V Both the method and results mhtn Byrap of Figs is taken; it it pleasant nd refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Lirer and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and ferers and awes habitudL eonstipatiun., Syrup of Figs, k the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the siomach, prompt in; Its action and truly bensficial in its' effects, prepared only from the most - healthy, and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and hare made it the most popular remedy known. Byrup of Figs is for sale fa 60s and fl bottles dt all leadinr dm gista. Any reliable druggist who may not bare it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who :.. wishes to try it Do sot accept any snbstitute. CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP CO. SAM FMHOItCO, OAU ' uumiUE. n. mm mux. s r. ' " 1 l' I I Tl I ' ' I 'I . I i PROFESSIONAL. DR. C. K. BAGBY, Surgeon Dentist, 301m, Middle Street, opp. Baptltt Church, '0''''f-i-: BKWBEMKK, IT. C TTH. PELLETIER, ATTO RNE Y-AT-LA W, AND MONEY- BROKER. CP3TS1 StrCfit TWJo rnVlbfIai p&K specialty mad in aegotiating small i loans for short time. Will Ipractlc in the Counties of Cravon, Carteret, Jones, Onslow and FnniUoo. aT-Uuiled Slates Court at Nw Berne, aud Buprwas Court of the State. DR. J. D. CLARK. NEW BERNE, N. C.: iWOflice on Craven Blrcet, between Follouk aud Broad. ..a.N.i. TWOS. MNIIU, VtCK-MC. a. h. o.i.Ta. casxit. The National Bank OF NEWBERNE, N. C. lMCOKrOKATEU 1805. Capital, - . $100,000 Surplus Profits, - 86,700 DIRECTORS. J AS. A. BbYAS, ThOS. DAMKU. Chas. 8. Betas. J. H. Hackbubb. O. U. Kobeeis. Alex. Millsb. 1 L. Harvey. . GREEN, F0Y&.CO.; BANKERS, ' Si General laniinj Easiness. NEW BAN KINO HOUSE, Middle Street, AIA Door below Hotel Albert. NEW BERNE, N. C. Fast Passosger and Freight Line beiwesa f NEW BERNE, ' TXasttra North Carolina Points, and all Cat .i section of tue PKHBSTLVAB1A RAILROAD, ', IHCXUDIKS A I Wow York, FhUalhta, sTarfblk, Bat. I Uaaora m Bosiosb ,. . ' VM CMN.Y i Trt-Wa.hlr 1 Uaa Oat f . Mew Bar. Ths New and Elegantly Equipped Steamm Salla from Now Bern , , COraiTS, WEBIESBATS, - fllSATS, AT FIVE P. M., '. '( Stopping at Roanoke Island aach war and . forming elmw connection with tka , " Norlolk Southern Kaiiroad. t Tns Eastern Diepaieh ' Line, eenalntlng si the Wilmington S. S. Co, Norfolk Southern ,K. R. New York, Phlla. and Norfolk it. H, and f nnsylyania R. IV, form a reliable and . regular line, oOering superior raoilltieS for quick passenger and freight transportation. No transfer ezecpt at ' Kliialietb C4tr,t which point freight will be tailed on edra to go through to destination. -r -':'" :' ' Direct a'.l gooda to be ahlpped via Eastern 'Carolina Dispatch daily aa lollnwa: , . , From New York, by Teiina. K. iL,Vlw ST, North Itirer. Fr.ni Philadelphia, brPhlla, W. and Calto. K 1L, Doek 8k Hlation, From Baltimore, by I'liila, Wll. aad Balto. RR.1Vrorrtent8t.ttion. : From Norriilk. by Norfolk Southern K. B. ' . 1 rom l!oU)D, by Mnrehanti Miner Trane- IioilHtiau Co.j Maw York and New England L R. t ur-Rata at law aad time quinker than by y other line. t ; For further Information apply to -1 T. H. otob, (Oen'i freight Traflls Ageat, P. B. R.) General Traffio Atenk ' , 3ko. Stsphrkb, Diriiion Freight lAgent, K i. W. H. K. It, t'hlladeipnia. . B. COOKE, Oen'l Freight Agoat, N. Y P.AN. II. It, Norfolk, Va. . , . u. iiUDOiNs, uenerai rreigni Agom a. o. ki. U., Norfolk, Va. v QUii. UENDERSON, AoBKT, ' . Newberae, N.O. fl EXTI a r; . H.SHEPARD tanti la the tentorial art ?0 Canta. HOW THE CAIMANS LIVE. BOTH XXV ATTD WOXBPT MAD A .: LANGUID SOST Lira. Dally Routine or' Kaoh Sex Gam : blina; a National Habit Kamtly Relations A Chilian .UonaeholO. - The fair Chilena rises late, says Fannie B. Ward in the Wathington Star: She dresses hastily, throwing a charitable shawl about her shoulders, her little feet thrust carelessly into , slippers, her splendid black hair, snarles and all, plaited in two long braids that fall down her . back, and her ablutions, if she troubles herself t make aay, beta? merely form of politeness at the wash bowl. Of course, she mutt go to morn ing mass, but the big black manta ' that outtom demands for that service, drawn over the head to the eyes and elosely en veloping tha body, obviates the neces sity far auy further dressing. In every cose the Chilian, woman prefers a silk qt woolen gown,-however soiled and tat tered, to the finest and freshest cotton fabric, for she considers the latter ma terial the exclusive property of servants and despised gringoes or foreigners. Thus en deshabille she dawdles about, amusing-herself 'with fancy work or doing nothing at all, until ennui drives her to seek relief in shopping or payin; visits. .Then the glossy hair mounts up on top of her head in a marvelous heap, the slipshod slippers give place to French boots with the highest heels and most peaked toes that were ever intended'to torture their foolish wearer, and In al the splendor of costly apparel, than which Solomon in all his glory wasnerer so arrayed, she sallies forth with stately tread, generally bareheaded, closely fol lowed by a servant, whose business it is to bear my Lady's purse, handkerchief, parasol and whatever trifle a lie may pur chase. At the sunset hour or in the early evening before time for opera or tertulia she repairs to the promenade to enjoy a little music and peihaps some mild flirtations the last mentioned amuse ment, however, being discreetly restricted to sighs, 'isheep's eyes'' and following footsteps. Thus ior the women the days go by in one monotonous round, jesr in and out. The men omit the mass, look a little af ter their business affairs, if they have anv, during the middle of the day, but diligently attend to the promenade, the opera sad tertulia or to the gaming table for the eight. Grumbling is a na tional habit. In many of the swellest casas of Santiago and Valparaiso the gaming table is regularly set out and forms one of the features of private en tertainments, like the baccar.it ot Great Britain, which lately plunged the eldest hope of her respected majesty into such boiling water. In Chili the poorest peon and raggedest gamin may be seen at all times in the alleys and by-ways betting medios and centavos (the peunies and nickels of the countty) with as much eagerness as the wealthy mine owner stakes his golden ounces. The tallest gambling that has ever came under my own observation took place on a steamer between Copiapo and Talcahuauo, when a man who had recently ''struck it rich" in copper at the Atacama mines lojt $90,000 in a single night. There are laws against gaming, but they are seldom enforced. in uam tne man woo makes your shoes, the tailor who cuts your coat, the woman who irons your linen will charge according to your "cloth for his or her service. If you claim to be a gentleman by dressing up to the character the price will be enormous; but if you area trades- man, a clerk or a laoorer of any descrip tion it will be more moderate. Should you be so excessively vulgar as to ven ture to the market in person to purchase a piece of meat it will cast you at lent forty cents a pound; but if you send a servant he will buy the same quantity and better quality for half the money In Chili tne greatest repect it shown by children to their parents, but the ten der love between mother and daughter, as it exists among us, is almost un known. A young girl never leaves the house of her parents unless acoompanied by some member of the family or a female servant. If she goes to pay a visit the duenna waits for her at the front door or gossips with the female servants. In terviewt between young ladies and gentlemen never take place except in the presence of others. Servants are abundant, and if one does not please a better may be readily oh' tained, so that Chilian ladies are entirely relived from some of the responsibilities that harass northern housekeepers. Hera t ie hire of servants u to cheap and their demands so moderate that people can mors easily afford "the nre or six . that usually compose tne; Kitcuen ongaae than the matron of the United States her one or two,. Eight dollars a month is a high pnee to pay one s 'cook, and so on down the scale to nothing but his "keep" for the errand boy. who is everybody s servant and the hardest-worked member of the household,- 1 i - ; In every Chilian household hospitality to evening visitors is expressed by tea and cakes, the hostess always pouring out the beverage aad a servant handing it to ' the guests. . The beverage of the common people is yerLa mate, the leaves of a thrub that grows In Paraguay, and it is also much used by the better classes. though the Chinese plant takes its place in the parlor. ' Terba mate is a slightly exhilarating drink, with the taste of tea and a faint savor of tobacco. It is pre pared by putting a little burnt sugar in tha bottom a eup, men a ptnen or two ot the dried leaves. ' after which boiling water Is poured on and it ie drunk steaming hot, or rather Sucked through a tube. The poor use uttte gouras ioi cups, with a bamboo taoe caiiea bombillu while the rich indulsre in ele gant mugs of silver or ohioa, with silver, bombilias, s ,i "v ' ''., Evening narties. larse and small, for mal Or informal, are very mucn ;: in fashion,' and the refreshments served are always cakes, ices and teas. Tears ago before, the Chilians grew jealous or lor ignert and also, perhaps, before journal iats csrue. down here to publish unpleaa' ant truths about them all strangers were welcomed with overflowing hospi tality and delighted simplicity. But bow such warmth is seldom shown, except in remote country places, where the mate cud and its bombilla are stilt passed from your neighbor's lips to your own, and where the hostess will pause in front of you with her dish of dulces in one hand and looon in the other while she envelops a peach in its rich sirup and gently thtusts it into your mouth, and so on arouud the circuit of the drawing room. imj you bring a letter ot i high in some 'Chilian city. He . leaves his card at your hotel with the informa tion that he will "celebrate greatly ac quaintance with you," and when you return the call will assure you that his house and all it contains is entirely at your service-a meaningless phrase, ex cept that henceforth you have the entree of the casa, and his wife will receive you cordially. .The parlor is always lighted at evening, and you are at liberty to drop in without knocking at nine or ten o'clock, every evening in the week if you like, to take tea and remain till mid night, ' the usual amusements being music, conversation and tea. The mas ter of the mansion is not often present, for he is spending his evenings some where else in the same way or maybe playing cards at his club. Sunday is the day for complimentary visiting, - calls being made at two or three in the after noon, and also at twilisrht. Ladies are rarely attended home from erening visits by anybody but a servant, "oeaux, as we at the north understand the term, not being permitted. SELECT SIFTINUS. Men in Assyria live on six coots a day. In Africa there are immense tracts of wild cotton of excellent quality. Teachers' salaries in the United States annually amount to more than $30,000, 00. Cashmere shawls are made of the hair a diminutive goat found in Little Thibet. A trestle on the Northern Pacific Rail road is 300 leet above the gora whija it spans. A physician out in Si. Paul, Minn., by mistake vaccinated a lot of girls witu mucilage. In a field boloain? to a Mr. Oi'rdev, f Halford, near Ludlow, Scjclaud.a pea produced 105 pods. An inventor in Germany has male a clock that he warrants will go to the year 9999 without winding. In Montana, recently, a bolt of liiflit- ning from a clear sky struck a womiti and traced on her the perfect represen tation of the branch of a tree without urting her in the least. James Henderson, an old sailor, at Norfolk, Va., has an iinae of a full- rigged ship tattoed upon his arm, waich is so small that it cannot be fully dis tinguished without the aid of a magni fying glass. A bouse still standing in Chicjpje, Mass., is reported to be '225 years old, and is probably the oldest dwelling iu the Com nonwealth. It is in a good state of preservation and its preien: owner has occupied it ti(ty-3erca ycin continuously. A remarkable ease of tlio attachment of an animal for its master is reported in the case of an old horse which Or. Wal ter Nangle, of Virginia, had owned for nearly twenty years before his death. On the latter event the horse gave v irion signs of recognizing the loss of his mis ter, becoming unmanageable, aad, wnen he was conliucd, died, apparently fro u grief. Certain localities in the South wore called "Hundreds," as, for instance, Bermuda Hundreds, on the Jatr.es River, because the English colonists trans planted from their old homes the names they were accustomed to there. A "hun dred" in Eugland was a subdivison of a county consisting of ton times ten fami lies, or ten titamgs. In England the "hundreds" system is said to have been oiiginated by Alfred the Great, for the collection of taxes. History of Lighthouses. The history of the lighthome goes back to the time when your neighbors didn't fling things into your bic'.c yard. It is claimed thai Virgil hal knowledga of a lighthouse, and that he sutod tha: one was placed on a tower of the temple of Apollo, on Mount Leucas, the light of which, visible far out at tea, warned and guided, mariners. It is even said that the colossus of Khodes.erected JUU years before the birth of Christ, showed from his uplifted hand a signal light. But the famous Poaros of Alexandria, built 235 B. C, is the first light of undoubted rec cord. Other lights were shown from towers at Ostia, Ravenna, Apamoa, but the lighthouse at Corunna, Spain, is be lieved to be the oldest sea town. This was built in the reign of Trojan, and in 1634 was reconstructed. England and France have towers built by their Komaa conquerors, which were used at light houses, and they are to-day marvels iu the art of masonry. Chuajo Herald. American Wateiies Lead the World. "The American watch leads the world to-day," said Charles L. Genta, of Walt ham, Mast., at the St. James Hotel, "and any other better than the high grade American watch is made simply to please rich man's fancy and is practically a toy. Before the war the watches maae in the country were cheap, plated a lairs, with little or no merit. All our good watches wore then made by Swiss work men.. The war stopped all that, because it made it impossible to obtain toe watches of foreign manufacture, and of course our people set themselves out to see what they could do. We sell watches to-day in all parts of the world and they are acknowledged tha world over to be the best of timekeepers. You wilt not find a lailroad mas, in thU. country, no matter how able he it to have a watoh of foreign make, who does not depend on one of our watches. It is perfectly nat- tnral, as they are absolutely the best. lor Telegram. !' ' ; Preferring Iron From Rut. ; - ;; The beautiful ironwork so much 'in rogue nowadays, is generally finished, on account of its susceptibility to ; rust, with a coating oi black laoquer, or some other preparation, whioh is not only in appropriate but giro to the metal a tinuatural appearance. A clever French man, who was an expert in metal work,' showed us such a smple and effective way of preserring it from rust, that it is worth remembering, The only material required is a cow's horn (the toy trum pets sold in the shops will answer the purpose).1 Heat the iron nod rub the edge of the horn orer it that is all. If the horn smokes a little as you rub it on yen will know that the iron is hot enough. This will cause the horn to melt, and an imperceptible coating will be left upon' the iron that will afford, complete protection from the damp for a v'str or more on out-door work. On ta il ..if i-.inwvk it will Inst indefinitely. PIGS FOUND THE WEALTH EOWA CTSTRBHATED COPPZB 1CXNX WAS DISCOVERED. A. Michigan Boardlng-House Keeper - Pound the Animals Kootlnjr and Squealing In Vine Ore. "How was the Calumet and Hecla discovered? you ask. 'Here, Captain Duncan, you tell this man what he wants to know." Thus appealed to the broad-shoul dered, smiling faced man whose spirit ' pervades the great copper mine, stepped up to the little group waiting for dinner in the hotel at Calumet. "It was pigs, ' he said. "Pigs?" I exclaimed incredulously. "Pigs, and no mistake." returned the captain. Back in 1883 nn uxploiing party came here to try to find copper. They built a shanty tolivo in, and of course. tney brouzhtsome pigs. One nitht the pigs were lost. The boarding-house keeper started out to find them. After a long search he heard tho pigs rooting and squealing, but he could not see them. The noises seemed to come from down in the earth. Next morning a party of men went back to the place whence the noises came, and after a search they found a pit ten or fifteen feet deep. The mouth was covered with bushes, and the growth of the trees about the sides gave every evidence that it had not been used for centuries. There the pigs wore content edly rooting among broken pieces oi rock. "A rudo stoue hammer and some charred sticks give evidence of earlier explorers who had evidently gone away unsuccessful. The hammer was of the same kind as the other implements, which had been traced back to tho days of tho predecessors of the Indians whom the French found in possession of the lands the Indians who built the mounds and who over-ran the whole country from Mexico to Lake Superior, where they got copper for their imple ments and uteasils. The mound-builders, like the explorers who had discov ered the ancient pit, loosed for copper only in mnsos, as it had been deposited in fissure veins and in the lava (lows. Tne huge chunks of virgin copper weigh- Muiinaoy tons and the smiller masses I hnngiuj; in the rocks like metal icicles were the only kind known to the an I cients.and the moderns hail be?a assured j by the learned geologists that copper couid be found only in rocks formed from lava. "But the pigs had turned over pieces of rock formed by the action of the water aqueous rocks -and in these conglomerates tliero certain was copper. This seemed a find indeed. lSut when the matter was reported science scoffed at the explorers, saying that the copper conglomerates loiinu were simply a treak of nature and that money would be wasted if an attempt should be made to work them. So Mr. Hurlbut, who owned the lands, continued to give his attention to the Huron mine, which was workiog the lava flows. For the money lie borrowed for the Huron he gave to Quiney Shaw, of Boston, the lands on which the conglomerates were found. Mr. Shaw soon bejan to work these rocks, and from these begiuning the richest, the most staple and the belt promising copper mine in the world has been built up." The Calumet and Hecla is a myste rious corporation. Owing the greatest mining plant in the world and spending money lavishingly in experiments, im provements and elaborate machinery, the company allows none but its own em ployes under ground and guards the de tails of all its affairs with a jealousy that piques curiosity. The company owns thousands of acres of land from which it takes the wood considerably over one hundred cords a day which in summer feeds its extensive battery of boilers, cl being used only in winter. As the res inous wood cracales in the tierce beat it I gives off a pungent odor. No lands are sold, but the employes of tne company lease the surlace right of their lots and can sell out to the company at a fair val uation for improvements and lease. The company has built an enormous school house, and the towns of Calumet and lied Jacket enjoy a good degree of civilization. The very large number of educated men employed in the various mines makes an excellent society, which has close connections with New York and Boston, where the mines have their financial headquarters. Saturday, July 18, was pay day, and the various mines disbursed iu cosh $290,000 an enormous amount of money to flow into the little towns about Portage Like. The people in Houghton and Hancock buy Calumet and Hecla stock as they would make a deposit of money in the savings bank. At the present rate of output President Agassiz reports there is work in sight for seventy years to come. The company is increasing its capacity so as to about double its present output, or to work out the ore in sight in about thirty-five years. The machinery for the lied Jacket shaft now being put in place will cost the company i, 500,000. Like all the other machinery operated by the Calu met and Hecla, it it built to stand for ages. The granite on wmco it rests comet from Massachusetts and the cast ings from Philadelphia. Tho great en gine in the central power house has a greater power than the two Corliss en gines which were the wonder of the Cen tennial. From a depth of 420'. feet it hauls trains of ore and dumps them on cars to be taken to the great mills, on Lake Linden, where the ore is crushed and the rock portions are washed away by tuccessive washings until copper par ticles as fine as dour are depjsited on the washing tablet. . '. A new pumping engine, with a ca pacity of 50,000,000 gallons a day, has just . been pnt in place, and after the water has been used it is again elerated by huge wheels having a diameter of fifty-two feet, and is allowed to flow into Lake Linden.:. ,' Bis days in the week and twenty-four hour in tho day the opera tions of this great mine are carried on. Detroit Tribune. ''' " ' . ' A Want Sunflower. , , There ia growing on , East Walnut street, near Jefferson, a sunflower that has attracted much attention on account ot its great sise and beauty, The stalk has now attained the height of fourteen feet.and the plant is crowded with forty- fire separate and perfect bloasom. As this magnificent bunch of flowers leans toward tha rising sun fresh from .its dewy bath, the giant plant testifies elo quently to the fertility of the soil of tha Ozark s. Kansas should send to Spring field for her floral emblem. SinuigMl POINTERS ON COLLARS. Time awl Trouble Savins Dovlooetor Shirt and Collar Woarar. 1 Millions of good linen collars are" mined annually by the handling they receive in laundries. The ncidx used in washing are baneful enough, but the greatest harm occurs in the iroa- ing. Perhaps the moat popu'ar of col lars ju-t at present is the familial "bent-edge" style. 1 his is the one that suffers most at the bauds of the laundress. The points are turned over, and the hot iron presses down on the seam, stretching the fiber at that point so that the collar larely is piespnt able after two or three washings. Here is shown a little device that will effect a great saving if put into piactico, while being simple in optraiion. First, instructions should be given that your cnllnrs are (o be returned "ironed flat," the ends not bent in any wise. Then take the collar iu baud, as shown in Fig. 1. Run the tongue along the under side of the seam for folding, moisten ing it, not so that it will penetrate to the upper surface of the collar, but "yet sufficiently to to loosoa the fibers of the linen around the seam. '1 hen j reverse the collar and hold it, ngaiml some Hat, clean surface, as shown in Fig. 2. I , With a lead pencil or thn tbir.nb sail in play it is readily and neatly j pressed down to the projie'' angle. Treated thus a good collar c ill last twice or threo times as long in use a the ironed down affair. Hon o dilli culty may be experienced at first in having tho collars returned as re quested, but a card attached to tha package containing instructions will be effeoiive. rfveil God Wlttiout Trying. All the day long the arms of fne great Father are stretched nut to us lovingly, yet how difficult a thing many of us make of drawing near unto Him! We long to be His, yet we stumble and grope as though the way were hard to find. A minister tells us of how tliU was the case with a young lad who was lying upon a bed of sickness, from which it was thought he would never again rise. "One day I saw he seemed more than usually sod and troubled. I sat down by hi a, took his hand and asked him what made him sad. 'I waut to love God,' be said. 'Tell me how to love Him.' " 'My boy, you must trust God first, and then you will love Him without even trying to do so at all.' "With a surprised look, he exclaimod, 'What did you ay ?' "I repeated the exact words afrain. " 'Well,' he slowly said, '1 nover knew that before. I always thought I nni-t love God before I bad a right to trust Him.' " 'No, my dear boy,' I answered. 'God wants us to trust Him; that is what Jesus always asks us to do first oi ail, and He knows that as soon as we trust Him we shall begin to love Him. That is the way to love God ; to pul your trust in Hiin first of all.' Then 1 spoke to him of the Lord Jesus, and how God sent Him that wo might be lieve in Him, and how all through Hi i life He tried to win the trust of men ; bow grieved He was when men would not believe in Him, and how every one who believed came to love Him without trying, because 'He first loved them.' "He drank in the truth, and, simply saying, 'I will trust Jesus now,' withou'i an effort put his young soul in Christ'u hands that very hour, and so be camn into 'the ieace of God which passeth understanding.' and lived in it calmly and sweetly to the end. None of al the loving friends who watched ove: him during the remaining weeks of hii life doubted that the dear boy had learned to love God without trying, and that, dying, he went to Him whom, 'not havinc seen he loved. ' " j The number of arrests for drunken mess in Massachusetts for the year 18U0 was 52,814, of whom only 5,882 were women. Forty-five thousand nine hundred and eighty-two arrests were "made in the twenty-five cities, and lonly 6,591 in all the rest of the State. The city population is 1,827,164; the .town population 911,779. The number (of arrests has increased since 1885 from 1J5.480 to 52,821 in lSJiit), whatever the lfr.nres may mean. A Life Saved Mr. Ons. Raymond, of Benecn Fall, . V lump fetier in lite employ rf Bammy & C;., the wpii known rump maker t or that rlact. )e ia a member oi Kamsay Engine Oo. He say: "My w Ie- without aou'it owdi her life to Hool'i &arnpir-ll.i. A few ytwa aju so 3 w n t death' dimr, due to uloo Ipolatmtnt, ot ai p!iyiloiaii aay pyema. Afmr erarrcMtc lsi fallal Hoil'i Sar.iti''itli rmr'it ar 11c f tit or if 1 aU rlrv. siulh! t iu t am au Tara I t tlm wti auaooaii and hraiao.ie, out coatluuas taking Hood's Saraaoarllla rM to crwluaHT Retttax ov thaw' troablM. 81 rllusli Hool'a, tta aotMn: !, ill wjujlltrj ,1 win "(Twt a en-nrvw enr KI.VK ORtiAH Bll.M pplll Into tiaatrui to Quickly AMOrtieil, Clwniwa th Heftd, , Holt Dm Saras and Cam CATARRH. teton Tut aaifSimll, qnlek b Relieve Cold k Heed and Beadeche. We. at DruggUta. JU.Y uttOS., W Warrou bt, K. T. f "TtW Ihitt'sHairDye . ' Gray had r or wh taken ehan tr4 to flOM? ' black by alnfrla appltoain of thla Dya. It lmparta a natural color, acta rnatajitan , . otMlyandcontelMitothlna;! hair. Hold by all drunlata, or aant by ax ; . prwa on receipt of prlca, 100 Offloa, 99 Jk 41 Pnrfc Ymrm, Tw Y"-, P)ra H dlubl prtnc. i dlubivd. a ( for lnarea. m yamni ex nrtmrv Writ foe Lava. A.W. UtoiMMC There wet recently reeeived in New Lon don, Conn, a banana weighing two aad halt ponuda. Will rieat to a Plolefc. At lonjr a the tight laats among the wall paper manufacturers, the Siilolitr Wall Pa per Companv.of No. 13 North Eleventh utreet, Philtidelt hie, will five ihe labile the advan tage ot the droit in pricey, - Ha get thl lrom them direct, fccnii lour luoceut nlainim lor immpieif ot their eiht, len aud twelve cen; gUu. Gold it shipped abroad in kegs. Chlldren Enjoy The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing eflecte of Syrnp of Figs, wten In need of a lax ative and If the father or mother be costive or bilious the most gratifying results follow its ose,so that it is the beet family remedy knowa and every family should have a bottle. Men are what their mothers make them. Malaria cured and eraUetd from the ivfttem by Hrowu's Iron bitters. ilch en riches the blood, lone tats uorves, ala. aiKea tloo. Acts like a charm on persons in geiier! Ui hcaltu, giving uuw co .rgy aud sLroutfdi. A miner drnssed in armnr went intoa burn ing mine at Kepubhc, Mich., to fij-ht the lire. FITS s opped free by Dr.. Ki.inr's Gkkat Nekvk Hrktoi'.KU. No fits after first dny'a line. Marvelous cures. Treati.e and $' tri ll bottle tree. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., I'liila., Pa. Only six hordes hnve ever trotted twenty miles within one hour. We will give Sl'Ji reward for any case of c tarrli that i-annot bj cured ivitli Hii.l'j C larrh Cure. Taken internum . k'. J. L'henev tic Co., l-Yoprs., Toledo, O. It i nn interesting fact that there are no I bald-headed trumps. Brown's Iron Bitters curei Dyp-'psia. Ma laria, Bihousni'ssan I U:,.iural Deu.iity. lji.es Mreugth, aiUVs uueslion, toaoa lliu nerves crea ea apue: ito. Tai 'ieit tonic for Nuria MoiUera, weak women aud children. A Connecticut mereh bednteads n net bedditiir,' 'lit advertises ''iron HOW TO GET WELL is a question of vital importance, but it is equally important that you use some harmless remedy; many people completely wreck their health by taking mercury and potash mixtures, for pimples and blotches, or some othel trivial disease. S. S. S. is purely vegetable containing no mercury or poison of any kind. And is at the same time an infallible cure for skin diseases. Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta, Ga. "August Flower 59 How does he feel ? He feels blue, a deep, dark, unfading, dyed- I" in-the-wool, eternal blue, and he makes everybody feel the same way j August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel? He feels a, headache, generally dull and con stant, but sometimes excruciating August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel? He feels a violent hiccoughing or jumping of the stomach after a meal, raising bitter-tasting matter or what he has eaten or drunk August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel ? He feels the gradual decay of vital power ; he feels miserable, melancholy, hopeless, and longs for death and peace August Flower the Rem edy. How does he feel ? He feels so full after eating a meal that he can hardly walk August Flower the Remedy. 1. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A. DONALD KENNEDY Of Roxbuiy, Mass,, says 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. rrice, fl.OU. feoiu by every Druggist in the United States and Canada. Money in HOSEIISCMM. IT TOP KNOW HOW To keep them, bat t ie wronf to let the poor thinge Sutter and Die of the va rlouaMaladiea w hich afflict them when in a majority of caaea a Care cou d have been effected had the ownor poaaeaaed a Utile knowl edge, aucta aa can be pro cured from tha ONE HUNDRED PAGE BOOK e offer, ambraefna; th ff ..a.l liPMimmrol piwi litMEDY FOR J- Cheapest Kellel Is uoia in ui jaoaa qh no s3 t BJr - aLsv .sataMalaaw Is aa Ointment, ot whleh a small parttole la applied to tlia - .Bostrlls. frlce, 60e. Bold by druggists or sent by mail. . Tr VmoHtsrtin Chbush, tfffl Ciross ' , ' . THlOlINiaNOt!U!HC. TktaalrSaAkS kOMIMlWllhblHribba. 1 .k. --.L J m. II.HM.W. jr-IfOTTT HICMaTair cV.I. ''' ' KonntOHT ISM A ringing noi in the earn, headache, deafness, eves weak ; obstruction of nose, dis charges falling into throat, some times profuse, watery and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, bloody and . putrid ; offensive breath ; smell and tasto impaired, and general debility. Not all of these symptoms at once. Probably only a few of them. That's Catarrh. ! A medicine that by its mild, soothing, cleansing and healing firoporties has cured tho most hope ess cases. One that will cure you, no matter how bad your case or of how loner standing. A medicine that doesn't pimply pnlliate for a time, but produces perfect and per manent cures. That's Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. A cash payment of 8500, not by you, as you might expect, but to you, if you can't be cured. It's an offer that's made in good faith, to provo their medicine, by responsible men, the proprietors of Dr. Sage's n.'i;:nlv. That's the kind of medicine to try. Doesn't it Beem so ? U 38 CHEAPEST AND BEST GERMAN DICTIONARY OF 034 PACES FOR CKLYJIHE DOLLAR. A FIRST-CLASS ETIOMT AT VKKV bilALl. PRICK. It(rieaFn(rll h Words with th Carman Rqnlwm Irnw a ( Proinmjihtlnn and German Wonli with E4Ufb Deflua.uui, Sent postpaid ou receipt of $1 READ WHAT THIS MA!t HAYS! HAT.ru Mass., Kay SLIM. .Voaft fub. TTnu, 114 Tonard St.: The German Dlrttonary Is received and I am aiTMk pleanfd witli It. 1 Uld not exittct to find such i-laat pripi it mo cheap a booa. rieitae attno a i opj to - mmm incujMu una y ior wiaa. m- m. uaju Addreai BOOK PUB. CO., 134 Leonard Street. New York Citr. PENSION Ko Pension. K ftt, josi.ru ii. ii ui riii;. AMIlMil OA, - l. Th FlMCBT 'ilvstratrt Catalooit of OHKiiKlf. Ficlief, J weiry, 4nrr i Wrl'iiij 1or menttiiel:' (OuJ wityrA; no eaiiVananiaT. tit Kp)f-iuMrt'R-M Htaniue I i vrlopr, Mir ..ill iJjtEli Mil l.Li , HUtta rcnd.Jnd. 'How we Make the Fruit Farm Pay." Sample CUj-y Kree. A-utres: l . A. lULK, Uocliaalar, N. V. SIOKI Weak, Nia Wretched mortal gat ell ana Beep weu. ticaun nirm tells bow. 50 cu. a year. Sample uOD7 Jr. J. II DYL Editor, BoflalOa N. Y PATENTS W. T. FHzcerald. Wa.litn-rtin. I. C, 40-pase book fre r.'Jcurnal ot Aove nt u r e' 255 AiidifsbLlNkJsVa I.K, l'A .Vti.i HjKt no.(-oM inmjK. il wirda J'kU adr. te every auwcrlpor. Here It Is! Want to learn alt about a Bono 7 Bow to Pick Out a . SoodOne? Knowlmperrec-a tloaa aad ao Guard affalnst Fraud ? Detect Dlaease aad Effect a Cora when aama U poaalble? Tell tha in or he Teeth? What to call tho Different Part of the aalmal? How to Shoe a Hone Properly - AU thla and other Va'nahle Information ran Lie obtained bJt reading our 100-l'A UK I LlMJHTll TKI HoRKK HOOK, which we will forward, rfet pa.U, on receiptor only -J3 canta In at nip BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. New York City. Chiciceais, a man who devoted Tf art of hi !ifr loCONDVCTlN'; A rolJl.TKY YARD AS A BUSINESS, not aa a paa time. Aa the living of him aelf and funiily depended on it. he gave the aubject eurh attention aa only a nerd ot bread will oora Biand. and the reeitltwaaa. It rand nieces, after he had apent much money and loot hundreds of valuable chick eutincxiei1menttof. What be leftmed m mi; theae rear) la embodied In thla book, which we tend postpaid fo 25 cnt tneUmn. u teai-lwa you how to Detect and Cure Diceaeea, how Feed for Egea and alaa fat vatteiiine. which Fowti ta Have for Breeding Piuyoaaa and everytlihift. Indeed, roa euould kuow on tbJa aubjeob hook run. noitoK. CATARBH. Best Etwlest to u.9 Immeituw. A cur la oeicalu. kur equal. . . . - . , i ry I T7Y L'"V'1iii J u