Oregon courier. (Oregon City, Clackamas County, Or.) 188?-1896, June 05, 1896, Image 7

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    TAKE CAKE OK YODIl WATCH.
The nitchaniam ol the tinman body
mlndi one very much of the mechanical
construction of a Hue watob, the wheels,
cogs and aorewa answering to the muscles
and the delicate springs are what may be
likened to the nerve. Una cannot move
without the other, and yet the action ol
each is separate and distinct. Ho it ii
with the nervea and uiU'clei of tbe human
body. The ailment of the muaolea are
distinct from tbe ailmeuti of the nerve,
and, like the mechanism of a watch, if ex
posed to sudden change of heat and cold,
they get out of order and for the tune are
useless. Especially is this aoat ibis season
of the year, when from exposure, negli
genoeor want of care, the nerves are at
tacked and neuralgia in lis worst form seta
in. But like oil to tbe worka of a watch
so is He. Jacobs Oil to the nerves thus de
ranged. It is acknowledged by thousands
to be the best and moat permanent cure
foribia most dreaded diseat-e; hence it is
well to look alter tne human watah as well
aa the one in the pocket.
MEMORIES.
As ixirfnniB doth remain
In tlio folila lu to it hnth lain,
80 the thought of you nmmlnlng,
Dt1ly fuMod in my brnln,
Will not leave me nil thlnm leave me
Yon remain.
Other tlioiiKliU may romu and go,
Other moment I may know,
That ahull waft niu in thoir Roing
Ah a breath blown to antl fro.
Frunnint niimoriia fi-usi-ant inemorira
Come and so.
Only thunitlita of you remain
In my heart whore they have Inln,
I'erftime thoughts of yon rcmnlnlntr,
A hid sweetness in my bruin.
Others Imvii me all tliitiK leave me
lon renin n.
. Arthur Symona.
SOME PECULIAR ACCIDENTS.
.THE CABINET CAMEO.
True beauty doet not (ear to dolt
The pluinoa and l.athurs aay,
Ami all the cbarinlUK itlrlt mite off
Their bat now at Hie play.
TIIK COMMISSAKV UKI'AltTM K.NT
f the human system Is the stomach. In con
sequence ol its activity, the body la supplied
Willi the element ol buue, brain, nervous and
nuMiiiar tlaaue. When iiiiliifealion Impede!
ita limolloua, the beat agent lor Impartinc a
oeaiimin nnptiiis 10 itaoieriitiouaia lioatuiier a
Stomach Milters, also a curative lor malaria,
bilious and kidney complaints, uertousness
and oonallpotton.
Prospective Pere Do yon think you can fill
the requirement ol a son-lu-laxv? 'llieBuiwr
nny, l,er Uioukui you would do bat.
Piso's Cure for Consumplion has been a
wou-eena to me. win. u. Aiouielian,
ester, r turiua, Dept. U, listt.
HOW'S THIS?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward (oranv
auM) ol Catarrh Uiai cannot be cured by Hall's
uaiarrn viire. .
K. J. CHEN KY A CO.. Prooa.. TolcdnTo.
We, tho HiidersiKiied, have known F. J. Cheney
lor the last 16 years, and believe bun perfectly
oonoraoiu in an uusinesa iraiiaacunns, ana
liiauelally able to carry out any obligation
anaue vj meir arm.
V KKT OJ TRDAX,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0.
Waldinu, KicNan A Marvin,
Wholesale Drugabts, 'loledo, O.
Han s caurrn Cure la takeu Internally, aetlug
ttrecily upon the blood and mucous aurlaces of
tne system. Price 700 per bottle. Sold by all
Druggists. Testimonials Ilea.
Hall's family pills are the best.
riTB.-All File slopped free by lr. Kline's
Sreat Nerve Restorer. Mo Fits after the ttrst
day's oae. Marvelous cure. Treause and 12.00
trial bottle free to Fit eases. Send to Pr. KUna,
Ml Arab tM., Philadelphia. Pa. .
Tit Gibmia tor breakfast.
Thai
Cxtreme tired feeling afflicts nearly every
body at this season. The hustlers cease to
push, the tireless grow weary, the ener
getic become enervated. Yon know just
what we mean. Some men and women
endeavor temporarily to overcome that
Tired
Peeling by great force of will. But this
la unsafe, as it pulls powerfully upon the
nervous system, which will not long stand
each strain. Too many people "work on
tfceir nerves," and the result is seen In un-
fortunate wrecks marked "nervous pros.
tratioa," in every direction. That tired
Feel
log is a positive proof of thin, weak, im
pare blood; for, if the blood is rich, red
vitalized and vigorous, it imparts life and
energy to every nerve, organ and tissue
.of tbe body. The necessity of taking
Hood's Ba-saparilla for that tired feeling
is, therefore, apparent to every one, and
tbe good it will do yon is equally beyond
luestlon. Kemeiubei that
ood'i
Sarsaparilla
Is the OneTrne Blood Pnrifler. All drngirlsta. L
Prepared only byC. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, -Mam.
nUUU S THIS tooperate. SAcent.
WHO CARRIES THE LARGEST
U ne of Cutlery, Sporting Goods,
Barber Supplies and Bazaar (joods I W hy, don' t
you know
THE WILL 4 FINCK COMPANY?
They will supply you with anything you want
at lowest market prices. Hend forUeneral Cata
logue or Catalogue of Snorting Goods or Barber
Supplies- m Market street. Ban Francisco, CaL.
FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE SICK or
"Just Don't Feel Well,"
xpBbLIVER pills
are the Oae Thins to uae.
Onlv One for a Dose.
Sold by dnigfftata at 25c. a box
6 ample Free. Addreas tha
Dr.Bosanko Med. Co.. fhiia. 1'a.
Save My Child!"
is tne cry or
man an
agonized
mother
whose
little one
writhes in croup or whoop
ing cough. In such cases,
Dr. Acker's English Rem
edy proves a blessing and
a godsend. Mrs. M. A.
Burke, of 309 E. 105th St.,
New York, writes: "Dr.
Acker's English Remedy
cured my baby of bronchitis,
and also gave instant relief
in a severe case of croup.
I gratefully recommend it."
Three sizes, 25c.; 50c.; tl. All Prat-fists.
ioii Mediciki Co, IS a IS Cliambera he N. V.
An Oculist Telia How tha Sight of Several
Paraona Was Destroys!.
A prominent oculist of this city gives
tho following liHt of queer accidents
that have come under his observation
recently:
A little boy, 10 years old, was stand
ing iu front of a bird fancier's shop
when uu need parrot teemed to take a
sudden atiinioxity to the child and durt
ed ut him, pecking out otin eye before
he con Id get out of the way.
Some linemen left a lot of short wire
lying on Euterpe Htreet uftor repairing
the telephone connections in that (lis
triot. An old negro woman who was on
her way to murket early the next morn
inn stepped on one end of n bit of this
wire, when the other end flew tip, strik
ing her in the eye and blinding her.
A milker employed nt one of the
dairy farms near the city wits milking
a cow that bud got her tail matted and
tangled with cocklebnrs. In the coarse
of the milking the cow switched her
tail into the man's fuce, the mass of
burs striking him in one eye and com
pletely destroying the Right of it.
A lud shouting ut sparrows with uu
airgun hit his little brother in tbe eyo
and blinded him for life.
Tommy Peats, the hundKome, bright
eyed 7-year-old sou of a widow, fell
down stairs backward. Whou his moth
er sot to him and picked him up, the
boy was asleep, the shock having affect
ed him iu this singular manner, and in
an hour after, when be opened his eyes,
they were badly and irrevocably crossed.
A poor Jad who is affected with epi
lepsy during a recent attack fell against
the steam coils in his father 8 office.
burning and blistering bis eyes so budly
that the sight is gone.
As the Louisville and Nashville pas
senger train wan coming into the city
some ruthless person threw a stone at
tbe day coach, shattering one of tho
windows.' The particles of glass flew
into tbe face of it man sitting by the
window, as many as 40 of them embed
ding themselves in his eyes alone. Most
marvelous to relate, every bit of sglunt
has been abstracted and the man's eye
sight remains unimpaired. New Or
leans Letter in Philadelphia Times.
I A SKETCH OF RICHARD OLNEY. SEC
RETARY OF STATE.
Aristocrat to the Cora A Corporation
Lawyer How Cleveland IHseovared
Him Intensely American Aa to Ula
Presidential Hoom,
Richard Oluey, onr secretary of state.
is hard, lucid, sointilluut, sparsely sown
of his sort, untl tberefure valuable iu
fact, a muu diamond, A cold sparkle, as
of frost, not of Are, goes with Olney.
He U clear, frigid, wintry uud has no
sympathies.
Being superbly egotistical, no tnle of
woe moves him, beinn thoroughbred, a
cballoiiKe to buttle brings) him speedily
forwurd.
a foroign encroachment, even to tlw
point of. courting o foreign war. This
is instinct with Olncy. He Is cold. He
is au' arisioarut, and, as becomes the
latter, he is selfish. But he is ulso ut
terly tbe Amnricun. Ho fears no power
on the map, und won Id meet wir with
any or nil with the abomlouof a enuave.
Your Now Eughmdnr fights readily.
Ho is of a stem brood, your Now Eug
lander, and besides his natural thrift
has never been aroused by war, for he
ever undo pleasutit money by it. New
England whs richer at tho clrwe of the
Revolution tliau in 1770. From 1813 to
1814, cutlass iu bund, New England
took millions on millions of prize dollars
from the British und founded herself.
That's half tlio basis of all her money
Bow.
Y'nnr Yankeo lights coldly, und opens
i set of books uu the buttlelield. When
Born in 1835, Olncy was fall 24 yeurs
of age when Fort tiumter became the
first target of the war. Olney, however,
declined all act or part iu tho war. The
first roginieut to march southward came
from Massachusetts, but its) enlistment
rolls wooed Oluey in vain. He staid
, he ilitoWH a buttory into position, lie
What Shall Wc Call It?
The boys call it a "bike" and are
happy; the dictionary makers call it a
bicycle and rest content, though
heaven knows the philological sin ought
to lie heavily on thoir literary con
sciences, and we who ride and are hap
py and independent cull it n "wheel,"
in spite of the finicky protest of sundry
would be pedants who fill space in the
daily and weekly papers. Pray, why not
"wheel?" Do you know of a hotter
name? Surely not "bicycle," for "hi
cycle, " besides being au awkward word,
does not describe the instrument of tie
light we know, its doubtless the origina
tor of the word fully dreumed it did
"Bicycle" hus an affected, strained
sound that ill accords with the best ele
ments of the language we love, tho lan
guage whose strength lies in its short,
crisp words, pulsating with life and
meaning.
It is not uuuhuuI to designate a spe
ciiic thing by a generic term, and we do
no violence to the ImiguHg') when wf
say we ride awheel. The term camo in
to general use when men did literally
ride upon a wheel, in tho days of the
old "ordinaries," before the utlvent.of
"safeties." It was a wheel they rotlo,
tbe second member of the machine trail
ing behind in almost unnoticed insig
nificance. It was then that a thousand
tongues ut ouue named the wheel. This
democratic term of spontaneous birth
hus hud a tenacious life and will still
live, for it is always the people who
make language, not pedants nor dic
tionary compilers. Womankind.
Rainbows That Can Change Sex.
In many parts of the world it is the
general belief that the rainbow has tho
power to chuiige sex. This queer belief
obtains in such widely separated dis
tricts us South Africa und Norway and
China und Australia. The Zulus have a
long folklore story of the young man
who was changed into a wrinkled old
womuu by touching the ninny lined arch.
The Scandinavian peusauts have a sim-
lar story, and in Greece they say that
anybody who runs against the end of
the rainbow will have bis or her sex in
stantly changed. In France and India
'A pass nnder the rainbow bus a similar
jffect St. Louis Republic.
Old Story to Him.
"My boy," said the passenger with
the fur lined cout and the smooth shaven,
square fuce, "it was the success of the
season. Thte wasn't standing room."
Tbe conductor smiled a sour smile.
"Zif I didn't have the same experience
everyday," said be to tbe morernian.
Cincinnati Enoujrer
Fits
If BHI
C25
- uu
BSC
Vast r.SVMnu) of JraaVtua
Frof. W. H. Peekc who
makes a specialty of
Epilepsy, has without
doubt treated and cur
ed more cases than any
Hvinif Phyaician; his
success is astonishing.
We hare beard of casef
of jo years' standing
cared b)
him. H
publishes s
valuable
work or
this dis
ease, wh id:
he 8end
with s.
:le of his absolute cure, free to any auffererj
who mar send their P. O. and Espreaa adilre.vt.
We a4rie anr nne wishing- a cure to arii1r
KICHAItn OLXKV.
soberly, resolutely behind. This was not
cowardice, for bin courage is proof. It
was the cool selfishness of one who thinks
fiast and best of himself.
By blood and birtb Oluey is an aristo
crat. He believes in pedigrees audorests
and family trees and coats of armor. His
ancestors came with the Mayflower, a
craft, by the way, which must have hud
a giant passenger list, as well as such a
cargo of furniture as should have con
sumed forests iu its construction.
Olney is of the nobility of New Eng
land. He wedded u daughter of the But
lers, also of the Mayflower and the pa-
tnoians. By nature he is exclusive, se-
clusive, shields himself selfishly from
common contuct, has few acquaintances,
fewer friends, wraps himself in his cloak
and withholds bin baud.
In his way Oluey hus tbe merit of
obuugelessness to a degree, indeed, which.
half breeds the theory that he is great.
A man gem, us I have said ; no influence
corrodes, no fires melt; under all pres
sures, through all conditions, Oluey is
immutable.
He graduated from his college at 21,
and was a lawyer of tbe Harvard wash
ings and diggings three years later. This
was in 8oU; the war was on the na
tion's threshold.
Tbe war was n good thing for Olncy.
It eliminated many a bright fellow, re
duced rivalry, and left Oluey a wide.
rich field to his sickle. Tho young law
yer went about his reaping with a sage
prudence that soon gave him a rich prac
tice.
Prom the first Olney was busy with
tbe tillage of great companies ; digging
about corporate roots and pruning cor
porate branches, a fashion of money cul
ture. And he liked it, served well, wus
paid well nnd it wus all an experience
much to bis taste.
Beared ut the knee of corporations,
soaked in a stock company vut, Oluey
no wonder sees things through corpora
tion spectuelus. Yet ho is honest und
high minded; won Id do no dishonorable
thing. He believes in money and the
rights of money, und is more impressed
by property thun by a muu. Personally
he is worth a cool million, nor is he
likely to Jose it. There's no danger of
his forgetting where he hus put it down.
Oluey 's mind is a law miud. What
with study and what with experience,
Olney is ono of the best lawyers iu the
country. Ho does not shine in court,
cures little for foreusio glory or the
wreuths of the trial table, but he knows
the law. Aud in its application to the
interests of his clients he has always
been daring, enterprising and sure. No
one ever found him wrong. At the time
of his utrival in the cabinet, what with
this railroad and what with that, Olney
was drawing aggregate retainers to tbe
sum of a round $100,000 annually. In
picking up politics Olney has not mis
loid any of his connections.
Oluey does not care for politics, and
still less for place. The Democracy in
herited him from the Whigs. It is from
this Whiggish, .Jleiiry Clay source he
draws a mild sentiment for protection.
Olney is not a free trader, aud cares
nothing for sailors' rights.
Cleveland discovered Olney. This
was at Buzzards Bay in the four years
between Cleveland's two presidencies.
Olney abode on the opposite Buzzards
bay shore. They formed a catboat ac
quaintance while fishing in the bay, and
finally sought each olber on each other's
porch, and were friends. Cleveland be-1
charges it. When he blows au enemy off
the earth, he credits it. Yon can't whip
bun. Ho is simply doing business with
a foe. He will fight whiio it pays 8 per
cent. Whou it ceases to flow an interest,
ho will limber up his guns and ride
away. From crudle to gruve with your
Yankee his life is ever listed us part of
his assets. Aud Olney is pure Yankee,
ami splendid us UaVpeoinien.
Oluey 's recent boom for tbe presidency
wus und is no growth of him. It was
purely the work of Josinh Quincy and
I coterie who sought to head off rx-Gov
eruor Russell in somo utteuipts at favor
ito souisui he was jnst then embarking
upou. They neither consulted nor noti
I fled Olney. He is wroth at their use of
; him. He has so instructed them, and h
I uume will not be heard of nt Chicago.
At the close of bis term he will return
! bis portfolio to its triiclf and quietly re
immerse himself iu railway law. He
will cover himself with obscurity
with a mantle, and struggle to be nsnn
known hereafter us ho wus beforo CJcve
laud lured him to become u oubiuetevr,
His joyful sutisfuctiou will grow justiu
proportion us he disappears, uud be will
be entirely happy only when he is en
tirely hid. Such, iu brief, is Olney, the
cameo of the cabinet. A. H. L. in
New York Journal.
ANOTHER CONGRESSMAN.
Palne's Celery Compound, the Great Spring
Remedy. Made Him Well.
A TALL WHITE HAT.
Ones Worn by Lincoln anil Now tha Sub
ject uf a LawaulU
A suit in replevin has been brought
in Washington before Samuel R. Church
justice of the peace, by Walter C. Cle
phaue, attorney for Emma H. Adams
and James O. Adams, her husband, ad
niinistrutors of tho estate of Phiueas O.
Hurley, deceased, who was for muuy
years pastor of the New York Avenue
Presbyterian church. The defoudunt
named is Osborn H. Oldroyd, who is
the owner of a collection of Lincoln rel
ics, now in the house where Lincoln
died, filO Tenth street, and the suit
to recovor possession of a tall white hat
with a broad black ' baud, which tbe
pluiutiffs claim is valued ut $10, and at
one time was owned mid worn by Abra
ham Lincoln, late president of the Unit
ed States.
It is claimed by the plaintiffs that
tbe hat is being unjustly detained by
Mr. Oldroyd. The writ was issued, uud
tbe hut was delivered to a constable,
who put it in possession of the plain
tiffs, they giving bond. It isolainied by
the plaintiffs that tho hat wus given to
Dr. Qnrley by Mrs. Lincoln after the
death of the president, and that it re
mained in the possession of the family
of Dr. Uurlcy until they loaned it to
the government. When the house on
Tenth street wus fitted up us a Lincoln
museum, the hat wus transferred there.
Washington Star.
BLAINE'S RESTING PLACE.
Ills Widow Contemplate the Purchaae of
a Situ Krar Augusta, Me.
Mrs. Blaine, widow of the late James
G. Blaine, is contemplating the removal
of his remains from Washington uud
has in mind the purchase of a site for
their hist resting place. This site is
about a mile from Augusta, Ale., on the
road to Manchester, and is at present
owned by Mr. W. H. Gunuett, a wealthy
Augusta publisher.
The place, which is very rural uud
beautiful in its aspect, has been im
proved by Mr. Gannett, who has daiu
ined the streams, where he proposes to
iutrodaco colonies of beaver, uuimuls
now nearly extinct in Maine.
Mrs. Blaine's contemplated purchase
is for a portion of Mr. Gannett s park,
which she would convert into a private
cemetery, after the fashion long peculiur
to New England. The location is on tbe
brow of a bill, from which there is a
splendid ontlook over the Kennebec
Washington Post.
Fatrlotlo Citizens.
With the temperature at 20 degreos
below zero the patriotic citizens of floul
ton, Me., held a public meeting u few
days ago to make preparations for cele
brating tho Fourth of July. It is pro
posed to muke the celebration of the
Fourth this year the biggest thing in its
way that has been seen in that part of
Maine, and it was necessary to begin in
good season.
Too Lazy to Get Harried.
Dr. Felix Adler proclaims that after
r careful study of the institution of mar
riage he has come to the conclusion that
hevea Olney to be one of the profound-; y th moht who re.
fram from marriage do so "because they
est lawyers he ever met, nnd Cleveland
is entirely right aa to that. . ,
Olney didn't want to come to the
cabinet Cleveland persuaded him as to
a duty. He also took moderate counFel
of his vanity. But be has never liked
his place, and tries at intervals to re
sign. Cleveland has always been able to
talk him out of this mood. As it now
stands, Olney will remain to tbe bi-t.
More than any other's Cleveland
takes Olney'g advice, and whether us
attorney general or secretary of state
tbe president hag made no weighty step,
assumed no position of importance, un
til after a thorough ransack of the sub
ject with Olney.
A i secretary cf state, OJney has been
marked by a prompt reajfness to oppose I
are too lazy to make a chutige in their
life." Illustrated American.
Mayor Plnzree'a New Title.
Mayor Fingree still holds the publio
eye as a man of innovations. He has
lately enriched tha vocabulary of polite
indignation by inspiring a member of
tbe Detroit board of education to refer
to him aa a "fabricationist" Wash
ington Star.
, mmWmm ill '
A congressman is a publio servant iu
the full cense of the word.
He is responsible to bis ooustituents.
to bis partv, to himself the honorable
office is full of hard, thankless work,
and heavy responsibility.
Congressman William W. (front is
grateful to the friend who directed him
to Paine'a celery oompound, when pro
longed official work had well nigh ex
hausted his health and strength. His
let.tr reads:
Commit tee on Expenditures the Wan
Dept., Housa Rep., U. H
Washington, D. O., Feb. 2H, ltfiKI J
I round relief in Paln'e celery oompound
for insomnia, lis action on the circula
tion and dipstion was also benerioial.
Very truly votirs.
William W. Oroiit.
There is something wrong when
one feels "tired all the time." It is
contrary to every oonditiun of good
health. There ought to be no necessity
of drumming into the ears of tired men
and women who feel they are broken
in health, and are every day losing in
weight and strengtn, the urgent need
of taking Paine'a celery compound,
now 'tis spring, to restore their spent
nerve force and purify their blood.
Nome of tbe earliest good results no
ticed from taking Paine'a celery oom
pound during these spring daya is a
regularity of the bowels, a better appe
tite, annnd sleep, and good digestion.
A healthy blood supply is regulated by
the nervo m4 wrhn ttn vltai
suds btsoonie fatigued and badly nour
ished, tbe bad effect is seen in failing
digestion, distressing, ringing sounds
in the ears, dizzy spells, depression,
neuralgia aud lassitude. Bpriug day!
afford every oue the opportunity for
shaking off old weaknesses and persist-
en t disorders. (
Physician of every sohool have been
from the start urged to inquire into
the formula of Paine'a celery com
pound, that they might satisfy them
selves of its wonderful power of mak
ing the sick well. Prof. Edward B.
Phelps, M. D., LL. D., as soon a he
presented Paine'i oelery oompound to
his fellow physicians, was always anx
ious to have the invigorator tried in
oases that resisted the usual methods of
treatment, that he might prove tb
truth of every olaim made for his new
ly discovered formula for Paine'i oel
ery oompound. The great remedy al
ways gave relief, and in 119 oases out of
100 made people well.
Paine'a oelery compound oannot be
Judged by the standard of any ordinary
modioine, sarsapiirilla or nerve tonio.
It is a great modern. soientiQo disoov
ery, singularly unlike any remedial
agent that hs ever aimed to effect a
similar purpose to make people well.
Paine'i celery oompound is the one
real spring remedy known todav that
never fails to benefit. Get Paiue'i cel
ery oompound, aud only Paine'a oerr
fnmnoTinH I vnn wt.li tn hn
Look Out
For Imitations of Walter Baker & Co.'s
Always
the arti-
Prcmiurn No.
i r i
asK tor, and see
cle made bv
Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., Dorchester, Mass.
i Chocolate,
that you get,
She Preached the Kermoo. '
The Rev. Dr. Henry Wheeler was to
have preached bis furowell sermon in
the Methodic church of Media, Pa., on
a recent Sunday, but was so ill tliut ho
was unable to do so. Tho people got u
furowell sermon, however, for his wifo
took his place iu tho pulpit and preach
ed au effective sermon appropriate to the
occasion.
SURE CURE for PILES
I Killing. ul itiiinl, hi, . Hug or Hruiruitinit Plh'sylHd i . la
Dr. BO-SAN-KO'8 PILE REMEDY. Htop.hcb-
lUa.ttlivirbituuiurij. a uuiti) oiiro. (JircuUraMiiirrra, PriM
tUo. Urumiitu or mail IU. UOBAMiO, J'MI. Ptv
;MRS. WINSLOW'S so8:
- FOR CHILDREN TEETHINQ
Fsraal.brallMracf-'U. IS t'.au a kettle ,
N. P N. U. No. (152. S. F. N. U. No. 720
JW BV Jar m
r
The highest claim for other
looaccos is "just as
gocxl os Durham."
Every old Bmoker
knows there is none just
us good as
($&QDa&Wiii's
k
IFoteco
m
Bonod to Come.
The twentieth century ii only four
years off. It is coming in Cuba as well
as elsewhere. Epain cannot itop it.
'ew York World.
-'1 L
Ton will find one coupon inside
eacu twooutice b.ig,aiii twocou
pons inside each lour ounce
bagof Clack well's Durham.
Buy a bag of this cele
brated tobacco and read the
coupon which give a list
of vuluuljle presents and bow
u in (j or l inn.
sPuDYlJ I
j
r7C7"at"TV if ..vN. "IVT The TerT remarkable nd certain
V V Vr -N 11 relief given woman bv MOOKK'S
u fir , t- 3 , . REVEALED KEMEDY has given
,Ju f m" ' 0F?l ' ,Fr'nd-, Tl lg TTI r T "niforn.lv racer,
which burden and shorten a woman'i -. Va J;fft Thoosan.f.ol
women testify for it. It will give health and strength -r- yv -r- -r-nd
I make life a pleasure. For sale by all drnreists. Vf )TT
i Tal W. H. tHXI, J. B- a CUr St lew Tor
I