London Bervanis' Wages The item of wages opeus up the ole question of servants and do. jestic home rule. One need only ro- fer to the monthly reviews and mau. zines to see that here we have indeed a chroule subject for discussion. The professional philanthropist, the en- lightened and benevolent peeress, the lady journalist, even Sarah Jano herself, all have a word to say. Our own experience I can give very shortly. "There has been, on the whole, very little trouble except with the cooks. Wages have run on an average as follows: Nurse, £20; cook, £18 to £20: house parlormald, £16. When the life aud income of a do- mestic servant is compared with that of many a girl in business, or even with that of many working men, Iam prepared to say that she is exceeding- ly well off and, if thrifty, could very soon save £100, Servants are often very good to their relatives and money, but it is idle to blink the fact that a great deal of their wages goes suitable finery. Putting all budget of £54? Well, you can, with luck, get well served in every depart- ment except the kitchen. the food, but the devil sends cooks.” The difficulty is mainly this—tha impossibility of getting a plain cook to cook plain things well every day. She will boast of her pastry and “ongtrays,” but if you ask her to cook a chop or fry a potato properly, the middle-class breadwinner can in Lon- don be certain at a hundred restau- rants, or at his club, of getting a re- past of three courses excelientiy cooked and presented to him ata moderate cost. The same certaioly cannot be had at home. My own ex- planation is a very simple one. The British plain cook does not consider, in the first place, that her employers are entitled to have food - at all bet. r prepared than she herself knows how to prepare it. This knocks on the head any idea of teaching her the art. She simply listens to her mis- tress with silent contempt and ig- nores her plain directions. That is one phase of the cuek difticulty.—The Nat!onal Review Lost Dignity. Irish vicerovs are stripped of their saoverelzn atiribates as soon as they reach English waters, which gives point to the foliewing story told of Lord Houghtwn and a lady with whom he was acjuainted. They both found themselves on board the Holyhead packet. During the voy- age from Ireland the lady treated the Viceroy with ceremon ous res So soon, however, as the packet en. tered Holyhead harbor she said to him, **Now, Bobby, jou're no looger a viceroy. #0 take my bag and make yourself useful ”—London Truth. — ncaa — - Tue fvsane asylum is crowded, so stop worrying. The cemetery is get. ting new inhabitants every day: take care of your health, or you will be one of them. ect. Tue man who asks God daily for his bread will always have enough. is when God's hand is not in sight ms mms IIIS css smn Teo Cleanse the System Effectually yet goatly, when costive or hile fous, or whea the blood is Impure or sluggish, to permanently cure habitual constipati on, to awaken tie kilneys ani liver to a healthy activity, without irritating or weak ening them, to disrel headaches, cold or fevers, use S;rup of Figs In London there i= a was established during VIIL Dr. Kilmer's Swanxr-Rootr cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles Pamphlet and Consultation froa Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y. Cherraponges, in south western Africa, fo the wettest place in the world, the average mainfall there being 610 inches, fur company which the reign of Henry fall's C atarrh Cure la a Hou dd and is taken internally, and acts direc ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Write for (es. timonials, free. M anufac tured by F.l.Cnesey & Co. Toledo, O. Christopher Grove, a ninety-two year old resident of Bethany, Ind., set of teoth, Shiloh's Cure Is sold on a gnarantee, [tenres Ine Iptent Con. stnption; itis the Best C ough Cre; og. Me. $1 The Empire of Morocco is the most impor. tant State that is absolutely without a news. paper. If aMicted with! sore pyes nse Dr. Isaac Thomp- son's Ey e-water, Druggists sell at Zhe > por bottle, The first British translation of the Bible was in the Irish B tongue, Chronic Indigestion Kept me in very poor health for five years, [ . begun to take Hood's HBarsaparilia ow my digestion was helped by the first three doses, I have now taken over four bottles and I firm- ly believe it has REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject: **Martyrs of the Needle.” TEXT: through the eye of a needle, Xxix., 24. Whether this ‘eve of the neadla™ small gate at the cide of the bir gate at the entrance of the wall of the ancient city, nsis generally interpreted, such as is now han tad in Io not say, In either ease it would tight thing for a camel to ofa neadle, But thersare whole earavans of | fatigues and Qardships going through the | ey» of the sawing woman's needle, Very long ago the needle was busy, It | wns considerad honorable for women to toil in olden time, his palnes showing garments made by his | own mother, were made hy the Queen of Mam ths Con queror, Augustus, the Emperor, woul { “e-Matthew | be a The Bible ives an ttirstion that the first duty of an idler is to starve when it says if he “will not work neither shall he eat.” Idleness ruins the health, and very soon nature says : ‘“T'h'a man has refused to pay his rent, Out with him!" Boclety is to ba reconstructed on tha sub- ject of woman's toll, A vast majority of those who would have woman industrious shut her My judgment in | Theres should be no department of merchandise, jan, art or selence barred against her, her a chisel, If Llosa Ponheur has a fond. } i i | ! family. spected, The greatest blessing that eonld have hap- pened to our first parents was being turned out of Eden after they had done wrong, Adam and Eve, in their porfect state, might have got along without work or only such | slight employment as a perfect garden, with no weeds in it, But as scon they had sinned the best thing for them was to ba turned out where they wonld have to | work. We know what a withering thine it for aman to have nothing todo, Good old Ashbai Green, at fourscore years, when asked | sald, “I do so to keep out of mischinaf,” Wa ges that a man who has a large amount of money to start | with has no chance, Of the’ th housand pros- perous and honorable men that vou know, So let the toiler everywhere be re- demanded, But I am now to tell y Jost as important for a we happiness, The most u our communities to-day ar ou that industry is s thos= who ] i i i i i i ing ; who, ones having risen and break fastad, hb the dull forenoon in slippers down at the heel and with disheveled hair, nove! and who, having | dragged through a wretched forencon and taken their afternoon and spant an hour and a half at thelr toilet, 1 up their cardease and go out to make and who pass their evenings somabody to coms in and braak up the mo- notony. Arabella Stuart never was impris- onal in so dark a dungeon as that, There is no happiness in an idle woman It may be with hand, it may be with beatn, it may be wit h foot, tut work she must or be wretched forever, The little girls of our families ma st be started with that idea. curses of our American socisty is that young women are taught that the first, see ond, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, tenth, fiftieth, thousandth thing in their life is 10 get somebody to take care of them. In- stead of that the first lesson should be how, under God, they may take care of themselves, si sen jek 1 calls, have to take care of too, of th 2 LAs themselves, and that, after having, through the false notions “it parents, wasted the years in which they ought to have learned how successfully | to maintain themselves, We now and hers | declara the inhumanity, cruelty and outrage of that father and mother who pass thelr daughters into womanhood, having given thom facility for earniog their livelihood, Mme. de Stael sald, “It is not theses writings that I am proud of, but the fact that I have facility ia ten occupations, in any whieh I « You say you have ns { 0 man and woman, that, likes vauitures, riches nn fortune to leavs them, have you not learnad like hawks, like engion, have wings and fly away? Though vou should be succsssfal in leaving ae petency bebind you, the trickery of execu. tors may swamp tina night, or some slders or deacons of our churches may get up a fictitious company and induces your orphans to put their monsy into it, and I it he lost prove to them that it was eternally decrssd that that was the way they wars 1o and that it went in toe most orthol heavenly sivie, 0%, the damnable schomos that Christians will engage in fingers into the collar « and rips it clear down haves no right, because you ars conciude that your children are as well off. A man died leaving a large fortune, Hisson {sll dead fn a Philadel grogshop., His old comrades eame in and #aid as they bent over his corpse, “What is the matter with you, Boggsey?" The surgeon standing over himsaid «+ “Hush up! He's dead !™ “Ab he is dead ™ they Oe JE and professad -antil God puts His { the hypoerite'a robe the bottom! You wail off, to going to be memory of poor Boggeey leave your children? If you have not, but send your daughters into the world with brain and unskilled hand, you are ragiside, infanticide, Those sul | fering ones now would be giad to have the | crumbs that once fell from their fathers’ table, That wornout, broken shoe that she descendant of gaiters in which her mother walked, and that torm and fadad ealico costry of magnifieent broeade that swept Broadway clean without any exe to the street Though you live in an elegant residence and “The Horse Fale’ If Miss Mitohell study astronomy, If Lydia will bs a merchant, If Lucretia Mott will prone will i the Gospal, quence the Quaker meeting house, It Is said that if 8 woman is given such on- be taken Ly men. I say If she have more man has let her have it. Khe home ns men have, But it is said that | that she is unfittel {| ask in the name of her nature is so delicat » all past history what toil exhaustine and trs. mendous than that toll of the neelile to which forages she has been subjected? The battering ram, the sword, ths carbine, the have made no such I would that these living sepulohres in which women have for ages been hurisd might be opened, and that some resurrection trumpet mizht bring up these living corpses tothe fresh ale and sunlight, | who by hardest toll st apports her of hildren, her dranken husband, her old father pays her houss rent, always food on the table, and when she some neighbor on the Rabhath to take care of hor family appears in chursh with hat and cloak that are far from indicating the toil to which she issab- can get soul She body and position, Such a woman as that has fit her Ruy beside the for could stand rity of maj goods, more g could go into your wheslwright shone and beat one-half of your workmen at making carriages, We talk about woman as thou we had resis gned to har all the light work, | and ourselves ba 1 shonldersed the heavier, | Bat the day of judgment, which will reveal the sufferings of the stake anl inquisition, marshal before the throas of { heaven the martyrs of God and needis, Now, Lsay, if there bs any preference In oocupation, let woman have it, God knows her trials are the severest iv her ac misfortane, nt sansitivensss to by her hour of up her SRN oss, ® a any mand that no ons hadge pathway toa livalihood, Oh them the ! men who be despleability of 9 WOrK anywhere era woman the rigat t in honors ealling ! I go still further and say that women should have equal compensation with By what principle of judios {8 it that in many of our nly two-th mush pay as n, and In many halt? Here is gigantic injas Iy well {if not batter done wy far less compensation than with the nations! goverameat, ¥ while women clerks in Washingt $900 for doing that for which 815800, To thousands of roang women In our sities to-day thers is only this alterastive —starva- tion oF dish Many of thas largest mer santile establishments of our cities are ao. sory to yminations, and fron iargs satablishments thers are woores of being pitehsd off isath, and thelr yoyers know it! Is thers a God? Will thers ba a judgement? I tell you, if God rises ap to redress woms wrongs, many of our iarge establishm will ba swallowsl up qu American sarthquaks aver took God will cateh these two milistonss to powder! I hear from all manhood, Man that wall bat fiat nage!, She isn She is a ham ha« no { (rive Dor no m slice Hen Cities got i% ns ‘AAS nly In -% bat VENA man ra fice ren Start 3 long ives nn got recsived wen Or. thease gt Es inio ns ails han a South iowa solty, wei w aan the 4 them ker 1 ress a of His wrath and seins gnn wall of woe answer 1o Save sie IF Aan Ms she ia this land the has nothing to Ha Ra ferisa, she ot, hungry when Silt DRE DO an Deng, v gels ah wis Give Theres are about 50.00) sew York and Brookiva. ng girls in New Aaross the darinoess of ane, It is hoses who ars haried out ut a slow, grinding, horrible wasting awysy., Gath them belore you and look into their faces, pinohed, ghastly, hunger struck! Look at their flagers, needle pricked 1 blood Sea that promat ura stoop in the Hear that dry, hacking, merei- ry as come ay shoulders! loss congh! At a large mesting of theses women, held in a hall in Philadelphia, gmnd spesches but a nesdic-woman took the stand, threw aside her foaled shawi, bolt of ters foal it is a disgrace 10 them not to know how to work, 1 denounce the idea, Wire men may embroider slippers and erochet Itis a shame belonging to a large his life away for her support, for un daughter to be idle while her mother toils at the washtub, to twist a watch chain, If women do that is honora- ble. If they do practical work, it is dishon- orable, That our young women may sssape the consure of doing dishonorable work I shall particularize. You may kntt a tidy for the back of an armchair, but by no means make the money wherewith to buy the chair, You may, with delicate brush, beautify a mantel ornament, but dis rather than earn enough to buy a marble mantel, You may learn artistic musie until you ean squall Italian, bat never sing “Ortonville” or “O14 Hundred.” Do nothing practical it you would in the eyes of rellnad sociaty preserve vour respectability, 1 seout theses finieal wotions, Itell you no woman, siiy more than man, has a right to oceupy a piace in this world unless she pars a rent for it, In the course of a liletime you consume whole harvests and droves of onttie, and every day you live breathe forty hogsheads of good pure alr. You must by some kind of useful. ness pay for all this, Our race was the last thing crest created —the birds and fishes on the fourth day, the esttle and lizards on the Afth day and man on the sixth day. If geol- ogists are right, the earth was a million of in the fon of the inweots, heasts und birds balors our race came upon it, In sense we were innovators, a cattle, Hanrds and the hawks had pre-smption right, The question is not what we are to do with the lizards and summer inscots, but whut the lizards and summer Insects are to do with us, * and Mat which is ussless, Stand at the corusr of a sirast in Now York in the very sarly morning as the wo- men go to their work, Many of them had no breakfast except the crumbs that were over they chew on their stresta, Here they ecome-the jog girls of the eity! These beadwork, these in flower makin way through the WOork- engaged in 2, in millin- bookbinding, iaveling, festher picking, print ooloring, but, jsast compensated, the women, Why do they not take the city oars on their way up? They cannot afford the If, soasluding to deny | somal hing else, she gets into the car, herssat, You want to ses how Latimer and Ridley appeared in the fire, Look at that dom--a hotter fire, a more agonizing death, One Sabbath night, in the vestibule of my in eon The doctor said she neadeld medi As she began to revive, in ber delirium she said gaspingly : ‘Eight cents | Eight eonts ! Eight i wish I could get it done! Iam so tirad! I wish I could get some slesp, but 1 must got it dons! Eight vents | Eight cents I" Wao found afterward that she was making garments at sight cents apiscs, and that she could make but three of them in a day, Hear ft! Three times sight are twenty-four, Hear it, men and women who have comiortable homes | Bome of the worst villains of the city are the employers of these women. They beat them down to the last penny and try to cheat them out of that, The woman must deposit $1 or 22 befors she gets the gar. ments to work on. When the work is done, it is sharply inspected, the m insignif- cant flaws plaked oat and the wages refused, and sometimes the #1 deposite! not given back, The Women's Protective Ualon re. fis a case where one of these poor souls, niing a place where she could get mors wages, resolved to change employers and went to got her BM for work done, The employer says, ‘1 hear you are golng to leave me?" “Yeu,” she said, ‘‘an I have comin to get what you ows me.” He made no answer, She sald, “Are you not Ag to pay me?’ “Yes,” he said, “I wi you,” and he kioked her down stairs, How are these evils to be eradioated? What have you to answer, you who sell conts and have shoss made aad sontract for the southern and westorn markets? What help is there, what * Dantese, what relemp- tion? Some say, ve womon the ballot,’ Sha offast ow, aliot might have o on Sthas questions I am ore t ha upon woman's | don vet woman will ever get id by woman's women as much vilsions, RAI NA SA IS Bs De Soon aug beat down to the lowest fi the womnas who sews for them? Are not women as —— as mon on washerwomen and miliiners an 2 mantuns makers? If a woman asks $1 for her work, does not her female employer usk if she will not take ninety cents? You say, “Only ten cepts difference.” But that is sometimes the difference between heaven and hell, Women often have less commis. eration for women than men, If a woman steps aside from the path of virtue, man may Woman will never got justioe dons her from woman's ballot, Naver will she get it from man's ballot. How, then? God will rise up for her, God The flaming sword that hung at Eden's gate when woman was driven out will cleave with ite terrible edges her onpressors, Bat thera is somethiog for our women to to, Let our young people prepare to excel in spheres of work, and they will be able after awhile to get larger waces, If ft ba goals in a year than a man, she will soon be able not only to ask but to demand mors wages, and to demand them successfully, Unskilled an incompetent Inabor must take what Is given, Bkiiled and competent labor Ad that the nw of supply and demand regulates thess things, I contend that the Btart with the dea that work is honorable do somes one thing better Resolve that, God help. ing, yon will take oare of yoursalf, It yon you will all the batter be qualified for it by your spirit of sall-reliance, or if you are called to stay as you are you can be happy Posts are fond of talking about man as an but I a tree fall that not only went dogo iteslf, but took all the vines with ean tell you of than an oak for an ivy to elimb on, is the throne of the great Jehovah, hays seen many and that 2 The neadlse may factory band may slip, the wages ut over avary good woman's head gentle, siu- on God and does her best, may fail, } pendous wings of the Almighty, Many of you will gu single handad through and you will have to choosa between two characters, Young woman, | am sure you will turn your back upon the useless, ing, painted nonentity which soc gnomintously acknowledges to be a woman and ask God to make you a humble, active, wf ne ety What will become of this godless disciple of fashion? What an insult to her sex! Her manners are an outrages upon de 3 is more thoughtful of the ries upon the earpst than in the judgment, more han her sins, more interested strings than in her Her apparel is the poorest part of a ristian woman, however arnificently and no ons has so much right to iress well as a Christian, Not so with the disciple of fashion. Take her and you take everything. Death will come down on her somes day, and rab thas bhistre off her eval is, an i the rouge « i two rough, bony | and glass beads and r ince and brooches friscites and gol ow ste will worried abou 10k 3t in her b tion, (‘Hh mnet redemn. m tomy i. fo ilens roshwom of res “The som Genarally th iarce afterward, but was first the farce of the tragedy of Lom ‘ with that of once n waioss Je 1 oloses, irs her life it then a tragedy comes in an useless life and A wretohed eternity lite and death of such a one a Christian aunt that was ing to your housahold. 1 do not kKaow that she was ever offered a hand in marriage. She jived singles, that meisd she might be ershody a Whenever t sk were 10 be vieited poor {0 be provided with br she with a blessing She could or Ages™ for any sick pauper As she pot older thers wore when she was a little shary Part: sontie was n otis for Christmas better than anv one else how to fix Her every prayer, as God heard it, was fall of eve » F who had The brightest things in a. the house from her flogers, . but the grandest no? Was 3 make you happy. She dressed well aur siways dressed wall Sut her highest adorn ment was that of a meek and quiet spirit, which, in the sight of God, is of great rice, When she died, you all gathered lovingly about her, and as you carried her ont 10 ros the Bunday-school class almost covered the Japonicas, and the poor peoples at the end of the alley, with their sobbing bitterly, and the man of the world said, with Solomon, “Hor price was above rubies, pare the wom biess unirame- «y hissing fie si or ioe went sing “Rock of who SAYH frie asked her, most sunbeam se knew just the “ye, = things, trouble, iropped Mo IAT BOLO of shie ever hin stood yes say unto thee, arise ligent, So long as our dogs were employed in the labor of the organized recrea- tions of man, the tendency of the were constantly submitted to a more With thing of his utility, oven in the way He is fast becoming a mere peculiarities of form. The effort in which ean help in the employment of man, but to breed for show alone, de- manding no more intelligence than is necessary to make the creature a well-behaved denizen of the house. The result is the institution of a won- derful variety in the size, shape and special peculiarities of different breeds with what appears to me to be a con- comitant loss in their intelligence. It appears to me, in a word, that our treatment of this noble animal, where he is bred for ornament, is, in effect, degrading. —Seribner, a ——— I A Practical Solation, A professor at ths University of Texas was explaining some of the habits and customs of the ancient Greeks to his class, ‘The ancient Greeks built no roofs over their the. atres,” said the professor. ‘What did the ancient Greeks do when it rained?” asked Johnny Fizzle- to Tho professor took ol hiss polished them with his han Jactasion. i replied oalmly: ‘They got wet, I suppose,” Texas Siftings. ssc —cC— Austin K. Jones, who has rang the college bell at Harvard for near forty re, was not a bit 4 when he discovered the other morn. ing \hat some mischievous students had carried away the bell's tongue. Biota, oa 30 a, m. no by 1 of it to summon thes Do You Wish the Finest Bread and Cake? It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is the purest and strongest of all the baking powders. The purest baking; powder makes the finest, sweet- est, most delicious food. The strongest baking pow- der makes the lightest food. That baking powder which is both purest and strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome food. Why should not every house keeper avail herself of the baking powder which will give her the best food with the least trouble? Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, cr at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul- phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome. Certain protection from alum baking powders can be had by declining to accept any substitute for the Royal, which is absolutely pure. Physician lor the Hair, One of the luxar es of a very recent { birth is the physician for the bair In Boston he is one of the most pop- ular of the medical fraterpity in town, and a woman can harcCly be in the fashionable set without falling they were living ns B ew — tiled | into the hands of this really charm- The divine } asada. | ing man : If she goes to the most Hy IW ed © Y=! fashionable hairdresser and shan his duty to give each young couple a | pooer in town, it will ot be even ice before he per- {| her second visit which will taake forme BI Ke cere ay + . ha formed the marriage ceremony, and | 3. 0 usinted with what the scalp for his purrose he usuaily took them for her hirsuited one at a time, and talked very | specialist can do ae at a time, and talke EY | adcrnment, and if she meets the to each visit to f = { « at of hem refunding fashionable doctor first ber grea and sham pooer i= only the importance of the step | ,.. hairdresser they were to take, and the pew re- | it makes no difference ing with the doctor Well Prepared. A minister's wife, who Is nos sc times as her is, tells some laughable relating to marriage cere- | he performed while ew miss III cs AA. Betrayed by a Bird. A trifle sometimes leads to the de. tection of a fanitorcrime A theatri- cal musician ow: ed an ecbony fHute with silver Keys: he valued 1b highly, but as one of the upper notes was de- fective, he seldom uses it A young man lodged with the musician, and petween the two a close friendship One night the ebony flute having no doubt been stolen. Suspicion fell on several persons, but nothing could be proved against any of them Not long afterward the lodger went to live in off, but as the friendship between the men still ex- isted thev occasionally visited each sther, Nearly a vear afterwa d the musician pald his friend a visit and was pleased to find him in pos session of a beautiful bullfinch, which could distinctly whistie three tunes. The performance was jer- | & or 30 Lange iden Sante cut fren Lic fect with this exception, that when- Write for list of our other fine Pre ever he came to a certain high note == Sus GiESol Bikro. he invariably skipped it and went on = " to the next. A little reflection con- | vinced the musician that the note in which the baliinch was imperfect was the deficient one on h s Jost flute. So convinced was he, that he at once | sharply cuestioned his ex-iodger on | the subject, he at once tremblingly confessed his guilt, and that all the bird knew had been taught him on the stolen instrument. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, RICHMOND, VISCINIA, HUNTER MoGUIRE M.D, LL.D, Pres, JOK A, WHITE. AM. MM, - Sec. & Treas, AHICHCRADE INSTITUTION 1n times MEDICINE, DENTISTRY, PHARMACY. A DIDACTIC AND CLINICAL COLLEGE, CONDUCTED RY 48 INSTRUCTORS, The Regular Seasion begins September 15th and continues seven months, For For Catalogue nddress Dr, J. ALLISON HODGES, — —— y. Richmond, Ya. BOY TTR NY “le . Eh a ALL THE LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, 1 OVEL Diamond ( Cycles ARE THE BEST MADE. TIE TOURIST'S FAVORITE. nsibiliti hey Sa . | deferred. ki £1 re oe 3 oy oD assume | whether she beg e da e 5 rn- ne aay he hed 4 inh Rout earn: | ,r shampooer—she is sure to see the 8 ph O 8 ¥ al minutes to a other at once. — Poston Journal had come to be |. —— mo a mm— THROW IT AWAY. “And now.” he sald, in rclosing, There's no long. “1 hope you fully realize the ext eme | er any peed of i A . i wearing clumsy, importance of the step vou are tak- chafing Tr ng. and that you are prepared fc "i which give only partial rélic : ep spared" sh P Spa . I st best, never cure, but often repare ie sald, innocently: | inflict great injury, inducing “well, if 1 ain't prepared, 1 doa't fuSammation, strangulation : i th 1've &£0t nur common i “HERNIA (Breses ), or quilts and two nice ones, and four > RUD, no Pg ne Card > v OR matter of how jong at brand-new feather beds, ten sheets I nay Seay ply and twelve pairs of pillow slips, four | and permanently cured without linen table cloths, a dozen spoons, | £9d without BR Another . onservati Surgery and a good six-gquart kettle. Ir I Friumpls in - ain't prepared, no girl in this county TUMO Ovarisn, Fibroid and other ever was.” + varietios, without the perils “p cutting operations, ILE TUMORS, jererer. dues sy Fistula, and other FIL of the lower bowel, promptly cured "g part in or resort to the nif, TON in the Bladder, no matter how large, 8 crushed, pulverized, 5 TON out. thus svoiding cutting. “STRICTURE ree » it Lien removed without cutting, Abundant Relerences, and Pamph- Jota, on above diseases, scot scaled, in plain ene velope, 10 ote, (stamps), Wontb's PIS. BARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Bufigio, N. X. « un be made working for 10 but srtios preferred wir Oa wroish a horse and ors ives rough the country; & team, EK: Hh, IB Rol SeCesERrT A on vacancios ig towns asd cities. Mon abd wosoes of good charscior will fing this an exoeptions opporusity (or profitable me poyment. Bare hours may be used to peed advan . HB. FF. JOULNSON & CO, 11th and Main Sts. Richmond, Va. mx vd == COOK BOOK -» FREE la 320 PAGES ILLUSTRATED, One of the Largest and Best Coox | BOOKS putiished. Mailed in exchange ooLEON baron i Bh, Ld tet ot EFL TT) Consnmptives and people who have weak lungs or Asth ma, ehould use Piso's Cure for Consumption. It has emwred thonsmnda. [thar notinier ed one. 111s not bad to take, itis the best cough arrup. Bold everywhere. She. BRT ION GBS WEY 1 THE WONDER OF THE ACE. CALL AND SEE IT. Hend for sur Special Hargain CIRAFF of and Ey Wheels, We have wot iu nat tina, what yuu a I8 Toa, acu W, HICH GRADE BICYCLE FR $43.78 5-2 ET Fa EE er EOE OUR SPORTING Goons LINE 18 UNEXUELLED, oa aii to. stn ph or aot JOHN vy and
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