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The Hazel Green herald. [volume] (Hazel Green, Wolfe County, Ky.) 1885-19??, September 09, 1885, Image 4

Image and text provided by University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86063242/1885-09-09/ed-1/seq-4/

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EiZEL Eeralp
SEC COGPEB Proprietor
HAZEIi GREEK -
KENTUCKY
HINDOO HATRED
JL XrabmtaA Aeeeant of Itaglfsk Bale la
Jadla
5e ioiel register dsplajed the name
4-G- V Joshee written in a small
clerkly feand and the reporter having
seat up his card the JBrsmn Gopal
Tlaayak Joshee himself came down
ad extended a courteous invitation to
coae to his room which was accepted
in person the Brahmin is raall of
stature with small feet and undoubt
edly the tiniest hand that the reporter
ias ever seen on a man His features
are small and regular his swarthy
cheeks bein set off by a thin and deli
cate beard and his upper lip carrying
aninute black mustache An immense i
rolled turban of iome changeable silk
stuff crowned the small head He wore
several coats of light woolen stuffs the
outside one long and buttoning up close
to the throat -
The reporter found him a remarkby
intelligent man speaking Englsh
cntly and welL ana evidently a thinker
and careful observer While in San
Francisco he delivered several lectures
oa var ous matters connected with In
d one of them before the Geograph
ical Society of CaLforn a He hasleen
out from India only eleven months and
is traveling a philosopher without
much of the worlds goods endeavor nz
to increase his store of knowledge- He
formerly occupied a Government pofi
t on in India oeing in the postal
ice at Bombay In fact the civil poai
taons winch the natives are allowed to
fill a e occunicd almost exclusively by
the Brahmins who are the educated
and intelligent class of the Hindoos
The Brahmins constitute the highest
of the many social castes in Iuda and
are respected by all occup3ing a pos
tion in education and influence s nrlar
to that of the priests in the middle
ages Even the hghest pnnce is hon
ored in accept ng food from the hands
of a Brahmin but the Brahmin is not
allowed to accept food from any ones
hands They are vefetarans and have
the utmost abhorrence for the eaters of
fiesh There are four stages in the
Urahrans life First Celibacy which
is enjoned on him while studying
During Ih s pcrol he is not allowed to
wash his teeth nor rub h s body while
bathing Second -Marriage Third
Traveling He must travel as a mend -cant
begging from door to door Iu fact
the Branmins prevailing virtue is pov
erty Fourth and h ghest stage The
-suppression of all passions The last
three stages lire more or less opt onal
The Brahmin loses eate by worktng
for any one or by leavnghts own coun
try Hut Joshee says that he is not
trct3y orthodox he inclines to the
philosophical as do many of the Brah
mins of to day They do not regard
these observances as strictly necessary
to their rel gion
The conversation naturally turned to
the Anglo Kussan difficulty and the
feeling in regard thereto aid in ex
press ng himlf upon this subect the
leeFns of the Brahm n seemed to be
stirred to the r innermost depths
He said Ihatc the English from
the bottom of my heart for the r lonj
and cruel oppress on of my country
and my people and ths is the un
feeling throughout lnd a It
does not show itself because it da e
not be shown but it is there
enng
strentn and rancor with
every new wrong Ana Uie tact that
thepress and people wnen speak ng of
the matter must beLe their real senti
ments makes the iron sink deeper int j
the soul And should we not hate the
Englsh Have they not destroy ed our
industries and trade and reduced our
people practically to the poston of
srfs Have they not closed all the ave
nues of lucrative labor to our people
and left them to starve or accept sev
ice in the Engl sh army for a beggariy
pittance There was a time when we
had large salt ports and an immense
quantity of salt was made and exvort
ed These were all forcibly closed and
we Are obliged to import our salt from
Liverpool and now our poor people
get a handful of salt for a cent where
as they used to get that large basin
fulL
And what industries have not been
suppressed in this way have been ground
out of existence by excessive taxat on
There jised to be in every town in In
da hundreds of native looms weaving
the cloth which was used throughout
our land But excessive taxation and
itne peculiar advantages conceded to
English manutacturers have rendered
all those looms idle and now we are
forced to wear exelusvely goods made
in Manchester The opium trade from
which the East Indian company under
Government sanction derives a prince
ly income makes no money for the
iard working cultivator who rasus
the opium on his own land for he s so
heavilv taxed that he barely gets a liv
ing Every day the necessaries of life
become dearer in India while the op
portunities for the poor Hindoo earn
ing an honest Lvelihood are lessened
In consequence man of the poor class
are driven by starvation to enter the
English army as volunteers where they
getbarely enough to sustain life
The English soldier in India in
addition to clothing and rations gets
about 815 per month as pocKet money
The poor Hindoo for the same work
is paid S3 per month and out of that
beggarly pittance must supplv himsalf
with everything he eats and wears
and besides support his wife and
children if he lias them The Hindoo
is neer allowed to rise from the ranks
In fifty soc years not a single one has
been promoted to a corporalship and
although the native troops often tight
bravely they never receive even the
credit for dyln for ther oppressors
jmjjsfja
THE MISSING LINK
Pictorial Solution of Mysterious
Disappearance
TeatOHic Supplemented by Canine Sa
gacity A Dream of Love Rudely
Dissipated A Sad Awakening to
the Stern liealltles of Life
XT Graphic
i
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JsLiV r
H
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TEMPTATION
Suspicious
We think that the negro called Senator
in the followine anecdote was correct in his
suspicions He said to a friend
Mistah Waggonah I tink I smell one o
dem mices
You think you smell a mouse Sena
tor
Yes sah I done blieve I smell a mice
sah
How is that Senator What unex
pected developments have you found now
Squiah does you rocouiniember dat gal
HKSITATIOX
Ise been coutin down in de scrubburbs of
Steubenville
Yes Senator 1 know her very well
What is the matter now She has not
gone back on you has she
Well boss lse mightily afeard dat am
jes what she liab done lse seed two or
free fings dat looks mouty spicious now I
tole yer an lse feared shes done frowed
me ovah
Why what have you noticed Senator
De mawnin papah says she has done
gone and married Sam Likely las night
Now wouldnt you call dat a mighty
spicious circumstance squiah Bloom
ing ton Through Mall
r
rERSUA6ION
BONNERS BIG HEAD
Something About Heads The Book Agent
Who Didnt Fool the New York Pub
lisher
Robert Bonner has a big head This
not a figurative way of saying that he
is
is
The native regiments are thus con- mDnttv nMo w 1a cQtflma rt
stantly recnUcd from the number ol C
faftL vot ftlonft R hftt remark
those who must either enlist or starve
and who are reduced to such extremity
Iby the systematic oppression of the En
glish Is it any wonder we hate them
And then they are so insolent these
Even our rajahs and mahara
iahs they treat as slaves and the poor
Brahmin who commands respect ano
reverence from hrgh and low among hs
own people is despised and spat upon by
those English who are usually less in
telligent and educated than he The
two great classes in India theilohama
dans and the Hindoos are unan raous
in their detestation of the Eaglsh
Sacramento Bee
-
The village of Shoebeck Is known
throughout the whole of Germany as
litecbess playiug village For centa
uries every native of the village fron
lk8prosperous freeholder down to tin
poor village shepherd has been enthu
isiastic uad a more or Jess efficiou
cheiifr iiayer
able in size but the shape of it commands
attention Its diameter from side to side is
equal to the distance from front to back
Probably there is not another such cranium
in America A book agent walked into
Bonners office the other day with a bulky
rrllgious volume under his arm
I have called to show you a work he
began
Havent time to look at it said Bon
ner decisively
The reason why I came to you per
sisted the canvasser with the calmness of
assurance arising only from habitual suc
cess was that your pastor Rev Dr
John Hall considered this book highly de
sirable for his library but did not feel able
to buy it He didnt tell me to go to you
3tr Bonner and yet he seemed to want the
book so much that I thought possibly you
might like to give it to him Something
that he said put the idea into my uead and
I said as much to him but he peremptorily
forbade me Hed rather do without the
vork helpful 115 it wosld be to him than
to have it hinted to you that It would be a
acceptable present Still
Youre lying to me interrupted Xr
Bonner and 1 ought to kick you out
Then Bonner put his remarkable hat on
his wonderful head preparatory to going
oat for his regular afternoon drive
I might have known better than to have
tried my racket on a man with a head like
that mused the agent as he was about to
depart N Y Cor Chicago Inter Ocean
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ABGUMEXTATIOIf
WONDER
CONSUMMATION
awe but 1 have ceased to wonder The
cessation was not a matter of choice I have
no longer the power Remarkable his
tories adventures and theories excite a cer
tain peculiar feeling in me but it is not
wonder Eveu the doings the most eccen
tric dolncs ot crazy fanatics either moraL
political or religious can not move me to
wonder X am beyond it and I dont know
whether to be sorry or not You may de
pend upon it that to j vxw of sixty wonder
is a thing of the past
Here a neighbor looked into the coffee
room and said Mr Whiffles your wife
asked me to step down aud say that she
p
bffife f22 M
roXSTEEX ATI Olf
Equal to the Emergency
1
A Man Whose Theory Docs Not Square
with li Ih Practice
What I anintain is this said Mr Whif
fies orularlyf at the age of sbctj or there
about xe Twer to wonder ceases Take
my own case for instance I am sixty
gentlemen and have led a very active life
I have traveled widely and read deeply
I have gazed upon the marvels of nature
art science and mechanics I have watched
progress in every shape with emotion and
particularly wanted you to go home t
once
Mr Whiffles drank his glass of
without hurriedly and as he got his
cold
head
into his hat exclaimed Now I wonder
what the deuce she wants me for Detroit
Free Press
A wild eyed man entered a Chatham
street pawn shop and wished to see some
pistols
1 sells you dot pistol for two dollars
said the clerk
Ill take it Load it up and before an
other sunrise Ill put an end to my miser
able existence
Vat You shoot yourself mid dot
pistol
Yes said tne
Mr Isaacstein called the clerk to the
proprietor in the back room ade shentle
mans vants a two dollar pistol to shoot
himself init Vat shall I do
Sharge him five dollar Oxir Society
Journal
m t
Ma said little Tr nmy do the In
juns own the railroads
No my sou
Well theyve got somethiu in do with
thein cos pa says he bought his ticket offY
scalper St PaulHerala
DOMESTIC ANIMALS
Tho Breeder of Them Moat
aal LUlngr For Them o
cess
Those only should eriier upon the
business of breeding farm animals
whose taste leads strongly in that di
rection This position will as invaria
bly prove true as that a man can not
gain renown as an artist in the line of
painting unless the talent be implanted
within him This leaning toward live
animals orops out in the child at an
early age and is a tendency that can
not be mistaken at first manifestations
and is not by the individual in after
life It is of course a taste that grows
by cultivation and becomes dwarfed
as any other faculty doe if permitted
to 1 e dormant A child may be born
an athlete but if apprenticed to a tail
or wll be quite sure to have an arrest
of growth in the muscular system and
in fact in every part concerned in giv
ing power and mot on while on the
other hand due cultivat on of the
boddy inheritances wU add to the size
and capacity of the muscles and all
oiher parts brought into action by the
athlete as growth toward maturty ad
vances The trotter is a trotter by in
heritance ut the outcome of the
tendency to trot depends upon the sort
of hands he falls into as the outcome
of the talent for painting depends upon
the extent to wh ch it is cultivated
Hence on the farm there is no occa
sion for making any mistake or as to
whether or not any of the growing sons
have such natural 1 aning toward do
mestic animas as to give promise if
cult vated upon the better sorts of
yielding good fruts Speak ever so
depreciat ngly of the enthusiast a liberal
measure of this comes in as an import
ant factor in success A breeder with
out enthusiasm has many avenues
closed to him because through want
of sultic ently intense interest he fails
to see what is leg t niately within his
range of vision Like Milton refer
ring to his own bl ndness
And wisdom at one entninco quite shut out
the enthusiast is on the look out His
deeper than ordinary interest brines
forward a des re to excel while the
breeder who follows the business with
no other incentive than that wh ch
leads the house painter to ascend a
ladder for the purpose of covering old
siding wth a new coat of pa nt viz
for the money he will get for
over a nven surface
will
Have a Nafc
Insure
much interest in breedmjr and
ceding
a pia n an mat that lias descend id
from stock wh ch has tost him but lit
tle as from cultivat ng the best pro
vided the plan sort in the
ratio of the amount of money
invested pays as well on the
investment as the other The highest
attainments and ult mately the- most
crowning successes in every way have
not usually come to those whose efforts
have been based almost ent rely upon
the sordid branch of enterprise in
breed ng The admirer of the in
dividual animals no matter what the
breed adopted this admiration being
backed by intelligence and judgment
will give a dergee of promise that can
not come of sordid influences alone
All things be ng e pial the young
man or as to the matter of age we
need draw no line who first gets his
interest awakened through reading
up current stock literature will be more
likely to make an intelligent beginning
than he who does not read at all This
rule ga ns double force when careful
study is pursued during the practee of
the art Possibly a person
Elating the adoption of breeding as a
nsiness could in no other way so well
settle in his own mind the advsabiity
of the step as indicated by his liking
or the property to be handled and
his industry in following up
all the requirements as by care
fully d gesting literature on breed
ing as a prelim nary step that he
may the better see something of trie
complexities that are all the time try
ing and likely to test the depth and
breadth of his enthusasm Going into
the business because he 1kes it pre
supposes that he will g ve personal at
tenton to the more important details
rather than turn these over to a herds
man The herdsman is nothing as a
herdsman if he be not deeply imbued
with a fondness for live stock With
the master making an investment mere
ly to be in the fashion or entrely gov
ered by the money making feature of
the business and the herdsman follow
ing his calling inechan cally as it were
solely for the monthly pay it brings
falls greatly short of being up to tho
highest standard by which naturally a
herdsman is judged No matter how
generally the contrary opinion pre
vails facts regarding improvements in
uniformity of duplication among im
proved breeds are to a greater degree
than many are willing to acknowledge
in a primary state It is at least so with
the average breeder Who is likely to
make the most rapd progress in this
d rection Undeniably the man who
from personal 1 kings takes the deep
est interest in the stock be handles
even though he be an enthusiast Im
provements in the direction referred to
have heretofoie come from and must
contnue to depend upon the same kind
of interest and enthusiasm in a gven
undertaking that brought out and de
veloped navigation upon water by
steam upon the iron rail by the same
agency our instantaneous mode of
wr ting over an almost 1 mitless stretch
of wire through the use of the electric
current and of wiring the voice through
space wth like rapidity Indvdual
effort gives us these results and further
improvement of the breeds must bo
looked for through the efforts of men
possessed of judgment vet wedded to
an idea and enthusiastic yet this en
thusiasn may have the force of a deep
rap d current without the surface de
raonstraton that attends a shallow
stream Live Stock Journal
The most absent minded man in
Scranton is the one who carried his
dinner to work one day last week
worked all day and when he came to
p ck up his dinner pail to carry it home
felt it quite heavy and thinking some
of hs fellow workmen had been trying
to play a trick on him by puttingsome
thing in his pail opened it and there
found his d nner just as it was when he
left home He had gone without his
dinner and et thought he had eaten
it Lackawanna Pa Democrat
M deLesaeps relates that on the oc
casion of us marriage the day ofth
opening of the Suez Canal November
1S69 lis father-in-law handed hiai 100
000 francs as a present to his wife At
that time he adds Suez Canal shares
were sc Uing at 250 francs or iif ty per
cent d count He invested the present
in these shares on which he realized
1500000 francs
America has not given to the world
a single rpmposer of the first order
but many of the most successful vocal
ists of our day hail from the other sicU
of tie Atlantic London Times
HOME AMD FARM
Sorghum is said to be poiron to
jrasshoppers
To stop or rather prevent crystal
lization of honey it is said that the
juice of half a lemon squeezed in and
stirred up is enough to save a barrel
ful Albany Journal
If milk is set at home for cream the
sooner it can be set after milking and tho
higher the temperature the better a
cream rises best and almost wholly
while the temperature is falling Trot
Times
Bran is highly recommended by
several intell gent farmers as manure
for potatoes Some say it is cheap for
this purpose at 15 per ton Damaged
bran which is just as good as the oesfc
can often be bought for 5 a ton N
Y Times
Plow deeply for potatoes this
seems to be the universal verd ct of
successful potatojrowers Of course
not deeply the first time but get down
gradually If planted deeply drouth
does not affect the crop as unfavorably
as shallow planted Prairie Farmer
Vinegar Pie One and a half cups
of sugar large spoon heaping full of
flour a little nutmeg and a piece of
butter the size of a walnut stir them
well together then add one of cider vine
gar and one and a half cups of boil ng
water Boil until it jellies pour into
crusts and bake Trv it Toledo
GATHERED WAISTS
Blade
We are told that the first most im
portant agent in fertilizing any g ven
plat of land is dra nage Without a
complete system of drainage no land
can be cultivated with the best results
while frequently land that is entirely
worthless for garden purposes becomes
fert le and productive when drained
Albany Journal
Asparagus is dellcous if a piece of
juicy and tender lamb is cooked with
it Or it may be boiled in stock made
of the bones and remains of a chicken
berve with thin slices of toast After
you are tired of having it plain it will
appear almost like a new dish and be
eaten with a relish if cooked in this
way Boston Budget
Fruit Pudding Chop a pineapple
quite fine take some cake which is a
httle dry rub it line in your hands or
crush it on a kneading board put it
into a pudding dish in alternate layers
with the pineapple sweeten abundant
ly moisten with cold water and bake
in a moderate oven for an hour and
gm three nuarters
4 l - A
mrwt Jiil 13
The household
Baked Codfish Pick up the fish
and fresh na little as for cooking then
into a dish put a layer of cracker
crumbs then one of fish over each
layer spr nkl pepper and butter con
tinue uutil you have two layers of fish
and three of crackers lastly beat wo
eEes with milk enough to cover the
wnole Bake about three quarters of
an hour Excluinqe
Scotch Short Cake Take one half
pound ot si ghtly salted butter and one
pound of Hour then mix flour and but
ter with the hands then add four
ounces of loaf sugar and work all into
a smooth ball then roll out u at1 it is
an inch thick prick over with a fork
and p nch round the edges and bake
for ha f an hour in the oven with a
moderate fire in a round or square pan
according to taste The Caterer
Tho Fashion of tho Season For Thin Fab
ricH and Light Summer Silks
Lace dresses gauzes crapes sil
muslins lnd a silks and all thin wash
goods such as lawns and mull are
made up in some one of the various de
signs that have full waTsts shirred in
rows or merely gathered in a singla
row The most dressy of these waists
is the shirred basque with the front and
middle back forms shirred at the neck
and again at the wa st Lne The collar
is very h gh and close about the throat
and the slight shrring is just below it
cousisting of not more than three or
four rows very near together at the
line of the waist in front there are
many rows of shirring while the back
has only a fev rows extending betweeu
the seams of the s de forms the middle
baok forms are not separated by a seam
up the middle but are cut in one piece
in the old fash oned way The lining
oi transparent lace or muslin basques
is cut low in the neck either round
square or in V shape and there are
short cap sleeves set in the armholes
An edcre of narrow lace usually Valen
ciennes for light fabrics and black
French lace for darker dresses edges
the neck and sleeves of the 1 ning
wlrch may be either 1 nen or else silk
Sometimes the basque is in fan shape
with tha fullness of the front carried
back aiong the shoulder seams this
gives tho appearance of greater
breadth and is used by very
slender figures In other basques
the shirring is confined to the top
of the basque while fine pleats or tuckc
are laid at the waist line and for some
distance about it The round belted
wa st is also made in various ways tho
simplest and most popular form being
that wth a single row of gather ng in
the front and back where it is attached
to the belt This is made wthout a
lining by amateur dress makers as it
is then more easily fitted and is worn
over a prettil tr mmed corset covitr
the modistes prefer to have a lining of
linen or of tho dress goods itself sewed
in w th the seams to strengthen them
but this does not answer with wash
dresses as the two different materials
will not shrink in tho same proportion
after being washed Another f nil waist
very much used by those w th slight
figures has the top shirred from the
neck low down on the bust to represent
a rpund yoke the lines of gathering
are three fourths of an inch apart ana
extend around the neck and shoulders
mak ng the waist qu te low above tho
armholes
White mull and Valenciennes trim
med dresses have this shirred corsage
or else the plain belted waist and a
black velvet ribbon belt confines them
at the waist The neck has Valencien
nes lace turned down around it in a
close collar that is also very high or
else the lace forms a puff with a frill
below it Still others have rows of
Valenciennes insert on forming a pont
down the back and front below the
neck and others have the ent re wai3t
made of strips of insertion alternating
with mull strpes Harpers Bazar
John Eaten Cooke of Virginia
rlams to have proof that the John
Smith Pocahontas story is true After
a sear hing investigation he says that
m th was captured by a party of In
dians in 1607 and carried to the Indian
capital on the York Kiver where
Powhatan ordered him to death He
told his friends in Jamestown that
Pocahontas had saved his life In a
letter to Queen Anne lie sa d that ha
would be gu lity ot the deadly poisor
of insrratitudeK if he forgot the good
ness of Pocahontas In several letters
he gave to this girl credit f or his resea
from death A7 Y Fo
j
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Some Things Education Cant Reach
Theres some things said a Broad
way policeman the other day as he
mopped his brow carefully which
makes me feel as if there wasnrt no use
spreadin ediercation and sich like with
a lavisn uana in tms great country
Peoples so infernally ignorant of com
mon things 2ow 1 stood on this cor
ner about half an hour ago watchin an
umhrellar family tryin to cross the
street
What kind of a family
A nnmbrellar family Father
mother an a nice large fat pious son
Every one of them had a big new um
brell an they carried the umbrells open
to perfect theirselves from the sun The
sun was shinin at an nngte of about
forty fivo degrees but that bloomin
family insisted upon holdin its umbrells
straight up in the air They paraded up
Broadway three abreast with their big
umbrells an three red mugs which was
drippin wet The sun fell on them like
a furnace but they stalked on on the
sunny side of the street until lost to
view tho still to memory dear an I
sez to myself whats the good of edgur
kation after all Brooklyn Eagle
About Cellars
A cellar should
airy If the sdil is
be dry light and
moist it should be
drained all around the house by a deep
trench at least two feet below the level
of the cellar floor This drain should
have a safe outlet The cellar should
be not less than seven feet deep in the
clear aud the floor should be covered
with cement A wooden- floor cannot
be healthful The walls should be laid
up with good lime mortar thus prevent
ing the entrance of vermin There
should be windows on every side to let
in abundance of light and air and the
top of each window should reach near
to the ceiling to afford an easy outlet to
tlio nir Tho ttrinilmicnpwl nnk liA lnror
if they are sufficient in number and the 1
sills should be a foot above the ground
outside Areas around the windows
are objectionable as they admit the
dampest air which floats upon the sur
face of the ground N Y Times
Where you find one young man
who can if he has to saw wood to raise
a family you will find two others who
can display only white hands and talk
nonsense Chicago Ledger
A Dally Dedication
The Hon John Kelly the head and front
of Tammany Hall a man of strict integri
ty an indefatigable worker early at hia
oflice late to leave so burdened with busi
ness that regular meals were seldom
known by him with mind in constant ten
sion and energies steadily trained finally
broke down I
The wonder is that he did not sooner
give way An honest man in all things
else he acted unfairly with his physical
resources He was ever drawing upon
this bank without ever depositing a col
lateral The account overdrawn the bank
suspends and both are now in the hands of
medical receivers
It is not work that kills men It is irreg
ularity of habits and mental worry 2o
man in good health frets at his work By
and by when the bank ot vigor suspends
these men will wonder how it all hap
pened and they will keep wondering till
their dying day unless perchance some
candid physician or interested friend will
point out to them how by irregularity by
excessive mental effort by constant worry
and fret by plunging in deeper than they
had a right to go they have p odnced that
loss of nervous energy which almost in
variably expresses itself in a deranged
condition of the kidneys and liver for it is
a well known fact that the poison which
MA little Are IsalCtcfrr tradca
Which beia sutferad rivera 4kjm4
Pj ocrasiatks cany rob yo
hnihtr increased dilizesee TC i
ap the less bfc it i roteyoaof 1
low is irremediable U yowr feMt J v
deliraiA irnar snnetite ftckle TOST 9Mm
broke yoar miad decreased your whta
being ot o sorts depend oa it yo a
seriously diseased Is all sack cases Dr
Pierces GokW Medical BiscaYer wSi
speedily- effect a gcaaiae radical ears
zaake sew bsb of yo ssA sare y -from
the tortureerof euaeaae
The barbers trade iatke fcest tra far
its always at tae aed
T- i
Toaagr Sfecu TLmaA TMs
ThzVoLT aic Belt Co- of MarsbaUVIISek
off er to send their caie tested ELBcn Tca
taic Belt and other Elzctsic AKLLUKaw
en trial forS days to men yoaag oroW
afflicted with nervous debility losaof vital
ity and all Madred Ale I scraea
matismneHralgiaparalyssand sway efc
er diseases Complete restoration to aealta
vIgoran manhood guaranteed 2fo risk im
carred as 30 davs trislli allowed Writa
thematoncefor illnatratedpaznpilat fra
Straw bats show which way the -triad
blows Chicaoo Tribune -
Says your wagons your horses and year
patience by using Fruzer Arlo Greawa
m
THE eyes of old age see best the aa -
flaws of childhood JVI I Post -
Throw Physic to the Decs
wnen id is tne uiu iitauiuiicv uuo jlhiuh
blno pill sort and insist on Dr
Pierces Pleasant Purgative Pellets a
modern medical luxury being small
sugar coated granules containing tbe aes
ive principles of certain roots aad herbij
and which will be found to coataia as
much cathartic power aa any of the old
fashioned larger pQls without the latter
violent drastic effects The pellets oper
ate thoroughly bet harmlessly establish
ing a permanently healthy action of tha
stomach and bowelsaad as an anti billoai
remedy are unequaled w
A humorist doesnt write for money bt
just for the fun of it
PikesToothacheDrok cnreinltnlnuteSc
Glenns Suiphur Soap heals and ueauunes
Gekmax Coax Eesiovek kills Coma Bunion
the kidneys and liver should remove from
the blood if left therein soon knocks the
life out of the strongest and most vigorous j
mn or woman Dailv building up of
these vital orean3 bv so wonderful and
highly reputed a specific as Warners safe
cure is the only guarantee that our busi
ness men can have that their strength will
be equal to the labors daily put upon i
them
The Shamrock A pretense at kick
ing the cradle Philadelphia Call
Piles fistules and rupture rad
ically cured Book of particulars two let
ter stamps Worlds Dispensary Medical
Association Buffalo 2L 3T
m m
Oh you can laugh exclaimed Fen
derson with a show of impatience but I
am not quite so much of a fool as you
think 3 am Tell you the truth 3aid
Fogg I didnt believe it could be possi
ble Boston Trauscript
The St Louis girl3
feet No doubt thev
admire their own
are camea away
with them Yonkers Statesman
The business in which you know you
could make money is generally the other
mans Boston Post
There is a marked difference between
getting up with the lark and staying up to
have one
A dentist says Teeth are like money
hard to get hard to keep and hard to
lose Philadelphia Call
m
Speech is certainly silver at the tele
graph office Ten words for a quarter
Somerville Journal
It is useless to interrupt the course of
true love A Liverpool woman to relieve
her husband who was charged with cut
ting off the end of her nose swore that she
bit it off herself
The Goddess of Liberty is to be married
to the Bey of New York They will begin
light housekeeping N Y Herald
Thirteen has always been an unlucky
number Adams thirteenth rib was the
cause of all his troubles ChicagoTribune
m
ASHIP is called she because it always
has the last word The ship is bound to
answer its helm every time BostonTran
saipt
At a negro wedding when the minister
read the words love honor and obey
the groom interrupted him and saidt
Read that agin sah read it wunce mo1
sos de lady kin ketch the full solemnity of
de meauin lse been married befo N
Y Suit
It is a sad and solemn thought that
Franklin did not discover lightning until
after he was married Pall Jiicer Advance
The butcher should always be placed o
joint committees
I
If afflicted with Sore Eyesuse Br
Thompsons Eye Watec Druscgi3t3 sells- 2Sc
Does the man who puts the powder 1
the fire cracker filliboater CAtjra -
neig
ssiion Cured
wu VZ Z
eaas ana soon au inas nuraiac ceaacu uu a wmu
tala food difficulty- howzayeaimu
rr - put anvthfntrintheshaDeof food and c
i rilfflrnTrr Tftkcthe OTeserlbea dose ax
eatlas JAMES il AX2 Ko14 Iry St
For sale by all drugjilsts
Treatise oa Blood and Sldn Disease mallea free
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO
Is T 157 W 23d St Drawer 3 AtlaaSa G
WllHOFTS FEVER AMD ASUE TNttG
LIFE
OF
XUtabllshed
AJTK E
ATOrraaxed care for an diseases
caused by zcslsrial yoaoac
the blood sncaasCblEs maAFcrer
Ferer and Ague Sua Pain
Chills Istermloect Eraiiteat
Batons and an other PeTerscanaea
by malaria- It la also the safssC
and best cure for enlarged Spfaafc
Fcrer Cake General Debttfty
sxdFerlodlc Neuralgia rSTorSalebyaUDrcegs
CHAS F KEELEH Ptod Chicago IU
IF PAGES
LIQUID GLUE
Is used by thousand or first u33 Sfsssfserarers
nd 3tcisnlcs oa thtir bertrirwk KeceiTed
GOLD MEDAt XcndonX ProiMHincedJfwy
afMiamra Send card of dthokesotkeei
Eusa Cemeat Co G3GcctrMis Lilfc
Mr Kelly has nervous dyspepsia we AJPrrTjLTOXCEFOKA5JkGEXr3rr
leurn indicating as we have said a breafc
down of nerve force His case should be a
wandng to others who pursuing a like
course will certainly reach a like result
Tlie Sunday Herald
I Buffered for more than flre years rtta indjgwtlea
scarcely able to retalfc te simplest food oanr tor
ach I declined In Senti and suffered all tha usual
depression attendant upon this terrfll8 disease At
laat falUas to flad relief In aaytalaffelse X jxnar
mencedtaeuse ot Swifts Specific The mecis
tnnort tin thn tflmieh strengthened the dlsresttTO off
BQOt
i7
rlCH
EN GRANT
By Ben Prriey Poors OfftdaZ Biographer U S- Can
ffrsandRerO ILllffauy DD GeUheowZyeeJ
cinl and richly tllngtreitm trorfc Complete from th
CTadle to the Several years la preparation
Dnt be drtireA by imitations- Demand Is enormous
AentWunted OutflTSc
promptly if st nrsnBAHi J5Xyrxinfcs
JPnVrm SL W Poartfc St Ctsxlastl Okla
1000 REWARD
tvr Hacuat BtUtUt1 aa
cteaauiz ut or istrket a aaea
Oot t la 05E D1T
aste
VICTOR
DOUBLE
HULLER
TIIairatl efrea
Ur maifed free
TfEWARIT
HACHLNE CO Cola
THEY8M
ffMSSSSS W
t I MS1 SSW Ill
PjKK iioo
sV3ft UPfaHIKd
tWi
LOSEFES
lbK0
i7i
Hmm at4Jti maJU
FAYS
ise
MANILLA BOQFINS
f
KefiBble flae leather forXOFS ODTSHSE
WAIjlVSand ISSIDElnrrfaSfvE
ti onsc and durable cisPCTSsal JtXTCSof
same material Catalojree wlthtesttaiordaasand
samples Free
jKHVBTjH
R
U AWARE
THAT
Lorilhrds direst Ping
rKarinc a rrJ tin tag - that LoriUzrdS
Sose Lett fane cut that LorUIanls
Kavsr Clippings nd that Ixrrillard3 SaaJar9
the beat and cheapest quality considered 2
Palmars Plan Primr wSauSSr
H Sherwood A K Parsons Carlyls PetersHea etc
Invaluable to teachers and Indispensable to art learn
ers saving time and laMr of tencher worth vstaer
times Us cost Price la boards cents post paid
Address H E PjLLitssil as Uoc
250 1
HJI H iwpennanens
eniplojTnent and Rood salary
sciUncQneen City Skirt and
StoeilDcSrorterSarnpI
oontrr e AJdresaCInclnruul
Stiapecdcr Ox Cincinnati Ot
MOXTH Areata Wanted 9 best
linz articles In the world esxarAeFHES
Address J AX BROSSOH JDnaorr Maca
a ajoxnr aydsoaxb orTxxxs
8r YxrnsrMenorLadleatneacbccantT A
U drew P WZIEGLEK CO PWladeljjM
Treated and cored without the knife
Boot on trratment sent free AGZr
Y JP03TDMD Anxora Kaae CaUl
EDUCATIONAI
U5I07T COLLEGE OP LAW Chfcaeo la The
IteraiwtUbeKtaScptrmiHrrSX tor drcirlar
address
EGRAPHY
aaabM ir a
ECU ill cicsgo iu
x
a KOOd
ahereae ears
Pt Situation
furnished Write VAtrrrmi Bros JaaesvtUs WJ
1042 t
Positively care SICK H2ATJACHE Biliousness and all LTV2S aad 30WZZC8KpladaU3CjkABXJU
SLOOD POISON and 8tan Diseases OJTE Plil A DOSS Per jemais CeaipUlaxa tie POJa
havo ao equal I and theaa svaJnabl Cathartic ardli7er PU1 Dr T3C Palmar
-in ny prscuca a ue no owr cmjjoa a jj uewiir wa ifra ig Terywaern ernst i
mi ror us cuu la buss uau uuecmauva jr at r i a JOMjtTfOa m CO OfiTOjr
FoatffSy
- i
Man and Beast
Mustang Liniment is older than
most men and used more and
more every year
Tr v
HAGAITS
Magnoli
Balm
is a secret aid to beauty
Many a lady owes her fresh
ness to it who would rather
not tell andw carii teU
i
UK
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V-
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