floor. flour btes&latttfu xc*isf menthol sell next i h co.'s€¦ · fcjrfloor....

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fcjr FLOOR. F lour * ,rr*******w****m**mmmmmmmmmm |fl V\ want to Sell in the Next 10 Days V idO BARRELS I (ill H CO.'S CELEBRATED I “Cold Medal Brand” U/I?eat plour, i, i to accomplish the above end we will offer the I ~qO! J Medal” for 10 Days at Same Price of I Superlative, K •, Flour, twk first prize r.t the Centeouial Exhibition in ' ... in lsTii. At Miller's Exhibition at Ciuctnuatti, 1880-. fl| x .\\ Fair, Chicago, 1893. BB v ill from the very i( it, grown in Min- wm- m I is recognized a* ‘‘ 1 grade Hour where- '' -a large jKircentage ■' at and a very small / .. ad lor thisreason '• docs not become m ,! retains the Sweet ; .un! will keep moist u M of testimonials aa H - .j u.i!it ies, we insert BB 1 i■a un Mr. Martin M. jHB*", ... i, ~ who is well and fav- ■l .t we expect a very few 1 < ‘ties, buy more Hour B^P| , “rs Mr. Smith. Mr. BBI* V. - > . when vour car arrives ',' ~ !> of the Washburn, , i r this is thefourth |B| *• .: iwo have sold him. |V\ U A.ng firms, Mr. Win, |H. , ,v linker on Church ■. iling up a leputation |H;., Mr. Kiillman ordered ~ t . ,r is much tlour as he IHv'l'l \ml from Mr. James |K u ;;, . . .Kiahiished I try (ioods |K;;. sll \ others. We are now ■ELii'JY’; it;.' tilth car load of the h J '... \i, i: d no complaints.— This Flour comes from the largest mills in the World, having a daily capacity of 13,.500 barrels, and bv getting it direct from the mills, we are in position to give to dealers and consumers the very best prices. R. R. MAGRUDER&CO. Annapolis, MU..October 28th. 1885. Gent*,-- Implying to your inquiry, relating to ttie Wasbliurn..<'n>sl>y Co.'s Gold Medal Brand of Flour, will say that the best evidence I can give you of its being entirely satisfactory to me, mihe fact of my continued orders to you lor the same. I have worked several brands of high grade Spring Wheat Flour, but prefer the Washburn, Crosby Co.'s Gold Medal Brand. Itcspectfully, MAKTIN M. SMITH. Annapolis Md., October, 1895. K. It. Magruder Ac Co.:—The Gold Medal Brand of Flour that 1 have been getting of you lsentirely satisfacaory, and 1 take pleas- ure In recommending It to any one wishing a iiigh gradeof Spring Wbeat Flour. Bespt., WM. KU'.LMAN, Baker A Confectioner, HO Church St. Annapolis, Md , October 28tb, 1805. Gentlemen After many attempts to And a good Hour that could be relied upon at all times. 1 Anally struck upon tha Washburn, < rosby Co.'s Gold Medal Brand. Have used live or six banels of the same, s*id have always found It A. No. 1, in all respects. Itespectfully, oSUOd JAMES MI’NHOK. R. R. MAGRUDER & CO. y " !*:::: i-r-1:1:aaa V f'J When your cake is heavy, sog- B Y ' gy, indigestible, it’s a pretty sure || £ if wla sign that you didn’t shorten it g m r with COTTOLENE. When this g | great shortening is rightly used, j| 8 888 I the result will surely satisfy the B 3 m most fastidious. Always remember g 1 that the quality of COTTOLENE g 3 {M makes a little of it go a long way. B I \ C*' (fl4Mf * v n < willful waste to use more | two thirds as much as you ' would of lard or butter. Always i llf ABB use COTTOLENE this way, and | ft C AI I your cake and pastry will always [ /ill be light, wholesome, delicious. | m m fVnulne OOTTOLfAb to sold vwjrwtei to I W tins, with trade-mark* “Coltotene” nd tieer $ I § a hall in cotton-plant wreath- on every tin. Ij| lliwl W Tin. S. K. FAIBBAIK COMPANY, CHICAUO [ CHAS. A. CRANDALL fIIQCOR -.•-lIEALER.f? Families Supplied#BßOWN-STOUT Pailv with . lORTKR, 31 Main Street -A-ZCLn-aipO-Lis, Md.. - Wont for Maryland and District of Columbia for the Celebrated CHAMPAGNE CIDER.*, Agent for the Bohemian Rochester Beer. The. very best brands of rooking Wines kept constantly on hand. And also the tine grades of Foreign ana Domestic Wines and Liqnors. The Leaders Foot-wear f We keep the the finest se* _ oM/oilection in all Standard Styles. CET YOURS. “tits a grand stock for finding sT’\f \f TTP R I just what you want. Few can , I MMER , D J mwt and none can beat our 0 T T , \po R prioee. You can’t go wrong bhOEb * gheMß&l 2 SHOES o AT- \f lfl BROOKS & BARTON, q B ° T South'* thk lfadkrs in X /""V O I Foot-wear, I tor satnnwf fflt, D hmm •** 4aalhW tc I-. * Ag* 0 Jg ?<f iftt# pftUMt H ilw si* CHILDE*** T jWJISP **"*6*9 *+ ] OIFOBDS and SLOTHS, Q iwm g T <u- : 4ll, l*'*"' andßmßl fly *Jm ß^bST*i >hadai<W SSTm!*? *""* mmmevm \ oK?** ™* SHOW * —*7 jUigyiM *****9 BROOKS a barton iNo Is &AIN STREET, * ANNAPOLIS. MD Coming BteS&latttfU Published Daily. Except Sundays. WM. M. ABBOTT A SONS. Publishers. MONDAY, November 11. 1890. KATES OF AIIVXItTIMXU. One square, first insertion, Sl.OO; subse- quent insertlans, 50 Cents. Special rates made with monthly, quarterly and yearly advertls era iSf Local notices and political or personal ' oommu meat ions, 18 cents per line; su I .sequent insertions, 10 cents per line. Ordinary marriage announcements, twenty- five cents. Obituary notices will be charged for at one-halfthe usual rates ol advertising. A Frog With Fear Wing*. The curiosity of tropical Africa Is tbs wonderful flying frog, first described by Bithoff of the equatorial African expe- dition, which returned to Europe in the full of 1694. This oddity of the reptile family is about the size of a common bullfrog and resembles other member* of the order of batrachiaus in every- j thing but its feet, each of which is j webbed and enormously enlarged, so ; much so as to form splendid substitutes for true wings. The creature has five toe* on each of the other two, which makes four separate membranes on each of its hind feet and three on each fore foot, or 14 in all. In his description of it Bishoff says, “Each leg terminates in a sort of fan, and with these the lit- tle reptile paddles the air like a locust, or like a partially fledged bird testing its pinions for the first time. Although somewhat awkward in it* flight, the winged frog can dart through the air at a speed of about ten yards per second and can keep itself going for- .ward at that rate for from 10 to 15 sec- onds. The average distance covered by these spurts of grasshopperlike flight is from 75 to 125 yards, but Bishoff men- tions instances where the flying frog cleared sandy stretches 200 yards in width.—St. Lonis Republic. Lawyers Who Make Their Own Wills. Many celebrated men have neglected to settle their affairs. Beu Jenson, Dry- den and Sir Isaac Newton all died in- testate, Bacon insolvent, and the epi- gram on Butler’s monument in the ab- bey sufficiently explains why he and many others like him never made a will: The poet’s fute is here In emblem shown: He asks for bread uud he receives a stone. “Wills, ’* said Lord Coke, “and the construction of them do more perplex a man than any other, ami to make a certain construction of them exceedeth jurisprudentimu artem. An old prov- erb says that every man is either a fool or a physician at 40. Sir H. Halford happening one day to quote thesayirtg to a circle of friends, Canning humor- ously inquired, “Sir Henry, mayn’t he be both?’’ At anyrate experience teaches that lawyers who draw tlieir own wills sometimes make gnat mistakes. Sir Samuel Roinilly’s will was improperly worded, Chief Baron Thompson’s will became the subject of chancery proceed- ings, while the will of Bradley, the eminent conveyancer, was actually set aside by Lord Thurlow. —Temple Bar. HW Great Anxiety. Athlete —Did—I—brea1—break —it, doctor? D.ietor —I will beplain, sir. The arm is broken, the collar bone crushed, the skull is fractured— Athlete—No, no, no I The—did—l—- What, my sou?” “Record!” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Them are 17 different brane’ es of Methodism in this country, each having n distinctive name, its own church prop- erty, its own oiganizatiun, its own places of worship and its own body of membership. A Sanson Fawned the Guillotine. The Sansons have a place in French history, not only because they continued so long to hold their odious office, but becanso two of their number, a fatlior and son, held office during the evil days of the reign of terror, when they were kept so busily engaged with tlieir guil- lotine. The last c.f tho Sanson dynasty wasdismissed from his post in the reign of Louis Philippe, in 1b47, under to- markable circumstances. Although lie hail inherited a comfortable fortune from his father, the executioner of the revolution, he gv>t into pecuniary diffi- culties and was guilty of pawning his guillotine, surely tho most lugubrious pledge ever taken by mortal pawnbro- ker. An order came from the procurator general for the execution of a criminal, and the necessary apparatus was not forthcoming. The prison authorities had perforce to get it out of pawn, and the execution took place. But tho last of the Sansons was informed that his serv ices would ro longer bo required. What became of him afterward does not ap- pear to be known. —London News. Hattie Well_and Happy Jsed to Suffer From Impure Blood and Eruptions rtw Beneficial Result* Brought About by Hood’*. loo*M4h*ilZr*J> Hood’s"*^ SST£S=C ures 22 *ThiibanSfnMdicinawJS^S* 1 do not think then* i* any better.” qwi*DA3roo, Lawrence Station, N.J. Hood’a PHI* •**. ynt pro-F* l7 ea me Ever and bewela Ba j POLE'S REPUBLIC IN OAN6ER. MiuUtrr CMtl* Uflkw* Uw Jpßt<W*Wy £oi*c Ut lUvtlim Island*. The almond eyed Jap covets the gem of the Pacific, in the opinion of William R. Castle, Hawaiian minister to the United States, and flushed with his great victory over China is only awaiting a reasonable pre- text for over- throwing the Dole government and annexing the Hawaiian Islands to the Laud of the Rising Sun. There are 25,000 w. R. castle. Japanese on the islands, and it said they maintain a hostile attitude toward the government in hope that some complication may bring abont the seizure of the repnblic by Japan. The situation may soon call for action on the part of the United States, according to Minister Castle. The present Hawaiian minister is the sou of a missionary and was born on one of the islands. His education was fin- ished in this country, and he studied law with the firm of ex-Senator Evarta in New York. After practicing in the metropolis for a time, during which he oocupied a subordinate position in the corporation counsel’s office, he removed to Hawaii, where he became president of the board of education ami attorney general during the reign of King Kala- kaua. He took part in the revolution of 1887 and was also prominent in the re- sort to arms when Qneeu Liliuokaluui was deposed in 1898. He assisted in the formation of the provisional government and was one of the five commissioners who came to the United States and negotiated a treaty of annexation with President Harrison, which treaty was afterward withdrawn from the senate by President Cleveland. It is said that Minister Castle will resign about Dec. 1 and be succeeded at Washington by Frank Hatch, Hawaiian mini;-?' -• of foreign affairs. AMEU6 RiVES CHANLER. TV FinioDi XmlMI Career, Her Dtvaree ud Her Kuiaerou twntrirltin. The recent divorce secured by Amelie Rives Charler from her husbaud, John Armstrong Chauler, upon the gronnd of incompatibility of temper, was quite a surprise to the literary world, but had long been anticipated in fashionable New York and Virginia society. Friends and relatives of the oouple were aware that they had not lived together for two years and surmised that it would be only a matter of a short time before the intensely practical lawyer and the ro- mantic, imaginative, impractical and somewhat affected novelist would agree to disagree according to law. Her love of startling effects was one reason, it is said, that led to the estrangement In Paris she always insisted upon being attended by a very large, very fat and ; very black negress. Her everyday life, it is averred by her society friends, was fully 'as star- tling and sensational as her books, the best known of which is “The Quick or j the Dead?” a novel said to have been founded upon the courtship of the au- thor and young John Chauler. There was nothing commonplace about her, nothing ordinary. She was always the eccentric young genius, fascinating to the occasional beholder because of her originality and piquancy, but a trifle wearying perhaps to those constantly and intimately associated with her. Amelie Rives began life under very favorable auspices and has always been the child of wealth, culture and refine- ment. Her grandfather was William Cabell Rives, United States senator and minister to France. Her father was Colonel Alfred Landou Rives, a civil engineer, born in Paris and godchild of Lafayette, and her mother was Miss MacMurdo, a granddaughter of Bishop Moore of Virginia. Aiuclio was born in Richmond in 1803, and her early years were passed with her grandfather at Castle Hill in Albemarle county, Vir- ginia. She never went to school, but was guided in her eager quest of knowl- edge by governesses. She was a strange AMELIE RIVES CHANLER. child, and other children could uot love her or understand her. In her earliest teens she was thor- oughly conversant with the world’s best literature and was writing sonnets, short stories and poetic tragedies at the age of 15. Her cousin, Thomas Nelson Page, saw somo of her manuscript and pronounced her a genius. Her first story, “A Brother to Dragons,” was published in The Atlantic Monthly and was re- garded as a remarkable effort. In 1880 Lippincott’s Magazine brought out ' ‘The Quick or the Dead?” which proved to be the literary sensation of the year. The book was a whirlwind of passion aud caused as much talk us the late pop- ular favorite, “Trilby.” All manner of stories, many of them false or exaggerated, of the young au- thor were published far and wide, and her work was in extraordinary demand. A New York weekly paper paid her $7,000 for a single poem of 105 stanzas, or at the rate of a little over $1.50 a word. The leading magazines published her prose and •poetry, aud then she mar- ried Jack Chanler, one of the rich great- grandchildren of the original John Jacob Aster and hero of “The Quick or the Dead?” He was arising young law- yer of energy and force of character, noted as a society man and club fre- quenter and enjoying an income of about $30,000 a year. Pleased by the furore she bad caused, bat somewhat shucked aud hurt by the ermcwuMi that branded her as an erotic writer, the jxuig novelist removed to Pans and ft a tune devoted herself to art ami sculpture. An attack of the grip mads her an invalid fur a time, and she has never fully recovered bar earlier health ami laaiaty She did very credit atda murk be art, and several of her paint tags and sculpture* were exhibited •fenmd Her last novel, “Tania, the mmg Digger ..** waa published by Town Tap***, New York, a somewhat sur- psisiuf fad wben it is retneiubeted that a trw years ago the leading magazines af the susbity were outbidding one an- ntbrr for bar weak, riba is now at her old ham. Castle Hill, as happy with her thunsegiibrods, her dugs and her faithful mro .ervoutsas ayuong wom- an ef gen'u. can well be to whom mar- ■i*£< hr a i jved a failure. I JENNIE KING, SOUL SAVER. A Woman Revivalist Who Han Met Great Success In Georgia and South Carolina. * Saving souls is the work Mrs. Jennie King believes she has been called to do, and she is doing it in a very successful manner. Many women are auxious to enter public life, but Mrs. King shrank from it, fought against it and resisted the “call” for years. She is a comely young woman of 28 aud was born in Kentucky, but long been a resident of Dry Valley, Qa. As a mere child she was locally noted for her piety, and at the age of 10 joined the Congregational church. Her father was very poor, but she managed to seenre a fair education by attending the country schools and by hard study at home. When she was 15, a very stirring re- vival was held at the Gum Spring schoolhouse, and Jennie astonish- ed friends and W strangers alike it* by the fervor off”- v Wi her prayers. Two % Lj> i7 women revival- j ists were so \ struck by her re- ligious eloquence that they urged I ff> her to begin * preaching, but her father waa MRK KlXr *- one of those old fashioned men who be- lieve woman's sphere is the heme, aud she shrank from entering the pulpit. She even married, hoping that the “still, small voice” within her would be si- lenced, but marriage, maternity even, did not bring about the desired resalt. Finally she told her husband that site felt iiresiatibiy impelled to save ronl*. At first be strongly objeere*l to.the idea? but be now declanw that her cootse is the only one she could conscientiously pursue. Her revival work ha* tiros far been confined to Georgia and Sonth Car- olina, bnt her great success in. securing conversions has caused her to receive oordial invitations from other neighbor- ing states. &he is almost constantly en- gaged" in reading the Bible, and she reads nothing ebe, not even a newspa- per. fflghoct of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE The dte* ®f t.'Vf 1 Ponce de Leon wa yw W*t Cl% llt di * -* \Vi// covet the fountain fl Xc*isf of perpetual youth. jf L >/vTr He died searching *-? ,’ |il i for it. The fountain /Ik V lid J. l|/ was an impossibil- /il\ t Lfy itv, unnatural and } fit chimerical. The * OMll f/ nearest thing to the i VSJ/rj'iTjt a* a / fountain of perpet- \*sf 1 1 If Ita IM# /ual youth is a fottn- I / i 1If ft rllf /tain of perpetual, perfect health. r f tfilVJ&m J Health keeps people I ' /’ rfkVfflKF 1 young. Sickness I f, !Bl Wm i wak e * them old. r lQfrm Iff Health means first n A Ml Mil# /of all, strength and / v bajh /regularity in the di- M /fr%lß m gestjve functions i V/P. llHa Put indigestible mat- 1\ mV/ ter into the stomach, yf\ \ VmVl and it is likely to W M V hnd lodgment in the \ bowels. It will stop their action. Poi- sonous, refuse mat- ter, which should have been thrown off, is retained in the body, and as it cannot go any place else, more or less of it gets into the blood. That’s constipation. It is such a wonder- fully simple thing that people do not regard it seriously. They let it run on. let it grow worse, become chronic, and show itself all over the body in fifty ways before they con- aider it important. Constipation causes nine-tenths of all human ailments. Its first symptoms do not seem very serious, but- even they are very disagreeable. A few of them are sour stomach, flatulence, heart- burn. distress after eating, foul breath, coated-tongue, diariness. palpitation of the heart, sick and bilious headaches, general lassitude and debility. When any of these symptoms show themselves, you should immediately take I>r. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel- lets. according to directions. They are tiny, sugar-coated granules, made on purpose to cure constipation. They do this perfectly and quickly, and they are the only prepara- tion in the world that will do it. There are plenty of medicines that will give relief ns long as you keep on taking them, but you can’t stop. They don’t cure ; they give merely, temporary relief. Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets give immediate relief and produce v pcTtndHtHt cure. I Manufacture Cigars And use the very best quality of Tobacco In making them. 1 sella Clear Havana Filler, mm Sumatra Wrapper and Connecticut binder Cigar for 5 Cents. 1 will forfeit *lO CASH for any Cigar not made as represented. 1 claim the fin- est Box trade in Annapolis, and can sub- stantiate it. If you want to enjoy A lOcts. Cigar for scts. 3$ Give me a call. 1 LEAD—others try to follow—but not being .’able to manufacture f their ownfgoods, must naturally accept ■Btbe say-so fof agents. This sometimes proves wrong—hence by dealing direct > it* me you obtain first class Cigars at a BAfigure that retailers can’t touch. H. MENSH, '7B Main Street. 3Q THt WELSBACH l MPROVED Gas —* GO Candle-power from 8 feet of Gas * per hour. GEO. A. MYERS & C 0„ 44 W. Lexington St., Baltimore, Md. Sole Agents for Baltimore. HENIt Y BCIIW A SKR, Sole Agent for Annap- olis. * erma Cash. 5 Hy 57 MAIN STREET 57 R. E. L. HOPKINS Tin, Sbeet-lron, Stove and Farnace Worker, Roofing and Spouting, —AMD DBBI.BR IB—- STOVES. FURMCES, MUSES ind FIRE PUCE HEATERS, Slate Mantel*. Tile Hearth.*. o 1 and Vapor Stoves, Ac. Also Garden Hose and Attachments At Baltimore Prices. And nilkinds of Stoye Repairing. Fire- place Store* and others furnished at short notice. Give me a call. BO2T. 2. L. HOPKINS, tiemoved to 57 Main Street. FAILING MANHOOD General and Nervous Debility. / Weakness of Body and Mind. Effects of Errors or Excesses in Old or _\ rM Young. Robust, Noble Manhood fully Restored. (i How to Enlarge and W A l/ Strengthen Weak, Un- t*-'* 4—“Ti-sdeveloped Portions of /att Body. Absolutely nn- iiVj failingHome Treatment. r/fWfIFTI Will —Benefits in a day. Men testify fiom 50 States and Foreign Countries. Send for Descriptive Book, ex- planation and proofs, mailed (sealed) free. ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, NA. Trese finy Capsules are supericr RpM (jm) Cushman’s MENTHOL INHALER Cure* all troubla* of th limit anil Throat. CATARRH, HEADACHE, NEURALGIA. LtGRIPPE, WILL CURE Imtattou atop* UW .}| *.in-7iigi muffing, roughing, BKAbACIfE. Coo- "Tfj Gk Uu*d ** efleclß -^T</m"ENdORSE D & Ss' zJ lil|M ronlical u- -/■LT thorttM of Europe *n,l A inr ■1 c * for VWSi Vt conns.Bora Throat .v- Haj Kavar, Bron- "A k chiUa. La ORIPPh re Ttir mi<*t Itriiinldng and IliHlthfUt aid lo HKADACHB Miffrr- *r*. Tliiuir- >ilre|i to iht siretiii Cura* laanumta and Karvwui Proatratiun P>iiiTliaf<Ht|ml aitli aorllilr-* Imitation*. Tlakr . nly CI’kKMAS S Prtta.fiOc. I Drusirtaui. or nmttnl flw Aganta aanlrd, ( I'SHM UCNTUni URI U lirodm-r* anmtrrful Curr* of INCH I miL DRLIR Rhrum, Old Boraa, Cuts, Wound*. Burua Proatbltaa F*crl all at tin mnedi., fur I'ILBS Prii-e ghr. al l'rußgl*ta. n-'k on Menthol frae. Adilrem Cutltmin Manu- facturing Co., No. 324 Dearborn Street, 0.. BullJl.c , CItICACO, f tI.MBNSkM.Ikb. Do You Smoke ? RICHARD WELLS, Invito# you to drop in at the old CIGAR and TOBACCO STAND. No. 79 Conduit Stivct, <opp. cuj Hotel.i And try his llrnnde CIOAHM nd TOBAt CT>. which an- lint \ the in-*! nmiiufsctiir- ers in the oountry. Try my sct. Havana Filler, Can’t be lumt. and I have in stock a fine gra if of Oravely and other Chewing 'lobaooo.— A Iso a gHHI assort incut of I’tpcs. fce. Come in and have n smoke. Yours Truly, n22 HICHANII WHLI>. Danger Signals More tbjH half Ibt victims o f consMmfh tiou do not know tbn bate it. Here is a of symptoms by w hich consumption can certainly be detected Cough, one or two slight efforts on rising, occurring during the day and fre- quently during tire* night. Short breathing alter exertion. Tightness of the chest. Quick pulse, especially noticeable in the evening and alter a full meal. Chilliness in the evening, followed by Slight fever. Perspiration toward morning and Tale face and languid in the morning. Loss of vitality. If you have these symptoms, or any of them, do not delay. There are many preparations which claim to l>e cures, but Dr. Hcktr‘l finainc Rtmedy for Consumption has the highest endorsements, and has stood the test of years. It will arrest con- sumption in its earlier stages, and drive away the symptoms named, it is manu- factured by the Acker Medicine Co., lA and IS Chambers St., New York, and sold by all reputable druggists. Jtov 121 TO SSO PER WEEK can l>c made by AfiKNTM h W 9 taking orders for MAMIOM 7*7 II AKI.AMI S new BOOK, / ‘'Home of Ilia IlIhlB,” rare aji radiant and charming, flun- drcJs of now photos; lands, [TrWs.’.’m'*. people mill places. pTfCTfcitory of travel in the Holy land, for 1 ho first time by woman’s > pen. Nearly 500 extru large pitgcs Agents ul- ruady reaping' h llwir% i*t of Full iiicl lloli'iMV Onln-M. One repurtw JH) hmluH In i hours. Liberal terms. No expeuses needed. Write for agency quick. Historicali I tildish- IngCo., I’lilladelMliln. 10 4 Do You i LLlea r Pants ? ©ther< Clc>thtr\9 ? do you | pldrnine fl JNfdat-fittins Then Co To F. J. SCHMIDT, Merchant Tailor and Naval Outfitter, MARYLAND AVENUE. ' Who has a full assortment of 6LOTHB, BBAVKKB, CABBIMEKKB. whuth he will make to order in fashionable styles and * on reasonable terms. @f“l’articular attention paid to Naval fJnl forms. dlt i J vioia WMM fmmMd I _/A lovely com- . j plrxion only Nature U’J V '|WC\J 'T can give. She glvca v., j clear and soft one to r \Jj * use I)r. Hebra’s Viola Ci'r It is not a paint or powder to tour defects. // IT* grtt rid rf t/u >K, by 't. own pro- cess of renewing t!i'i.y of the skin ; V bani>bir,7 :ll lourbi < , i< dne*s, freckles. , . moles, jmnplesj bUa.l.i:< ds, sutiburn ana tan. It doe-, this sure/; and harmlessly, be- I cause naturally. 1: . i both skin- I beauty and skin-! -Jilt. Viola Skin-Soap hastens the pro"- ' , it is a pure and delicate soap. It should be used in con- nection with the Cream. It should be used - in the nurs- ry, too. Ordinary soaps are not i fit for a baby's skin. Viola Cream, 50 cents. Viola Skin-Soap, ,5 c nt>. Sold by drug- gists or scut by mail. Send to HUMPHREYS’ Nothing has ever been produced to equal or compare with StU&phltys’ Witch, Hazel Oil as a curative and healing application. It has been used 40 years and always affords relief and always gives satisfaction. It Cures Piles or Hemorrhoids, External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding—ltching and Burning; Cracks or Fissures and Fistulas. Relief immediate—cure certain. It Cures Burns, Scalds and Ulceration and Contraction from Bums. Relief instant. It Cures Torn, Cut and Lacerated Wounds and Bruises. *• It Cures Boils, Hot Tumors, Ulcers, Old Sores, Itching Eruptions, Scurfy or Scald Head. It is Infallible. It Cures Lnflamed or Caked Breasts and Sore Nipples. It is invaluable. It Cures Salt RheuM? Tetters, Scurfy Eruptions, Chapped Hands, Fever Blisters, Sore Lips or Nostrils, Corns and Bunions, Sore and Chafed Feet, Stings of Insects. Three Sizes, 25c., 50c. and #I.OO. Sold by Druggist*, or aent post-paid on reoeiptof prieo- ■CBFHMTB' UD. C0.,'11l All* WtUUa M., ha tat WITCH HAZEL OIL

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Page 1: FLOOR. Flour BteS&latttfU Xc*isf MENTHOL Sell Next I H CO.'S€¦ · fcjrFLOOR. Flour,rr*****w****m**mmmmmmmmmm |flV V\ wanttoSell intheNext10Days I(illidO BARRELSHCO.'S I CELEBRATED

fcjr FLOOR. F lour■ * ,rr*******w****m**mmmmmmmmmm

|fl V\ want to Sell in the Next 10 DaysV idO BARRELSI (ill H CO.'S

CELEBRATED

I “Cold Medal Brand”

U/I?eat plour,■ ’ i, i to accomplish the above end we will offer the

I ~qO!J Medal” for 10 Days at Same Price ofI Superlative,K •, Flour, twk first prize r.t the Centeouial Exhibition in

' ... in lsTii. At Miller's Exhibition at Ciuctnuatti, 1880-.fl| x .\\ Fair, Chicago, 1893.

BB ... v ill from the very■ i( it, grown in Min-wm- m I is recognized a*‘‘ 1 grade Hour where-

'' -a large jKircentage■' at and a very small/ ..

ad lor thisreason'• docs not becomem ,! retains the Sweet■ ; .un! will keep moistu

M ■

of testimonials aaH - .j u.i!it ies, we insertBB 1 i■a un Mr. Martin M.jHB*", ... i, ~ who is well and fav-■l .t we expect a very few

- 1 < ‘ties, buy more HourB^P| ,“rs Mr. Smith. Mr.BBI* V. - > . when vour car arrives

',' ~ !> of the Washburn,, . i r this is thefourth

|B| *• .: • iwo have sold him.|V\U A.ng firms, Mr. Win,|H. , ,v linker on Church

■. iling up a leputation|H;., Mr. Kiillman ordered

~ t - . ,r is much tlour as heIHv'l'l \ml from Mr. James|Ku ;;, . . .Kiahiished I try (ioods

|K;;. sll \ others. We are now■ELii'JY’; it;.' tilth car load of the

h J'... \i, i: d no complaints.—

This Flour comes from the largest millsin the World, having a daily capacity of13,.500barrels, and bv getting it direct

from the mills, we are in position togive to dealers and consumers the verybest prices.

R. R. MAGRUDER&CO.Annapolis, MU..October 28th. 1885.

Gent*,-- Implying to your inquiry, relating tottie Wasbliurn..<'n>sl>y Co.'s Gold Medal Brandof Flour, will say that the best evidence I cangive you of its being entirely satisfactory tome, mihe fact of my continued orders to youlor the same. I have worked several brandsof high grade Spring Wheat Flour, but preferthe Washburn, Crosby Co.'s Gold MedalBrand. Itcspectfully,

MAKTIN M. SMITH.Annapolis Md., October, 1895.

K. It. Magruder Ac Co.:—The Gold MedalBrand of Flour that 1 have been getting ofyou lsentirely satisfacaory, and 1 take pleas-ure In recommending It to any one wishing aiiigh gradeof Spring Wbeat Flour. Bespt.,

WM. KU'.LMAN,Baker A Confectioner, HO Church St.

Annapolis, Md , October 28tb, 1805.Gentlemen After many attempts to And a

good Hour that could be relied upon at alltimes. 1 Anally struck upon tha Washburn,< rosby Co.'s Gold Medal Brand. Have usedlive or six banels of the same, s*id havealways found It A. No. 1, in all respects.

Itespectfully,oSUOd JAMES MI’NHOK.

R. R. MAGRUDER & CO.- y " !*::::i-r-1:1:aaa

V f'J When your cake is heavy, sog- BY ' gy, indigestible, it’s a pretty sure ||

£ ifwla sign that you didn’t shorten it gm r with COTTOLENE. When this g

| great shortening is rightly used, j|8 ■ 888 I the result will surely satisfy the B3 m

most fastidious.Alwaysremember g1 that the qualityof COTTOLENE g3 {M makes a little of it go a long way. BI \ C*' (fl4Mf*v n < willful waste to use more |

two thirds as much as you '

would of lard or butter. Always i

llf ABB use COTTOLENE this way, and

|ft C AI I your cake and pastry will always [/ill be light, wholesome, delicious. |

m m fVnulne OOTTOLfAb to sold vwjrwtei to I_ W ■ tins, with trade-mark* “Coltotene” nd tieer $ I

§ a hall incotton-plant wreath-on every tin.Ij| lliwl W Tin. S. K. FAIBBAIK COMPANY, CHICAUO [

CHAS. A. CRANDALL

fIIQCOR -.•-lIEALER.f?Families Supplied#BßOWN-STOUT

Pailv with .• lORTKR,

31 Main Street ’ -A-ZCLn-aipO-Lis, Md..- Wont for Maryland and District of Columbia for the Celebrated

CHAMPAGNE CIDER.*,Agent for the Bohemian Rochester Beer. The. very best

brands of rooking Wines kept constantly on hand. And alsothe tine grades of Foreign ana Domestic Wines and Liqnors.

The Leaders Foot-wearf We keep the the finest se*

_ oM/oilection in all Standard Styles.CET YOURS. “tits a grand stock for finding

sT’\f \f TTP R I just what you want. Few can, IMMER

, D Jmwt and none can beat our

0 T T , \po R prioee. You can’t go wrong

bhOEb * gheMß&l2 SHOES o

AT- \f lfl

BROOKS & BARTON, qB° T South'*

thk lfadkrs in ▼ X /""V O IFoot-wear, I

tor satnnwf fflt, D hmm •** 4aalhWtc I-. • * Ag* 0 Jg ?<f iftt# pftUMt

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CHILDE*** T jWJISP **"*6*9 *+ ]OIFOBDS and SLOTHS, Q iwm gT<u- :

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BROOKS a bartoniNo Is &AIN STREET, * ANNAPOLIS. MD

Coming BteS&latttfUPublished Daily. Except Sundays.

WM. M. ABBOTT A SONS. Publishers.

MONDAY, - November 11. 1890.KATES OF AIIVXItTIMXU.

One square, first insertion, Sl.OO; subse-quent insertlans, 50 Cents. Special rates madewith monthly, quarterly and yearly advertlsera

iSfLocal notices and political or personal' oommu meat ions, 18 cents per line; suI .sequentinsertions, 10 cents per line.

Ordinary marriage announcements, twenty-five cents. Obituary notices will be chargedfor at one-halfthe usual rates ol advertising.

A Frog With Fear Wing*.

The curiosity of tropical Africa Is tbswonderful flying frog, first described byBithoff of the equatorial African expe-dition, which returned to Europe in thefull of 1694. This oddity of the reptilefamily is about the size of a commonbullfrog and resembles other member*of the order of batrachiaus in every- jthing but its feet, each of which is jwebbed and enormously enlarged, so ;much so as to form splendid substitutesfor true wings. The creature has fivetoe* on each of the other two, whichmakes four separate membranes on eachof its hind feet and three on each forefoot, or 14 in all. In his description ofit Bishoff says, “Each leg terminatesin a sort of fan, and with these the lit-tlereptile paddles the air like a locust,or like a partially fledged bird testingits pinions for the first time. ”

Although somewhat awkward in it*flight, the winged frog can dart throughthe airat a speed of about ten yards persecond and can keep itself going for-.ward at that rate for from 10 to 15 sec-onds. The average distance covered bythese spurts of grasshopperlike flight isfrom 75 to 125 yards, but Bishoff men-tions instances where the flying frogcleared sandy stretches 200 yards inwidth.—St. Lonis Republic.

Lawyers Who Make Their Own Wills.Many celebrated men have neglected

to settle their affairs. Beu Jenson, Dry-den and Sir Isaac Newton all died in-testate, Bacon insolvent, and the epi-gram on Butler’s monument in the ab-bey sufficiently explains why he andmany others like him never made awill:

The poet’s fute is here In emblem shown:He asks for bread uud he receives a stone.“Wills, ’* said Lord Coke, “and the

construction of them do more perplexa man than any other, ami to make acertain construction of them exceedethjurisprudentimu artem. ” An old prov-erb says that every man is either a foolor a physician at 40. Sir H. Halfordhappening one day to quote thesayirtgto a circle of friends, Canning humor-ously inquired, “Sir Henry, mayn’t hebe both?’’ At anyrate experience teachesthat lawyers who draw tlieirown willssometimes make gnat mistakes. SirSamuel Roinilly’s will was improperlyworded, Chief Baron Thompson’s willbecame the subject of chancery proceed-ings, while the will of Bradley, theeminent conveyancer, was actually setaside by Lord Thurlow. —Temple Bar.

HW Great Anxiety.

Athlete—Did—I—brea1—break—it, doctor?D.ietor—I will beplain, sir. The arm

is broken, the collar bone crushed, theskull is fractured—

Athlete—No, no, no I The—did—l—-

“What, my sou?”“Record!”—Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Them are 17 different brane’ es ofMethodism in this country, each havingn distinctive name, its own church prop-erty, its own oiganizatiun, its ownplaces of worship and its own body ofmembership.

A Sanson Fawned the Guillotine.

The Sansons have a place in Frenchhistory, not only because they continuedso long to hold their odious office, butbecanso two of their number, a fatliorand son, held office during the evil daysof the reign of terror, when they werekept so busily engaged with tlieir guil-lotine. The last c.f tho Sanson dynastywasdismissed from his post in thereignof Louis Philippe, in 1b47, under to-

markable circumstances. Although liehail inherited a comfortable fortunefrom his father, the executioner of therevolution, he gv>t into pecuniary diffi-culties and was guilty of pawning hisguillotine, surely tho most lugubriouspledge ever taken by mortal pawnbro-ker. Anorder came from the procuratorgeneral for the execution of a criminal,and the necessary apparatus was notforthcoming. The prison authorities hadperforce to get it out of pawn, and theexecution took place. But tho last ofthe Sansons was informed that his services would ro longer bo required. Whatbecame of him afterward does not ap-pear to be known. —London News.

Hattie Well_and HappyJsed to Suffer From Impure

Blood and Eruptions

rtw Beneficial Result* BroughtAbout by Hood’*.

loo*M4h*ilZr*J>

Hood’s"*^SST£S=Cures22 *ThiibanSfnMdicinawJS^S*1 do not think then* i* any better.”qwi*DA3roo,Lawrence Station, N.J.

Hood’a PHI* •**. ynt pro-F* l7ea me Ever andbewela Ba

j ~

POLE'S REPUBLIC IN OAN6ER.

MiuUtrr CMtl* Uflkw* Uw Jpßt<W*Wy£oi*c Ut lUvtlim Island*.

The almond eyed Jap covets the gemof the Pacific, in the opinion of WilliamR. Castle, Hawaiian minister to the

United States,and flushed withhis great victoryover China isonly awaiting areasonable pre-text for over-throwing theDole governmentand annexing theHawaiian Islandsto the Laud ofthe Rising Sun.There are 25,000

w. R. castle. Japanese on theislands, and it said they maintain ahostile attitude toward the governmentin hope that some complication maybring abont the seizure of the repnblicby Japan. The situation may soon callfor action on the part of the UnitedStates, according to Minister Castle.The present Hawaiian minister is thesou of a missionary and was born on oneof the islands. His education was fin-ished in this country, and he studiedlaw with the firm of ex-Senator Evartain New York. After practicing in themetropolis for a time, during which heoocupied a subordinate position in thecorporation counsel’s office, he removedto Hawaii, where he became presidentof the board of education ami attorneygeneral during the reign of King Kala-kaua. He took part in the revolution of1887 and was also prominent in the re-sort to arms when Qneeu Liliuokaluuiwas deposed in 1898.

He assisted in the formation of theprovisional government and was one ofthe five commissioners who came to theUnited States and negotiated a treaty ofannexation with President Harrison,which treaty was afterward withdrawnfrom the senate by President Cleveland.

It is said that Minister Castle willresign about Dec. 1 and be succeeded atWashington by Frank Hatch, Hawaiianmini;-?' -• of foreign affairs.

AMEU6 RiVES CHANLER.

TV FinioDiXmlMI Career, Her Dtvareeud Her Kuiaerou twntrirltin.

The recent divorce secured by AmelieRives Charler from her husbaud, JohnArmstrong Chauler, upon the gronnd ofincompatibility of temper, was quite asurprise to the literary world, but hadlong been anticipated in fashionableNew York and Virginiasociety. Friendsand relatives of the oouple were awarethat they had not lived together for twoyears and surmised that it would beonly a matter of a short time before theintensely practical lawyer and the ro-mantic, imaginative, impractical andsomewhat affected novelist would agreeto disagree according to law. Her loveof startling effects was one reason, it issaid, that led to the estrangement InParis she always insisted upon beingattended by a very large, very fat and

; very black negress.Her everyday life, it is averred by

her society friends, was fully 'as star-tling and sensational as her books, thebest known of which is “The Quick or

j the Dead?” a novel said to have beenfounded upon the courtship of the au-thor and young John Chauler. Therewas nothing commonplace about her,nothing ordinary. She was always theeccentric young genius, fascinating tothe occasional beholder because of heroriginality and piquancy, but a triflewearying perhaps to those constantlyand intimately associated with her.

Amelie Rives began life under veryfavorable auspices and has always beenthe child of wealth, culture and refine-ment. Her grandfather was WilliamCabell Rives, United States senator andminister to France. Her father wasColonel Alfred Landou Rives, a civilengineer, born in Paris and godchild ofLafayette, and her mother was MissMacMurdo, a granddaughter of BishopMoore of Virginia. Aiuclio was born inRichmond in 1803, and her early yearswere passed with her grandfather atCastle Hill in Albemarle county, Vir-ginia. She never went to school, butwas guided in her eager quest of knowl-edge by governesses. She was a strange

AMELIE RIVES CHANLER.

child, and other children could uot loveher or understand her.

In her earliest teens she was thor-oughly conversant with the world’s bestliterature and was writing sonnets,short stories and poetic tragedies at theage of 15. Her cousin, Thomas NelsonPage, saw somo of her manuscript andpronounced her a genius. Her first story,“A Brother to Dragons,” was publishedin The Atlantic Monthly and was re-garded as a remarkable effort. In 1880Lippincott’s Magazine brought out ' ‘TheQuick or the Dead?” which proved tobe the literary sensation of the year.The book was a whirlwind of passionaud caused as much talk us the late pop-ular favorite, “Trilby.”

All manner of stories, many of themfalse or exaggerated, of the young au-thor were published far and wide, andher work was in extraordinary demand.A New York weekly paper paid her$7,000 for a single poem of 105 stanzas,or at the rate of a little over $1.50 aword. The leading magazines publishedher prose and •poetry, aud then she mar-ried JackChanler, one of the rich great-grandchildren of the original JohnJacob Aster and hero of “The Quick orthe Dead?” He was arising young law-yer of energy and force of character,noted as a society man and club fre-quenter and enjoying an income ofabout $30,000 a year.

Pleased by the furore she bad caused,bat somewhat shucked aud hurt by theermcwuMi that branded her as an eroticwriter, the jxuig novelist removed toPans and ft a tune devoted herself toart ami sculpture. An attack of the gripmads her an invalid fur a time, and shehas never fully recovered bar earlierhealth ami laaiaty She did very credit •

atda murk be art, and several of herpaint tags and sculpture* were exhibited•fenmd Her last novel, “Tania, themmg Digger ..** waa published by TownTap***, New York, a somewhat sur-psisiuf fad wben it is retneiubeted thata trw years ago the leading magazines

af the susbity were outbidding one an-ntbrr for bar weak, riba is now at herold ham. Castle Hill, as happy withher thunsegiibrods, her dugs and herfaithful mro .ervoutsas ayuong wom-an ef gen'u. can well be to whom mar-■i*£< hr a i jved a failure.

I JENNIE KING, SOUL SAVER.

A Woman Revivalist Who Han Met GreatSuccess In Georgia and South Carolina.* Saving souls is the work Mrs. Jennie

King believes she has been called to do,and she is doing it in a very successfulmanner. Many women are auxious toenter public life, but Mrs. King shrankfrom it, fought against it and resistedthe “call” for years. She is a comelyyoung woman of 28 aud was born inKentucky, but long been a residentof Dry Valley, Qa. As a mere child shewas locally noted for her piety, and atthe age of 10 joined the Congregationalchurch. Her father was very poor, butshe managed to seenre a fair educationby attending the country schools and byhard study at home.

When she was 15, a very stirring re-vival was held at the Gum Springschoolhouse, andJennie astonish-ed friends and Wstrangers alike it*by the fervor off”- v Wiher prayers. Two % Lj> i7women revival- jists were so \

struck by her re-ligious eloquencethat they urged I ff>her to begin

*

preaching, buther father waa MRK KlXr *-

one of those old fashioned men who be-lieve woman's sphere is the heme, audshe shrank from entering the pulpit.She even married, hoping that the “still,small voice” within her would be si-lenced, but marriage, maternity even,did not bring about the desired resalt.Finally she told her husband that sitefelt iiresiatibiy impelled to save ronl*.At first be strongly objeere*l to.the idea?but be now declanw that her cootse isthe only one she could conscientiouslypursue. Her revival work ha* tiros farbeen confined to Georgia and Sonth Car-olina, bnt her great success in. securingconversions has caused her to receiveoordial invitations from other neighbor-ing states. &he is almost constantly en-gaged" in reading the Bible, and shereads nothing ebe, not even a newspa-per.

fflghoct ofall in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report

PowderABSOLUTELY PURE

The dte* ®ft.'Vf 1 Ponce de Leon wa

yw W*t Cl%llt di*-* \Vi// ‘ covet the fountain

fl Xc*isf of perpetual youth.jfL >/vTr He died searching

*-? ,’ |il i for it. The fountain

/Ik V lid J. l|/ was an impossibil-/il\ t Lfy itv, unnatural and

} fit chimerical. The* OMll f/ nearest thing to thei VSJ/rj'iTjt a* a/ fountain of perpet-

\*sf 1 1 If Ita IM# /ual youth is a fottn-I / i 1Ifft rllf/tain of perpetual,

perfect health.r f tfilVJ&m J Health keeps peopleI ' /’rfkVfflKF 1 young. SicknessI f, !Bl Wmi wak e* them old.r lQfrm Iff Health means firstn A Ml Mil# /of all, strength and/ v bajh /regularity in the di-M /fr%lßm gestjve functionsi V/P. llHa Put indigestible mat-

1\ mV/ ter into the stomach,yf\ \ VmVl and it is likely to

W M V hnd lodgment in the\ bowels. It will stop

their action. Poi-sonous, refuse mat-ter, which shouldhave been thrownoff, is retained in the

body, and as it cannot go any place else,more or less of it gets into the blood.That’s constipation. It is such a wonder-fully simple thing that people do not regardit seriously. They let it run on. let it growworse, become chronic, and show itself allover the body in fifty ways before they con-aider it important. Constipation causesnine-tenths of all human ailments. Its firstsymptoms do not seem very serious, but-even they are very disagreeable. A few ofthem are sour stomach, flatulence, heart-burn. distress after eating, foul breath,coated-tongue, diariness. palpitation of theheart, sick and bilious headaches, generallassitude and debility. When any of thesesymptoms show themselves, you shouldimmediately take I>r. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel-lets. according to directions. They are tiny,sugar-coated granules, made on purpose tocure constipation. They do this perfectlyand quickly, and they are the only prepara-tion in the world that will do it. There areplenty of medicines that will give relief nslong as you keep on taking them, but youcan’t stop. They don’t cure ; they givemerely, temporary relief. Doctor Pierce’sPleasant Pellets give immediate relief andproduce v pcTtndHtHt cure.

I Manufacture CigarsAnd use the very best quality of TobaccoIn making them. 1 sella

Clear Havana Filler, mmSumatra Wrapper and Connecticut binder

Cigar for 5 Cents.1 will forfeit *lO CASH for any Cigar

not made as represented. 1 claim the fin-est Box trade in Annapolis, and can sub-stantiate it. If you want to enjoy

A lOcts. Cigar for scts. 3$Give me a call. 1 LEAD—others try tofollow—but not being.’able to manufacture

• f their ownfgoods, must naturally accept■Btbe say-so fof agents. This sometimes

proves wrong—hence by dealing direct> it* me you obtain first class Cigars at a

BAfigure that retailers can’t touch.

H. MENSH,'7B Main Street. 3Q

THt WELSBACH

l MPROVEDGas —*

GO Candle-power from 8 feet of Gas *

per hour.

GEO. A. MYERS & C0„44 W. Lexington St., Baltimore, Md.

Sole Agents for Baltimore.HENIt Y BCIIW A SKR, Sole Agentfor Annap-

olis. * erma Cash. 5 Hy

57 MAIN STREET 57R. E. L. HOPKINS

Tin, Sbeet-lron, Stove andFarnace Worker,

Roofing and Spouting,—AMD DBBI.BR IB—-

STOVES. FURMCES, MUSES ind FIREPUCE HEATERS,

Slate Mantel*. Tile Hearth.*.o 1 and Vapor Stoves, Ac.

Also Garden Hose and AttachmentsAt Baltimore Prices.

And nilkinds of Stoye Repairing. Fire-place Store* and others furnished atshort notice. Give me a call.

BO2T. 2. L. HOPKINS,tiemoved to 57 Main Street.

FAILING MANHOODGeneral and Nervous Debility./ . Weakness of Body and

Mind. Effects of Errorsor Excesses in Old or

_\ rM Young. Robust, Noble▼ Manhood fully Restored.(i How to Enlarge andW A l/ Strengthen Weak, Un-

t*-'*4—“Ti-sdeveloped Portions of/att Body. Absolutely nn-

iiVj failingHome Treatment.r/fWfIFTI Will —Benefits in a day.Men testify fiom 50 States and ForeignCountries. Send for Descriptive Book, ex-planation and proofs, mailed (sealed) free.

ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, NA.

Trese finy Capsules are supericr

RpM (jm)

Cushman’sMENTHOL INHALER

Cure* all troubla* of thlimit anil Throat.

CATARRH, HEADACHE,NEURALGIA. LtGRIPPE,

WILL CURE Imtattou atop*UW .}| *.in-7iigi muffing, roughing,

BKAbACIfE. Coo-"Tfj Gk Uu*d ** efleclß

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-/■LT thorttM of Europe*n,l A inr■1 c * for

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"A k chiUa. La ORIPPhre Ttir mi<*t Itriiinldng

and IliHlthfUt aid loHKADACHB Miffrr-

*r*. Tliiuir- >ilre|i to iht siretiii Cura* laanumtaand Karvwui Proatratiun P>iiiTliaf<Ht|ml aitli aorllilr-*Imitation*. Tlakr . nly CI’kKMAS S Prtta.fiOc. IDrusirtaui. or nmttnl flw Aganta aanlrd, ( I'SHMUCNTUni URI U lirodm-r* anmtrrful Curr* ofINCH I miL DRLIR Rhrum, Old Boraa,Cuts, Wound*. Burua Proatbltaa F*crl allat tin mnedi., fur I'ILBS Prii-e ghr. al l'rußgl*ta.n-'k on Menthol frae. Adilrem Cutltmin Manu-facturing Co., No. 324 Dearborn Street,■0.. BullJl.c , CItICACO, f tI.MBNSkM.Ikb.

Do You Smoke ?

RICHARD WELLS,Invito# you to drop in atthe old

CIGAR and TOBACCO STAND.No. 79 Conduit Stivct,

<opp. cuj Hotel.iAnd try his llrnnde CIOAHM nd TOBAt -

CT>. which an- lint \ the in-*! nmiiufsctiir-ers in the oountry. Try my

sct. Havana Filler,Can’t be lumt. and I have in stock a fine gra if

of Oravely and other Chewing 'lobaooo.—A Iso a gHHI assort incut of I’tpcs. fce.

Come in and have n smoke.Yours Truly,n22 HICHANII WHLI>.

Danger SignalsMore tbjH half Ibt victims of consMmfh

tiou do not know tbn bate it. Here isaof symptoms by w hich consumption cancertainly be detected

Cough, one or two slight efforts onrising, occurring during the day and fre-quently during tire* night.

Short breathing alter exertion.Tightness of the chest.Quick pulse, especially noticeable in the

evening and alter a full meal.Chilliness in the evening, followed bySlight fever.Perspiration toward morningand

• Tale face and languid in the morning.Loss ofvitality.If you have these symptoms, or any of

them, do not delay. There are manypreparations which claim to l>e cures, butDr. Hcktr‘l finainc Rtmedy for Consumptionhas the highest endorsements, and hasstood the test of years. It will arrest con-sumption in its earlier stages, and driveaway the symptoms named, it is manu-factured by the Acker Medicine Co., lAand IS Chambers St., New York, and soldby all reputable druggists.

Jtov 121 TO SSO PER WEEKcan l>c made by AfiKNTM

h W 9 taking orders for MAMIOM7*7 IIAKI.AMI S new BOOK,■ / ‘'Home of Ilia IlIhlB,” rareaji radiant and charming, flun-

drcJs of now photos; lands,[TrWs.’.’m'*. people mill places.pTfCTfcitory of travel in the Holy

land, for 1 ho first time by woman’s> pen. Nearly 500 extru large pitgcs Agents ul-

ruady reaping' h llwir%i*t of Full iiicllloli'iMV Onln-M. One repurtw JH) hmluH In

i hours. Liberal terms. No expeuses needed.Writefor agencyquick. Historicali I tildish-IngCo., I’lilladelMliln. 10 4

Do Youi

LLlea r Pants ?

©ther<Clc>thtr\9 ?

do you |pldrnine

fl JNfdat-fittins

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Jvioia WMMfmmMdI _/A lovely com- .jplrxion only Nature U’J V '|WC\J 'Tcan give. She glvca v.,

j clear and soft one to r \Jj* use I)r. Hebra’s Viola Ci'r It is not

a paint or powder to tour defects. // IT*grtt rid rf t/u >K, by ' 't. own pro-cess of renewing t!i'i.y of the skin ; Vbani>bir,7 :ll lourbi < , i< dne*s, freckles. ,

. moles, jmnplesj bUa.l.i:< ds, sutiburn anatan. It doe-, this sure/; and harmlessly, be-

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hastens the pro"- ' , it is a pure anddelicate soap. It should be used in con-nection with the Cream. It should be used

- in the nurs- ry, too. Ordinary soaps are noti fit for a baby's skin. Viola Cream, 50 cents.

Viola Skin-Soap, ,5 cnt>. Sold by drug-gists or scut by mail. Send to

HUMPHREYS’Nothing has everbeen produced to

equalor compare with StU&phltys’Witch, Hazel Oil as acurative andhealing application. It has beenused 40 years and alwaysaffordsreliefand always gives satisfaction.

It Cures Piles or Hemorrhoids, Externalor Internal, Blind or Bleeding—ltching andBurning; Cracks or Fissures and Fistulas.Relief immediate—cure certain.

It Cures Burns, Scalds and Ulceration andContraction from Bums. Relief instant.

It Cures Torn, Cut and LaceratedWounds and Bruises. *•

It Cures Boils, Hot Tumors, Ulcers, OldSores, Itching Eruptions, Scurfy or ScaldHead. It is Infallible.

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Three Sizes, 25c., 50c. and #I.OO.Soldby Druggist*, or aent post-paid onreoeiptof prieo-■CBFHMTB' UD. C0.,'11l All* WtUUa M.,ha tat

WITCH HAZEL OIL