The Miluary Korce of Jnpar..
The Japanese army is equipped, ortcaniznd
and drilled like n European
army and many of :ts officers have
received their education in European
countries. Conscription was intro?Jneed
into Japan in 1874 and the regulations
now in force were adopted in
1883. Every male citizen between the
n&v.s of 17 ind 40 years owes military
laervlce. which is given three yoars in
the active army, lour years In the first
reserve, five years in the territorial
army and eleven years in the nntlonal
army of the second reserve. For the
jernr 1801-02 the budget provides for
12 divisions or 24 brigades of infantry,
?aeh brigade composed of two regiments
of thr?e battalions each. The
cavalry comprises 17 regiments or 51
squadrons. The artillery has 19 regiments
or 144 field and mountain batteries.
The engineers have at present
2H companies and will soon have 89.
The Army Service Corps has 13 battalions
of two companies, with one
battalion (three companies) of telejgraph
troops. Upsides the 13 divisions
of the infantry there are three regiments
of coast guards and two battalions
of foot artillery and a special
brigade of four battalions of Infantry,
cavalry, artillery and engineers (the
"Yosso Brigade). The aggregate is
3.116 officers and 135,633 men on a
p*-are footing. The war strength is
392.220 men and 1,098 guns, the re
SCTVCH excluded. When It la remembered
that recent campaigns have
shown the Japanese army to be of
first rate quality it Is obvious that the
military power of the new nation of
the rat idc is formidable.
I victims or Electricity.
A table has been compiled by the Insurance
companies of the losses of
sJectrlclty during the nine months ending
on Dec. 1. Two hundred and fortysix
persons have been electrocuted during
these nine months, or an averago
of almost thirty a month; 515 have
been maimed; 112 horses have been
killed, and there were 442 hres.
In this table no account has been
TkrpL of the indirect accidents through
the use of electricity, such as trolley
<car accidents, electric mobile accidents,
and the like, but only whore the direct
slertriu shock caused the death or
maiming or the lire.
The loBses by electric fires alono
have averaged over a million dollars
a month. These losses have become so
arrious that the accident, life, and fire
>i? - i uuii'auiu:* ure considering
tba advisability of taking united action
^igaonst them. The insurance rate in
these companies was lixed before the
jgreat and Increasing use of electricity,
anil the electrical risk was not figured
in. so that the rates are upset and require
a readjustment through these ad-.litlonal
losses.
The winter months show more damage
by electricity than the summer
months. Ihiring the summer there are
lower fires and not so many electrocutions.
while after every winter's storm
there is a long list of casualties and
tosses from imperfect insulation, crosstil
and broken wires, and misled curitcnia.
The youngest princess at the coronation
services will he Victoria Alexandra,
of Wales, who -tias just kept her
5th birthday. The little ICarl of Airlie,
who is in his 9th year, will. It is said,
?h> the youngest peer to take part in
.-She coronation. The father of the hoy
iiie?l leading a cavalry charge in South
Africa over a year ago.
MRS. IDA L ROSER
tiranfl-Niece or Ex-l'reHldent I
James K. Polk, Writes to
1 Mrs. Pinkham Saying:
" Dhar Mrs. Pinkham : ?I have been
married for nearly two years, and so
fc?r have not been blessed with a child, j
1 hiAve. however, suffered with a com- i
Kteat Ion of female troubles and pain- j
1 menstruation, until very recently.
h MRS. IDA h. ROSKR.
""The value of Lyriia E. I'lnkl?r>
m's Vegetable Compound was 1
?allcd to my attention by an iutimatc
fr'?cnd, whose life had simply been a
borture with inflammation and ulcer- j
mfcion. and a few bottles of your Com*K>nnd
cured her; she can hnrdly
lielieve it herself to-day, alio enjoys
wi'ch blessed health. 1 took tour :
.bottles of your Compound and consider !
mjrwn euroa. I am once more in line
health nnd spirits; my domestic and
oDieial duties ull seem easy now, for I
^rel so strong I can do three times
what I used to do. You have a host of
friends in Denver, and ninong the hest
ount, Yours very gratefully,? Mits.
Iiu L. R oskii, 320 ISth Ave., Denver, j
5d."?S&000 forfeit if above testimonial is not
Jf you arc ill, don't hesitate to
get nbottleof LydiaE. Pink ham's
Vegetable Compound at once,
nd write to Mrs. Pinkliam,
lynn, Mass., for special advice?
JStisf roe.
sir
I
ARP ON A SICK BED
Doctors Say That Bill's Heart is Af
fected.
AND HE IS GIVEN SOME MORPHINE
Then Bill Clues to Sleep, lias Fitful
Dreams and Quotes Turn Angelina"
All the Night Long.
If anyone else was conrerned I would
not write this sick letter, but it may
benefit others who are similarly affected.
I havo been a very sick man an.l
hardly expected to see my next birthday.
which is today, the 15th, but I
have scuffled through and am now on
the up grade. One of my far-away boys
wired me to work on my stomach and
1 would get well. He might as well have
wlrod: "Keep on living and you will
keep living on."
No. it wasn't the stomach. It was
high up where the loft vantrielo of
the heart had got walled up in and the
trouble was what the doctor calls the
angina pcctoria, and my left arm was
helpless. For two days and nights 1
sufTored more of real agony than I ever
suffered in all my lifo. Our doctor boy
was here from Florida, and knew exactly
what was the matter, and I took
all his medicine, hut got little relief,
and I was willing to die to get out of
pain. Finally he gave me morphine in
both arms and I went off to sleep and
rest. Those morphine dreams and visions
are always a miracle to me. I
thought that in his talk about my
trouble he called it angelina pectoris,
for I don't hear well now. and I got
the refrain on my mind, that pretty
verse from Goldsmith's "Hermit:"
"Turn. Angelina?ever dear?
My charming turn to see.
Thine own, thine long-lost William
here.
Resorted to heaven and thee."
Ever and anon I could hear it raining
on the tin roof, but it didn't rain
a drop. All night long 1 was murmuring
"Turn, Angelina, ever dear." I couldn't
stop it nor think of anything else to
say. but I wasn't restored?next day I
got some better and as 1 hadn't taken
any nourishment for three or four days
I craved something add, and like a
foolish boy eat a small piece of huckleberry
pie for supper, which they told
me not to do. That set the dogs to
barking about midnight and set me
hack Just where I had been, and the
doctor's work all had to be done over
again. Emetics and hot baths and hot
water bags and more morphine finally
brought relief. That night after supper
the young people hud the dining table
cleared off and were playing that pretty
little childish game called ping pong
or ding dong or sing song or Hong
Kong, or some outlandish name with
its tinkling halls, and so I got up
anomer rerram and was murmuring
ping pong, ding dong and ding d??ng
bell all night. One of my boys, who is
always punning, told his moth or that
huckleberry pie business was simply a
ease of too much pie-eaty. and they
tried to make me smiie, but they
couldn't. 1 was past all wit and humor
and puns and jokes, llut I am done
with huckleberry pie and huckleberry
cordial and huckleberry Finn and any
other huckleberry. Only last Saturday
my only brother died suddenly of heart
failure away off from home. His time
was not out, for he was nearly twenty
years younger than I am, and row,
alas! 1 have no brother, and he was always
a good brother to me. But almost
everybody Is threatened with heart
failure now. and so I am looking out
for it, but don't want it to come along
the Angelina line. The heart is the
most wonderful and mysterious organ
of our anatomy. It is called the seat of
affections, tho desires, the emotions.
The organ of love and hate and joy,
but it is not. It is mentioned in the
Bible more than six hundred times,
and always in connection with our good
or bad traits, but it has nothing to do
with feoling or emotion (r>r character. It
Is nothing but a fleshy, pulpy organism,
a mechanical contrivance, and has to
be carefully nursed or it will rebel. It
is the engine that drives the whole
anatomical machine. If overworked or
overfed with ico or tobacco or anything
else it will work on faithfully until it
can't work any longer then gets discouraged
and dies suddenly at Its post.
The hook says that but little was
known to medical science concerning
the heart until the eighteenth century,
and that within the last fifty jears
many hooks have been written, and
now no part of the human system is
better understood or more satisfactorily
treated. The disease called angina
pectoris is declared to be the most dangerous
to which it is subject because
of its distressing pain and a sense of
impending death. If I had read that
while I was suffering I should have
surrendered, but the doctor wouldn't
tell me nor let me read it. He says it is
better to mtpify rather than magnify
the apprehensions of his patients. But
the young people ought to be told, told
often and earnestly, that they can't fool
with the heart. A boy who smokes cigarettes
on the sly is storing up trouble
that will surely come home and sap his
manhood and shorten his life. This is
so well known now that good men will
not employ boys who smoke. One vice
calls for another and a news manager
told me the other day that one o" his
newsboys skipped some of his patrons
every week so as to have a paper or
two to sell and get money to buy cigarettes.
Of course he discharged him.
It is pleasant entertainment to listen
to a doctor tell his varied experiences
and this one uttered a trut-i the other
day that ought to provoke serious
thought in every parent's bosom, lie
says that his greatest foo in the treatment
of diseases of children is their
disobedience to their parents and it is
most, generally the mother's fault. They
will do things and eat th.ngs that are
forbidden, but she loves the little dears
so much she overlooks their disobedience
and so when thoy get sick they
will not take tbe jhy.^ielan s nifdicmi.H
without force or a struggle and if the
duct.** adhere to force it the moth *
x
' M i t * - ?
or lets the time pass rather than hear
the screams or cries of the child. Not
half the parents enforce obedience from
their children. Prompt and willing
obedience should be the first lesson
taught a child. Theii hanolnoss de
ponds upon it and so does the mother's
peace.
We old-fashioned people have but
little patience with a generation that
is trying to reform the world with new
methods?abolishing the ways of their
forefathers? raising children on love
instead of discipline and filling all the
schools in the land with athletic sports
and intercollegiate contests. What
onor, what manliness, is there in
kicking a ball or batting one or wrestling
or rowing a boat? These sports
have gotten to be the most important
part of the curriculum and fill the daily
papers with pictures and thrilling reports
of the games. It is all an "ignis
fatuus" that fools the boys and makes
them think they have acquired an education.
When they went to college their
parents had fond hopes of them?when
they coine out that hope is gone, for
thry arc unfit for business or the duties
of life.
While I was half recovering from
the morphine state 1 got to ruminating
about the value of things and 1 compared
good health and domestic happiness
and he love and devotion of
wife and children with fame and power
and wealth and ambition and the very
thought of them sickened mo.
1 wouldn't givo a good shower of rain
just now for Roosevelt and all he has
got or over expects to be. But I love
Roosevelt because he hates Miles, and I
love Miles because he hates Roosevelt
and I despise them both?"Turn Angelina"?
ping pong. And last of all came
Satan. They are for war. They kill a
thousand negroes to our one. They
make a land desolate and call it peace.
They have trampled the love of liberty
in the dust and all for lust of power
and place. A woman front Kansas City
sands me a paper with a speech of a
Grand Army of the Republic orator on
Decoration day in which lie says that
he wishes every confederate monument
was buried in the bottomless ocean
and other vindicative thing3, and she
wants me to answer it. No, it is no use.
That Grand Army of the Republic is
full of such contemptible creatures and
; csw't answer them all. It is a standin..
curso to the peace of the land. Let
the ball roll on. Turn Angelina?ping
pong, ding dong, ding dong bell. We
will survive the wreck of matter and
the crush of words. And sq I went ot(
to sleep murmuring, there is no Grand
Army. It is a two for a niekle or four
to one concern, if 1 couldn't fight better
than that I'd apologize and hide
out. Some of them down here in Atlanta
would like to make friends, but
they have never apologized and the
way tney do reminds me of the old
couple:
"I know that you say that you love me.
But why did you kirk me down stairs?"
1 *inx ? pong?ding?don?Turn, Angelina?Wish
1 was well enough to
wrok in my garden.? Bill Arp in Atlanta
Constitution.
Popular Summer Rates.
For the Northern and Eastern Seaside
Resorts, the Baltimore Steam
Packet Co. arc offering the following
rates from Portsmouth, Norfolk or
Old Point Comfort, viz:
VIA l'KNNA. It. U.--<?Of?|? U.NTIIj OCT. 31, 1902.
A-t>urv Park, N. J. ? 13.00; Loug Branch,
N. J. *13.00; Atlantic City. N*. J. *11.00;
Ocean Orove, N. J. *13.00; Capo May, N. .1.
*11.25.
via n. A o. u. u. noon cntii. oct. 31, 11)02,
Astiury Park, N. J. *13.0.1; Long Branch,
N. J. *13.00. Atlantic City, N. J. *11.00;
Ooeuu Grove, *i3.00; Harpers Ferry, W. Va.
*7.25.
VIAQCF.EN ASNK'H H. B.
Season tlekota (good to return Sept. 30th)
Cape May, N. J. ?3.75; Rehobotli Bench, Pel,
?H.00. Ten days Capo May *7.75; ltuhobotli
Beach ?7.25.
This route offers the tourist a delightful
sail and the pleasures of
promenading on the spacious decks
of its popular steamers, inhaling the
balmy breezes of the Chesapeake; and
after a good night's rest in the commodious
staterooms of the "Alabama,"
"Georgia" or "Tennessee." travelers
en route to the North. East and
West are Invigorated and prepared for
rail Journey by the early trains out
! of Baltimore for Philadelphia, New
York and Boston.
The "Bay Line" has also arranged
for special excursions to Niagara Falls
for $14.00 for the round trip.
Descriptive pamphlets, etc., at all
railroad stations.
For further particulars, address
J. W. BIIOWN. Jr.. So. Pass. Agt.
KEY COMPTON, General Agt.
Norfolk, Va.
If you are going to get married for
money, or for a home, or out of pique,
or for any other reason not involving
real, convincing, old-fashioned love,
do not ask the Rev. W. E. Warner, of
Chicago, to tie the knot for you. He
won't do it. The fact that you came
a rong distance would not help you,for
Miss Besaw came from Wisconsin, ami
Mr. Broadway, who is twice as old as
she is. came all the way from Indiana,
and still Mr. Warner would not marry
11iviii i?<-< an- ? in1 lmiiui oui mat sue
did not love her ancient suitor, though
she was quite ready to marry him. It
all come out in the middle of the
ceremony, for in the beginning the
J clerical suspicions were not aroused.
Mr. Warner was marrying them in
approved fashion, and was getting
well along toward the marriage-fee
stage when the revelation came. Me
asked the bride-to-be the usual questions,
and in answer to one of them
she made the fatal admission. "I do
not love him." she said. "Then here
is where i quit," exclaimed the clergyman,
forgetting, as it seems, the dignity
of his cloth in the firmness of his
determination. His decision was beyond
the reach of appeal, and finally
the couple, departed, the elderly
suitor, not in the least disturbed, declaring
that he would find a clergyman
who was not so particular.
Whether he did or not is not set down
An expedition will start in July to
I rescue Arctic Kxplorer Baldwin. Resi
cue expeditions to rescue the rescuers
start out as circumstances war1
ramt.
?
Th* Rffort of \Tiirin l)#r? an<l Cool Nlirhta.
A leading physician write* that ha hu no
tired warm i'.wh an<l ouol night* always afT ect
the bowols, anil suggests soma preranta tire
remedy. l?r. luggers' Huckleberry Cord lal Is
the only oue that can he absolutely relied
upon. Itnerer falls to cure.
Sold by all !' 'i ggl ats, vt5 and Mc. bottle.
The Krsboard Air Lino
Ha? Ismiml a folder under the title. "Summer
Elsewhere Via Seab< nrd Air Line,"
which will be mailed to any address upon
application to A. V. Hnrrill, 1\ A. T. A., 23
South Tryon St., Charlotte, N. C., or any
other passenger representative of the above
company.
H. H. Gbkem'? Hobo, of Atlanta, Ga., are
the only successful Dropsy Specialists in tho
world. Seo their liberal offer in ndvertisomout
in another column of this paper.
Use Allen's Foot-Ksiv.
It Is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting,
Tired, Aching, not. Sweating Feet,Corns and
Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, u powder
to be shaken into the shoes. Cures while you
walk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c.
Don't accept any substitute. Sampio sent
Free. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Leltoy, n.Y.
Destruction of germ-bearing mosouitocs
is said to have largely relieved Havana
from yellow fever visitations.
FITS permanently cured. No fits ornervousress
after first dnv's u?? of l?r if ih..'.
KerveHostorer.flit 1 ial bottle nnil trentl.sofroo
I>r. H. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phlla., Pa.
The washerwoman may often be seen
wringing her hands.
We will give -SICK) reward for any ease of
catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Taken internally.
F. J. Chknkv A Co., Props., Toledo, O.
A rich man's autograph always looks
best on a cheek.
Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup forehlldrsn
teething, soften the gums, redueesinflatnmao
11<L,allays pain.cures wind colic. 23c. abottl- j
A donation party?the fellow who is out i
for the dough.
I'lso's Cure cannot bo too highly spoken of |
as a cough euro.?J. W. O'UniEN, 322 Third !
Avenue, S., Minneapolis. Minn., Jan. 6,1900 |
A man's bad luck is often due to lus bad I
habits.
In some of the cantons of Switzerland j
all the dead, rich as well as poor, are buried
at the public expense.
AT 8HAKKSl'EAItK'S HOME.
" strntford-on- Iron."
"I am finishing a tour of Europe; the host
thiug I've hud over here is u box of Tettcrino
I brought from home."?C. II. McConneli,
Mgr. Economical Drug Co., of Chicago, 111.
Tctterine cures itching skin troubles. 50c. u
box by mall from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah,
Oa.,if your druggist don't Keep it.
Jamaica hopes to export over 12,000,000
hunches of bananas this year.
Tennessee now has 1.445 names on
its State pension roll of old soldiers,
and the total amount paid to them in
the last year was $149,220. No more
names can be atbfed unless the legislature
increases the appropriation. The
pensioners are divided into three classes:
the first receive $300 a year each,
the second $200 and the third $100.
Chicago stockholders in the Ferris
wheel are again talking of sending it
to Coney Island. They have invested
$000,000 in it and get no returns. The
holders of the $300,000 mortgage bonds
are a little more fortunate, as they
have some prospect of saving at least
a part of their investment. During the
Columbian Fair the wheel paid well.
For six years I have been a
very sick man, suffering from
nervousness, headache and
pain in back and stomach,
all caused by a stomach that
refused to do its work. A
friend advised me to try Ripans
Tabules. The results
have simply been wonderful.
At droggiat*.
The Five-Cent packet l? enough for an
ordinary occasion. The family bottle,
tu coats, contains a supply for u year.
I S^ CURES g
II APUDINE^Pp i
? ( old*, etc. K
x V y Sold at all Drug Stores, g
S *
"^DROPSY
fe? ?* W* 10 DA,S"TFEATI,ENT f REE17/
* jrj Have mad? Dropsy and its comzf
plications a Bpecialty for twenty
RlnSi T years with tho most wonderful
y ( sncoess. Havo cured many thouaja**"aa^
CiSr3,
~TTinv*jri^ skf* ** " B ????
ijnWTr3 Box ? Atlanta, Go.
V0U WAHT 0NE 0f
/>.? iJi** ',jj jf thcac Fluffy Little While
I *^1^ 0 JTV French l*o<>dlr? ni nn
( i^VrCl * ?-fi' ViiT Aristocratic J"ct l>og. Kor
\-yfcp _> jWw s particular* send to
Ratlimm's Pet Kennels,
IH?S Marshflrld \*r..
r rillCAVO, ILLINOIS.
-* ? f f f B " - ' "
wvmtiuw otuiiipcu v/ i/ u. never sqiq in DQiJC*
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
"something just as good."
fOLUMBIA fin [fT
^business UULLlul,
COLUMBIA, S. C.
Student* prepared mofflccMi'n ^rapher* and Court
ll'IMirtrrn In dmrtfft lime at least expense. Hn?lnewCiiurne
lesitlnK U> detiree of M. A., etc. Ilun.
(lredaof cxmu.Niu* In hua'nee*. Send fi>r lurxe n>-??
CutaioKUv. W II M'.W HKMIt\. M. V.. I*re? |.
KsffiMn*! !f3&nl?lVW csfl
The candidates
The office choose, gjuj ^
They win who run ??:'--JS
In Red Seal Shoes.
1 No /irg/>?|
"my hair was railing out 17
fast and I was greatly alarmed. I
then tried Ayer's Hair Vigor and
my hair stopped falling at once."?
Mrs. G. A. McVay, Alexandria, O.
The trouble is your hair
does not have life enough.
Act promptly. Save your
hair. Feed it with Ayer's
Hair Vigor. If the gray
hairs are beginning to
show, Ayer's Hair Vigor
I will restore color every
n time. S1.0S koMk. All draalsts.
I If your dm grist cani.ot supply you,
B send'us nim dollar and we will express
you a lv>ttle. Bo sure andjjivo the nasi*
B of your nearest express orfTeo. Address, fl
S J. C. A YEK CO., Ix>wcll, Mass, fl
bo. "2r>.
\'.Mr.':!Thompson's Eye Water
Mothers and Daughters 1
E Both look well if
A wear the straight
1 Royal
\ Wofcestet
jf or BonT
I _ ? Ccifsets
M Try them now.
K& Vou will always wear tiiein.
B A?V your dealer to order what you
V* select, if he doC* n Vr?j, iheir.
JL Royal Worcester Corset no.,wor??t?
boiLe
Work, SbnfttiiK. I'ulloys, (JjeariiiK, lloxoa, llnnar
pa?-tty. :a>i tmn ie Loinbsrt Feuiidry, Msei
To Preserve, Pur
the Skin, Hai
Nothing
?
Millions <a women u
by Cuticura Ointment, th<
purifying, and beautifying
of crusts, scales, and dandruff, a
for softening, whiterting, and sool
for baby rashes, itC-hings, and
for annoying irritations and infl
sive perspiration, in the form of i
and many sanatrve* antiseptic ]
themselves to women, especially i
of the toilet, bath, and nursery,
compared with it for preserving
skin, scalp, hair, and hands. N<
soap, however expensive, is to
purposes of the toilet, bath, and
ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE,
soap, and the BEST toilet and bi
COMPLETE TREATMENT 1
ConalfltlnK of Ci'TlCtn
f Xl I flS?523 H ftnrt an.! Hoftcn
\MlllV U (SOr). nil,
soothe and heal; and
Tu r cct fit and cl^anae the blood.
t O t I 91. nio?t torturing, dialled
humour*, with lyrn of hair, when all olao
Depot: <7-28, Chartcrhouec London.
1'otikii Dunn and 'Them. (X>UT , Solo l'ropi
Ccticu&a UaaoLraNT riu.? (Chocolate Co
t?al aubatltute for the celebrated liquid WTirt
Klifter* and humour cu r*. )Cteh plil la cqutr
1 up la ?jrow-eap pocket rUia, ootatalag ?),
!
i
i \
SUMMER HOIViES '
ON LONG ISLAND.
By the Ocean, Sound and Bay.
Cooled By Sn B ! ?
I A T I A K T I C O O lf m m g
"LONO ISLAND.* a handsomely Ltnsiratetl
descriptive book, containing/. ?... _j
the hotel* and boarding houses [>orl_
Island, free upon application -at Ucl.2
offices. Aator House. 1? <t?2 I'-agte >lurwtu)
(13M ttorld Bureau) and 13a3 BltK/Jr
way. M Sth av.. 34th st.. P.. It.. an<J fo?t
New Chainbcw st . and 43 wei.
at.. New York; 333 Knlton at., f
Summer Resort Hurc.au; 1 IN Hri.,.,,..
Brooklyn. and at L I. R. It- statE/1, ^
Brooklyn, or send ?c. In stamps t?J. i? ?r
SMITH. (Vca'l HaasT Agt". 1,. I Cltf1^ ^
Medical college of virginia.
F.ltTARI.IKIIKn l?U.
Ihe^lx'y-Fittiises?Iou wi 11c.?mme
September JO;h 11ML Depart _? ? 0e
Medicine. Dentistry and Kharmloy.
Well roulnped Laboratories. n0?o}_
tal facilities and abundance of t"l!0}cai
terlal alTonl unexcelled opportu?|.t.ea ^or
practical Work. For Announcement Iin,j fur_
ther Information, address, < hri?toptirr
Xonipklna, Ifl. U., Dean. RlCIty,>al^
"x&lffi? so?iesm,raowe,.,sjr
JBmSk
pt|.p? miu
<rs, Etc. IluiiitiuK CiHtinps? c i?t fvpru '^' ?
?ln? un<l lloll-r Wnrkk, AtiRUstA. 5'
ify, and Beautify
ids, and Hair
; Equals
se CUT! CUR A SOAP, assisted
c great skin cure, for preserving,
X the skin, for cleansing the scalp
md the stopping of falling hair,
ihing red, rough, and sore hands,
chafings, in the form of baths
animations, or too free or off encashes
for ulcerative weaknesses,
purposes which readily suggest
mothers, and for all the purposes
No other medicated soap is to be
, purifying, and beautifying the
) other foreign or domestic toilet
be compared with it for all the
[ nursery. Thus it combines in
the BEST skin and complesuon
iby soap in the world.
WH EVERY IIUMOUB, $L
n v Soap (25c.), to clenn?c the ckln of cruata
the UiIcUbmI cuticle; (uticcka oomnorr
ay luhtug, Inflammation, iiml IrrltatioD, And
cirriouuA Bacm.vr.nt pilia ,26c ), to coot
A Single arr It often aufliclc nt to care the
ring, (ux) humiliating rkln, ncnlp cod blood
fan*. Hol<l throughout the world. TiAtUh
French Depot: 5 line tie lc Pali, Parte,
i., Boeton, U. 8. A. (
ated) at* a new, taatrleaa, odonrleaa, ecorjonv
ha RcaoLrsirr, a* well ae (or all other blood
a lent to >ae Uaapoonf ol of liquid RecoltbImt.
doeea, pdoa iio.
a/ '