CLEAN!

1
AT
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MITCHELL & LUNN, Resident Agents.
o
H'1
Threo fays of llsht cbot upward from the rrest,
Tlirco ro'.iIcii rnyx, which lit llin hunt und aca.
And lost Ibccisehraabovu la MyMury.
The day hurt been ft dny nf mlM nntl rnln,
In piilTul iimi'M:
Tho wind bad
Aud like a litarl within a wcr breast.
The sea IihiI tliroblieil and Nature iwumedto
weep:
I
THE FIELD.
ACROSS
C'
'
Acrcns the dewy field sbe goes ,
Alono upon ber mmnmr'a daj",
And t'ward her btsuda tbo sweet wild roio
As If to bold ber on ber way.
In neighboring lands the tillers rake
The wheat to ninny n. shining sheaf.
And flcklo morning breezes shake
The windward pojilur's silver leaf.
Oh, pink and paIo wild roses blow
Amid the morning' diamond light,
And gold and crimson popples plow
Against the daisy's gloaming !.lte.
Dut down the winding path sho slips,
Whore slender grasses
) and swing,
Trilling from careless, curving lips
A song to cheer her wayfaring.
And swift her feet go twinkling by,
And fall the far notej low with her.
Then In the hapless dhtnnco dio
And all my summers ::o with her.
Rowan Stevens In Kate Field's Washington.
AN EARTHQUAKE.
It was at Havre during tho height
of the Beasonj tho low tido eignal
wan flyiug and tho usual crowd of men
that one always Bees thoro at tho
bathing hour had ranged themf-olvcalong tho edgo of tho little wooden
walk, from tho cluster of bathhouses
to tho water's edgo to ego the fair
bathers trip by.
I had seen it nil a hundred times
at, least and know tho scene by hoart
& The fat women satiated mo. tho thin
i ones repelled me, tho sands of this
pebbly beach wero never intonoed to
be sat on comfortably, and I was
about to retreat to tho shaded corridors of Frascati'B well known hostelry when M., lo Quai, a tall, robubt,
well prcsorved compatriot, whom I
had first mot at the table d'hoto a
week ago, approached and took a
seat beside me. He was alono and
naturally I remarked, scanning tho
crowd of heads bobbing about on
tho waves before us:
"Madumo, I presume, is in tho
bath, monsieur?"
"Yes," replied ho, pointing hor out
to mo; "behold horl"
She was standing erect now, tho
waves reaching' only to a Bmall,
rounded waist, leaving to view a
graceful bust and charming head
a beautiful head, I should havo said
. rich black hair, soft dark oyes,
red lips and transparent skin in
short, an ideal and piquant brunotto,
bo pretty that I could not help tolling tho husband tho exceeding
warmth of my admiration.
"But," said I, "bIio Buroly cannot
bo French, monsieur; she looks' too
much like a Spanish woman."
"No," ho answered, "sho is noithor
the one nor tho othor," and then,
without further proamblo or hesitation ho began and told mo tho following story:
"It was a Bummor ovening in tho
year 187," said ho, "aud I was sitting on tho veranda of a charming
dwelling in tho outskirts of tho city
of Curacas. Boforo mo strotched a
porspectivo and beautifully kopt lawn
,and shaded walks, whilo farther
nleng, among tho shaded trees, shono
tho silvery gloam of a tiuy lako, and
far off in tho distanco tho dazzling
white of tho Caracas houses against
a background of buu and somber
mountains.
"But it was not at nature's painting that I was gazing at tho moment.
I did not need to Boarch tho
for beauties to charm tho oyo
when at my sido was seated what
Boomed to mo than and still for Bho
is now my wifo, sir tho loveliest
woman that I had over Bot eyes on."
Hero I sought to mumble something to tho olfoot that ho was not
mistaken, Hut tho Btory tollor continued as if ho had hoard novor a
word.
"Todcscribo to you tho ardor with
which I rogardod tho lustoroftho
dark hair, tho gontlo depths of tho
black oyos, tho scarlet curvo of tho
Binlling lips and sylphliko figuro is
simply impossible, Suflko it that I
appreciated thoin so thoroughly that
I had just proposed to hor though
it took tho courago of n Napoleon to
do Itand was waiting breathlessly
s
land-Bcap- o
(
to receive my answer.
"Sho liked me, I know, her father
also, and I had been a great deal nt
tho house; but liking is not love, and
whether Nina do Latere loved mo or,
not tho cool friendliness of her man-uerso tantalizing to a lover who
fears his doom ahead, had hitherto
provented my finding out.
"You know of course. Bir," pursued XI. lo Quai, diverging a moment
from tho lino of his Btory, "how fre
ijuent earthquakes are in that part
of South Africa, especially in sum
mor, when thoy occur nlmoKt daily
At tho day I speak of, ever since
early morning, tho ground hod been
shivering inwardly, whilo from time
to time a low, deep ruinble could bo
heard, liko tho mutter of distant
thunder.
"Liko every one else, however,
who lived in Caracas I had grown
accustomed to and in a measure
to these constant seismic
disturbances, but now, oven in tho
absorbing interest of tho subject
that filled my thoughts, I could not
help noticing how greatly of lato
these quaking tremors had increased.
"In fact, I had hardly finished my
lover's ploa when a hugo porcelain
vase at the foot of tho steps was jostled from its pedestal and shivered
to atoms, and at tho same instant I
was thrown violently to tho floor of
tho balcony. With a haste that
great peril only inspires, I was on
my feet again and turning to seek
Nina to siezo her in ray arms and if
possiblo boar hor to a place of safety.
She was no longor besido mo, and
looking about me, dazed though 1
wr.s, I could nowhere seo her.
"It was UBoless ps well as madness
to wait longor, and with difficulty
keopiug my footing on tho rocking
floor I fled down tho Btaggonng
Btops and from tho dangerous neighborhood of tho groaning house. To
go far, howovcr, on tho tossing
ground was impossible; sick and
dizzy I was forced to my knees.
Tho house behind mo swayed and
Bwung from sido to sido ; tho chimneys
cracked and toppled down on the
roof; whole planks, wronched by tho
strain, burst from their fastenings,
leaving great holes in tho walls; the
stairs writhed and fell apart; tho
beams slid from thoir supports and
crashed to tlio earth in a debris of
.
wrecked wood, glass, bricks and
plas-tor-
"In less than a moment, it deems to
mo, tho beautiful villa of an hour
ago was reduced to a heap of dust
und broken rubbish. All this happened in less time than it takes to
tell it, but a Btill moro torriblo Bceno
remained to bo enacted, for all of a
sivlden, with a report liko musketry,
tho earth cracked open and tho ruinH
wore swallowed up in its depths.
"At tho snmo instant thero was a
scream behind mo in Nina's voice.
I turned, but nlasl only in timoto
boo tho earth open again whoro Bhe
lay and engulf my beloved as tho
ruins had been.
"'God havo morcy upon us!' I
criod and Bought on hands and knooa
to fight my way toward tho crovico
that I beliovcd had swallowed her,
but now on ovory Bido great rents
wero coming and going, nearer
and nearer each timo to whoro I
crouched, reckless and paralyzed
with despair, and thou boforo I had
timo to realizo tho horror of it, and
with only n momentary vision of
donso blackness boforo my oyos, I,
too, was engulfed in tho earth 1"
XI, lo Quai paused towipo his damp
brow, beaded with 'sweat at tho moro
recollection of that hideous moment.
"Monsieur, " resumed ho presently, when ho had somowhat
his emotion, "if over you
havo dreamed that you wero buried
alivo, then you havo had a forotasto
of tho 'feeling with which I onco
moro recovorcd consciousness. No
hell could havo boen blackor than
tho plaeo whoro, on regaining my
souses, I found mysolf, prono on my
back. No crack or cranny permitted
con-quoro-
sag
rr
in
I
B
-
bun-owin-
I
I
mo-moiit- s
WHYAREYOU
rTAMMMCC
MELT
LECTRIC
m 111
Jmmk
HLMf "
f
ik"
&YFOR,
WFwim
Wri- I A NDSUSPENSO
WE-SJS- ?
SfcElSrT
V-t-
d
ontrnnco to a single ray of God's
blessed light, and to know tho fall
torture of eternal darlcness you have
only onco to experience it. The
deadly silence, too, of the place was
awful ; my breathing Bounded to me
like tho hissing of a furnace. 1
could plainly hear my heart beat,
and oven, it seemed to mo, tho blood
Burgo through my veins.
"When I tried to move, sharp pains
shot through my wholo body, but I
soon found to my joy that I ws
only bruiBed and no bones broken.
God knows why I was not killed, for
the floor of my prison was of solid
rock.
"How far had I fallen? With an
effort I dragged myself to my feet,
and taking a trinket hung to my
watch chain, I hurled it with all my
strength up into tho darkness. It
struck, but not boforo its force was
was nearly spent. The last hope left
mo. I was buried alivo in a pit a
pit more than a hundred feet deep I
"Overcome by tho anguish of my
thoughts and tho oppression of tho
pitchy darkness, I sank again to thoground ana gave myself up to utter
despair.
"After awhile, an eternity in
length, I determined to exploro tho
extent of tho cavern into which fate
had plunged mo and which was destined to bo my grave. Perhaps, too,
a sound that for a littlo while past
hod been gradually becoming audi
ble to mo had somothing to do with
roubing mo to action.
"This noise camo from a distance,
and to my heated fancynnd sensitive
ears sounded liko tho wheezing of a
subterranean bellows. I cautiously
moved forward and found that tho
ground seemed to slope toward tho
point whence tho noiso camo.
"Walking on slowly with outstretched hands, groping, you may
say, it was not very long before 1
struck against a wall of rock. Ito
tracing my way 1 came against another, equally solid.
"'I am swallowed in a cleft I'
thought I uhudderingly, 'high, nardeoper and deeper
row,
with every inch and leading God
knows where t to tho bowels of tho
earth perhaps I'
"Crushed by this discovery, for
awhile I was powerless to advance a
stop, but then, as I had nothing to
lose, I determined to make an effort
to press on and leave no stono unturned that might set mo at liberty.
Creeping little by littlo down the
stony gorgo, I was at last close to
tho point whenco thoso panting puffs
came. Xly heart beat liko a hammer.
" 'It is a precipice,' I thought, 'and
tho wheezing bound the wind in its
depths. Better bo lulled outright
than die a Blow death of starvation I'
"And I put out my foot expecting
to encounter only spaco. Instead I
stumbled over something soft and
fell forward. Blindly I felt about
mo and my hand touched somothing
warm a human face
"I felt again, running my hand
along tho body as tho blind explore,
and mado out a dress Liko a flash
it dawned upon mo. 'Nina, Nina!' J
cried aloud, my voico rolling and ro
verborating liko tho voice of a thousand.
"Sho was not dead.oithor, for it
was tho Bound of hor breathing that
I had takon for a wind in tho subterranean depths or tho sinothorod rushing of a volcanic stream. I caught
hor hands I chafed thorn in mino
but it is useless, monsieur, to go ovoi
again thoso dragging moments of agony when I walked over tho hall
doad body of my love, or thoso
of mingled joy and torturo
when her returning consciousness
had to struggle with tho fearful reality.
"I told hor as well as I could whoro
wo wore and how wo had como thoro.
To hor piteous pleas for comfort I
could only respond with a sorrowful
silonco or an equally piteous entreaty
to hor to bo hopeful.
"At that moment, sir how
kM
0
"
IJr
WwmmQmmi WEAK MEN
WHO ARE DEBILITATED AND SUFFERING
from Nervous Debility? Seminal Weak
ness.losses.prains.impotency
1.
or,
Lost Manhood. Rheumatism. Lame
(Ml tftsJOK
JPrUtM &j
HmmLMMM&-Back. KidneV Troubles. Nervousness
WSmuMimiMMMWIm
mm
WTnfwP
'HlhMiTan HllfllfimrTlR'Vlirilinl'.C
irT&'
ImK
MMffi wLiLJn
HEBH
Btrangely does tho aspect of things
chango as tho wheel of Hf o goes I
wo would both of us havo given ten
years of our lives to havo escaped
from our living tomb. Now I at
least would not for wods have
that experience. I should then
never havo known thoso bitter-swee- t
hours when my love and I, buried
tonother and with death staring us
in tho face, wero drawn together by
1 10 strongest tie humanity knows
tho boi 1 of a common adversity.
"When at Inst, on my persuasion,
Nina sought to move Bho fell back
helpless with a loud cry of pain; she
had sprained her anklo and could
not stir without agony. Nothing
could be done but to lio thoro where
sho had fallen.
"How long wo remained thus I do
not know. Hunger and thirst came
in timo two new troubles added to
the rest, Though wo could not lose
ourselVes in sleep, still our minds
wero tortured with waiting dreams
horrible to think of now. The strain
in truth was so hideously cruel that
Nina at times grew delirious, tossed
and writhed regardless of the pain
sho gave herself and filled the darkness with her heartrending cries.
"Then again peace would return
und she would cling to my hand for
human companionship simply to feel
that sorao one was near. As I say,
how long this lasted I do not know.
but suddenly, nftor an eternity of
torturo, a shiver bti'uck brusquely
through walls and floor, followed by
another and still another, accompanied at first by a faint rumble that
died away in tho echoing bowels of
the earth.
"But soon tho rumble grew to a
roar, the roar to thunder. Tho noise
was deafening, The rocky ground
heaved like tho ocean. It was my
turn now to lose my reason; I know
not what I did, but Nina tells me
that I seized her in my arms; that in
a frenzy of despairing lovo I covered
hor face, hor hands with kisses, cry
ing aloud wildly:
" 'If dio wo must, Nina, wo can nt
least dio together You are mino,
mine forever now; not even death
itself can part us.'
"Proportionately as 1 lost my
senses Nina became calm, besought
mo to regain my composure and
plended with mo to think only of
tho next world so near.
"But heaven ordered othorwise.
In tho midst of tho tumultuous toss
ing of tho earth tho roof of our cav
ern suddenly split in twain, letting
in no blinding a glaro of light that
even with our oyes closed our oye-balls felt as if pierced with redhot
knives. Eithor thi3 was tho signal
for quiet again or tho dying throe of
the giantcliained m thoao rock ribbed
vitr.ls; tho rumbling died away; the
sickening quaking ceased.
When wo at last dared to open
our eyes and look at each other we
found ourselves in a rift of comparatively Bhallow depth. Tho second
earthquake had been our saviour and
forced up tho bed of tho subterranean
gorge that imprisoned us porhaps
eighty feet."
"But how did you got out then?"
cried I, shivering with interest, as if
I myself had been tho victim of this
terrible catastrophe.
"With no troublo atall, monsieur,''
Mmo. le Quai responded, who hud
long sinco como from tho wntor and
now advanced from the shelter of
her bathhouse; "tho Caracas people
drew us out with ropes, you know.
Thoy had run ns usual to tho earth
quake ground to give what help they
could, and the rest was easy."
"My poor littlo girl I" murmured
her husband tenderly as ho drew her
to his sido. "You speak of it lightly,
but that earthquake cost you dearly
homo and fatlior at a blow, with
only a husband to balanco tho loss.''
"Exactly," sho answered, laughing
lightly and pulling him to his feet
with tho roguish abandon of a happy
child; "a husband too infatuated to
mind tho fact that owing to that self
his goddess -lsaino earthquako
imps I" Translated from tho French
of Do Boldoro by Henry Jordan foi
Now York Mercury.
d
I
McmnKo
of Wnr,
Where (ha Caiuel
s-
--
would be happier If ho could have a supply of
Blackwell's Bull Durham
Smoking Tobacco
For over twenty five years the standard smoking tobacco of the world.
--
More Popular than Ever.
To-da- y
To have a good smoke anytime and every time it
iu
ANDIN ILICTH.C CO., 172 First
UMle-an- 4
iinpcwsi-Wlity.-li-
tt, PORTLAND
OKQOIi.
"- -
only necessary to
Plants.
"Why grow late berries that only glut the market at
Vandyke, who was a pupil of
Rubens, had much prido in his own low prices? Plants are carefully trimmed and well put up
work, as is shown in the following for mail or expiess.
Must be sold in next few weeks.
tale: The canons of a certain church
j9SCall
to P. O. or at residence, North
door
next
asked him to paint a picture for
E. HOEER, Salem.
Salem.
.
done
and
them, and whon it was
thoy saw it tho canons called him u
"dauber," and went away disgusted
Vandyke was only a young man then
u
and had no redress, but after awhile
picture
C
upon
the
some critics passed
and declared it to be wonderful. The
canons were sorry for their mistake,
c
and to make amends pive him a
cd
WO
commission for two move pictures.
O
u
dignity,
and
on
his
was
But Vandyke
Ph
he sent them word that there were
u
plenty of "daubers" in then- own
0
&
of
rplace without calling upon those
H
Antwerp. Harper's Young People.
rH
l
'
nro very small, yot possess all the vir-tuof tho larger Xutt's I'llls which A
havo been so pom .arfor thirty Jrears.1
g
coui- Their alio and
mend them for the use of children
and persons with ivcakstomachs. For
es
sugar-coatin-
LU
f
U
o
CD
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r
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o
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oM O
en
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o 3 u
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food to assimilate, nourish tho bodyM
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or griping. Both sizes of Tutt's I'llls
are sold by all druggists. Dose small. iB
XTlce,acc. OEM, HI) to 111 nus'n St, S. I.
heart
D
V)
9 they
Sick
Headache
are Invaluable as they cause tho
new
en
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r
Tutt'sTw Fills
CfLMiLES
m
m
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ert
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lagan, Ilucbtnan, Mich." It. B- - btutson. Wars
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Illustrated book F1U:K at dnuurlsu, or address
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ctf
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CO
me.-L-
A 2
Dr.Mlloa' Modlcal Co.,Elkhart,lnd.
Bold by D, J.Fry, drut'gtfit.Fplcm.
XEE7ssumnus
Act on a new principle
reenlate the liver, stomach
tad Dowels through thi
nirvtt. Dr. Mara' l'nxa
tpttdily curt biliousness,
torpid liver and constlpv
tlon. Smallest, mlMest,
snrestl 5pdoitee,2Bct3.
frsM nr iim.ii.lDti
SrmiilftM
'laHti.Cs.aklurt.Uti
druggiBt, Salora
--
Fo
A.rrz3EnNr'a
go
u
o
CLEAN!
Ii you would
be clean and have your clothes done up
in the neatest and dressiest manner, tako
them to the
SALEM STEAM LAUNDRY
where all work is done by white labor and in the
most
prompt manner.
E.M. Wake
UTSTPATHTSjSIWITH
5Sl2yrS?
tamVEWHTS.
5JS
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Sum,
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hut, uiu u.,u.
urtMtur
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iw.IwUmwm
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the city.
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OVER
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Paper Hanesrand Dftwirarnr.
MWteB
Saw.
r.t?.he
OREGON.
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.ibeitv St tvt
Wood
TJRUUK,
'jlZrS,'!
:
(
-
-
he
I
nanai
Buy early stock.
year.
A Story of a Great I'ulnter.
N
.
JStew
v,
is
Strawberry
Early
ynvw
..i
,rra?.,
ana sooming
get Bull Durham.
Jilnti'a Sliarc.
BLACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO..
Countless stories nro told about
DURHAM, N. C.
Jun Lane and diet Thomas by old
Kansans. Theso two men were the
pet politicians of the state. Jim was
bold and Cliet was sly. Once Lane
visited Junction City to make a Choice
speech on Sunday.
"If thero is any objection to my
speakin," ho remarked to the committee, "tell 'cm I've been a MethNOW IS THE TIME TO PLANT THEM.
odist on probation for forty years."
Dozen.
Per 100.
A great crowd gathered to hear
'
fertilize
Crawford,
5
and
No.
City.
Bubach
him. Ho did not liko Junction
Looking over tho beautiful strotch
each other, and best combination for
of prairie he began his speech in
' 25cts
$2 00
large, early berries for home market.
very solemn tones, saying
"God has done much for your Matteson, only a few hundred left; earli
city."
est berry in Salem market tor several
All his hearers seemed to think so.
3 00
50 "
"God has done much for your
years
city," ho said again slowly and
thoughtfully.
It was very still; Warn" eld, early, a great bearer and most
2 50
great
crowd
held its breath, and
25
the
beautifulfruit
Lane continued:
"
2 50
25 "
"God lias done much for your city Pearl, early and "a pearl."
man very little."
3 00
25 "
It was five minutes before tho au- Oregon everbearing
dience quit yelling at this. Such
Have many other varieties. Can recommend any of
men as George W. Martin and John
Speer rolled over the ground in a fit above as especially early varieties.
Should be put out in
of laughter. "Tho Sunny Side of next few weeks on well prepared soil to get crop next
Politics."
ELrmCBELT
It round.
y
The Man in the Moon
It is all good and always good.
do-6ire-
DR. SnNDBN ELECTRIC BELT
J
When suddenly tlieso in r.i 111 the (ilutn
o)tlud llieacosenf
And bathed thw
pain,
Lighting tho dull ny nkle with vuindrou
light
As golden it thy hoard whlcji iilivrn keep.
From jwlnt ti 110I11I I taw tho twtrai life leap.
Until, the ulmlo wo.-l- .l lit, the iilugle thought
Wus that (if I'aur.
'1 l:u
orlil wok lint lets brigh
With Uioinir .iT'i'mruf thccentU night,
for the thr.-- beacons of the iuiren uun
Wlthlu all l.itii la n work of (,'l.ulncss wrought
It ivili hi trj r.il'li of h nht luug fouuht
With uiIsl''.') n.i'l 1. ooiu nail .d despair.
And light had ntu;i trul all an day was done.
And hcurt.iurHllcd by Dnubt were still unwou
For theso lb rev rnyn of glory were to me
Tbo nnsw ur lit tb or'en whispered prayer
One Faiib, oi.e Hope. Ibe other Ixive moat fair
Tbo raj of (Icil hk h light all misery.
-- Flavel Seott Mint's In Harper's Weekly.
Among tho natives of Australia
uotched and carved sticks aio used
for messages. For instance, u piece
of wood carried from one village to
unothor, with straight and curved
linos cut upon it, is a message of
war and moans: "Thoro is a light on
hand. Fetch your spears and oooin
umngs."
Tho North American Indians have
utilimV wampum belts from time eold by D. J.
immemorial tor liko purposes. The
arrangement of tho different colbred
beads convoys tho signification
Ynukeo Bludo.
fSLEEPLESSNESS.FbORMEMORV&GENERAUlLLHEALTH
Tho camel is found in Arabia, Perj effects of abuses, excesses, worry and exposure. For such - jfferen sia, Asia Minor, Afghanistan, Balui
iu our marvelous invention, which requires but ft trial to convince th.e most sleptlcM. chistan, Mongolia, wostem China
M'MVtl a relief and cure
or by excewM, or epoure, yomuty have unduly drained your system of netve forci and northern India, as well us in
Florence of effects
fsmsi llty wldk
electricity and thus caused your wcakueM or lack of force. It you replace into rout Syria, Turkey, north Africa and
drained, which are required for vigorous strength, you will remove the cause, and health, parts of SiMiin. Tho camel is known
thus
yetes the element
low at once nd In a natural way. This Is our plan nd treatment, aud we guarantee a by the same root word in nearly ..all
stfttttftlt awl vigor will foU
Send for our Illurtrated l'awphlets, free sent by matl, sealed.
cum or MMjr rtfumtal.
tlieso lands; not a page scarcely of
thousands to rolmst heaKh ana Tir,
BK Is so experiment, as we have restoredthroughout
KlMtfk
SmmUh's
Dr.
an Arabia lexicon but it has reference
would tfadl
who
State,
thta
cases
by
fatted,
shewn
of
hundreds
be
as
can
tfMtWHMM
wr
aitr U
wbem we have strong letters bearing testimony to their recovery after using w BsJt. to tho camel; tho language itself, acW
testify, mmI foM
cording to Hammer Purgstall, kuowa ,
kirn by 5,74 name, Tho only reason J
iffliti
why Soripturo is comparatively silent
WtwM to be easily wnm during wwk or at ret, and It gives soothing, neolonged cnrrentl
Mivtalc lUry wufe
k c eempiete
the fai beoaufie the tonography of the
Wnntrtn sWHse
weaV.
all
part, nr we forfeK $5,000. It has an Iuapvnvni
I.ieti are instantly ek tnronout ,
nans,
or
LtaiL tt ta cure any of the above weaknesses, and to enlarge shrunken limbe, or
Holy Laud in such that in most parts
iciest boon ever givest weak
or oM awn, and v.W ewe
Tfcy are graded in strength to meet all stages of weakness In )oung,
the use of the caniola u aa
L.
nr liiM month. AddMM
& 31 Zweaetr bs CLrin- -'
IW
SUH.
OF
SET
I