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Perfectly Wen. , fttUCOM. Dabnqoe Oo .U.. Bopl^ilBo, ? K. FlanlfM wrltM: Uj motlw ud . and rum KMnlf'? Nam Ibnla for Jfla. Tb?y a? both perfectly ??u w ^wtlr^of prslatnf Uw loale. II Hu Indeed a Miracle. , rtMT nr.. B?oou.r>r, K. T., Attg. 1. tb ?0 rta* what * voaMol bMMAt Pm. otoig'a WwyTpgie bu ben to xny broth b hti mthwd from tbiuoifttiujj ainoe ad b?i not been abU to do work or may So. , hat Urn* HehaetrtedUl ktodTcJ ,t medicine* and different doctors of ?nn u without beaedt, until ho took the ToqIa it continually lawmd dnoe, Md Xvffl jtdbu0dredelMtidw? who h??o wen hliq 4 hi. alotmeae, that? wi Indeed amir. ? ate him reelorod to health. w W. D. OBAHAM. IENIC MED CO., Chicago, lit. |byDrujrtrirt??tST rw Bottle. 0rtw t . mh", **tv Consumption Surely Cured. To Editob?Pleaee Inform yonr mdm h?r? ? poaitiTe remedy for the abore-named L. Br ita timely use thouaande ofhopeleaa ?have bean permanently eared. I eh*Il be RUd Ld two bottlee of my remedy FREE to any of ? ?n/iers who here conanmptlon if they will ?*# their Express and P. 0. addreae. T.A ??LOCOM.?.a.imPearli^T? OT and Shoe Shop. Re tiring promptly done. Good k, rates reasonable A. S Is, One door east of Lowndes DR. A. S. TODD'S li-bilious or Liver Pills. i USE OVER SIXTY YEARS. HI erer known to equal Ultra. Always sate >no reliable. ' ir <??r Cmtwt. Sal J lir all ighlin's Worm Syrup, 1 P22FECT VEBKIPU5E the Destroying of Worms. TWENTY-FIVB CENTS. LAUGHLnrS [STANT CORDIAL CHILD'S CURE WHEN TEETHIN8. IS U. Mc?aXN?j80N. Proprietor!!, Wheeling, w. Va. BETTOH'S. A POSITIVE CURE FOR PILES. 30c. tive. pe* derfuu ITBTIKOIJl.US. ??fPri?, I NN 4 BROWN _ >.rn>f. Baltimore, Md.~ 11 > Greet German endnebo Care wiU core nerrooe, sick. all |f headache. People who ^,v ,UUCI ?1 POP tn mankind, new * ho badr VVI effects. Cnro certain "HEADACHE tlf O UTZ'S fSE AND CATTLE POWDERS J1' ? Couc. hmt or Lcis r? er. Pow<1.?? are oaed in time. M WrtILw,i,5|We Present Hoo CnoLaaa. P^'ent Gaucs i* Fowia Increase the qnsntltr or miff JJ twenty per cenu and make Uie butter flflj ?hnow *"*** nr!m&&2?! *ni1 ,,UJe"? wbject. ?SfmX? w,u *lrM 8*??r*cno?. nAVlD M. roUTZ. Proprietor. SALTUCOaX KD. sale by A. C Rector & Bro. "A WKMIS " ittra ItBtnnt roller and Is an tnrnlliblo Cart for PUm. Prfce|L Ily DnitnttataormalL Bamplea AiWraf'U IK Ksls," Hoi 2U8, Now York utir. LES Mi I coho1 ?Jcohol to make Woltt's Acsot ?so. Alcohol ii good for leather; M for the akin. Alcohol Uthechia.' ?ttlof Cologne, Florid* Water, and "ell known face wuhe*. there is nothing too ooatly to tin M leather preserratire. 0e Blacking retails at 20c. * ll" price Bella readily. Manj "???0 accustomed to buy ing a dress Jwiuig at 5c. and 10c a bottk ?9 cannot understand that a black "WCheap at 20c. We want to meel r-iL- *pno" " we esB> "d to ao "a Una we ofler a reward of Ml* which will enable us to make L' ^c*e BLAanro at such a print [ '!" om profitably sell it at 10c. a P*> 1893 ^ "*'* ?^*r op<Q nnl'' ' * Randolph, Philadelphia. <JoW?n *X?ectHe. b drinker oi r lr,?'00?>?alu?e4.O?ttaatI? 3-laria, Livor Trou Indigestion, use 'S IRON BITTERS Tkf SUf.HUik. The horrified oppoaers of the movement for women's riding en cavalier may be Interested In learning that had it not have been for an accident of fashion the gentler gex would be striding their horses still, and that the side saddle is not an invention due the advanced modeaty of civilization. It appears that one, Anna, of Bohemia, eldest daugh ter of a German Emperor, and wife, of an English King, Intro duced the custom, not from deli cate repulsion to the old method but simply bccause she was af flicted with some sortof deformi ty that rendered it impossible for her to ride the saddles in com mon use. In those days it was impera tive that a woman should ride; ac cordingly the first side saddle was invented. Royalty had then, us now, snobbish followers, ever on the alert to adopt fashions hon ored by its patronage, and in a few months every woman of position in England possessed a side saddle, and the custom was established. Still we do not think the cus tom of ladies riding like men will become very general in this generation and we should be sorry to think that it would. Women now wear gallowses, ride bicycles, and smoke cigarettes ; but for God's sake let them keep both their tiny slippers on the same side of the horse when they ride. THE HANDSOMEST LADY IN Clarksburg remarked to a friend the other day that the knew Kemp's Balsam (or the Throat and Langs was a super ior remedy, as it stopped her ooufjU in stantly when other oough remedies had no effect whatever. Any druggist will jive yon a sample bottle tree. Large bcttles 50c and (1. A Narrow Ksenpe. The tall. aged, sad-looking man ate a bountiful dinner at the restaurant and then, with a check calling for twenty-five cents, made his way to the cash-j ier's desk. He banged down the check with a battered silver dol lar. and looked sadder than ever. Tlie cashier picked up the dol lar and examined it suspiciously. It had a deep dent on one side, and looked as though it had been plugged. At that moment the customer spoke : "It is very painful for me to part with that dollar. It saved my life once, however, and must do so again. At the siege of Vicksburg I car ried it in my vest pocket, and the dent you see there was made by a bullet, which otherwise would have killed me, I have kept it since as a memorial, and it well nigh breaks my heart to let it go; but I must?I have noth ing else." The cashier was deeply inter ested. "In what year was the siege of Vicksburg?" he asked. ??Sixty-three," said the sad man, promptly. "And this dollar," returned the cashier, is dated 1877 and is a counterfeit." The sad man looked annoyed. "Of*course it is," he replied. "How could I have an 1877 dol lar in '68 if it wasn't a counter feit?" And the cashier was so dumb founded that he passed out a quarter in change and allowed the sad man to escape.?Harper's Magazine. TREES AND FLOWERS. ilF.Jt cutting Ice at Buxton, Me., found a half-blown water lily imbedded in one of the cokes. It was thawed out, put in a sunny window, and soon bloomed out as handsomely as any lily of July. ... i The Doufflos fir in British America is celebrated for Its strength and straight ncss. frequently growing over three hundred feet high. This to being large ly exported to California, where It to used in place of Oregon pine. Some seedsmen of New York hare been selling bulbous plants just ready to bloom at about the price which the bulba.brought last autumn when pur chasers hiS them away In dark cellar) from six to nine weeks in order to ob tain a sudden splendor of blossoms In midwinter. The life of trees is determined rery largely by climate. Actual experiment Wfowi that the English oak for in stance, matures, and consequcnUy dl?. sooner in the United Stut^ than^ England. The lifeof one of these tree* across tho water to estimated to be a Snd years, and in America but threo hundred. ..v.. As experimenter has discovered that nasturtiums will live and fln"^but bloom sparingly. In a sunny where the temperature at nfeMMU sometimes to or below tie trwdnff nolnL It has been found, however, that those neutral tinted a comparatively recent triumph of Hot icultmv. not only need than the ordinary nasturtium, but also are much more sensitive to cold. TO A WEED. T?o?rt * ?"? a"wn Brt?ht btalix or the common win For tniM JOB tmi act phma S5J!gR,,S3?<^S?" "i1* U>? HI tbo wltcb.rj Of moonlight drosm. fvt to the lunn, aowth I know Ton aoaa with Hint Uf hi Th. hspp; OcUla md wood, whams Iro*m#d. lor., pro^ljw. ^ ???*? KM how .. .to, , ' I""*''1* with Ion'. er?. Z thought Tour disks im ?i Aadttow, lcat too thouia lose roar pm When ltm|k tlx Soldi 1 hie. ?oa"m*1 ,rmo* Tbe low-light in my ?y?. ^ Mltht^mctoo t luiton*" I will sot show your charm to then Nor brasthe roor name, Uppincott, la Ladloa- Homo PUHSOED BY A TORNADO. How a Funnel - Shaped Cloud Chaned an Engine, On. of the Two lira l-pos It TrIU tho Storjr-Tluijr Turned a IWn.l .lait In Time to Kacapo Death. DONT believe that (right ever turned a p e r Bon's hair tvhlte off hand.*4 said Henry Wether ell. an engineer of the Jersey Central rall Jp road. "If aueh a thing could happen these locks of mine would not be as block aa you t i ... 5"- them now, for. I will venture to aay that, no man ever went through a more fear-inspiring experience than 1 did once. Tell you the story? Why, certainly. But I am not rery good at a yarn, and I can only give you the bare facta without dcscrip tire ornamentation. "It happened this way: The year was 1878 or 1879, I forget which Anyway It was some time in Jnly. The weather had been pretty hot. and it was just the sort of day for breeding a tornado. "Bnt I am getting al.Aul of my story already, not being rery expert in the way of anecdote. I was working on a one-horse railroad In southern Kansas. The superintendent wired me to fetoh my engine a distance of about seventy miles to a place called Peters town. It was wanted to haul a lot of perishable freight, mostly market produce, which had got shunted off by some accident onto a sido track and was in danger of spoiling. A suit against the company might have followed, and tho business had to be attended to in a hurry. There were only seven locomotives on the road, barring two or throe that were disabled. "Well, not to be too long-winded, I got fuel and water aboard as quickly aa possible and started for I'etcrstown, taking It rather easily, because the track wasn't in condition to stand fast running wclL I was about an hour out from my starting place, and had gone sixteen miles perhaps, when I no ticed some queer-looking clouds on the western horizon. "The day was exceedingly sultrv, and there was a curious sort of (flare over the landscape which made it look sort of feverish. I can't think <?f a bet ter word for describing it There waj something unnatural about the appear ance of everything. My fireman was a boy who had been brought up in that region, and he said that it looked like a tornado coming. lie ought to have been a good judge of the symptoms, because the whole of his family, to gether with all their property and live stock, had been wiped out by such a 'twister,' as they call 'em, when he was hardly old enough to toddle. "By the time we'd gone, maybe eight or ten miles further, a dense bank of clouds had spread around toward the bouthwest It was black as ink, but be neath it was a blank streak of white. I had never seen anything that looked quite liko it before. As 1 looked at it the bank rose higher, and presently I saw something like a sharp point of cloud project itself downward from the black mass. All this time there was no thunder nor lightning, but only a look about tho sky that was dreadful to see, because it was so unnatural-like. It seemed as if something awful was go- j iug to happen. It was the boy who called my attention to the pointed cloud, and he said it was a tornado be ginning. "I pretended not to be afraid, and said that if it was a 'twister' it would not be likely to hit us. But he was as pale as a ghost Says he: " 'Don't you see that it is directly southwest of us?' " 'Why, certainly,* I replied. 'What of that?' " They always travel, northeast* he said, 'and we are right in the track of it!' ?"Then we'll run away from It I guess,' says I, pulling the throttle wide open. But the boy, he said nothing only watched the clouds in the distance. "By this time the pointed cloud had got 7ery much bigger, the lower end of it nearly touching the ground. It grew rapidly larger and larger and seemed to be approaching at a great rate of speed, while the rest of the view to ward the west and southwest became blurred to the eye, so that nothing could be made out clearly. I saw that it was a tornado that was coming, and no mistake, for the strange cloud, which had the shape of a gigantic peg top, was distinctly outlined in its inky blackness against the general blur. I began to feel pretty badly frightened myseli Now and then, when I could take my eye off the cloud, I looked at the boy; but he only sat silent in the cab, staring at the great peg-top wl th starting eyeballs and white lips. Finally I said: *? 'Do you think we are going to es cape it?" ?? 'We are right in its track,* ho said, without looking at me. "You see, we were running in an air line over the prairie, directly north- j east and, pursuing the very path in I which the tornado was coming. Any j other course, with the steam I had on, j would have carried us out of the way. 4*The boy shoveled more coal on. Ho j had already done 19 three or four times j since the strange cloud was sighted, j But it was no use. The engine was doing its best and she wasn't caoable of more than about thirty-eight mil at an boor. "'Irt c*lolr pr on ua,' I said. 'How faat doe* Mich a thing aa that travel?" ' 'About a hundred mil? an hoar,' replied the boy, whit* ua *he?t'3$$$f$?i "If that had been true 1 would not be here to tell the a tor?. 1 hare alnoa learned that eighty mile* an hour la supposed to be the beat a tornado can do. My belief Is that thta one waa go ing at about sixty mile*. Anyway. It wasn't more than tlx or seven miles distant by this time, and- gaining <N| Ml rapidly. If my reckoning wa* comot. It would catch ua In a little more than twenty minutes. The way, I calcula ted It was that the great peg-top was moving at the rate of three mile* to oar "It wa* the moat frightful spectad* to look at that can possible be Im agined. To me it seamed to be a mon strous giant, pursuing ua with an eril Intention to destroy. Now and then lta blackness would be transformed Into a dark green and it was constant ly lighted up by flashes, aa If It were an immense balloon Illuminated from within. It appeared to whirl around with Inconceivable rapidity, and from It came a sound acroas the pralria as of bellowing, with a voice so awful that the rumbling of the loco mo tire waa lost in it. Of the destruction It waa accomplishing I could get no no tion from my point of view. Fortu nately there were few aettlementa In that part of the country, but aa wo passed two or three small hamlet* at full speed 1 could see the people run ning about trying to find some place of safety. "The bo}3 staggered to my side?the rocking of the engine made it difficult to keep one's feet?and clutclicd my arm. I stooped my head and he yelled Into my car tho words: 'Make the bend.' "1 knew what he meant on the In stant. Less than ten miles ahead of us was a bridge over a river, after erasing which the road turned nbrubtly south ward. It waa a freak railway anyhow, and lta slgzags were Intended to pa** throug*h as many snppoaed centers of future population as poaalble. The only long stretch of it in a atralght line was ju*t where we got caught by the tornado. If we could get to the bend ahead of the monster wo might run out of it* track. "Aa yon may well imagine, I had no opportunity to consider the plan calm ly and in detail, but It struck mo like a flash. It was a raco for life sure enough. If that engine never did her forty miles an hour before I think she must have done that and more, too, then. With the great funnel cloud ruahing on behind us and steadily ap proaching, we tore over the rail* at a frantic rute of speed. I wa* fairly crazed by the excitement, so that it al "MAKE THE DEKDt" most overcame my *en*e of fear. I remember distinctly that I pulled the whiatle cord and let the locomotive scream with all her might, though it could hardly be heard In the roaring of the pursuing tornado. "Six miles passed, aa well aa I could estimate, and the monster was only about four mile* behind. Three mile* more and It had lessened the distance by a mile at least. But we were near the river. A minute later and we were running acrosa the bridge. No time then to heed the warning that trains must run slowly over thl* stream. In obedience to the sign poet "Over the bridge, we flew around the curve and dashed away southward. Just In time to see the mighty balloon pass by with a whirl and a roar, as if all the demon* In the infernal region* were let loose. SVe could not make out any thing very distinctly, the *ky being darkened and the air filled with du*t, but we knew that we were safe. A few mluntes later tho clooda rolled away and everything was a* quiet and peaceful as before tho storm. We ran back to tho bridge, but It wasn't there. It waa clean gone, and such remain* of It aa were left were scattered all over the country. The road was so" badly torn up, the track for considerable dis tances being twisted and broken to pieces, that the expense of repairing It bankrupted tho company. Eleven peo ple lost their live* by that tornado, which afforded me an experience which 1 would not repeat for all the money In the world."?Washington Star. ?The masculine mind labors under the delusion that picking up something for dinner is a very light matter. It one thing fail*, why try something else, and do not let such a triflo worry you; think more of a feast .of reason and flow of soul, etc., etc. Do not, however, for one moment suppose that the philosopher will eat cold corned beef and potatoes with cheerful alacrity while hi* "dearest dear" tell* him of a new spot on the sun, or the latest the ory concerning the afterglow. BOREMAN'B OOUUH SYRUP Is the beat remedy yon can find for hoarteneaa, croup, oough and asthma. The 35 oent bottle* are monster* for the money. Why oough, haok, spit, sniffle and make a noiay nuisanoe of yourself whon so good a remedy is at hand? Btop that oongh! It may bring you trouble. Take Boreman's Cough Byrup and do not be fooled into baying some thing else called "just a* good" be cause the dealer want* a fancy profit. Sold by all dealer*. Lambrecht is still selling watches, clocks, and jewelry of all kinds at prices to snit all who appreciate a fine quality of goods. 14. Subscribe for the Telxgram the best local newspaper in Cen tral West Virginia. Only $1.50. TERRA FIRMA. TUm BMUUar. ?> ihr Karthl Sartor* 10 Deformation. A rery Urge part of the educated public believes that the earth is a molten globe, superficially enveloped by a chilled crust, and a magaslne ar ticle in support of such a theory hss re cently attracted much attention. Very many of the natural philosophers con sider It moat probable that the rocka at and near the eurfaoe of the globe would expand In melting. If the earth were thus constituted a time would come when the solid crust would crack from its own weight, or from some moderate internal disturbance, and then block after block of the crust, re gion after region of the world we know and lore so well, would plunge slowly and heavily to meet the rising, molten flood, while whirlwinds of scalding steam would shroud perish ing humanity. A aide from ignoble fear*, there seems scarcely any topic better suited to ex cite a legitimate intellectual interest among men than this most funda mental question concerning that little planet, onr world. Is it n molten globe, with a pellicle of cool dry land, or la it really terra flrma, a solid earth? The public may acccpt the theory of terra tlrma In peace. a* all the argu ments whicb hare not been shown to be Inconclusive or false indicate that the earth presents a resistance to de formation about aa groat as if It were a solid steel ball, and that It actually j Is solid to, or nearly to. the center. ' The permanent deformations to which it has l>een subjected near the surface arc enormous, and their amount Is sel dom appreciated, by astronomer* or physlclnts; but these deformations I have been produced for the most part by the "flow of solids," and there h no | known incompatibility between such distortion* and the theory of a solid i earth. ? Qeorge F. lleckor, in North American Review, THE DOORBELL. Character of Tropic Can He Told by the Way They Rl??. Poor belle are pretty good indicators of character. Probably ydu have not been conscious of it, but every time you pull a doorbell you register what man ner of man you are. Your ring will not tell everything about you, from the color of your eyes to your taste In flowers, but to thoee who know the signs the doorbell is as good as a title psge. Anyone who has had occasion to an swer doorbells knows how much dif ference there is in them- One person's method varies very little from time to time, though the difference between that method and somebody fine, wblle slight, will be Hufflclently well marked. It is seldom that two rings are exactly alike. The housewife recognises each?the Impatient man, who pulls tho bell twice in quick succession, and does not wait long before trying it again; the one of tnore phlegmatic temperament, whose ring la slower and more substantial, the hesitating woman who draws the knob out In a succession of nervous Jerks; the seedy individual with matches to sell, who stretches tho wire carefully t<? its full length, and then allow it to relax with a faint, apolo getic tinkle: on?l the Jolly friend who knows he is welcome, ntul therefore grasps the knob with a hearty swing that I* fairly eloquent with good na ture. and sets the bell shaking its sides with such peals of echoing laughter that It positively cat. not ntop at once, but subsides gradually with a merry, invpressible little titter. A door bell has as many voices as visitors.?Yan kee Blade. An Immense Dining Table. The largost dining table In Now York Ih the onr that illl* the main private dining-room on the upper floor of the Union League club. It U ao large that thirty-five mm have been seated at It without discomfort, and thirty men find plenty of elbow-room around ita edge. The custom la to heap the mid dle of It with flowers and then to trail sprigs of smllax out from the floral mound towards the various seats. This enormous table has a top surface of about two hundred and eight)- square feet and Is nearly twenty feet long by fifteen and a half feet broad. It Is In reality too large. No conversation can be carried on from one side to the other, and when a party la seated around It the men break up Into a number of local groups and communicate with distant frlenda by pantomimic signs and approving nods when they fail to hear what Is shouted to them.?St. Louis (Hobe-Democrat. s llltting All Around. On one occasion In a western town the editor of the country paper was a character witness In a suit by a tricky official against a ward politician for libel, and the editor didn't like either one of them. "Did you ever say In your paper that the plaintiff waa a thief T "No, air." "Haven't you said the defendant waa a person entirely untruthful?" "Not entirely." "Ah, you believe then that ha la truthful at times?" "I know of one time when he told the' absolute truth." "Will you state when that waaV "Certainly, It wns when he called the plaintiff a liar and a scoundrel." Why lie Wan Neglected. Fanny?Why, Tommy, you have got your Jacket on wrong side put. Waan't your mother at home.when'you dressed yourself? Tommy?Naw; she Is attending a con vention for the relief of neglected chil dren.?'Texas Sifting*. Kb NMd of Alarm. Mistress?It appears to me that yoa are entertaining a good many male call ers In the kitchen. New (Hrl?Yes'm; but you needn't be seared, mum. I ain't going to marry any of 'em.?N. Y. Weekly. A MILLION PRIEND8. A friend in need is a friend indeed, and not leaa than one millipn people have found just sash a friend in Dr. King's New Dioovery for oonsnmption, oough, ooldn. If yoa have never nsed this great cough medicine, one trial will con vince yon that it has wonderful curative power* in oil disease* or throat, chest and lungs. Each bottle is guaranteed to do all that is claimed or money will lie refunded. Trial bottles free at Clay tou & Dent's drug store. Large bottle, 50c and 91.00. ;?TSS: S i&jssr&rsrB .? storcaa tbo pui.no by anotloe gtreo free ol oh?r? la the #i m\i\iic $mcriam UNIQUE PHOTOGRAPHY. Photography i< u Mondorful art. Incrod* *o?e Mjt may seem, Ul? now possible by th? aidot the camera to show tin? movements of a bird in its night, a horso at it* awirtcst n- ? ?? paco, or n bullet us it leavoa tbo gun. Very much moro that is most nmrvol ous lms been accompli h* J ft* >n photography. Tbo ] publishers or the renowned jpyUM and popular fnmlly v.. ukiy. They will sand twelve Columbia l'hotos valueifi.(X)and Tho Weakly Free Press ono yi-ar for ?l.lo. It Is necossary to send a cabinet or card photograph with order Our readers bad better send for a Miopia ropy of Tbo Kree Press and learn tbe par tlculars of this remarkable offer wbkU thousands are taking advantage of. _ A new and Complete Treatment. consisting of Suppositories. Ointment la Capsules and Two Boxee of CuliMBUnMUfiCiiniof nMrtilt IS, Vfcfc ?w?rs and many other diasssns; it is always a *reat benefit to the general health. The first dis covery of a medical ears rendering en operation with the knife nnmc??sry hereafter. Thle Remedr hu never h?i known to faiL fl per box. S for fS; sent by malL by snflet from {all terrible disease when a written jraaraatee is pos itively given with 8 boxes, to refund the moneyif not cured. Hend sump for free sample. Guar autse issued by oar AgeaU. Most of the above Dlscucfl are oaased by a iggggaaawaBg JAPANK8C LIVCR l?ui^. Kor vale pv f'unnlnghain Bros., druggists Third street, Clarksburg, W. Va. CURE dacha sad relieve sll tbetronL. dent to a bilious state of the system, e tttulases, Nausea, Urowslnsss, Distress after eating. Vila ia tbe ?de. Itc/Whlle their nasi lemsrt sble success has been shown In cuxiag SICK flick Ssadaehaaad relieve all tbo troubles locf* i. such as ' Headache. yet Carter's Little liver Pins are equally valuable la Constipation, curing tad pcw? venting this annexing complaint, whlletbey else correct all disorders of thestomachjMJamlate the Itver aad segalate the howala. Zveaftftheyoolf HEAD AA*n?r?i>iiuii<>iB<i?tpi<uin.ti>(i ?a/for from U.U dlatxwulng complslnu butf orta aslstytt^r,?o<lin?aoM?etmlh?ewiltlies? who one. tij Item will and Urn urn. puis nlo. ?fctolBM>aUT vunttutUMT ?1U not k, Mk Ufif to do without Uuaa. BntsfUrsUslckha^ ACHE Is the base of so msny lives thst here ts wbsra weMe^rar great boost. Oar pills ours U while Carter's Little Liver PCle are very small and fcy druggists everywhere or seat by malL CARTER DgeoiOlNK CO., New York. SHALL PILL ^all DOSE. SMALL PR1CF ffoir'i Si'mmtt. W. Va ,> October a, 1892./ T? Mothen.-?Our baby is nearly 14 months old. and wo bail bought autl given it 7 bottles of "Caatora," without much change for the better, anil it nover seemed heart; until we gave it a bottle of Susanna, which cured it entirely. Jons T. Williams, lira. Mart M. Wiluamh. Mrs. J. n. noRSN YDKB, 153 Paciflo Ave., Santa Crui, Cal.. write*: " When a girl at school, In Heading, Ohio, I had a saver* attack ot brain lever. On ray recovery, I found myself perfectly bald, and, for a long time, I feared I should be permanently so. Friends urged me to use Ayer's Hair Vigor, and, on doing so, mj lialr Began to Grow, and t now hare as fine a head of hair as one could wish for, being changed, how aver, from blonde to dark brown." " After a lit of slekneaa, my lialr came out In combfulls. I used two bottlsa ot Ayer's Hair Vigor and now my hair is over a yard long and very full and lisavy. I have recom mended this preparation to others with like good effect."?Mrs. Sidney Carr, 1*00 Keglnast., Uarrlsburg, Pa. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for sevsrml years and always obtained satis, factory results. I know It fl the best preparation for the balr that Is made." ?0. T. Arnett, Mammoth Spring, Ark. Ayer's Hair Vigor Prepared by Dr. J.C. Aysr ft Co., Lowell, ICass.