Mrs. Fairbanks tells how neglect of I Mrs. Fairbanks tells how neglect of warning symptoms woman. She thinks woman's safeguard is Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Dr.Ait Mrs. TixKnAsi: Imoranco nnd neglect are the cause of untold female sullerinp;, not only with the laws of health but with the chance of a euro. I did not heed the warnings of headaches, orgnnio Eains, and general weariness, until I was well nigh prostrated. I knew I ad to do something. Happily I did the right thing. I took Lydia E. Plnkhnm's Vegetablo Compound faithfully, according to directions, and was rewarded in a few weeks to find that my aches and rains dis appeared, and I again felt the glow of health through my body. Since I nave been well I have been more careful, I havo also advised a number of my sick friends to take Lydia 12. l'lnkham's Vegetable Com pound, and they havo never had reason to be sorry. Yours very truly, Mrs. Mat Fairbanks, 216 South 7th St., Minneapolis, Winn." (Mrs. Fair, banks is one of the most successful and highest salaried travelling sales women in the West.) When women aro troubled with Irregular, suppressed or painful tnenstru atlon, weakness, lrucorrhcea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of tho ovaries, backache, bloating (or flatulence), funeral debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, or are) beset with such symptoms as dizziness, falntness, lassitude, excitability, irri tability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, " all-gone " nnd " want-to-bo-left-alone " feelings, blues, and hopelessness, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. l'lnkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such, troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, lor you need the beat. a, x . jar Kim ' V v with ease." Ho other medicine for femalo ills In the world bos received inch widespread and unqualified endorsement. Mrs. Plnkham Invites all sick women to write her for advice She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. $5000 FORFEIT If we cannot forthwith prodnee th original lettsrs and lfnatnr.esot above ft1'"1""1!. vliica will prove tlielr ahaolute ponutneness. Ljdla K. ltnkhain alodlsUi Co., Lynn, aiaia The number of cotton spindles In the principal countries of the world is as follow: Great Britain. 47,000.000; continent of Europe, 34,010,000; United States. North, 15,000,000; United Butcs. South, 7,000,000; East Indies, (.000,000; Japan, 1.500.000. FrrSnermannntlvmired. No ftt nrneprmn. tiesss'fer first div's nun of Dr. Kilns' (lre KerveKwtorsr.SatrlslhottlBsndtnotlsefrae Dr.R.H. Klix. Ltd., S3 1 Aroh St., Paila., p;t. Don't malte the mistake of riving a man advice which docan't confirm his own opin ion. Ksrlle.f (Ireen Onlnna, The John A. Palier Seed Co., T. Cross, Wis., always have something new, some trims' valuable. This year they offer among their new monev making vegetables an Earliet Oreen Eating Onion. It is a winner, Mr. Farmer and Gardener! JT7ST BEND TniS NOTICE AND 160. and thev will send you their big plant and eed catalog, together with enough seed to grow J.OOfl fine, solid Cabbages, 5.000 'icioua Carrots, 8.000 n'nnching. nutty Celery, i nrn. nnrrarv jettuce, 1.000 rindid Onjo-a. 1.000 rare, lusoiotu Fdih'. 1.000 glorioitalv bri'liant Flowers. In all over 10.000 nlants this great offev ts made to get you to teat their warranted vegetable seeds and all fob but ice. postage, providing you will return this notice, and if vou will send them 20c. in postage, they will add to the above a package of the fa mous Berliner Cauliflower. A.C.L. A man usually gets the laat word in an argument with hia wife because she gives it to him. IamaurePiao'sCure torConsumptlontaved my life three years ago. Mas. Thomas Rob. is, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 100. If poets are born their ancestors should be held responsible. Half a dozen firms practically con trol the meat output of this country, and own or otherwise control three fourths of the railroad cars used In transporting the meat from the ranch to the packing house and from the parking house to this market. SILOS, LUMBER, DOXES, GRATES. kou cannot afloru to da without a SII.O. Huu waul Iua (or moral, or ned any ilmbar, tlmbar. mill work to rapalr or build, or Boaaa, or Crataa, writ U. KL1AS k BRO.. Buffalo, K. Y., ana wM tba baat lor tha la.. I monar, (Ureot Jroiu tha ttiitnp. Catatonias rVXtt. i)f aaanta yaolad. al aiaBlrtW with Tt....i. - m "-' aJ Bsl8r will soon prostrate " Dear Mrs. Finkiiaii s For over two years I suffered more than tongue can express with kidney and bladder trouble. My physician pro nounced my trouble catarrh of the bladder, caused by displacement of tho womb. I had a lrequent desire to urinato, ana it was very pain ful, and lumps of blood would pass with the urino. Also lii.l backacue verv oiten. , 44 After writing to you, and. receiving your reply to my letter, I followed your advice, and feol that you and Lydia E. IMnkham's Vege table Compound liavo cured me. ine medicine drew my womb into its proper place, and then I was well. I never feel anv rain now. and can do mv housework Mrs. Alice Lajion, Kincaid, Miss. Dress and the Theater, Somebody says tho reason people don't go to the theater any more If because they don't like to dress up Now, what do you think ot that? In tho first place, nobody has to dress for the theater in New York If he doesn't feel like It, and In the second place he usually feels like dressing up, es pecially If he Is to take a lady with htm and who Isn't? From our baby hood every one of us has had a weak ness for our Sunday clothes, and there's not onn of us who doesn't feel happier tn them than In anything eUe. Now, honestly. Isn't this true? And wouldn't you think that a person who can afford to gJve up two dollars for an orchestra chair, could afford an evening suit or a smart frock or two? This Is no reason. Nor Is it because the theaters are too flno, as some in genious Idiot has suggested, and that the general. run of flat dwellers and working folks feel out of place In such rich surroundings. Nothing Is too good for your true American. Ye are all niultl-m.llllonaJrea tat heart, and the expression, "a champagne appetite with a ginger ale bank account." was never suggested by a manifestation of American modesty. We want all wo can get for the money, and none of us Is averse to sitting on pea green plush. Eleanor Franklin, in Leslie's Weekly. , Economy ts the road to wealth. Pct NAM FauklIlSS Uvks U the road to econ omy. Jealousy makes a woman think she can secure a monopoly on a man's love by act ing up. Mm Wlnslow's 3oothlnir3yru') for aMldrei tsthin.so(tentnerumj, rj4uieslufl:tm.n:i tton.aUaya pal a.oa ro wind aoilo. J5 j. a luttle Too many people only know by hearsay that it is more bleated to givo thaa 'to re ceive. The Wonderful Cream Separator, Does its work in thirty minutes and leaves leas than 1 per ceut. butter iat. 1'hs price is ridiculously low, according to size, 2.75 to fu.00 each, aud when you have one you would not part therewith tor hfty times its coat. JUST SEND THIS NOTICE with So. stamps for pottage to tho John A. Baker Beed Co., La C'roaae, Wis., and get their big catalogue, fully describing this remarkable Cream Separator, and hun dred at other tools and farm seeds used by the farmer. A.C.L. IVIih m .I..4 , . J I is usually is the eliiax direction. ' Charcoal for House Plants. Nothing Is so good, says Vlek's Mag azine, fur house plants as charcoal. Use It In lumps for drainage In the bottom of pots. Pulverize It and mix It with tho soil as you would use a fertilizer. It keeps the soli sweet and pure, makes vigorous growth and gives depth to the color of bojh foliage aud flower. Make Haste 8lowly. All farmers, advises Michigan Far mer, should keep an account with each crop. Then, farmers, stand by the ones that stand by you. Do not drop those you know how to grow for those you do not. Hold on to corn, wheat and clover while you are trying alfal fa, cow peas, sorghum, cc, and after you have got well acquainted and your new-found friends have really proved themselves bettor than the old ones, then, and not until then, would we bid the old ones adieu. I t the Carnation House. In tho carnation house watering must be done carefully and always on the forenoon of a clear day, If possible, to allow the house to dry up before night. When watering Is needed, a thorough one should always be given, enoiigll to wet the bench through, and yet you should not make It so heavy as to was all tho flno particles of manure through the bottom. Sometimes a bench will dry out In sM)tg. nnd tha spots should bo watered accordingly. Hut bear In mind always that nothing Is more harmful to plant llfo than re peated drllibllngs. James T. Scott in American Gardening. Rose Cuttings, A lady who Is quite successful In starting roses from cuttings, showed us her roso bed In which rose bushes of good size and vigorous growth were pointed out as having been started from cuttings, while Interspersed among tho various bunlios were small cuttings recently planted which gave equal promise of growth, each bring protected with a tumbler or a fruit Jar. Her method Is to take cuttings of roses which have had the bloom on, as It Is her Idea hotter bearing bushes will be obtained In that way. Mix plenty of sand with the dirt In which thoy are planted, and after pinching off all tho lower leaves (and of course the bloom if It has one) in sert pretty deepln the soil and press It firmly around them. Cover with a glass which should not bo removed for a month. The glasses were to be left on also through the winter as a protection from the cold. It might be well to mention that this rose bod ran through the mlddlo of a sunny back yard not Interfered with by the shade of trees or shrubbery. If any one Is looking for fascinating work none bettor can be found than experi menting with rose cuttings. Excellent Hog Houses. A few years ago the Iowa Agricul tural College began using a stylo of portable hog limine that has beon used by tho institution ever since. Where twine aro kept at somo distance from tho farm buildings, such houses make an excellent temporary sleeping ac commodation. Professor Curtlss gives the following method of constructing this style ot a hog house. The house is eight feet square. There ere four posts on each side, two by eight inches in size. The slcopers, Ave In number, which are two by four scantllng3, are made in runner shape, and aro eight feet long. Four plates are required which are also eight feet long. Three sets of rafters are used, which are cut in five-foot lengths. The ridgo polo is eight feet eight Inches long. The flooring is mado out of four boards, twelve by sixteen, cut In the center. The sides and ends are covered In with eight-Inch drop siding, with grooved Inch rough boards, ten by twelve, cut Into two pieces, without wasto for the roof. The win dow in the end is twenty-four by twenty-one inches, that in the roof two by five foet. The door Is made two feet six inches by two feet eight Inches. Whore not otherwise specified, the lumber is two by four inches. Where these houses are to be permanent, they may bo floored. It affords an excellent place for the sow at farrowing time and the window in the-rixif lots in sun light and warmth during the winter days. If used In the winter it is a good idea to bank up the house a little at the bottom. What a Farmer Needs Moat., But among farmers, as with all other classes, there is a class of unfortunates those who fall behind in the race. A word 1 of encouragement a helping hand If possible Is a very pressing need. Unfortunately this Is most dif ficult; for however loath we are to ac knowledge it we are nevertheless re luctantly forced to conclude that this man must bo his own physician. If you prove that wo are not the archi tects of our own fortunes, but creatures of circumstance, you leave him with out a shadow of hope. But prove the reverse, and you have already done a miracle In his behalf; and all he lacks is a few suggestions to strengthen hlu will. These, then, are some of his mora pressing needs: First He needs a strong determina tion to do the best, let come what will. Second Ho needs to hustle, to stick. He who moves tho faster and keeps his pace cannot be beaten in the race. Third He needs to be Industrious, economical, thoughtful and courageous. Fourth He needs to be absolutely boneet; not alone on moral grounds, but M an Investment, It is a good ad vertisement, costing nothing, yet bring Ing many customers. Fifth He needs to keep out of debt, save In extreme urgency. An eaVnent agricultural writer once said that farmer was scarcely Justified In going Into debt for anything except "tile and manure." Blx'th He needs to avoid staking his all on any oris linn, yet to make some one thing a specialty. This Is the ad vice one of our ex-presldents gave to a young man who afterward became president by heeding tho admonition. Seventh He needs to know that trusting to luck In a game of chance Is tho shoal upon which most barks have been wrecked In the world of finance. Eighth Ho needs to know that the first dollar is tho hardest to get, that a dollar saved Is two earned, and that a dollar so Invested that It returns an other will bring the answer in all en terprise. Ninth Flnr.lly he needs to "watch and pray," and the more watching he does the less praying he will need to do. Now York Tribune Farmer. Build up Your Own Dairy. The farmer who keeps cows to pro duce milk or butter needs a dairy cow. If beef Is the object In view he wants an entirely different cow. It Is Impos sible for him to produce both success fully and with profit from the same animal. Often I have this question asked mo by our patrons: "Where can I got cows giving a largo quantity of rich milk?" There are two ways of getting such animals one by purchasing, tho oth er by growing them yourself. A man who starts out to buy high class dairy rattle will soon learn that the man who understands his business Is not selling his best cows until their days of use fulness are past. When a man offers to sell a cow that promises to be a pood milker for any reasonable price tho buyer Is apt to discover after he purchases her that she deceives her looks and that she has some secret fault which will show it self later on. Dairymen who are cxccllont judges of cows will sometimes get hold of first class animals, but, as a rule, they will buy them from men who are not acquainted with their business and with whom the possession of a cow of this kind Is an accident. Even then only a few of these cows will come up to his requirements or give anything llko the satisfaction of those that ho might is I so himself, and I think that when he counts the time and money tliat ho spends In experimenting tn this way ho will come to tho conclu sion that tho best way for the dairy farmer to Improve tho quality of the herd Is by raising his own stock. It does not take bo many years to grow up a herd in this way as one might suppose. In raising up a herd himself there are several advantages to bo derived, tho principal one of which Is that he is ablo to control the breeding. Milking qualities aro hereditary, and the heifer whose sire's dam and grandam are also good milker's will be a good milker also. . In raising calves for the dairy al ways food for milk Instead of beef, and tho he i for Intended for tho dairy should r.ot have tho same treatment In feeding as tho heifer intended for calf production only. Tho dairy cow is better as a lean animal than as a fat ono, nnd sho should bo kept during her youth In such a way that she will not lay tho product of her food on her ribs but put it in tho pxll. Dairy and Creamery. Poultry Notes. For diarrhoea, give a half teaspoon ful of paregoric once a day until checked. . A cholera preventive, according to Iowa Homestead, is five cents worth of Vonetlan red added to the drinking water. A pill of asafoetlda, the size of pea, given night and morning, says Ohio Poultry Journal, is a good llmberneck remedy. For chicken pox .and swelled head equal pirts ot vinegar and lukewarm water, used morning and evening as a wash, Wt excellent. For asthma or rattles, vinegar la one of the best tonics. Ablute with water and give grown fowls one-half tea spoonful every other morning. The Wonderful Trick Egg. Take a raw egg and empty it by means of pin holos. As soon as the Inside of It is dry fill It quartor full of sand, and then, with a little wax, seal up the holes. It now looks like an or dinary egg. The next time you have belled eggs for breakfast take your prepared egg and substitute for it the one that is given you. Then you may safely announce thait your egg is ready to obey your com mands. You can place it at will In any po sition you desire. It will stand on the edge of a knife or on the rim of a glass, no matter whother you put it endways or sideways. In the last way you will cause more astonishment, because it will seem to trespass against the laws of gravity. The only precaution yci need to ob serve Is to tap the egg gontly, so as to cause the sand It contains to sottle each time at the bottom, and thus it will assure any position you wish. A Mosquito Plant. A German paper, says Country Life In America, reports the finding in North Nigeria of a plant, two or three of which when placed In a room or on a veranda, will remove mosquitoes. The natives extract an essence from the plant, which Is an excellent sub stitute for quinine. It ts not only equal in its effects, but It lacks many of qulnlne'i disagreeable, attribute!. THE OLDEST MAN 8N AMERICA Tells How He Escaped the Terrors of Many Winters by Using Pe-ru-na. Mr. Brock's Age Is S15 Years. DIR. ISAAC I1R0CK, DORS IX Hl'M'O.ttUE CO., N. C, MARCH 1, 17S8 Hit Hue Is 1 1& ivur, vomited for by authenUo revurU. lie saps attribute my ex'reme age to the tine of I'rruna." Horn beore the Vnited Slate was nrmrd. Saw Uli l'cnltlent elected. M'e-ru-na hat protected htm from all eudden cHangee. Veteran of four ware. Shod a home when 90 year told. Alwaye conquered the grip with Pe-ru-na. irtfneaa in a land suit at (he age of 110 year. It ell eve e l'eruna the greateet remedy of the age for catarrhal dteae. ISAAC BROCK, a citiron of Motonnan County, Texns, has lived for 115 years, rnr many years he resided nt ltosque Falls, eighteen miles west of Waco, but now NO MORE NEW CHURCHES. Era of Division of Sects la Drawing to a Close, The era of division or separation seems to be drawing to an end, de clares I3T. T. T. Munger. It is doubtful if we soon see another de nomination of any Importance that can be called Christian. There Js great activity In the theological world, but It does not move in the direction of crecdal organization. There Is no loss theology for theology will never go out of fashion but it looks to ward explanation if not extinction of creeds alieady existing, and to other changes that drop out or reinterpret old meanings and bring in new. Care ful distinctions and definitions that determine the exact amount of free dom or necessity in the will are dis regarded, because Christian faith Is not now approached on that side of our nature. Emphasis Js transferred from tho field of speculation where chiefly tho denominations originated, to tho field of action, to psychology and human society. The pressure of the past is less felt, or Is felt as rovcrence rath er than aa authority. The fact of change whatever its cause cau no longer be resisted, and the chief ques the church Is: At what speed and by tion that burdens thoughtful minds in what road will It move Into the re gion where It must go; also, what rhall be left behind and what carried forward? The main question of all Is: how to retain steadiness of mind In the confusion and rush that All the air. Serious minds trembla he fore the changes that come thundor Ing down upon them. Moth er "My mother was troubled with consumption for many years. At last she was given up to die. Then she tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and was speedily cured. ' D. P. Jolly, Avoca, N. Y. No matter how hard your cough or how long you have had it, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is the best thing you can take. It's too risky to wait until you have consump tion. If you are coughing today, get a bottle or Cherry Pectoral at once. Tantalus I llc,Mc,SI. AlHnttlsta. , Con.alt toot doctor, tt as mts tak. li, thaa do- aa hs .ava. If ha tall, you not to laka It, than doo'i Uka It. Ha kaows. Lain It with him. Vim wlllli... . 0. ATM OO, Lowall, sUaa. "I lives with his son-in-law at Valley MiKs, Texas. Isaac came to Waco and sat for his pic- mre. in ins nana ne held a stick rut from the grave of Oeneral Andrew Jackson, which has been carried bv him ever since. Mr. llrock is a dignified old gentleman, showing few signs of deereptitude. His family lliblc is still preserved, and it shows that the auto ot his birth was written 115 years ngo. Surely a few words from this remarkable old gentleman, who has had 115 years of experience to draw from, would be inter esting as well as profitable. A lengthy bio graphical sketch is given of this remark able old man in the Waco Times-Herald, Deeemlier 4, 18!I8. A still more pretentious biography of this, the oldest living man, Illustrated with a double eolnmn portrait, was given the readers of the Dallas Morn ing KVwfl. Hated December II, 1SIIS, and ouo me vnicago limes Herald ol same BEST m QUARANTEBD CURB for all bowel trouble, appendicitis, billoutnena, barl breath, bad blood, wind on the ntomach, bloatrd bowels, foul mouth, headache, .ndifreation. pfmplea. paim lifter catinrj, livor trouble, aallow akin and dtf ineaa. Wherl your bowels don't movs tef ularly you are tick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It star a chrnrlc ailments and Ions; years of suffering. No matter what aila you, start taking CASCAETS today, for you will never sret well and atav well until you get your bowels sir"!, our uvico, snairt wnn vikhtfii money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped C C C. Never sold In bulk Sample and. booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company. Chieaeo or New York. The Trench Government employs 1550 workmen nnd 15.000 women in the Btnte tobacco manufactories, nnd makes a yearly profit of 400,000,000 francs. Tho English language Is much In use tn Panama, especially on tlu Atlantic side. Etati or Ohio, City or Toledo, I Lucas Couhty. 1 Fraxr J. Chexey muko orttb that hs It senior purtnur ot tas firm of Y. J. Cheney Co.,dolnir business la tU City of Toledo, County uud Htute ntores ilj, uad tlmt ill linn will pay tan um of one hundreij dol labs foreaoU aalaveryaisaof 0ATAnnnta.it cannot be on re J by the use of Hall's Catarrh Ccna. I'baxk J. Chehey. bworn to before roe an t aubjenbj 1 la inf , - -, . presence, this tttbdny of Ducombor, i seal. A. V., A. W . Glzaso, ' ' notary J'tMie. Hnll'sCntirrj Cureta takealutara!illy,anl aets directly on tha blood and maeous sur faces of tau system. rteol for testimonials, Ire. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, U. - Hold by all DruggUm, tie. Take Hall's 1'amily l'llls for constipation. Sunday IsInnJ, lr. the 1'aclfic, Is really tho tallest mountain In the world. It rises 2000 feet of five miles of water, and Is thus nearly 30,00'J feet from base to summit. The average number of visitors In New York City is estimated at 200, 000, and their stay Is ten days. City Trees. In many citlcg throughout this coun try, and more notably In the famous municipalities of Europe, the vato of systematic tree-planting along tho public streets, is highly appreciated. There Is nothing that adds more to tha beauty ot a city than a succession of tree-lined avenues. Not only is tho artistic senses satisfied, but from a hygienic standpoint tho cultiva tion of city forestry along the borders of the public highways Is worthy of every encouragoment. Western cities have not practiced to so gieat an ex tent systematic tree-planting as have many of the larger towns In the east, a fact probably due to the engrossing activities Incident to rapid develop ment along what are considered more material lines. Portland (Ore.) Tela gram. DROPSY, MM ftttMl f tMtUUWMrl NEW DISCO VEST: slaw auiak raliaf and mm mnA aaaaa- fcaa al aaavunooiala aB4 U ' matUMMat time. a. a. a. aaaaa aaaaa. a a. Auaai. a. date. This centenarian Is an ardent friend of Teruim, having used it many years. In shaking of his good health and ex treme old age Mr. llrock says! "After a man has lived in the world a long as I have he ought to have found out ?. "Vl1. ""any thiags by experience. I think I have dune mo. "One of the thing 1 have found out to my enttre attfaetton fa fAte proper thing for ailment that are tiue directly to the effect of the climate, tor 1 IS year 1 have wtth onil I he changeable cltmate of the United Slate. "I have always been a very henlthy man, but of course subject to the little affections which are due to sudden changes in the climate and temperature. During my long life 1 have known a great many rvnediea for coughs, colds and diarrhoea. "A for Vr. llartman' remedy, Peruna, 1 have found it. tn be the beet, if not the only, rel ta ble remedy for thee affecttw. It ha been my ' tandby for many year, and 1 at' tribute my good heullh and extreme old age to thin remedy. "It exactly meets all my requirements. It protects me from the evil effects of sud den changes; it keeps me in good appetite; it gives me strength: it keeps my blood in good circulation. 1 have conic to rely upon it almost entirely fur the many little things for which 1 need medicine. "When epidemics of la grippe first be gan to make their appearance in this cou. try I was a sulfcrcr fruin this disease. ". had several long atege with the grip. At flint l did not know that l'eruna tea a remedv for I hi a I urate. When 1 heard that la arlppe wa epl.lemio catarrh, I tried l'eruna for la grippe and found it to be Jat the thing." In a letter dated January 31, 1903, Mr. liruek writes: "I am well and feeling as well an I have for years. The only thing that bothers me is my sight. It 1 could see better 1 could walk all over the farm and it would do me good. I would not be without l'eruna.'' Yours truly, For a free book on entnrrh, address The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O. If you do not derive prompt end satis, factory results from the use of l'eruna, write nt once to Dr. llartman, giving a full statement of your case and lie will be 111 cased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. llartman, President of Tha llartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. YHS BOYELS CANDY ' CATKRTtO aamy unatr aosoiute guarantee to cur or 3 FOR WOMEN A Boston physician's dis covery which cleanses and heals all inflammation of the mucous membrane wherever located. In local treatment of female Ills Paz tine is invaluable. Used as a douche it is a revelation in cleansing and healing powers it kills all disease germs which cause inflammation and discharges. Thousands of letters from woman rirove that it is tito greatest cur lor oiicorrhoea ever discovered. 1'axtino never fails to cure pelvic catarrh, nasal catarrh, sora throat, sore mouth and sora eyes, because these diseases are all caused by Inflammation of the mucous membrane, Forrlcnnsing, whitenins; and pre aorvlng the teeth wo challenge the world to produce Its equal. I'hysicians and specialists everywhere prescribe and en urse Paxtine, and thou aandsof testimor..al letters prove its value. At druggists, or sent postpaid 50 eta. A largo trial package and book of instructions absolutely free. Write The H, Paxton Co.. Pspt. 28 Boston, Xass. CAPSlCUtf VASELINE (PUl WIS OOLLAPaslUMB TUUKtM Aenbstituie for and uperinr to mustard or fiuy ocner piaaior, auh will not DiiNUtrtXie modtiltiUca.e Hkiu. 1 he pain-allay. and ciiritivmtuaiiiiurHu luiHaruciearu woout'r ful. It mil btnpthw loothacheatonc6.aud rn.N've litj.uiHCQt and wialica. We recom mend It uh the bunt aud aafebt exturnl mm titr-frrttant kuovvn, aUo an an externa I reme'l j 'or ptiitii in ttie client and btomacb uiuuiirueunmiic.neunutf.canugouiyctim pUli.ia. A trial will nruve what weolaini i or its and It will he found to be tnvaluaMf in the h)UselaiUl..Mtvn y pt'onietMi y "it IbID le-tf nil uf your preparation a.' Price ip ta.. at all d niuriritri or other dealer, or bv rifludl.urthlaiuuount tout in poHtatceatamnf 'e will wend you a tube by mail. No artime ilionld boaot'eptsfd by thepubliounlenrithf MainecarrieanurlnhtM.aantherwtneltlanut genuine. cnesKBKUUun jnr-u. iu. 17 6Ute btreeu NhW Vork Citt. P. N. U. 8, '04. IUSU NUI All llftl UIL&. Couaa vnip. VmMm (tood. Dei afa uud. Dee I In lime. Aoitl br drtunrtKU. w- raws
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers