NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Chiffon flounces rival lacea. Snake jewelry is still the rage. Many of the hats are plate-shape. Miss Braddon loves horseback riding Church weddings arc on the decline Ivy wreaths are suitablo for large ne< hats. The "Princess" dress shows oS a good figure. Jewelers say that fancy stones arc in great demand. The newest gloves are stitched in con trasting colors. Sarah Bernhardt indulges in a little harmless sculpturing. Miss Susan B. Anthony advises young women to study law. Twenty-three States now admit women to practice at the bar. The Princess Louise is an author, a sculptor and an artist. Mrs. Belva Lockvvood is a gigantically tall and slender person. Olive Harper walks with a crutch and has a plain but genial face. More trained nurses marry than any other class of women workers. Small brooches in fantastic forms aro popular among the ladies of Paris. Prizes for bread-making aro popular this year at young ladies' seminaries. Five women on the Chicago Health Board are paid SI,OOO a year as inspec tors. Bound pearl buttons aro once more iu vogue, and a very nice trimming they make. Many of the eye-glasses and lorgnettes carried by women of fashion arc bound in gold. Princess Beatrice may bo said to bo decidedly stout, as she weighs 210 pounds. Use dark green on a black dress and blue on a black hat if you waut to be un common. "Carmen Sylva," otherwiso Ilei Majesty of lioumania, is forty-wen years old. Miss Nevins, a Brooklyn gfrl, gives lessons iu photography and earns a nice sum thereby. The Brighton cheviot, a choice mate rial, comes iu small reversible check pat terns and yards wide. Tho British Astronomical Association has elected Professor Mary E. Byrd, of Smith College to its membership. That Tired Feeling Prevails with Its most enervating and discouraging effect In spring und early Hummer, when the toning effect of the cold air Is gone and the days grow wurmer. Hood's Sarsaparilla speedily overcomes '•that tired feeling," whether caused by change of climate, season or life, by overwork or illness, and Imparts that feeling of strength and self-confidence which is comforting and satisfying. It also cures 6lck headache, biliousness, Indigestion or dyspepsia. Hood's Sarsaparilla Solrl by all drugßlst*. $1; KIX for $3. l»reparoJ only bye. 1. HOOD & (JO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Jluaj. IQO Doses One Dollar Evt RY M° THEB 81iould Have a* iin The Hotiiie. JJrojtpe<l on Sugar, Children Lovo ***£ Johnson's Anodtnk Likimknt tor Croup, Colds. Borv Throat, Tonsllltis, Colic, Cramps arid rains. Re lieves Bummer Complaints, Cuts, bruises like magic. TIT INK OF IT. In use over -to VKAIiS in one family* Dr. 1. B,i Johnson & Co.- It is sixty years since 1 first learned or your Johvsok's Anodtnk Liniment, tor more than forty yearn 1 have used it inmyfatnilv j regard It as one of the best and safest family remedies that can be found, used Internal or external, in alt case*. O 11. I Mi ALLS, Deacon 2nd Baptist cfmrch. Pangor, Me. Every Sufferer [, r ,r von* Hendache, Diphtheria, Coughs, Catarrh, bronchitis. Asthma, Cholera Morbus, IHarrfuea, Lameness. Soreness in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, will find in this old Anodyne relief and sDeedy cure. Pamphlet free. Sold every whero. Price ft ets.. by mail. G bottles, Lxpresn paid, 82. I. S. JOHNSON & CO.. Boston. Mam. "German Syrup" Martinsville, N.J., Methodist Par sonage. "My acquaintance with your remedy, Boscliee's German Syrup, was made about fourteen years ago, when I contracted a Cold which resulted in a Hoarseness and a Cough which disabled me from filling my pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. After trying a Physician, without obtaining relief- —I cannot say now what remedy he prescribed —I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle. I received such quick and permanent help from it that whenever we have had Thrr it or Bronchial troubles since in our family, Boscliee's Ger man Syrup has been our favorite remedy and always with favorable results. I have never hesitated to report my experience of its use to others when I have found them troubled in like manner.'* REV. W. H. Haggarty, of the Xewark, New a q a f e Jersey, M.E. Confer ence, April 25,*9 O. Remedy. « G. 0. C.REEN, Sole Mnn'fr.'Woodbury,N.J. TTT? A T VW CALENDAR «»<* fuTrt iXlJXilj JL XX far,' for each day or \i. 30c. Few left, will mail for 12c. each to close. *450,000 in lor t li«* iiihnncn- economic**!! 1891 Cook Book A|f||| NVkak, Nkrvohs, Wrktchkd mortals tret SIOK as,r. sx free. I>r. .1. 11. IIV l\ Kdttor, buffalo, N. V. UAV CCUCD CURED f0 STAY cured. IIHI I£ 112 Lit We want tfte name and ad dress of every sufferer in the &A QT II EkA ft U.S. ana Canada. Address, HOI (1 Iflft r.Euoiiiu>ju,H.D.,tiiii^o,ah. A BIG FLOATING MARKET. X.OTS OP THINGS TO EAT AND DRINK ON AN OCEAN LINER. An Immense Quantity of Meat, Fish anil Other Goods—A Great Steam er's Ample Storeroom. Going down to Chief Steward Thomp son's room on the Teutonic, one is ad mitted with much hesitation to the mys teries of tho various stores. Tha storo deck is n thing apart from the rest ot the ship and is kept scrupulously clean. Take the fish room for example. It is twelve by fourteen feet square probably, and well filled with largo blocks of ice. Piled upon this ice are twelve or thirtren hundred pounds of fresh fish, iucluding, when the ship leaves New York, salmon, cod, halibut, smelts, bass and black fish. This quantity is sufficient for a voyage one way only. When tho Teutonic leaves Liverpool her fish stores will include turbot. brett, sparling, salmon, cod and halibut. The sparling is a small fish, corresponding quite closely to our smelts and, like the smelt, is a great lavorite with ocean travelers. In the dry refrigerating room next to the fish room, tho temperature of which is kept by the ammouiu process down to twenty-eight degrees 01 thirty degrees Fahrenheit, one sees, when the vessel loaves New York, a number of barrels of oysters to begin with, which belong to private individuals; a number of tins of oysters and claius which belong to tho ship's stores, a number of cans of pickled oysters, two or three barrels of lobsters, a thousand head of poultry and kidneys, tripe and sausago galore; and every whero ice, ice until one's eyes grow cold looking at it. Twelve or thirteen carcasses of lambs recently slaughtered, throe veals, three fat cows, two large pigs, forty or fifty carcasses of sheep, hang in full view amid the ice. Close by is a fat, juicy- , looking English mutton, brought out from Liverpool on the last voyage. Si.\ or eight sucking pigs hang near by; in a , corner 600 weight of salt pork is packed. One thousand pounds of corned beef , adorn another corner and sixty or seven ty beef tongues hang from hooks in the deck beams overhead. "We left Liverpool," said the chief steward, "with 1833 pounds of salt but ter for use by the crew and steerago pas sengers both ways; we also had 1180 pounds of Kiel butter for the use of the saloon passengers. We had 1500 tins of preserved milk, 1831 tins of preserved beef, 800 pounds of coffee for the use of the steerage and crew, COO pounds of fine-grade coffee for the use of the saloon t passengers, 200 tins each of jams, jellies and marmalades, 2000 tablets of soap, t 350 pounds of fiue black tea for the use ! of the saloon passengers, 400 pounds of ■ black tea for the use of the steerage pas- j sengers, 900 pounds of split peas, 2000 i pounds of raw sugar,24oo pounds of lint- 1 1 sugar, a large quantity of white Cala- 1 ' vauces beans, which are a great favorite i with the voyagers, eighteen dozen cab- I 3 bages and a large quantity of turnips and - 1 carrots. "Our sugar, coffee and tea arc all pro cured in Liverpool from tbo company's own private stores, From this source also we get all our pickles, sauces, pates dc foie gras, caviare and the like. From our own stores we get for the voyage also eighty or ninety hams, 15,000 pounds of bacon, fifty cases of preserved beef, ICO cases of beer, twenty boxes of eggs, 700 or 800 pounds of salt fish for use on Fridays, two or three barrels of salt herring, and two or three barrels of red herring. The preserved beef and salt fish are provided mainly for use in the contingency of a breakdown. For the same reason we provide seventy or eighty gallons of condensed milk, which is purchased in New York, and 180 bar rels of hour, for we keep our stock of flour up to about that limit. "Our lettuce,salad and berries are pur chased in New York, and our ice cream, in quantities sufficient for the voyage both ways, is put up for us in your Amercian metropolis in large freezers. For the round trip we provide 350 quarts of ice cream, which, as you see, is kept in this room by itself, packed in ice and salt. "Of course, we get our fresh milk from both sides, as much in Liverpool as here,22o gallons of it at a time; aud our cream we provide in the same way. Corn meal, which we could not procure in Liverpool, we buy in New York—about a hundred pounds at a time. We also purchase in this city for the voyage 500 pounds of onions aud twelve crates of tomatoes. "Our fruit we buy for the single voyage just before leaviug port. For instance, we have just now purchased and stowed away twenty-six boxes of oranges, four teen barrels of fpples, 200 boxes of strawberries, seven bunches of bananas aud fifty or sixty pineapples. In New York, also, we purchase for use until we return here six hundredweight of new potatoes. "Of the supplies that we buy hero in New York to last us until wo return to this city I may mention tinned pears, as paragus, tomatoes, peaches, pineapples and apricots. All our cheese is bought in Liverpool. In our flour room we keep 180 barrels of flour, which wo buy in Liverpool, as a constant reserve, being a quautity sufficient for use during three voyages, in case of accident. "This is not a plentiful time of year for game, of course. We buy in either market the game in senson at the time. Just now for our voyage eastward we have taken on board twenty-tivo dozen squabs, lifteen dozen plover, thirteen dozen snipe and thirteen dozen pigeons. When we sail from Liverpool during the season we supply ourselves thero with grouse, hare, partridges, pheasants and venison. "AH our mineral waters, cliftmpagnes, clareut, ales, stout, brandies and whiskies we get from our own stores in Liverpool, where wo bottle them ourselves aud where we also prepare our own dried dried fruit. We use al>ou 1 12. eighty cases of mineral waters on a voyage." lVrsons aeeu-itoinod to the narrow iu wiugii cveu ihts great hotels of New York maintain their pantries and supply rooms, and having in mind the even narrower quarters Jn which moat > private families content themselves with stowing away tfceir edibles, would be greatly surprised to see the cxtensivo 1 area devoted on a great ocean liner to the accommodation and arrangement of the various stores. A low estimate of the superficial area devoted to this pur pose would be several thousand square feet. The store deck is separate and apart from the rest of the ship, and on a vessel like tho Teutonic the eighty odd assistant stewards and cooks sleep in 1 quarters immediately adjacent, though below and some distance removed from the scene of their labors in order that they may be, as the chief steward says, easily found when they arc wanted. Close at hand are the butcher shops, bake shops and kitchens. Tho tempera ture in the main kitchen is, by means of steam, kept during meal hours evonly at over 100 degrees, so that every edible in the apartment may have no chanco to got cold. Steam boxes, subdivided by numerous shelves are at one side to re coive and keep until called for tho vari ous dishes of meat and game as they leave the hands of tho cook who has pre pared them. At midnight every day the bakers and pastry cooks begin to pre pare the next morning's meals. Thero is indeed no time during the voyage when there is not more or less activity in the department of tho the chief steward, and method above all things character izes his management on ships liko the Teutonic. In a large refrigerator on the same deck, and not far away from tho kitchens, a constant supply of cold meats is kept, so that, no matter at what hour of the day or night it be, if a passenger feels the desire for a cold cut or a sand' wich, the materials from which to supply his request are always ready. From hooks attached to the rafters of the kitch en roof, or, nautically speaking from tho deck overhead, hang hundreds of indi vidual tea and collee pots, ready tor the uso of the saloon passenger*) at any mo ment. Cooks, bakeis, pastry cooks and stewards are at all hours on the qui vive to supply any but the most unreasonable demand, aud evca casual inspection uu der tho escort of the chief steward, of the stores, pantries and kitchens of an ocean racer is amply sufficient to satisfy the hungriest visitor that an ocean voy age under present conditions is a god send to a fivo-mcal-a-day man.— JS'eto York Recorder. WISE WOttDS. All tho glorified feel that they have had an easy market. From the lowest depth there is a-path to the loftiest height. It is a great defect in men to wish to rule everything, except themselves. Oh, banish the fears of children 1 Con tinual rains upon the blossoms are hurt ful. Find earth where grows no weed, and you may find a heart where no error grows. Nothing is ever done beautifully, which is done in rivalship; nor nobly, which is done in pride. True glory takes root, and even spreads; all false pretenses, like flowers, fall to the ground; nor can any counter feit last long. Farmers who feed their pigs and cat tle good corn, and pay no attention to what kind of books or papers their children are reading, make a big mis take. What a pity it is that men should take such immense pains, as some do, to learn those things, which, as soon as they become wise, they take so much paius to unlearn. A charitable untruth, an uncharitable truth and an unwise management of truth or love, are all to be carefully avoided of him that would go with a right foot in the narrow way. In a world there is so much to be done, how happy that there is so large a por tion of daylight; in a world where there is st» much to be suffered, how merciful that there is also so much light. There can be no real fear or reverence or seriousness of heart, until a man has come to understand, at least in some measure, what he is, that is, to realize hii own awful structure and destiny. Alligators as 11 Commodity. Beside the hido of tho alligator, of which 50,000 or 00,000 are annually utilized in the United States, there are other commercial products obtained. The teeth, which are round, white and coni cal, and as long as two joints of an average finger, are mounted with gold or silver, and used for jewelry, and for teething babies to play with. They are also carved into a variety ol forme, »uch as whistles, buttons and cane handles. This industry is caried on prin cipally in Florida. Among Chinese drug gists there is a great demand for alliga tors' teeth, which are said to bo pow dered and administered as a remedy. As much as a dollar apiece is paid by them for line teeth. All the teeth of the alli gator are of the class of conical tusks, with no cutting or grinding apparatus, and hence the animal is forced to feec chiefly on carrion, which is ready pre pared for his digestion. Other com mercial products of the alligator are the oil and musk pods. The tail of an alli gator of twelvo feet in length, on boil ing, furnishes from fifty to seventy pints of excelleut oil, which, in lirazil, is used for lighting and m medicine. The oi! has been recommended for tho cure of quite a variety of diseases. It has a high reputation among the swampers as a remedy for rheumatism, being given botb inwardly and outwardly. Laugh. There is more benefit in a good laugh than in all the hot water remedies, faith cures, colli water, electric and all other new-fangled treatments in tne world, and it does not cost anything. Laugh. If you know of uothing else to laugh at laugh at your neighbor. lie is probably improving his health by laughing at you.— AUiiHWi (Jlvbe. A Huge Stone. At Baalbec, in Syria, the traveler sees at the quarry, nearly ready to be moved from the pillars that support it, a stone 71x14x13 feet, containing 12,922 cubic feet. And this stone has waited for more than 1000 years. There are four stones nearly Its large, which have been transported a mile or more and put into the foundations of the Temple of the Sun. The ancients did know how to handle big stones, and wo have not yet quite reached their standard of size.— Hail Francisco Examiner. Tho earth's 1,500,000,000 human in habitants speak 3034 different languages and possess about 1000 different relig ious beliefs. Out of 600,000 applications for pat ents mnde during the past century, 385,- 000, or a little over fifty per cent., have been issued. There is more catarrh In this section of the country than all other diweuwon put together, and until tho last l'cw years was HUpi>oscd to he incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing: to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in curable. Science has proven catarrh to bo a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. .1. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is tho only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly upon the blood and inwous surfaces of the system. 1 hev offer £IOO for auy case it fails to cure, bend for circulars and testimonials. Address _ 0 ~ , F - J * C " ENE X CJo., Toledo, O. Sold by_Drutjfcists, 75c. OVER 5,000,000 little Russians were born last year. Hyi np of KiiiN, Produced from the laxativo and nutritious Juico of California figs, combined with tho medicinal virtues of plants known to bo most lieneflcial to the human system, acts gently on the kidneys, liver aud bowels, effectually cleansing tho system, dispelling colds aud headachos, and curing habitual constipation. The Convenience o! >oll«l Train*. The Erie is tho only railway ruuning solid trains over its own tracks between New York and Chicago. No change of cars for any clat* of passengers. Hates lower than via. any otiioi lirst-class line. btopped tree by OK. KLINE'S GKKAI NKKVK KKSTOHKK. NO nts after lirst day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise ami trial bottio free. Dr. Kline, I*3l Arch St., I'hila., I'a. There's a patent medicine I which is not a patent medicine paradoxical as that may sound. It's a discovery! the golden discovery of medical science ! It's the medicine for ; you—tired, run-down, exhaust ; ed, nerve - wasted men and women ; for you sufferers from diseases of slcin or scalp, liver or lungs—it's chance is with | every one, it's season always, because it aims to purify the fountain of life—the blood— upon which all such diseases depend. The medicine is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The makers of it have enough confidence in it to sell it on trial. That is—you can get it from your druggist, and if it doesn't do what it's claimed to do, you can get your money back, every cent of it. That's what its makers call taking the risk of their words. Tiny, little, sugar-coated granules, are what Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are. The best Liver Pills ever invented; ac tive, yet mild in operation; cure sick and bilious head aches. One a dose. N Y N U—23 DADWAY'S II READY RELIEF. THE CHKAI'JLST ANi> UEMT MED]. OINK FOR FAMILY USE IN THK WOllLI). NKVKK FAILS TO KKUKVE PAIN. Cnms and Prevents Colds, Coughs, Soro Throat, liillaiuiiiutlon, Rheu uiutisiEi, Nourultfla, 11 c-ad.no ho, Toothache, Asthma, lMfll cult. Breathing. CURES THE WORST PAINS In from on© to twenty minute*. Not oue liour after roadm* this advertise. OH'tu need any oue SUKFEK WITH I'AIN. I.NTKHNALLY, a half to u tco«i»K>nful In half a tumbler of water will In a few minutes cure Cramps, spa/tins, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomiting, Heart turn, Nervomnefw, SlceplewmeHs, Sic'-- Headache, Diarrhoea, Colic, Flatulency and all lnt*nal pain*. 3llc. Pfr Hoi lie. Hold hv DrugglitA. DADWAY'S n PILLS. An Excellent and Mild Cathartic, Purely ■vegetable. Tho safest ami liest medicine in tho world for the cure of all disorder* of the Livor, .Stomach or Jiowrols. Taken according to dlroctlous they will restoi* health aml renew vitality. Price, 28c. a IH>*. Sold by all druggist*, or mailed by RADW AY & CO., Xi Warren htreot. New Yorlu ©n rocolpt of price. m I EWIS' 98 % LYE I Powdered and Perfumed. St range.it anil pu rest I ,jo mado. A Makes the bent ]ierfuined Hard "Hoap in'JO minutes without boil ing. It is the best for softening water, cleansing waste pipes, V disinfecting sinks, closets,wash- MU ing bottles, paiuts, trees, etc. ML PENNA. SALT MFG. CO., lien. Agent*, Phi la.. Pa. PRI VAT E ■ 11.1 Wrt ■ Mm* I<a \ J* 11IV AT E TELEI'HO.N >■; ('On 01 Itroniluiiy. Now York. TELE PHONES sls rpcc TO I'l Ol'I.K Not .11A ftIIIKl». ■ FCI K .SEND UIIDREAM to O&IAHA MATRIMONIAL, WORLD, Omaha, Neiiranka, tor rh£K COPY ot l o.*t nu<i <'nrr>'B|M indent* paper i>uoll*ruM. WK offer YOU pleaannt work, exclusive ter ritory nnd over KM) per emit, profit from thenturf. Addresa, fucloKlngstamp, 'A HE LEWI) lUAM'FIii CO., Florence, Mass, A Wonderful Bronze Pagoda. A missionary who has settled in the province of Sz-Chuan, Central China, and who has visited the great Buddhist peak, Mount Omel,describes the temples around the base as still showing many wonderful works of art. Near the foot of tho mountain there still stands a pagoda of bronze fifteen stories high,be lieved to be upward of a thousand years old. From the ground to the polished ivory tip this immense structure is liter ally covered with delicate figures of men, beasts, birds end reptiles. Of fig ures of Buddha there are no less than 4700 •within tho province, most of them in the immediate vicinity of the sacred peak. A Magnificent Walnut Tree. A veneer mill in Grand Rapids, Mich., recently purchased a magnficent speci men of blister walnut, which cut up in to five logs twelve feet long and ouo seven-foot log, all of them as round and regular as if turned iu a lathe. The logs rango from forty-eight inches in diame tcr at the butt of the tree to thirty in ches, and will cut about 6000 feet of rare and very valuable stuff. It is to be cut into fancy veneers.— Philadelphia Record. Quit Everything Else. S. S. S., is the only permanent cure for contagious blood Taint Old chronic cases that physicians declare incurable; are cured in every instance where S. S. S., has had a > fair trial. I honestly believe that S. S. S., saved my life. I was afflicted with the very worst type of contagious blood poison and was almost a solid sore from head to foot. The physicians declared my case hopeless. I quit everything else and commenced taking S. S. S. After taking a few bottles I was cured sound and well. JThos. B. Yeager, Elizabethtown, Ky. PAINT. hnKrl RMuifieSAoDiTtoifgKAWl 111 I HI 1 I £ Q UA "-PARTOFOIL(fc'4 oar rU nfajMAKi.NG cos.Tjfrq*asl 25 , U?wifiTTseo'iN 7348BA&ERS no . A « ent "I" arranie with any active Merchant.—L. & M.—N. V. ANew Use for Petroleam The most marvellous results are now being obtaiued from the use of petroleum in the treatment of catarrh of the head and throat and lung troubles. Bend for pamphlet froe describing the new treat ment to the lIKALTn SrppLiKS Co., 710 Broadway, New Yc^k. BUY A BUFFALO Wyoming lot. Ifg the coming city of Wyoming. 1I»H water-work*, electric flouring mills. Located iu tho gardon ot Wyoming. Produced tho prize potato crop of the United States In 1890. J: or mapß aud information apply to . WAXN & TIIOM. Buffalo, Wyn. FRAZERAShB <*I£ST IN THE WOKLDUIICAdC ciot tuo Genuine* bold J£veryw&ur& BAGGY KNEES O reel j Pant Stretcher, Ar,?f at Harvard, Amhmt. and other OoUegee, also, by professional aa<i bunlneM men every WBere. If not for sale tn r«mr tow* tend *Q Q*£Kl«Y. 7 U Washington Street. Boston. DATCHITC T * Fitzgerald Kfl I tn! I 3 Wanhintioii. I>. C ■ n ■ m-MW ■ w 40 . PW book lrt . e . aar oowiM WITH HICH PRICES. —.. lu kind in ihe Cit/r .Middlemen'* or Tit MlDtlflU world, and OAT t Denlera'profits. KCr RIGERATORH ■I rjfcfcfS. Ovsr 1,000 Articles jss? SAFETIES direct to consumers, thereby V maklngc '* CHAINS. ■-'''? "112" LIBRARY DESKS. Kaacr Chairs, Korkers, iSM, FOLDING BEQt Mg~ Write at once tor Catalogue, : Send stamp* and mention good* wanted. ■■■ ' m\ -v- — a THE LUBURC MANUFACTURING CO. PHILADELPHIA. PA. !)'>'■ A 103, Kon. 341, 3U3, 323 .North taih Street. fPUHCH*SSys# to be done ? -—• e *SsT tf Vt —> Oujghb stands for Rehouse oughh to be cleaned' next" ti o.use>cle &n i njg &n abe co nvi n ced. ""IGBTOT? ' aw excuses no man,"and ignorance is no excuse for a dirty house or greasy kitchen. Better clean them in the old way than not at all; but the modern and sensible way is to use SAROLIO on paint, on floors, on windows, on pots and pans, and even on statuary. To be ignorant of the uses of SAPOLIO is to be behind the age. LPI Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. IQS Cures where all else fails. Pleasiuit and agreeablo to tlio frT* BASE BALL, Fains and Aches AND THE BEST REMEDY AKE INHEPAKAIIL FOR THE PROMPT, SURE CURE OF Sprains, Bruises, Hurts, Cuts, Wounds, Backache, RHEUMATISM, ST.JACOBS OIL HAS NO EQUAL. N Y N D—2,l Send for our ' 1 new book on constitutional or Blood Diseases, mailed free. The Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. pBTOBIfts UNEXCELLED! AI'PJjIEI) EXTERNALLY FOB Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pains in the Limbs, Back or Chest, Mumps, Sore Throat, Colds, Sprains, bruises, Stings of Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNA I.hV It net* like n charm lor Cliolora )lorl>iii, Dlnrrhcra, Dywim-ry, Colic, Cramp*, Naa- M'u, Hick Headache. Ac. Warranted perfectly harm I run. (See oath accompaay iaif racli hoille, al*o Hirpi'iioiid lor IINC.) 11M HOOTIIINU and I'KN KTIIA TINIi qaalilirM are It'll immediately. Try it aa«l be convinced. I'rlcc and.» 0 cvatn. Sold by all drn«- KININ. DEPOT, 411 MI'HRAYST., NEW VO'fK. RUPTURE CURED! Positively Holds Rupture. WOKX M«IITA!n>I»AY. tig ELASTIC Hasan AtlJuMnltlc I'mlnlilrhran nuulf Inntrrorhiuallcrloiiult G.V HOUSE MFG, CO. IPATKRT AUOFE) 744 BROMDWAY, N.V.CITY I r YOU WANT TO MAKE MONEY IP FAST AND DON'T KNOW HOW, »<>iid 10c. I I for catalogue, to \V. HA It VE V Hit EEN K, m .Michigan Ave., Detroit, Mirli.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers