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A Good Appetite Is essential to good health, and when th« natural desire for food is gone strength will soon fail. For loss of appetite, indigestion, sick headache, and other troubles of a dys Hood’s Sarsam A -M- %%%%%% parilla peptic nature. Hood’s f ^ Sarsaparilla is the ■ remedy which most certainly cures. It Ww quickly tones the stomach and makes one “ real hungry.” Be sure to get Hood’s and only Hood's Sarsaparilla. Hood’sPiMs 'ire purely vegetable. 25c. I «V\IARRHCEA, Uysentery, CHOLERA INFANTUM, -AND ALL AFFECTIONS OF THE BOWELS. Oxford, La., July •}, 1S88. Gentlemen We have used vour Brodie s Cor dial in our family for some time pa^t, and are perfectly ratisfied with its effects. Would not willingly do without it. Rcspcctfullv. J. 12. Robinson. _ SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. PRICE, SOc. and 81.00. Prepared by I. L. LYONS & CO, Hew Oflcant. La. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit isalv/ays experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts be ing stopped, and always disappears in a Week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. McELREES’ « WINE OF CARDUlJ ; For Female Diseases Remember j the name: The De Long Pat. Hook and Eye. Also notice on j face and back of every card the words: See that k hump? TRADE MARK REG. APR. !»•**. Richardson & Dp Long Bros., Philadelphia. Davis Inter national Cream Separator, Hand or Power. Every fanner that has cows should have one. It saves half the labor, makes on e third more but ter. Separator Butter brings I one-third more money. Send, for circulars. ' Davis & Rankin Bldg. & mfg. Co. Agents Wanted. Chicago, HI. x«* FARE Harvest Excursions -TO Arkansas, Texas and Oklahoma, JULY 24, 25 and 28,1894. Tickets Rood for return thirty days from date of sale. For maps, pamphlet!, time tables and full informatioa write C. F. RECTOR. General Ajrent, Memphis, Tenn. H. H. SUTTON, Trav. Pass. Agent, Chattanooga, 'fenn. A. T. a, MATTHEWS, Piet. Pass. Agent, laihHUti!*, Hj. W. G. ADAMS. Trav. Pats. Agent. Nashville, Teno. FEED H. JONES. Dist. Patt. Agent, Atlanta. 04 E. W. LaBEACME. Ota. fat;, e Tit. Act.. Sr. Jj?. DOMESTIC CONCERNS, — —Use warm water and salt to eleafl your willow furniture. Apply with a nail brush, scrub well and dry thor oughly.—Prairie Farmer. —Cherry Dumplings: Twocups flour, one cup milk, one tablespoonful butter, one teaspoonful baking powder, a little salt. Make a paste of the above: roll it into a sheet quarter of an inch thick, and cut into four-inch squares. Put a spoonful of stoned cherries in the mid dle of each square, sprinkle with sugar, fold the edges across and pinch togeth er. Place the dumplings in a pan with the joined side downward, and bake tc a light brown.—Farm, Field and Fire side. —Fish Salads: Some varieties of fish make excellent salads. Remove the bones, and mix with a dressing made as follows: Take the volks of two eggs, one teaspoonful of salt, half a teaspoonful of white pepper, a tea spoonful of mustard, and two-thirds of a cup of molted butter, and three table spoonfuls of vinegar, beat the eggs, salt, mustard and pepper together, stir all one way, a little of the melted but ter at a time, until it is all used, then add vinegar.—Ohio Farmer. —Cornmeal, the yellow Indian meal of our pantries, is said to be one of the best of cosmetics. A jar of it should be kept on the toilet stand, and after the face has been washed in really hot water with a pure, unscented soap, the meal should be rubbed all over it, well and gently. Then it should be dusted out of the hair and eyebrows, the face wiped lightly over with a bit of soft old linen, and the result promised by those who have tried it is a delight fully smooth and satiny skin.—X. Y. Times. —Boiled Beets: Wash the beets care fully. and do not cut off the roots, for by so doing the juices escape and the color is spoiled. Boil them several hours: the time varies according to the age and season. When young and small they require about an hour. When they are done, pour off the hot water and cover them with cold water. Rub off the skin, cut them in rather thin slices, and season with plenty of fresh hotter, salt and pepper, and. if you like, a tablespoonful or less of vinegar. —Boston Budget. —A friend tells how her luncheon, prepared by a kind relative for a ten days’ journey, proved appetizing to the last. It was rather a series of lunche ons, each meal being separate, wrap ped in oil-paper. Variety was aimed at, and no two meals were alike; and the one who was to partake of the luncheons did not have the key to the menus. Each meal was a surprise and a feast. >Some of the accessories for each meal, as sauce, pickles, etc., were not wrapped but assigned their proper places in the luncheon box. —Currant Shrub: Pick thoroughly ripe currants, not overripe, or the shrub will have a purple color. Strain through a flannel bag or other heavy strainer cloth. Take a pint of currant juice, add to this some block or granu lated sugar, and let it stand in the ice chest until ready to use. Pour some in a glass and add -water to suit the taste. The currant and sugar can stand on the ice for twenty-four hours, then make fresh. Red raspberries can be used in the same way. only add a very little currant juice to give it character. —Good Housekeeping. STYLISH HATS FOR SUMMER. Flowers Are Popular, But Wings Are the Feature of the New Millinery. The first thing to strike oneonglanc ing at the summer hats and bonnets is the extraordinary amount of trimming they all carry. Hats are miniature flower beds. Flowers have rained, nay, poured, down upon the millinery world. They have landed on everything in the way of headgear. Often, too, they have landed with more force than discrimi nation by coming, evidently to stay, in three or four sorts upon one small bon I net. Milliners sav, and with truth, that bonnets are small. They certainly are. It is the lappets and flowers and buckles which keep the season's bonnet from being altogether invisible, by reason of its size. A small bonnet recently seen was made entirely of jet sequins, and not very many of them either. Hut it had in front wing bows of frosted jet anrl cream guipure, a jetted osprey w ith some cut jet spikes and stars, and toward the back a cluster of rose geraniums, with some sprays trail ing down over the hair. Gold and black is the color scheme of another dear little French bonnet. It has a rolling brim and sides to the crown, but no top, and through the aperture thus formed nod yellow roses and two ends of a bow of chiffon contrasting with the gold band of the crown and the Jittle rolling chiffon-covered brim. For such bonnets the hair needs to be dressed high. Bonnets which use the hair as the only crown in the style of the coronet ribbon hats are to be much used. A bonnet of this sort is formed entirely of wings, set at different angles with two pink roses in front as the only trimming. Hoses, with other things, appear on nearly every hat. One of the few ex ceptions seen in a swell milliner's is a large hat of Tuscan chip with a lace i^d brim. A big. green, satin rosette, holding s prays of lilacs with foliage, made a graceful trimming. The only exceptions to the rule of flowers are those novelties which have hardly yet found their way in the shop windows. They are hats smothered in tulle, with a pair of wings on either side, or a couple of birds, by way of or nament. In spite of all that has been .aid and written on the subject, birds ifre coming into vogue again. I wouldn't wear one for the world, indeed I feel some compunction in telling you that if you w'Snt to be particularly chic in the matter of millinery you must dis card flowers and trim your hat with tulle and birds fortwith. A tulle col lar finished with a past buckel and a how, or tied scarf-fashion under the chin, looks very pretty with a tulle ■ trimmed hat. and this dainty little ad junct to dress is. I a® told, quite th? tftge in Haris.—Chicago Time* A MIRACLE IN MISSOURL The Achievements of Medioal Science Far More Wonderful Than the Magic of the East. The Remarkable Experience of Post Mas ter Woodson, of Panama, Mo.—For Ten Tears a Cripple—To-Day A Well and Hearty Alan. [Prom the Kansas City Times.] The people of Rich Hill. Mo., and vicinity, have recently been startled by a seeming miracle of healing. For years one of the best known men in Bates and Vernon coun ties has been Mark M. Woodson, now post master at Panama, and brother of ex-State Inspector of Mir.es C. C. Woodson, of this city. The people of Rich Hill, where he formerly resided, and of his present home, remember well the bent form, misshapen almost from the semblance of man, which has painfully bowed its head half to earth and labored snail-like across the walks season after season, and when one day last month it straightened to its full height, threw away the heavy butt of cane which for years had been its only support from total helplessness, and walked erect, firmly, unhesitatingly about the two cities, people looked and wondered. The story of the re markable case has become the marvel of the two counties. Exactly as Mr. Woodson told it to a Times reporter, it is here published: “For ten years I have suffered the tor ments of the damned and have been a use less invalid; to-day I am a well and hearty man free from almost every touch of pain. 1 don’t think man ever suffered more acute and constant agony than I have since 1884. The rheumatism started then in my right knee, and after weeks of suffering in bed I was at last relieved sufficiently to arise, but it was only to get about on crutches for five fears, the ailment having settled in the joint. Despite constant treatment of the most eminent physicians the rheumatism grew worse, and for the last four years I have been compelled to go about bent half toward the ground. In the winter of 1S90 91, after the rheumatism had settled into its most chronic form. I went to Kansas City upon advice of my brother, and for six weeks I was treated in one of the largest and best known dispensaries of that city, but without the slightest improvement. Before I came homo I secured a strong gal vanic battery, this I used for months with the same result. In August, 1893, I went to St. Louis, and there conferred with the widely known Dr. Mudd of hospital prac tice fame, and Dr. Kale of the city hospital. None of them would take my case with any hope of affording me more than temporary relief, and so I came home, weak, doubled with pain, helpless and despondent. “About this time my attention was called to the account of a remarkable cure by Dr Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People of locomotor ataxia, rheumatism and paral ysis .1 ordered some of the pills as an ex periment. When I began to take them, the rheumatism had developed into a phase of paralysis; my leg from the thigh down was cold all the time and could not be kept warm. In a short time the pills were gone, and so was the cane. I was able to attend to the duties of iny office, to get about as a well and strong man. I was free from pain and I could enjoy a sound and restful night's sleep, something I had not known for ten years. To-day am practically, and, I firmly believe, permanently cured of my terrible and agonizing ailment. No ma gician of the Far East ever wrought the miracle with his wand that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills did for me.” To verify the story beyond all question of doubt Mr. Woodson made the following affidavit: State of MrssouBi,) County of Bates, f BS' I, M. M. Woodson, being duly sworn on my oath state that the following statements are true and correct as I verily believe. M. M. Woodson. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3d day of March, 1894. John 1). Moore, Xotarii Piiblic. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company. Schenectady, N. Y..and are sold only in boxes bearing the firm's trade mark and wrapper, at 50 cents a box ! or six boxes for f3.50. Bear in mind that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are never sold in bulk or by the dozen or hundred, and any dealer who offers substitutes in this form is trying 1 to defraud you and should be avoided. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills may be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Wil liams’ Medicine Co. The best evening ties are those that keep a man at home after dark.—Boston Com mercial. _ Spots Where It is Cool. The Northern lakes. Eastern seaside and Rocky Mountain resorts for health and pleasure each have within themselves a diversity of attractions, a certain article of water and air that can not be denied. A cool ride on the bosom of the big lakes of the North, taking in the famous resorts lo cated on its shores; a trip) down the St. Lawrence by wav of the Thousand Isles and through the New England States; an extended sojourn of the fashiouable water ing places, Cape May, Long Branch, As bury Park, Saratoga, Narragansett Pier, etc.; a visit to the Adirondack regions of New York, and a jaunt through Colorado and Utah, the most marvelous scenic sec tions on the face of the earth, will well re pay one for the outlay of time and expense in an improved mind and b<*dy. Greatly reduced rates are in effect via the IRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE to the localities men tioned above, and excellent through Pull man service offered, via Memphis and St. Louis, where direct connections are made for destinations. Send for copy of resort book, mailed free. H. C. Townsend, Gen eral Passenger and Ticket Agent, St. Louis. In a A*ain man the smallest spark may kindle into the greatest flame because the materials are always ready for it.—Hume. Lookout Mountain. One of the largest signs ever painted is seen by visitors to Lookout mountain. The ascent* up this historic old mountain is made by an incline railway. Open observa tion cars are used, and the trip to Lookout point, 2.200 feet above sea level, is made in six minutes. Just at the foot cf this incline the laboratory of the Chattanooga Medicine Co. is located. The roof of this buildiug shows a sign 175 feet long and forty feet wide that reads “McElree's Wine of Cardui for Women.” Some of the letters are twenty feet long and can be read from the cars while riding all the wav up the moun tain. No visitor comes to "Lookout moun tain without having "Wine of Cardui” firm ly impressed on their memory. The Chat tanooga Medicine Company also make Thedford's Black-Draught, and have an im mense laboratory containing more than one-half acre of floor space. Three years’undisturbed po »session of a setter dog will destroy the veracity of the best man in America.—Texas Siftings. The Ladies. The pleasant effect and perfect safety with which ladies may use the California liquid laxative Syrup of Figs, under all conditions, makes it their favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine article, look for the name i of the California Fig Syrup Co., printed near '■ the bottom of the package. j Muslin the sweet girl graduate doesn’t | ic-ske her less dangerous.—Lowell Courier. Bali’* Catarrh Core 11* a CofttUtutioeal Cur#. Price 75c. 1 PITH AND POINT. —Cunning has effect from the credu lity of others. It requires no extraor dinary talents to lie and deceive.—John son. —The league race is a very queer thing, when we consider that a number of the clubs that are in it are not in it. —Fuck. —Another dress. It takes a good deal of money to keep you in clothes, Mary?” “Am I not your wife?” “You are—my dear wife.”—N. Y. Press. —Acme Reached.—Higgs—"Figgs is prospering, isn't he?” Hatch—“Oh, yes. He's got now to where he can sass his butcher.”—Judge. —Balleteuse—“I will give you a place in my heart M. le Baron.” The Baron —“Thank you, but I'm not fond of a crowd.”—Journal Amusant. —Commercial Traveler (popping the question)—O! Fraulein Anna, may I offer you my heart?—extra quality durable—indestructible !”—Unsere Ge sellscha/t. —“Is Ethel going to the seashore this summer?” "No. What's the use? Nobody would believe she has been iway. SI e doesn't freckle or tan a bit."—Washington Star. —“I always thought fifty was an even number,” said Willie, hopelessly puzzled, “but here's an item in the pa per which says ‘the book has fifty odd pages.’ I can't understand it.” —Landlord—“When a poor fellow without money asks for a night's lodg ing I invariably take him in.” Mc Caustick—“Then you treat him like a regular guest.”—Raymond's Monthly. —"Confound that fellow Bilkem: he's up to some crookedness I know. T wish there was some way for me to find him out.” “Humph! Go around to his office with a bill.”—Buffalo Courier. —A Sure Thing.—“Clara says she has had a proposal of marriage from rich Mr. Bagley.” “Do you believe it is truth?” “Oh, I guess he means busi ness. He has offered her a position as typewriter."—Judge. —Non-Committal.—Woman Suffragist —“Are you, sir, in favor of women vot ing?” Mr. Man—“Madam, you should not ask me such a question and expect an answer when you know I am un armed."—Detroit Free Press. —Mrs. Grumper ("reading description of a June wedding)—“I don't see why they should call the groom's attendant the ‘best man?"” Grumper—"Humph! That's east*. Cause he has sense enough to stay single, of course.”— Buffalo Courier. —Not Solid Gold.—Strawber—“You look as though you had sat up late last night.” Singerly—"I did. And one of the fairest flowers of womanhood promised to be mine.” Strawber—“1 see. And so those rings under your eyes are engagement rings.”—World. —Mi-s. Wick wire-—-“Wasn't it Shak speare who said that ‘the apparel oft proclaims the man.’ or something of the sort?” Mr. Wickwire—“I don't re member, but probably you are right. I suppose they had clothes loud enough to make proclamations in his day the same as now.”—Indianapolis Journal. ELEGANCE OF SPEECH. High-Flown Terms Affected by Ambitions Young Girls. Young girls who are ambitious to ap pear cultured, and to excel in elegance of speech, are often in danger of losing just the quality they would gain by avoiding many of the simple expres sions in every-day use. Most of our familiar forms of speech are proved good by long and constant use, and are so entirely unaffeeted and direct that any evidently intentional avoidance of them seems stilted and in bad taste. The girl who. for instance, scorns to employ so common an expres sion as “go to bed,” and always an nounce herself as discreetly retiring,” has not only sacrificed somewhat of directness and accuracy, but lias also failed to attain the “good form” for which she lias striven. As a matter of truth, one “re tires77 when she leaves the family circle and goes to her own room. She inav spend the entire night there and not “go to bed.” She who “retires” at bed time. as a matter of course, “rises" in the morning. She could not by any chance do anything so utterly common place as “get up.” She “purchases” the articles people ordinarily “buys," and condescends to “reside” in the street or town where her more unpretending neighbors are pleased contentedly to “live.'7 Her morning stroll, no matter what its aim or destination, is a “constitu tional;77 her afternoon nap. a “siesta." She. happy maiden, is never by any chance “ill" or ••sick.” though frequent ly confessedly “indisposed." This young woman of ambitious if somewhat “toploftical” diction man ages by carefull circumlocution to achieve what no doubt seems to her a grace of language, hut she is at her best when she gets a pen in her hand. Sometimes haste or enthusiasm may betray her tongue by a sliort-cut into simple directness of expression—but her pen. never. The rose that she holds in her hand, and that she has hastily spoken of as “smelling sweet,” would be described upon her written page as “shedding gracious perfume.” ‘‘distilling fra grance.” or perhaps it would even form the theme for an elaborate and diffuse rhetorical figure, as unlike the rose in simple unpretending sweetness and beauty as the writer's style is unlike the elegant perfection for which she is striving —Harper's Young People. A Bright Boy. “Johnnie," said a teacher in one of of the uptown public schools, “haveyou seen the skeleton of the mammoth in the museum of natural history?” “Yes. inum." “To what kind of an animal does it belong?” “A dead one."—Texas Siftings. Ah i Kual. Softleigh—Don't you think that Mis Caustique is very sarcastic? Gruffieigh—I believe that is. her friends' polite paraphrasing for her in. pertiueae*—Truth, Take no Substitute for Royal Baking Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia. Wife—“What a singular man you are, to be sure. Whenever we have company I have to do all the talking. You have absolutely nothing to say.” Husband—“You are mis taken, my dear. I have plenty to say, but I never get a chance to say it.”—Washington Star. _ Chollie—“I’ve got an awful cold in my head. What’ll I do, Dawson?” Dawson— “Oh, let it alone. It’ll die of ennui.”—Har per’s Bazar. No One Mourns the I.oss Of the treacherous, long abiding, deceptive symptoms of kidney complaint. But the return of regularity is hailed when, with the aid of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, the wise disciple of common sense who uses it per ceives a return of regularity. Use the Bit ters in malarial, kidney or dyspepsia trouble, disorder of the bowels, ne.'Vousness or de bility. As a rule sarcasm Is a boisterous demand for liver medicine.—Galveston News. A dull man often make3 a cutting re mark.—Ram's Horn. -• Evert difficulty overcome is made a step ping stone.—Ram's Horn. The man who is willing to learn one thing at a time will soon know much.—Ram’s Horn. The great, beauty of adversity as a med icino is that it is not sugar-coated.—Puck It Is not necessary to have a gun in the hand to show that there is murder iu the heart.—Ram’s Horn. Mrs. Mulligan—“I’d rather liev the hull family ill than you.” Mr. Mulligan—“So would I.”—Tit-Bits. “The baby is wonderfully like its mother.” “Yes, I have to mind her just fhe same.”—'Truth -• No man will ever amount to much who labors under tho impression that somebody else is always in his way.—Dallas News. “Is sue really as devoted a wife as wo had heard?” “Morey, yes; she won't cook a morsel for him to eat.”—Inter Ocean. Little Bot—“How long have you had that doll?” Little Miss “This is a girl doll, an’ you oughtn't to ask her age.”— Good News. “Why do you not stop begging and try to get somo work?” “Because I do not wish to givo up a sure thing for an uncertain one.”—Le Figaro. Mrs. Innit—“Grace, are you sure Mr. Huggard loves you for yourself alone!” Grace limit--“I am sure of it, mamma. When he calls he hates awfully to have any one else come into the room.”—Puck. When a man asks you for a candid opin ion of his novel, or his picture or his new ba by,ho generally means a candied opinion,and, if you want to be popular, it won’t be wise for you to forget this little fact.—Somer ville Journal. LIKE A THIEF IN THE NIGHT, Consumption comes. A slight cold, with your system in the scrofulous condition that’s caused by impure blood, is enough to fasten it upon’you. Consumption is Lung Scrofula. You can prevent it, and you can cure it, if you haven’t waited too long, with Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. For Scrofula, Weak Lungs, Bronchitis, Asthma, and all severe, lingering Coughs Pierce guaraiitees a Cure. Mrs. Lincoln. Before taking the “Discovery” X would have four or five bad coughing spells every day and would cough i up mouthfuls of solid !. white froth, and before '] I took one bottle it I stopped it. I could not I walk across the room with the pain in my back and sides; but soon tho pain was all gone, and I could sleep well at night. My general health is much better since taken the “Golden Medical Discovery ” al though I have been obliged to work bard on a farm. e Mrs. JOHN LINCOLN. Glen Annan, Huron Co~, Ont, uk'r"« *»*. *» snasa*. Hill s Hair and Whisker Dye, yja It never cools a man off when the ,trM sprinkler tlirows water on him. trw* W. L. Douglas $3 SHOE.'iS:s»; *5. CORDOVAN FRENCH* ENW£U£dS5?' $4»3.5J)FlNECAlf&to 1 *3.5° POLICE, 3 Sous. $25?*2-W0RKiN3^ J' extra fixeT0® *2.*1.7-? B0YSSCH3'lSK33. . ---'T •LADIES 44 *2*2'2>1.75 ■“ J5’ BesTDCn6(>Ij SEND FOR CATALOGUE * W W*L’DOUGLAS. BROCKTON, AWs* lou can save money bT wearing tb« W. L. Cousins 83.00 Shoe. Because, we are the largest manufacture this gradeof shoes in the world, an i marantwth.e value by stamping the name and pri“ ™ bottom, which protect you against high prinSmJ the middleman's profits. Cur sh,*s ^ (. j*£d work in style, easy flttlmr ar.d wearing onali-l-f We have them sold everywhere atlowcr nr the value given than any other mate. Tate n stltute. If your dealer cannot supply la% ^ THE PROCRESS-aaaafc “SELF-TRAMPHT =$ Cotton Press BSaves man tramping in th« jf box. Requires hut one bandii v pack l'j to 15,or t wo 20 to as bi>§ i f per day. Very stronc. simp,* | 'quick and durable. Alsooor “IDEAL’ HayPress ft notttonnUd.BteeUiaH ‘PROGRESS' ENGINES d B01l£l|' Conplsts Ginning and Grinding Outflts Architects^ Iron*. Foundry and ldachin# Work*. Address PROGRESS MEG. CO., Sole Mfrs.,Box.O #M»r:dia^,M^s, [ELY'S CREAM BALM CURES fcEHuLiaa:; [PRICE 50cents, all druggists SA *n money: n Iso other raluabl* Halil IB premium* t< g<*od cuwrx QH SB 111 BASE BA 1.6. K..thu*la.U, § this Is your opportunity offer HOME AND CIHNTKV MViiAZINl!. Pr1<y 25c. All Newsdealers; or 53 East 10th St.. New York THIS PAPER •vary tisne you write. EDUCATION A I,. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT," Tulane University of Louisian*. Its a«ivantages for practical instruction, both la ample laboratories »nil abundant hospital materlM are unequaled. Free access is given io the gml Charity Hospital with 700 beds and 3"^ paf lent*i* iiuailr. Special instructionVsfWen daily ktTHtst> SIDE or THK sick. The next session begins Oct obmUtb, i 1894. For catalogue and information aderm J Prof. 8- E. CHAILLE. M. D., Dm, 1 5fp. o. Drawer 261. SEW 0RLEAXS.1A WalM Mooney’s School FRANKLIN. TENN. FITS BOYS FOIt t'MYKUSITV OKFiWUW. Pl'PILS KNTER YASBKKBII.T onCLKTIIK1TF. ’Advantages offered: rigid di»cipUBn. tbcrw«> instruction. excellent board, healthful location. For handsome catalogue. address *• »• **“NAME HIS TAPER • fry time you writ*. FKANKLIY COLLEGE, Now Athens, 0. B'»r4 room and books, *a for »nk. Catalogwrm •9-NAMr. THIS PAPER#-fry tire#you writ*. «aM«*TOia&LLII Consumptive* and people fl who have weak lungs or Astn* fl nia, should use rise's Cur*’ for fl Consumption. It has enrw fl thousands. It has not injur- ■ ed one. It is not bad to take. ■ It is the best cough syrup. ~ ’ ■■Majj A. N. K.t F. _1 - WHEN WHITING HI ADVERTISER* I’U*'* state that you .aw the Adverll.e-ent I paper. - |aMD ECONOMIZE YOUR TIME,HUSBAND YOUR STRENGTH fli INCREASE YOUR PLEASURE BY USING ICLAIRETTE 50AB BEST,PUREST a MOST ECONOMICAL SOLD EVERYWHERE V THE HMUBMIK COMM. nDIIIM WHISKYand TOBACCO UriUm ^0 ■ ■ ^0 Nothing severeabout treatment Boo^<Par . 4U«ed. f —--—--- - spondence STRICTLYCONFIDENTIM, Pl;nn ' , If.pipl Instititt, 2p',.1“ «?medjterms,etc., address loc|( Box 1,000, or MemphisiKeeie/ Tobacco Remedy' 5 00 Office, 475 Poplar Street._ME.MPhlr. -^ THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUS THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINE:>|\ SAPOLIO SHOULD be USED IN EVERY KITC. ■