The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, May 23, 1900, Image 3
m
j - *
Five Larce Cities in 1800.
There were only five large cities in
America in 1800. Philadelphia, with
GG,000, was the largest, the seat of j
government and the centre of wealth j
and culture. New York was next,
with 60,000. Baltimore was third,
with 26,500; Boston fourth, with 25,- j
000, and Charleston, South Carolina, .
fifth, with 19,000 people.?Ladies' j
Home Journal.
A girl can't speak of any one being
is love without using the word "desperately."?Atchison
Globe.
What Shall We Have For Dessert'
This question arises in the family daily. Let
os answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious
and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 min. Nc
boilln^l nobakiug! Simply add a little hot
water&settocool. Flavors: Lemon,Orange
liiispberrv and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c j
It seems odd that love is blind, and yet j
<san find a way.
The Best Prescription fox Chills
and Fever ts a bottle of Grovb'8 Tastilb* |
Chill Tonic. It Is simply iron and quinine li
a tasteless form. No cura?no pay. Price 60c
Sweden has ?175,540,030 invested in raiJ
roads.
* Piso's Cure cannot be too hipbly spoken o
as a cough cure.?J. W. O'Bribn, 322 Thin
Ave., X., Minneapolis Minn., Jan. (>,1900.
Home-made bread is responsible for man'
a married man's crusty temper.
Frey'* Vermifuge saves the lives of the lit
tie ones. Druggist* and country stores, 25c.
or by mail from E. & S. Frey, Baltimore, Md
In China, the mem liers of a man's famil;
are held responsible for hi9 debts.
I CuresTalk
< Croat Fame of a Creat Medicin* j
Won by Actual Merit.
Tbe fame of Hood's Sara9parilla has beer !
won by tbe good it has done to those wbc
were suffering from disease. Its cures have
excited wonder and admiration. It ha?
caused thousands to rejoice in the enjoyment
of good health, and it will do you the
6ame good it has done others. It will expel
from your blood all impurities; will
give you a good appetite and make you
strong and vigorous. It is just tbe medl-,
cine to help you now, when your system is I
in need of a tonic and iavigorator.
ErUDtlOnS?"AQ erupnou an over m> i
body caused a burning sensation so I could j
not sleep nights. By taking Hood's SirSfiparllla
I was completely cured." Jkkxik
Thompson, P. 0. Box 36, Oafcsvllle, N. Y.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is America's Greatest Medicine.
Save % Labelsl
and write for list of premium* wt offer
free for ihem.
HIRES
fsvorile
T1
Bird Di ed of a Broken Heart.
Last summer a woman who liveB in
Harlem went to the country for 9
month's holiday. Before leaving she
gave her pet canary, Dick, into the
bands of the woman in the next flat
to care for nntil her return. Dick
missed his mis'-'ess the next day *nd,
v after a tender little song, hushetl hie
voice and would sing no more. He
ate very little and began to droop
visibly. As the days went by he became
simply a miserable little bnnch
of ^jones and yellow feathers. One
morning the woman who had charge
of him found him on his back, dead,
in the bottom of his gilded cage. He
had died of grief at the loss of hiB
mistress.?New York Herald.
Miles or Street* in New York City.
Greater New York contains 1720
toiles of paved streets. Macadamized
streets have an aggregate length
in the five boroughs of 746 miles;
granite blocks,- 389 miles; cobblestones,
238} miles; asphalt, 234 miles;
trap rock, slj miles; ueJgian diockb,
miles; brick, 19 miles; gravel,
13i miles, and wood only eiglit-tenths
of a mile.
Serious
ills of
Women
The dorangemen is of
the female organism that
breed all kinds of trouble
and which ordinary prao"
tlco does not oure, are the
very things that give way
promptly to Lydla Cm Pink?
ham's Vegetable Compound
Uterine and ovarian
iruuwfifai niufio/ ? ? * * ??/
ulcerations, tumors, unusual
discharges, backaches
and painful periods
?these are the'Ills that
hang oh and wreck health
and happiness and disposition.
has a wonderful record
of absolute cures of these
troubles ? a constant
series of successes for
thirty years* Thousands
of women vouch for this
Their letters constantly
appear In this paper,
. o
" mom A T# mfi hava rrr\t tha PI |,||X
ill I B RT you have not used Daniels
81 _% Sure Pile Cure, or you
I hi V would not have them row.
i he only Guaranteed Cure. No detention from
boairietia. no operation, no opium or morphine.
U Suppositories 60c. or 24 and box of ointment
H-Cis postpaid by mail. Send for book of valuable
information on Piles, FREE.whether you
B*e ou remedy or not.
*HE DAMLXS SURE PILE CURE CO,
2Si Ayylum St.. Hartford. Oona.
ADVERTISING
I Thompson's Eye Water
New York City (Special).?It is remarked
that the children's clothing ip
decidedly dressy. Frocks in their
waist ornamentation are very ornate.
bB
OSr f
/ ,
PItOCK FOR ; A CHILD.
Little girls' dresses are not generally
cut with skirtsin shape. This is
done only when the skirt is entirely
pleated in Barrow, lingerie pleats,
which are stitched down about onethird
of the skirt, and then allowed to
fall loose, giving; tbie necessary fulness
to the lover pari.
Dresses are shorter than they were
last season. ^ There has been some
attempt auide^tb introduce trimmings
at the extreme edge of the skirt, but
ERIDES AN.
tains. " Deai'^era'^^^^^ll^ra^
ceeded *in producing,';.,? pattern for a
circular-cut skirt in frock or coat that
J-?" -?* ? ? Ao Mama n? Vi an a n n
UUCO UUU MI5 AM *MV WVMtMM Wf
evenly. Tina model is universally
In ootto^mjlks Reams are connected
by lines of veining.
Thess stripes of insertion extend in
BOQX^.,m^p^?'to the extreme edpe of
th'ebenk M''others they terminate
whei^ tte^j^ditional circular is attached.
The Eton or bolero effect is
noted quite as often for children as
for "growa-nps," not only in vroolen
frocks* but in cotton ones also.
Troeki For Weddings.
Decided originality is shown by
many oitltefrocks now in preparation
for wedding*. The first one shown in
the large out, reproduced from the
New York Evening San, is a wedding
gown in^hite satin. Its long tunic,
reaching clear to the skirt hem, is cut
into a sexfil&fffeep points finished
all around Tfith frill upon frill in white
chiffon. A frilled and kilted underskirt
in chiffon is revealed by the
tunie'B poisto. -.?lm corsage consistsof
an underblouse in kilted chiffon
with a bolero of the satin edgad with a
chiffon frilLjrfc . ]
All-lace wedding gowns will bepopur"
'? ? ia nne fnjihinripd in A fetch
mi* jjivav ?w
ing way that can scarcely be improved
upon as a model for this sort of frock
in this sort of material. Its foundation,
of course, is white Batin, over
which, is. draped the lace. In this
case, the lace is Brussels of the fineBt
pattern. An edging of chiffon frills
round the court train is effeotive".
Chiffon frills also trim the corsageiaf
throat and the sleeves at wrist. Across
fcnnf nt the oorsacre runs a
| tuc uiapou *4 vmv w _
garland of orange blossoms.
The quaint touch imparted by the
fichu seems to be in high favor for
bridemaid gowns. Here, for instance,
is such a frock in white Liberty Batin,
with yoke in white silk guipure and a
lichu in white chiffon frilled all round.
At the waist is a broad sash with long
frilled ends in lily greeu chiffon.
Another model for a bridemaid's
gown has its fichu in white chiffon
also, but edged with lace. Soft white
t
I flo+m 1 a mofario] r\f fKia fl*A/?lr f.flA
skirt of which has a deep shaped
flounce edged with chiffon frills and
headed bj several baads of white lace
insertions.
The no-collar vogue appears in a
third bridemaid frock model. This,
also displays the bolero, -without which
so few costumes of whatever sort are
seen nowadays. The bolero is creamcolored
guipure embroidered in dead
gold; theunder-blouse, which, finished
with the finest of frills at the throat,
does away with the necessity of a collar,
is in kilted lily gieen crepe de
chine.
A Pretty Watli Frock.
A pretty little wash frock for a little
girl is striped watermelon pink and
white, each stripe having a little
figure, upon it. Stripes lend themselves
prettily to trimmings. This
has a pleated ruffle around the skirt,
pleated so that the red stripe comes
together solidly at intervals. The
waist is pleated back and front so that
the red is again together, and the
same effect is given in the short puffed
sleeves. there is a lace insertion let
in at all the seams of the skirt of this
little frock, at the head of the pleated
mffle.andit outlines the pleats in the
ironi ana Dacs 01 me waisv. j.mu itt
made to wear with a guimpe.
Fulness In the Slcirts.
The effect of fulness in the skirts
is to be seen in a woolen gown which
is made with side pleats about an
ii/ch wide laid up to the waist all
aiound the Bkirt and carried almost j
to the lower edge. Somo of the wash
gowns^ are also made in this way.
Many of the gowns blouse considerablyin
the front. In English separate
waists the belts have a decided incline
down in the front. In some the belts
are made with a decided point, others'
are full and merely drawn down, and
some little ribbons, while they are
dsawn down a little in front, are
fastened at one side with a small bow.
Black Lave on Parasol*.
c >. Women who have plain white para- j
j
^ '
tffdULirh eh are a little soiled are dress5K^|Bm;.np
with black lace for use
The laoe can be put on
iU B TAKV997 u: wajfu, uuuuimu^ *\s vuw ,
material ou hand ana the nkill of the
needlewoman.
Salt* For Little Girls.
Many little girls' suits are made
with Eton jackets and skirts like
those oftheir elders. They are made
chieftj in the heavy wash materials,
the 'linen*, ducks and piques, and
have plain little straight waists of
hetfvy white wash materials.
' Beautiful Sathet.
Sashes arranged around the waist ;
like a Swiss belt are fastened with a
rosette, and finished at the ends with
silk fringe. \
A Btrlral Id Olovu.
judow, Bieeves a?ve drougui. a revival
ojthe becoming long mousquetaire
gloves.
.
Made Of Flowered Organdie.
TfcjSTbig sister's summer wardrobe
will contain a sunbonnet, which she
wiiiW.^at While participating in the
mon^cient and royal game of golf.
It isiadaStrty affair, made of flowered
organdie, 7 beruffled and beribboned,
an^itt^ ^Ile will indeed present a
charming" picture when she dallies
forth, in one of these elegant and
wm
THE SUMMER OTHl/8 SUtfBONKET.
elaborate editions of the horaoly j
PtiDgliam and calico ?roio4jppe ef olden
times.
AS THINGS CO.
When we figure out our blessings in a calm,
judicial way,
And consider uli tho joys we don't doserve,
How the unexpected frequently has made
us glad and gay
When we've struck a lucky tangent on
life's curve;
When we've found out admiration in an
unexpected place,
And have learned our neighbors think
we're rather smart,
There's a certain satisfaction, not to mention
airy grace,
In the deprecating way we play our part.
And we settle down to living in a oomfortable
frame
Of mind, at neu.ce with all the world
around.
With a charitable feeling for the blind, the
halt, the lame,
Whether mentally or bodily so bound.
Then there comes a rude awakening that's
due to Hard Luck^s Knock,
And we cower at the gath'rlng of the
storm,
Till it breaks in a|l Its fury; but, Oh!
greater is the shock
When our friends say: "Well, he i never
was so warm!" '
?Wood Levette Wilson, in Puck,'
PITH AND POINT.
, y i
"Yes, I found the editor." "How
did he strike you?" "He did it bo
quickly I don't know. "?Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
He?"Who is that agly old woman
over there by the piano'?" She?"Oh,
that's Mme. Cosmetique, the famous
beauty specialist."
"Is Dnkimer Dabbs a ready speaker?"
"Oh, yes?he's a ready speaker,
but he's an awful stuttering listener."
?Chicago Record. '
"Does he know much about the
firm's business?" "Knowmuch! Well,
say! the office boy actually doesn't
consider himself any better posted."
He who woos and runs away
Is oft a knavish churl.
But he may woo another day,
And woo another girl!
?X'iinuuoipuju i\ouuru, r
Long?"Family troubles, oh? What '
rock did your domestic ship split on?" j
Shore?"It wa3 the absence of 'rocks'
that caused the split."?New Orleans
Times-Democrat.
"Joppo, you make nice, fine garden
beds." "Yes, when my wife sets me
to digging I'm mad enough to pulverize
everything that comes in my w'ay."
?Detroit Free Press.
"Hold your tongue, Bessie," said
the mother of- a three-year-old miss.
"You chatter, chatter, all the time."
"It isn't my tongue, mamma," replied
Bessie, "it's my teeth."
"Have you considered what matri^
mony means?" asked old Par la Mark. '
"Oh, yes," replied yottng Spendy.
"That's why I want to marry your
daughter." ? Philadelshia' North i
American.
"Georgie, don't stare at Mr. Cramley
that way. It isn't polite." "I
was just waitin' to see hitn pick up
bis glass of water, ma. ' I heard pa
tell you that be drinks like a fish."?
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Mrs. McSwatters?"What on earth
possesses that dog of oars? He's
been barking all day in, the back
yard." McSwatters ? "Maybe it's
that pussywillow I planted there yesterday."?Syracuse
Herald.
"Pa, what is the inevitable?"
"Well, I don't like to see you investigate
suoh deep themes, Jimmy; but
as a general proposition, the inevitable
is any big scheme that a man
tries to/run without cash."?Indianapolis
Journal.
Mr. Newed?"I wish you would try
your hand at baking a sponge cake,
my dear. I'm very fond of them."
Mrs. Newed?"Very well. I'll go
over to the drug store the first thing
xi._ ?.1 ?i - t
ill tuo uiuruiug uuu u agou |
aponge."?Chicago Record.
"What's your name?" asked the
teacher of a new pupil. "Jules," answered
the little fellow. "You should
say Julius?not Jules," said the teacher.
"Now," she said, addressing another
small boy, "what is your name?"
"Bilious," was the prompt respone.
A New Thins In Schools.
At Ilsenberg, in the Hartz Mountains,
in Germany, I investigated
thoroughly Dr. Herman Lietz's school.
It represents strongly the reaction
against the machine method of controlling
a public-school system. Dr.
Lietz has fifty-five pupils, representing
nearly as many countries. The
school is on a farm of eighty acres,
containing orchard, garden, cereal
fields aud workshop. The principal
building is an old powder mill. The
work of converting it to a school-house
was done by the boys. The boys do
the farm work and everything that is
to be done. Their studies begin at 8
* .1 .1 it. ....1
a'clocK ill tne morning auu at we euu
of an laour tbey exercise. They return
to books and after a period of
study tbey have a luncheon. After
another hour's study they have more
play. Dr. Lietz has something new
for the boys every hour, and the way
they rushed at, their work and at their
play was remarkablo. The afternoon
is spent in the workshop and out of
doors. The result of the system is
that the boys are not dull for a minute.
Their minds or bodies are always at
work.?Dean Jackman, in Chicago
Tribune.
The Mode Care Is the I.nteM.
Fashionable physicians in maDy of
the large cities: ere dealing with a
class of patients by what they term j
the-muaic cure. It is a wortby sue- I
- ? ? I
cesqpr 01 tne coior cure, ?wuu ,1UU ,
away a couple of yearr back and was I
not half a bad idea, as it often soothed
the mind. It is said that the music
cure is antique, for a search through
the books of the ancients has revealed
many allusions to the curative power
of music, in certain ailment* mainly
of a nervous character. It was used
in times of pestilenoe and plagnc to
divert the minds of the people from
the disaster which threatpned them.
\It is said that musio incites the action
of the heart, and that influences the
blood circulation. It also stimulates
the activity of the skin. The health
and steady nerves of the Germans are
cited as proofs of the medicinal
powers of muBic; and while we may
not give it full credence, we mast at
leaat admit that nobody was ever injured
by the sound of music, so phy ??
in recommending it.
v. i
j An Infallible Tent.
I Pat np a sign, "Fresh Paint, ",aarwbere,
and nine out of every teu men
' fhftt pass it will dab their lingers on
I it and aofc/Burprised to find out it is.?
' Ne* York Press,
fr
Flons Burglar* at Work.
The sexton of a church in Denver,
Col., the other night found that all
the movable property had been cartied
off. He traced it to a pawn-shop,
where it had been left by burglars
who represented themselves as deacons
eager to raise funds for the
church.
Weeds of the Ancient World.
Soil was brought up from a depth
of 326 feet from a coal mine in Belgium,
and from it sprouted weeds of
a species unknown to botanists.
Holland's Famous Tollp Crate.
"In the year 1634 the tulip craze
in Holland," writes Clifford Howard,
in the Ladies' Home* Journal, "became
so great that the ordinary industries
were neglected. No one
wanted to do anything but raise tulips.
A rare specimen offered for sale called
forth exciting bidding. Every one
was on the lookout for special varieties.
It was rumored at one time
that there were but two bulbs of the
Semper Augustus in existence in Holland.
One of them was owned by a
florist in Haarlem, and another by a
.dealer in Amsterdam. This rumor
was sufficient to arouse the liveliest
commotion in tulip circles, and dealers
and fanciers hurried forward with
offers to purchase?each one endeavoring
to outbid the other. The com- ,
petition became so eager that finally
one man offered twelve acres of city
property for the Haarlem bulb; but
the owner refused to sell. The bulb
in Amsterdam was knocked do?n to
the highest bidder for nineteen hnndred
dollars in cash, two horses, a
carriage and a set of harness?a total
of about thred thousand dollars, which
in those days was a fabulous sum."
\ Smbarraaalnff.
When the new minister, a handsome
and unmarried man, made his
-A AAII T?ao /li/llra V* A
JLilOb pUObUiai UttiJ Qb DUO x vouivao, uo
took little Anna up in his arms and
tried to kiss her. But the child refused
to be kissed; she struggled
loose and ran off into the next room,
where her mother was putting a few
finishing touches to her adornment
before going into the parlor to greet
the clergyman.
"Mamma," the little girl whispered,
the man in the parlor wanted me to
kiss him."
"Well,'1 replied mamma, "why
didn't you let him? I would if I were
you."
Thereupon Anna ran back.into the
parlor, and the minister asked."
"Well, little lady, won't you kiss
me now?" '
"No, I won't,", replied Anna,
promptly, "but mamma says she will."
?Harper's Bazar.
,
wonting CiBriu auu oiiji
Colonel Thweatt. Eastern manager 01. the
Southern Railway, learned that there was to :
be an eclipse of the son Ma; 28. 1900, which J
seemed made to order to tit his line with regard
to points of observation upon Itlfl Ala*
oama, Georgia, the Carolinas and "Virginia. .
He at once made this known to the professors j
of a number of colleges, and ti their olaaees
who are poling up on astronomy. In connection
with a party or a special rat<vttpon?
short line basis, and convinced themthat he
was sound, both on the best points of view of 1
the eclipse, and on tempting rates. Several
parties have already boosed from New York
and Brooklyn, and New England colleges; 1
also from Princeton college and Allentown,
with others. It will be a good outing for the ,
sky-scrapers, especially if Colonel Thweatt
be along. Meantime he will give any astronomer
his detailed calculations who applies
to him in person or by mail at his office, 1185
Broadway, New York?Call, Easton, Pa.
Stammering men are four times as numerous
as stammering women'.
Jell-O, the New Dessert
Pleases all the family. Four flavors:?
Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry.
At your grocers. 10 cts.
There are seventeen oleomargarine factories
in the United States.
To Cure a Cold In On* Day.
Take Laxativx Bboho Qoiinm Tablets. AD
druggists refnnd the money 11 it falls to care.
S. w. Gsovi'b signature Is on each box. 860.
Taxes are paid in Berlin, Germany, on
about 25,000 dogs.
M. L. Thompson & Co., Druggists, Coudersport,
Pa., say Hall's Catarrh Cure is the best
and only ,?ure cure for catarrh they ever sold.
Druggists sell it 75c.
Kansas has 300 flour mills, with a capacity
01 10,000,000 barrels yearly.
Spring
Jfe
surely, leaving your blood p
lively, and your liver and kid
nui sausiiea get your muucj
To any needy mortal Kiffering from bo v.
Sterling Remedy Compar
An Unadulterated Not.
Four million bnshels of peanuts are
used annually in this country. In behalf
of the peanut it can be said that
no successful adulteration of it has
ever been sprang upon the public,?
Chicago Tribune.
A Strategic Atsiiolt.
? tTT! 11 _ tl _.;j ?1
"say, ".vmie, emu
Johnny to a little playmate, "you pretfcnd
to hit me and I'll howl, then
mamma will give me a cake and I'll
divide it with you."
Inapectlou by Tapping:.
Among the most incomprehensible
proceedings to be observed within the
vast area of Woolwich Reserve Depot
are the doings of a small party of officials,
one of whom appears to do
nothing all day long but sit at a table
and tap on the top of tin canisters
with a couple of bits of stick something
after the manner of a child beating
on the upturned end of his drum.
The tins are passed before him about
as fast as he can tap them, and absolutely
nothing seems to come of the
game. To the unenlightened onlooker
it is quite unintelligible. The tins
contain meat, and before they are (
passed into the store it is, of course,
important to examine the condition of
wnat is inciosea, ana tnis in lacr is
the way it is done. The trained ear
of the expert examiner can tell whether
the meat is in a wholesome or a putrid
condition by the sound emitted when
rapped with the stick, just as the examiner
of railway carriage wheels is
supposed to be able to tell whether
the wheel he taps with his hammer is
cracked or not. The rapidity with
vhich the business is gone through
and the seeming inattention of the performer
with the sticks, and his total
indifference to all sorts of noises about
him, render the procedure a very
curious one to watch. The test is
said to be practically infallible.?London
News. ' 1
Triaifaph for the Proiecutlon.
"I.will ask you now," the attorney
for vthe proseoutior said to the witness,
"if the defendant in this case
confused to yon his motive in shooting
the deceased?"
"Sold on!" interposed the attorney
for the defence. "I object!"
'"I only want to find out whether?"
" ' "I
object!"
, Legal wrangle of hall, an honr.
"The witness may answer," rnled
the Judge.
"Now, the*, sir, I will ask yon
again. Did or did not the prisoner
confess to you his motive.in shooting
the deceased?" ,
"He did."
"What was it?"
"He wanted to kill him."?Chicago
Tribune.
FITS permanently cored. No fllsor nervousness
after first day's nee of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Beatorer.fS trial bottleand treatise free
Dr. R. H. KiiM, Ltdn 881 Arch St, Phila., Pa.
It seema "queer that shoe leather should
not he sold by the foot.
Mrs. WInilowr'iSoothing Syrn^forebildren
teething, softens the gams, reduces lullammaLion,
allays pain.-oures wind colic.^5c.abottle.
The shipbuilder frequently has to mend
Us ways.
Try Crain-0!
Try Crain-O!
Ask your Grocer to-day to show
you a package of GRAIN-O, the new
food drink that takes the place of
coffee, i
The children may drink it without
injury as well as the adalt. All who
try it, like it. GRAIN-0 has that
rich seal brown of Mocha or Java,
but it is made from pure grains, and
the most delicate stomach receives it
without distress. $ the price of coffee.
15 cents and 25 cents per package.
Sold by all grocers.
Tastes like Coffee
Looks like Coffee
Insist thttyour grocer givet yon GRAUT-0
Accept no imitation.
Body CI
Every spring
live in, to get rid
collected in the
house your soul i
Sg up during the w
filth, which shoul
day to day, but v
HjK. cleaning inside.
f\ your kidneys are
you don't clean
you'll be in bad
everybody else a]
DON'T USL
body inside, but
positive and for<
work while you
collected in youi
drive it off softly,
ure and nourishing, your stomi
neys healthy and active. Try a
%rr\t4 11
r IMKA WUl jruu u avk
\ADE EASY E
. . , W *
MDY CATHARTIC
rel troubles and too poor to buy CASCAKETS
ly, Chicago or New York, mentioning advert ij
A Long Engagement.
Eenhrm ? "When I commenced
courting joa you said you could M.
cook."
Mrs. Benham ?"I could then. Yon
courted me ten years; how long 9o ,'1
you suppose a woman is going to retain
her faculties?"?Harper's Bazar.
To Pats Away tlie Time.
Dorothy (seeing a rooster standing
on one foot while he scratches his neck
with the other)?"Goodness! there'* a
rooster playing a jew's-harp!"?Judge.
ilk Yonr Dealer for Allen'* Foot-Kaae,
A powder to shake ioto you shoes; rests the
feet. Cures Corns, Bunion#, Swollen, Sore,
Hot, Callous, Acblng, Sweating Feet and InVT.illa
A llan'aVAAKV.aau mo Iraq nAV
(s?un'"a ? -?
or tight shoes easy. At all droggfsts and
9hoe stores, 25cts. Sample mailed FREE.
Address Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
The Dumber of matches consumed la
France In 1898 was 34,841 millions.
ALABASTINE Is the original
and only durable wall coating:,
entirely different from all kalsomlnes.
Beady for use In
white or fourteen beautiful
tints by adding cold water.
L^lDIES naturally prefer Al*??
BA8TINE for walls and celling*,
became It Is pure, clean,
durable. Put up In dry powdered
form, In flve-pouna pacta
ages, with full directions.
ALL kalsomlnes are cheap, temporary
preparations made from
whiting* chalks, clay*, etc.,
and stuck on walls With decaying
animal glue. ALABASTINE
Is not a kalsomlne.
BEWARE of the dealer who
says he can sell you the "same
thing" as ALABASTINE or
"something Just as good." He
is either not posted or 1b trying
to deceive you.
AND IN OFFERING something
he has bought cheap and tries
to sell on ALABAST1NE*8 demands,
he may not realize the
damage you will suffer by a
kalsomine on your walls.
^ r>KTOTt2T If ^.olora trHll rvAf
Sa lawsuit. Dealers risk one by
selling and consumers by using
infringement. Alabastine Co.
own right to make wall coating
to mix with cold water.
The interior walls of
every church and school should
be coated only with pure, durable
ALABASTINE. It safeguards
health. Hundreds of
toes used ye&rly for this work.
IN BUYING ALABASTINE.
customers should avoid get- ting
cheap kalsomines under
different names. Insist on
having our goods in packages
and properly labeled.
NUISANCE of wall paoer is obviated
by ALABASTINE. It
can be used on plastered walls,
wood ceilings, brick or canvas.
A child can brush it on.
It docs not rub or scale off.
Established in favor, shun
all imitations. Ask paint dealer
or druggist for tint card.
Write us for interesting booklet,
tree. ALABASTINE CO..
Grand Rapids, Mich.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 & 3.50 SHOES
' ^?yvorth $4 to 56 compared^ \
Jw\ with other makes? ?~: Ik
/] wi \lodorsedby over ~r_.- jfi
iCIL> 1,000,000 wear en. KgFjP^ IB
Ml The genuine have W. L.j" J** 13
I IX Douglas' cams and price EjKg Pj
*| l\ IS rtamped on bottom. TakeMMK, Jr
a V^?i 00 >ub?titute claimed to be
M VjC as good. Your dealerJfllWpF'yL
not, we will teed a pair ^HIl2LjaCjU|
Son receipt of price and 25c. ^ 7'^
lnt> ior carriage. State kind of leather
*31 ^^fcJsiie, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat in*2&mmi
* L DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton. Matt
Happy! 1
rremged?f"t* * JOHNSON'S
MALARIA, CHILLS&FEVER
Grippe and Liver Diseases. 4.
KNOWN ALL DKLCG1ITI. vSCf
p% m mmm mm ? secured or
P AT F N TFeiRtfundtd >
1 jU L. 91 B Paten: adv*irti8?d
l?l ? free. Freo adrice
?a to patentability. Send for "Inventors'
Primer, FREE. .HI hO U. STEVENS <fc UO..
Estab., 1864. 817 14th St., Washington, D. 0.
PlAVAland and Dfltroit. -
naADGV^zvDisccvnT;itm .
UnUrv) qoiek relief ?od eont wont
Book ol tMt'.mciDiili *n<t lO^KTi' \
gy. Pr B- H. gmi'lMM. Be? l,iUuU.?>.
Mn QMS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. " Q
Bjl Besl Cough Syrup. Taetee Good. Cat n
|S In time. Sold br dractfflsta. pf
^EEKBiraairaegi
"t i
eaning j
you dean the house you
of the dust and dirt which
winter. Your body, the
[ives in, also becomes filled f
?* -f j
inter witn an manner 01
d have been removed from
ras not. Your body needs
If your bowels, your liver,
\ full of putrid filth, and 1
them out in the spring,
odor with yourself and
1 summer. 1
f A HOSE to clean your
sweet, fragrant, mild but
;eful CASCARETS, that
sleep, prepare all the filth
r body for removal, and
ov ntfv- hut none the less
ich and bowels clean and
i JO-cent box today, and if
cleaning of your body is
?f DRUGGISTS
* -m!tt a fvW ff##. A^ffCC
?ment and paper. cs