burglar's jimmy. It is said to ] feed on field mice and crickets, but . there is a suspicion in the minds of i old frontiersmen that a timely autopsy j would disclose the presence of young j and tender prairie dog. . j In the latter days of August it sud- j denly disappears. Nobody has ever j been able to find out where it goes. < The Indians, who are close observers, aver that it spends the winter in torpor. Those who have traveled through the woody hills of Massachusetts are familiar with the Acadian owl, familiarly known as the "saw-whet." Its love notes bear a startling resemblance to the filing of a large saw. It is a soft, fluffy looking object, and how it manages to mako such harsh notes is a wonder. Many a man while traveling along a country road listening to the love-making of these birds has fancied himself in the vicinity of a T * n 1 ;j iv. sawmill. .anomer pecuuaruy ui uie "saw-whet" is the snoring notes of its young. The little downy chaps sit in * their nest and snore away for hours with their eyes wide open. It may be / that they are only endeavoring to give expression to their hunger. When calling to each other the voice . of the "saw-whet" ia almost exactly like a bell. ( Everybody familiar with country life has heard the long, quavering scream of the screech owL For a bird so small and insignificant its voice is c tremendous. It hae the unpleasant ? habit of doing the wrong things at the ? right time. Take your best girl for a s walk in the woods in the gloaming c and note the result. Just when si- 1 lence is busily engaged in speaking t louder than words from right over- c head there will arise a scream like that i of a lost soul. If you have never i heard the sound before it is likely t that you will do a hundred yards in t even time, it is oniy tne love note 01 * the screech owl, and is the only way * he has of expressing tender emotion. ( If by chance yon oatch the little fel- t low in your hand you will find that it can express something else besides emotion. It clatters its beak like ( small castanets and hisses and bites 1 with great vigor. Its plumage is soft ' and downy, and mottled brown. Its c eyes are large and keen, and its facial j disks a yellowish white. Every dog has its day, and every well regulated barn has its owl. At ] least this pertains to barnB in the 1 Eastern States. The barn owl is the bully of its tribe. It has an especial weakness for chickens of the spring * variety, and it shows its wisdom in ' taking up its abode near its prospective larder. It also pays strict attention to mice, squirrels and other small animals. It is never found far in the woods. This owl, when wing broken, ; becomes a great bully and blowhard. i On approach it hisses like a goose, j swells out its plumage and blinks its ' great eyes imposingly, although it is doubtful if it can see to any extent in the daylight. Its plumage is grayish brown on the upper parts, interspersed with yellowish red, produced by minute mottling. The owl that we are most thoroughly acquainted with, whose cries we have heard most frequently in the | wooJs at night, is the barred owl. If its language is translated correctly it is a very inquisitive bird. Walk out into the woods on a moonlight night, and you are sure to be greeted with, "Who-who, who-who, srho-ar-r-r-e ] pou?" If you refuse to answer it fills ;he woods with a sort of horrible anghter. "Whah-ha, whah-ha, hai-a-a!" it will cry in derision. The barred owl is a great destroyer )f poultry and is thoroughly hated by ;he Southern farmers. Its sight is 90 lefective in daylight that it has been inown to light upon the backs of cows md horses, probably mistaking them for something feasible. Down in Louisiana the "Cajuns" (Acadians) sometimes make gumbo soup of it. rhey pronounce its flesh palatable, [ts plumage is a light reddish brown m the upper parts, its faoe brownish ffhite and its tail barred with brownish red streaks. Its abdomen is a yelowish white. Last and greatest of all is the great aorned owl, the bird of Minerva, the feathered emblem of wisdom. The vision of the horned owl is as keen as ihat of a falcon. It is one of the Nim. ods of the feathered tribe and flies ike a trailing shadow. It is never at rest. Watch it as it sits on a tree, ind yon will see its bill snapping as ;hough in anticipation of coming food timea Now and then it utters a ihxiek, now it bays like a bloodhound >n trail of a murderer, or calls for lelp for some starving person. At mch times it keeps its keen eyes in notion, and nothing escapes its vision, inch is the great horned owL Boulanger's Lost Opportunity! Paul de Cassagnac says that Bouanger, when he was in command of he Thirteenth army corps at Clernont-Ferron, entered into negotiations rith the right and pledged himself on lis word of honor that as soon as he returned to the war office he would, vithin forty-eight hours, possess himself of the persons of the President of ;he French republic and his colleagues in the cabinet and send them to Mount Valerien. "If Boulanger had only bad the good sense," said Cassagnac, "not to stir for thirty or forty days the coupe would have been made and the republic would have ceased to exist."?Chicago Herald. Washington lived Here. The little State of New Jersey, as every schoolboy knows, was the scene of many stirring events during the Revolution, and almost every city, town and hamlet has, or claims to have, a landmark cf which its inhabitants are very proud and delight to point out to visitors. While there is no doubt of the authenticity of the claims made for many of these places they have certainly lost nothing by the traditions with which they are surrounded. As in many other parts of the country, however, some of these monuments which should have the greatest claims on the American people from a historical point of view have been neglected, apparently forgotten, and allowed to go to decay and ruin. In the march of history and progress they have been lost sight of. One of these isthe oldBerrian house at Bocky Hill. It was in this house that Washington resided for many months, and among other acts wrote [lis farewell address to the Continental irmy. The house is an old-fashioned structure, with large square rooms md low ceilings to retain the heat from the hickory and oak logs burned Vtisv nrtAn flrnnlo/ioa A f fVlA LU IrXlU Uig vj^/ou UJL v|/*uwui ?? ?w time that General Washington occupied the house it was the homestead sf the family of Judge John Berrian, VHKKT! "WASHINGTON "WROTE THE PABEWELL ADDRESS. >ne of tbe oldest families in the State, rhich at that time owned vast tracts )f land, obtained by grants from the 3rown. Judge Berrian, when the clash same, remained loyai to tne American sanse, and his house became a refuge or General Washington on more than me occasion. A Novelist's Phonograph. Captain Charles King, the novelist, loes not write at all; he uses a phonograph. His hours for composition are ifter midnight Having thought of a itory he comes home from the theatre >r from a social party feeling in the )est of spirits; starts in at midnight alking his story into the phonograph md continues to dictate for four lours. This practice is resumed the iext night and is kept up for eight, en or twelve nights?until, in fact, he story is ended. The phonograph s then turned over to the typewriter, rho prepares the manuscript, which Captain King revises before sending o the publisher. ?Chicago Herald. To Emerson is this story attributed: )n being asked by a friend what he ectured for, ho replied; "F-a-m-e." 'What do you mean by that?" inquired the other. "Fifty and my exjenses." Three-tenths of the earnings of a 3elgian convict are set aside for his jenefit on release. Printing in colors was done in the ifteenth century. The Partii Farmer Green?"Thank goodness, Now we'll have something to eat oursel1 A Carious Llle Preserver. The lower portion, of the carions device -which is represented in the cat resembles a life-preserving dress; the upper part is a kind of buoy or floating chamber, in which the occupant has some freedom of motion for his head and arms. The object is to provide the shipwrecked person with not only a means of flotation but with complete shelter. Inside the enlarged upper chamber it is proposed to place provisions and a water supply, so that the wearer can stay afloat for a month, if need be, with safety and comfort. The upper portion is made of strong sailcloth, waterproofed and distended on a jointed cylindrical frame. Across the lowest ring a diaphragm is placed, in which are two apertures f"? the legs, which are incased in waterproof pants and boots, covered with metallic rings, in order to afford protection against fishes and the sharp rocks. These rings are made to fit one within the other when the dress is folded, bo as to enable the device to be stowed in small space. The top of the upper chamber is in closed by a hood, in which a window is made. An air pipe is provided, leading to a respirator fastened over the mouth of the occupant. An annular air chamber is provided, which keeps the upper part of the apparatus well out of the water. A man of Newark, N. J., is the inventor. A Chinese Beanty. If China were only as beautiful in its personnel as in its scenery! There are not over many beautiful women in China, says a traveler, and fewer handsome men; but the Chinese wo j THE PRETTIEST WOMAN IN HONG KONG. men at high rank are, to the best of my belief, always intelligent and charming, and usually highl/ educated, often intellectual; and in Hong Kong I knew at least one Chinese woman, whose picture I secured, who would anywhere take rank as a beauty. The ?obra Stone. It is said that the cobra carries in its mouth a small stone that when warm is capable of giving out a faint, white light that resembles the lamp of the glow-worm. The serpent takes advantage of this resemblance to furnish himself a dainty desert of fireflies, of which he is very fond. The winged insect is attracted by the sapposed glow-worm, which is the female, and falls an easy prey to the wily cobra.?New York Ledger. Enlarging a Wheelbarrow's Uscialness. It is often desirable to wheel away from a lawn or garden light rubbish, straw, hay, or vines, for which purpose the ordinary wheelbarrow does not give sufficient accommodation. So often is it desired to wheel away light but bulky loads of this sort, that such an arrangement as is shown in the il WHEIXDARROW WITH RACK FRAME. lustration will be found very serviceable. It is simply a light rack frame that can be attached to the barrow in the same way that the ordinary sides are attached, the addition of a couple of sockets near the handles being the only necessary addition to the barrow in order to accommodate the rack. The construction is so plainly shown in the sketch that added explanation is not needed.?American Agriculturist. Qg Guest. ^3 Jane, they hain't misse.l the kyara. res."?Frank Leslie's. i . ? \ A SIDE from \ | cheap bakin i alum, which causc rU other serious ailrr extravagant, i It takes three p ill of them to go as h] ot the Royal Ba [U cause they are defi I gas. I There is both \ omy in the use of Powder. 4 ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO LoQi 'V A Fro? as Bif? as a Brick. As C. C. Bettes, the druggist, was walking home Monday night he saw something on the sidewalk which he took for a brick. Mr. Bettes is a cyclist, and he was thoughtful enough to endeavor to remove the obstruction, which might cause some wheelman +.n flnmfi t.o rrriftf. so he stormed and attempted to shove the brick off the walk with his foot. The "brick" moved. In fact, ifc moved about twenty feet straight toward the middle of the street. Mr. Bettes was utterly dumfounded. He could not remember taking more than a half dozen cococolas, and that beverage had never before caused him to see bricks leap off the sidewalk. He started after that brick, bat just as he was almost over it and stooped down to examine it closely, away it went again, landing on the opposite sidewalk. He then saw what it was. A tremendous bullfrog, that could outjump the Nassau Railroad ring at the county convention when the ringsters saw the regular Democrats were going to sit down on them. Bettes was not going to let that frog get the best of him, and, after chasing several blocks, finally got it cornered, and now has it on exhibition in the show window of the Carleton pharmacy.?Jacksonville (Fla.) TimesUnion. Over fourths of the voting strength of Minnesota and "Wisconsin in ftvrpitm. BEEGHAJ (Vegi What The 4 Biliousness indigestion dyspepsia bad taste in eick headache foul breath bilious headache loss of appe when these conditions are can stipation is the most frequen One of the most import learn is ui??l cuiibupauuu ness in the world; and it c the book. Write to B. F. Allen Con York, for the little book on < sequences and correction); ser reach of a druggist, the pills w Com'l Arithmetic, Fenmanahip, Stenography and I men supplied with assistants. Situations turnlshed basis. Instruction individual. Applicants udm VACATIONS. *OH. CATALOliLE, WJ'I nddrefts CLEMENT C. GAINES, Prcnldpnt " Fool's Haste is I Hurry the Work D P A M'C PEBEEMEEED BIS. Fat. AFBIL XI, 1903, a!CD Juf. 3), 1S94. Made of can- ? ? era. throngh intn the and gal- Kj i frffl baa In, gradually vaiitzcd iron. ?. S fiwjj filling It About one Two iiajs, one ifi V IviUSS inch, directly under inside of tho f,V p ftpMAl the norso'i mouth, other, with J?'jfcl f&wa Thla Bag prcveutj jpaco between |i'(Wj l?VJ waste, gormandiztnem for eight K'T lng, slobbering, quarts of oats, ?f> |J(| !j| |?H CW k breathing hi the which drop JWw;? jj: ft? J oats, never gets foul, ami positively cures the habit ot throwing: tho head. Knur miarts of oats slowly fed where the horse gets th*'m all "is <>?' more value than six wastca. Wo eruarantco it the oulv bax ever offered for sa!o with these merits. Send for circulars. JOHN P, LOVELL ARMS GO., BOSTON, MASS. X Y x u-;n> HALMSjiE|lClief|njGyin Gurus ana Pre vents Rheumatism, Indigestion, S Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Catarrn ami Asthma. ? \ Useful In .Malaria and Fevers. Cleansei the \ A Teeth on 1 Promotes the Appetite. Sweetens A t the Breath. Cures tne Tobacco Habit. Endorsed t by the Medical Faculty, Send for if, n or 25 A cent pac?a?\ Ultcer, stamps or lost at Mote. A , f ULO. K. HALM, ltu West 2Stb St., New York. f j J '' *' '*? . _____ the fact that the \ g powders contain \ >s indigestion and * I lents, their use u \ ? i lounds of the best < far as one pound | king Powder, be- j - ',.f| cient in leavenin? I I health and econthe Royal Baking J 1 I 106 WALL ST.. NEW-YORK. 4 Washington as a Iiroad Jumper. A still extant letter of Mr. Warrington, of Virginia, who was a famous broad jumper in his day, tells of his jumping twenty-three feet three inches, and says that there was only one man in the world that could outdo him, "Colonel G. Washington, of Mount Vernon," who could beat him by a good foot. The father of hia country was something of an athlete. ?New Orleans Picayune. Vermont merino sheep imported to Australia are proving very successful. A 4 LONG STRIMO WL ?? of diseases and daJR Ba H ran gementahave their F origin in torpor 01 tns liver. Deranged appetite, constipation, headache, sour stomach, gassy belchingB, indigestion, or dy?pcpsia, are due to sluggish liver. Mb. Jomr A. D?. Bebby, U. 8. Inspector of Immigration at Buffalo, N. writes as follows: " From early childhood I suffered from a sluggish liver. Doctors' prescriptions and patent medicines afforded only temporary relief. I tried Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, taking three at night and two after dinner every day for two weeks and then one " Pellet" every day for two months. I have in six months increased in solid flesh, twenty-six pounds. I am in better health than I have been slnco childhood. Drowsiness and unpleasant feel~ ings after meals have completely disappeared. Bespectfully yours, (X U. S. Inspector of Immigration. i/T'S PFI.T.S JL ky X A JL-# ^ t * / etable) t j :y Are For i sallow skin the mouth pimples torpid liver tite depression of spirits sed by constipation; and cont cause of all of them. ant things for everybody to uses more than half the sickan all be prevented. Go by lpany, 365 Canal street, New Constipation (its causes con. it free. If you are not within ill be sent by mail, 25 cents. ?? Cai;fBlly prepared for business and practically ?au,,ht some honorable vocation wheieby a llvln* may be earned and money mode. EASTMAN BuHinesH College Rives courses of Instruction la Bookkeeping, Banking, Correal ondence, Com'I Lata, ypetcriting, ihe Academic Branches, dec. Business competent students. Terms reduced to a hard times ttted any day in tbe year wltli equal advantage. NO II FINE SPECIMENS OF PEN WORK. 30 Washington St., Poughkeepsie. N. Y Vae Speed." Don't Unless You Use \ ENGINES J t AND BOILERS \ w For all purposes requiring f \ power. Automatic, Corliss j f <a Compound Engines. Hor- r \ izontal <fc Vertical Boilers. a ? Complete Steam Plants. r { B.W.RAYNE&SONS, ( { N. V. OfDr?'mira N'Y- J m 41 tiey st. ? EPILEPTIC, PARALYTIC and NERVINE INSTITUTE, 667 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mill, (Near Washington St.) For the treatment of epilepsy, paralril?. brtln xnt nervous diseases in all tbeir forms The only pan* lytic institute in the United States. Consultation tree, fatients boarded, nursed and eared for. O0ir? treatment if desired. Institute open daily. Send for circulars. I " money | oesldes other vaJuuiIe ftlSlllHI Premiums to ?ooi iruesssrs. Base* yIMCyU b.til Knoter*. ealcli on. !*>ee oiler in IJO.HE A Nil COUNTit V .UAGAY.\XK. Price, 25cent*. Sam:>le AIa?az!no cau 0? .-eon and tull particular* ob'taln-d at tnls office. Ait Newsdealers, or M East lutri Street, New York City. 1 (?W1 Stickers, your name and address, only lOo 1uuu the heuald. No. ?S.\. Lum St., Phlia. Pa Si Coninaipttveo And people IM ?3 who have wcafe lanes or Asth> mm 99 ina.i.honlduso Plso's Cure for M Consumption. It has cared H Ira thoanand*. It has not Injur- H Sal e 1 cne. It ia no: bad to take. H SB It is iho best cough syrup. KJ fig; Sold everywhere. SSe. raj