VETERANS’ CORNER.
GOOD SHORT STORIES FOR THE
OLD HEROES.
The Major’* Story—Sian* of the Bar
rack*— Military Service Ilalloon* -
Lincoln’* Hand- Jeff Ilavl* Would Not
He Placated.
to w AAL. yes,” said the
111 1 Major, unfold
n/' ing h,s knlfe ’
AsJj&Jfpj /■*( And shaving a
slice from his
“I came from a
'■('lll fej fam'ly of purty
'W The longest, 1
|L reckon, ’round
hyar.
"My gran'father lived to a mighty old
age—
He died at two hundred an' four —”
Hut the Major stopped short in his yarn
at this stage.
For the Judge entered in at the door.
"Now, Major,” the Judge very gravely
remarked,
”1 knew your grandfather well;
He was just eighty-three when his
spirit embarked
For that bourne where the good
spirits dwell.
For a moment the Major had nothing to
say,
Hut finally rose to his feet:
"He died at two hundred and four
Hroadway”—
Then the Judge moseyed up and stood
treat.
.Military Service Balloon*.
Balloons for warfare are a feature of
up to date modern improvements. The
big European armies have a well-or
ganized balloon, corps, and it is inter
esting to know that I’ncle Sam is doing
something in the same line. That this
government is interested in the air
tights of science is shown by the experi
ments. not only at the Weather Bu
reau, but in the Signal Service. Out
West, at a fort near Denver, the gov
ernment has a balloon in the course of
construction which is to be used as an
aid in war. The shape is that of an
ordinary halloon, but a drag-rope will
connect it with the ground. It will
carry several officers, whose work will
be to watch the enemy’s movements,
study the disposition and strength of
his forces, to make photographs of the
field and get all information possible.
An instrument called the telephone
telegraph, will be taken in this balloon,
and by means of the wire, a conversa
tion can be carried on between the oe-
cupuuts of the basket and the general
on the field below. Telegraphing can
also be done by the same instrument,
which lias recently been perfected by
an officer of this branch of the govern
ment service. Bicycles are used by the
Signal Service men and on a coil of the
wheel the wire is run and paid out as
the machine progresses. Thus, when
the balloou has started up, the officer
on the wheel rushes to the tent of the
General and the telephone wire is car
ried aloug and let out till the tent is
reached. This work makes direct com
munication between the otflcers on the
Held and the man in the air, who from
his station has a complete view of the
enemy and can thus give important in
formation to his superiors. The Gen
eral commanding thus gives his orders
from absolute knowledge of the enemy’s
strength, and the disposition of his
men. This will be of incalculable value
to the mode of lighting in the future.
The balloon, of course, is not designed
to flght, hut to be a watch-dog and keep
a sharp eye on the enemy. In the event
of a shot from tlie foe, the balloon would
be so high up as to make its effect un
certain. But even if it were struck
there is attached to the top a parachute,
which would enable the officers to de
scend safely into their own camp. This
parachute is part of the silken web »*f
the balloon- woven into the top so that
It is always spread ami ready for action.
Should a shot pierce the bag the silk
would collapse, but the upper frame
which is already a parachute, would
simply let the ear slowly down to the
earth. The French Government is said
to have a fine balloon built for use tn
war. It Is kept in a largo garden, and
no one is allowed to see it, nor has any
drawing been made or photograph
taken. It is steered as readily as a ship.
It is expected that it will he on exhibi
tion in the coining World's Fair in
Paris. The French balloon is said to b«*
a cigar-shaped envelope, within which
is the gas and a small bag, which is to
be pumped full of air. An electric
motor drives in the rear a screw pro
peller. It is said that the ship will lie
able to make a speed of at least twenty
five miles an hour.
Sliiiik «*f tin* I ta rrui'kn.
The British soldier uses a vernacular
of his own, which must appear strange
to outsiders. For instance, he calls his
lied cot tho doss, and when he retires to
it he goes hed-filling. His food has cur
ious names. Bread Is rooty, and pud
ding with raisins is known as spotted
dog. When he is only supplied with
bread and tea for breakfast, he says he
has slingers. The gray-back is his
shirt, presumably from its color, jack
boots are John shoes, and a helmet is a
war hat. Kit inspection once a month
he calls rag fair. The Hergeant major
is the bloke, the quartermaster sc.
geant the quarter bloke, a shoeing
smith is Bhoey, the tailor stitchy, or
snip, and a Bergeant is No. 1. The
medical staff corps are poultice wallahs
or linseed lancers, and whatever drugs
receives from the dock or hospitals
'Ms black strap. If he thinks a
exaggerating—chancing his
•t—he whistles, and that
**r up. The reveille he
terms the rouse. If he is put into the
guard room he goes to the clink, and if
he gets cells he is said to have got his
hair clipped. His sword is his cheese
knife, and sword exercise is wind slic
ing. Riding drill is bumping drill,
and physical drill is monkey motions.
Would Not Be Placated.
General John Bankhead Magruder
will be remembered by the old officers
of the army as a great bon vivant, a
dashing soldier and a polished society
man. "Prince John,” as he was called,
while not afraid of field service, en
joying a nice, sort station immensely,
! particularly in Washington, and such
l was his charming manner, brilliant
j record and personal influence that he
was more than a match for a callow
’ Secretary of War. He once told me of
a characteristic interview he had with
Jefferson Davis while Davis was Secre
i tary of War. Said ‘‘Prince John:”
"I had been in Washington nearly all
! winter, and was anxious to be assigned
to duty here, when down came an order
i for me to report at some outlandish,
! one-company post in the West.
”1 went to the War Department and
sent in my card to the Secretary, and
was immediately ushered into his
room. Mr. Davis was sitting bolt up
right at liis desk looking cool and im
passive, not to say unapproachable.
“’Good morning. Mr. Secretary!’
said I.
” 'Good morning. Captain Magruder!’
said he.
“1 thought that in-fore requesting a
change in my orders I would try and
thaw him out a b't, and so, after a
few general remarks, began thus:
“ ‘When I was in Paris, Mr. Secre
tary, last year 1 was thrown a groat
deal with the officers of the French
army, saw several reviews and was
greatly impressed with the kindly feel
ing and admiration they expressed to
ward the United States, and when I was
presented at court the Emperor —’
“ ’Captain Magruder,’ said he, 'I de
spise the French.’ Then lie began to
look over some papers.
“J saw it was no good trying to work
French reminiscences, so I began
again:
’’ When I was on the frontier of Can
ada some years ago I was very hand
somely entertained by the officers of
the English garrison. The regiment
plate, priceless in value and associa
tion. was brought, and the dinner was
I one of the most recherche affairs l ever
i sat down to. The menu was —’
“ ‘Captain Magruder, 1 loathe the
English,’ said he.
"By this time 1 was somewhat rat
-1 tied, and began to fear it was no use;
; that infernal order would stick. Now,
; Davis and 1 had been at West Point
together and in the Mexican war, so 1
thought 1 would make one more effort
in the way of polite conversation.
“ ‘When we .were cadets at West
Point,’ Mr. Secretary—’
” 'Von have received your orders
from this department, have you not.
Captain Magruder?’
“ ‘Yes, Mr. Secretary: but, by the
way, do you remember the day in Mex
ico, just before Buena Vista, when my
battery was passing your regiment, you
called out to me —’
“ ’Good morning. Captain Magruder.
■ Upon your arrival at your post please
report the fact at once to this depart
ment.’
“Then l got up. We exchanged
bows, and I went out of that room route
step. Davis never did like me, and no
amount of savoir faire on my part
could ever make him unbend for a
moment. He was like that from cadet
to the end of his Presidency of the Con
; federacy."
l.liicoln'* Hand.
With the winter Bayard Taylor came
on from his home in Kennett and took
an apartment in East Twelfth street,
and once a week Mrs. Taylor and he re
ceived all their friends there, with a
simple and charming hospitality. There
was another house which was much re
sorted to —the house of James Lorrimer
Graham, afterward Consul-General at
Florence, where lie died. I had made
bis acquaintance at Venice three years
before, and I came in for my share of
that love for literary men which all
their perversities could not extinguish
in him. It was a veritable passion,
which I used to think he could not have
felt if he had been a literary man him
self. There were delightful dinners at
his house, where tlie wit of the Stod
dards shone, and Taylor beamed with
good-fellowship and overflowed with
invention; and Huntington, long Paris
correspondent of the Tribune, humor
ously tried to talk himself into the reso
lution of spending the rest of his life in
his own country. There was one even
ing when C. P. Crunch, always of a most
pensive presence and aspect, sang the
most, killingly comic songs; and there
was another evening when, after we all
went into the library, something tragi
cal happened. Edwin Booth was one of
our number, a gentle, rather silent per
son in company, or with at least little
social initiative, who, as his fate would,
went up to the cast of a nuge baud
that lay upon one of the shelves.
“Whose hand is this, Horry?" he asked
our host, as he took it up and turned
it over in both of his bunds. Graham
feigned not to hear, and Booth asked
again, "Whose hand is this?” Then
there was nothing for Graham but to
say, "It's Lincoln’s hand," and the man
for whom it meant such unspeakuble
things put it softly down without a
word.
During the war the chaplain of one
*::diana regiments very often preached
to the boys from the text, "If God be
with us, who can be against us?" This
wus so often repeated that one of the
boys—of course he was an irishman
shouted the reply: "If yea raley must
know, sor, it’s the devil and Jiff Davis.”
The purest treasure mortal afford
Is spotless reputation; that away,
Men are but gilded loam or painted clay,
—Shakespeare.
Scarlet Few Settled in (he Back
AN OPERATION WAS UNSUC
CESSFULLY PERFORMED.
Tb* Patient flat Finally Bettered, After
Eighteen Year*.
From the Evening News, Newark, N. J.
About eighteen years ago. when Mrs.
Annie Dale, of 88 Bruce Street,was a bright,
merry school girl, she was taken ill with
scarlet fever. She recovered, but she was
a very different girl from a physical stand
point. She was cured of the scarlet fever
but it left her with an affection of the baok-
As she grew older the pain seemed to in
crease. Her sufferings were intensified by
her household duties, but she never com
plained, and with one hand pressed tightly
to her back she did her work about her
cozy home.
“I was fourteen years old when 1 was at
tacked with scarlet fever, and have now’
suffered with my back for eighteen years.
•’Night and day I suffered. It really
seemed as if I must succumb to the pain,
and then to make matters worse, my head
ached so badly that 1 could scarcely see, at
times. Finally I went to Bt. Michael’s
Hospital, at the corner of High Street and
Central Avenue, and there the surgeons
IKirfonned a difficult operation on my back
but it did no good; it was like everything
else. I was told at the hospital to return
for another operation, but the first had left
me so weak 1 could not go back. Then again
I had become discouraged and my three
children needed my attention and care at
home. The pain became harder to stand
and my back was almost broken, it seemed.
1 thought, I would never know what it
would be like to be well again when I was
told to try I)r. Williams' Pink Pills. With
many doubts, a faint heart and an aching
back 1 went to get the pills, and littlo
dreaming that they would prove the elixir
of a new life to me, 1 began to take them.
Only a short time elapsed before I began to
improve. Could it be possible that Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills were doing what every
thing else had failed to accomplish! I asked
myself the question many times and before
long I was enabled by my improved condi
tion to answer the query with an emphatic
‘Yes.’ Now the pain of almost twenty years
is cured by these Pink Pills in a few
mouths. I have no pain of any kind now,
but 1 have got some of Dr Williams' Pink
Pills for Pale People, and while I do not
think it will ever be necessary to use them
again, 1 shall certainly never be without
them in the house.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a con
densed form, all the elements necessary to
give new life and richness to the blood and
restore shattered nerves. 'I hey are also a
specific for troubles peculiar to females,
such as suppressions, irregularities and all
forms of weakness. They build up the
blood, and restore the glow of health to pale
and sallow checks. In men they effect a
radical cure in all cases arising from mental
worry, overwork or excessoT of whatever
nature. Pink Pills are sold in boxes (never
in loose bulk) at 50 cents a box. or six boxes
for *'-.50. and may be hail of all druggists,
or direct by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medi
cine Company. Schenectady, N. V.
PRINTERS’ INK.
The good ad makes itself felt, as
well as seen.
Meet the reader half way in your ad
—tnd make the first advance.
"Out of sight” is an expression that
will not appropriately describe good
ad vertlsing.
A \ (cation is sometimes good for
an ad. hue a substitute should always
be provided.
Advertising is like a bellows; it
makes the fire of trade burn with
greater vigor.
It Is just as important to put your ad
in the right medium as to ship your
goods by the right railroads.
>{early every reader possesses a good
imagination; so do not attempt to cx
pb*ju every tiling in your ad.
j»?oid slang in your ads; 3omo per
rons are offended by it, and those who
are not never regret its absence.
Kate l''ielU iu Denver.
Denver, September 10.—My journey
from Chicago was over the Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy railroad, one of
the best managed systems in the
country, I should say, judging by the
civility of the employes, the comfort
1 experienced, the excellence of its
roadbed, and the punctuality of
arrival. I actually reached Denver
ahead of time. The Burlington Route
is also the best to St. I'aul, Minne
apolis, Omaha and Kansas City.
Some people are willing to give the devil
any room iu the house, if ho will only pay
good rent.
State of Ohio, City* of Toledo, Lucas
County—a*.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he
is the senior partner of the firm of F.
.7. Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of Toledo. County and State afore
said, and that said firm will pay the
sum of One Hundred Dollars for each
and every case of Catarrh that cannot
be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In
my presence this 6th day of December,
A. D. 18S6. A. W. GLEASON,
(Seal.) Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internal
ly and acts directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of t lie system. Send
for testimonials, fret*.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O.
Sold by druggists; 75c.
Hall's Family Pills, :!se.
The trouble is just this: There are too
tmtuy church members, ami not enough
Christians.
A Map of the United States.
The wall map issued by the Burlington
route is three feet wide by four feet long:
is printed in seven colors; is mounted on
rollers; shows every stute, county, impor
tant town ami railroad iu the Union and
forms a very desirable and useful adjunct
to any household or business establishment.
Purchasod in large quantities, the maps
cost the Burliugtou Route more than fifteen
cents each, but on receipt of that amount
in stamps the undersigned will be pleased
to send you oue. Write immediately as
the supply is limited. J. Fkancis. G. P. &
T. A., Burlington Route, Oinuha, Nob.
The man is traveling in the wrong direc
tion who thinks money can make him
happy.
Among The Oxarit*.
J'he Laud of Big. lied Apples, is au at
tractive and interesting l>ook. handsomely
illustrated with views of South Missouri
scenery, including the fatuous Oldeu fruit
farm of 2,000 acres in Howell county. It
pertains to fruit raising in that great fruit
Pelt of America, the southern slope of the
OzHi'ks, and will prove of great value, not
only to fruit growers, but to every farmer
aud bomeseeker looking for a farm and a
home. Mailed free. Address, J. E. Look
wood, Kansas City, Mo.
Find a man who has never ridden a
hobby horse and you will tiud one who has
never been a boy.
If we do not learn from little trials, the
lesson muy have to be taught in great
ones.
The dev 1 is generally the gainer when
the piuauher gels uu easy place.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL.
LESSON III—OCT. 20-“ RUTH’S
CHOICE”—RUTH 1 : 14-22.
Golden Text: “Thy People Shall B«
My People and Tliy God My God"
Ruth 1 : 10 —"Leaving the Laud ol
Sorrows.”
INTRODUCTORY :
This section in
cludes the whole
book of Ruth. The
book of Ruth is an
appendix to the
book of Judges. It
throws a charming
«. and true light over
BtmLtMtM the troublous time
the history of
which we have been
reviewing. The book lifts up the cur
tain which veils the privacy of domes*
tic life, disclosing to us the most beau
tiful views of piety, integrity, self-sac
rificing affection, chastity, gentleness,
faith, hope and charity. We must re
member that these virtues grew up in
the homes w’hile the Israelites were at
war. Time, 1222-1182 B. C. Place, near
Jerusalem. Ruth, after the death of
her father, returned from Moab, the
“land of sorrow,” whither they had
gone during the seven years’ famine.
Explanatory note —At this time there
lived a family at Bethlehem consisting
of Elimelech, his wife, Naomi, and two
sons, whose names indicate feeble
health. Finding it difficult to obtaiu a
living on the home farm on account of
the famine, and perhaps afraid of the
roving bands of the invaders, the fami
ly determined to emigrate to some safer
and more fruitful region, even though
it would compel them to bring up their
children amid heathen surroundings.
They went across the Jordan, probably
at the fords of Jericho, turned to the
south along the eastern shores of the
Dead Sea, and settled among the rich
fields of the Moabites. Here great
changes came to the family. In the
course of ten years the sons married
Moabitish women, and both sons and
Elimelech, their father, died in the land
of Moab, leaving the three women wid
ows. * * * It is plain that Naomi’s
personal character and her teachings,
shining out through the night of sor
row, had commended to her family and
neighbors the religion of the true God.
14 —And they lifted up their voice,
and wept again : and Orpah kissed her
mother-in-law; but Ruth clave unto
her.
15 — And she said, Behold, thy sister
in-law is gone back unto her people,
and unto her gods : return thou after
thy sister-in-law.
16 — And Ruth said, Entreat me not to
leave thee, or to return from following
after thee : for whither thou goest, I
will go; and where thou lodges, I will
lodge : thy people shall be my people,
and thy God my God.
17 — Where thou diest, will I die, and
there will I be buried; the Lord do so to
me, and more also, if aught (anything)
blit death part thee and me.
18 — When she saw that Bhe was
STAIRWAY OF A BETHLEHEM
HOUSE.
steadfastly minded to go with her then
she left spewing unto her.
19 — So they went until they came to
Bethlehem. And It came to pass, when
they were come to (arrived at) Bethle
hem, that all the city was moved about
them, and they said, Is this Naomi?
tTheir coming created a great stir
among the people of Bethlehem.)
20 — And she said unto them. Call tue
not Naomi, call me Mara : for the Al
mighty hath dealt very bitterly with
me. (It was considered a sin to go
among idolators as she had done in
Moab.)
21— went out full (rich), and the
Lord hath brought me home again
empty (poor) : why then call me Naomi,
seeing the Lord hath testified against
me, and the Almighty hath afllicted me?
22 So Naomi returned, and Ruth
the Moabitess, her daughter-in-law,
with her, which returned out of the
country of Moab : and they came to
Bethlehem in the beginning of barley
harvest (usually in May).
f
INSPIRED STATEMENTS.
(From Rani's Horn.)
The trying of your faith worketh
patience.
A double-minded man is unstable in
all his ways.
Every good gift and every perfect
gift Is from above.
Making an idol of Christian work i;
no bettor than making an idol ot
Chemosh.
If auy mun among you seem to bo re
ligious, and brldleth not bis tonga*
this man's religion i* vain.
Highest of dl in Lcc-venmg Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report
Rp>&! »
ABSOLUTELY PURE
A Great Undertaking.
••This trolley road i< » great undertak
ing." remarked the garrnlous citizen.
■•Yes,” was the reply; "I have ample
reason to know that.”
’•Why*”
“I’m in the undertaking business my
self.”
At a Methodist Convention.
Sir Yellow Leg—Well, madam, pray what
are you cackling so loudly about
Mm;. Yellow Leg— (just off the nest - )
Hump! Got a mighty right to cacklo! I'm
a lay delegate.
That Joyful Feeltug
With the exhilarating sense of renewed
health and strength and internal clean
liness which follows the use of Syrup
of Figs is unknown to the few who
have not progressed beyond the old time
medicines and the cheap substitutes
sometimes offered but never accepted by
the well informed.
Before bo had won renown as a poet,
Joaquin Miller had failed as miner, lawyer,
and editor. _____
Rost Yourself
About the Burlington's new short line to
Montana, the wonderful country it runs
through, the time it saves to Helena, Butte,
Spokane, Seattle and Tacoma. Our ad
vertising matter gives full information.
Write for it. J, Francis, G. P. &T. A.,
Omaha, Neb.
Shouting in enureh during a revival is
one thing and paying the preacher in chips
and whetstoues is another.
Burlingtou Route Home seeker* Kxcur«lou.
Oct. 22—South, Southwest and West-
Just about half rates. Call ou nearest
ticket agent and get full information or
write to J. Francis, G. P. A., Burlingtou
Route, Omaha, Neb.
Lord Koseberrv's house in Berkeley
Square is one ot the handsomest in Lou
don. He is constantly making additions
to it.
Full Inturmallou respecting the best
fruit and farm land in Riverside Co., Cal.
Address Hemet Land Co., Hemet, Cal.
Ex-Senator Edmunds has made Philadel
phia his home.
l’iso's Cure cured me of a Throat and
Lung trouble of three year’s standing.—
E. Cady, Huntington, lnd., Nov. 12, '94.
Wisdom can live on what fools trample
under foot.
FITS -AllKltsstoppoU freeby Pr.Kline’*Great
Nerve Kestorer. No Fits after the tirvi ‘Jay's us**.
Murve)ouseuros. Treat Im*an«t Sfctrialuottl**fre* t *
toeuil to Dr. |£iiue,9ol AivUSit.,Pbilu.trtt»
The Australian aborigines are the low
est known species of humanity.
It tlie Baby is cur.mg teeth.
Pe sure and u*e thatolJ and well-tried remedy, Mks.
W ncsiow's Soothing Stri p for Children Teething
tjueen Victoria has gone to Scotland to
remain until November.
"Sanson's Magic Corn Salvo."
Warranted to cure or money refunded. A»k your
druggist fur It. Price to cento.
Your greatest joy but balances your
greatest sorrow.
Coe’a Gough Balaam
It tl.e oldest and best. It will break up a Cold quicker
tbau anything else. It Is always tellable. Try it.
You don’t have to be happy unless you
want to be.
»»A €’i»p of l*i:rlt*’ 'l’ea at night
moves the bowels in the morning.”
A wrong desire to overcome is a tempta
tion resisted.
«luat how It Uwe* It la not the quest ton.
It J.- enough to know that H'lidercorn.s t.tk,-s out the
tot us. and n very pleasiug relief it is. lie. at druggists
Governor Culberson of Texas, is only 32
years old. Ho is the youngest man that
ever held the office in that state.
**l have tried Parker’s Ginger Tonic
and believe in lt,"siys a mother and so wi 1 you
say when familiar w ith its revitalizing properties.
Lieutenant Colonel Craigie Halkett, tut
Euglidi soldier, has not drunk a drop of
water for twelve years.
KNOCK A sore spot, green, Bfc 111 E” '
THE black » or bh,e * 18 a Ep jfl fejp i
SPOTS Use ST. JACOBS OIL the soreness disappear. ' *
OUT. IT IS MACICAL.
Timely Warning.
The great success of the chocolate preparations of
the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established
iCw in 1780) has led to the placing on the market
many misleading and unscrupulous imitations
of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter
mb Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu*
if 1 UMk facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and
m (« Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are
M i if Mi used in their manufactures.
Mi ITj Consumers should ask for, and be sure that
they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goods.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
DORCHESTER, MASS.
; borrowing from health.
If you have borrowed from
| health to satisfy the demands
L_f u i l of business, if your blood is
\ • r>/ supply of fat from your food
x Tlgn Jf J, " should have, you must
\ // pay back from somewhere,
/ X' and the somewhere will be
/__H from the fat stored up in
The sign of this borrowing is thinness ; the result, nerve*
waste. You need fat to keep the blood in health unless you
want to live with no reserve force—live from hand to mouth.
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil is more than a medicine.
It is a food. The Hypophosphites make it a nerve food, too.
It comes as near perfection as good things ever come in this
world.
D* sure you get Kmultion when you uu ut it uuj not a ■ heap substitute.
Scott 6l Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and sl.
HU Go in pit tat ion.
"Arabella has a great many
freckles.” said that young woman s
mother.
“Yes,” replied the man who was fig
uring up his summer resort expenses,
“she got ’em all at the seashore.”
“I suppose so. 1 didn't know you
took so much interest in Arabella’s
complexion.”
"Interest? Why. I studied that girl's
face for 20 minutes yesterday. She has
just 61 freckles, and they cost me ex
actly $53.29 apiece.”
Probably.
‘•Oli. what a lovely baby! Boy or girl?
“Girl.”
“Isn’t she lovely ’ You dear little ootsy
tootsy! How old it oose!”
“Four months old last Friday.”
“How cunning! Is she the youngest?”
A bud man roost nates the things that
would do him most good.
Since ISUI l have been a
(/rent sufferer from catarrh. aAUVI
i tried Fly's Cream Balm,
tt nd to all appearances ain
cured. Terrible headaches
from which l had lono *u/- ffernm
tereil are <jonr.- IV. J. Hitch
cad. I,ate Major I 'nitrd fjpf
States Volunteers and A. A.
( ieneral , Buffalo, A. I. BEgr ■■■
CATARRH
ELY’S CREAM BALM opens and cleanses th*
Na-'al Passages, Allays Fain and Inflammation, Heals
’be Sores, protects ilie Membrane from Colds, He
stores the sensesof Titote and Smell. The iialtu is
quickly absorbed and gives relief at once.
A particle Is applied into each nostril and is agree
able. Price SO cent sat Druggists or by mail.
ELT BROTHERS. 56 Warren St., New York.
1 Pains |
in vour Back, vor.r Mus- £
□C cles, your Joints, your J
jrS Head, and all diseases of >
•la Impure Blood, are caused j
go by sick kidneys,
jo? Sick kidneys can be *
WV cured, strengthened, re* j
KJ vitalized by (J
K DWobb’s ;
M v parasus t
k Kidney Pills ;
J 0: They relieve the pains, !
gQ purify the blood, cure all C
fijfi diseases of which sick kid- J
JOS neys are the cause. At all j|
gU druggists, for 50c. per box, £
fijfi or mailed postpaid on re- J
sos ceipt of price. J
!rg Write for pamphlet. i
fig HOBH’S MEDICINE CO., j
srm CHICAGO. SAN FRANCISCO. !
KKHBKKKKKSKJ
“JONES JIE PAYS TIIE l’llKlOl'. ."
'wmT Farm and Wagoii
I’niteU StatessumL.nl All Sizes and All Kinds.
Not made- by a trust or i ontrolled by a combination.
For Free llook and Price List, address
JUNES OP 111 NO II AM TON,
Jtlniilminlou, N. Y„ l .s. A,
W.X.U.—D.M. l*2l * Xo. I‘J