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(9*frtr& JkLeon ( ^ _ „, ;-—~ [| 1 ■"■■ I Vtii HxoAV. Aiufirr fl, w® EDITORS. DEMOCRATIC TICKET for. governor HON. ROBERT LOWRY. FOR LEI IT. GOV^ HON- U o. SHANDS FOR TREASURER HON W L. HEMINGWAY FOR ATTORNEY GEN. T- MARSHALL MILLER. fOK AUDITOR HON. W- W- STONE L>OR8UPT.OF PUBLIC IN STRUCTION J. R. PRESTON FOR SECTY. OF STATE. G- M-G0VAN County ticket. STATE SENATE. B. A. DEAN Fun hie legislature. T. I«. WALDBIP* J. II. WELSH. n.» UIICRIFF I*. K. M4TTHKW*, FOU TREASURER. J. *1. HALL FOR ASSESOR. W. ji, uwwown FORSURVEYOR J. F. VISKAXXOY. i‘OK CORONER ANT* RANGER ^ w. .VORKOH ' BEAT-TIUKET. FOI! SUPERVISOR. T. w. DOOLEI. M AJISTRATEB. J AS. G. TRIGG. GEORGE FOUST. FOR CONSTABLE J. B. ROACH > The New Mississinpian takes it manfully. No squir ming but a direct X)emocratic acquiescence iA the the will of the majority. -- lM» Generally conceded—That the ticket, altogether, or, as the French say, the en serable, is the best ever otTered to the Voters of Mississippi. There £ere C18 delegates Actually in attendance on the state convention and a more intelligent body of men never Assembled in the htill of the house of representatives, A West Point poet entlm Ses overlthe victory of the local military company and signs iimself ‘a brother to one of fbe rtlms£’ Are we to infer from this that he is a son of a goo?’ The surgeon of the West i*oint Rides was very careful of their health. He not only Jyrbode them to driuk any Vicksburg intoxicants but &ven Vicksburg water. They earned two barrels of water from their own artesian well with them. Reports that the cotton eroji fs being ent short by drought are now finding their way into the columns of the metropoli tan papers. Such reports de ceive nobody who has any thing to do with the market price of the staple. Such per sons are too well supplied with sources of information. The prohibitionists, that is io say some of them, are be coming .exasperatingly ag gressive. The Swdru and Shield may be potent weap ons of offense and defense bnt possibly moral suasion might he productive of be.ter results. ft the prohibitionists expect io accomplish any good they Should keep the fanatics in foa background. ABOCT MOW A good deal I* belli* said j at thia time about crow ana; diet In nearly every State' exchange that has come to usj this week there has been some reference to the unsavory dish generally in a jocular vein but neatly always with a touch of, boasting on the part of the viftbilous And of di-appoint ment on the part of thej vanquished. It occurs to tiSj that it would be better If this; were not so. Better if the hateful word, in its political application, were banished from our vocabulary’. But it is not of this we intended to speak. We observe with pain and disappointment that some of tile papers that most readi ly accept their‘share of crow' and place the convention’s ticket in a prominent place in their columns continue their ungen-roas^and unjust asper .sions Upon the ticket and up on those who were mainly in strumental in securing its nomination. The W est Point New Era, for example, gulps down its share of crow with apparent relish and imroedi ately after begins t° vomit ‘inasheens;’ ‘Dear Bob’ and Lynn Hemingway as if they could not be made to set well on ifs stomache. The I tica Comet masticates its choice « • . rn .« 1*_1 _Z I 1. nnnllllar Li 11 Ui me iwwi w»v.» j.v, -- gusto and rolls the delicate morsel in its mouth until its palate is tickled to ecstacv tmt after all its pretense of enjoyment it throws up worse than a seasick passenger on an ocean vessel. What we have sal 1 about these two pa pers applies with equal force to several others but not to all the newspapers which oppos ed Gov. 'Lowry’s nomination. Some of them, notably the Yazoo Herald and the Corinth Herald yielded very graceful ly. Some that have failed to reach us since the completion of the convention’s work, we are perfectly sure will make no sorry faces over their feast. 1 It was un« ot the moot gratify - • ing features of the convention that among all the candidates before that body who were de feated in their aspirations there was not one ‘kicker,’ | the result being received in every instance with a cheer fulness and good humor strangely at variance with the irreconcilable temper of some of the anti-Lowry jonrnalists. VVe are sorry some of these accepted crow. Their open ! opposition to the ticket would be decidedly preferable to the lighting under cover. Electric lights are being in troduced on plantations in north Louisiana for the rrr pose oi destroying me wwu worm and other insects. The experiment has proven very latisfactory and it is predict ed that in the near future ev ery large planter in the Mis sissippi Valley will be the possessor of a dynamo mr. j chine for the manufacture ol his own electric light, not Merely for the destruction o1 insects bnt to enable the farm , to bo carrwd on at night, 'it is a well known fact that the electric light has been in use on the large sugar planta tions in the Sandwich Islands for 1 year or more. In warm climates people will general t ]y prefer to work at night, when provided with electric lights to laboring in the day time in the oppressive heat ol a torrid summer sun. __- - The latest venture in Mis sissipni journalism is the Grenada Gazette, published by Walter H. Ladd. It shows , the Lscprcss of new type and good press work and is very handsomely gotten up, though ! its general appearance is sad ly marred by an office adver tisement.of ‘fill space’ dimen sions. Journalistic abilitv is apparent in its columns and we wish the Gazette stfccess. ■0 MORI CflULMRla Gen. Chalmers declines to offer himself as a sacrifice up on the anti Lowry altar but he knows another man that he would gladly offer tip, nolens volens, and he calls upon his presumed allies to' assist him in the ceremony. Oapt* Put Darden, late candi date forgubernAtorial honors before the Democratic State Convention, is the subject the ex Democratic Congressman Las hit upon os the victim and, strange to say, he goes directly into the victim’s household to marshal his ex ecutioners. It is assumed that Capf. Darden will not be a party to the Chalmers scheme and it is therefore purposed to act independently of Jills wishes in the matter and, if possible, Keep him in ignorance of the sacrificial proceedings until 'after the slaughter. Cnpt Darden I shooed make haste to repudi ate Chalmers and his brilliant scheme or try the same scheme on..Chalmers"that^he threatens Put Darden with. A HEW POET. Go ring the bells and tire the guns, Ami fling the starry banner out! Bhout victory ,ti!,j*yoor lisntnp ones (Jive bi C i their < radio shot t. «** n • i it* M l UIIU imi u «■« tolerable verse,* to borrow an expression of Lord Byron. There is metal in the poet who can'tlms apotheosize a victori ous military company in even so short a strain. The re mainderof the st '.nra is mar red by a careless verse and a descent from the esbalteJ pitch to which his pegasus had mounted. Tin's : ‘But still let the West Point Rifles strain bo heard.’ There is a redundancy of feet in this line which we are prone to attribute to the interpola tion of the intelligent compos itor but it is also common place and that is the fault, of the Poet. But to revert trf the original proposition, this little morceau which we Had in the last isroc of the West Point New Kra has meiit. The an thor gives evidence of an ac quaintance, at least, with the divine afflatus and may be capable of a sustained effort which would do the ftace of his residence more lie nor than the victory of the gallant Ri fles. The Democratic nominee for Attorney General, Thomas Mar. shall Miller, was given u grand ovation at Vicksburg last week. The local military companies, wt'h artillery and small arms, met him at the depot as he alighted from the tfe’in and re csived him amid the music of brajs bands and the roar of ar tillery and musketry. In ad dressing his friends the new attorney general is reported as saying, among other things ‘that it was with pardonable pride he alluded to the attitude of the Warren county delega tion In the Convention. It had repelled rrom the begioniug to the end.aM offers of trading and swapping of suppoft with dele gations from otbet couuties, voting for the candidates sim Iply and purely on their merits. He was glad its attitude was so unimpeachable, for be would far rather have preferred to come home ont of the smoke of defeat with clean hands, than' to have returned victorious with the defilements of donblfi dealing clinging to his garment.’ A littTfe more of that sort of talk srd of that sort of deter mination wnold soon put a cheek on the reprehensible system of bargain and sale of votes in the Slate conventions. El Paso, TeX., Aug *1.—A quarantine fotce was put on duty yesterdav against all ports of hfexico, which are in fected with yellow fever. Nu merous complaints of the de lay are already heard. The guard inspects all trains from Mexico ahd California. LU0C18' “ I Barbi-rr% from the position of copying ilerk in the pension office in Philadelphia: Mr. J. Bnrbler* ^Nb ex-confederate, I who p hed a book some a ibe war which was i filled w base of loyal lead era. has Wen forced to resign his position as chief clerk nn der Gen. l>avis, the philadel j pbia Pension Agent.” In its ! admiration for the ‘loyal leaders’ fhe Post Is led into error. Maj. Barbiere was not forced to resign. Radical hate and ’intolerance of^ex confederates assailed hiin.and through him all who partici pated on the confederate side in the wgr, but he stood the fire, as many other ex confed erates have done, without ~r» r oer who appointed him. The ‘loyal leaders’ who were criti cised by Maj. Barbiere were no more loyal than he and his abuse of them w»9 not more severe than that which the loyal leaders of the soutli re ceived front northern writers who have bi eu appointed to offices of more honor and profit. The editor of the Post mnv not have uevo lonsri enough among ex-confeder ates to realize it but the ap plication of the term ‘loyal"I to the northern soldiery ex clusively rt very distasteful to southern people. There were never any inore ‘loyal leaders’ than those who led th" confederate cause and Jo Barbiere was oneef them. * —...•• • - The Mississippi state cou vention took a step in the riglu d\fe'tion in ignoring territorial considerations in the make up of Its ticket. ‘Is In* honest: is he capable; is he pre eminently lit for the placet’ seems to. IutVe been the test y—1ft— atll cnlMl<lM«i Tims is a departure from the recognized inode of procedure that is deserving oi general imitation. The practice so. much in. vogne of filling u< the ticket with m<*n selected from different sections of “ state wilhont regard to spe cial qualifications for the place in ‘ view is a custom more honored in the breach than the observance. On the ticket jnst nominated in Mis sissippi are the names of two men. Stone and Miller, who reside in the same section of the state in what is known as the river counties. As Stone was nominated for auditor, it looked as if Millers chances for attornSy general were hopeless. The Mississippi convention was not governed I'J OUVtl Uttlivn — and the question of locality seeftis to have been Ignored. If all state conventions were inspired by motives os lofty as those that seemed to have pervaded the Jlississippi con ventlon the purification of Eolitics would be^ clod# at and.—Memphis Avalanche. The revision of the Old Tes tament lias revived the hopes of some peoplfe who exoect to have things smoothed for themtbimgUlife. It was this TnCereatSty; fast that induced Shuttle ta attend church the other day. ‘Htfw did you like ! the sermoni’ inquired a friend as he passed out of the vesti; | bule. ‘Sever was so disgusted ! in mjr life. Why the man , took ‘Tboa shalt not steal’ for ! his text ‘ ‘It s the same old i text. I thought the new ver ] sion would read, ‘Thou shalt i not compromise for twenty - ) five cents cn the doll.”—Ex. --- »i — "" > There Is a good deal of tAlk 1 about negro superstitions, but i the facts it Jhat the negroes are no more superstitions than the whites, after all allowan ces are mgde. , There are nnmbers offairly well educa ted people in this county to day who Audder when they hear a dag howling otf the quavering cry bf d screech ! owi. Superstition io #<>|ne ! form or other is a part of a natural and inevitable equip ment of the human mind,— Atlanta, (Gap Constitution. on. cHAiaru. Habdi*. a**, a*. IMS Sditor Vlcksbnrg !'o*t i k»f« received letter* trom uaiiv pert* of the Stale asking nv edriee m to what those who ire opposed .to the Democratic' a rgdni rations iu this State lit mill do, and some asking that I should be k candidate fcr Governor. . • I have wgited anti.1. after the Democratic nomination*, and respcetfnlly riminfBf that jron 1 will publish tbirf, my reply. I There are many reason* why I cannot afford to be a candidate for Governor, and many way I war.Id not lie the proper can didate of the opposition if I desired to make the race. As at present advised, 1 ahull vote for Capt l*nt Jbuden, whether Le ia a candidate or not. I agree with him folly on State politics, and sympathise with him, in that efforts bare been made to declare him no Demo erat, because he has dared to differ from and eipose the er rors of the leaders of the party in Mississippi. The Democrat, ic platform nt »l*ay,«lppt -con tinue* to announce the “deipbic oracle” on the anbject of Rail read Nfipervieton, and yet eve ry leading railroad attorney in the State ia a leading Demo crat : and.Indeed, to be a suc ceseful railroad^attorney se.ems to be the surest road to Dem oeratie promotion. For having the independence to assail Ibis evil, I’at Darden is declared no Democrat. It the opposition to the Dem ocratic machine rnle in Missis sippi will vote for Pat Darden, and his granger brethren will assist in giving him a fair eonot ho can. in my judgment, lie elected Governor by a large _Th « T turn nprti t if* nominees, wi'li the exception ot the Governor, present fair rec ords for ttje support of the peo ple. and tny advice therefore, would.he that the opposition should not nominate a full tick et. hut work and vote for Pat Darden for Governor. \\ hen the Democracy nomi nated an unworthy man for Dia tiict Attorney two years ago iii the Fifth District, the people, by a large ma jority elected -Hr.. Brantley over him, although Mr. Brantley declared lie was RO candidate and did not wish to be voted for. Capt. Pot Darden may; ami poss bl.v will, declare the same thin*, but the people have tlio right to vote for anj' man for any office with out regard to his wishes iu the ni.ytler 1 hope, therefore, all the op ^aailinn la 4i«v. Lowry will 'earnestly canvass and vote for Put Darden far Governor, and, if elected, we will have » Gov ernor who will faithfully obey the law, and whose certificate of election will never be dis honored either in Democratic or Republican Congress. Jas. R Chalmers. Nerer 0 ve Up. If you are suffering with low and depressed spirits, loss of appetite, general debility, dis ordered blood, weak coustitn tion. headache, or any disease of a bilious nature, by all means proeare a bottle of Klectric Bitters. Yon will be snrprjsed to see the rapid improvement that w.ill follow ; you will be in spired with new iite; strength and activity will return; pain and misery will tease, and henceforth yon will rejoice in me praise ui ciccuil Sold at fifty cents a bottle by Dr. J. T. Chandler: All the latest styles in gent* stjff bata iu Blac*, Brown And pearl at J. 1 Pt*»T> Thousands Say So. , Mr. T.. W. A tkins, Girard Kan, writes ’: “I never besitatt to recommend yoor Kiectrii Bitters ta jnj customers, tbcj give entire satisCsction and art rapid seners.” Kloetric Bitten are the purest And best m*di cina known aud will positively cure Kidney and Liver coin plaints. Purify the blood and regulate the bowelh. So fami ly can afford tt> be without them. They will save ban dxeds of dollars in doctor’! WUs eyery year. 8old at fifty cents a bottle by l'r.J.T. Chsn dler. Two Bang cross Seasons. Spring and fall ar« times when ao m#ey people get sick The changes in the weather art severe on feeble persons, and even those naturally Strong ar apt, as they say, “to, feel miser able.” Then they are jnst ir condition to be struck dowt j with sonic kind of terer. A ; bottle or two oi Parker’s Tonii ; urill invigorate thel digestion 1 pd't the fivet, kidneys and blood n perfect order, and prevent more serious attack* Why suffer, and perhaps die, when ft simple a medicine 'i’ill save yot i Good for both sexes and at lag*** 9 A flutters Cm* #f Aerofdl* | I h«>« btn *flliet*4 with Scrofula from my infancy, and in ronaeqaone* Hava always j been a frail and delieate crea ture. I might trsthfalty aay that I wm raided ehiedj on mercury and poiaab. 1 haae ' remedies for the time being Would dry np the fearfal nlcera, with which I infrared, but they would retWn with greater vio lence. 1 wss tbe'merest shadow aa to form and person. Jfy di gestion &aa all deranged, ard < my existence was moat wretch ! ed. Everything that could be don's lor trie waa done, but no permanent benefit waa derived. At laat a greatjtnmor came oh my neck below the left car. It increased in site until my head wss forced to the right shoul der and in thia ungainly and uncomfortable position, I waa compelled to carry my bead. The doctors decided that it waa there loe’tny a2 long as life continued, and for many years it did remain. In March, 18A4, at the suggestion of Colonel Jotiii Taylor I was hidneed to try Swift’s Specific. My sys tem resnouded to the medicine promptly, and I began lo ini prove from almost the first bot tle. That fearful tumor baa all disappeared, and every appear ance of the disease lias left my person except a email hard lamp on the right aide of iny neck, find that is disappearing rapidly. From a 'fragile little g!rl*I have developed iuto as healthy and robust young lady . • . ■ « • a 1_a__X U luerp i» in MciKiMMHiivwu. j Swift’s Specific isT the only , remedy that has ever given me I any permanent relief, and I am in better health and wci&h more than I ever did in my life before. Myxoid friends scarce ly recognize me since this won. ' derful change has been wrought ' in my appearance. My grati- j i tmle is unbounded for wtiat i this medicine bus done for me. ;Miss Tommie Kmrrv. Lafirange. On., May 14,1885. ywift’a Specific is entitely vegetable. Treatise on Blood and 8Win IJiseases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co-. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Oa. -THE #NIvTrTi1Y OF MISSISSIFPI AT OXFORD. -:0: Xext Nrssion flfpen* Sept. 1885. TUITION FREE TO ALL RUT LA IF STUDENTS. -sO:- - Open to both sexes aiikc. * Terms very moderate, Looa | tion healthy, in a community , famed for iU churches schools, morality and culture, <"# miles South east ot Memphis, Teun.. fsndouthft I. C. Railroad. 12 learned Instructors. Depart meats of Law. Art Literature aud Science, all in successful operation* . For Catalogue ami luioruia ftion. Apply to the Chancellor, | (Jen. A. P. Stewart. H..M. Secretary B :ara Trustee A Wonderful Discovery. Consumptirea and all, who gaffer from any affection of the l Throat and Lungs, can find a ; certain cure in Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption. Thousands of permanent S.urea verify the troth of this state ment. No medicine can show such a record of. wonderful cares* Thousands of one$ hope less sufferers now gratefully proclaim they owe their lives to this New Discovery. It will cast voo nothing to give it a trial. Free Trial Bottles at Dr. J. T. CbaiAHer’a Ding Store. Large sid>, A Walking kaleton. Mr. E. 8pringer, of Meehan icsbai g, ft, vnttt “I was af flicted with lung fever and ab seess on tongs, aqd reduced to • walking Skeletea- Got s free trial bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consnmpi ion which did me so much good that I boagbt a dollar bottle After using tires bottle*. found myself onee mors a man, com pletely restored to health, with hearty appetite, aud a gain to Seals of 4$ lbs.” Call at J. T. Chandler’s Drug Store and get a free trial botile of this certain core, for all Long Diseases. J^a'gs bottle #1.00* Medical Department of the To. Go to W. I. Brown’s for Bo/ ; ed Soda* Cool, nice and re edbiag—3 cents s glass AMREN rtm.jw INSTITUTE. OXFORD, MISS The Kisreiaes of tMM School ■ ill be resumed Hept. 2ed, 1885. with s full corps of com latent Teachers. Enlarged sc comidatiou* for boarders. Small beys admitted to Primary and In ter mediate N*»M»tl- , For Catalogue gietug terms F t‘ A- List t«M«, . lotyia l«u Principal rTo *mieat» ffc Nealy':—An sttachai-nt at thsynit of A. D. A rent against vour estate for f 10,58, returnable before the Justice court of District No. 5 of LsFayette count*. Mlas., baa beeu eiecwled sort •» now pen-j ding lu Said court and nniesa yon appear before the aaiq ronrt on let Saturday iu Au« gust 1«8T» at Denmark in Dis trict No. n, Ijtfayette county and plead to sbch action, judge, ment will be entered and the estate-allAcbe’tl will bp sold This 2»th day of Jape I8£5. _B. A CoOPBB, J. P. Ti rayed or~Fttfen . , Near Toby Tubjr Jron Brid«e»*luiH»SU.omaft«a bitten Gray liorae . 14 or 14. hands biali. 12 or IS .rear* ojjd, s«n^ place on neck. I oth hind hoofi} white; old halter burn ,,on right hind leg. Any informs, tion leading to his recovery will be liberally rewarded. W. C. Pkttis Oxford, .lane 27, , Itch. and Seratahes of every Mad cured In *1 Minute* by Wooutwos anctahv Loti in. Use no ottier. This ever tail*. tinId T.pJ, T. Chandler Oxford, SiU*. V ly _ *p Trv._Jr.. Jackson a ttoot iand Heth fordir.l. lor I>y*pep*la or tndlgwtioa. ix icib nut; ft TTv ami liver. Sold by J. T. Chandler, O* ford. >lls*. nil_ , . * UK. |x>WRT-S kKMEDY Inline* new lift In tlie rtdib/alerf ;.lt aMlncil* atf* «rii*» tiw blow. itr*u snppitw tba* dwthieiuy In the Nereom. Svatem, which is the cause ol dei'.lltymmi yAesir ml nraVhrmUm. It acts on the /.ICSr, A'i'/(!<»». Hltjdder. and Rrpn.iiuclirt Or yin*, causing health)' »**errt*hn«. there-, iiv stopping waste and building anew, hi n the face resumes the Ilmt cf hra'th. the Kir U* I.nttrt. and tkt Hrninf it, linr-r. ‘I'liiv remedy ca* be obtained • >1 iJriiygiel- ami I*ealcrs gencraltv Price $1.00 per package; three pack ages. .two duller*, sufficient to euro ordinary cases. Ask your druggist for It. do nix. take anv oilier. Jljou cannot obtain It send direct, w ith pi lee. and li e **4 be sent securely scaled, by mail to your address. • - * A I Ires* I t.'pH and l.lnatory, I»r. Ixiwry's Remedies, is JU-fUtb street. :ig30-ly] New York t ity. Advice tree, send stamp foe reply , A KlSSBYMoonLIGIIT prom time Immemorial, nopne wilq pretend t.i deiyc the •/*•* -l&jBxAJaaMkw->w» knir been held In high rep it lehyhov^ si *-«—whether active or passive 1*. Iu-# been decided that a I.KGAI. Kl>4 In.pita* At J’lON on both parties ; but wiles a lady simply consent* lo b«r kissed williiuit action of her lips. i« constitutes only a PASSIVE kiss—a sweet deprived of its neetae. Snuglv enswnnaed within a moss embowered and vine-rlad verandah, and almost hid from view amid ssieh scented hone)suckles, was seated 4 fair Atlanta nvmph, whose beautiful ■ lark eyes, alabaster complealon and voluplous contour. seeiWcil lo IIAZhr the voting gent bvdier su.e. %ho ever and ant n white circumnavigating her slender waist, gave her.g. BISS an* l hen a RE- BL'bS to the arckzement ol a prdeslrnin who happened to be pas sing that beautitul moonlight nights At that moment the lover was heard, to ask. -My dear darling Sarah Jane you are becoming more beautiful ever*, ilav; youreves sparkle with more bril liancy. Your bnf* pale cheek* bay* been painted by the roseate hue* of nature, and you seem to l ive entlreljl regained your health. l\lll. you tell I me the cause ol the change ?” » “1 list cairn ply used that wondarfnlli eimrUTe oiooa remeuy known u ». THE ATLANTA CONSTITU TION. ... :. i. - In a long artiein mating to tbs B B. B..ot thalrttv. asya: * The Wood. Balm Company started <*r.e vnar ago with gltiilo*. but to-dag the 'ouaines* cannot be bought to? *50.000! - • . ’ Tlie demand and that snlUlac.tr>*. given hi said to be without a parallel,, as It* action is pronounced wonderful, W« are glad to announce that ant druggists have already secured a aupr plv. and-we hope our renders will sup ply themselves at once. •—e c_* ft lssatd to be the «•% »peady and perms neat bipod potaon remedy oh fered. giving Entire satisfaction in al* oaoea, More ene battle haa been used. Eor Blood Dta eases. Ktdne Troubles ScreAttt, Catarrh. Old tTleers. I nad Skin Diseases, try one bottle B. B. ! B. *1 • .if aitllcted with any lorm of blood ' polaort. tterofuSL BheumatUm. Caty ! arrh. Old l leers and Sores, Kidney , 1 Pom plaints. Female Dlaeaaea. eU., th* I B. B. B. will cure vou al once. Bend to j lo h1 Balia Co- Atlanta, Ua., for a copy i cf their book FBEE._^ Oil from Mature't Well. The skin oa the bend is kspt soft nail flexible bj p secretion. I from Uio oil glands. When these nrs clogged the bnir dries nnd falls off Parker’s Hnij^ Bnlsnm nmews their net ion, rt* stores the origin*! color to the hnir nnd makes it nqft nnd glot~ gy. It also eradicates dandruff. Not greasy, not ndye, delicious ly perfumed., pelightfol form lady’s toilet tsble. Tbs best of dressings. Preferable to nil auniinr nrticleH been us* et 1 s : superior e»*anllne*s and pciitr. j Taae care of roar U"f-. A grva. number ot the diseases to which tcan kind are liable arise from a disordered, condition of thisorgan. Keep U in a sound and bealUy condition and yon. can deiy dlaeaae. PwcaiT Aan Btrrm are espeetallv adapted tpr l hi* purpose, being composed of drug* which acton, j he J-ivcr,,giving It tone and «rreng» I o withstand malaria