FIG CULTURE. RAISING THIS POPULAR FRUIT IN TUB FAR EAST. Smyrna the World'* Great Fig Mar ket—A California Experiment— A Singular Property of Wild Figs. Smyrna is the approach and the key to the small district that supplies all Europe, indeed tne whole world, with the most popular of dried fruits. From the heart of the town a railway starts, running south to Ephesus and eastward to Snrakeui, and the traffic of the line de pends 'argely on the fruit harvest. In Smyrna itself is the great market for the distribution of the figs to all parts of the world, and in harbor here may be seen a large fleet of steamers lying moored Btern onto the quays, and porters, car riers, and humel busy loading them in great wooden cases. It is by this rail way that you make your way into the fig district. The tract is comparatively small, when it is remembered that its produce may be found all over the world. It is, in fact, actually small—a valley of some fifty miles skirting the northern bank of the Meander, and with a width at its widest of scarcely more than five miles. Twenty years ago not half this area was under cultivation. The soil of this tract is very deep, and has the property of retaining moisture, so necessary for the crop. The peculiarity is of special importance, as in cases of drought the fig-tree does not generally show at the time signs of drooping. The leaves retain their strength and color. It is only afterward, when the fruit should have reached maturity, that its stunted size and dimished yield show the effects of the check. Indeed, it is this quality of the soil that makes the valley of the Meander the great centre of the fig-crop. Experiments have been tried by trans planting the trees to raise a crop in the neighboring valleys, but they never have been successful. Some years ago Mr. West discovered in California a tract of soil which he believed to be almost iden tical. The climate also was similar. Mr. West took back with him some 300 roots. These fig-trees have done well. They have made good growth and yielded fair crops, but a sufficient time has not yet elapsed for the tree to reach such maturity as should test the value of its fruit for preserv ing. It is only when the trees are from five to seven years old that they begin to bear fruit useful for commercial purposes; but once that age is attained, the tree •will yield its annual crop for sixty or seventy, or, with careful pruning, for eighty years. The fruit does not all re semble the ordinary black eating fig. It is a short, pulpy fruit. A large one would weigh quite four ounces. Tlie color is a bright yellow-green, but when you cut into it the flesh is white, with a cen tre of dark red. The taste of these figs is poor and rather faint, but the pulp exudes an abundance of atuber-colore J juice; so that they seem -with the slight est pressure almost to drip with honey. Their promise to the taste is more than their performance. Wc know how beauti ful a cherry orchard, or a garden wall covered with peach-trees, can look in the early weeks of a mild spring. The fig tree differs from almost all fruit trees in this respect, that it seems to bear no flowers. Of course it does flower—if it did not it could bear no fruit—but it flowers invis ibly. In fact the flower is concealed in what ultimately becomes the fruit. If you cut open a fig when it has attained little more than a third of its full size the flow ers will be seen in full development, and i is at this stage that, if the stamens arc perfect, fertilization takes place, and the fruit swells and ripens. Walking through a tig gar leu in the Aidin district -11 the month of June, you will see a straugc and almost incompre hensible operation being carried on. The trees arc by this time covered with fruit, though the figs are less thau half the size to which thev subsequently attain. The boughs which hear them are often not more than a few fest from tLc ground. One of the peasants 1 a the garden takes a basket filled with small green ligs strHng loose'y ou pieces of cord. Some of these cords will have only a couple of figs, aud some as many as six. The work man flings the cords up into the branches, on the twigs of which they are caught, SJ that every tree shall be adorned with one of these singular necklaces. It is hard to guess their purpose. These strung figs are wild fruit, bitter in taste ) and quite useless as food, but they have this singular property, that they arrest the tendency of the other figs to dropt< the ground before they attain maturity. Sometimes the crop of these Capri figs, as they are called, fails, but so useful is the purpose they serve that growers will give as much as a piastre, or four cents, for each fig. This price is so high that as a rule, it will swallow up all the prof its expected from the crop. From the end of June and throusrh July the fie swells and ripens. In its earlier stages the fruit is not very palatable, but on at taining maturity it is sweet and agreea ble, juicy and much relished, though somewhat laxative. This is the season far the pilferers. The crop is so valua ble that watchers arc stationed in the garden, keep guard day and night. These watchers, called beckji, with their shelters and surroundings, might be designed for art rather than occupation, so picturesque is their appearance. Their accoutrement reminds one that Asia Minor is still a great hunting-ground for bri gands. Quite a museum of knives and pistols is displayed in the belt,and a heavy iron-bound cudgel is probably rather a symbol of office than actually needed for protection. The guardian's arbor is generally located near the drying-ground of the plucked figs. It is there that the greatest value is concentrated.—Harper's Magazine. The Terrible Tcherkesses. The Tcherkesses—the term now most used in Europe to designate the different Caucasian tribes—are a wild, bellicose and rapacious nation. The Tcherkess is a warrior in his very soul, sly, cruel and blood-thirsty. The sufferings of an eu emy awaken in him only a smile of en joyment. He tortures his prisoner, kills him and mutilates him terribly. The Tcherkess is not a fanatic, but he is a great fatalist; and now he is in the Rus sian service he attacks with the same ruthless ardor and blood-thirstiness the Mussulman with whom thirty years ago he used to fight side by side against the Russian. He always seeks to attack his enemy on the sly, but when he does not succeed in surprising him, he dashes upon him and displays prodi gious ccurage. Tcherkess boys are trained from their tenderest years to ride and handle weapons. The Tcherkess horseman will rush at full gal lon into a small court-yard, and not turn his horse until he strides his nose against the wall. Iu the same way he will gal lop tsward a precipice, a:id turn his horse only wheu his fore.eet are over the abyss. All t'je Tcherkess games find dauces are of a warlike nature. One of the most picturesque sights one con imagine is a Tcherkess fete, when these tall, dark-skinned men, handsome an J muscular, with their swords and poniards drawn, execute their favorite dance, the 'Lesginka," around a fire, which, with its red glare, lights up their strong feat ures and illumines the surrounding woods and rocks. A favorite gam% is to leap on horseback over the fire when the flame is at its highest. All the natives of the Caucasus carry arris up to the present day, aad the Russian Government finds it prudent not to in terfere with this usage. Still it must appear strange to one who travels for the first time in the Caucasus to find himself surrounded by people who are all armed tD the teeth. Doubtless the Caucasus is pacified, but traveling there is not com pletely safe. The Tartars and Kurds iu southern Caucasus, and the .Tangouches in the northern districts, often inu.ilge in brigandage. In European wa.-Jarr the Tcherkesses are very useful on outpost duty and as skirmishers. Even in open battle they can make very useful charges. In the last Turkish campaign it happened once that a trench occupied by the Turks was attacked by a battalion of infantry, but the deadly fre preventing them from reaching the intrenchmeuts, order was giveu to the Jangouche militia to mount to the attack, and they simply dashc 1 upon the enemy like a hurricane, leaped over the defenses, and massacred tli Turks iudide.— Harper'* Magazine. u:Viion Too Many. Ex-Judge Noah Davis was always noted, while he was on the bench, foi his pertinent questions to witnesses. One day a suit was triel before him in which a "tranship company was require 1 to show Ov'.isi; w'ly it should not pay the damages to certain goods which had been destroyed by the incontinent actions of truck horses, frightened, as it was claimed, by the horrible and uaeart._.y whistles of the steamship which was about to deiari fror i t ;>ier. One ol the witnesses was It.icaadl Sweeny, ar Irishman, who was present at the time of the acei lent. Stephen P. j .ash, < counsel for the plaintiff, ajked Mr. Sweeny if his horse' were frighte. .d by the whistle of i«c boat. "They were not, sor," he said. "But what kind of au ear have youi horses, Mr. Sweeny?" said Mr. Nash. "They have good ears, sor," he an swered. rou iR.-.r Lit n. »>le yourself?" "I did, sor." "But," said Judge Davis, tuning to the iunoeeut-lookiug Irishman, "what kind of a cart or truck was it that you ■ r >ve, Mike?" "A hand-cart, sor." "Ah," said the Judge, turru_ 0 apolo getically to the discomposed Mr. ~ lash, "we have asked one q lestion to> many." —Detroit Kmc. Gotham'* founqest Edltcr. New York has many editors apparently twelve years old, but only one actually of that age. This little feilow has made a great success of his magazine, the Sunny Hour Monthly , just now safely through its first year. The lad is Tollo D' Apery, whose father is a Greek and has attained proficiency in forty languages. Tello's magazine is an outcome of the boy's ambition to help other youngsters less fortunate than himself, by tempering the hardships of poverty. The profits of his magazine are used for that purpose now. The December number contains the por trait of the Prince of Montenegro and a fac-similc of tu autograph letter by him, a translation of which is also given. Some of his correspondents are Ferdinand de Lesscps, Priuce Jerome Napoleon, General Beauregard, Ghazi Ozman Pasha, Sir Julien Pauncefote, Dr. J. P. Profas Paul, President of Venezuela; Mr. A. Arel, President of Bolivia; Itafeal Nunez, President of the United States of Colum bia; Baron Rothschild, the Marquis of Salisbury, General Schofield, M. deGiers, Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs: Marshall MacMahon, Marshal Sapounjaki, of the Greek army, and a lot of others of the same kind. The young editor has received two letters from General Bou langer since the General went into exile at Jersey. Sig. Crispi, of Italy, is one of the latest contributors. Last Tuesday Tello received by mail a handsome dec oration sent by the President of Bolivia. The Sunny Hour has a paid circulation of 2000 copies, but a much greater edition is printed usually in order to call atten tion to the barefoot work. The current edition is 15,000 copies. Since it was established the net profits have been sufficient to buy and distribute 500 pairs oi' shoes.— Chicago Herald. The Hardest Workzr in Jamaica. Everywhere (on the island of Jamaica), where the water is collet in bays aad har bors, one sees the mangrove at its silent, ceaseless work. The parent trunk, grow ing from a little pink stem, shoots up iu to a low shrub with wide-sprca.ling branches, clothed perpetually with glossy green leaves. From the;e branches long 6lender roots drop into the water beneath, where, in the muddy coil at the bottom, they themselves take root, and in turn become trunks and trees. And every where under the snake-like net-work of roots which rise out of the muddy soil, and in tfcc tangle of branches above, life is pulsing and rustling. Innumerable crabs, with long red legs and black bodies peppered with white spots, scurry and crawl in and out upon the rank ir.ud be neath the arching roots,an J droll hermit crabs d.-aw themselves with a click i ito their borrowed houses—strange-looking shells with long spines, curious epirals, mottled with blue and gray and yellow. In the days of the Spaniards vessels used to sail up the Rio Cobra to Spanish Town; now it is well n'.gh chocked with the wash of centuries. To enter it you pass around a long spur of sand that stretches far out into the bay,a roosting place for sleepy pelicans resting from their fishing—"old Joes," as the island ers call them. The channel, btrely <L;ep enough for the light canoes of the fisher men, is tortuous nnd winding, and further up along its course is nearly roofed in by overarching trees, and bordered by impenetrable thickets that now fcrever shut out the life that use J to come and go between the harbor and San Jago dc la Vega.— Harper's Magazine. THE dentist of the Queen of Italy ie an old Maine boy, Dr. Albert Henry Chamberlain, who wore blue and car ried a musket a quarter of a century ago. He is rich as well as famous now adays. Are any of tbo new faiKled washing com pounds as good as the old-fashioned soaps? Dobbinß's Electric Soap lias been sold every day for 24 i/cam, and is now Just as good as ever. Ask your grocer for it and take no other. THE fashionable finger nail Is said to bo longer anil more pointed than ever. Pains and Aches In various parts of the body, more particularly in the back; shoulders and joints, are the unwelcome indications that rheumatism has gained a foothold, nnd you are "in for It"for a longer or shorter period. Rheumatism is caused by lactic acid In th 3 blood, and Is cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, whtcli neutralize* the acidity and eradicates every impur ity from the blood. "I t uffered from acute rheumatism induced by \ severe sprain of a once dislocated ankle Join! which cause. 1 threat swelling and Intense pain. On* tottle of Hood's restore 1 clrculitl:) 1 cleansed the blood and rellevod the pa'n so that am nearly we'.l."—L. T. Huirr, Springfield, Mo. Hood's SarsapaHlla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared laly uy C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mai u IOO Posos One Dollar N Y N U—2 *h v '®., ..Catarrh CREAM BAlMjagriys^a Cleanses the WCREM BW*3| Nasal Passages, ® tH I Allays Pain and y^AM HS?^ a ßo°^.^FEVEß||£| Itosforos the . 4( & BM Senses of luteV / r^RD TRYTHECURE. A particle Is »pi U.SA. into each nostril and isljf A\/ a CFt/C O agreeable. Price 50 cts. at l>rugglsts; by mall, registered. «0 cents. ELY pKOTHfcKS, Druggists, 36 warren St., New York. The Grip Grfpa the Rich Folk*. Speaking of the grip, a railroad man eaya: "The men and women who take the cheaper classes of accommodation are not infected to the same degree as those who travel in the costly cars. I don't mean that the contagion makes any speedier progress in the latter, but that the sug gestion that the grip is to some extent a disease monopolized by wealthy folk is borne out by my observations along the line. I came through from Pittsburg two nights ago. They were twenty-two people in tho sleeper, and twenty of them were sufferers. In the morning I went forward into the cars where the passen. gers who could not afford to pay for berths half dozed away tho night. It struck me that it would be Interesting to make a comparison, and among seventy, eight travelers I could only determine that nineteen woro grip victims,"—Neto York Tribune. STATE or OHIO, CITY or TOLEDO, I „ I.UCAH COUNTY, F • FKANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the Arm of F. J. CHENEY A Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said Arm willpavihe sum of ONE HCNDKED DOIXAHS for each and every c*ee of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH (JR HE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence, this oth day of December, A. D„ 1880. I —) A. W. GI.EASON, ■ KK AI. V Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces o£ the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENKY & Co., Toledo, O. 13T" Sold by Druggists, 75c. WILLIAM GWYNN, of Napa, Cat., carries a watch that is more than 180 years old. It keeps first-rat<! time. A Sensible Man Would use Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs. It Is curing more cases of Coughs, Colds. Asthma, Bronchitis, Croup and all Throat and Lung Troubles, than any other medicine. The proprietor has authorized any druggist to give you a Sample Bottle Free to convince you of the merit of this great rem edy. Large Bottles BOc. and sl. ONE MILLION dollarsof so'd coin weighs39Bs pounds avoirdupois, and $1,000,000 of stiver coin weighs 58,H2U.9 pounds avoirdupois. Don't Faol Away precious time and money and trifle with your' health experimenting with uncertain medicines, when Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is so positively certain in its cura tive action as to warrant its manufacturers in guaranteeing it to cure diseases of the blood, skin and scalp, nnd all scrofulous afflictions, or money paid for it will be refunded. SSOO He ward offered for an incurable case of Caturrliby tho proprietors of Dr. Sage's Rem edy. 50 eta., by druggists. THE total value of property in Massachu setts has increased fifty-six per cent, since 1880. Oregon, the Paradise et Farmers. .Mild, equable c LI mate, certain and abundant crops. Host fruit, grain, grass and stock coun try In Ihe world. Full information free. Ad dress Uregon lm'igrat'n Board. Portland, Ore. A pocket pin-cushion free to smokers of Tanslll'a Punch" sc. Cigar. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomn. i on's Kye- water. Druggists sell at3sc. per bottle IS OIVB ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs ia taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gentlyyet promptly on the Kidneys Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sye> tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt In its action and trulv beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Svrup of Figs is for sale in 500 and #1 bottles by all leading drug 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 substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAM FRANCISCO, CAL imsvius ky we w rout nr. nnillli HABIT. Only Cert .la and IIHIIIsM eaar CURE la the World. Dr. Wl ll# W J. 1.. BTEfHKMg, Lebanon.O M CMGI w.jrioMM is, IjCllOlUn WELLINGTON, D.C7 Prosecutes Claims. I Late Principal Examiner U. B P.nfllonßur.ML ■ 3 jrn lii liit war, 11 abjudicating claims, atty sinoa, OPIUM HABIT. A. Valuable Treatise Glvlna full Information of an Easy and Speedy cure free to the afflicted. 1)R. J. C. HOFKMAK, Jetferson,Wisconsin. Ayr ttTUUY. Book-keeping, Business Form* HUME Penmanship, Arithmetic,Short-baud,eto thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars free. lli'ynnt*M College. 457 Main St., Buffalo, X. Y* AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT DR. LOBB JUit North Fifteenth Philadelphia, Pa., for the treatment of Blood Poisons, Skin Eruptions, Nervous Complaints, Bright'* Disease, Strictures, impotcncy and kiudred diseases, no matter of how long standing or rroin what cause originating. f#Ten days* medicines furnished by mail CBEE bend for Hook ou .SPfcX'l A I. Diseases. ilfECe M 1 prescribe and fully eo* dorse Big U as the only Cures in specific for the certain cure TO ft DATfl.v of thin disease. I*™ RAH AM, M. D., gtH oacss fltrtstars. * Amsterdam, N. Y. El nr««nty bytb* \ve have sold Big G for eawewMie fliwelMl Ik. many years, and It has MMtsMOhaaMUO^^ ? lT#n tho but of aatla- faction. Ohio. D. R. DYCHE A CO., 1 Chicago, llfc HoMbr Drog>l«t* CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS RCO CROSS DIAMOND BRAND. /VHL*N Safbxod elwa/« reliable. Ladles, A £ (( ask Drofffiat tor Diamond Brand, in A\ fedLL&Jg&i r«d, boxes, wit led wits blue ribbon. Take MO other. All pills \\Ky iu v&j In pMtebo*rd boxes, pink wrapper*, are VBr V7 - tfT daa««roas <*«aterfe(u. Seat 4a. V 1 L, Jr (sienna) tor partfteelare, tesUmoalels ul l£ 0 M Relief fbr Ladlea," in letter, by retsra nr ami I. ffmmt M»per. ChichesterCSea'l OooJ for every woman's need, v' whatsoe'er her dime or creed. English, Yankee, Turk, or Swede, Moslem, Spaniah or Egyptian; Known in everjr land and tongue. Friend to women, old and young. Round the world Its praise Is sung,— "Pierce's favorite Prescription." Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a legitimate medicine, not a beverage: care fully compounded by an experienced phy ■ician, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. It is purely vegetable in composition and perfectly harmless in any condition of the system. Contains no alcohol to inebriate; no syrup or sugar to ferment in the stomach and derange digestion. As an invigorating tonic, it imparts strength to the whole system. For over worked, " worn-out," " run-down," debili tated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seam stresses, "shop-girls," housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon: being unequaled as an appe tizing cordial and restorative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nervine. "Favorite Prescription" is unequaled and Dr. Pierce's Pellets 1W• PURELY VEGETABLE! » 45..A PERFECTLY HARMLESS I 00l UfttS Unequaled as a LIVER PILL. Q Q »» Smallest, Cheapest, Easiest to Lnke. One tiny, Sugar-coated Pellet a dose. Cures Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation. Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the Stomach and Bowels. 25 cents a vial, by druggists. • OR. KOKHI.KK'H FAVOHITK VOlilO MIXTURE for all domeotlc animals, will cur© 'JJ out of every UK) oa-os of colic, wliethor ttat ulent or spasm odlc. llaroly more thau 1 or 4 dojes nectary. It does not cou ntlpate, rather acta as a laxative and Is entirely harmlej «. After 20 years of trial In more thau UOOO cases, our guarantee is worth something. Colic must bu treated i»roini»tly. Expend a few cents and you have a euro on hand, ready when needed, and perhap* save a valuable horse. if not at your drugglit'.* enclose 5U cents for luimple Ootjle, sent prcpal 1. Address iTlt. KOKHI.KIt & CO.. Bethlehem. I*a. J use Dr. Kochler's " 112 avorite CoHc I He cheerfully recommeml Dr. Koehl Mixture" right along with sucoess. It in | fr's "favorite Colic MixtureS Would the beat coHc medicine 1 have ever even. I not be without it as long as we havi ISAAC MOOU t llorut Dealer, 1 horaex. ISAAC MOSKS tl k BliO., Brooklyn Sew York. | Sale arul Kxchun'je Stables, Kant on, fU LJ Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. Bill Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the ffl Ul taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists. CI JONES PAYS THE FREICHT. ImmL. j/Pj it Ton W Rffon Iron levers. Steel Beariufs, Brass jnPWRLL Tare Beam and Dean. m< i«r Every JUB© Scale. For free pr*jeiitt \ jJWfJ. mention this paper and address JONES OF BINQHAMTON, BINGHAMTON. H. Y. PENSIONS * UK''Ktt claim in the haniU EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOR By J. Hamilton Ayers, A. M., M. D. >c )tQ This is a most Valuta l»le Book for the Bouse bold, teaching as it does tlie easilj>distlng;ulshcd Symptoms of different 112 , Diseases, ttie Causes and 9 Means of Preventing: sueb Diseases,and the Simplest . ; JLtt » Remedies which will alle- * ▼late or cure. "WVk 598 Pages, Profusely Illustrated. The Book is written in plain every-day English, and is ftcc from the technical terms which render most Doctor Books so valueless to the generality of readers. This Book is iuteilt!e<l to l»C of Service in the Family, and is SQ worded as to be readily understood by all. ONLIY 60 CEHTS POST-PAID. (The low price only being made possible by the immense edition priuleri.) Not only does this Hook contain so much Information iiciativo to Disease, but very properly gives a Complete Analysis of everything pertaining to Courtship, Marriage and tlie produc tion and Rearing of Healthy Families; TOGKTHKK WITH Valuable Recipes and Prescription*, of Botanical Practice, Correct use of Ordinary Herbs. New Edition, Revised & Enlarged with Complete Index. With this Book in the house there is no excuse iac noi wl-nt tr- .io in i:i emergency. Don't wait until you have illness in your f»v.ly »ow .irdn, send at once for this valuable volume. ONLY 00 OBJKTT« I»OST-l* AiJD. Send postal notes or postage stamps ot any dtnorn!i»«Hcn r..<t !-.-grr than 5 HOOK PUB. IIOU.SE, 134 LEONARD 9TPERT. N. Y. Gtty. is invaluable in allaying and (nhdufog nervous excitability, irritability, exhaus tion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms, commonly attendant upon functional and organic dis ease of the uterus, or womb. It induces refreshing s'ten and relieves mental anx iety and despondency. ft is the only medicine for the euro of all those peculiar weaknesses and ailments incident to females, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufact urers, of giving satisfaction in every ca.it or price ($1.00) will be promptly refunded. See guarantee printed on Dottle-wrapper and faithfully carried out for many years. For a Book of 1(30 pages on Woman : Hci Diseases, and How to Cure them, (sent sealed in plain envelope) enclose ten cents, in stamps, to WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 663 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. DROPSY TREATED FREE. PoNiiivcly Cu red wiib Vegetable Itemedic*. Have cured thousands of cases. Cure patients i>r«>- nounced houeless by brst physicians. From first dono symptoms disappear; In tea days at least two-th!r<L'i all symptoms removed. Send for book *estUV> nlals of miraculous cures. Ten days' treatment free by mall. If you order trial, send 10c. In stamp* to pay postage. Dr. H. H. OnfcKN & SONS, Atlanta, Ga. FRATER^M BEST IN THE WORLD U H kr& W ft/ If Oct the Genuine. Bold Everywhere.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers