University of South Carolina Libraries
"Spring Unlocks The Flowers To epA\ni the Laughjig Soil." And not even Nature 'would allow the flowers to grow and blossom to perfection without good soil. Now Nature and people are much alike; the former must have sunshine, latter must have pure blood in crder to have perfect health. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures blood troubles of all sorts. It is to the human system what sunshine is to Nature? the destroyer of disease germs. It never disappoints. '~POOr BlOOd?" The doctor said there were not seven drops of good blood in my body. Hood's Sarsaparilla built me up and made me strong and well." Scsie E. Bkown, 16 Astor Hill, Lynn, Mass. Dyspepsia, etc.-" a complication of troubles, dyspepsia, chronic catarrh and inflammation of the stomach, rheumatism, etc.. made me miserable. Had?no appetite until I took Hood's Sarsaparilla, wbich acted like magic. I am thoroughly cured." N. B. Skklet, 1S74 W. 14th Av., Denver, Col. ' Rheumatism ?"My husband was ! obliged to give up work on account of rheui matism. No remedy helped until he used / Hood's Sarsaparilla, which permanently / cured him. It cured my daughter of catarrh. I give it to the children with good results." Mrs. J. S. McMath, Stamford, Ct. Hood'g Pli;? cure liver lllg. the non-lrrltatlng and the only cathartic to take with Hood"* Str?ap?rllla. ( timtortnreaof the damned I with protruding piies brought on by constipa* tlon with which I was afflicted for twenty years. I ran across jour CASCARETSfrin the town of N?well, la., and never found anything to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from piles and feel like a new man." O H. Keitz. 1411 Jones St, Sioux City, la. M CATHARTIC ^ xsmmm THADe MARK RtOISTfWiO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... a?r<t? Rra.di C.MBUT, CMet(?, Msitrral. Ii* York. 312 ||A Til Dip Sold andgnaranteed by alldrugRUaIU'DAV) -Hc-r-o CTK? Tobacco Habit METRIC RIJohn w.moKitrs |JC.nidlUre Wa.htusrton, ?.C. I 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Prlmitxjal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. I Q 3 jt? In ciTil war, IS adjudication claims, atty since i lv/rrxrirnM this paper when reply J MljJN 11UJN INU TOADV-fg. nyku-12 I n on DC Y>,E7!)!'^ET: ^ U riT I v5 I qaiekraliof aad car** worst B CUM. Bock of lO d???' trntment Fret. Br. I. X. MIIH'I SORB. Box D. Atlaata. 0a. IVAM'ti)-Ca?eol t/au beaiih that H-I-P-A-N-i * will not benefit. Send 6 cts.to Kipans Chemical Co.. New York, for 1?samples and louu testiraoniills. ' Not to Be Overdone. There are several children ir: the family, and they were talking of their garden. "I am goingto plant the seeds Uncle John gave me," Baid one, "and grow the moat beautiful flowerB." "I am going to grow pinks and violets." said another.' "And I'm going to have roses," said the third. But the little boy said nothing. He bad no seeds to plant. And presently his mother noticed that he took no partiu the cnauer ana her heart smote her. "And what is Georgie going to grow?" she asked. "Perhaps Georgie's lip trembled, but his voice didn't. "Oh," he said stonily, "I expect I can raise a worm or two."?Pearson's Weekly. A Unman Nature Pastel. The newsboy had stood on the corner holding an undiminishing bundle of papers for half an hour. An unvarying and meaningless sound issued from his lips, but neither he nor anyone else thought he was saying anything. Suddenly the clang, bang and rattle of a fire engine divided the traffic. "All about the fire! All about the fire!" he shrieked. Ard every fifth person bought a paper.?Puck. \ ik Tany a dutiful daughter ^ l\/l ignorance or perhaps , The mother sufferec / mast suffer also. This is true excessive pain is healthy. Eve m self fo INDULGENT MOTHERS concej organ! Many a young girl's beauty is 'rime of menstruation, and r mistaken kindness permit thei about physical health. Miss Carrie M. Lamb, Big I Mrs. Pinkham?a year ago irregular menstruation EgST and leucorrncea. My appetite was variable, ewj stomach sour and bowels aT were not regular, and 8"^ was subject to pains like a.,* colic duringmenstruation. Kg"] I wrote you and began'to Bra take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Bfej used two packages of gjjgt Sanative Wash. You can't ||gj imagine my relief. My P?W courses are natural and Kp general health improved." W Mrs. Nannie Adkins, La Due, Mo., writes: 1 DbarJJrs. Pinkham? a T feel it my duty to tell J* you of the good your r\f Vegetable Compound has done my daugnier. one igyw suffered untold agony at time of menstruation be- j%? fore taking your medicine; ? but the Compound has relieved the pain, given her stronger, and has improved ev you for the benefit she has ri for young girls." b ? / ; J*. ? Tfe Altfndi to Rnslneas. He attends to business whoRoes straight to work to cure Neuralgia by the use of St. Jacobs Oil, and saves time and money and gets out of misery quickly. He's all rigbt. Tbe invention of thetypewriter has given employment to 500,000 women. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tonr Life Atraj. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag* netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-ToBac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, COc or CI. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kemedr Co., Chicago or New Yorl& Eighty-five per ceDt. of the people who are laaie are affected on the leftside. To Cure a Cold lit One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fail9 to cnre. 25c. Before 1S40 men almost universally bad their faces clea^ shaven. Without Knowing !( While sitting in a draft without knowing it we may become sore and stiff from cold. We feel Foreness and stiffness all gone aTter using St. Jacobs Oil, hardly knowing when. T>?iba(o Koo oKmif OK fiftrt milaa ftf Tnilnrnu besides 7000 now in course of construction. Dr. Seth Arnold's f'ough Killer the best ?ver used in my family.?ThomasM. Bctlxr, Cor. 10th and Locust b?o., Phila_,P*., Nov. Si, 180% Boston banks and trust companies bn~?e Rained $106,000,000 in resources in foui' years. Piso's Cure for Consumption has saved many a doctor's bill.?S. F. Hardy, Hopkins Place, Baltimore. Sid., Dec. 2,1894. China exports to Europe a%d America 11,000,000 fans annually, Edncato toar Bowels With Cuicarett. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever lOe, 25c. If C. C. C fail, drucrrlsr* refund money. In Prussia only 6497 of 100,000 attempts at suicide were successful. Good Rubber in Mexico. Experiments made with the native rubber tree in Mexico have demonstrated conclusively that the cultivation of the castilloa elastica is feasible and that, after the seventh or eighth year, a quantity of rubber sufficient to make the investment profitable may . be extracted annually. Each acre of the ground available in Mexico for the purpose can accommodate about 200 trees. Each tree should yield from one to two pounds of rubber an niioll-ir rrith a r-nliiA nf sixtv to Seventv I V ? " *~v * f cents a pound, United States currency. The cost of gathering and preparing the rubber is small, and, with freight charges, amounts to so slight a proportion that an average profit of fifty cents a pound may be relied npon. Therefore, the net annual returns to the planter should be between $100 and $200 an acre each year. The trees continue to grow larger, increasing the amount of their product each year. It is estimated that on a plantation in Mexico fifteen years old each tree should yield an average of five pounds of rubber. The only objection planters can find against entering the rubber-growing industry is the long time they must v. ait after planting before they can realize any returns. While it is true that it involves much patients waiting, it is considered the safest of crops, with practically no risk of loss. The prices quoted are top figures in the markets of the world. With bucd opportunities as mexico offers there is little danger of the robber supply failing behind the demand in the near future, as has been suggested by some of the larger dealers. ?New York Press. A British Plaint. We recommend those who are interested in public art in this country to look at the account given of the decorative work carried out at the new Paris Opera Comique. The exterior sculpture is by the greatest French sculptors of the day; for the decorative paintings in the auditorium, the staircases ana the foyers a galaxy of the most gifted FreDch painters have been employed, and all this paid for by the Government, for the public good and for the encouragement of national art. When shall we see such a thing in England? It is as if we had a London theater decorated with sculpture by Mr. Gilbert and Onslow : Ford, and the halls and staircases painted by Mr. Watts, Mr. Tadema ' and Sir P Pnvntpr Instead of that ' * ? -- - j we have theaters with sculpture done by stone-carvers and paintings by decorating "firms."?Builder. Frog's skin, though one of the thinest, 'is also one of the toughest leathers tanned. pays in pain for her mother's neglect. 1 and she thinks her daughter only to a limited extent. No Ty mother should inform berr her own sake and especially i sake of he** daughter. Write 5. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., er advice about all matters ming the ills of the feminine wasted by unnecessary pain at nany indulgent mothers with tr daughters to arrow careless ieaver, Mich., writes: "Dear I suffered from profuse and f a better color, and she feels ery way. I am very grateful to sceived. It is a great medicina * IS. PUCE EIECUTED. Atones For the Murder of Her Stepdaughter at Sing Sing Prison. WENT CALMLY TO HER DOOM. The Murderess Was Accompanied to tb? Death Chair by a Woman Physician and a Matron?Maintained Her Remarkable Nerve to the End?Died With a Prayer on Her Lips. 8ing Sino, N. Y. (Spe ial).?Mrs. Martha Plaeo wb9 put to death la the electric chair 1 ?* D.lnAn \f r\r> .1 a ir mnrn'nc for 1U OILlg OIU^ X LAOSJkX iuvuuu; - wthe murder of her step-daughter, Ida Place, In Brooklyn, la9t year. Tbe execution took place at 11.01 o'clock. The witnesses reached the execution chamber at 10.45 o'clock, and tbe Warden, the principal keeper and his guards went after Mrs. Place a few moments later. While they were gone tbe 8tate electrlolan tested tbe wires that led to the chair and found the strength of the current. Then lie fixed the electrodes. MRS. MARTHA PLACE. (The first.woman to be electrocuted In New York State.) Mrs. Place went to her death cnlmly. "With her when Hhe entered the death room were Warden Sage, on whose nrm she leaned heavily, her aged spiritual adviser, the Rev. Dr. David Cole, ot Xonkers; a woman physician, one of the matrons of the prison, and two keepers. Mrs. Place wore the black gown that she had made to "* o?r*orttflH nonr trlnl Hnnhnnd held a small prayer book. The woman's eye9 were closed, but she held her head erect. Her ilps moved in prayer. Mrs. Place was led to the chair, whloh was at the west en<f of the room. She was backed up to It. As the bent of her knees touched the edge of the chair she sat buck and then the two women stood In front of her shielding her from the sight of the witnesses while the electrodes were adjusted by the men. These electrodes were adjusted exactly as in the case of men condemned to death. The worn of fixing them did not occupy a second over a minute and a half. All this time Mrs. Place kept her eyes closed. Now and then there was a movemeat of her lips, and once she murmured "God have mercy." It was hardly loud enough to be heard. It wa9 not beard except by those who stood very close to her. Then the Warden beckoned them to step back and they moved away about five feet. The other witnesses, except the prison physician and the guards, were seated along the wall on three sides of the room. The guards stepped back, and as they did the current was turned on. There was not ft movement of the body?not a quiver. Not half the witnesses in the room knew that the shock had been glveD, 80 quick and silent was it. It was exactly 11.01 o'clock when this happened, and before the witnesses realized what was happening it was all over with Mrs. Plaoe. The voltage the electrician had used was 1760, and that lasted bnt four seconds. During these four seconds the hands o! the woman were clenched. In one hand she held a Testament. At the end of four seconds the current was reduced to 25& volts, and it remained at that force for fifty-six seconds. One minute was the total ti:ne taken. The current was then turnod oft entirely. STORY OF THE CRIME. Af er Killing Her Stepdaughter Mrs. l'lace Nearly Murdered Iter Husband. Mrs. Martha Place murdered her stepdaughter "Ida in Ler home, No. 503 Huncock street, Brooklyn, cn February 7,1893. She always had been jealous of the girl becausc, she said, her husband loved the daughter more than ho did her. On tho morning of the murder she quarrelled with her husband, and she said afterward ho struck her on account of some tales Ida had told him. When ho went to business Mrs. Fiace went upstairs p.nd threw acid into tliegirl's eyes and then forced her down onto the bed and smothered her. She remained nt. home until her husband returned home at night and, slipping behind him us he was taking off his coat iu the hall, she hit him on the head with an ax three times. The weapon sunk deep into the skull and he lay In tho hospital at the point of death for months. Since bIs recovery he has evinced no interest in his wife's Tate. After striking down her husband, Mrs. Place ran upstairs, turned 011 the gas in her room and tried to hide herself between the mp.ltrcsses in the bed. She was, or appeared to be, critically 111 for days after her arrest. Sixth Woman to Pay Death Penalty. There were five other women exeouted in New York State in the last hundred years. They were banged. The women included Mrs. Marasraret Houghtaling, at Hudson, October 17, 1817; Mrs. Elizabeth Johuson, Johnstown, January 24, 1846; Mrs. Runkle, at Wbiteboro, In 1849; Mrs. Anna Hoag. in I'ouiihkeepsie, May 7, 1852, and Mis. Roxalana Druse, ia Herkimer, February 27, 1S87. Professor O. S. Mnrsh Dead. Professor Othnlel C. Mnrsh, of Yule University, occupant of the chair of palaeontology and curator of the geological collection, died at his residenceat New Haven, Conn., a few diiys ago of pueumonla. He was one of the greatest authorities ou tfeoloRical research and w.19 known throughout the world. To DUpose of DorvUh Leader*. An Anglo-Egyptian expedition will be undertaken next autumn, to finally dispose of the Khalifa Abdullah and the other dervish leaders in the Soudan, Shot Hor Husband Dead. The wife of Dr. Kelly assassinated him n few nlght9 ago at Ehrmandale, twelve miles from Terre Haute, Ind. The husband and wife quarrelled frequently, and he drank a great deal. Ho was sitting in a room with another man, under the influence of liquor, when she shot through the window at mm. He wont to tne aoor, ana she fired the fatal shot. She is In Jail, There are three children. Agulnaldo in a De?perafe Moot]. Agalnaldo, the leader of the Philippine insurgents, has beheaded one of his generals for trying to convince him of the folly of resisting the Americans. Confhi Lead to Coninmption* Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold In 25 and 50 cent bottles. Qo at once; delays are dangerous. The foreign commerce of Austria-Hungary increased <-59,000,000 during 1898. Beauty la Blood Deep* d?m blood means a clean akin. No beaut; without it. Cascarett,, Candy Cathartic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Ca3carets,?beauty for ten cents. All druggists, satisfaction guaranteed. 10c, 25c, 50c. Indians in Alaska have shot Government reindeer, mistaking them (or wild game. TVliat Do tlic Children Drink I Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called Gbain-O? It is delicious and nourishing, and takes the place of coffee. The more Gbaix-0 you give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Gbain-0 is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about X as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. German railway receipts In January Increased $1,550,000 over January, 1893. How1* This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. West & Trcax, Wholesale Druggists,Toledo, Ohio. _ , , Waldino. Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The new Lord Mayor of Belfast, Ireland, la a German Jew. Enclose Ten Cents And get by mail trial bottles Hoxsle's Croup Cure and Hoxsie's Disks for Croup. Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis. A. P. Hoxsie, Buffalo,N.Y. London bakers are trying to do away with the "hot cross bun." Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchlldren teething, softens the gums, reduces inQammalion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottleNot Really Perfldlout. A correspondent sends us an interesting account of the trust reposed bj our neighbors in British good faith, At a time when war between Greal Britain and France seemed possible, if not probable, it was feared that il would involve a bombardment o'< Havre. Insurances were accordingly effected at Lloyd's by Frenchmen ai Havre against any damage whicl might in such a case be done to theii buildings. Such an underwriting contract would be unenforceable a law, but the Frenchmen who paic their insurance felt certain that th< British underwriters would not tak< advantage of any legal point, bu would pay up?as, of course, they would have done. After all, this lit tie incident should serve to show tha "perflde Albion" is very often no1 much more than a phrase.?Westmin ster Gazette. I on Athletic Goods Insistupon Spalding's Handsome Catalogue Fre*. A. O. 6PALDINO ? BHOS, Tort, Chlo?jjo. Den rn. "A Fair Face May gain." Marry a PI; SAP After the Cooling Frocesi* Don't cool off too quickly after being In an overheated room. If you do, you will need St. Jacobs Oil to cure Lumbago, which sets in very often after the cooling procees. It relaxes the stiffened muscles. The Roman Catholic population of the United Kingdom Is about 5,500,000. To Core Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 28a U C.C.C. fall to cure, drueeiRt.s refund money. The population of the world Increases ten per cent, every ten years. Fits permanently cured. Jsoflta or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treat!se f ree Dr. R. H. Kline. Ltd.. Ml Arch St..PhiIa..Pa Cornstalk pith Is of high value In the manufacture of smokeless powder. No-To-Bao for Fifty Centa. Guaranteed tobacco babit cure, makes wean men strong, blood pure 60c. II. All druggist* The highest price ever paid for a race horse was $150,000 for the famous Ormonde. Lane's Family TTIedicine. Moves the bowels each day, In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. London's Asiatic*. London has a floating population of some ten thousand Asiatics?equaling that of a Bmall town; and, if a little malodorous sometimes, and inclined to linger outside the pale of modern civilization, it is interesting to make their acquaintance, note their habits and the places they frequent. Even their vices have a certain element of picturesquenesB, and ?especially among the Chinese?some of their ceremonies obtrude upon the attention. For high life among the Asiatic population you must go to Bayswater, which is spoken of among foreigners as "Asia Minor." Here reside the rich Orientals who are engaged in commerce or have come for purposes of education or pleasure. These are the small and cultured minority. For the large majority, the Asiatics of the slums, you must go out 1 to Poplar and Shadwell?to the neigh borhood of the East India Docks by preference. It is here the Oriental . is to be seen in all the richness of his r infinite variety.?Paris Messenger. t A BUlpoitlng Machine. , Successful experiments have been 5 made in Paris with a new billposting machine, which does away with the use of either a ladder or paste. It can ; be used to post bills at a height ol fifty feet from the ground, and is being put into practical operation. Wire nails are so cheap, it is said, that if a carpenter drops one it if cheaper for him to let it lie than tc waste his time in picking it up. One , keg out of every fiv?) sold is nevei used, but simply goes to waste. An Ohio Judge has decided that one ; cannot be prosecuted for forging c - document unless a revenue itamp it affixed to it. 30iy\! ^ WITH a better understanding of efforts?gentle efforts?pleasant forms of Illness are not due to any a the pleasant family laxative, Syrup > of families, and Is everywhere esteem the fact that It Is the only remedy w It acts. It Is, therefore, all-importanl have the genuine article, which Is ma Of the art of advertising Is to correc always prove most effective In time, the California Fig Syrup Co. by reai laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, wh ment, which the company freely nu should be used when needed by the 1 of salts and pills the more constipate other hand one enjoys both the mi Figs 5s taken; It is pleasant and re yet promptly on the kidneys, liver t tually, dispels colds, headaches and f< pation permanently; also biliousness ai The great trouble with all other pui fail to act when a single dose is U Invariably tend to produce a habit ol doses. Children enjoy the pleasant Figs, the ladles find it delightful and Is needed, and business men pronoun without interfering with business and THE EXCELLENCE Is due not only to the originality and s to the care and skill with which it is known to the California Fig Syrup Co. pross on all the Importance of purch Wh?n buying' note tne name, ^aiirornia every package. CALIFORNIA F San Fran Louisvillo, Ky. THE SCHOOLS Of Greater New York, Boston, an< many other places use Carter's Inl exclusively and won't use any other That speaks well for CARTER'S INK and gives you food for thought. nUCIIM ATIOM CURED?Sample bottle, <day? KntUlTlAIIOm treatment, postpaid. 10 cents Alxxaxdzb Remkdt Co.. 24hGreenwich St., N.V m ? (URE6 WH?fi? A LI ELSE FAILS. _ Q U Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cm M in time. Sold by dnaggtitt. ei Prove a Foul Barain Girl if She Uses OLIO / J , I (5tlcltSt5t5ti5t5c5tatSt3t5t2t5t3t5(3tJ I . i 4 1 ! %dx?<S?t I 1 ~~ ? ' ' ' g A SONG o: ^ The summer Jay is over, ^ And weary with Honest toil* ^ Home, through the fields of clover <3 That springs from the fertile soil* ^ Plods now the sturdy farmer With grimy hands, and though ^ Soiled too, indeed, is his suit of tweed, But little cares he, I trow. ? A WORD OF WARNING.?There are mm; as good as the' Ivorythey ARE NOT, but remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for <? Jp, C?fT7Tt?il. 1W?. Vj TVi PrecttU Endurance of Arabian Porters. 1 Arab carriers bear great loads upon ; their baoks and go at a trotting pace from 6 a. m. to 6 p. m. During the ' month of Bamadan the Koran forbids the taking of food between sunrise and sunset, and tbis law is said to be held sacred and rarely violated. Not i only do these porters continue their ; arduous physical exertion during the i twelve laboring hours of the. day l without taking any food during that ! period, but the French inspectors who are in charge of the gangs told dnr informant that they could work better during the month of the fast than at , any other time of the year, because i their energy was not needed for digestion. At eventide these Arabs I have a \ moderate meal of wheatmeal porridge, mixed with large proportions of butter (it is to be' had cheap) or olive oil. Their expenditure for food ) is not more than six or seven cents a k day, and the only luxury which they i permit themselves is a cup of very strong black coffee and a cigarette. DMES* COM the transient nature of the many physic efforts?rightly directed. There Is comfoi ctual disease, but simply to a constipate of Figs, promptly removes. That Is why 1 :ed so highly by all who value good healt hich promises Internal cleanliness without t, in order to get its beneficial effects, to .nufactured by the California Fig Syrup C THE HIGHEST OBJECT tly lpform the public of the merits of an The valuable reputation acquired by Jon of the excellence of the pleasant lch it manufactures, confirms the stateikes, that the best of remedies only luman system. The more one takes sd the system becomes, while on the athod and the results when Syrup of freshing to the taste, and acts gently ind bowels, cleanses the system elTecevers and overcomes habitual constild the many ills resulting therefrom, rgatives and aperients is not that they iken, but that they act too violently and f body requiring constantly augmented taste and gentle action of Syrup of beneficial whenever a laxative remedy ice it invaluable, as It may be taken dnoo rint srrlne nor nauseate. OF SYRUP OF FIGS limplicity of the combination, but also manufactured by scientific processes only, and therefore we wish to imaslng the true and origtoial remedy. , Fig Syrup Co., printed oir the front of ) IG SYRUP CO., cisco, CaL New "fork. N. Y. ~^\ J , THE GLOR" < Strength, Vitai THE SCIENCE OF LIFE ; 01 / TUt?W&fTk/rrBMarri ages. the J Sliaustecl Yitali " / ftp m/ IFF ft Debility, Atro; i. # 4P Si coce'c a,so 0:1 ^ vcr cau.se aris 1 KNOW THYSELF. j iaviugs. ' It Contains 125 InTaluable Prescript lens for ai , PRICE ONLY $1 BY MAIL (sealed). (Xeweditlc ! Bead this GREAT WORK now and K .v'OW TH Address The Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 ] Chief Consulting Physician and Author, Graduate c , Fifth Massachusetts Regiment Vol. Thf Most Em I Others Fill. Consultation in penson or by letter. 9 The National Medical Association awarded the <??>-.,a Rnrnr vn? ctpbv \r*v v^im, v;h ' i The Diagnostician, or Xnmv Thyself Manual, a meets of the press. Prir*e. 50 cent*.'bi't mailed FRI MECUM and of great va!u- for WEAK and FA I. Medical Author, distinguished throughout ihfsco-.n erenrwher* highly endorse the PeaUxiv Medical Ir The Peabody Medical Institute has been ei>tablfi Attained has subjected it to a te? whioh only a mori " Tin Peabody iicdical Jnttitu!: ai&ar iin dIMC"' ... ...irL ' >. i 5 i. F HOME. g:;, ; In the housewife's hand awaiting q ^J3 Is a cake of Ivory Soap, & r;*2 And we hear her say :"Hfc dirt away, a Tis this that gives us hope." ft So he takes the shining treasure, & And laughing with delight, ?? , Cries: "See it float, the magic boat $ That makes my home so bright." A ^ y while soips, each represented to be " Juit ? +WM like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and ? 1 " Ivory" Soap and insist up?* petting It g '* k CntU C*., dvfntll. A >&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&?8 _ z. ;|j The idler exists on one cent's worth :jjm of bread, with.a little olive oil; whieh /'{la he buys for an additional five cents.? .-1|i Vegetarian Messenger. ; Fatality of Xewatead Abbey. '? Another link in the chain of ill for- ->J9 tune which has followed the famou* ;7|g Newstead Abbey was forged the other week. It seems that a corse rests on 1 the Abbey, and that the eldest son of fa its owner has never succeeded to the | estate. Byron sold it to Colonel |,, Wildman, in 1808, who died childless. The trustees sold it to Webb, . ../IB the famous sportsman, whose eldest r-?W< son died that week. Byron had the '.a skull which was reported to have belonged to the ghost which haunted the Abbey, and he nsed it as a punoh- i bowl. Webb buried the skull, hoping to lay the ghost.?London Correspon- v'JS dencc in New York Tribune. ?, '%% Machinery exports from the United * States to Mexico in the last sixmonthf "M were $2,720,000. J w& I al Ills which vanish before proper rt In the knowledge that so many * d condition of the system, which .l;|s t Is the only remedy with millions b. Its beneficial effects are due to debilitating the organs on which note when you purchase that you y article, and truthful statements gWjgg I rOFMAN!-* 1 ity, Manhood. ft, SELF-PRESERVATION. ical Treatise on Happy cause aud cure of Ex- 'rtfrfc ty, Nervous aud Physical phv (wasting), and Varii ALL DISEASES AXD JB&SW 5 OE MAN Jroni \chaiing. True Principles of 70 pp. 12mo, with Eu-jgPtHMBf HEAL THYSELF. ?ute and chronic diseases. Embossed, full gilt, n, with latest observation! of the author.) vswt.f. for knowledge la power. Bulfinch St.. Boston. Ma.ss7 (Eatabliuhed in 1860J if Harvard Medical College, ClAas 1864. Surgeon nent Soeclalbt it America, whi Cum Wfaer* to 6 ; Sundars 10 to 1. Confidential. Gold Modal /or UjIs Grand Prize Treatise, whiok die-aged, or Old, Married or Siuglr M-pape pamphlet with tertimonUls and endorM* SEforUOdavfl. Send now. It is a perfect VADE LISG ME# by a Humanitarian and Celebrated nrv and Kurope. Address as abova. i"ii6 preta istitute. Read the following. bed in Boston 37 years. and the fame which it haa torious institution could undergo.-fio*(on Journal. itaton. but uo tcualf ."-Bot'.on Bnatd. , ; j