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Parent Issue
Day
8
Month
October
Year
1897
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

MES. ELLA M'GAEVY. Writing to Mra. Pinkham, Says: - I have been using your Vegetable Compound and find that it does all that it is recommended to do. I have been a suffcrcr for the last four was persuaded to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. and today, I am feeling like a new woman. - ■ Mks. Ella McGarvt, Neebe Road Station, Cincinnati, O. Iiydla E. Finkham's I.iver Pilis work in unisón with the Compound, and are a sure cure íor constipation and sick-headache. Mrs. Pinkham's Sanative Wash is frequently found of great valué for local application. Correspondence is freely solieited by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. , Lynn, Mass., and the strictest confidence assured. All druggists sell the Pinkham's remedies. The Vegetable Compound in three forms - Liquid, Pilla, and Lozenges. TÏE M YORK WORLD THR1CE=A=WEEK EDITION. 18 Pages a Week . . . . . . 156 Papers a year FOR ONE DOLLAR. Published every Altérnate Day except Sunday. The Thrire-a-Week Edition of The Nbw York World is tirst among all "vveekly" papers in size, frequency of publication, and the freshness, accuracy and variety of its contents. It has all the merits of a great $6 daily at the price of a dollar weekly. lts political nevvs is prompt, complete, accurate and impaitial as all its readers will testify. It is against the monopolies and for tlie people. It prints the news of all the world, haviug special correspoudence trom all important news points on the globe. Itlias brilliant illustrations, stories by great authors, a capital humor page, complete markets, departments for the housebold and women's work and other special departments of unusual interest. We offer this unequaled newspaper and The Argus toctether one year for $1.70. ïhe regular subscription price of the two papers is $2.00. REMEMBER, THE ARGUS THE WORLD $1.70 PER YEAR OLD BARBERS ARE SCARCE. After Rcachiug 40 They Usually Retire or Euter Anothfcr Occupation. "Did yon evprnotiee, " said a veteran tonsorial artist, who hnd shaved New Haveuers since 18ÏS, to a New Haven Register man, "that you only sec a few oíd barbera?" "Why is it?" "Thore are a gcod many reasons," answerert the veteran kuight of the blade. "I suppose the chief one is that a barber's hand becomes uusteady after he gets to be about 40 yoars oíd and he has to give np. A goorï many barbers drink hard, and that uiakes their nerves and hands luifit for service, and they retire before they cut their customers türoats. fcjtiU, 1 will say tbat in all mj experience of 37 years I never saw a man badly cut by a barber, not eveu by au accident for which the barber was not responsible. " "What becomes of the barbers af ter they retire?" "Oh, soine of them go to the poorhouse, " he replied, with a twinkle in his eye, "and sorne of them, who have saved their wages, bny little places and live on them, perhaps running a farm. Some of tliem, of course, go into othcr business, perhaps bookselling or else become insurance agents. I have heard of barbers who gave up the business and became butchers. This isn't such a wide difference fxom their former business (what are you laughing at?) as it might seem. No, I don 't mean that they learn to carve people or even to skin them in the barber business, but they learn how to handle a blade skillfully and they inake first class meat cuttei-s. " Pure blood is the secret of health. Burdock Blood Bitters insures pure blood

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Subjects
Ann Arbor Argus
Old News