Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, March 28, 1902, Image 3

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    " T
,
The Breton lint.
The little round Breton hat 13 enor
mously popular in felt with the brim
bound by a contrasting color, espe
cially in front. A great deal of bright
apple green velvet is employed in mil
linery, and one firm has made a strik
ing note In the employment of green
parrots witn green satin rosettes on
white and pale mauve felt. Very large
s toques are also to be worn, the trim
ming flat and low and a soft drapery of
lace round the brim failing low on the
hair at the hack. Nothing points to the
return of the high couture, as has been
stated in some fashion papers.
Tho Aiiptiquo Crase.
Fur and lace, iace and fur and fur
and lace and velvet make a chorus
mat never fails to captivate our win
ter fancy, a chorus, moreover, that
asks the aid of tho needle. Stitchery,
stitehery, ail the time, and never a
stitch too much. Applications are to
be the ruling bent in this year of
grace. The craze for applying one
material over another amounts al
most to a disease, for it is irresistible.
The cut out cretonne motifs and trails
•continue to declare themselves, while
too mystery lent to this decoration
I>y a veiling of transparency, prefer
ably the very finest aerophane, is a
vast improvement. Shaded so discreet
ly. all hardness is lost, and there is
substituted a certain shadowy sugges
tiveness which is the very essence of
artistic feeling.
The Revival of the Barring.
The long-predicted revival of the ear
ring has, it would seem, arrived; just
now earrings are considered quite the
correct tiling and are being worn to a
considerable extent for the first time
in ten years, though two styles only in
settings are at tho present time no
ticed. The large hoop and other fan
tastic shapes have been discarded in
favor of tho short drop and the screw,
and, given a pretty ear, earrings to
everybody, whereas diamonds only suit
people with clear complexions. Of
course, real pearls, lustrous and of
fairly good size, are very expensive,
but so perfect are the imitations now
manufactured that only an experienced
eye can detect the difference. The
most effective of the earrings now
shown have a small diamond as the
head of a screw and dependent from
this is a pearl or other stone. The
effect is that of the drop, yet there is
no swinging, the one thing most im
portant to avoid in tho up-to-date ear-
ring.—American Queen.
The Wedding Cake.
Wedding cake boxes are in any de
sign which the bride is pleased to or
der, if she gives the instructions long
enough in advance. At present, how
ever, there is a I iteful preference for
severe shapes, with dependence upon
tho best materials for distinction.
Heavy "white water color" papers
are the proper sort for the covering of
boxes, on the tops or sides of which
the monograms, usually cf both bride
and bridegroom, are blended in relief,
cither in white or in gold and silver.
Ribbons for tying the boxes are of
moire, taffeta or satin.
The bride's cake is exclusively the
bride's. Whatever the amount of cake
previously stored in boxes for the
guest 3 to carry away as they pass out,
there is always an especially decorated
eako among the good things served to
tho guests. It is intended frequently
that the bride herself shall cut this
cake in the presence of the guests, es
pecially her maids, who expect to find
in it a gold ring or some other article
portending the marriage within a year
of the finder.
A bride lately took high-handed hold
of tradition and substituted a heart for
me ring of our t'oremothers' super
stition.
Scientlllc Skirt- Cutting.
The trend of fashion in women's
skirts is toward a closer fit and more
sheath-like shape from the waist to
flounce depth. The greater number of
these skirts are ornamented with
flounces, various depths being em
ployed, while perhaps the graduated
flounce may bo considered the moßt up
to date. The flounces are cut on en
tirely new lines, being much more cir
cular than heretofore, and produce a
more graceful and decided spring
- around the foot of the skirt. This ex
treme fulness accentuates the clinging
effect of the upper portion, which must
be fitted with the greatest exactness.
The flounce ripples gracefully being
much more circular than the older
modes, and therefore is fuller around
the bottom. It is in two pieces and
slopes gradually until at the back it
is twice me depth of the front. It has
the added advantage that it may be
made with a sweep or shorter for those
who prefer the round length. The
upper or sheath-llke portion is held
in place by straps of elastic tacked to
the gore seams a3 directed on the label
of the pattern. To these elastics are
sewed tapes, that adjustment may be
made to suit the individual figure. This
fashionable mode is called the "form
fitting," or serpentine skirt —The De
lineator.
"All Work and No Play.'*
1 We all know the old adage, "All
I work and no play makes Jack a dull
boy," and perhaps It Is particularly
true when applied to busy wotaen.
Women, it I may express it so, plod
at their tasks in away unknown to
most male workers. Ask any business
manager of a firm which employs both
sexes, and he will tell you that women
are by far more conscientious and
turn out more work in a given time.
Then, too. nature meant men to be
the breadwinners, and endowed them
with constitutions more fitted for the
daily drudgery of office or professional
life. The mere fact of having to do
the same thing day by day is posi
tively deadly to many of the gentler
sex. To take up work and run It as
a hobby and taking up work as a means
of providing bread and butter for your
self or those dependent on you are
things as remote as the poles.
The sensitive, nervous tempera
ments, which are those which certainly
do uie best work, are very easily in
fluenced by their surroundings, and it
makes all the difference in the world
to them it at the end of a hard day's
work some one or something awaits
them that will take them out of the
business world in which they have
been and give them something entirely
different to think about.
So often one hears a business woman
say that she is too tired to go to tho
theatre, or to read, when as a matter
of fact, once the actual effort of get
ting there was accomplished, she would
find it a real rest, for it would changa
her thoughts, get her away from her
little home worries, and arouse her
interest in the lives of those who scorn
to nave so little in common with htr
own.
Lack of recreation not only ruins the
health anu turns girls into old women,
but it takes from them all individual
ity, all freshness, all power of sym
pathy, and turns then into the awful
product of this twentieth century—a
woman who has but one idea in life,
and that the particular branch of work
in which she is engaged.—Home Notes.
New Era in Sleevea.
There seems always something new
to say about sleeves, really the most
important item in wardrobes just now.
rue prettiest ami most modish sleeve
is undoubtedly the one that follows
closely tho lines of the arm to below
tho elbow and then widens excessively
with a lot of ruffled undersleeves that
fall over the hand; but this sleeve, un
fortunately, is not generally becoming.
A sleeve that, on the other hand, is
almost universally becoming is close,
with a high, tight cuff and elaborate
drapery at the elbow. An example of
this drapery is a scarf of mousseline
de soie arranged with a big how on
the outside of the arm, while the same
idea on an elbow sleeve consists of a
turn-up cuff, slashed on the outside
of the arm with a frill of lace or a puß
of some thin stuff coming through the
slashing. The correct way is to have
the full part of the elbow trimming on
the outside.
Some dresses made by first-class
houses have sleeves made in a bag to
the elbows, where they meet long, close
cuffs. A close cuff, perhaps five inehe3
deep, with the full sleeve bagging over
this, is perhaps the most popular
model. This sleeve should increase in
size gradually, but should reveal the
contour of tho arm almost to the
elbow.
After sleeves, what is the next im
portant thing on bodices? Probably
collars, although there is a great simi
larity about these. They vary mora In
regard to sire than to shape, in the
latter respect keeping close to the
Louis XIIT. design. It is the use of
embroideries and laces that gives
cachet to most of these.
A deep collar of yeilcw batiste, em
broidered with white and yellow
worsted and inset with ecru lace, is a
novelty that gives distinction to a gown
of tabac brown velvet. The blouse has
no other trimming save some small and
very lovely gold buuons, which are
used in clusters on the front of the
bodice and on the small, close cuffs.
The skirt Is made with a shaped
flounce, trimmed with diamonds formed
of lines of small tucks taken in the
stuff.—New York Tribune.
White rosea are much in demand for
the winter hats.
More stylish cloth skirts are made
with a separate drop skirt of silk than
with a lining sewed in with the out
side fabric.
Narrow lines of costly fur on gauze,
net and tulle remain one of the Incon
gruous combinations, hut it is extreme
ly effective and becoming whenever
used.
The rage for lace for the trimming of
hats and the adornment of gowns and
evening wraps still continues, Irish
crochet and filet being tile popular
sorts.
Guipure lace waists are prettily fin
ished with tiny hands of fur, and one
thing which never fails in these day 3
is the stitching applied in every con
ceivable way.
A somewhat novel and altogether
pretty feature of a fasliionablo wedding
was a wreath of sweet peas worn by
each bridesmaid In place of tho cus
tomary largo hat.
Brown cloth forms a smart tailor
costume, with cream panne revcrs
ttimmed with gold-threaded applique.
The vest Is of Persian embroidery,
outlined with gold.
The handsomest spangled nets are
being used, with garish effect and great
expense, over brocaded colored silks
and shaded chiffons and tho combina
tion is bewildering.
The Thoncht. of 11 House tat.
In fall, when I peer out at night,
The stars seem very bright.
They're surely brighter when It's cold;
And, though I never have been told,
I know those little stars ail try
To shine their brightest in the sky,
To warm the world and make tilings bright,
For cats who sing outdoors all night.
—Philadelphia Press.
New Cudgel Game.
Here is a new game, which is caus
ing a great deal of amusement at so
cial gatherings in Europe.
Two boys, or young men, are blind
folded, and in the right hand of each
is placed a stout roll of paper in the
form of a club or cudgel. The players
then have to lie down on the carpet
and to grasp each other by the left
hand. Thereupon the fun begins. One
of the players aslts the other:
"Are you there?"
When the answer "Yes" comes, he
raises his right hand and strives to hit
with his cudgel the spot where, from
the sound of tljo voice, he supposes the
other player's head to be.
The other player, however, is at per
fect liberty to move his head after he
has answered "Yes," and the result is
that in nine cases out of ten the blow
misses his head and falls on his shoul
ders or some other part of his body.
In that case it is his turn to re
taliate, and so the game goes on in
definitely, the sole object of the player
who asks the question being to strike
the other player's head and that of
the player who answers to save his
head from being struck.
A Terrible Moment,
While in New Haven to attend the
Yale and Princeton football game, I
witnessed a sight which I will not for
get for many a day. it was almost
noon, and the main sctreets were
swarmed with the hundreds of visitors
that a big game always draws to the
town where the game is to be played,
when clouds of black smoke were seen
to rise from the upper stories of the
Hutchinson, a large, five-story, light
brick building, occupied entirely by
students. Long before the fire depart
ment had arrived an immense crowd
had gathered on the spot, and there
we beheld a young man standing on
the ledge of a fifth-story window, wild
ly calling for aid, wnile the thick
smoke rose all around him, and now
qnd again completely enveloped him.
Two or three times he seemed about
to jump to the ground, which would
mean certain death, hut each time ho
was stayed by the shouts of his friends
below, who called frantically to him to
wait
To the crowd, as they stood in the
terrible suspense the fire engines never
seemed longer in coming, and when
they did arrive it took some time to
raise the truck ladder, so that angry
remarks could be heard on all sides.
The sight of the ladder slowly rising,
and the cheers and applause of his
friends below, gave hope and courage
to the entrapped student, by this time
almost suffocated by the smoke, and
he had just strength enough to scizo
the ladder as it reached the window
and slide down half-way, where ho
was caught in the arms of two of the
firemen and borne unconscious to the
ground. lie was taken to the house (/'
a physician nearby, and it wa3 over an
hour before he recovered. The fire
burned on and completely gutted the
three upper stories, but the two lower
stories were uamaged only by water.
The students in the lower stories went
to their rooms and threw whatever
they could into the street, where the
things were gathered up by their
friends, who stood waiting with the
water pouring down upon them. Those
whose rooms were on the upper stories,
however, lost everything they had.
That night there were about 50 stu
dents looking around for homes.
The Cobbler Gohhlert.
Little Dickie wept. You must not
think too badly of Dickie, for he was
only five. He wept because the turkey
was after him again!
There were many turkeys about, for
Dickie's father owned a farm. But thia
particular turkey was the liveliest of
them all, and how Dickie feared him!
It seemed to him that the turkey was
always after him.
"He doesn't yike me!" Dickie had
explained when jeered at for his fears.
"He wants to bite me."
"Never mind, Dickie boy," his tather
had laughed. "Some day you shall bite
him."
Dickie had vowed in his heart he
never would. And now, on the day
before Thanksgiving, the turkey was
pursuing him again. Dickie had, only
a moment before, escaped from his
nurse—a tiresome person, far too much
addicted to saying "don't"—and had
strayed into the farmyard. He looked
so clean and nice in his white sailor
suit, over the blue collar of which
strayed his yellow curls. His blue
eyes were filled with tears as he ran.
The turkey, gobbling, ran after him—
but not, as he thought, in pursuit, for
the turkey had no thought of Dickie,
but was trying to run away from Sam,
the black cook.
"Sam! Sam!" called Dickie. "Sam!
He's after me."
"All right, Mas'r Dickie," answered
Sam. "I be after him, and he knows
it, too."
At that point Dickie sat down,
abruptly and unintentionally, on a
heap of straw. The turkey came up.
Dickie waved his straw hat wildly up
and down.
"Hold him! Hold him!" erled
Sam.
"I can't. Ha'U hold me," wailed
Dickie, as the turkey came closer.
"Sair.—oh, Bam!"
"Hello, Dickie! cried his father,
coming out of the barn. "My boy a
coward? That will never do. Stand
up to him like a man!"
Now, Dickie never obeyed his nurse
if he could help it. Sometimes, I am
sorry to say, he did not do what his
mother told him, very quickly. But
he knew better than not to mind his
father the first time. He stood up now,
his fat legs very, very wide apart. The
turkey, however, shot by, Sam after
it. In a moment Dickie saw his foe
in the hands of Sam, who bore him off,
gobbling to the last and fluttering
wildly.
"I 'tood lip to him, daddy," said
Dickie. "But I didn't bite him. I
touldn't."
"You shall tomorrow," replied his
father, swinging him up on his broad
shoulder. "Come and see the little
calf."
The next day Dickie sat at the table
in his high chair. He was not usually
allowed to dine with the grown-ups,
but on Thanksgiving day liis grand
father paid his yearly visit to the farm,
and insisted upon his little grandson's
presence.
Dickie's mother cut up a small piece
of white meat for him.
"There!" said his father. "You've
bitten the turkey now."
Dickie wondered what he meant, and
why everybody laughed. But he had
long grown accustomed to the way in
which big people laughed when he saw
nothing funny, so he took a spoonful
of cranberry sauce and said nothing.
He did not realize that it was his foe
he had been eating.—New York Trib
une.
Clytie, tho Sunflower.
When I was a little girl I used often
to vi3it a gentle lady who lived at the
edge of a quaint old garden. Holly
hocks and sweetwilliam and mignon
ette grew in that garden, and away at
the farther end tail, strong stalks with
nodding yellow blossoms at their very
tops. These, the lady said, were sun
flowers; and she told me an interesting
story about them that I have never for
gotten.
Once upon a time —hundreds and
hundreds of years ago—there lived in
a far-off country called Hellas a beau
tiful maiden whose name was Clytie.
She was not a real maiden, hut a water
nymph, and her home was in the midst
of a forest stream. In those days
every stream and tree had its guard
ian spirit, and the people of Hellas,
who were the Greeks, believed that
their land was blessed by these nympbs
and made fruitful. The tree spirits
were called dryads and the water
spirits wcro naiads. Clytie was a naiad
because she guarded a sparkling stream
that came flowing down from the
mountain side. She was very beau
tiful, for her hair was long and yellow,
her skin was as white as the inner
siue of a lily and her eyes wore brown
and dancing as the waters are when
they darken among the shadows of the
trees and are rippled by the summer
wind.
The little nymph was very happy in
the pleasant wood where she was born,
and played contentedly all the long,
drowsy mornings and afternoons and
evenings. But one day she ventured
farther than she had ever been before
—out ir. f o an open space where the
sun was shining like gold on the peb
bles at the bottom of the stream. Now,
Ciylie had never looked upon the sun;
she had only seen the rays on the
stream that was her home as they
drifted down through the leafy
branches. As she looked toward the
heavens her eyes were dazzled.
Apollo, the young god of the sun,
was driving, an ho drove every day, in
his chariot of flame, from east to west
through tho heavens; and Clytie was
charmed. She had never beheld so
beautiful a being, and she called him to
come down and play with her by the
stream-banks in the meadow. But
Apo!!o kept straight on in his course,
never deigning to notice the little
water-nymph so far below him on the
earth. Clytie sat on the grassy bank
and watched until the chariot of gold
disappeared behind the western hills
and the purple mist of the twilight
came. Then she went home, hut was
very lonely. So day after day she came
out from the shadows of tho forest to
tho open place, where the waters
gleamed ana (he fish went darting like
spears of gold. But Apollo never no
ticed though she called him and called
him to come and be her playmate. The
people of the earth who came that way
often saw her there by the stream and
ueard the sound of her voice, and they
looked on hor with awe.
For nine days and nine long nights
the maiden sat and mourned, with her
yellow hair drawn elose about her, and
would neither eat nor sleep. She was
very, very sad, this little water-nymph,
hut she did not die. Oh, no. On the
morning of the tenth day, when the
children of the valley came to play by
the meadow stream, they found a won
der where the ma.den had been sitting
—a tall, strong stalk with a nodding
yellow blossom at its very top. And
when the people watched, day after
day, and saw that the pretty flower
turned its head to follow the course of
the sun from east to west through the
heavens, they knew it was the nymph
of the stream; and they called it Clytie,
the sunflower. —Grace Adele Pierce, in
Woman's Home Companion.
Selloolboy Knows Throe Towns.
A schoolboy at Greenpoint was
asked to name three towns on Long
Island. He gave them as follows:
"Crosstown, Downtown and Out of
Town." —New York World.
The contortionist is not the only
fellow who is addicted to pairing him
self on the back.
"UNREDEEMED PLEDGES."
One ol' Iho Ways In Which tho Unwary
Are Tricked Out of Money.
Recently there have been added to
tho city's heterogeneous commerce sev
eral little shop 3 which offer for sale,
mostly at auction to the highest bid
der and to the only bidder, too, if his
bid be high enough, jewelry and other
articles that go under the name cl' un
redeemed pledges. There are tricks
in all trades and this particular trade
is the sublimation of all tricks.
in the first place there is something
alluring in the term "unredeemed
pledges." . .
All such stores employ men with
phnnomenal lungs, who cry their wares
in basso profundo. In one of them
there is a fellow with a voice that
would he conspicuous in a den of roar
ing lltDis. Ho is always coherent and
tho volume of breathy sound that
comes from his mouth seems to be
reverberated from every surface in the
establishment. Generally he is tell
ing the merits of a certain watch, or
the price he has just been offered for
the timekeeper, and as a passing pe
destrian reaches the doorway he raises
his voice a little, which secures an in
voluntary turn of the head. Often
curiosity is aroused and the passerby
goe3 in to investigate.
When one enters the shop the "auc
tioneer" is probably announcing he has
just been offered a ridiculously low
price for a fine pair of earrings.
"Gentlemen, are you going to let
this elegant pair of earrings govt that
price?" he asks, and there seems to
be a genuine distress in his voice.
Perhaps the next article offered is a
watch.
"Ah! What have we here? A watch?
Well, so it is, ana a beauty, too."
And then he goes on to tell how the
owner of the watch was forced to part
with it. It is always a pathetic tale.
Young man; health failing for a long
time; no money savea; mo.ner dies
suddenly; the watch is pawned to pay
for the funeral of the dear old laay.
He sighs deeply, hut stifles his emo
tion and proceeds with the sale.
"Look at this watch and tell mo
what you think of it," he says to a
tall individual standing near the show
case.
"I have no need of a watch," replies
the man.
"But look at it. You don't need to
buy it."
A critical examination of the watch
follows and Lien the man who "had
no need of it" offers perhaps $3. The
b.u is at first scorned, but after much
talk 13 reluctantly accepted.
If any one bids 25 cents more the
watch is immediately sold.
The man who offers the $5 is a
"tout." He goes from shop to shop.
Three or four are employed, and they
go from shop to shop, making the first
bid on every piece of gold-plated jew
elry that is offered for sale.
There is one tall "tout" who we:;rs
glasses and who has been employed so
long that even the most unwary look
at him askance. Often he is forced to
"make a bluff" at buying the bras 3. It
is saf9 to estimate that he has
"bought" at least 2000 watches during
tho past two years.—New Orleans
Times-Democrat.
liagpipo Muklp.
Dagpipo inusic has "suffered greatly
through the eiforts of well-meaning
but mistaken people to lift it out of
its proper place and graft it on to city
life and its inside entertainments." To
compare its music with "classical pro
ductions" is "like comparing 'tatics
and herring with wine and jellies." A
Chicago jury once decided that the
bagpipe was not a musical instrument
at ail. But why quarrel with a defi
nition? Enough that it has lived
through some bad crises. When that
phase of life in which it was born
and brought up passed away, it de
clined to La moved into the back
ground. In short, it had the will to
live without the adventitious aids of
cranks and of congresses, because it
answers a primitive want. Indeed,
nothing could be more ironic that fhe
fact that the military organization
which did much to crush out every
thing that had made it a power should
have been so completely conquered
by it that there arc now tivo-and twen
ty bagpipe bands in the British army.
The bagpipe has been annexed by some
of our native Indian regiments, notably
these in the Punjab, and it continues
lo spread there as a military
instrument.—The Athenaeum.
I'lo.ldont Arthur ns a Drossor.
"President Artnur was the best
dressed man I ever saw," said one of
the attendants at the White House,
who ha 3 been there 30 years or more.
"Ho changed shirts three times a day
and suits almost as often. He never
wore the same suit all day, and dur
ing the social season changed as often
as three or four times each day. In
the summer he was fond of low-quar
tered shoes, and always tied them
with a wide silk string. I have bought
him hundreds of pairs of silk shoe
strings. He had not less than 50 pairs
of good shoes at all times, and I know
he did not have less than 100 pieces of
neckwear, too. President Arthur was
a mighty fine man and was good to
all tho servants and others connected
with the Wnite House."—Washington
Star.
A Humor of tho Counts.
The usual humorous incidents wore
not lacking in the recently taken Brit
ish census. An immigrant in Now
Zealand stated to the authorities that
his mother was a Kaffir, his father an
Irishman, who had become a natural
ized American, but afterward served in
the French army, and that he was born
on the passage between Yokohama and
Colombo in a Spanish vessel. "Put him
down a Scotchman!" was the official
decision.
IT "' My mother :roub!ed with
1 consumption for many'years. At
H last she was given up to die. Then
she tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
and was speedily cured."
D. P. Jolly, Avoca, N. Y.
t No matter how hard
your cough or how long
you have had it, Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral is the
| best thing you can take.
I It's too risky to wait
| until you have consump-
I tion. If you are cougning
I today, get a bottle of i
1 Cherry Pectoral ai once.
9 Three sizes: 25c., 50c., SI. All drii£zl3t3.
§ Consult your doctor. If lie oay3 take It,
■ then do as lie says. If lie tolls you not :
H to take It, then don't tako if. He knows.
■ Leave it with him. Wo are vrllllny.
fd J. C. AYEB( ■>.. L :i. Mass.
iMHßDaßcxvf 'mi w lizuwww waaawaagawß
TO^POWO
The best that Money and Sfcgfo
£seriencß can produce.
At all stores, or by mail for tho pries.
HALL & RUCKEL, New Yorut.
MORE VALUABLE THAN GOLD.
Why Recent Discoveries of Platinum
in Alaska Are Important.
The price of platinum, one of the
rarer of the precious metals, now ex
ceeds that of fine gold, being s2l an
ounce. In IS9O the price was only $lO
per ounce, but owing to the gradual
increase In demand it has been steadi
ly rising. Platinum somewhat re
sembles silver in appearance, but has
a rather duller luster. It is extreme
ly resistant to acid 3 and atmospheric
agents tending to corrosion, and
would be much more largely used
were it not for the rather limited sup
ply and resulting high price. The de
mand is in excess of the supply, and
its price will probably continue to
rise.
MEANING OF "ATMOGRAPHY."
New and Convenient Abbreviation
Suggested for Wireless Telegraphy.
A Muskegon correspondent of the
"Electrical Review" suggests the word
"atmography" as a desirable abbrevi
ation for use in place of "wireless
telegraphy" which Is rather clumsy
and undesirably long, especially when
It has to he repeated every line or
two In a description of aerial signal
ing. It should be pronounced with
tho accent and syllables of geography.
Made up of the first four letters of
atmosphere and the last half of teleg
raphy, it suggests the features of tho
system very well.
Lavender gives a net profit of SIOO
an acre. Pure lard saturated with the
sent of flowers (pomade) is worth
from $G to $7.50 a pound. Cologne of
the finest quality (obtained by soak
ing the saturated lard in alcohol)
brings as much as sl7 a pint.
HERE ™. , f. 18
Know by the sign
7/4. wmm
*'"RA°E
MARK *
St
Bbo
Jacobs Oil
CURES
Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
Sciatica, Lumbago,
Sprains, Bruises,
Soreness, Stiffness.
CONQUERS PAIN.
Capsicum Vaseline
Put up In Collapsible Tubes.
A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or any
other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate
skin. The pain allaying ami curative qualities ot
this art! le are wonderful. Ik will stop tho toothache
at cace, and reliove headache and sciatica.
We recommend it us the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also its an external remedy
for pains in the chest and stomach and all rheumatic,
neuralgic and gouty c •mplaintH.
A trhvl will prove what wo claim for it, and it will
bo found to be invaluable in tho household. Many
people say "It is tho boat of all your preparations."
Price, 15 cents, at all druggists, or othor deal us,
or by sending this amount to us iu postage stamps
wo will sond you a tube by mail.
No article should be accepted by tho public unless
tho same carries our label, as otherwioo it is not
genuine.
CHEESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO.,
17 Bttto Sti'6ot New York City.
DR OPS'YSS
eases. Boos of testimonials and 10 days' treatment
Free. Or. H. H. OMUU*'S SOBS, BOX H. AUSUU., US.
(■old .lledal nt ItulT'alo Exposition.
McILHENNY'S TABASCO
{ISPISSTIiS Thompson's Eya Water