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Statesman Journal from Salem, Oregon • Page 3

Publication:
Statesman Journali
Location:
Salem, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

S0MEWHATE0MANTIC. SALEM BUSINESS DIRECTORY, in TUB QUIDS. begin' the special evangelistic efforts for this season. The pastor will preach morning and evening; ubjest: at 1030 a. tn.

"A Blessing or a Curse, Which At 730 p. m. "The Secret of Christian Power." Friday next, being the regular quarterly fast day, will be observed as follows: Sunrise prayer meeting, a. preaching 10 a. experience conference, 3 p.

praise service 6:30 p. preach. Ing 730 p. m. We will not have In our efforts the Inspiration of an evangelist of fame, but if each one who has a name and place among us In church fellowship will measure up to the Divine requirements we will have what is better, a church awake and at work.

The Sunday school and social meetings for the day will be as usual. The choir will be led by Prof. Heritage and the singing will be of the very best. Services every eve-ring during the week. Special efforts will be made to make the meetings attractive and profl table.

As they are discovered they are side and chopped In two by a machine, thus withdrawing them from circulation. Crooks' sometimes counterfeit the penny and find It a profitable business. One hundred and ten pieces can be coined from each pound of copper. The metal Is quoted at eighteen cents per pound. It to a strange anomaly, yet in nearly all Instances the counterfeit coin to worth more for the metal It contains than the one stamped by the mint authorities.

The reason to that an alloy of zinc is added to the baser metal by the government coiners, while the counterfeiter, to save himself work, makes his penny of pure, copper. The counterfeits are there, fore easily recognized. The coin made of unalloyed copper Is softer and duller than It would be with the zinc added, and the Impression of the die to not so accurate and distinct There are seventeen pennies to an Inch plied one on top of the other. Therefore, the number of -holiday coppers put out by the sub-treasury If placed In a solid pile would stand over 652.MU inches high. This ia 64,412 feet or a pile ten miles and a quarter In height MARY THURMAN, BONANZA QUEEN.

Daughter of the "Old Roman" Make a Rich Strike In the West. Once the belle of Washlnton and now the bonanza queen of a Colorado mining camp, Mary Thurman, the youngeat daughter of the "Old Roman," the late Allen G. Thurman, has had one of the most romantic careers of any woman In America. Mary Thurman has been for the last five years a social exile from the fashionable circles of Washington and New York, where her brilliancy, originality and Independence, and her father's national repute formerly gave her prestige and position. While In Washington she made what was supposed to be a brilliant marriage, but a divorce followed and ehe went West to San Diego and took up her abode at Tla Juanna, on the Mexican line.

Since then she has made two extraordinary marriages, and when she visited her old home at Columbus. shortly before her mother died, her father turned her from the door. News haa just come from the mining camp of Piacho, near Yuma, that fortune has played the game Into Mary Thurman's hands again, and that after years of luckless fate she will probably become one of the richest women on the Pacific coast She has made the richest strike known in any of the desert camps for years, and while prospecting in the hills found a vein of ore that promises to make her a bonanza queen. The romance is enhanced by the fact that her find was made within a few days of the brilliant marriage in London of her first husband, Lieutenant-Commander William S. Crowles, a naval attache of the United States, to the heiress.

Miss Roosevelt, sister of James R. Roosevelt, the secretary of the United States embassy. Mary Thurman was her father's favorite child in her girlhood. She was named after her mother, who was a Miss Mary Dunn, of a well-known Lexington, family, and she had much of her mother's social charm, with the mental endowments of her father. Her sister is the wife of ex -Gov.

McCormlck, of -Arizona, afterwards assistant secretary of the treasury in Washington and now in New York. Until the domestic difficulties which led to Mary Thurman's divorce from Lieut. Crowles, the two sisters lived at Richmond Hill, near Jamaica, L. In houses presented to them by their father. Mrs.

McCormick still lives in New York the greater part of the year, and from there was summoned to the deathbed of Judge Thurman a few weeks ago. Mary Thurman resided over her father's house in Washington so graciously that it became a centre of social life during his term in the senate, although Mrs. Thurman had little taste for gayeties. Mrs. McCormick's house adjoined her father's In Washington, and the two mansions were thrown together when either gave a large entertainment.

The two sisters, one the wit and the other the beauty, were soon leaders in the younger social set. Mary Thurman has a curlius religious vein in her character, and narrowly escaped entering a nunnery in her early youth, but the counsels of her family prevailed against her religious zeal. She was educated in the Ursullne convent. Brown county, Ohio, and though she never became a member of the Catholic church she was a regular attendant at the cathedral on Broad street. Columbus.

Her marriage to Lieut Cowles took place with great eclat about sixteen years ago. He was then in command of the Despatch, a small vessel which lay at the Washington navy-yard, and was used for pleasure purposes. Their married life was an unhappy one and by mutual agreement Mrs. Crowles secured a divorce through an Ohio court She then went West and while traveling in Southern California, met and marled a dashing young adventurerThomas Scoltt Gifford who was born of English parents in Spain, and. Instead of castles in Castile, proved to have a wife and two little children.

Mary Thurman then procured a second divorce and astonished her friends by marrying "Bug" Holllday, the noted baseball player. She has lived a wild, adventurous life for the past few years, and Is known in all the mining camps of Southern California. Always prone to enthusiasms, she caught the prospecting fever and her long, lonely walks among the hills have made her a familiar figure of the region. What the new bonanza queen will do with her fortune, should it develop as richly as it promises, is interesting her friends. It is scarcely probable that she will care to go East to the scene Of her social triumphs and misfortunes; but in the role of a bonanza queen all things are possible.

MILLIONS IN PENNIES. Enormous Demand for the Coppers in New York. From October 29th to December 24th the New York sub-treasury paid out over its counters eleven million two hundred thousand copper pennies to banks and tradesmen in New York for the holiday rush. From October to January 1st of each year the demand for this denomination of coin Is something enormous. After the trade incidental to the holidays Is over the coppers become a drug on the money market and they begin to go back into the vaults of the sub-treasury.

The demand for the coin) this year was greater than ever. Sixty thousand dollars' worth, or six million coppers In all, were received last year and stored for holiday use. This stock was soon exhausted, and five million, two hundred thousand new pennies had to be ordered from the mint at Washington. One large dry goods firm took 2,500,000 of the coppers, and the others were delivered to retail merchants and banks. The banking institutions of Brooklyn, Harlem and Jersey City been large purchasers of the shining pennies.

The coins are counted by three men of the subsidiary coin department They are not counted separately, but In pairs, and are then bunched in bags containing $10, or one thousand pieces. Each bag weighs exactly seven pounds. During the recent rush the three men assignee! to the task could not keep up with the work. In counting the coins an eya Is kept out for mutilated and copper coins, ond of the latter class an average of one bun dred and fifty are thrown out each month. Program for Eevival Services.

How the Week Will Be fYhaarorofl A Whole lot of Church News That Will Make Interesting Bead- 11119 uviuiugi Baptism. The German Baptist will have baptism In Mill creek today 2 p. North Cottage street. South Salem. Leslie M.

E. church. Morning service will he conducted by M. C. Stan and the evening service by Rev.

V. 8. Austin. Independent Evangelical. On Cottage 'street, J.

Bowersox, pastor. Preaching at 10:30 and Sunday school at 12; Endeavor society at 6:30. During next week services will be held nightly at 7:30. Christian. Corner of Center and High n.

a. xsvuwu. iwwi. sermon at Sunday school at 12 Junior Endeavor at 3 p. Y.

P. S. C. E. at 605 p.

evening sermon at 7:30. Unity. Services at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p.

Sunday sohool at Rev. W. E. Copeland, pastor. Subject of sermon, "1896;" subject of evening lecture, "Is Francis Schlatter Jesus Christ Re-turned to Earth Again?" Y.

M. C. A. A song service and musicals will be held at 4 p. m.

This service will be open to ladies. Prof. Heritage and two quartets will sing. Prof. Winkler will play.

The association orchestra will also render special selections. Yew Park. Services at the U. B. church, in Yew Park, as follows: Preach, lng at 11 a.

m. and also at 7:30 p. Sabbath school at 10 a. m. and Young People's Christian Endeavor meeting at 6:30 In the evening.

W. Reynolds, pastor. First Presbyterian. At 10:30 quartely communion service will be held and public reception) of members. This being thr.

opening the yeir it is hoped that every member will make an effort to be present. Bring your foreign mission offering. At 7:30 the pastor's subject will be oicea of the New Year." There will be a special program for the week of prayer. Sunday school at 12; Y. P.

S. C. E. at 6:15. First Baptist.

Morning services at 10:30, subject: "The Turning Over of a New Leaf, or a Salutatory for the New Year;" evening services at 730; topic: "The World's Great Crisis." Carl Denton will give a violin solo as an evening offertory. There will be preaching and evangelistic services In the church every evening ep-cept Saturday, commencing at 7:30. These services will be held In the Sunday school roan or tne cnurcn. First Congregational. At 1030 a.

m. there will be a short sermon on "A Watchword for the New Year," after which will follow the public reception of a number of new members, and communion service; Sunday school at 12 m. Junior Endeavor at 3 p. m. Y.

P. S. C. E. at 630 p.

-nr. AC 7:30 p. m. there will be a short sermon on "A New Year's Caller." There will be evangelistic services in the church every evening during the week but Saturday. Junior Endeavor.

The Junior Endeav-orers of the Conxegattonal church had a unique way of combining business with pleasure It being the time for the semiannual business meeting, a lunch was served and thirty Juniors came out to en-Joy the social and elect officers for a new term. A fine time was had and the following officers were elected: president, La Verne Kantner; vice president, Cora Talklngton; secretary, Mabel Branson; treasurer, Ed. Jackson. Missionary Society. The Woman's Missionary society of the First Congregational church met in the parlor of the church Friday afternoon at 2:30 p.

m. As it was the annual business meeting cf the society no program was rendered. The election of officers resulted in the selection of the following: president, Mrs. W. C.

Kantner; vice president, Mrs. H. Harrild; secretary, Mrs. E. E.

Pentland; treasurer, Mrs. A. H. Dodd. The usual committees on program and entertainment were appointed, and the society is now ready for another year's work.

First M. E. The services of the day Will DISCOVERER 0' The Excelsio? Haif Tonic. Ealr BALD HEADS COVERED. For the first tine In the history of the world a discovery la made that restores gray hair to Its satural color without dye.

Mme. Yale, that most Wonderful woman chemist and great BcienHst, is tha discoverer. The Exceislor Haw Tonic la the Jwmedy. Mme. Yale has placed It on the market for the benefit of the public, and guarantees It will restore the natural color back to the hair, no matter how long It has been gray.

The cure is permanent In every way. It wilTalso stop falling hair In from 4 hours to one week. It restores the hair on bald oeaas ana creates a suuruure gmwui. -guaranteed cure for every ailment of the hair or ecalp. The whole world bows down to Mme.

it ale discovery and to her great skill as a chemisjL which has never been equaled by man or woman. TneKx-eelstoc Hair Tonic holds complete sway oyer the human hair. There are no ailments which the hair la heir to that it cannot cure. Beware of imitations. See that every bottle la labeled "Mme.

M.Yale's Ex celsior Hair Tonic Gearanteed to nestore mj MM BLACKSMITH tNO We have a nrst-daas blackcmlth she? at the southwest corner of State and Front etreets, opposite tha Salem Iron Works. Wa have been for several years employed as blacksmiths in the Salem Iron Works, and any work dona by us la done In a workmanlike manner. Heavy work a specialty. All kinds of boat and engine work neatly dona Wood-choppers sledges made to order, and warranted for mx months, wedges for thirty daya We are also prepared to give figures on all klnda of wrought Iron work. All work done at lowest prices.

MoCARL A KINO. 10-20 Salem, Oregon. Horseshoeing I $1.50 PER HORSE. W. T.

IIATTEN, practical horses hoer with MoCarl King, opposite the Sa lem Iron Works, AU over-reaching and Interfering homes shod practically end trouble overcome. Also fine band-forged shoeing to order. trial will convince you that turn out only first-clam work. 11-2-lm VETERINARY. veteriianr Mm free.

Condition, vermifuge and diuretic powders blistering preparations, purgative bills rnd other preparations al ways on band. Lameness and surgery a specialty, office and dispense tory at bed rout livery stable. Halem, Or. W. C.

MITCHELL, 12 17 Graduate Oat Vet College. FINANCIAL W. A. CUSICK, President J. H.

ALBERT, Cashier. CAP1T1 HATIOHAL BANK of Salem Transacts general banking business. Prompt attention paid to collections Loans mads. Exchange bought and sold the principal ettJee of the world. MONEY TO LOAN On mortgage security, both farm and city; also on approved personal security.

Warrants or atata, oswaty and etty Boise Barker, 4-a lm St7 Commercial Street. Money to Loan. On farm or city property, on long or short time. We make special rates on large amounts. Loans eoasjdered with out delay.

T. K. FORD. Room over Ladd a Bush's bank. MOSEY TO On farm land security.

tj Inside property. No delay. Hamilton Moir. Room K. Bush hank tmUdtae dsrf FURNITURE.

NOW IS THE TIME! To buy furniture, carpets, mnctlags nod everything In the furniture line, I will sell for the next 60 days at cost, and some goods for lees. I mean just what I say. Call and examine my stock and prices and be convinced. I want to make room for a large line of new spt 1ng goods. I am also going to add a line of wall paper and moldings to my spring stock.

J. A. ROTAN. JEWELERS EMBLEM GOODS, Diamond Mountings and Jewelry Of every description mode order. We turn out the finest work la tire city and our prices ore always the lowest The Leading Jeweler.

W. W. MARTIN. State Street Salem HOTELS. THE WILLAMETTE 8ALEM, OREGON.

Reduced Rates. Firt-Clasa all Its Appointor ents. All street cars leave the Willamette for II Dobllo buildings and points of Inter est A. WAQNBR. THE VALLEY HOTEL, (Formerly the Farmers' Hotel) On Milt street, near the nassensrer de- rt has just come Into my possession and have had it properly renovated throughout and am prepared to furnish the beat accommodations to the traveling public at reasonable rates.

12-20 H. EDWARDS, Proprietor. CITY WATER WORKS. SALEM WATER CO. Office, Willamette Hotel tVld's.

Vnr tvstor nei-viee annlv at office. Bills payable monthly in advance, make all complain ta at the office, nnon snickeit to Drevent freezing positively prohibited. Care should be taken, If in danger of freezing to have atop and waste gate closed. Bee sec. 3 rules and regulation No deduction in bills will be allowed for absence or for any cause whatever unless water is cut on from premises.

SEWING MACHINES GEO. C. WILL la headcraarters for Stetoway. Web ber. Estey.

Decker Tease A Emerson pianos; Story Clarke, Ear. buff and Newman Bros, organs. All makes of sewing machines. Instru ments and machines rented and re nalrad. Genuine oil and needles for all sewing machines.

Guitars, banjos. 1 sheet tmisto twos. etc. Two doors I north of. postoflce.

iiioiifitfoin A. H. Dagany, proprietor. Is a perfect connoisseur and constantly 'keeps ttw best of wines and liquors; special brand and whisk for medicinal par. poses.

lie makes a specialty of Cali fornia wines for festival parties and family use, at SOe per gallon and hp: special prices mode according to Quan tity purchased. Sample room andluodi counter supplied with the choicest bev erages and eatables; private room for families. No dishonorable conduct al lowed. The owner guarantees satisfaction to all patrons. Don't fail to oaM at 10 Stats Street, Or.

THE RECEPTION, 960 COMMERCIAL IT EUGENE ECKERIsEN, PROPS. Always keeps the best liquors and cigars on hand, and makes a specialty of OALIFORNXA WINES for family use; Port and Sherry WINE for Sl.23 per gallon, and Claret and White Wise C5c. per gallon. Free deliver within the city limits; and also free, lunch served hot and cold In all kinds of assortments. PRINTERS The Canltal Printing Company has re moved to that location.

Call on us. EDUCATIONAL Preparatory and Connecting Sdil Room 2, Gray block, conducted by PROFESSOR. E. H. ANDERS0X, -APPLY FOR TERMS- REAL ESTATE i General Land Office.

We are doing a general real eatate bueiuea and wull be "pleased to Mat your property. We co-operate with Eastern agenta in all principal cities. Oive us a trial. Btrangera cordially Invited to a aeat in our ofllce, 96H state street, Salem, Or. JOKY SfKAO CK.

10-20 Land A vent a nnnovna THE FRUIT PALACE. Headquarters for dried, canned, green fruit and fresh vegetables. Staple tod faacj Ercafa, Crccbj, Ol ass. Wooden, Tin, Willow and Ora-iteware. Every dopartaaent Is fSJ.

Pramnt dellvarv. U. tOSWUAH. US FEED STORES BREWSTER HIE, Ol rVvnr Street. oats, wheat, bran, shorts and flour.

Quick sales and small profits la oar matte. 10-16-dly FEED AND OSSIOli MOUSE! Flour, mill feed, oil meal, oats, chop feed and ha. Lime, cement hair and nlastes. WHITE QILMORE. No.

54, State street Telephone 87. lit la a soa.sotnanss for Uonorrhwe, s.rBisiisesj Whites, aaaatarareiS. eharawa, or an? inBatnma- sioa, imiauna or aiu tloa of a a mm wesse. Noa-sirlttl iHwasiaes, I lMlaraafK ounSsiar sstis 1 riiiiuLas The Imperial Hotel. Seventh and Washington streets.

gliomas Ottlaean, proprietor, Portland, Or- earn. Piaa. Maiesi European plan, SI. SLM and is. Americas pun 11 tt.M and Webster'o International HDicStionary rarer aabie fa Oflice, seoooi, sad iroaae affsaeassereCse "Vasbrrrftferf." Standard ef the IT.

S. Uov'i ITlut. Ing Office, the V. S. 8iiirrme Court, and nearly all the Sohool book.

Warmly tea. mended lv Bute niipcrinteaaesis of Schools, and oilier Educator al moat without tnuu ber. THE BEST FOR EVERYBODY eccauec I It ts easy to flsd ttie word wanted. wnrirKirn nifir OHwl MIKiaucuoai DlaoSS, esua una liMfiunuur a inuimmiili. 1 It Is easy to ascertain the prominclatlen.

1 pronuiwMMon mmi mr ilia omiiMry aia ertUoallf uarksii lauors umJ fit Uta sotwollMoka. 1 It la easy ts trace the (rrewth a word. 1 iwniirfflTO inn m. uiTftn in ma oitif roi iimraveiniiusuL 1 It la easv learn svhat ward sumim. i i.

if nnitioii. ara clear, rxpllrit, ami wmKu im cauuuufq ia a separate parafrap'fc O. C. MERRTAM CO PublUherB, Spring Held, MmaaH V.8.A., as Speetmea pates, ew ssnt ea appHeattoa. Wife Here's an account of a man shot himself rather than suffer the of Indigestion.

Husband-The fool I Way. didn't he take De Witt's tittle Garly Risers used to Buffer as bad as he 63 before oommeneed taking these little pUla, a Baaaett Karl's CJover Boot Tea Is a sore cure for Headache ous diseases, Nothing relieves For sale by Fred. A. Inks, terai SifEEi. to leltosSsysAI OasraaiM4 fkwjf sa at strtMvn.

I VJPrmais h.imi.s. IT! HHE CRAVAT QUESTION. The Man Who Wears a "Made Tie" Is In PerU. "Among the many subjects which are of profound Interest to society and which stand in the greatest need of patient Investigation we are aware of none deserving priority over the subject of says the Providence Journal. We have put the word in quotation marks because we regard It as open to certain serious objections, despite the sanction which the usage of makers and venders of 'gents furnishing goods' gives It.

'Neckwear' Is as bad as 'electrocuted' or 'in our midst-' But a generation which has been guilty of such aberrations of taste In the adornment of the person as we have been compelled to note from time to time cannot be expected to rejoice in the fine linguistic sense of an Arnold or a Lowell. An honest citizen might conceivably add to 'sack' coat the enormity of a silk hat; and virtue might appear decked out in a fancy But th error into which good men may fall is not to be mistaken for truth. There are men in this community whose moral qualities demand respect, though they flaunt with no apparent consciousness of guilt the 'made It is our duty to reason with such men rather than to berate them, to reprove more in sorrow than in anger. They are not to be confounded with those who sin having the light, and who, approving better things, follow worse. A man who wears a 'made though in peril, is not necessarily lost forever.

"But the 'made tie' is not the only danger from which we ought to petition for deliverance, although it is clearly one of the most threatening. The Houston Post, for instance, informs us that in Texas 'the great majority of mankind are guilty of this horrible device. This it calls 'speaking within If it is right, then the amount of missionary work still to be done by the advocates of good taste is simply appalling. In the first place, there are men who by their own confession do not know how to tie cravats. One such writes from Baltimore to the New York Herald to ask for information on this point.

His curiosity is perhaps distinctly encouraging; but to think that even In Baltimore such instruction should be needed! It is a painful reflection upon our civilization. The Herald truly observes in reply that "the problem of how to arrange and fasten neckwear is one of the most enticing, perplexing, distracting, amusing and maddening that ever bewitched This is strongly put; but not, we think, too strongly. In fact, the true moral and intellectual life of man centers in his cravat. Its size, color, shape and the way in which it Is tied all these things throw an 'illuminating light upon his personality. Let the heathen of Houston rage, and the people of Sioux City imagine a vain thing.

They are harfoarians of the outer darkness. They are children of the 'made tie' and they do the works of darkness. It Is hopeless to try to convert them while respectable men 'in our midst' are guilty of the same heresies. "This' other) danger, to which reference has already been made and one harder to deal with than the 'made tie' in some respects, lies concealed in the black tie which some persons wear with evening dress. Here there is apparently a conflict of testimony! on the question of propriety.

The New York Times has recently taken very radical ground on the subject. It insists that the young men of fashion who sport It 'do not know any better the gravest charge that could be brought against a highly reputable class In the community, whose sole duty it is to know exactly what is proper and set an example to Inferior mortals, A lady. the Times goes on to say, should refuse to appear in public with the man who wears with evening dress anything but a white tie. This is surely a hard saying not to be lightly accepted. If all the ladies should do as the Times is anxious they should, then the fate of the black tie would be quickly decided.

Man cannot do in the long run what woman wishes him not to do. As a matter of fact, we are disposed, after a careful consideration of the facts in the case, to believe that the Times is right, in the main. In its assertion that women should not permit the wearing of the black tie on' occasions when they are present, while it Is wrong in condemning the use of the black tie altogether. "The black tie was devised, in the first instance, as a distinguishing mark between a guest and a servant, other indications sometimes failing, and it was intended to be worn particularly on occasions when ladles were not present, such as bachelor parties and political banquets. "We do not mean to assert that any absolutely hard and fast rule has yet been laid down by an authority of unquestioned authenticity, or that the tie of black dominating a white expanse of shirt front is yet as absolutely anathema maranatha as the 'made It is at least 'allowable' In an Ill-defined sort of way, as with the 'tailless or Tuxedo coat, or In the privacy of the family circle.

This is, we think, all that can be fairly said on the subject just at present. But we wait eagerly for further light." Coughing Irritates the delicate organs and aggravates the disease. Instead of waiting, try One Minute Cough Cure. It helps at once, making expectoaUon easy, reduces the soreness and Inflammation. G.

Basketl. For Dyspepsia and Uver Complaint you have a printed guarantee on every bottle of Shiloh's VI-tallzer. If never fails to cure. For-sale by Fred, Leg. There may not be very much new railroad construction this year, but there to a great dee of new equipment contracted for.

A railroad man has calculated that the total number of new cars built this year will reach 125,000. Last year not mora than 18,000 cars were built and they were of the cheapest kind. This year's addition to the railway equipment of the United States to all llrst-clasa The new coaches are the finest and the new freight cars are possessed of nearly every modern improvement Allowing for the extra cost of coaches, it is calculated that the total cost of all this year's new equipment will not fall short of 19,000,000. IMPORTANT FACTS. If you nave dull and heavy pain acroaa forehead and about the eyes; if the nostrils are frequently stopped up and followed by a disagreeable discharge; If soreness tn the nose and bleeding from the nostrils Is often experienced; if you are very sensitive to eold in the bead accompanied with headache; then you may be sure you have catarrh; and should (immediately) to Ely's Cream Balm for a cure.

The remedy will give instant relief. It Saves Lives Every Day. Thousands of cases of consumption. Asthma, Coughs, Colds and Croup are cured every day by Shiloh's Cure. For asale by Fred.

A. Legg. A Natural BeauUfier. Karl's Clover Root Tea purifies the blood and gives a clear and beautiful com plexion. For sasle by Fred.

A. Legg. The Ills of Women Constipation causes more than half the ills of women. Karl's Clover Root Tea to a pleasant cure for Constipation. For sale for Fred.

A. Legg. A Fact Worth Knowing. Consumption, LaGrlppe, Pneumonia, and all Throat and Lvng diseases are cured by Shiloh's cure. For sale by Fred, A.

Legg. If suffering with piles. It will Interest you to know that De Witt's Witch Haael Salve will cure them. This medicine to a great specific for all complaints of this character, and tf Instructions are carried out a cure will result. G.

L. Baskett One Minute Cough Cure la lightly named. It affords) instant relief from suffering from a severe cough or cold, Zt acta on the throat; bronchial tubes, and lungs and never falls to gtve Immediate relief. G. L.

Baskett People have piles, but Da Wltt'e Wkten Basel Salve will cure them. When promptly applied It cures scalds and burns. G. I Baskett. No excuse tor sleepless nights when yon can procure One Minute Cough Cure.

This will relieve all annoyances, cure the most severe cough and give you rest and health. O. L. Baskett This Constipation. ordlnarr Juvenator to the most wonderful discovery of the aire.

It has been endorsed by the men of Europe and America. Nadyan Is purely vege- Hw'dtan steps Prematureness or the discbarge In 'JO days. Cnres 10ST lizzueis. Falling Ben-aetionK, Nervous twitching of the eyes and other pails. Strengthens, Invigorates and tones the entire system.

Hatffas cures Debility, Nervousness, Emissions, anddevelopcs and restores weak organs. Pains In the back, losses (0 by day oi nishtstopped MANHOOD mm quickly. Over 2,000 private endorsements. Prematareneai means lmrotency In the first stage. It ia a symptom of seminal weakness and barrenness, it can be stopped In to days by the use of Hudyan.

The new discovery was made by theBnedal-fstsoftheoldfamousHudsoa Medical Instihitt. It Is the strongest viuuizer made. It is very powerful, but haimUm Sold for 11.00 a pack-snort packages for 5.00(plainaealed boxes). Written guarantee given for a cure. If you buy af boxes and are sot entirely cured, six mora wlU be sent to you fr of Ml chants.

Send for drcularsand testimonials. Address HUDSON MSDIOAI INBTITCTK, Actio Stoekaon, Market Bills Ma mmu Fra'ttsee Cat Teke Your Wife oneof those handsome fromosq Pott Boise. They ate gtteafres with each boa of powder; extra I IIS I Hair without Dye." Price i per bottle; 6 forf Mdby aU Druggtsta. steiL orders promptly XL YALEr Cfckejo..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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