University of South Carolina Libraries
Fight on Sunday tiolf. TThi English premier's Sunday golf ha?s finally aroused such bitter controversy that appeal has been made ao th?* Vrchbishop of Canterbury. His Qrur-*. however, like the wary teacher evader a difficult question by tellto* the pupil to look up for himself, ?4? fie will remember," diplomatically ays tji- question of Sunday golf, as all Sun#', r. i uptimes, is one for "individual ?ohri i tuf." Thus the question is still pen .:ad the debate goes on. Not on the Mouth. >;*??!?Ho bas been very attentive t.r> me anil last ntuht be tried to kiss fie?Well. It's all rfgbt to be atImtsi!, hnt that was overdoing it. Nell -Ob. no; he underdid It. Ho ociV> succeeded In kissing me on the ehm. TIRED, SUFFERING WOMEN. urn run down and endure daily tor. rrs through neglecti"g. the kidairy Kidney backache mates house#work a burden: rest fitful; appetite gives Ia<*-? of 1S Capitol street, Concord, N. Iff., says: "1 was in the early fajjes of Hriglit's Disease, and wer< it not for Doau's Kidney IHita I would not be living to-day. Pacta in the hack was so intense that at night 1 had to get out of bed until the 9-rroxyBtn of puln passed away. 1 was languid and tired and hadn't the atrvugth to lift a kettle of water. 1 tmtild not work, hut n few doses of Kidney Pills relieved uie, and mo- boxes absolutely cured me." .4 FRKB TlllAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mrs. Wult.ii-r will be .nailed to nuy part of the !.? iled States. Address Foster-Milbum <>)., BuiTalo, N. Y. Sold by all dealers; price 00 cents per box. I'alcnl medicines are never s^pld in sin- apothecary shops of Sweden. The tjovrrnracot limits the number of tfcrvso shops, and there are only 1100 In Jh- whole country, Stockholm, with m> population of 300,000, having only ? *w<-nly-two. llnnfnfM Cannot Itn Cured l.v i,,. ..1 applications as they cannot reach the diseusod portion of thacar. There is only one w?.y to cure deafness, and that is liy constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of tin* mucous lining of ? the llttstuciduTdbo. Whcuthis tube Is inffivmed you nave ft rumbllngsound or imper foot hearing, and when it. is entirely closed madness Is the result, and unless the inflammation can bo taken out and this tube re>iorod to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine oases out of tou caused hy catarrh.which Is nothing but an Mllnnicd condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Pollnrs forauy <?sx>of Deafness (caused by eatarrli)tiiat cannot bo cored by Hall's Caturrh Cure. Send for circulars free. P. ?T. Chen by A. Co., Toledo, O. Hold by Druggists, 7.v. Take Hall's Family 1'ttls for constipation. ^Employes in Japanese cotton factories got only eight to eighteen cents for A day's work of eleven or twelve Ixiurs. This work, however, is uineh h%r. Btrenuous than in iliis country, ?nd much time is wasted in Ion ling, talking, laughing and drinking lea. FTTliirmvimtlv cure i. No It? or nervous* wrse aftrr llr-t day's use of Pr. Kline's rsat Jiorveilnsl >rer. i 'Jtrial hot t Isr.vd t reat-eireo T-r. it. 11. Kr.Tto:, Ltd., '.'.il Are i St., l'hila.,I'a When a !<up year pir! proposes it's up to Ihr young man to lo-u; his fu-if-possc&sio::. When a man thinks he is the whole "hureh he Is apt to ignore the lfead of Church. A faint heart more ant to .vin the fair Xnjy thuii^i faint linnk account. aIit. YYinslow '.* t-oothJngSynip forohildren nothing,soften tlio piniy, i educes tntlamma* JLVon allays pain ,onn su ind colic. ? c.abott to Conscience doesn't make cowards of lit* ?rary romancers. i do not believe I'lso's Cure for ConsumpWon lias nnj qual forcoughs and colds.?JonK JP.JV) rr.it. Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1UOO. Konie men have a keen sense of humor, jMfi ing by the pointless stories they tell. Ovcrlicnrii on Ills l'lkr. Vr. Easy "Why should people visiting 'The Exposition at night use more Allen's J^hiI Ease than in daytime?'' lit ins Footc -"Because under the brilliant dhtrmnut nn of the grounds, every foot becomes a.i acre! " Mr. Easy '.'Fair. Only fair! Fray, conAvcf me to the nearest drug store and I yromise never to accept a substitute for #on or for Allen's Foot-Ease." * * * i*v>ot Note The twain will be nude one im June. A poor girl's idea of a mercenary wretch ? a. young man who marries a rich widow. It takes a last man to bent a board TM1I. 80. 22. Given Awayl S W V 'J Wrlto na or uk an M jfl Alsbsatlnfl dea'nr for U particular! and free aamplr card of t.,f JYVotaosYvcve V Tim K?"IUrr Woll Vostlnff I M Tkeatmy^ULSMtargrrmsftnd vermin. haras J rnba oracaiea. You can apply It?mix with 85 oold wot.-r. Dtftntlful eflVcla In white and H H dalicatp lints. Notad.aoaar.hrMdlng.oaUH Mofdato hot watar win* preparation. Buy U Alabantlno In A lb. ptutns. properly la ballad, of paint, bardwaraand drug dralrrt. "Hlotaon Otronuiu.'' ?ad car Art lata' Q ideas Ireo. AUlU>iltt CA, W?M IUjMu,licit., IM Tdtr sr.. ,1 L H tariTAI. ITOt'K 3ll.OtMt.tH). *?l?aaa?<' hrtt yen IMnt of gi.inir <>(r toaehool, wiK' for Colleicr Jpoi nat ami Special - ttrr o' Ihe Swdlix Rtt I eaa and Hhnrihnnrt chouW. AtMrraa ne'N nimiNEm t ei.i.i:oc, Rairitk, ?. <%. or tbarlaltr, X. C. I ? " also tench DuokShorthand. Etc.. by btalL] ' SOUTHERN f, d Cnto) TOPICS OF INIEREST TO THE PL ANTE K Makins l'rotilublr llrff. Tlic commissioners of agriculture of the cotton producing States are banded together in an association. Experiment station ofiieers ot the same States are active workers in the organization. The fifth annual convention of this association was recently held in Montgomery, Ala., says I*rof. ,T. M. Tracy, in the Memphis Commercial-Appeal. The production of beef cattle in the South was one of the principal topics. It was generally agreed that tin cattle tick had been tile chief obstacle in developing this industry. Dr. Tail ltutler, of North Carolina, explained the methods by which at least six counties in thai State had been entirely freed of this pest within the past two years. The view was repeated!} expressed without challenge, that the general extermination of the tick, and thus the entire prevention of the so-called acclimation of fever of entile, was possible, through co-operation between State and National authorities. Prof. 1*3. I!. Lloyd, of Mississippi, PlilDll:i<i7 il llw* nnlut ilint ???-.? Auction affords the mosL universal in centive l"?>r extending the area devoted to leguminous or restorative crops. lie show oil that the beef steer pays a high rent for Southern lands devoted to pasturage. On one farm, of low value, sixty steers, grades of the beef breeds, a (lorded an average gain of ISO pounds between June Id ;tuil October 1. At three rents per pound this increase afforded a rental of $1.07 per acre pastured, through using the land for only 112 days. This gain of more than one and one-half pounds a day on grass alone speaks well for the productive 1 capacity of Southern pastures. Again grade yearling steers between March 20 and October 1 made an average daily gain on pasturage alone of 1.110 pounds, or 202 pounds each. This was equal to a rental of $15.!)S per acre of pasture. These steers had been carried through the previous winter on 1 MO pounds of Johnson grass hay per steer, affording an average gain of 120 pounds during the winter. Clilrkpim in Kituealion. Under this caption the Augusta ilia.) I'||..,...I..U I.... : vin w.n? i\ lino iui.^ nun;irii?;ir: Wlion eggs range from twenty-live to forty cents a dozen. aval turkeys from fifteen to twenty live cents a pound, and cltickens and other poultry in proportion, it is time that the eyes of the farmers were opened to the fact that there is money in chickens intelligently handled. And why shouldn't we handle them intelligently? If other States, in which weather conditions arc far less favorable. Hud it a paying industry, why cannot farmers and housewives ill <5eorgiu make ( money out of poultry raising? In tlie State of Missouri the .subject is regarded as important enough for it to be embraced in a university course. How to raise chickens will he taught at the University o! Missouri. ' The curators have decided to otter a full course of poultry-raising. A short course was offered last year, hut this | ( year the study is to lie put on an eipia' I plane with the studies in other do- j , pari/rents, and full instructions in tin breeding and handling of dome-tie j fowls and the production of eggs will ( be given. , After showing from the United States ( census of Idoo that the total value of , poultry and eggs raised in this conn try during the year 1SSD reached the enormous .sum of $281,17S.0fi."i. of j which the South Atlantic States are , credited with twenty millions, the Chronicle adds: 1 We think the example of the Missouri | University might profitably he followed at Southe.ni agricultural col- ^ leges and experiment stations, and that Southern agricultural societies would do well to devote a meeting occasionally to instructing their members concerning the great posslbilties of chicken culture. . About SI ruwberrIon. There is one point in strawberry cvdture, by tlie matted root system that is rarely understood as it should bo. and this is, in regard to allowing tiie plants to be set too thick In a row, says H. E. Van Dcinun. A strawberry plant is a weed in a strawberry patch, where it is not needed. It is the lirst or earliest berries, while the late plants make the little things that are a nuisance to the grower, the picker, the denier. The average strawberry grower is too apt to let the rows mat so closely that none of tlie plants can do its best, not nearly what it should do. After the plants have passed about the tlrst of August they proDauiy win liavo set enough new ones to fill the rows twenty inches wide, or a little more; provided the runners hnve been trained lengthwise of the rows and placed so as evenly to till the spaces properly allotted to them. About six inches apart is close enough for then). When they are News in Paragraphs Mother Katherlne Drexel, of Philadelphia, fourdcr and head of the Order of the Blessed Sacrament, composed of nuns who devote their lives to the uplifting of the Indinn and negro, has offered $500,000 of her own private fortune to build a * church and school for the Indians of the Winnebago, Neb., reservation. The only condition is that the Indians consent, and this Father Schell, of Homer. Neb., boa obtained. ARM fi/O a =?DR, STOCKMAN ANti TRUCK GROWER. LI ! ??>?? HI ill I? I M 1 m thus sot it is .1 mistake* to let any more take root between them, as they are sure to do if not prevented. Instead of spending time in keeping the middle spaces between the rows clean of weeds and strawberry plants it is better to let these spaces alone for a month or two ami give close attention to the centres or hearing spaces. With a fork-hoe pull loose or dig up whatovet tries to crow between the earlv plants, and drag the runners into the spaces between tin* rows. Sometimes it may be necessary to cut them oil*. This may need to be done more than ouce, in order to prevent the thick mat of plants in the rows that are to do bearing. Those thai sire set in th - middle spaces will do no bstrm, nor the ;rccils either, for the time being. Tin* !fuv Crop. Hay properly speaking is applied l<> grasses cut green and cured for foml for animals, lint in common practh the word covers all dried . egetniue food sowed upon the farm for ,slock feed except the grains. Roughage is a term often used among farmers. Ilav in its broadest u>" would include shucks, fodder, grain, straw ami chart", clover, alfalfa, corn stover, cottonseed hulls and many other quite different products. There is a difference between grass cut green and made into dried bay and dead grass cut off for food, ilut we desire at this writing to urge the importance of each farmer sowing plenty of hay of some kind. With plenty of good bay it is comparatively easy to feed stock, and very much cheaper than grain. Hood hay is now bringing high prices, and the outlook is for these prices to remain, it is very important. in planning your crop for this year to make r< om for a good supply of hay. Sow hay to feed cattle, flrow cattle to eat tlie hay. Save the manure and make the land rich to grow more hay to feed more cattle to make you rich. Make your plans to till your barns with good hn> and make your barns large to hold a good crop. There are trains and trains of Northern hay still emniiig South. This can be and should be stopped. We can grow good hay cheaper than tliey can.? Cultivator. MVloii* nml <'iiiiletmi|ir*. Farm life can be made more attractive to the boys and girls if they cm he encouraged to tak a personal interest in the farm. One way is to get them to plant melons and various kinds of fruits. Melon seeds are easily procured, and any boy who will write to the Congressman from his district can gel rare and useful information sent him free. Mnskmelons do best on a fairly rich, sandy loam: it should not be too rich, which would induce loo much vine growth. When seasons favor, the growing of muskinclons in the North is a very profitable verdure, but they U" more susecptihle to disease here. Early melons bring the prices ami profits, and hence various methods are resorted to, such as forcing under glass and transplanting, or starting under glass in the field. Transplanting is not very practical or as successful. "Nutmeg" varieties arc the best early sorts, hut the salmon lleshed are >f better quality. Fall plowing does much to decrease ravages of cutworms, as it deprives the moths of shelter for eggs, l'aper collar boxes pressed into the earth one-half inch uul covered with glass furnish tin* most practical protection. The striped beetle Is also one of its worst enemies, hut can he kept in cheek by sifting iur siuckou nine or land plaster over the plants.*' Velvet I'reu. In sections where the velvet horin will grow freely it is more valuable than the cow pea as an improver of laml, as it produces a much greater crop of vines and the nitrogen gathered and stored on the roots is much more. As a forage erop, however. it is not so valuable, as its enormous growth makes it prneticaidy impossible to handle it either as green fed or as liny. The bean is a semitropical plant and will not mature its seed north of South Carolina and therefore it is of no use to plant it i.i Virginia or North Carolina except for improving land. It makes an enormous growth of vines in this State, so much so as to render it almost impracticable as a forage or hay crop. Planted in May, one and a half peeks to the acre, it will continue to grow until frost kills it with the beans immature. In the far Southern States the beans are fully ripened and make a meal rich in protein which is used for slock feeding to some extent although even there the main use of '.lie crop Is as a land improver. It is allowed to lie down and is then plowed under and this is the Vest use to make of it here.?Virginia Planter. Minor Matters# The death of John K. Cowen removed the most bitter political enemy Senator Gorman ever had, says the Philadelphia Record. It was the Independent Democratic movement organized by Cowen that led to the overthrow of the Gorman machine In 1895, turned the State over to the Republicans for the first time In thirty years and temporarily retired Gorman from the United | States Senate U. S. SENATOR FRO Recommen For Dyspepsia and ^ Ex-Senator M. C. Butler. ^ If you tin tii>t derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at oiu-e to Dr. Hurtmnn. giving a full statement of your case, and he will 1><; pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Add res.- Dr. llartman. President of The llartuiuii Sanitarium, Columbus, O. best foi {GUARANTEED CURE for oil bowel trcu blood, wind on the tomach. Moated bowel: S pains nftcr entmc;, liver trouble, sallow .?.k:n B regularly you are sick. Constipation kills r P '.tarta chronic ailments anil long years of eu ft C A15CA R1.T3 today, for you will never cet 3 rie.ht. Take our advice, start witb Career d money refunded. The genuine tablet stsin j^boolrl-t free. Address b*-rlinc Rrmedy Coi C~/. y y , -y r j'//'r /n _>//, LIMiTEO .V. EAr;G UFI EDI ALL OUR 6,000 GRACUA it. it r.\r.i: r.\11? c(H?"e..T?QA.-ALA. I IcrKKs nvsrrvsi sh k iik vih TYNER'S DYSFE . RCfcl DGQKl.ET. N o M o r e SI i a ri H o r s e s v.STTi'S* fc>?>r?" I.)os, Uiirry i i>, lo* .i *. Hy, la., Ii.no u ; uru run ^ ThcGHBHfleTOWER'i' POMMEL S?:(\ SL1CKEK ftjBL/ UV HAS BEEN ADVERTISED <s,4 niT and sold for a V QUARTER OF A CENTURY. WfcFM I LIKE ALL UOtiJ ???!.?,WATfiMOOr l**j?V*52!S' CLOTHING. vHL It is made of the best "Eft matei tats. m black or yellow. - fully guaranteed. and sold by VSi reliable dealers everywhere STICK TO THE ^ 51CN or Tr?t FISH TOWT* CA) 'ADIAN CO, l.? uj. A J TOWER CO. TOIUKIO. CAM. &0S10:?.rtAS*.UiA. DR. WOOLLEY'S OPIUM &.WHISKY ANTIDOTE j Will euro pemmiicntly ut your own Homo, Mr. T. M. Brown, of IteQueen, Ark., says "Over seven years nito I wa. cured of tlx ojijuui haMl l\v your medicine. and have cc:i tinned In the very lie--: of health since." Mr. W. M. Tunstall. of l/cvlniriiton, V:?. says: "I ant triad to my that I firmly helievt lliul I ant entirely unit iierinaneiitly cured o the Brink Habit, a- I have never even so muel as wanted a drink in any form since I took your eradleator. now is months aj?.>, it ?? the beet money I ever invested." Mrs. Vli .nia Tnttnsciid, of Shrevetvort. Ijv. writes: "No nv.ro opiunt. I have taken in other remedy than yours, and I make no ntis lake when I -ay that my health is 1-etter now llian it ever was in my life, and I owe it to yon and your leinedv n k?-s ~ ? sinre 1 was cured by your treatment." I'r. \\ oolloy litis thousands (>f such tcstlmon ihK. with permission to use them. A tro.it mont with mo many recommendations from I'hvslclans ami cured laiii.-ni- must I*- gtxtd. "f. AVooIley's Antidote luc imitators, laall good articles have i?perhaps you Imvrlrled some of thcni, hut there Is nothing like Wool ley's. It has stood the tost of thirty yours. N< man or woman who uses opium or whiskoy |r any form, or who has friend* so atllii-lcd should hesitate to write to DR. B. M. WOOLLEY. lOO North Pryor Street, Atlanta, Cn., for his book on these diseases, which ho will send free and confidential. ^HICKEJVS you cannot spend years ntul d buy the knowledge required 1 cents. You want tin m to pay them as a diversion. In order to htindl tning about tin ni. To meet this want \ of a practical poultry raiser for (Only a man wbo put till bis mind, and time, en raising?not as a pastime, but a-- a b ty-iivo years' work, .you can save many earn dollars for you. The point Is, tbsi Poultry Yard as soon as It appears, and teach you. It tells how to detect and <: fattening; which Fowls to save for br you should know on this subj. ct to nv. ilvo cents In J'nmrs. UOO.K rUBMSjll IN SOUTH CAROLINA ds Pe-ru-na I Stomach Trouble. i i Catarrh of the Stomach is Generally Called Dyspepsia?Something to Produce Artificial Digestion is Generally Taken. Hence, Pepsin, Pancreatin and a Host of Other Digestive Remedies ?- Has Been Invented. , These Remedies Do Not Reach the Seat of the Difficulty, Which is ReaHy Catarrh. 1? \. ' S. Senator AT C. IJuticr front I j Carolina w.i- Senator truin that State for Un term*. In a recent. Ji tter to Tin- IVilllKi Mciliciiu- t o., ftom \\ Jt-l.itinton, 1). C., says: "Iran reeoimneml I'rrnn^.jnrtli/spepslu ti ml sltnmieli t rouble. I litter been its! tiff your ntetHelne for ft slnirt : |tecum ?i mi I JCCI VCCII III licit CCHI'fCH. I II is (mlcctl ti u-untlc rj'ul mctHcinc bcsiilrs u iinotl tunic.''?M. ttiitlcr. Tlic only rational way to cure dyspepsia i? to remove the ontairh. I'eruna cures catarrh. lVruna does not prodm." artiti?-ial digestion. It cures catarrh and leaves llic siomai li to perform digestion in .1 natural way. This is vastly lx-tter ami safer than resorting to artilicial metli' oils or narcotics. I'eruna has cured more cases of dv*-|>opi sia than all other remedies cotuluu-d. I simply because it cures catarrh wherever 'located. If catarrh is 'located in the head, ' I'eruna cures it. If catarrh has fastened it' sell in the throat or bronchial tubes. I'erua.i cures it. When catarrh becomes i settled in the stomach. Peru it u cures it, as well in this location as in uny other. i I'eruna is not simply a remedy for dyspepsia. Periiiiia is a catarrh remedy. I'eruna euros dyspepsia because it is generally dependent upon catarrh, 5 THE BOWELS ^ vw W^bpv V CANDY \ CATHARTIC *? ?* ble?. appendicitis. biliousness. bad breath, bad I | 9. foul mouth, headache, indirection, pimples, S and dirrincss. When your bowels don't move 1 rure people than all other diseases together. It P (Terlng. No matter what nilj you, :.tart taking K well and stuy well until ynu get your bowela v eta today under absolute guarantee t>? cure or If j vped C C C. Never sold tn bulk. Sample and H j mpany, Chicago or New York. 50a I:Y A $5,000 | tf irt///fff/ ,ANK J C ATI O N NO HINDRANCE. TES AT WORK. WlliTK T? "DAY T< t HJS. COLLEGE, Macon Ga. It'll K, III I IOI >\KSS, NIKVOI -.VtAi. I PSIA REMEDY ttliinliv. i.ii, ASK YOUR DRUGGIST. 5 k 'if Small Potatoes | | r< suit from a lac k of in the soil. Potash pro- | duces size aiul quality. i, w h V : | jj GERMAN KALI WORKS, , ' ? \cw \orl?- US Nn^nu 'Mrcut, or f f AlUnU. t-u. V52 j Mo. Urt^iil SC. . f msm. I la&r, .Simultaneous He- Works kikI :!i? HeaS i Hoook-King Variable l>e,l Works ore aim- gfl | | i oelltui tor SOC1 lurv, siari.tciTY. IHHUmi jp | filTr an i> rasx or oi-KBA TioN. Write for fuii &| ; 1 I Hdescriptive circulars Manufactured by the SV i BSAld^UKvlN^>l!KH\Un^oio^ ' IlrfisiQw ' fasti UIUpoy ss;a i y Removes all swelling in S to 30 | . , '* ' / duvr ; effects a j?riuanettt cure J A in >to < >days. 1'rial treatment 1 /maL^ <a!V\ Kivt-ii free. NotS1i1iKC.n1 l>v* fairs" I f^foi :??". V Write Dr.H. H.G'aan's Sons. *?*!_.. Soeolalitta. Box u Atlanta. U. 1 ~ I John W. Atkinson Co., j RICHMOND, VA. ! j I | Paints, fills, Vnrniskrn, Ar. Tri Their I ' .MSUiliU'd" Uraili .tliiril IIoust* Filial*. FARN MONEY ,f >'ou Klvo t,v:m hHl'Ilvrisa<i You ,.annot <j0 this * unless y<Mt understand them unci know j how to cater to their requirements. and < ollnrs I. arnltiK by experience, so you must | Liy others. We offer this to you for only 2."> < their own way even if you merely keep ] < Fowls judiciously, you must know some- 1 v.* are selling a book giving the experience 25c. > twenty-rtve years. It was written by and money to making a success of t'hlckuslncss?and If you will profit by his tweit<'hicks annually, and nvtke your Fowls it you must be sure to detect trouble lit the know how to remedy it. This book will urr disease; to feed for eggs and also for reding purposes?; and everything, indeed, in* it profitable. Sent postpaid for IwentyINf.i KOL'SK. 134 I/bonatd St., NewYorRCl'i JS-* ' ' > ?" ? ? 2Jjjjj5?j CURES MALARIA, ELIXIR I CHILLS and CEVER.. BABEK F.kRKK" la the olfl^at. aur.-at w*.* smic on<l h?iiKBi(d]rto AraerVn for runl*!**' ! ?<iln.a of malarial nature, itxnpoaliIto euro for MAI.Mtl A. ' HILLS nn.lEKVER. < nlyStn-. botlVr KLOCLEWSkl ? CO:. Washington. ?. C. tir"Wrlt?>foc toatlmonUla. -T-A-rv rOR.Vo'jrt , ^* < ComplexioN ft - 2ir ? -AVCLViors^ /(ISK*\ FRECK LE CURE --/W V = " i(tij> OuaHANtrto ro* rnttnifs v**4-. -7 ww*n HOTHHMPItS? CMA?*S C* ^ C-JL WSO'^fcBOX TRIAL 25"*-^ l*vAlP>VlUSON ti. CO>ifRSa Ftwyv ? n v" X CHARLESTON S. C. X ft.fQ.Tg \ ron SALE. AT ALL drug srwis/ uwn f Especially Mothers The Sanative, ftntiseptic, Cleansing, Purifying, and Beautifying Properties of vat* ww o is Assisted by CUT1CURA Ointment, the great Skin Cure, are of PricelessValue. For preserving, purifying, Ancf beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, a:*d sore hands, for baby rashes and chafings, in the form of baths for annoying irritations, ulcerations, and inflammations of women, and many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves, as well as for all purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, CUTICURA Soap and CUTICURA Ointment are priceless. S '..1 thrrnrh' at tlir world. Cul'.r?r? - . [> : ., f i*t lTv-iit, A". , t;?-. in t. (Ill form of < I ?lnl J'i. ?. JA' |, 'vn'.li.n llrpot.: I mil 11 ? . Ihourr > , 1'irif. A Km ?!< la l'alr ; K< .t n, I 4 - 11,n.l>u Xv. ; i.r liin? ( Iirin. Ci>ri>., > >. l'i pi uj~ iwa.l ( r - How lo l rtiriv., Purify, ami Beautify.'" FREE to WOiViEl^ A Large Trial Box and book of Inductions absolutely Free and Postpaid, enough to prove the value oi PaxiijHeToiiet Antiseptic Patlfno is In pow-Jer - !>. turni io dissolve in ' *-KSfcv water? non-puiscx.fta* Prr'HRA ;l*co',<"' which irritates OKy( inflamed surfaces, anil v|'i huvo iiu cleansingpropcy oiijjjJ t crti**. The content* > .5j8r8r3 oi every hnx inal.es r" f nu'ft' Antiseptic Solu ' # Roes further?liw. mote Jgj5 um? In the fntnily and dorrimoregoodtlru.iany antiseptic preparation >\^p' ><>u can buy. The formula of a noted Boston physician, tr.d used with ?reat success as a Vaginal IVash, for Lcucorrhcca, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, md ail soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female ill' l'tixtiiic is invaluable. Used ao u Vaginal \V:u.h wo diallingo tho w?>rld to produce i? "<|iiul for thoroughness. It is a revolution ::i cleansing iml healing jownr; it kills all /.erma which tause in tin ni nation and discharges. All leading Jriiggisis keep Pax tile-: price. EOc. thox ; if ymirsdovsnot,send to vrtor it. 1'ou't ml.e a substitute? there is not hing lilio i'axt me. M'rltefor thn Fika ltox of I 'axbins* to-<hiy. 6L PAaYOJI? CO., 'I Pope Elds;,, Boston, ?' ss. So. 22. jSmrairair Hrt CURES WHERE All ELSE JAIli. PJ PnJ IV'At Coutfb Byrup. l'a'V.a? tootl. I sc ? *S JVJ In 5rrntv. Soli] hy tir t <m. IM HERE IT IS! iVjnt to le.irn all about. as i HorsM ? 1 l.?w to Pick A Vjt H Hood Olio? Imperfections and so"\' duard against Fraud? \ W Detect Disease and Ef- /r ro. t a Cure win .i aamo. J \ / w Is possible? Tell tlio ? V #1 ARo by the Teeth? What to can th- uifforont Parts of tho Animal? How to Shoe a llorso Properly? All this and other Valuable Information can be obtained by reading out* lie-PAflK ll.l.UdTHATKU HOUSE liOOK. wli.eh we will forward, postpaid, on receipt of only 2> cents to stamps. HOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St., N. V. Cl'y. -- i