I np-j, , 5 . u ., Is eedd by poor, tired mothers, over " work and burdened with care, debill- tated Mid ran down because of poor, thin. n4 impoverUhad Wood. Help it needed by the nervous sufferer, the- mea sad women torture' with rheumatism, nee raigla, dypepsia,,scTOfula,atarrh. Help Comes Quickly When Hood's 8arsaperilla begins to e , rich, purify end vitalize the blood, and ends It in a healing, nourishing, inrigt ' orating stream to the nerves, muscles and , . organs 01 toe ooay; , niwo i iuhiwuh build ud the weak and broken down sysi 7. tern, and caret all blood diseases, becaus in n " I Oaroaparilla Is the Out True Blood Purifier. All druggist. V - rreparedoDly l C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mas nta( are tho only pills to take nOOU 5 fills with Hooe'i SursapariUai PROFESSIONAL CARDS. .lACOli A.. LOJVGr, .' ' ' ' ' Attorney-at-L-aw, GRAHAM, -.- Mrantlnoa In h flfalt.ai and VedATal GOUrtg. OMoe over White, Moore Co.'s store, Main street, 'rnoneao. u. - . ijrTOWEr AT LAW r.RAHAM. - - - N. C. NHS GBAV BVXDM. W. f. BY1IWM, JS, Attorneys and otnolor t Xittw ' GaKENBBORO. H. C. - 'Practice regularly stance county. lo the eonrls of Al . Aug. X M It. .OR. J. 1?. STOCK ARD, -Dentist, GRAHAM, N: C. Office at residence, opposite Itepllst Vnured. U.-it work at reasonable prices. In ofllee Mondays ami Satur v days. Uvery. Sale Feed y STABLES. I t J VV. C. MOORE, PliOP'jt, ' TaamsMeat all trains. Good single or dou-' 1 HE CHARLOTTE . Kobth Carolina's r'OKEMOST NEWSPAPER. and r- Weekly. .Independent and fearless: bigger . - ' VI ; i OBSERVER! . f i : ... un na.A ! w;n ').. ' be an invaluable visitor to thchoiqe, .V" the office, tha club or work room. r ' -lite Daily Observer.' , . V Ul the, news of the world. Com- - riet daiiv renorts irom ina state . w and National Capitols. 18 year , The Weekly Observer. ; A perfect famUy journal. All the - : newt of the week. Remember the. . v eeniy uDeerrey. - Only One Dollar a Year. t - 4laU1 IVvw sneawiilA AnrkiaM I i1r1rsnn I Jim OBSEUYEB CHARLOTTE, N. C ''ARE YOU tTO DATE If yon are pot the Niwt and Obeitek i. Snbfcribe for it at . once and it will keep you abreast v of the time. ; -.. - 5 , Fall AiioeiatedpiYwdiftpatcb . 'Mi the ner foreign, do ' -tjeitic, eational, atate and loerf all the time. ' . . " . "Da'ly Vtw and Obaerver $7 -yc r, $3X0 for 6 root. V.eclly North Carolinian $f ', i r year, 5(kr lor (J mot. . ; 3 r r c r crve'! pub. cx). A RISE IN TROUSERS. let ellenas, Tw. Bad Boya and , yereeemted Wuktrv in. Fliegende Blatter. Pis One Hope, - "Curse oo the boy!" cried the heavy rillain. "He staiir between me and a aplendid iaheritanoe." "Too bad I Too badl" returned the as sistant Tillain. "I suppose yon wouldn't want to" "Oh, it wouldn't do at oil, " said the heavy villain, with the usual villain- ous exclamations. - "I'd be suspected at once if any(hiug abonld happen to him. " "Then but one'bope of getting rid of him remains," asserted the assistant villain. " lou must get hisjfather to take a house on the lineof a trolley road." Chicago Post. Oaa mk the Conjurer. At a.oountrv fete' a ooniurer was ter- fbrming the-old trick of producing eggs from a pocket handkerchief, when he remarked to a boy In trout, I say, my boy, your mother can't get eggs with out hens, can iberv "Of course she can,'.' was the reply. "Why, how's that?" asked the con jurer. "She keeps ducks, " replied the boy amid roart of applause. Tit-Bits. . : Perauwe laveetiaeata "Yon promiseq; to lend me-S, but yon have only given me t4," said Jim Neverpay to his fdend, Charlie Uotsome. "Yes, I know. I am keeping the oth er dollar to buy postage- stamps to put on the dunning letters I'll have to write yon before yon pay me back the other 1." New York Sunday World. A Drafi, a Bigot. They were "Speaking at the club of drafts at sight ,i- -., "It is absolutely icrae, a draft at aight." f,. .. ,.-:v "Bah I That depends. Do the way I do. ' "When anybody presents a draft at light to me, I always shut my eyes. Qauloia ' ' -i- - ' Wk Bhe Beellaed. ' : "Won't yon take this seat?" said the gentleman in the oar, rising and lifting jus nas. ' ; f v.f - - 'No, thank yon," said the girl with the skates over her arm. "I've been skating, and I'm tired of sitting down. " Tit-Bits. t Ik OiepewU. . ' Pat An phat will yes do with yer BKey at yer dithr t Mike Oi'li lave it to me children. Pat Bnt tupposin yes niver hov innyT Mike Thin ut'll go to me grandchil dren. New York Journal. . Roaster's randy in one-half, one, two and three pound pack ages 40c per poand. Brittle and Buttercups 10c vper box." - trang,-Apples, rtuts, c Examine oar stock of per-' fumes and extracts before rout buy. " ' T" ' We -re T'Kirs fir a Merry -v-I! , . ) t rf v.. . f '" jTg"; l " GOOD ROADS LESSON; GOVERNMENT SAMPLE OF HIGHWAY , . " CONSTRUCTION. , . .'. 1 Three Binds of Boads Bhown at Oeneva, N. T. Met of the Work Done by Ma ' elilnes--'VarleUea of Boek Used Frepar. Ins Foundation, Boiling and Sprinkling. The road inquiry division of, the de partment of agriculture, was organized under the direction of General ' Boy Stone and has continued the education al work on tho subject of roods by means of bulletins issued from time to time and by the construction of samplo roads in different parts of the United States. The first of these sample : roads was oompi&ied at New Brunswick, N. J., last Juna The second wVts started at Geneva, N. Y.', and is by far the lon gest yet built. Others are' planned,, in course of construction or completed at Evansville, hid ; Lynchburg, Va.; II ion,' N. Y. ; Kingston, B. I.; Orouo, Me. : Warren, Pa., and Colnwbns, O. The sample road at Geneva was plaiiw ned last spring.. The ongiual estimate of its cost was 89,000, of which the vil lage contributed $8,000, the township $3,000 and residents of Castle street, ill which the road Is laid, $8,000. ' The government furnished free of ebargo tliB roadbuilding plant, consisting of a rock crusher of a capacity of 150, tons -of broken rock in a ten hour day, one set of screens, one road grader, two dis tributing carts and . one 20 ton road roller. The government also famished the special agent in charge, while the triage and town furnished material and labor. ' ' ' ! The sample road as constructed ' is about )4 miles in length; For the first half mile the roadway is 18 feet wide and 8 inches deep, the 8 inches consist ing of a fonndation'of 5 inches of broken field stone with a surfacing of 3 inches of broken trap rock. For the next three quarters of a mile the "roadway is 14 feet wide and 8 inches deep, while the final, quarter of a mile is 8 feet wide and Or inches deep. The flrgt portion is a sample of a macadamized village street, the second is a first class oouu. try road for general use in ' thickly in habited sections, while the third is a very cheap but ' serviceable road for more thinly inhabited regions. None of these is suitable for the heavy trucking of cities.' On each side of these sample sections is an . ordinary dirt road thor oughly rolled, intended for light driv ing in dry weather. - - ' i The road is machine built through out, comparatively little human labor being- used. The most important ma chine is the roller, which may be used either as a road roller or as a perambu lating pickax. When it is to be put to the latter use, its two rear wheels, oach 6 feet in diameter and 18 inches wide, are fitted with 50 case hardoned steel teeth 5 inches in length. The wheels mako a revolution every ten seconds, and in a ten hour day do au amount of work equivalent to that performed 'by 600 men with picks. After the old road bad been torn up by this machine tho loosened material was scraped to one side by the grader. When a sufficient depth had been reached, tho new sur face was thoroughly rolled in order to form the base of the new roud. On this base was then laid the five inch founda tion course of common field rock. The foundation rock is of all grades of hard-, ness and friability, and includes shales, standstones, limestones, qnartzites and granites. ' It was broken to A size about 1 incbes'square. The foundation was sprinkled- and thoroughly rolled, the machine passing over it a score of times. The surfacing course of broken' trap Lrook was then laid, thoroughly sprin kled and rolled. When the road engineers first visited Genera, they said that a large propor tion of the ordinary rocks of tbs field were suitable for the surface layer of the road. Closer examination of the rook piles showed that it would require an expert sorter to select the material which could be used. Accordingly it was decided as a natter of economy to use trap rock from the Hudson high lands for all the surfacing. Trap rock is said to be superior to most other rocks for surfacing becanse it is not friable or dnst forming. The trap rock was crushed to the proper size at the quar ries and hauled to Geneva in canal -boats.' The size is somewhat smaller than that used for the foundation. Above the surfacing was added a very thin layer of trap rock dost, to act as a cushion, protecting the underlying stone from the action of wheeled vehi cles and the feet of animals from the cutting action of the stone. The value of this, dust filling is increased by the small quantity of moisture added from time to time by means of a sprinkling cart. After being laid the dust layer was heavily ' sprinkled and rolled for several days. , The constant rolling foroes the rocks into eloae contact and holds them there. The sprinkling in creases the ease with which the angu lar pieces slip past each other. They grind together and form a nearly per fect union when the 34 ton roller moves over them.' When these angular pieces are rubbed together in this way, a small portion of the surface of each is ground into dnst When this dost contains a little clay, it becomes valuable a a ce ment or Jbcod. to buhl the larger pieces of rock together to ra crease the educational valss of the work, two oT each week, Wedoaaday and Thursday, vt-s dadg-: sated as visiting days, when special at tention was given o every one Inter- ad In road Aoaurtroctioa. On the days t mentioned either General Boy Stone,! icfalef of the division, or E. G. Harrison.' 1 srctal sfitJn cfearge, was present, 1 i. 4 explained IsfdetaO the ootwsrottion of good rot.!, Many persona, road eav' roadimUders and others, avail-, 1 th ! of this opportunity sod tiu.il tram distant parts of the ry to rtody the construction of the .1 AN mm FARM CONVENIENCES". an Be Hade In ..Stormy Weather and Are Unfit atjMl Seasons. 'r' Farmers aud stockmen agree (bat stock ought to have either a quantity of salt mingled in their feed or else fed to them direct. A writer in The Iowa 1- gv i - SALtnoX FOE COWS AND noliSES. Homestead who has experimented with seVeral khidsiif salt boxes gives the fol lowing illustrated description of one that is especially, designed for horses and cows. . The illustration here repro duced requires but little explanation. It may be placed np against the fence or on the side of the barn or shed. It is filled with salt, and an opening placed in - the- front as will" be seen from the sketch. The lid is hung on hinges and is kept weighed down by an old horse shoe, which is for Iflck. The stock soon learn to lift up the lid and help them selves, and as soon as they are done it will return to position again to exclude rain. " This is a much better plan than 'to salt stock at stated periods, or, what is worse; somutated periods, or not at all. . --'- , Another, useful article seldom fouid on the farm . is a wagon jack; Many farmers content themselves lifting their wagons, taking the wheels only partly off to grease, and often a good job of greasing cannot be douo in this manner. A very convenient wagon jackis the subject of the second illustration, which the authority already quoted describes as doing its work in a satisfactory man' ner. An iron piooe is madoln the shape ,-tLu,t- OOBVKN1KNT WAGON JACK. . shown In the out, to put on .the end of the lever to lift axles of three different heights. Insteud of a ratohet there are hooks for the link to hitch in to hold the lever down-while greasing is being doua Any:' farmer cau make one of these wjthout any outlay of money. i ' Protecting Late Sown Grain. "We doubt whether it is practically possible to protect lute sown grain by any covering whatever in the climate of western New York," says American Cultivator. "If you have manure, how ever, that you can spare to top dress the wheat after the ground has been frozen, that is another matter. The manure, unless in greater amounts tban we should advise for wheat, will amount to very little as protection. What effect it will have is as manure after the grow ing season begins, aud especially to make a vigorous clover growth for the young clover.. Five or six loads per acre thinly spread will be sufficient for this, and that of course means that much of thesnrfacewilLliayfi.J3nly a very small amount of manure on each of the 43, 600 square feet surface that au acre contains. , . , "The notion that grain straw scattered over the fields will T5Tor any benefit whatever is an absurdity. The straw 'cannot prevent the soil beneath it from freezing. "But in spring it acts at a mulch just at the time when the young grain needs all the sunlight it can get ta warm tateoil. tto the ranlch in spring will do as much harm if not more than it gave of benefit during the winter.- Iii 'rr!ot cases,' however, fall mulching ;vUb straw , results in the straw, being piled next the fences by winds blowing across the fields. In snrb case it docs no good at any time an8 is limply a waste of tho it raw." " Jtevr War ef Sceerfac Ion. ' Most people have well water near the house end ran easily have ice made in the following msnutr. according to a correspondent in American Agricultur ist: On a very cold day pump np some water and, Itt it aland until it com mences to freese, then take a pailful and wet the bottom and sides of ice bouse thoroughly. A coating of ice will toon form. By repeating this a few times a water tight tank will be form d, into which wates may bs poured, and it will freese solid In a short w bile. At Bight several barrels of water can bs poured in and will be found one solid blook in the moruiag. Jt will le c.aite a surprise to see what a large quantity of ice can be made in this way by a per son on a very cold day. ,, BoSarr Spsti Flow.. : The exchanges are noting the teat of a rotary spade plow, lbs iaveatica of a Masearbuaetts man. According to report the plow is ridden like s mowing ira ebine, the tpades are attached to two very wide wheels snd the dVptb . to bs plowed is regulated by the weight which cam be inert aw d ween necoaary. A j carter acre, all manared,' we plowed in les tbaa tLrce qoarliTf tf ail boar. It it cfsinsed that this flow will turn tbres scn-a s day and t biro r Ittf b eoasMy,,,n -L."f "r:Z'rV i BLACK JAVAS. Bards, Active .Fowls That Yield a Good 4 'i i , We consider the Black Java the most neglected of American fowls when its merit are considered. We spoke recent ly of the great difficulty of breeding fine .-Silver. .Wyaudottes, commending them to the ambition of , fanciers on that account. The Javas are exactly tho revorse. They breed almost ar true as docks. Just a little attention to the re jection of birds with poor combs and of birds inclined to , "show ' the : white Vl&llk .AVAB A . feather," and you are quite likely to get 90 por cent of birds that will score above 90 points. """ ' Almost tuo only Objoction tnat can be raised to the Black Javas is that they are black. This is a defect in the eyes of market purchasers, especially,: of young , birds, because . tho pin feathers are more likely to show,' but this objec tion diminishesas the bird grows old er, and the deep yellow color of - the skin and the large meaty carcass of the Java makes it a profitable bird to pro duce for sale dressed by the pound The, standard requirements as to size are ten pounds for males and eight pounds for females The plumage is a glossy' black and fits the rectangular franjo of the fowl almost as firmly as does that of the game. They are hardy, fairly active birds, easily managed and able to rear their own young with bat 'little assistance. We don't know of an-. other breed that two years hence would show so large a number of standard birds were a cock and a half dozen hens turned loose alone- on an ordinary farm and allowed to shift for themselves. National Stockman and Farmer. ' Torkojr. For Market. People, as a rule, do not want enough turkey at one' time to lay a banquet spread, and consequently they pick for something small - or not exceeding me dium size. The heu turkeys always sell first, simply because they are more suited in size to the wants of the ordinary fam ily. Then the smaller gobblers go, and lastly the pride of the flock the biggest torn in the lot and he usually goes at a discount of 8 or 8 cents a pound less than the lesser weights.' A turkey that weighs from 10 to 15 pounds dressed is plonty large enough. The people don't want a turkoy as big as a hog, but tbey do want a fat turkey. It seems . to us that there is a good deal of room for improvement in breed ing turkeys for the market, that a bird shorter in legs and neck and very full in the breast would bo more desirable one thatwould bo meaty and plump and capaflle of taking on a great deal of fat. Midland Poultry Journal. ,m ; Booster Changes Color. Mr. Frank O. Alvord of GlovorsviUe, N. Y., hat a White Creve-Cosur -cock. Two years ago this bird was as black as coaljr One year ago he molted into a mottled bird, and at his last molt he put on a coat of eolid.wbite. Only a few years ago we knew of a White Face Black Spanish hen that went through the same change and in a similar man ner. Both of these birds were confined in small city yards, and we think the change was brought about by not being movided with tironer food. The svatem merit, improper food, a lack of change in surroundings, all of which affects the health, aud the blood lacks color pigmen t. We do not believe there would have been any such change had these Ptame birds been allowed their liberty on A farm or been properly provided for , where they were. Poultry Monthly. " sVotwr'ln GfweaDaeiuL - Poultrymen who make the raising of docks a specialty ana who have ad' vanced ideas are reaping a harvest from the- demand for "green docks" as a ta ble delicacy. The green duck Is simply a duckling not "over t months old or less than four, pounds in weight, that hat never seen water to swim in, at least Tbey are the product of the in cuba tors and brooders snd are made ready for market by a system of forced growth and fattening, which la the i eret of the half dozen firms producing them by the thousand for the markets of New York, Boston and Philadelphia. Green docks, after leading their wholly artificial life, leave it for the table, with a flavor all their own. They are probably the most profitable develop ment of the poultry trade, for the sup ply bat never yet equaled the demand. New York Times Bmtlf Ls la rlti-T. Scaly legs can be cored readily. Pot a little soda into warm water. With this wssa the legs thoroughly by the aid of a stiff brnah and some good soap. Do this daily and after each washing dry the lot thoroughly end rub on a mix tore of vaseline and also ointment or use a mixture via, three ounces of tweet oil and ooe ounce' of sulphur. Fol low this cp until the legs are cured. Bural World. Pltry Aetna. American turkey a either from Can ada or the United States, are preferred by the British to eon ti Dental birds; their devil being considered whiter. sweeter and higher flavored, sod are in demand from the middle of November to April At Christmas large cock tur keys sell wall, but st ether times ttaU rangitir from 8 to II pounds are prs- A BEAUTIFUL CITY. 80 BRUSSELS 18 CHARACTERIZED BY! ' JAN AMERICAN ,N TOURIST., , Some of Its Most Attractive Feat are. A BandMme Bonlevard In Place of the Old City Wall The Immense Town Belli ' Bow the Tram Cars Ave Operated. ' Brussels is a beautiful 'city and owes its beauty: in a largd' ' measure to the good cense and public spirit of its citi-j tens or a ruling king who rules la tiia interest ci tne people. . . ' One good thing comes bf a -fortified, city,, or at least has come to Paris and Brussels, and that is when by expansion it has become necessary toteardowq the fortification it ' has left the boule- vard. ' Brussels is now about three times as large as the original walled city, and this boulevard forms a broad street around between the center and the out- tide from 200 to 800 feet wide. It if more than a street or. avenue; it la a street and a park. "It goes by different names at different parts, and Boulevard Waterloo the widestvie first a side walk, then a paved street perhaps 1? feet -wide for business purposes, then ground with two rows of trees, 80 feet wide, for horsebaok riding, then 40 feet or so of asphalt or macadam for car riages, then 80 , feet (at a guess) with four rows of trees for pedestrians, with scats for resting; then another; paved street for business and street cars, and; lastly, the other sidewalk. At different places are booths for selling papers, etc., waiting rooms for the street car service aud public conveniences. Through the town there aro two broad avenues and many outside, like the Avenue Louise, which leads out to the Bois, and, like the boulevard, has the same combina tionpart street and part park of itself. The other . streets are neither wido nor straight, but cool in a hot day and like ly warm in winter The buildings aro not whole blocks from street to street as in ' Paris, each separate house or store varying some- what one from the other, but thoy are all in a locality or block about of the same height and degree of finish all kept clean and bright the telegraph and telephone wires all over the tops strung from roof to roof and the whole city supplied with street . car service. One of tne lines is supplied with cart that run on the track .whore there is a track and turn out on the pavement where there is none. ; This is done by using common omnibus wheels for the carriage and two leading wheels which drop into the grooves in the. rails when in line which keeps the car on all right.-. By custom,, law or common sense none of the- carriages has tires less than about two 'Inches wide, so that the ground rail does not interfere at .all with the commonstreet traffic The king, either by his power or influ ence, tees to it that the companies give the worth of tho money. The fares are very low only a cent for short rides, varying according to the distance and the companies are no doubt managed on economical lines. As an example, the tickets or receipts are printed on paper and are canceled by the conductor tear ing off the corner. How simple com pared with the thick ticket and punch I The street oars, or tram cars, have uyips of the route' over which -they travel posted so one who can follow a map can see where the special line he is on goes, what main streets it crosses and where it connects with other lines. Probably nothing has been said about Brussels for tho last 800 years that did not include the Hotel de Ville, or town ball, with its openwork spire. Insida It it a museum, with many curiosities and noted paintings Surrounding it and) throughout the old part of the town there are many ancient Flemish build ings, and in the now part ia tho Hall of Justice, one of the largest buildings in the world, if not the very largest, It it larger than St Peter 'sand though Philadelphia claims to have the largest this is COO by 600 and 400 feet high, as against the Philadelphia structure's 400 feet square by the same height, and the Philadelphia building has a urge open court which the Brussels Hall of Justice has not Anyway there is an awful lot of atone and architecture about it r I do not know whether they deal out justice on the same scale as the build ing, but tho affairs of the city teem to be well managed, and one would think, from the talk of the people, that the king base good deal to do with it lie is greatly liked, is around the streets and in the exhibition every day and stops to talk to the exhibitors snd work men. We bad the honor of meeting bim two or three times He was going one way in the aisles of the exhibition and in the street and we were going the other. "Long live the king r John B Sweet in American. Machinist. Is A Prussian officer in the German ar my has been ia the habit of questioning raw recruits on simple matters of na tional history. Here are a few replies to his question, "Who is Bismarck?" "Bismarck was emperor of the French." "Bismarck is dead." "Bismarck is a pensioner and lives in Paris. " "Bis marck took part . in the campaign of 1870 and received a medal for good con duct" "Bismarck descends from tbs HobetrsoUerns snd wss born on April I." Of 68 recruits whom the officer bad to instruct tl bad never ia their life beard the name of tbs Iron Chancel lor. "It young Hop !y ranch of a lawyer?" "No, be isn't sny good st slL I em ployed bim ia a case a short time ago. and bs didn't say a thing to the cornsel for tbs other side that a gentleman sotild object to. "Chicago News. According to Dr. W. J. Beal, the na tive grasers of North America number about l.ST specie. Iswloded In about 140 Feoera, while ia Europe there are tffijy 47 Assert a4 t : 3 f;ut. : Rejral makes the toed pare, I --J m f dellcifc" - ( -i . Jtjwiar aj m -m .- .At- .!"! s-- iia. j Absolutely frm a aovu auaneeewert ooi, ewv. The Raleigh' Post 'Bays' thnt TTr. Sol. C. Weil, formerly of Wi ? tonr reported elected to the v York Assembly jon tho To , ticket, has been knocked out ly i ' Supreme Court of that State, v !.' i declare? that his election w;.., 1 1, and has ordered that his o ono,.t Perez M. Stewartj be seated. ! Belief1 iu Six Honrs. , Distressing Kidney and Bladder disca.- relieved in six hours by th Nw Cheat South Ahsbicas Kidkbt Curb. This new remedy la a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in Believing- puln In the bladder, kidneys, back and 'every part of tbo urinary passages In male and female. It relieves retention of water and pain in pass ing Italmoet Immediately. . If you want quick relief and cure this Is your remedy. Bold by T. A. Albright, druggist, Graham. N.C. ' ii win require siuuww m pay the pensions during the present Ti mi - Mtfin rw rirv a year. . , , . . , A Care for Heartburn. e; - That burning sensation In tlte stomach, the pains and sufierirj which I experienced for fire Ion" years,' brought oil by continued con stipation and ' biliousness, t are al most indescribable. 1 tned every known remedy without efiivt. Finally 1 tried Ramon's Liver- Pi" & Tonic Pellets, following the d'.. tions carefully. , After taking ft f - doses I began to improve. I havo not used more than three boxes And . feel as well as I ever felt. My res toration to perfect health I attribute solely to the Use of; Ramon's liver Puis & Ionic Pellets, and, J i only wish I could persuade others to do as I did and be cured. Logan M. INaint, Amsterdam, Va. For sale by J. V, Mmmons. ' ! " ' --.- Lucy Shepherd, a Tacoma n'-jro woman, has been sent to the asylum heeaiiim ' shn nnraintfld in ent m? - soap. Miss Allie Hughes, Norfolk, Va., was frightfully burned on the face and neck. Pain t: was instantly re lieved , by DeWjtt's Witch II cl without leaving a scar. It is -U famous pili? remedy. : Simmons t. liruggiMt, Alabama man had a very narrow escape the other day.' . lie itppca uvuu mw . avsv w t lAMitf friA lair rtAfrtVA ri n na . havo been married. , - ' f " - Tetter, Salt-Rheum and Ecxemn. -The intense itching and smartinr i , dent to these diseases, is instantly a -by applying Chamberlain's Eye Skin Ointment. Many very bad bare been permanently cured by i . equally efficient for Itching pll. favorite remedr for-sore ni - chapped hsnds, chilblains, frost I snd chronic sore eyes. S3 eta. per 1 Dr. -Tsdr's Condition Powder jnst whr.t a horse needs when in i condition.; Tonic, blood partner en vermifuge. They are not . food he, medicine and the best in use to pat horse in prime condition. Price . cents per package. For sale by T. A. Albright & v While surveying some land X' .... le inherited from . his grandfatv r with the view of selling it, I Duke" of Bridgeville, Del., fu ; and dug np 15,000 in Spanish c that had been buried in old pot Wheit in need of & ranetlj relieve pain you want the sir quickest and best, sacb a one is L, Goose Grease Liniment, it reli all pain at once, it cures cro. cough and colds as soon as v L For sale and guaranteed by all d -gists and general stores, - It relit whoopiog ough. , , ' James G. Blairtf;' Jr. is c more a newspaper man, bavin ) been enrolled on the .staff c! Xew York Tribune. It i -that Whitelaw Reid ha itic-! r dere that "Jimmie" le tr ' kindly. Why will you boy biiiir rnfi vim (irm'i T "!'- t 1 t - -plMMnt a Ifldrti ffrup. 1 our t. authorimt to refund tb mrn Is . wpere it tain to cure. I'rw, f .-The Chronicle says t! port thai sn att em j t . blow up the court ): f ' boro during the 1, '. ror. Some f w. : v ed in t! c . I I untfle win 1 w I ' . w crerkV. ' ' -

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