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About The new age. (Portland, Or.) 1896-1905 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1900)
&'mtfFXHi'-'tjt!s " jt, 4-'5"-'VtfjJ ' ff m A grTT1'""'"8 tT z BSBSEBSSSSBal THE NEW AGE PORTLAND, OttEGON. Facts For Slok Women Flrattha mmdktmm thai kalda thm rmoord for ihm laraaat numkar of ahma lata Ouraa of fmmmim IUa tm Lydm E. Ptnkhmm'a Vaaatakla Compound. , SaoandMra. Pmkham omn mhow ky hot Mtmr films In Lynn that a mil" limn woman hava bamn raatorad to hmahh ky bar madlolna and attvloa Third-All lattaratolWra. Flnkham ara raoahrad, onanadf raad and an" awarad ky woman only Thla faot la oartlflad to ky ihm mayor and poatmaa" tar of Lynn and athara of Mra Pmkkam'a own oNy Wrltm for fraa koak aon tainkmihaaa omrtlfloaiaam Evary aWmj woman m ktvhad to wrMa to nfra. Pmkhmm and ami hmr ad vloa fraa of oharaa. Ijrdla B. Ptnkham Med. Co , Lynn, Private roof gardens aro suoh n sue oen in New York that tbo large boarding-houses And it necessary to udopt them aa a regular summer feature DON'T OKT FOOT8OHE. GKT FOOT KANE. A powder. At thla Reason your feet feel swollen, nervous and uncomfortable. If you have snlartlng feet or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot-Ease. It rests mid comforts! makes walking easy. Cures swollen mui sweating feet, Misters mid callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of nil pnlu and Is a certain cure for Chilblains, Bneatlug, Damp or Frosted Feet. Wo have over 80, 000 testimonials. Don't get footsore get Foot-Base, v Try It tndan. Bold bv nil druggists and shoe stores for 25c. Trial package Frkc. Address, Allen 8. Olm sted. Le Itoy, N. Y. Tbo natives of Hawaii, bo thoy over eo poor, never stonl or bog. Thoao offences aro confined almost oxolusivo ly to the Portuguese residents of the island. TO CURB A OOZ.D IN ONB DAT Take Laxative JBromo Qulnino Tab lets. All druggists refund the monoy if it fails to cure. . W. Grovo'a sig nature ia on each box. 35o. Under rational treatment tho average yield of a boo hive in Palostine is 100 founds. ItllKUMATIflM. SCIATICA, Immediate ly relieved; positively cured by "Kheumatol." Prepared only by the Kheumatol Co., MS W. lllh BU. New York. "Whon a mau ia lost to all ahame, m elnb or a rawhide la the only argument left. CATARRH t Catarrh has become such a common disease that a person entirely free from this disgusting c.mplalnt is seldom met with. It is customary to apeak of Catarrh as nothing more serious than a bad cold, simple inflammation of the nose and throat. It is, in fact, a complicated and very dangerous disease ; if not at first, it very eoon becomes so. The blood is quickly contaminated by the foul secretions, and the poison through the general circulation is carried to all parts of the system. , Salves, washes and apraya are unsatU factory and disappointing, because they do not reach the seat of the trouble. S. 6. S. does. It cleanses the blood of the poison and eliminates from the system all catarrhal secretions, and thus cures thor oughly and permanently the, worst cases. Mr. P. II. McAlllater, of Rarrodsburf. Ky writrei "Ilavins ban a terrible auffercr froaa Catarrh, and being now sound and well, tbe quea tlon often put to me U, What cured you?' In an swer I feel it my duty to atatetbat Bwift'a Specific U the medicine. I am such a true believer in tbe efficacy of Bwift'a Specific tnat 1 can nontsuy ana conscientiously recom mend It to any one Buffer ing (torn Catarrh. Have recommended it to many, and am happy tt aay that iboAcwhoml hive Induc ed to use it can bear me out In tbe stetemit that k will cure any case of Catarrh U takccaTccord lag to directions." SBBBBB ssBBBs ' the only purely reg ctable blood purifier kW known, and the greatest XAX0' all blood medicines mW 9W Wkw and tonics. If you have Catarrh don't wait until it becomes deep-seated and chronic, but be gin at once the use of S. 8. 8., and send tor our book on blood and skin diseases tad write our physicians about your case. THI tWIFT WICIFK5 CO, ATLANTA. ta SEMO NO MONEY Usui ? k.n h tuW4 ear wuca WcwllurMtor frWr U OM-Mlrn4 bw Uun UI kt la m !, btrt. Ou wtlrkM u SUJ HuuuM la. 11 ,! IMWI IWIM, S SmUI Uall r Klffla !. kkowji l.ecTJS tfe wrl4 ovr M ! fcart. u4 WARRANTED 20 YEARI Cm I, kualiDf mIM U ptMtm BfTMlBf' II Sl tH e).U: il irnit (or rlliM4 JiMlJ.n. StMUIOSWtortM Mil n Sani Sn4 ttu in uSwtalllwaa "UkC.O n, with rlII fU nutlu tla. CM Is u utwt tut U f oaad perfectly MUtfectory MS 1 bal walck w ftflarad for Mk w rlt rr ' MS unm ckup LMlMllMMlHWlt FREE . ee for nit ss a art nu t l Lidlal or Dull !. ia tuUi Writ ti MM u Nr4nrtlMlkiwttMlalrcMJi CotokwMfn, UMlaiarWtvUhOa.. 470aa4fUBinkWe,rlaas nlSeHii m EEasssssssawtki Beat Coocb Srun. TaateeGood. CseH t to lima. Bold by dregtm. jSJJ CENTUEY OF FASHION VAGARIES OF THE PAST HUNDRED YEARS. ONE Many Different Way In Which the Fair Bex Kndearored to Enhance Their AttractlTenesa-Sllshtlr Bet ter Taate Hhowa To-Day. As the 10th century closca it fur nishes some amusement and instruc tion to glnncc over some of the vagaries of Dame Fashion during the 100 years. Paris, of course, Is and. was the seat of feminine fashion and its example was closely followed In every civilized land. Tbo year 1800 was ushered In nmM primitive surroundings. Tho French' revolution which had changed so many other things greatly affected fashion. Tbo billowy environment of femtnlno hoops and balloon-like skirts gave way to Spartan simplicity. Tho prevailing color In gowns becamo white; tho qual ity was of the finest nnd the quantity cant; tho waistband struggled upward lu an effort to attain a level at the arm pit; caps of lnfantlno shapes formed the headdress and the feet were nhod with low shoes, Innocent of heels and secured with sandals. In winter furs wero wrapped around the forms of the shivering fair. A few years later bon nets began enlarging their elevations and their circumferences and by 1800 tho waistband began gradually to low er. Tucks, laced and '.andyked, edg ings nnd tiny flounces began to be in troduced round the lower extremity of skirts to rellove the straight-down mo notony. A fashion pinto of 1810 la typical of tho mode which distinguished fcmlnlno taste at that time. By 1830 the fair feex arrnyed In all tho glory of huge "picture lints" of Imposing extravngant proportions, of bizarre circumference, SOME with accommodation for parterres of flowers, forests of bows, pyramidal plumes, and panaches of feathers, drooping blrd-of-paradlso tails, and all that bonnet-builders' Ingenuity could suggest; the width across the shoul ders was correspondingly amplified by capes, llchus, collars, leg-of-mutton sleeves, bishop's sleeves, and tho like, extensively wadded and puffed out; the waist was at Its neatest; tho bell like skirts amply spreading, but at tho shortest showing tho tops of the hot lines, or terminating above tho sandals, which secured tbe tiny slippers. The hair was built up to abnormal heights, with towers of curls, bows, tresses and locks, Interspersed with fluttering ribands and sprays of (lowers. Helirn of Crinoline. From 1833 to 1830 costume assumed looser, fuller and more flowing lines and flounces were rising in height and amplitude. Under tho auspices of the Empress Eugenie this mode reigned. Through tho 'OQ's and the '00's the era of crinoline rMgned paramount and tbe fair portion of creation, by an unwar rantable extension of skirts, filled an unfair share of superficial space In the fashionable world. Extended hoops attained Inordinate development and sweeping trains followed In their wake. Modifications gradually supervened and the fronts of dresses assumed strnlghter and less flowing lines. The '80's introduced the epoch of tightly tletl-ln dresses, which tuado walking less graceful and more dlflicult as the fashion tightened Its grip. In the "mid '80's" an easier amplitude came as a reaction; tbo "dolly varden" school flourished and pretty costumes became a specialty, A careful review of the fashions of the lust decade proves that the era of "selection" has been reached; past styles when advanced Into passing favor have been tempered by the Im proved taste of tbe present generation, kltherto successfully resisting the con- 1L , LBsasjMf f .- SB SE - 1 ta 1 - p 1 7 splcuous extremes of fashion, to which at intervals the fair have fallen vic tims. Damo Fashion, it may be, has sown her wild oats, after astonishing vagaries in the past, and is allowing tho 10th century to wind up In reason ably rational disposition as regards tho all-absorbing question of becoming wear for tho fairer portion of creation. ODD USES FOR OANNCN BALLS. Condemned na War Weapons They Are Juet the Thins; In 8toue Quarries- "Cannon balls for blnstlngl" This sign, hung in a conspicuous place before the door of a store, led a Boston Globe reporter Insldo and start ed a bit of questioning upon tho sub ject. The proprietor said: "Last fall, when the United States government sold all of the old cannon balls and solid shot which for so mnny years were piled In pyramids along the main street of the navy ynrd at Chnrlestown, we pur chased n lot of them, with little thought of converting them Into nnythlng be sides pig Iron. But a few weeks after wo (hnd stored them here I overheard a qunrry-owner complaining of the slowness and uncertainty of tbo old system of steel wedging used In getting out huge blocks of grnntte, and after a bit of thought I suggested tho use of cannon balls In the place of tho steel wedges. We sent about twenty of vari ous sizes nnd weights out to his qtmrry, and after tho first trial he hurried a team In hero with a note that read: " Tried the cannon balls; they are It. Send fifty more; liavo thrown the steel wedges nwny.' "The experience of this man' led us to send the cannon b'nlls and solid shot to other quarry operators, and within the pnst month the orders hnve been coml&r In so thick wo can scarcely 1111 them ffom the Btock on hand. "Th method used In getting out great cubes of monoliths from tho gran ite nnd marble quarries has been to drive steel wedges along the lino of the OF TUB PAST VAGARIES OF DAME lower portion of tho split mado by a blast until the great chunk of stone topples over on Its face. "It required a deal of time and a num ber of men with big Iron sledges nnd steel wedges to separate theso cubes from the qunrry wall from which they had been 8nrted by the blast. "The method now pursued with tho cannon balls Is to start tho block of stone awny by a light blast, and then between the quarry face and tho block soveral of tho smaller solid Bitot, usu ally the four-Inch short, are dropped down Into tho aperture. Two meu with crowbars give the block n little shake, and the Instant tho block moves lu the slightest manner forward the shot take up their 'purchase' on the space made, when tho larger cannon balls, some measuring fourteen or fifteen Inches and weighing 200 or 300 pounds, are dropped Into the top of the gap. Now the slightest outward Jar by levers on tho big stono send these heavy cannon balls dropping downward of their own weight, until, with an easy forward mo tion, tbo cube goes over on Its face. "These shot do away with any driv ing; of necessity their great weight in proportion to their size forces them downward and therefore prevents any chance of backward setting of the block. "Those cannon balls are also used as rollers, as they take up and go over tho Inequalities of the quarry surface, and can be rolled In any direction without resetting, thus doing away with tho old style wooden rollers. "They are also used to smother heavy clearlng-out blasts. Heavy rope mats aro thrown over the surface where tho blast has been set, and these cannon balls are thrown on the mats." WHERE DEW COMES FROM. Evaporated by the Ifcat of the Earth It Rises to ltei.ee nd Again. Ground a little below tbe surface ia always warmer than tbe air over it. So long u tbe surface of tbe groaod is above the dew-point vnpor must rim nnd 'pass from the earth Into th'o air. Tho moist air so formed will mingle with the air above it and Its moisture will bo condensed, forming dew wher ever it comes In contact with a surface cooled below the dew jwlnt. In fact, dew rises from the ground. Plnce some miial trays over the grass, the soil nnd the road on dewy nights. You will generally find more moisture on the grass inside the trays than outside; you will always observe a deposit of dew Inside the, trays, even when thero Is none outside at all. Thla shows that far more vapor rises out of the ground during the night than condenses as dew on the grass and oth er objects. Dew then rises from the ground. But how Is the dew formed on bodies high up In the air? Dew does not rise In particles, ns it was once considered, to fall In parti cles like fine rnln. It rises In vnpor. Some 1b caught by what Is on the sur face of tho earth, but the reBt ascends In vnpor form until It comes In con tact with a much colder surface, to condense It Into moisture. Tho vnpor does not flow upward In a uniform stream, but Is mixed In tho air by eddies and wind currents nnd carried to bodies fnr from where It rose. In fact, dew mny be deposited, oven though the country for many miles nlLarotind bo dry nnd Incnpnble of yielding any vnpor. In such cases the supply of vnpor to form that dew would depend on the evaporation of the dew and on what was wafted over by tho winds. A llaro Bird. The rarest species of bird now ex tnnt, and one which Is almost extinct, has Its homo In tl:n Jungles of South Amorlca. Tho ornithological curiosity is known to science ns the pnlamedra cornudn, and to common people as the "horned screamer." As, a rnra avis nothing could excel he cornudn, unless It should bo the accidental discovery FASHION. of a living tnoa, 01- an eplnornls. But fow of the bird books oven lot you know that such a horned paradox ever existed, let aioue telling you that living specimens of tho queer creature are occasionally met with. The only ono now In captivity In North Amorlca, If tho writer was not misinformed, Is that belonging to tho Philadelphia Zoologi cal Gardens, nnd which arrived lu this country about three years ago. The crenturo Is about the slzo of a full grown turkey hen, nnd of a blackish brown color. Ono Qf Its distinguishing peculiarities Is n rufllo of black and whlto which surrounds tho head. Moral Huaalon. Old Gentleman Do you mean to say that your teachers never thrash you? Llttlo Boy Neverl Wo have moral suasion at our school. Old Oentleman What's that? Boy Oh, we got kep' In, nnd stood up In corners, nnd locked out, and locked In, and made to write one word a thousand times, nnd scowled at, and Jawed at; and that's nil, Londou Tit Bits. Sturgeon Flailing Near Ita End, The United States fish commission has found that the sturgeon fhhlng In dustry, which Is now carried on prin cipally for tho more profitable by-product, tho roe, from hlch cavlnr Is made, Is drifting speedily to extinction. This Industry Is carried on more largely In tho Delaware river and bay than nuy whero elso In the country. The price of the roe hna risen from fO to $105 a keg In tho past fifteen years, and the production has declined from 1,1)18 kegs In 1807 to about 700 kc.s In 181)0. Tho Itoal Tiling. Tho dlvlno right of klugs Isn't In It with the right of the married daughter who comes homo for the first time to show off her baby to her parents. Atchison 0 lobe. The most effective blows are deliver ed ia the guise of kind words. BASEBALL WAYS IN MONTANA. Rivalry lietween Oreat Fall and Itel ena Canaeit Queer Demonstrations. "Base-ball Is about the only thing that can distract the attention of the Mon tana people from the Clark-Daly feud," doclutcd a traveling mnn who was sit ting lu the rotunda of n down-town hotel. "LnBt year the bnttle for su premacy was between Helena and Billings. Helena won lu the last half of the ninth Inning, when tho catcher knocked the ball over tho fence for a homo run and brought In the winning run. The people of the capital city fairly went mad with enthusiasm. Judges, ex-governors, county and city olllclnls threw their hats In the nlr nnd embraced 0110 another as long-lost brothers. One newspaper wanted to nomluato the catcher for State Treas urer. Incidentally the spectators tossed him over the screen $100 In silver. Bar bers shaved him for nothing, ho was fairly showered with profTcrs of shoe cigars and hats, nnd In addition tho peo ple would not allow him to work all winter. "This year tho Benson was divided with the understanding that tho win ners of the respective sub-scnBons should piny live gnmes for the cham plonshlp, nud It wns my good fortuno to be thero nt the time of the plny-ofT. Helena won the first half and Gr.eat Falls the second. The first two games were played In Great Falls, each club winning one. Then they went to Hel ena, nnd Helena won tho Sunday gaino. Monday It snowed, but they were bound to vhave It settled, bo a force of men wns put to work Tuesday shovel ing the snow from the grounds. "But to go back to Great Falls. Great Falls won tbe first game played In that city. That night the town was paper ed with facsimile posters of whnt was to bo the first pngo of tho next morn lug's issue of the paper. Tin 'form' wns frozen lu a thin contlng of Ice nnd ;plneod In front of the newspaper ofllco, for the purpose of Illustrating tho base ball phrase, 'Freeze 'em up.' But Great Fnlls lost Saturday's game. "Then the Grent Fnlls pcoplo char tered an excursion train nnd went to Helena, nccoiipnulcd by n drum corps, niegnphoncH, bells'nud tin horns, to at tend Thursday's game, which wound up In n row and wns declared forfeited to Great Fnlls, 0 to 0. Tho umpire was arrested nnd wns still In Jail when I left there on tho charge of carrying con .vented weapons, It being alleged that tutor tho game he obtained a revolver nnd n knife nud threatened to 'do some body.' "Tho clubs now being tied, It was necewtury to piny tho llfth nnd decid ing gnuie. Of course, each club wanted the gnme played In Its own city nnd no agreement could be reached. Feeling ,wns running pretty high, nnd It was llnnlly decided to piny the gnmo In Butte. Grent Fnlls won ou n forfeiture, tho Helena catcher becoming bo nngry over whnt he termed 'rank' decisions on balls nnd strikes that ho throw the ball over the fence. "After having witnessed tho grent struggle I decided to hco It out. Wlien I stopped In Helena every ono woro a long face, while Just tho contrary sp'rlt was encountered In Great Fnlls. Great Fnlls citizens would not let tho players walk to the hotel, where n banquet wns to be given. Tho triumphant club wns placed In carriages, the, horses were nn hitched, and the people pulled tho ve hicle with long lopes. The players will live In luxury the remainder of tho win ter, I daro wty. Why, during tho pluy off oven the Olark-Dnly feud wns al lowed n respite. That In n sncrlflco that cannot lo understood In tho effete) East" Chicago Inter Ocenn. REPENT INVENTIONS. To nnnouncc tho nrrlvnl of carrier pigeons ut the homo, nest n whistle has been patented for attachment to the bird, comprising n hollow ball of light material, with a clamp to secure It to the tall feathers, nn opening being cut lu the front to let nlr Into the whistle. An Ohio mnu has patented n street car floor which will provent people treading on sitting passengers' toes, the edges of tho door being double, with the upper thickness supported nt Intervals on brackets to lift It high enough to allow tho pnssengtrs' toes to slip under. Distribution of germs through the use of telephones Is prevented by n new attachment which tins n metallic ring to fit over tho mouthpiece, with a cover hinged on one side, having n bracket on Its Inner face for the support of a small bottle containing nn nntlseptlc or germicide. In New lork a compnny has been formed for the manufacture of an ar mor for pneumatic tires, using an un woven, fibrous material, which Is flat tened out Into n wide sheet nnd cover ed on one side with a looso woven fab ric to keep It In place, being then folded over until It attains tho proper width. An Improved feed box for nnlmnla has a small trough pivoted at the rear of the manger, with a narrow, round hopper depending from the celling over head to Ut over a cono-shaped projec tion In the bottom of tho box, a weight ed lever closing the cone over tho hop per outlet until the nultnnl presses the box down. Awful Dream. "I won't eat pickles and milk for sup per again," Bald tho Dear Girl. "Nightmares?" linked tho Sweet Young Thing. "Nightmares? I dreamed I saw my fnvorlto matinee actor doing low com edy stunts In u tank drama!" Both shuddered. Indianapolis Press. Put two men lu the same bed, one with the toothache nnd tho other In love, and the mnn with tho toothncho will go to sleep first. Tbe average man's second thoughts are the wisest. Sandwiches vthat are to be served hi an afternoon tea should riot be spread with bntter or tbe Ailing mixturo quite to tho edge of the bread. This little precaution will prevent their soiling thn gloves of those who hold them. The Oldest Hanhnot ' Is In the iiosscslon of the Bank of Kngt laud. It is dated December 10, 1G09, and IS for -CSWS, but on Recount of Us age same Is made very valuable. One of the oldest and most valunblo stomach medicines is Htxtettcr's Stomach Hitters. For fifty j ears it has cured dyspepsia, indigestion, nervousness or insomnia. It will euro w hen faithfully taken. , At a stroot fair in Wichita this fall, ono of tho chief features will bo an nroh 40 foet high, constructed entirely of apples. IOO KKWARD SIOS. Tbo readers of this paper will bo pleased to joarn that thero la at least one dreaded dlsoase iliatROlencebaa been ablo to euro in all ita stages, and that lscatarrh. HaU'aCatarrh Curo is tno only posltlvo curo known to tho medical fraternity. Catarrh belim a constitutional dis ease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Curo Is taken internally, acting directly upon tho blood and mucous surfaces of tho system, thereby destroying tho founda tion of tho disease, and Klvlnir the patient ttrenkthby bulldlnjup tho constitution and assisting naturo In doing its work. Tho pro. pnetors navo so raucn laun in lie curauva powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars mroa uoiiara Send for list tor any caso ti for anr caso that it rails to onro. 01 tcstimouiais. Address testimonial V. J. UltKNRV A CO.. Toledo. O. fold by druggist. 780. Hull's Family I'llls are tho boat. An Egyptian contemporary saya: "Our whole island is now glralod with golf courses. All the world is BO longer a stage, bnt golf links." sw This signature la on every bos of the ganulae Laxative BrortifQuinic Tablets the remedy that csurea at eeM la mmm eUy Coillnga that have boon smoked with a keroseuo lamp aboojd be washed off with soda wator. MISS FLETCHER'S SUCCESS. Tho Daughter nt n Formor Governor of South DhIciiIh Attains aa KiivImuIo 1'oaltlou. 1 . From the Ortgon independent, Ealom, Ore. Tho daughter of Hon. J. H. Flotohor, . formerly governor of South Dakota, but now a rosidont of Saloin, Orogon, hna llitoly attained an onvinblo position, llor snocoss is remarkable, cspoclally when tho fact is known that for soma timo it wns feared her oatcr would bo shortened bocnuso of ill health. Kx-Govornor Flotohor iu speaking of tho happy ovout in his daughter's lifo said: "For ovor two years my daughter had beon deuliulug from n strong, healthy, rosy-chucked person to a pale, weakly and holplesa uirl. She was nfllicted with torrlblo hoadaohos, and apparently grow wonkoi nud moro Ian guld, nud apparently without oauso. Wo boenmo greatly alarmed aud feared that her daya woro already numbered.,. "I tried soveral dootora, ono aftc . tho other, bnt all without avail. ii' el H ally, to ploHso a friend, 1 bought JUrhf-N 01 ut. miliums riuK run mr sjstja I'ooplo, and to our snrpriso, boforo 4t wns used hor hondachos ceased, tho color began to return to hor ohooks and lips nud her strength began to assort itsolf. ' 'I bought fivo boxes moro and by tho timo fiho bad finished them hIio was completely restored to hor health, and today our hearts uro gladdened with thn society of u robust, rosy and hoalthy girl Instead of a palo, tired and sickly ono. In hor oaso tho transfor mation was rapid nnd wondorful, and I can never speak too highly of tho splendid morits of Dr. Williams' 1'luk Pills." No dlscovory of modern timos has provod such a boon to women na Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pule People Acting directly on tho bluod and nerves, invigorating the body, regulat ing the fouotiona, they restoro tbe strongth aud health to the exhausted woman when every effort of tbo phj si clan proves unavailing. For the growing girl thoy nro of the utmost benefit, for tho mother, indis pensable, for overy woman Invaluable. Kvery where Dr. Williams' Plnkl'illa for Palo Pt-oplo aro recognized aa a speoiflo for discuses of tho blood nud nerves. For paralysis, locomotor atax ia, anil other diseases long supposed incurable, thoy hao proved tholr effi cacy iu thousands of ouses. Thoy aro ono of the groatest blessings ovor be stowed upon maukiud. This remedy is sold by druggists generally, or will bo aont, postpaid, bv tho Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Sobe' neotady, N. Y on receipt of price, CO con is per vox, aix boxes for $2.50. ooaooooooGoooo&oooooaoooi: Beware of Them There are two afflictions which perhaps .give, the most paut and trouble, vis; "mM Sciatica i I and J! I Lumbago Both disable and cripple, V m but V ' fl O (8 St. Jacobs Oil i 1 Is tbtlr best cure. 111 toOaOaDaoaQanOMrtrw-uauaJii f'f 1 ly) EM saMjMylBjjflajsjByiifr .-- - ,"',r'asT'BsaeaaasasaiiiasBjsfaaBjii ta.'4,-Jfii'- K. Ill 1MB HWW fa , JH. Vg "Lj j mmix fit 1 -t a