ARP ON MATRIMONY
o
The Philosopher Writes on a Serious
Subject
BNTII PARTIES SECIRFLY BOUND
Arp Says Harriage Is the Only PartII
nership That Cannot Be Dissolved
? Responsibility.
Married and gone. It is {lie same oM
story. Love and courtship. Then comes
the engagement ring and a Idcssed In- |
terval of fond hopes and happy dreams,
and then the happy day is fixed?the
auspicious day that is never to In- forgotten?a
day tlint brings happiness or
misery and begins a new life. Then
omes the license, the permit of tinlaw
which says you may mat:;., you
may enter into bonds. The stun- ai?
proves It an I the law allows it. and it
will c ost yon only a dollar and a quarter.
Cheap Isn't It? And yet it may he
very dear. Then routes the minister,
and the happy pair stand up before
him and make some solemn vows and
listen to a prayer and a benediction,
and they are one. In a moment the
trusting maid has lost her name and
her free will, and Is tied fast to a man.
Well, he Is tied fast. too. so it is all
l ight all round. I reckon, but somehow
I always feel more concern about the
> woman than the man. She Is u helpless
sort of a creature an 1 tik? < the
most risk, for she risks her all.
I was ruminating over this, for there '
was a marriage going on at our good j
friend Sam Jones' house, and their j
pretty daughter. Laura, was changing I
lic-r name and her home on litis tlie i
last Hay of the year and going off to
live with a man she hasn't known very
long; hut 1 have diagnosed him from
I hid fare and features and am satisfied
with her choice. He is a big-hearted
gentl'man, or else the signs fall. 1 i
wanted to be present and give thorn ,
my blessing, but was not well enough '
to go?I've got the eleplianllosls from
my tors to my knees, and can hardly ;
- ^ meander across the room, but I am always
Interested in the marriages of our
young people. It is the most serious
business In this life, and if the peril of
It was known beforehand many of the
young people would hesitate to niuke
the change. The chains of matrimony
and not bonds of marriage are the \
right words. When men make a partnership
they can't get along w 11 if
they art unlU.9 in disposition, or in
moral principle or in business ways,
but they ean dissolve anil separate at
pleasure and try another man A man
and his wife ought to be alike in al- j
moat everything. In some things folks
like their opposite*?their counter- i
parts. A man with blue eyes goes distracted
over a pretty girl with battel I
eyes?J did. and I'm dlstraetey yet
when I look into them, though I've
been doing that for fifty-four years.
Hut in mental and emotional qualities
and in tastes and habits and polities
and religion they should class together, j
I never made any mistake about my
choice of a partner for the dance of a
life, but I've thought of it a thousand '
times that if Mrs. Arp had known I
loved codfish and got up by daybreak
every morning, she never would have
had me. It wn? ?
__ MIU nit iv iu m-i ]
her, anyhow, and that would have been
the feather to break the camel's bark.
Well, I'm mortal glad she didn't know
It. though 1 am free to nay that if I had
known she slept until the secon 1 t inging
of the first bell for breakfast and
was fond of raw oysters. It would have
had a dampening effect upon my ardor ,
for a few minutes, only a few. But I I
have seen Home mighty clever people
cat oysters raw and sleep late in tlx* I
morning. But still a man and his wife .
can harmonize and compromise a good
many of these tilings, and it is a beautifn)
Illustration of this to see Mrs. j
*\Arp cooking codfish for me and fixing
it aliynp so nice with eggs and cream, j
and i\is a touching evidence of my
undying devotion to tier to see trn
wandering about the house lonely and;
forelorn every morning for an hour or j
two, and forbidding even the cat to
wulk heavily while she sleeps. That I
rod fish business comes to roe honestly .
from my father's side, and my niothej j
put up with it like a good, considerate
wife, and we children grew up with
an idea that it was good. I've heard of
a young couple who got married am' j
went off to Augusta on a tour, and tin
lener htuck ins rork into a codtlsh ball
and took a bite. He choked It down
like n hero, and when his beloved
asked him what was th^ matter, replied?
"Don't say anything about it.
Mandy, but as sure as you arc born
there Is something dead in th" bread."
Well, we can make compromises
about all such tilings as habits and
tastes, but there are so in? things that
won't compromise worth a cent, if a
girl has been brought up to have a
good deal of freedom, and thinks it no
narm to g.> waltzing around with
every gny, Lothario who loves to dance,
and alter she gets a feller of her own.
wants to keep at it and have polluted
arms around her waist, she had Just as
well sing farewell to conjugal love and
domestic peace, for It Is against the
otder of nature for a loving husband to
Htand it, and he oughtn't.
And now another busy year has gone |
?gone like the water that has passed .
over the dain?gone never to return. !
It has carried many friends along with j
It and left snil memories in the household,
but on the whole It has been a
good year to us all and Providence has
been kind.
Now Is the time to look bark and review
the past, as did old Janus, for
whom January was named. He was tho
porter, the gute keeper, of heaven, and
had two faces?one to look back and
.
the other forward Into the mysterious
future. Numa Pompllius gave htm his
' name and his high office, for he was
? next in power to Jupitor. He added
two months to the calendar and called
one January for Janus and the other 1
February for the mother of Mars. Until
then there were but eight months of
forty-9tx days each. Numa Hdded two
more, which gave them thirty-six days
Bktt each, and January was the fourth
month and remained so for more than
" two thousand years. April was the first
month and remained so until two hundred
years ago. Why It was changed
i cannot understand. for Apr'l in much
more like the beginning of a new year
than January. April comes from aperio.
to open?the time when the earth
opens and the grass comes up and the
dowers bloom and the birds sing. Hut
the names of almost everything s?eni
to comfort that old mythology, and
we conform to that old mythology, and
we can't get rid of it. My gr ^-grandfather
lived an l died under that old
calendar when \pril was the firstt
month of the year. Julius Caesar andj
Augustus Caesar stuck in two u.orel
months and made the year of twelve
mouths of thirty days each, hut AprilI
remained in the lirst month and ought 1
to be now.
But whether Christmas he in December
or in April, we love the old superstitions
that cluster around this sea-;
son of joy and gladness. I always,
thought it a pretty idea for a man to J
he weighed every Christmas or New \
Year?to put his acts and deeds in the]
balances, the good on one side and the i
bad on the other, and let him rise to
heaven or fall below it as the scales
might turn. This is not an orthodox
.doctrine, for it is s:iiii tlml "II" 1? <I
deed will outweigh a thousand good
ones. Nevertheless. Relschazar was >
weighed, and the scripture abound in
such figures of speech. It will take miracles
of grace to save us. anyhow, and
we must all help one another, for the
oevil is doing nis nest, naviu commit- 1
led murder; Solomon worshiped idol*;
Cain killed his brother; Jacob cheated
Ksau out of his birthright; Noah got
drunk, and Peter denied his Master,
but they al! repented and got foreglvenrss;
and if there is any difference between
folks now and and folks then. 1
don't know it. Then let us all lov our {
Maker and he good to our fellow-men.
- ltlll Aro in Atlanta Constitution.
Inventor in Hard Luck.
John KapieH. inventor of the dynamite
gun. is now in the Home for Incurables
:u New York, without re
sourres and dependent upon Ids
friends. Ilia wife is eompellod to take
in sowing, one of the hoys is a tiekei
chopper oil the elevated road, another j
is in charge of a moving stairway,
while a daughter, who lias shown remarkable
artistic ability. Is supported
by some friends In Troy. In other
words, a man who revolutionized a
certain branch of gunnery is in dire
straits. '
"I he fellow who Ktill h.i* the lirst dollar
he ever earned in pretty apt to hold on to
the luct.
I'atarrh Cannot nr enrol
With local annlleatlmi" K....
_ ?_r., ,..- < itdinu r<?u'it
the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood
or constitutional disease, and in order to euro
It you must take internal remedies. Hall's
CatarVlx Cure is taken internally, atnl acta
directly on flic blood and mucous surface.
Hall a Catarrh Cure in not a quack medicine,
it was proscribed by one of the best pliysl- '
elans in this country for years, and is a regular
proscription. It is composed of the
boat tonics known, combined witli kite best
blood purifiers, noting directly on themu-i
eons .surfaces. The perfect combination of
the two Ingredients is what produces such
wonderful results In curing catarrh. Send
for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cits sky A Co., Props.. Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, price, 75c.
Hull's Family Tills are the in -;.
'Die eyes may be the mirrors of the soul, 1
and. furthermore, they can satisfy .1 woman
that her hat is on straight
r.iiglieh ha* been made a compulsory subject
of stiulv in Austrian schools.
' _
FITS permanently cured.No dtsor nerv "up:ness
after lirat day's use of 1?r. vim -> Circa:
Nerveltci ti rer.jZ t rliil t>ott leaud I feat is.- f pee
Dr. 15.11. Klixk, Ltd., '.'Ml Arch .st.. PUila.. I'a.
The Cr.ir of Kus?la lias established a tenhour
working day.
Mrs. Winslow's.Soothing Syrup forchiidroa
teotldQg.soUoailiogam^, rodueesiufiam ua
llou. allays uaiu.euro* wiu<1 ?*oU>*. -.1\ a !> >ti i?
Fowil rural, found in Fiji, is the host.
hliiMing stnhe in tin- world.
I'iso'sCurnistlio best medicine wo ever used
for all (UToo: inns of throat unit Ittu^s. Wm.
(), Kndslkv. Vaubureh. Ind.. IVb. 10, 1'JOO.
Of the 1000 parts of the moon, 570 arc
visible to us on the earth.
THE P1NKHAM CURES
ATTRACTING GREAT ATTENTION AMONG
THINKING WOMEN.
Mrs. Frances Stafford, of 243 E.
IHth St., N.Y. City, adds her testimony
to the hundreds of thou!
sands on Mrs. Pinktiam's files.
When Lydia K. l'inkham's Kcme|
dies were lirst hit rod need skeptics
| all over the country l'rowned upon
their curative claims, but as year
! after year lias rolled by and tlio
i ? * *
I iiluc flyiiit'iiwill) 1111(1 IH'CU |
cured by the new discovery has
! since grown into a vast anny of '
hundreds of thousands, doubts and
| skepticisms have Ih'cu swept away
us by a mighty Hood, until to-day 1
the great good 'that Lydia K.
Pink bum's Vegetable Compound
and her other medicines are doing
among the women of America is
attracting the attention of many of
our lending scientists, physician*
and thinking people.
Merit alone could win such fame;
wise, therefore, is the woman who
for a cure relies upon i^ydia E.
Pinkham'sVegetable Compound.
PROMINENT PET
ropj^
I ^ y|
C.B.CHAME
V^yl OF WASH l,
* C'. 1$. I'hamherliu, M. L)., writes Iron
*
J " Mii??i/ rose* have coinr limitf
' /??s binr/I if.I and at rru. 'I'hi- r
? /or catarrh and ? i/enrral tonic.'
Medical Kxmntner I1. !W. Tirnaury, I
Or. IJeweHyu .Ionian, Mtdiral Kxatninrr
oi I" S. Treasury Ditparliiient. graduate oi
? ? *?*??? ??? ?* Columbia (.'ollrgc,
l'oitil. has.
' U&tZ * 'following to
J a m t "a\ o? IViuuu:
f V k Allow me t<?
t JL^bL A*& * express my KratiSrJBQ^g^4|>
* tude to you lor
A thebenelit derived
WHV'y%i, ? I'roiu your won
/\T ? derful remedy.
* ? Oni' ihort month
; .flik' '^ri^UVu,
Dr. L. Jordan. J no? eon-mlnr my
-rlf wel1 n?*n
WHY SUFFER HEADACHE OR
LA GRIPPE?
CURE YOURSELF WITH
CAPUDINE
NO BAD EFFECTS.
Sold at n II Drvia stores
WANTED
25O Yoving Men
M once to quality for ??oo?l | <?ltfou? which w?
will iruarniiter In wltlflit under a $5,000
Inposlt to promptly ptocUii' llie.n
I he Ga.-AIa. Bus. College,
mac'on, (,i:om;i v.
Genuine stamped C C C. Nevrr sold la balk.
Beware of the dealer wbo tries to sell
"somciblng jnst as good."
l winch
{metallic
: [P~^^W[URING our 30 >
I i discovered man^
ELSKj I no one could le
Rrofly A discoveries in th
6i i i^a experience manu
to embody man
Metallic Cartridges for rifles 2
II superior in many ways to all <
Winchester cartridges in all
and exact in size; being m
manner by skilled experts.
1 , INSIST UPON HAVING WINCH
Judicial Advice. |
Curious advice is sometime:: Riven
by magistrates in Eugland. A gentleman
recently appeared before a mag
istrnte named Kennedy anil complained
that one of his neighbqrs had
covered bis windows with placards
about a local election.
"I want you to issue an order, your
worship," he adjed. "compelling him
to remove the placards and to clean
the wlndbws."
"That's what he ought to do," replies!
Mr. Kennedy, "but. if be refuses
you'll have to do it yourself."
"But suppose he does It again?" ash
ed the plaintiff.
"In that rase," said Mr. Kennedy,
softly, "the beat thing for you to do
la to have a large pitcher of water
ready and to empty it over him ns
soon as you see him approach amy
of the windows."
d?^DROPSY
fe ?T: W 10 0AYS'TH?ATII?;,T FR?L
rJ Hare mad# Dropiy audita com*
V plication! a ipaeln'./ for twautT
T y?ir?wlttL ? mo*t wondarftU
X.' - ( ?oeooj?. H?vo cwrad many thjtu
Jw and cuti.
?2. S. C. GI2SVG 80K8,
Sot B Atlanta, Oa.
i pay aroT CAsn fox
MIt?OONTY LAND WARRANTS
I Iminjtq aoldlera of any war. Alao BoMiora* Addts=*ra*SKmr>.o.ic,T^'r-.
SICIANS I
MME_^-RB-S4.
NGTON.D.C. X \J
^\VWV%WWWWVWWVVWV\'\%%\%%%?J
i I4tli and i' Sts., Washington. I) C.t
*
r in J/ observation, ic/irrr I'rriuiu J
rj'nrr Ichecrjullff rrcommcnd. It J
? f. It. til AM Mill I.I M. IK *
*
*
kWWMWVWWWVWl ??*??%???**?*??*
I .iiui I after months of suffering. FellowI
sufferers, IVrunH will cure you."?Dr.
1 Llewellyn .Ionian.
tlco. (.'. Ilaveimr, M. 1).. of Anacostia,
H. L'? writes:
The Porunu Medicine Co., Columbus, ().:
Centlemen "In mv pvactire I have had
ino'aoion to frequent iy presenile your valnalile
modieilie and have found its use benetieiul.
especially in eases oi catarrh."?I
tleorge C. Havener. M. I).
If you dq not derive prompt and satisfactory
results from the use ol IVruiia, write
at oinf to l)r. Ilartninn, giving a full .statement
of your case. and he will lie pleased
to give you his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Ilsrtmiwi, President of The
Hut man Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
Twenty-two Phlradelphiaa.
The man from Philadelphia who was
Fending a registered letter from the
i New York pot. t office last week was
j astonished when the man at the wiuI
dow pushed it hack to him. and told
him to write "Pa." on the envelope.
' "There are twenty-two Philadelphia
'.n this country." he said, "and some of
I them are places of importance. A
woman from Philadelphia. Ky.. was
( mttch ofTended the other day when I
asked her if she Intended a letter for
; the Pennsylvania Philadelphia.. VVe
have a great deal of trouble In this
way with Philadelphia (Peun > per
sons. Hut there are others. Brook,
lynite's are almost as had. There are
as many Brooklyn" in the United
States as there are Philadelphias, but
very few persons who live in the
i orough across the bridge know it."?
New York Times.
Marry for nionc.- and divorce for
wii.it it doesn't giv->.
S FihTFnl
1 ILaJF 5 fL. ]
CAR T.R I DGES.
rears of gun " making, we have
r things about ammunition that
;arn in any other way. Our ;!
lis line, together with years of
facturing ammunition, enable us
y fine points in Winchester
md revolvers which make them
Dther brands upon the market,
calibers are accurate, sure-fire
ade and loaded in a modern
If you want the best ; j
ESTER MAKE OF CARTRIDGES. I
W's.ijsa
*1 M < * UNION MADt
' W. L. Oouglai m.ikos and sells more
men's S3.BO and 13.00 shoes than any other
two manufacturers In the world, which
I proves their superiority; ?
; they are worn by more f
j peopli In all stations of / Wp,
life than any other make. A
Bwiiiish \V. I.. Douglas Kfc 1m
: Utlie largest-manufacturer j/ffj Mf*Jv
I produce Ills shops at a fVJ
I lower mt than other conj
icnii. which vnn1ik'< biiii^HPn^|&?>f.'f
to sell shoes for S.'1..VI and A,
?.{.<*) coual in every JS~ jfejV? iv.
way to those sold eUpwhere
for Si and So.on WA*
\V. I j. Doii^las ?d..vi mssSJK vtf i.'//flrP'
I and $!l shoes are worn by tliounandsof menu ho
I' have l?een payinsSl and sr?,not bclictine they
could j?et a tir.-t-class sins* for or Sii.nn.
He has convinced them that tlie 'tyle, tit,
Iand wear of his $11.,V) and Sl.tX) shoes is just
:vs good. l'laced side by side it is impossible
to nee any difference. A trial will convince.
.\orlri* lnrrciiM* (5rW S iicn; HKl.'iOiI.SMJl/i |
In lfn?irfra? t JUO.OO
\ mln of * ill in Four Wart.
I W. L. DOUCLA6 14.00 CILT EDCE LINE,
Worth SO.OO Compared with Other Makes.
The bex! Imparted mil American leather/., Ileyl'i
j Patent Calf. Em met. Box Calf.Cnlf. Vict Kid. Corona
Colt, and National Kanoaroo. Fait I'vlor I urlcl*.
Pauiinn mnulnt have w. I.. WUOLA8
vuUIIJII nam'* ami price Htamj <s.l on >>ottou>.
Stioer hp mail. extra, /lint, t'otalottfrer.
W. 1.. Iiol l.I.AM, llltot IvTWK, MAM.
2 Heat Cooirti fyrup. Tastes lS(?xl. Use H
i J_: . S l
r C
GETTING AT THE TRUTH.
Porter of Burned Establishment at
Last Made a Shrewd Guess.
Some time ago an unquestionably
suspicious lire occurred in a ready- |
made clothes store that was carried
on in a certain locality 01' New York.
The lire was immediately reported to :
the office of the company with which )
the building and its contents were insured,
and an inspector was dispatched
to make the necessary investigations.
The senior partner of the < lotliinir
firm was first waited upon and questioned,
and he. .Mr. Abrahams, by
name, informed the insurance official
that it was his opinion that tin* fire
was due to the electric light. He considered.
in fact, that in some way the
(glow-lamp wires had fused. Mr. Abrahams*
partner, who happened to be a
Mr. Moses, was separately interviewed
on the subject, and he also attributed
tit" disaster to electricity, but
incautiously particularised sparks
from the are-lights as the direct cause
of the mischief.
Whilst returning to the office the
inspector happened to encounter Patrick
Murphy, who held the position
j of porter to the conflagrated establishment.
and thought he might now get
an inkling of the true state of things.
| "Now. look here. Pat," said lie.
I "what is really your own view of this
awkward fire at Abrahams' shop?
I Your two governors seem to look at it
|in different ways. Mr. Abrahams says
it was the glow-lights and Mr. Moses
says it was the are lights. What do
you think about it ?"
"Faith," replied the son of Erin, reflectively.
"Oi'm inclined to fancy it
must have been the Israelites!"
He Confessed.
John 11. Fow. ex-state representa|
live, has a story which be tells to tao
point that there was no excuse for
those independent Republicans who
returned to the Quay fold; that political
conditions are un< hanged since
last November. This is Fow's story:
"A man jumped off a train at a
station in the West one day, and
asked for a lawyer. A young man
j stepped up and said, 'I'm a lawyer."
"'I ^ant the best in the town,' ex,
plained the stranger.
I " 'Well, I'm the one,' persisted the
attorney.
" 'What proof have you?'
" 'Proof,' shouted the. lawyer, 'you
! don't need proof. I admit it.' "?
' Philadelphia Ledger.
The Standard Rh
?T A VIUDH because able plivsici
ij| U1 AnUnt\U cure lor rheumatism
3 ? . = physician recently sa
prescription that will cure rheumatism,
5{! ilics do incalculable harm to the digc
j SI pletelv overcomes this diHiculty?bene!
digestion-? hence it can be taken tor an
be, to effect a permanent cure."
^ T'-.e Do. tor quoted covers the case . zictly
I g _
S Ali Druggists, #i.oo,
P Bobbitt Chemical Co.,
A FAMILY POISON BOOK.
! Recommended for Persons Not Too
Excited to Use It.
I
"It would be an excellent idea for
every family to have a little book giving
briefly prompt antidotes for various
poisons," said a prominent New
York doctor- " Phvalotiirw L-r......
- J ** "" VtlOli
tnere arc scores of cases of accidental
poisoning never heard of outside
of the family concerned. I've had several
< uses of poisoning by an accidental
dose of the chloroform and aconite
liniment that almost every one keeps,
and one woman gave her child muria.lr
acid that was kept for cleaning
fhe marbles.
"Prompt action is the great thing in
cases of poisoning. By the time one
can get help from a doctor or druggist
it is often too late to save the patient.
A few antidotes for the common poisons
would bo easy to learn. Still, if
i there was such a book I suppose most
persons would he too much excited
to use it in time of emergency."
To Cotton Ginnors.
We Manufacture the Most Complete Line
of Cotton Gift Macfrifery of Any Comoany
In the World, namely, the
PRATT,
WINSHIP,
Ail I I r-r\
IVI UIMU C.K,
EAGLE,
SMITH.
We alto make
Linters for Oil Mills,
Engines and Boilers.
We also sell everything neoessary to complete a
Modorn Ginning Outfit and furnish our custcrr.ers
with full detailed plans and material
bills for construction of necessary
houses for our plants without extra charge.
The Continental Gin Company,
Birmingham, Ala.
wnite ron oi n i.atkmt CATAT-nor*
United States Government Sold S3C
ftr . to Kr.*soii Mamnkuman,
) }7y Br , Jf. X. CkUUott. IiVj :Uu*r?tW*% fr?e.
Coughing
II WW Iiiij uurgCTiC^-Qrgi<ar^r?c-.m^esarrrj
" I was given up to die with
quick consumption. J t!ien began
. to use Aycr's Cherry Pectoral. I
improved at once, and am now in
perfect health."?Chas. E. Hartman,
Gibbstown, N. Y.
It's too risky, playing
with your cough.
The first thing you
Iknow it will be down
deep in your lungs and
the play will be over. Bcgin
early with Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral and stop
the cough.
???
Tlirt'r . **noueh for 411 ?r?l.a;ai*-T R
_ ... . I j;ill liir HI mill!'. < ;i J
um. hartl i-otilii. pic.; SI. mint V.ui .in . 1 H
K for chronic id?r> mid to keep <>n Iru it. m
.1. C. AVKK CO.. .unveil. B
" wiiui tn ii n nii .--raresmsracziEj
i fir:'/ 3L%/&k
VY\ <1' 37
P^^L^shces.
I THE 3CST SHOE
/ ii ^sK,n AMERICA
II yS^IE)^ TA64E NO
Ii ^3*fr ilsubstitute
II I II IP YOUR 9tAl.Cn DOtS
\\ ) ^ II HOT CAKHV TMtM,
\v. / A P06TALC<kR? TO US
Nv^N. WILL TtLLYOO WHI?
YOU CAN OCT THEM.
CRAPPOCK TERFyV CO.
LEADING
SHOE MANUFACTURERS
OF THE SOUTH.
LYNCHBURG VA.
HlimiSES
Holder. I rlaloilr Krre CHM81 U( H :?0\.
K1.TY I OMPANV. HI I>TIM;TII* IMIIAN A
- ?
eumatic Remedy. f
an* declare that it is tlic only absolute
i in it* various forms. A prominent gj
id: "I have ne\ er been able to write a p
owing to the fac t that the usual reme- 8
stive organs. RHKl7MACIDE com- jr
tit* rather than injures the organs of it"
i indefinite period, or as long as need {?
, " RhnrnuicMe " ts absolutely harmless. 8
or expre'ssage prepaid. g
Baltimore Hd.. U. 5. A. 0
B tr ?'wrw?sw.- .. ..1.-- ----- >
., e* *? ?* rt A JX.el JX IX
Field
makes a fat j?n r>
1 m^r ^ fertilizer without
Capsicum Vaseline
Put up in Collapsible Tubes.
A Substitute for and Superior to Mun'urd or
anv other pla?ter. and will not bl's'.er the moil
delioate skin 'I ho pain allaying and curative
J qualities of this article are wonderful. It will
I atop the toothache at once and relieve head|
ache and sciatica.
Wo recommend It as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an external
remedy for pains In the oJiest. and stomach
and all rheumatic,neuralgic and gouty complaints.
A trial will prove what we claim for It.
and It will In- found to be invaluable in the
household. Many |.eople say "llAs -he l.e?t of
ail your preparation*. _ -
i IV*" io itiks, ai mi iirupKi-fi*. or outer nullere.
or hy sending this amount to us In instage
stamps wr will send you a tube hy mail.
No article should be accepted by the public
unless the same carries our label. r.? otherwise
It Is not genuine
CHESEBHOl'fiH MANUFACTURING CO,
17 Ntut* St.eet, New York City.
METALSHI?ole. i
gMMJWBRS
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yyrrV, in,rr.y ??.jLVyyvy thai. -inte r . a.
l'rlee.s. carat..*.- is , ,.,t
V. vJrrT.:rxy^fr/^S testimonial- Fltr.K
?'9NT"(|s'< **ni\<?i.it /
' w I lls I i-nadrn, N. .1. /j
I Pay Cash ^ S* I
Scr.d lor Catalog 11
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