V
OXI$ ENJOYS
Both the method and results wnen
.Syrup of Figs ia taken; it is pleasant
Hid refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the eys-
tern effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
i:x: e r t?: ii..
cuugupsuuu. KTvrup vi figs la w
only remedy or its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
effects, prepared only from the most
; healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities oommend it
to au ana nave made it me mosi
t popular remedy known.
- feyrup of Figs is for sale in 50o
and $1 bottles by all leading dru
' gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
. cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it Do not accept any
-. anlwtitiita.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAM FRANCISCO, CAL,
Sjlyiiwmc, nil flc m rwnn. if"
UllMDUDirVQ'
Da. Humtmuti' Spbcifics are aclentlflcally and
eino lo a Detilal core (or the disease named.
. Thaw (Tpeelflcs core without drugging, pnrg
tmg or reducing the system, and are In (act and
deedtheaeTerelgn remedies ofthc World.
tor or rancar al kos.
curbs. rairn.
1 Fe
era, Congestion, Inflammation. .. .3.1
I We
erase, worm rover, worm uoiiu..
-1
rrylaa ce)Hc,arTeeunngorinianui
fiyeeatery, Griping, BUloui Colic... .'25
keiera raoruae, vomiting
eat ha. Cold. Bronchitis
earalala, Toothache, Faceoche. . . .
(eadachee, Slok Headache, Vertigo
Fyepepal a. Bilious Stomach
aapreeaea or Painfnl Period
3
V kites, too noiuae rerioas
aft Rheum. Erysipelas, Eruption.
hoi. comm. uimcuit ureaininc
latiein, iineumatio rains,...
and A an e, Chills, Malaria. . . .
Blind or Bleeding
h, Influenza, Cold In the Bead
l la a Ceash, Violent Coughs.
1 nebTlity.PayslcalWeakneai
T .Disease
nu.iilrv
rhooalaa Coaa
General JteMlity.
ey-Uisease
erroae
rlaary W eaknett, Wetting Bed. .5
laeaae of theHeart.Falpltatlon 1.0
;. Sold by Druggist, or sent postpaid on receipt
(price. Da. HuannuiYs' MiituL, (144 pages)
richly bound In cloth and gold, mailed tree.
HUMPHBEYS' MEDIOINE 00
. Per. William and John Street, Maw York.
SPECIFICS.
asaaaaWiaafcaMiB"""
All of tba abore medicines are for
lale at the drag "tores of F. S. Duffy
and B. Berry, Middle street, New
Berne. N. C.
V' Liquor Habit.
amnre wcru mEteSBurofz aiur
0!rttIrfE5 GOLDEN SPECIFIC
It can be given 1 n co (Tee, tea, or 1 n artlcl es of food
Without tbe knowledge of patient If necessary
it Is absolutely harm loss and will effect a perms.
Bent and speedy cure, whether tbe patient Is t
moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. IT NEV
Mrtafntv that tba Datlent undergoes no Incon i
sentence, and soon his complete reformation b
ffeeud. 4 Daze book free. To be bad ol
B. N. Duffy, druggist, New Berne
N.O. jylSdwy
' . ftwfWTnw
OLD DOMINION
StfiamPlln'n ffirrmflmr
SEMI-WEEKLY LINE.
The Old Dominion bteu unship Company's Old
and Favorite Water Rout'., riu Albe
. miHe and Vhetipeakc t'aiml.
FOR
' Norfolk, Baltimore, New York, Phllo
delplil, Boston, Pnivliteucr, and
v ' Vtthliigtuii City.
. And all point Nwlh, l-.aai and West.
f- un and alter iumuai, Ai'Kiii h, ism
lltlln ,u.t..ii' notice; Hie
f Stealer HB'i7BEHNE,Cajt. Sontligata,
'.1 i e X' II- I . . T T
n "' N. 0) Iir. ct, evny Momliiy nml Tliunuluy,
j liiakins; elose roniiectinn with tlic A. fc N. (.'.
' p. It., for nil ftsiionsoii that imd, and with
th'Steann'rs Kins ton nml ilownrd tor Kin
' auin, Tri'Miiin, and all oilier landings on the
Neuseanil Trent Rivers.
s , Bftnrnli.tr, -ill ssil FROM NEW BERNE.
, TOR NORFOLK direct, at 2 p m.,TutJay
iu siii iiom iorioiK. n.. iorriw i.erne.
and Fridays, mnklnir connection with the O.
D. & S. Co,' stiips tor New York, B. 8. P. Co. '
atesjhers I'nr Baltimore; Clyde Line Ships tr
, Philadelphia, M. dc M. T. Ca'a ships for Be a.
, .' lAn anrl Prnvldenci.
Steamer Kinilon, Capt Dixon, will sail for
, Klnston on arrival ot steamer Newberne.
Order all good care of O. D. 8. S. Co.,
, Norfolk, Va.
Passengers will find a good table, comfr-t-
able room, and every courtesy sod attention
1 ' will be paid them by the officers.
. . ' E. B. ROBERTS. Agent
MtasRS. CULPEPPER 4 TURNliR"
. Agents, Norfolk, Va.
, . W. H. STANFORD,
, t i , . Viee-Preaident, New York City.
URS. J. M. HINES'
: BoaringgH
''; -REOPENED.
' Mes. J. M. HINES haa reopened a
First-Cksd Boarding House in the city,
oppt i.te Baptist Church. A
Tie Pioneer :DaTls SewinrMacliiiie,
Can bt had at the tarn place.
,J.' M. HINES, Agent.
, J, Et. O BOWN,'
-nRex-ciAf--i. ,:'
OAR BE R SHOP.
Neatly fitted up In tba beak of stylo. Batk
rooma with hot and sold water. . ov,,,
r"ICK BLOCK, MI50LI3T. 1
Today.
Be iwift to loro your own, dears,
Your od who need you to;
Say to the speeding boor, dean,
"I will not let the go
Except thou give a blessing
Force it to bide and stay,
Love has no tare tomoirow,
It only baa today.
Oh, hasten to be kind, dears,
Before the time (hall come
When you are left behind, dears,
In an all-alone borne ;
Before in late contrition
Vainly you weep aud pray,
Love has no sure tomorrow,
It only bus today.
Swifter than sun and shade, dears
Move the fleet wings of pain;
The chance we have today, dears,
May never coue again.
Joy is fickle rover,
He brookelh not delay.
Love has no sure Dmorrow,
It only has today.
Too late to plead or grieve, dears,
Too late to kiss or sigh.
When death has laid his seal, dears,
On tbe cold Hp and eye,
Too late our gifts to lavish
Upon tbe burial clay ;
Love has no sure tomorrow,
It only has today.
Congregationalism
THE FIRST-BORN.
DV DAVID (i. riIII.Ml'3.
rieston found his wife in a low arm
less rocking-chair beforo the grate lire
of her bed-room. Their baby boy,
whose first weak rail against the mis
eries of existence had boon heard but
two months before, lay flat upon hi3
back in hor lap. lie was swathed in
a long woolen night-gown, which
bulged restlessly under the impatience
of his legs.
The mother was pinching his cheeks
and smothering him with kisses.
This caused him to give vent to bub
bling gasps of delight and to wave his
clinched lists convulsively. When she
saw her husband sho lifleJ the baby,
supporting his body with one hand,
and Ills uncortain back with tlio other.
His big head, fallen forward, rolled
from side to side, whilo his bright
eyes stared at his father fixedly, and
without the smallest gleam of intelli
gence. Preston smiled constrainedly,
I and put ono forefinger under the
rather damp chin.
As the child showed that he disap
' proved of the change of position, his
' mother put him in her lap again, and
began the interrupted play. Preston
, looked down upon it with an irritated
I expression. When the nurse came in
J with a small tub partly filled with
! warm water, he looked about awk
j wardly, as though ho were out of
; place. Then lie sat down in a deep
leather chair by the window. As he
watched the two women and the baby,
a feeling of isolation and sadness grew
upon him.
When the nurse had put the hath on
il1Q j-11Cr near
;' u 1 L
tho fire, she pushed to
the mother's sido a small table spread
with tho articles of a baby's toilet.
i Whilo tho child was bathing, the
mother kept up a steady flow of talk,
at timcs addrosed to the fathor, al-
wavs intended for the son.
Sho took off the long woolen gown.
Then sho lified the child and laid him
gently in the bath. At first touch of
the water lie clutched wildly and
twisted his faco into a crimson tangle.
But the warmiii and the safety guaran
teed by the voice and fingers of the
mother reassured him. He was soon
splashing and kicking as widely as the
narrowness of his bath allowed.
His faco reddened and puckered as
ho was lifted to the blanket on his
mother's lap, but the softness of tho
fleecy towol consoled him. At last she
was done, and lie lay straight and
glowing. His eyes closed languidly.
The talk of the mother ceased. There
was silence in tho room, except her
monotonoui und soothing "Sh-h-h!
sh-h-h! ' as she rocked to aud fro.
Tho husband's eyes turned away im
patiently as ho saw the look in her
face. Sho was admiring, with a look
of perfect love, the beauty of the
smooth round form in her lap. The
skin of the child was soft and delicate
Waves of color, first pure white, then
rosy pink, passed across it from Lead
to feot.
Thoy put a fow clothes upon him so
quietly that ho only smiled, and did
not awaken. The nurse left the room,
and thore was no movement or sound
but the occasional slow rock, with the
faint "Sh-h-h 1" whioh accompanied
It. The mother looked steadfastly at
her child. The husband watched her
sadly.
They had married two years beforo.
As both were strong-willed and posi
tlvo, there had been much clashing in
the first twelvemonth of their life to
gether Each was finding' out tho
real charaoter of the other, so different
In , many ways ..from " tho character
each had admired before marriage..
But in this undecolving there had been
no serious disillusion, arid their' low
had grown stronger. Through this
love happiness had gradually come.
Just as they were entering upon
this unexuected happiness, which
J comes in married Ufo if any at all, just
Iheu the baby was born. Preston had
looked forward to the event with un
easiness and dissatisfaction. It had
seemed to him that a third person
would bo an interloper. And his
feeling was shared by his wife,
But with tho birth of the child caino
the birth of the maternal instinct.
Preston found himself alono in his
dissatisfaction. He realized this when
he saw his wife afterward. At first
ho was awed by the change in hor
face, by the mysterious being whos-c
head nestled to her shoulder, by the
wonder of birth and maternity. Then,
as the inclining of it for him came to
his mind, tho instant thought was
that she was more lost to him than if
sho were dead.
A few days before her eyes had in
them the sparkle and the frequent Hash
of passionate love for him. Now ;
those same eyes were turned to him
with tenderness, but with a changed
tenderness that pained him keenly.
She was still young. She was still
beautiful. But in those few days the
quality of tho youth and the beauty
had been transformed. Her face now
shone with the calmnoss and serenity
of a mother. Aud the sad conviction
camo to tho husband that tho change
was final.
On this morning, two months after
ward, as she sat in tho low chair, in
health and strength again, he studied
the change more carefully. he had
been trying to deceive himself during
those two months. He felt that he
could deceive himself no longer.
lie cared for hor as before; more,
perhaps, since ho grasped so clearly
the change in her. But she, sitting
there with her child, cared for him in
a new way. The child was first, the
central figure, in her lifo henceforth.
She loved tho father throiurh tho child.
In the days of their courtship ho had
fancied that the passing of years
would not touch them. When her
hair would bo gray and his hair would
be scant they would cling together
still, excluding everything and every
one else. Now all this was thwarted,
brought to naught in tho very dawn
of their real happiness. Tho girl wife
was gone, with no hope of return.
This small form had pushed in be
tween, lliesc clinched nanus, so uu-
f-kil ful, so helpless, had yet battered
them apart. They must come, each to
the other anew, and throuh the
child.
lie seemed to himself to bo passed
awav. llo lelt as thougli lie were in
another world, lookiiur across a wide
gulf to the far place where the child
lay in the mother's lap. And he
thought, with utter lack of hope, that
he was straining his arms and his
heart in vain.
This instinct love which showed in
her eyes as she looked at the scarcely
featured faco filled him with bitterness.
"And as time passes," ho thought,
"this will not grow le-s, but greater.
She may conceal it when she finds that
it slabs mo. Blither real heart will
be barred against me. She will care
for me, but sho will plan and scheme
and try to control mo for his 6ake
for their sake, if thero aro more"
Then ho thought of his own father
and mother. How intensely his
mother had loved him! How often she
had shielded him from his father! And
he wondered how his father had felt
at first. He certainly cared for me,
and he and my mother lived happily,
contentedly, loving their children be
fore themselves."
And ho saw that ho too would no
doubt grow to care for this little one
in some such way as his wife now
cared. "And I shall be content," he
said to himself, "as my father was
content, and I shall forget the happi
ness that might have been in the
pleasure and pride that are. But 1
shall be a loser. For I have lost her
exclusive love. I shall have only the
second placo in her heart, and iu tho
heart of her child. For ho will love
her first. He will bo first hers; mine
through hor only."
While the husband was searching in
vain for consolation, the wife also was
thinking of tho change in their rela -
tions. She realized as fully as he that
thero had been a change, a transfer of
lore. And in a certain way she felt
sorry for him. But she had no regret
for the happiness they both thought
they should regret as they talked it
over beforehand.
Indeod sho was wondering how she
coald have been so blind thou. For
this new lore was so sweet to her, so
self-absorbing and self-denying ! How
strange, how wonderful, how satisfy-
ing was the new lore the love for
il I. --J".!! I.t.. - !t. ::t.i..
un intuil wing rriuun n uur
through the miracle of birth, through
suffering to be remombored only Wlth
gladness I "'.'-V'',-,:''-t..:i'
She realized the isolation of her '
husband, yet sho could not long thiuk
ct it. She was so absorbed with her i
sou. "My son I" she thought, and i
she bent to kiss him softly, while the
joy of maternal possession went
through her like a strong wine. Her 1
thoughts leaped along the years, pic
turing him as he would bo when he
could walk ftiij talk, when he should
bo a schoolboy, a youth, a great man,
of whom she was so proud, who loved
her so.
The look that came into her face
with these thoughts cut her husband
to the quick. He arose and stod
looking bitterly out of the window.
"She is no longer a wife. She is a
mother!' he aid. Harper's Weekly.
The Htcairn Islanders.
Of course, everyone has heard of the
rcmarkablo colony on Pitcairu island,
the little rock iu the Pacific Ocean,
less than three squaro miles in extent,
whero the mutineers of tho Bounty
took refugo iu 1781' with ihe women
they liad stolen from I he island of
Tahiti. There many of their descen -ants
live today, one of the happiest
and most contented comintuities in
the world. Pitcairu island became too
small to hold this prolific people, aud
in 185G tho entire population was re
moved to Norfolk inland, far west of
their native home. A part of them,
however, yearned for Pitcairu aud re
turned to the little rock that gave them
birth. There are, therefore, now two
settlements of the descendants of the
mutineers, one ou Norfolk island and
one on Pitcairu.
A more wonderful story was never
told than that of these sunny-hearled
people who, having their origin iu
crime and bloodshed, have been shield
ed from nearly all the temptations that
beset the world, and aro now a pros
perous Christian people, simple mind
ed, pure and upright. No such thing
as a jail has ever existed at Piteairr
island. The world seldom hears from
this handful of peoplo, living iu the
far southern Pacific Ocean, but it is
always glad to learn ti lings of t heir
welfare, ami when news does come it
rarely fails to report the continued
prosperity of this remarkable settle
ment. A while ago the Pitcairu Isl
anders celebrated the hundredth anni
versary of the landing of their fathers
on Pitcairu rock. Dearly as they love
their little home, it is probable that
some of them will be compelled to
emigrate before many years, because
its population is again becoming
crowded. (ioldlhwaite's Magazine.
Sand Tornadoes.
A German physician who has passed
several winters in southern Italy
claims to have discovered the cause of
the sick headaches and respiratory
troubles so often experienced during
the prevalence of a proirietcil sirocco.
Having noticed that those symptoms
are observed even without a percepti
ble increase of temperature, he con
structed an apparatus enabling him lo
demonstrate that the atmosphere of
southerly gales is impregnated with
countless particles of line sand. On
Mn liurtless plains of the Sahara those
gales often acquire the force of a hur
ricane, and whirl up sand-clouds
to n height of several miles; from
there the upper air-currents carry
them across the Mediterranean, and
even across the eastern Alps, since in
the valley of tho Danube southwest
storms are ofton accompanied by a
curious haze, hanging for days about
tho hill-tops like the smoke of a forcst
lirc. Belford.
The Kakapo.
The kakapo, or owl-parrot of west
ern New Zealand, is almost as great
an anomaly as the ornithorhynchtis.
It has tho plumage of a parrot and the
head of a hawk; has wings furnished
with all the featners found in the pin
ions of a falcon, but is unable to fly
over a fonr-foot wall. It is semi
nocturnal in its hnbits, and at sight of
a dog will rush away liko a frightened
chicken, but never even attcmps to
take wing. Its strange disability has
been ascribed lo the circumstanco that
New Zoaland is free from large carniv
orous animals, aud that a bird finding
abundance of food in the underbrush,
J can dispense with the accomplishment
of flight. Belford.
The Sargent Locomotive.
Tho run from Baltimore to Phila
delphia of the absurdly named R yal
Blue Line express is mado behind
what is said to be the largest engine
in this country. It weighs 187,000
pounds, and runs on four driving
wheels, 6 feet 6 inches in diameter.
Black, without a particle of bright
color about it, the engine is a grand bi'
of mechanism, and quo easily can lm
ogluo the engineer having a feeling of
affection for the huge machine that la
,,0 respond re to his tonch. Now
York Sua. -
The Genua Kmptror's XiekaameSt
The Berliners and the German?, in
general delight iu giving nicknames to
their popular idols or antipathies. These
nicknames are not always rlattering to
their owners, and there have beeu
Hohenollerns lees fortunate than the
Emperor William, who is not afraid to
ask for his popular sobriquet. He
proved this at a regimental dinner at
which the Duke of Connaught and
Prince Henry participated. In the
course of conservaiion the kaiser said.
They call me the "traveling kaisar,"
don't they? 1 wonder if that is the
ouly nickname I've trot."
Prince Henry laughed and Major 1
von I lesson, unable to control himself
joined his roval highness.
"What is it!" asked the emperor.
"Doyou know of any other nickname?
If so, out with it'"
The major mumbled somethingabout
Ids respect; but the emperor said.
"Well, if you don't want to do it to
please me, 1 command you to speak!"
The major then confessed that the
emperor was known among the com
mon soldiers us the "Alarm Fritz," on
account of his habit of suddenly, in the
IllilMUl rf t'r... ... ,1... .irrl.
sons of the towus iu which lie might be
st".v"g-
1 Th
emperor laughed heartily at this; i
and I'riuce
brothers. i
"Well, thou hast a similar name in
tho navy. The boys call you "Good Ax
I i Hi " i. j;.,.. ..i , ' ..o ii.,.
.'-i l;uuuui i ii i; ULnilil, ia till,
call-it, ou your ships constantly during .
:all-it, ou your ships constantly during .
ho summer, and being anywhere and j
verywhereonthe boats.'' I
Weil, laughed the emperor, "those
tho !
every
are three fine nicknames; hut, inasmuch '
as all ot them paint me as a busy man,
I rati ler like them.'' I
Tiik true gentleman is patient, for
bearing, and resigned on philosophical
principles. He submits to pain because
it is inevitable, to bereavement because
it is irreparable, and to death because it
is destiny. If he engage in controversy
of any kind, his disciplined intellect
preserves bi'i from the blundering
discourtesy of perhaps better but less
educated minds, who, like blunt
weapons, tear and hack instead of
cutting clean, who mistake tho point in
argument, misconceive their adversary,
and leave the question more insolvent
than they find it.
We all have two lives, gliding on nt
the same time, scarcely connected with
each other the life of our'minds; the
external and the inward history; the
movements of the frame the deep and
ever restless workings of the heart.
They who have loved know thero is a
diary of the affections which we might
keep for years without having occasion
even to touch upon the exterior surface
of life, our busy operations, the me
chanical progress of our existence; yet
by the last we are judged the first we
never know.
Many a person hud arrived at some
considerable degree of knowltdge if In
had not been full of self-conceit, and
imagined that he had known enough
already, or else was ashamed to let
others know that he was unacquainted
with it. God and man are ready to
teach the meek, the humble and the
ignorant; but he that fancies himself
to know any particular subject well, or
that will not venture to ask a question
about it, such a one will not put him
self into tho way of improvement by
inquiry and diligence.
You cannot dream yourself'into a ehiitnctcr;
yon must hummer and lorge yourself one.
Fntiileii to Ihe nest.
All are entitled to the host that their money
will buy, go every family should have, at once
bottle of the best family remedy. Syrup of
Figs, to cleanse the system when costive or bil
ious. For sale In Mc. and $1 bottles by ali
leading druggists.
The noblest mind the best contentment has.
Creates
An Appetite
Thero la nothing; for which we recommend Hood's
SDrsaparllla with sroator confldenco than for km of
appetite, Indigestion, nick headache and other trou-
Ziof dyspeptic nature. In the most-natural way
this meillclno gently tones the itomach, asslsU dl-
geatlon and makea one feel "real hungry." Ladles
In delicate health, or very dainty and particular at
ineau, alter taxing hooqs earsapar,,.. u o,.
find themselves longing for and eating tho plainest
food with unexpected rcllah and saslsfaotloo. Try II.
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
SoM by all drujgUts. 1 six for V Prepared only
LJ U 1. UOOU CO. Apothecaries, LowaU, HtM.
lOO Dosos One Dollar
DONALD KENNEDY
1UUUUIJ
Kennedy's Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep
Seated Ulcers of 40 years'
standing, Inward Tumors, and
every disease of the skin, ex
cept Thunder Humor, and
Cancer that has taken root,
Price, $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the United States
and Canada.
Copyngbt, 1490.
Which will yon have,
suffering and despair,
sickness, Suffering: and despair,
i . S ,
or health, strength, and spirit ?
You can take your choice.
All chronic diseases and de
' rangements peculiar to women
are permanently cured by Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
It restores the female func
tions to healthy action. It
removes the obstructions and
suppressions which cause
trouble ana misery. Por pe-
nodical pains, internal mnam-
mation. ulceration anrl L-mdrpH
ailments, it is a positive rem-
cdv. The SVStem is invi?-
1 i .
orated, the blood enriched, di-
. 1111
gestion improved, melancholy
6""" "P"ll-ui uicioin-uuiy
and nervousness dispelled.
It's a legitimate medicine, the
, , , .
only lnat s guaranteed to
give satisfaction in the Cure
.r ill u f,rmli rnmnUinc 11
J 1 Ull llUUl. .UllllUlllbJ,
lie must lie mi obsi'ure and comiuoiiplui'e
peisou who Iiun no enemy.
Deafnou l au'l be Cured
By local applications, as thoy cannot reach tho
diseased portion of thu ear. There la only ono
way lo cure deal'noss. ami thM H by constitu
tional remedies. lcuiiie., is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lininK of itao
Eustachian Tube. When this tube i;ets in
flamed you have a ruiubiiijj sound or imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed,
deafness U tho result, and linjesfltho intlam
nmtion can, bj takeu nut and this lube rt
rtorcd to its normal condition, hearing will bo
destroyed forever; iiin cases out of ten tiro
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but au iu
Cnmed condition of the mucous sui fiucs.
Wo will plvo Duo Hundred Dollars lor any
case of deafness caused bv catarrh) that wo
cannot euro by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Bend for circulars, free.
F. J. Chhnry & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by drngyibt. , 75 cents.
The degree ot success obtiiineil imiy often
be nsoer'iiineil by the amount ot jealousy
which it arouses.
Proof ol Popularly.
THE 1.DVFI.I. 1IIAMOXI) SA Kt-TV llll VI I K FC.
TOI1Y KI-JT Itl'NNINt: TWKNTY-I'UI K UOt'HS
A DAY TO Sri'lM.Y TDK IIK1IANI).
PassenRcrs on the i;ho-t 1 ruin whb-h whizzed
tliriimih N'orces1er in Ihe Munll hours of tho
morning have noticed of laleu factory which
never seems to clo-e. and from vvhoc windows
tin- bright lii;ht streams ull niuht lorn;. It is
the factnrv of ilic John 1'. I.ovi-11 Ann-Company
of fto-ton, and il is niiinimr Inenilly
twenly-four hoursa day. with o complcii
relays of men. fr im tin-foreman down. This
activity is due to the extraordinary popularity
of the new oiurily-lhe-dnllar l.ovell diamond
hafetv bic t ie. a niai liini- w hich isi ini; tho
MTyhcstof MUist'action. IbMnn ihraiJ.
He quick. You c:in use a minute but once
make the most of it.
"Doclorn Sold There Yr No Cure."
IJai.ya, Ka.., 5!nr-h I', 11M.
My doctor faid there was no i lire lor me.
About six weeks iiko I had our dru'ist send
for six bottles of Fioraplexioti, which 1 bavo
taken, and il has don.- me more jjuod than any
thing in twenty years. I am :'-i Years old. I
want a few more Pott les lor mselfnnd soma
for my neighbors. .Mauy M. Lvnmnuiiam.
t'tirifipWjnm is the --i eedv and permanent
cure for Sick luadaehe. lnili(;esiion. Byspep
sia, biliousness. Liver Complaint. Nervous. De
bility and Coni-umiitiou. It is tho only sura
cure for these com plaint. Ask jour druggist
lor it, and get w ell.
I f the power to do lmr I work is not a talent,
it is the besi possible substitute lor it.
Fort Dyspepsia, ImMioitiin and Stomach
disorders, u--e llrown's Iron Hitters, ''he Best
'I on ic, it rebut uls the system, cleans t hn Blood
rind strengthens the inuseies. A splead.d ton
ic for weak aud iluuiliiatod persons.
The coi tion way to he cheated is to fancy
one's sell more cunning than others.
BTT3 stopped free hy Dr. Kline's GrsaI
IIebvb KiftTOHElt. No fits after tirst day's use.
Marvelous euros. Treatiw) aud S- trial bottle
tree. Dr. KUue, 931 Arch St., I'Uila., I'a.
Men of charneter are the c mscii'iice. of the
society to which they belong.
Fon impnro or thin Blood, Weakness, Mala
ria, Neuialvia, Indigestion and Biliousness,
take Urown'a Iron Hitters it gives strenuth.
malting old persons feel young aud yountf
persona strong; pleasant to take.
Seal ol the United States.
The seal now in use is tho fourth of
the sfries. It depicts the American
eagle, holding in each claw a sheaf of
thirteen arrows, and Surmounted bv a
circu,ar wreUh illclosing thirteen Stars,
. . .
corresponding to tho original SUteg,
j and encircled by the HlOttO "i PluriblU
Unutn." It is mounted upon a lllaSSlVe
block, and it is SO admirably Constructed
, n,h,.n v .w the 8 l? h teat turn rf
the screw will develop all the pressure
required. The uses to which the great
seal are put are various. It goea upon
all commissions, pardons, and other
official documents issued by the presi
dent; but a law passed in 1789 stfys it
shall not be affixed to any instrument
except a commission "without the
special warrant of the President thore
for." Every Farmer us own Roofer
CHEAPER than Shingles, Tin or Slate.
Redumi Tour INSURANCE, and Perfectly
Fire, Water and Wind Proof.
&IEEL ROOFING,
CORRUGATED
1 3ie m out w
CATAtotju a, pstiers
Our RooSng I ready formed for tie Bundle,
and raa be applied by ay one. Do not boy
any Booflng till you write to un for onr Teri
live unaiocue. aerioe u A w r. m naM
M Uw-KM mum nionoiliRT
(mbllahed, uhe remarkekly Jew prtae
Ulm M an.lT prtattd tm of elw
true on eneuent neiMr and la .And.
wmy jm eHTiiiaaDir booms I
It iTM talub wetda wish the
sqiumeeai and praaoaeleCloa, ant
Renaaa weroewttli BncUik aeAnltlaee,
It la umtuMe to Oeraua who sr. lot
Iheroacbly (utular witaj tulleh. ar So
fmaiteuiewko wtak ae bmra Oenaaa,
v )
CCAJHJaaakttMawlWLiaa '
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