THE WAYSIDE WELL, Ha stopped at the wayside well, Where the water was cold and deep; There were feathery ferns 'twixt the mossy stones, And gay was the old well sweep, He loft his cirriage alone; Nor could conchman or footman tell Why the master stopped in the dusty road To drink at the wayside well. Heo swayed with his gloved hands The well sweep, creaking and slow, While from seam and scar in the bucket's sido The water plashed back below, Ho lifted it to the curb, And bent down to the bucket's brim; No furrow of time or care had marked The face that looked back at him. He saw but a farmer's boy As he stooped o'er the brink to drink, And ruddy and tanned was the laughing + face That met his own o'er the brink. A I STASI lid The eyes were sunny and clear, And the brow undimmed by care, While from under the brim of the old straw | bat Strayed curls of chestnut hair. He turned away with a sigh; Nor could coachman or footman tell Why the master stopped in his ride that | day To drink at the wayside well. Walter Larned. BRIGITTE'S FORTUNE. Short, thin, dry and wrinkled as an apple that lay withered during a long | winter, such was the good man, Farmer’! Landry. Indeed, he was one of those | close-fisted old peasants of whom it is graphically said that they can shave something from an egg shell. Since the death of his wife he had re. tired from agriculture and lived alone in a little house at the end of the village. And yet, not entirely, alone, for he had with him his old servant Brigitte. But the poor woman counted for so little in the household, a little above the dog, but not so much as the donkey, that cost a hundred and twenty {rancs. She entered his family at the age of twelve to guard the cows, and had been there ever since. She knew no other family life than t one, and the exceeding parsimony of the master seemed to her natural. She was now a tall, hale woman of fifty, red-faced, square-shouldered, with feet and hands that might have been the | pride of a pugilistic trainer. While ex- acting very little in the way of compen- tion, she drudged like a pack horse; for indeed, she could not do otherwise in Farmer Landry's house. Besides, in her simple mind existed a canine attachment and real admiration for her master, who was not ashamed to take advantage of her good nature, Of course, in the service of this miser Brigitte had not earned a fortune. Bat the honest creature was amply satisfied when the old peasant, in a patronizing tone, praised her zeal: ‘‘What a good, simple creaturc you are, Brigitte, are you notl” Then the good woman's mouth would open into a loud laugh. ““He! he! he! master! You have ways your little masner of joking he! he!” One day while Farmer Landry was him. self replastering his garden wall, so as not to pay the mason, he made a fale step and fell into the pool just over the point where the deepest hole was. Hi splashed wildly about for a few moment calling vainly for help with all the power of his lungs. At last, worn efforts, he was about to sink from sight. when Brigitte at last heard him. The devoted ereature courageously jumped into the water, at the risk of drowning herself. Sue succeeded in pulling him to the bauk; he was entirely unconscious, but she raised him in her strong arms, as she would a child, put him to bed. and with rubbing and remedies recalled him to life. On seeing him open his the good Brigitte shed tears of joy. ‘‘Ah, good master, how glad 1am that you are not drowned and buried in that hole!” The old peasant was glad of it, too, although Le had one lively regret—the loss of his trowel, which fell into the water at the some time with himself. However, he had the decency not to ex- press the wish that Brigitte should return and jump in after that also, Indeed, in | the first impulse of gratitude, he said to his servant with a touch of emotion : “It is you who pulled me out of the hole; I shall obver forget it, my good girl, you may be assured of that. I am going to make you s present.” i “Oh, master, indeed there is no need of that!" ““But I tell you I will give you some- thing; don't doubt it!" And really, the same evening, after a | thousand hesitations, he drew forth his | long leather purse and called Brigitte to him. While making a grimace like one having a tooth drawn, he selected a sil. | ver piece of twenty cents, Here, Brigitte, is your present. It shall not be counted in your wages, you | know. Do not be extravagant with it: that would be a sin. For the service rendered it was not unbridled genciosity on the part of the giver, and the former had some dim in- | timation of the fact, for he added (as i | to enbance its value): “It is just the price of a lottery ticket. Bay one, my girl, aod you may win | twenty thomsand dollars.” i It wan the first time in his life that the poor man allowed himself to be liberal, #0 the thought of it haunted him for a | long time; the fate of his bright silver piece. He often asked the servant if she had yet | her lottery ticket. 4 Not yet, master,” was her unvarying Answer, But at loogth she decided to end this constant questioning by pacifying him. Bo one day : 13 T ais entirely al ; he! , out by his eyes, | the table, but he could | hundred thousand | his piece of twenty sous —} constantly wondered about "Very good!" said her master, repeat- fog the number to impress it on his mind. Be careful not to lose it!" ‘Never fear, master.” ‘Because if you do fear sometimes to 1080 ite’ “Eh, master!” “Well, you need only give it to me and I will hideit in my bureau.” “Oh, I shall certainly not lose it!" The habits of daily life in the little household, disturbed by these events, soon settled into their regular course; eating sparely, very temperate drinking, few hours for sleeping and many for work. Farmer Landry war almost consoled for his forced prodigality, when one morning, in the barber's shop, where he went from time to time to read gratis the (fasette, un terrible emotion struck him. He read the result of the lottery drawing and at the head these words, like lines of fire, flashed before the dazled spectacles of the good man: “The number thirty-four has won the | y great prize of 100,000 francs. The old gentleman gave such a sudden cry that | the startled barber, in turning towards him, almost clipped a corner from the ear of the schoolmaster, whom he was shaving. “What's the matter, Father Landry?” he asked. “Oh, nothing, nothing,” answered the | farmer, who quickly recovered his calm- ness, learranging his spectacles, he read | again slowly, spelling each syllable to | “make assurance doubly sure.” There was no mistake; the number 34, Brigitte's ticket, had won. He dropped the journal and started off in great agi- tation towards his house. Brigitte had prepared her master’s frugal breakfast of nuts and cheese, He placed himself at emotion seemed to clinch his throat and prevent him from swallowing. “What is the matter, master” iously asked Brigitee. “Nothing atall.” ‘““You are not ill?" **No, I tell you,” he ans vered angrily. During several he secretly ob served the poor woman Did she know that she had 100,000 francs! No indeed! Eatir gnorant that she was the object of such close scrutiny, she per- forined her tasks with her usual good humor her master was io a fever of anx days won ely daily , while unrest, One day he dared to asked her, tremb aoing so; ling whil ‘Is there any news, my good girll ‘“‘Nothing, master, the hens has the pip.” Very good! Bhe knew nothing about her good fortune. As for announc ing it to her—that was entirely too much for his nature and long life habit. It seemed to him monstrous that another should profit by this marvellous windfall of a produced by iis own bright, lengthened from A notice in the journal (he really bought a copy of the one con- taining announcement) formally stated that after a delay of three months the unclaimed prizes would be employed for an The poor " except that one « {ranes, stiver bit! Time days tO weeks was & LL ew capital had or drinkin dying of times he was on the point of the ticket to Brigitte; he bit the tip of his tongue man no more appetite for eating he uneasiness. Tweaty speaking of and twenty times One word only might put his servant in the way to learn her good fortune. One morning, after an unusually sleep- less night passed in turning and return ing in his bed, he arose with a smile on hus thin lips. He bad found the key to the problem. He commenced by order ing Brigitte to kill the plum pest chicken, and to cook it in the oven with a good And finally, he gave his servant money to buy coffee and sugar. Brigitte asked herself if her master had gone ma it “Surely some demon has taken pos session of his mind!" she thought with a thrill of fear. It seemed a fearful increase of the malady when the old gentleman, after having ordered her to lay the table for asked her to take her place as his vis-a-vis, “Oh, master, dare to do that!" was Pm oe of pork. i two, I should never, never “Bit down there, I tell you, foolish | woman!” Brigitte had heard that one must not | oppose the wishes of maniacs, So, without answering, she seated Ler self in great embarrassment on the edge of the chair. “Come, eat and drink, Brigitte, my orl," be said, filling her plate gener- ously, However, this was not the last surprise for Brigitte, When the coffee was served the old gentleman suddenly said: “You see, my good Brigitte, this means that I am going to get mar. ried |" “Indeed, master, it is not yet too late; if you are old, you are still hale and well,” answered the simple servant, ap- provingly. “Since that is your view, if you like, we will marry each other.” Aftor the roast chicken and pork, and the coffee and sugar, Brigitte expected to hear almost any strange thing on the part of her master, But that! Oh, not : that! “You are joking me, master!” “Not at ml,” answered the old peas ant, He explsioed that he was growing old, was without children or family, and did not wish to die alone like a dog. Be. tide he wan grateful! He could vot tor. get that Brigitte had saved his life his faithful Brigitte, One must not be for getful of such a service, Finally, the worthy woman, whose head was turned by this stroke of fortune, believed in his sincerity. , humble servant, her master? Think of it! It was, indeed, something to turn one’s brain, The bans were published, and the followed. The couple were church the good not eat, for his | of! g, or power to sleep ; | a oar Nr ————— — f——_ Having crossed the threshold, he while energetically rubbing his bands: “Brigitte, my girl, where have yon put your ticket?” “What ticket?” ‘Your lottery ticket, No. 841" “What lottery?” ‘You know very well,” he cried, im. patiently. “The one you bought with my twenty-sou piece, that I gave you!” The bride began to laugh stupidly. “Ah! the twenty sous! Listen, Mas- | ter. One seldom wins in those lotteries. | It was very cold last winter, very cold.” who began to grow very yellow. not buy the ticket. With the money I bought me some good fur-lined slippers, which 1 was sure would do me good. { Yes, indeed.”—From the French, | American Cultivator, | " EE — | The Indian Witch Dance. eo before described. It is really a weird affair, and almost as dificult to witness as the celebrations that New England | witches were said to indulge in in the olden time, | meaning, although the writer was never {able to get exactly at what the meaning was. The medicine men of the Sioux do not seek publicity in their incantations, and it was entirely by chance that 1 came across three Indians going through | some peculiar operations, at a point re- {mote [om their camp. A stick about three feet in height was stuck in the jground, and from it hung out in the The hair i breeze a long-haired alp. looking on from a short | was dark, and { distance I could not tell whether the scalp was that of a white woman or an Indian. It might have been either. The | three Indians were leaping and gesturing {and at intervals mumbling something, | not a song apparently, but disconnected { words, Occasionally they would point | toward the Then they would | mumble again and jump abo They | Ware not peat i, and t was different from that braves. They noticed me, and, they made no demonstration of } y that they The shades on prairie and Missoun $ wat Del i scalp. 14 ik. heir attire of ordinary while 3 silty N their expression ! would mther bw of evening hill and like a mighty sery : waters tinctured h aruddy stain by { the final gleam of the setting sun, and all, away from the painted tents and the silent cotto wood, these | children of nature were enacting their strange enchantment to move in some {| way that supernatural power which seemed to have deserted the ladian race. With eerie feelings I withdrew, leaving them to their superstitution, and j conscious that perhaps its parallel might be found among more enlightened nations, — ago Herald, - EE — How to Visit the Queen. Should you be invited by Queen Vic | toria to dinner, the following, according to Edmund Yates in the New York I'v dune, is some of the eti juette the you will have to observe Guests are expected to arrive { to dress for dinner, and they leave after breakfast the next morning. The rule is for guests to repair to the corridor in full dress at 8:30 o'clock. the dinner he ing 8:45, and the Queen comes in from her own apartments just as the clocks | chime the quarter, bows to the company and proceeds into the oak room, when the meal is served. The dinner is al ways excellent and the wines are superb, but the conversati m at the table of course most vapid and conventional. Af ter dinner usually stand | about the corridor, or ¢ 11h ¢ t ni meant | i alling f i Th WM Wore river, stretched w wit here on thas | Chi in Gime IL th comp ny y into one of the three drawing rooms which adjoin it, The Queen speaks a few moments to each person in succession, then retires, and the guests see her no more, as she never appears in the morning: so that a | visit to the Castle does not involve much personal intercourse with her Majesty After the Queen to her rooms, | the company remain in one of the draw ing rooms for music or whist, and when the ladies retire the men adjourn to the smoking room, in which is a billiard i table, a very comfortable suuggery. Is gone a EE A Mexican Farm, “On one farm in Mexico I saw enough of the luxuries of life produced to make any man happy,” remarked OC. F. Wood, of El Paso, Texas. “The farm was not | large as some farms go in Mexico, it was, | to use a slang phrases ‘stunner.’ I don't | think the mind of man could imagine a : vegetable product that could not be pro- | duced on that farm. At any rate I saw growing there coffee, sugar, rice, potatoes, | rye, wheat, oats, corn, berries, cabbage, | tomatoes, apples, bananas, cocoa, figs, { cochineal, and a dozen other products, | On the upper end of this farm you could { find gold, silver, sapphires, onyx, wand other precions stones. Some of these articles were not produced in quantities | large enough to pay to market them, but | they were all found there, and all at the | service of the owner of the land. Oh, I | suppose the farm contained 10,000 or 20,000 acres of land, but it extended | through all temperstures and all eleva tions, "Kansas City Times. ——— —————— Where Coral Comes From. | The largest quantity snd the hand. | somest corals come from the Algerian consl, These coral nds have been le of the sixteenth century, Other coral grounds are found on the const of Bicily, Corsica, Sardinia, | Spain, the Balearics and Provence. More than 500 Italian barks and over 4200 per. sons me engaged in the coml fishery, hastily demanded in a joyful voice, | “Well, well?” interrogated Landry, | | ‘Oh, indeed,” she concluded, “I did | in | ‘ . | It must have some religious | OER SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL, Electricity has been put to driving drills. It costs sixty-four cents to run a train a mile in England. Wooden-spoon making is an extensive being the annual product. reeling, weighing and making up into balls of silk and similar woven fabrics. Iron bolts exposed to water in the bridges over the Thames in England, | have in twenty-five years been eaten away one-half, Silk from paper pulp is made smooth | and brilliant, has about the same elastic. ity as ordinary silk, and is about two- thirds as strong, Japan is about to enter the field as a | producer of indigo, industry in Russia, about 30,000,000,000 : Large Feo for Medical Attendance. Probably the largest fee for medical or surgical attendance eezy paid in New York was the sum of £100,000 to Dr. Willard Parker, about fifteen years ago, for an operation in a wealthy family resi. dent near New Tork, The case was one of goitre, a rare affliction in the United | Btates, at lesst among native Americans, Electricity has just been applied to the | The soil and clim- | | ate of parts of the island are stated to be | | favorable to the cultivation of { shrub. The Indian witch, or medicine dance, | is very different from the performances | An Austrian has invented an instru. | ment resembling a piano in appearance, which contains six violins, two voilas, | and two violoncellos, and is manipulated | by a keyboard, A machine, said to be lightness and ingenuity, has recently been built in Australia for experiments in flying through the air. It is propelled by an engine fed with compressed air, n The group of bodies termed by chem- ists the earbo hydrates—because they are composed of carbon united with oxygen and hydrogen in the proportion in which { those to form tain the known series of PUgArs, gums and starches two elements combine Waller well A 9.2-inch armor-piercing shell, manu factured by the British firm of Thomas Firth & Sons, was recently subjected to being fired at a fourteen-inch compound I late The projectile passe | through the plate. Further tests with this shell will soon be made. At a test of Reading, Penn., inch bar broke at pounds, clean manufactured at e other day, nu of ““heing ab yt 20 (yi) steel th th Ba one. 233,883 pounds in strain excess of the highest red known supervision of Pe causiic rd nuthoritavely under t 3 CaArmY "er "wl Government offic The test was made he 18. At the France, the market in | effected by rated liquor to tween hollow rollers, kept ox down to a by circulation of cold water within them. whi ol low point the Clay which is pure white, and that also which is discolored, and has been washed to bring it to a uniform shade of color, is used by the manufacturers of paper hangings to give the smooth satin surface to the finished paper. It is used h a thin size, apply- f the pre os of by mixing it up wit ing it to the of paper, and then polishing it by means of brushes driven by machinery. surface in All investigations by Professor of Edinburgh, Scotland, have led him to reject the commonly accepted views of the origin of thorns He has found that there is a more or less devel- wed general contrast in vegetative habit between thornless and thorny varietios The thorny varioties or show a diminishing wvegetstiveness than their thornless in fact, they frequently devel wp their thorns by th actual death of their germ points Recent wy (recides, species more congeners; veneers is now done by machine, in around the log, as usual, akes a thin slice from the flat side of it, The ut into cutting knife is fixed shafts, and the log is carried up A Circuiar The cutting of The venes ) ‘ ring WoCtno) 5 ring ead of cutting or ntire circamierence of ER - shaving the f any diameter, and are The veneer. two logs are f ten feet lengths between o ¥ parallel and down in front of it with motion by revolving cranks, and is fed against the knife by a retchet and pawl, to the ordinary manner in iri —— Race Changes. Professor George Barbour, in his work n the strange race tion and abnormal have developed on the border of the tropics, in the next neighborhood of en. terprising Yankee-like communities, But it is not possible that those com. munities, too, will by and by experience the influence of a winterless climate! of bipeds which isola. climatic influences i gy has been sustained | Thus far their energy has bee | tion will become of great use in lung Is Your Ch by a constant influx of Northern immi- grants, but that influx will cease after the population of the North and South has reached the equilibrium of its dis. tribution, and the *‘cracker” of the hum. mocks will then come to form the type of a new race. Strange metamorphoses have happened in Southern Earope, and only the incontrovertible testimony of historical records ean persvade an eth. nologist to recognize the present in. habitants of Sicily as the direct descend. ants of athletic Grecian colonists and of the heroic Normans who followed Robert Guiscard across the Strait of Mession, — | Now York Voice. on Man Food. On the large islands in the delta of the | Amazon River there are banana gardens | which have continued to uce enor mous crops for nearly a hundred successive yours, the cultivators never use any kind of fertilizers or think ie dota to tice irrigation, or rotation or My did bushels of fruit per acre is considered only a moderate the | marvel of | although far from uncommon in France and Switzerland, From the side of the face and the neck hung a large fleshy sack, hideously disfiguring and making life a burden to the heir of several mil- lions, He carried the outgrow:h in a black silken bag, which hid it from view, but did not render less conspicuous the fact of its presence. The young man ap. pealed to the surgeons of highest reputa tion in France and London; but they made an examination and concluded that an operation would result fatally, Then he turned to the well-known Amencan surgeon, who consented, It is said to have been a most arduous task of surgery. But the patient lived, ana without the deformity. Under the circumstances the fee does not appear to have large. jut if New York leading physicians and surgeons receive large fees from the rich, they mora than make up for this good fortune by free attendance on the poor, not only at medical institutions but been too also at the houses of patients, —( hicago Herald, a ——————— Little Use for Flylnz Machines. Flying machines are among the neat possibilities—an enthusiast might almost say probabilities, Man ay yet har- ness himself into a light, tough frame- work of aluminium, and, compelling the electric current completely to his will, mount the ether like a lurk or cleave the clouds like an eagle, le § ne 1 "re al use for flying machines four 0 North Pole HY interested thie deientists the nx mild be dee in the m; might them conceivably rious ns use things; sd venturous would play mad with re high pranks heaven,” but in nd 4 ia the vod managers of Fourth of July } with joy JV] Cos Ha lavor I mare The that surface will never earth's surface power that binds tolid substances t | be defied or evaded to any beyond the most Hmited extent, Norsk American EE ——— Framing. framing seem i AD d Bt art we dig Picture Pictur re fol. Ive. has an art How are every one ave wed the onward m rk, and guity of Ot i engrs ment of now § itself, \ it sf be. Avings who has taken the troub ) investigate the first selection knows very well A ne iborately carved og is unsuitable itself ¢ irammes 3 4 frie a ive a overp NOrs of ¢ J One he most attractive or a Breton peasant group had 1 carved farm. AZO n antique oak frame; soth- and thus the charm that where every the hand of more bx & frost la ing impleme there nor careful smo WHS nO varnish Hor ing of the frame OEseamed] Ver piece comes the ORIYErs w» the et surrounds ian rn i aesigner, than a ape,on a i 1 Duteh interior, + du nd. Another, a Burgomaster's Family,” had a curious frame of pale red plicated wi w pane. he | and blue tiles surrounded by a carved | molding the resources of Florida, describes | | well as through their lungs. of time-polished and darkened sak. Boston Traveler. Everybody ne —— a Skin Breather. A scientific gentleman of Buenos Ayres, M. Cobes, bas discovered that all living wnimals breathe through their skins as Hypode:- mic injections ol oxygen into their skin sre taken up by the capillaries of the | system in the same manner as when oxy- | gen is breathed through the lungs. The | practical part of the discovery is that M. Cobes thinks the hypodermic respira. | diseases. jut the world has | the | n———— Plate Glass Casting Table, The casting teble of a plate glass factory is about twenty feet long, fifteen feet wide and seven inches thick. Strips of iron on each side efford a bearing for the rollers and determine the thicknvess of the plate to be cast. The molten glass is poured on the table and the roller passing from end to end spreads the glass to a uniform thickness, The glass, after cooling rapidly, is transferred to the annealing oven, where it remains several days. When taken out it is very rough and uneven, and in that state is used for skylights and other purposes where strength is desired rather than transparency. ‘The greater part of the glass, however, is ground, smoothed and polished. — Chicago News. TUR FCRERRR | — Do you wish to know how to have no seam, pnd not half the usual work on wash day? Ask our grocer for a bar of Dobbias's Eectrie ap. and the directions will tell fou how, Be sure Lo get no imitation. There ars lots of them BUnove TuespAy is a legal holiday in Ala beams and Louisiana, Cutarrk Can't be Cured With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they can. not reach the sent of the disesse. COntarrh is & blood or constitutional disease and 10 order Lo cure it you Lave to take internal remedies, Hall's Ostarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur- faces, Hall's Catarrh Cure ts no quack moedi. cine. It wos prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Ingredients Is woat produces sceh wonderful Festlts incuring csiarrh. dNend for testimo- mials, free, F.J Caeser & Co., Props. Bold by druggists, price ec, Toledo, O. TORE THOUSAND MILLIONS of pounds is the estimated yearly production of paper, FITS stopped free by Di, Keawe's Guasar Nenve Rusronen, No fits after first day's use, | Marvelouscures, Treatise and 82 urial bottle free. Dr. Kline, 881 Arch st, Phila, a De You Ever “poculnte Any person seading us thelr names ant at. Gress will receive information that will leal fo a fortune Ben). Lewis & Us, Sscurily Buliding, Kansas City, Ma, Oklahoma Guide Book and Map sent any whers wh receiptof Wot. Ty ler & Co. Kansas City, Ma. SJACOES Of, ————————— SPRAINS. | BRUISES. OY 40 & Mim Rafi way Ofoe President and 3 General Manager, | Paitin Ma Cincinnatt, Ohio | Jun'y 18, 1890 “My foot suddenly { “1 was bruised bad. turned and gave me | ly In hip and glide by & Yery severely | 1" A pws sprained ankle The a fal} } sulered se- application of St verely. St Jecots Off Jacobs Ofl resulted st | complete] y cured once in relief from | me” Wx C Hannes pa YW Pranony Member of State Prost & Gen’ Man'gr Legislature, THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore, M4 KYN U3 748 Dolphin Ptrest, FI ar Mae HENS SAY In quantity costs ity coneestrated, Dose small Pghly day por hen I'reovests fon than onedentl rent a cures all disonsen. If you os 4 ry we send by wont, pid, Five Pi4ih oan LD; i wimoniale free, Sond stamps oF wide (price She) free with $1 AROS & OO, Boston, Bass AY'S READY RELIEF. |THE GREAT CONQUER OF PAIN For Spralos. Bruises, Backache, Pain in he Chest or sides, Headnone, Toothache, pravy ether external pain, a few npplicns Hens rubbed on by band, act tike magie, thusing tee pain to instantly stop, For Congestions, Colds, Bronchitis Poeae mouin, Inliammations, Khrumatism News ralgin, Lumbage, Sciatica, mare th “rough and repeated applications are BeCeRRATry., All luternal Paine, Disrrhes, Colbie fpasme, Nansen, Feinting Spells, Nervous tess, Sleepless cns are reiieved instantly, tnd quickly roved b; taxing inwardly oo @ GE drors in hall a tambler of water. Bem bottle. Al preggisis. RADWAY'S PILLS, n excellent and mild Cathartio, Purely oustable. The Satest and Best Medicine inthe world lor the Care of nil Disorders » the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken nccerdi te directions thor will restore health and renew vitality. Price25cta. a Box. Sold by all Druggists POSITIVELY REMEDIED, BAGGY, KNEES Harvard ant and othe Oalirgres, + Ao nd busin ah? 3 town send Be. Wo tog id where, If set for sale tn nr BJ GREELY, TD 100 r $1000 Caratuily Yovmtod yw! FLAY trem TWENTY IETASTRENT 0. acon ild Sick. 8.8 8. gives strength, | health and vigor to weak and delicate children. BOOKS ON BLOOD AND good, A nel {bad been pletely cured, and without it NEVER WITHOUT IT. About three years ago my little boy three years old was confined to his bed with what the dostors pronounced io. § flammatory rheumatism in his left log He complained of severe pains all the Ume, extending to his hips. several remedies but they did him no bor whose little son loted the same way, recommended 8. 8B. 8B. After taking two bottles my little boy was com one and a quarter miles 0 school ey. erydaysinoa Ikeep 8. 8 8 in my bouse al’ the time, and would not be 8. J. Caxsminse, It is perfectly harmless, yet so powerful as to cleanse the system of all Easton, Ga impurities. i tried has been walking THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta. Ca.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers