What has become of the old-fash ioned man who wore the overcoat ho had in the army? WIo an an Owl. The owl is said to bo tho wisest of birds because he keeps both eyes and ears wide open, says nothing nnd keeps up a goo 1 deal of thinking. When sciatica takes hold of a man, ho is wisest who says nothing but keeps his eyes aud ours open for tho best remedy, who thinks and knows it may result in crippling, and who finds by trial that St. Jucob.s Oil is the best known remedy for its treutmont and permanent euro. It peno trates to tho seat of the cXoruciating pain, soothes ana cures it, and prevents what sometimes happens —the use ot the surgeon's knife t get rid of the torment. The owl thinks and then acts quickly, and the sciatica sufferer should act promptly to arrest tho progross of the disease aud to restore the nerve by the use of St. Jacobs Oil to its nat ural condition. now'i This? We-offor One Hundred Dollars Roward for any case of Catarrh that cannot he cured bv liull's Catarrh Cure. ' F. J. CiiKNEY & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che ney for the last 15 years, and believe him i>er fectly honorable in ull business transactions and financially able to curry out any obliga tion made by their firm. WKST <& TIIUAX, WHOLESALE Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WALDIXO, KINNAN A- MARVIN, Wholesale Druggist*, Toledo, Ohio. Kail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon tlie blocd and mucous sur faces of tho system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 7-' c. per bottle. Sold by nil Druggists. Hail's Family Pills aro the best. Milton Reizenstcin, a graduate student of the Johns Hopkins I'niveraity of Baltimore, has prepared a monograph as a thesis for a degree which ho expects to receive next June. Ho has chosen for his subject the history of the 11. & o. R. R. 1 roni its inception on the night of February 12th, 1827, when 2J of the leading business men of Baltimore met at the home of Philip E. Thomas and devised means whereby the trade of Hnltlmore with the West could be restored. It was at this meet ing that the rftinnnny was organized which afterwards built the B. & <>. K. R. Mr. lieiz enstein's monograph takes up the history of the road from that night until tracks wore laid to Wheeling, W. Va., in Ifttl The 70th anniversary of Ihe H. & O. It. It. Co. was Feb ruary 12th, 1807. FlTSstopped free and permanently cured. No fits after first day'HUSO of l)n. K LINK'S CURAT NBBVK It EBTOREK. Free trial hot t le n nd treat ise. Send to Dr. Kline,o3l Arch St., l'htla., Pa. I can recommend Piao'a Cure for Consump tion to sufferers of Asthma. E. D. TOWK -81 ND, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, 1804. JUST try a 10c. box of Casoaret*. tho finest liver ami bow* regulator over made. In London euch day 400 children are born, and 250 enter school for tho first timo. NO-TO-KIIC lor Fifty Cent*. Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To-Bae regulate or remove your desire tor tobacco? Saves money, makes health nnd manhood. Cure guaranteed. 50 cents and SI.OO, at all druggists. The total income of tho London hospitals i 9 close upon 600, pounds a year. SCROFULA SWELLINGS On Our Boy's Nock Crow Larger and Larger Until wo became alarmed. In May we pur chased a bottle of Hood's rarsapnrilla nnd the child began taking it- We gave our son llood'a Snrsapurilla until the sore was entirely healed. He is now permanently cured." W. C. KHEA NBU, Milesburg, Pa. Remember Hood's parilla Is the be-*t— in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Ilaeil'e Dill* act harmoniously with IIOGQ S r 1195 Hood's Sarsapariila. 1.340,000 CONSTANT WEARERS. DOUGLAS SQ SHOE J WEST IN THE WORLD. . ••iftk W. 1.. DO rci la a, A& a llroclu... M MM. PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHNW MORRIS, WASHINGTON, B.C. Lata Principal Examiner U.S. P.n.lon Bureau. 3yrs. in lut war, l. uJju<iicatiug uUuiua, utty. liu.;. GET ItICII quickly: send for "son J nven"inns Wanted." KMGAH TATK k Co.. IMA B'wny, N.V. 1' N U IS 1)7 Rest Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use |W In time. Sold by druggists. iSI | Bubbles or Medals. | ,jf|k ' Best sarsaparillas." When you think of it how contradic tory that term is. For there can be only one best in anything one "gSr #best sarsaparilla, as there is one highest mountain, one longest river,one deepest ocean. And that best sarsaparilla is ?.... There's the rub I You can measure mountain height and ocean *©/ depth,but how test sarsaparilla? You could if you were chemists, (i!H) Hut then do you need to test it? The World's Fair Committee dk\ tested it,—and thoroughly. They v.-ent behind the label on the /gh bottle. What did this sarsaparilla test result in ? Every make of sarsaparilla shut out cf the Fair, except Ayer's. So it was *|fP that Ayer's was the only sarsaparilla admitted to tho World's Fair. The committee found it the best. They had no room for \|§p B anything that was not the best. And as the best, Ayer's Sarsa- / \ parilla received the medal and awards due its merits. Remember C. : / I|E|!l the word " best" is a bubble any breath can blow; but there are f, \ \ J pins to prick such bubbles. Those others are blowing more V§|P /j|B|!v " best sarsaparilla " bubbles since the World's Fair pricked the old ones. True, but Ayer's Sarsaparilla has the medal. The a'sß' /j||k pin that scratches the medal proves it gold. Thepin that pricks \ Jj| J the bubble proves it wind. We point to medals, not bubbles, V. V when we say: The best sarsaparilla is Ayer's. REMARKABLE RECOVER? Of Young Lady of Gnnpnrt, Now York, from Anaemia. From the Courier, Buffalo, N. Y. Miss Lulu Stevens, daughter of George Slovens, tho woll-kaown blacksmith, of Gas port, Niagara, County, Now York, his sur prised her neighbors considerably, by not dying five mouths ago, when the physicians said sho could not live. This was quite a remarkable oaso. The young womau, who is very well kuown, on account of her musical ability, bad been a very healthy girl, until about one year ago, when she began to fail, and grew so pale and apparently bloodless and so weak that after a few months sho was given up to die. Last winter a physician wno was a visitor at Gusport met Miss Stevens, nnd seeing her emaciated condition, and hearing from the local doctors that the disen.se was anaemia, prevailed on the girl's mother to make her try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Directly she commenced tho troattneut sho begau to inend, and now since February, when she decideil to take tbom, she has become well and strong nnd the picture of good health. The mother of the girl, Mrs. Stevens, says: "Every one in Oospore knows that Pink Pills cured Lulu, aud I feel very thankful that wo heard of them in time to save my child's lire." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, In a con densed form, all the ulemouts necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are also n specific for troubles peculiar to females, such us suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. They build up the blood, and restore tho glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. In men they affect a radical cure in all oases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. Pink Pills are sold in boxes (never in loose bulk) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.60, and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. OLDEST HOOSIER. Nat 6tranghn, of HIICIIMII, Ind., Is 105 Ycnra Old. One of the oldest men In the country Is Nathaniel Struughn, who lives In English, Ind. Mr. Straughn Is now nearly 105 years old. having reached the century mark on May 8, 1802. "Uncle Nattie," as he is affectionate ly called by the residents of English, was born in Franklin County, Ken- OLDEST MAN IN INDIANA. tucky. He moved to Crawford County, Indiana, in 1810 and is still occupying, with his granddaughter's family, the house he entered at that time. The old gentleman boasts that he has nevei worn a piece of cloth that was not spun and worn by the hands of mother or wife; that he was never In a lawsuit, pro or con, and was never a witness in a suit at law, and that he did not find tho need of eyeglasses until he was over 85. in his younger days Nathaniel Straughn was a hunter, and his old llintloek mus ket occupies to-day a place of honor over the wide fireplace of his room, while below it hangs his modern shot gun. In his prime Mr. Straughn weigh ed 150 pounds, and now, at the advanc ed age of 105, weighs 100 pounds. The descendants of this venerable man are reckoned at about (500. Power of tho Press. "Well, they are at It. again," rcmarl:- d a leading bookseller to-day. "Some tern lias been going the rounds of the oress about a rare old book being found in a garret, and telilng of what in enormous price was paid for it by i bookworm. I don't know that is the rise, but my mnJl shows it. Why? Well, every time such item Is printed I begin getting letters from people all )ver the country, who think the}' have i book worth a fortune or two. As a rule, not one of tho books in a tliou land they write about is worth any rlilng at all. Because a book is old is 10 good reason it Ls very valuable, but .hey keep writing every time some ro mancer writes a story of a rare book picked up In some out of the way place."—Pittsburg Dispatch. FRUITS AND FLOWERS. A German writer says the nutrition of plants ia diminished in a constantly moist atmosphere, because in such case the plants censo to transpire. It is by the stream of transpiration that the food materials from the soil are brought to the plant, remaining be hind in the plautwhen the plaut gives off tho water in vapor, and thereby makes room for a like quantity of now food material from the soil. Experi ments show that in a very moist at mosphere leas of mineral matter is brought into the plant from the soil, but tho formation of starch grains from carbon dioxide and water is not hindered. Mrs. Allen, Gerraantown, says: Py rethrum powder, the insecticide most used by housekeepers, is one of the best to use with house plants. A very lit tle of it in water and difused by an atomizer as recommended a long time ago by Profesor Kiley, is one of tho best ways for using it. Another way is to wet tho leaves of tho plaut, and blow the powder upon them from an '•insect gun." Out of doors, if used dry, it should bo in tho evening or early in tho morning, whon the mois ture on tho leaves from tho dew will cause it to stick. If in water a little glycerine or molasses or soap may bo put in to make it etick. "This insec ticide is made from tho flowers of the pyrethruin cinerariaefolium. These uro gathered bofore tliov are quite open, and dried under cover and without artificial heat. When driod they are pulverized and the powder sifted, then put iuto air-tight recep tacles. The powder will not injure either tho foliage or tho llowers." One of tho best of tho Nov/ England peach farms is managed 011 tho partly turf system, a strip of so 1 being left about tho trees, the space in tho mid dle of the rows being cultivated. Tho fertilizer is applied on tho sod and tho grass is mowed aud left us a mulch. The eod, it is said, helps protect the roots from freezing and thawing, and tho wood being of slower growth is bettor matured. Tho ideal location for an apple orchard, Miss Cutler told tho Boston farmers at their recent meeting, is on a hill. Tho ndvuntaoro in this over a plain being that tho trees are moro open to tho light and air, giving bet ter color and tlavor to tho fruit, bet ter natural drainage aud Ireodom from frosts. Whitewash or dusting with pow dered lime whan tho limbi and twigs aro damp with fog, or after a rain, will destroy any moss that may be on them. TIIE VALUE OF CUT BOXES. Did you ever think about how much material it takes to make an egg ? If you think about it ouco you would readily see that a single egg contains all tho elements necessary to animal life, for at the end of tho period of incubation out steps a chick, equipped with bone and muscle, a little fut perhaps, and feathers u-sprouting, in short, every thing that goes to make a fowl, was contained inside the egg shell. How did they got there? Tho hen that laid that egg did not ovolvo its elements "internal arrange ments;" there was no spontaneous growth about it. "Nothing comes from nothiug," as Shiulespeare said long ago. That egg was fed into tho hen. It is requiring "bricks without straw,"when wo demand that our lions shall lay eggs and give them nothing with which to manufacture them. Tho whole secret of egg production is—alter you have a healthy hen—a properly balancod ration. As long as tho hen's food lacks one or moro of tho elements necessary to egg pro duction, it is silly to expect a well filled ega basket. Iri tho past few yoar3 poultryraen kavo been greatly favored in having an idoal egg food placed at their dis posal at a very small cost. .1 refer to greeu cut bone. By analysis and ex perience grcou bones have been fouud tocontaiu every element that is found 111 an egg, and in such proportions as can bo ueod to tho best advantage, it is unfortunato that so many far mora are neglecting this most valuable ad junct to the chicken yard. Groen bones can bo obtained for the hauling of them away ; but even if purchased they aro cheaper than grain, nnd workod iuto a grain ration, the bono makes the grain go so much farther, so that it is a saving all arouud. A given weight of bono will moro than displace tho sumo amount of grain in tho ration. Now thut a good bone cutter, which is practically "a lust forever," can be purchased so cheaply, it is certain that more barnyard lowls will bo made happy aud prolitablo by an addition of green out bones to their diot. A writer to tho National Stockman calls ! attention to tho advantage of the bono cutter in that it keeps the Hock healthy aud enables the farmer to double or treble his llocks at will. Ho says: "I speak from experience, as I am keeping in perfect health over 1200 layors and breeders by tho use and aid of fresh out bone. No condi tion powdeis or medicine are necessary, but tho cut <jrayihg4 add reducing tho feed bill, and it is only a mutter of a little timo and practical observation when u good bone cutter will bo to the poultry de partment what the mowing muohiue is to the hay field. Not only is cut bone a healthy feed, but it is one of the greatest egg feeds known, for I health means eggs. Try it and be ! convinced that green cut bone is not only a luxury, but a necessity to the poultry keeper.'—Farm News. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Don't try to make silage do as a complete ration. A little grain and hay are needed with it. Your hogs ought to havo roots now. If you haven't any lay the lesson to heart and provido some next season. At this time of year ono of the best tonics that cau bo given a llock of hens is to place a rusty nail, or spike, in tho drinking fountain. It is about time to mate fowls for early spring business. Winter in not over but the fowls want to get familiar with each other, to insure the right sort of eggs for hatching, and two or throo woeks will settle the matter. Food alone does not and cannot coutrol the quality of milk. This statement, however, does not imply that proper feeding is nit necessary. But no amount of feed will transform a naturally inferior cow into a first class dairy animal. An Indiana farmer says ho has tried corrosive sublimate for preventing scab on potatoes, with gratifyiug re sult. Tho sublimato is poison ami should bo haudled by careful perFous. It does not injure the hands, but is deadly when it enters the stomach. Tho Michigan experiment station has conducted experiments to dotor mine wkethor beos injure grapes. Ex perimenter Taylor concludes that not only do bees not injure gropes, but that by gathering tho juice of cracked one they prevent decay and consequent. destruction of sound ones. An Illinois farmer living in Jewell County, has discovered that seed corn soaked IU coal oil renders tho growing corn chinch bug proof. Ho plowed up his wheat, and planted the ground with corn. Tho seed of five acres wao soaked iu coal oil and the other forty was not. Tho bugs ato up tho forty acres aud never touched the fivo acres. It is worth a million if trno. On almost every farm there is a shed that is fairly dry all through tho winter. In this shed throw dry leaves or cut straw to tho depth of tea or twelves inches. Nail a board at tho front of tho shed, so as to keep tho leaves or straw from being scratched out, and in this litter scatter the whole grain you intend to feed your chickens. They will pcratoh for it the whole day long, and, in this way, seouro exercise while getting their feed. Professor Masecy, of tho North Carolina experiment fitation, nays that sawdust would have to be rotted to the state of perfectly black mold and then be compostod with lime before ho wouldusoit for any innnurial purposes. Better burn it, if practicable, aud put tho ashes on the laud. The evolution of organic acids from the sawdust, he says, would do more harm than tho mulch would do good. Sawdust is of no valuo whatever ou laud till com pletely decomposed, und then acted upon by lime. Coal ashes are often scattered over garden and field iu winter uuder tho impression that they are a valuable fertilizer. As a matter of fact, about thoir only effect upon the soil is a me chanical oue, having a tendency to loosen heavy soils, rendering them more friublo, while their effect upon soils already light and dry may bo wholly detrimental. However, nn loacliod wood ashes, aro a valuable fertilizer for tho orchard and all soils deficient in potash. They havo bcou used on orchards and grass lands with very gratifying results. California Pearls. The pearl fisheries of tho Gulf of California have been enormously valu able. In 17' JO a largo number of pearls were collected lor a collar. This eventually came into tho posses sion of the Queen of Spain, and is ono of tho most valuable of tho crown jewels. A brown pearl worth SBOOO, a blank ono valued ut S 1.0,000 nnd nil exquisitely lustrous ono which was sold in Paris for nearly 30000 have been takeu irom theso beds. Black pearls are exoeedidgly popular in Eu rope, and nearly all of this port that are found in California are sent over to the European market. The Mexi can government controls tho fisheries, and the business is put into the hands of a San Francisco company. About four hundred men are employed, and tho oysters, after beiug lilted from the rocks, are put into schooners and taken to a place where thero aro in spectors, under whoso charge Ihey are opened. Pearl fishiug is rather un certain business, as one may open thousands of oyßters without finding anything worth while ; again, in a few moments, thousands of dollars may bo realized. Milk Sold in Bricks. Frozen .milk if. very popular just now in Europe. It is sold iu bricks of different sizes and warranted to be pure and sweet. Belgium's Govern ment is to subsidize tho industry to t,Jio tune of 3S0,0l)0 a year, while in Copenhagen a company has been formed und arrangements have been completed for She regular export of frozen milk. The necessary plant has been erected aud contracts have been made already for the delivery of 110,- 000 pounds u week, which will be eout to all parti of the world in bricks or blocks of ice. FATE. Two shall bo bora the whole wldo world apart • And speak-in different tongues and havo no thought Each of the other's being, and no hood. And these o'er unknown sons to unknown lands Shall cross, escaping wreck, defying denthj And all unconsciously shape ovory not And bend oaoh wandering step to this one end, That one day out of darkness they shall meet And read life's meaning in each other's eyot And two shnll walk some narrow way of llfo- So nearly side by side that should one turn Ever so little sp&co to loft or right, They needs must stand acknowledged faoo to face, And yet with wishful eyes that never meet, With groping hands that never and lips Calling in vain to ears that never hear, They seek each other all their weary days, And die unsatislled; and this is Fat?. —Susan Marr Spalding. HUMOR Of THE DAY. "Doesn't hor Ringing appeal to you?" "Wellj it does seem in need of help."—Truth. If you are looking for trouble toll a woman that her Dew wrap is unbecom ing.—Atchison Globe. Mr. Dudeley (during the shampoo) "Ah! I say, me good folia, you will shako mo brains out!" Burbet—"No danger, sir."^-Judge. Friend—"Why is it that there is HO much dyspepsia in this country?" Doctor—"My theory is that wo have too many cooks."—Puck. Diner —"lsn't that a pretty Fmall steak?" Attendant—"Yes; but you'll find it will take you a good while to eat it." —Boston Transcript. "I understand your football eleven | has lost several members." "Oh, none to speak of; only n half dozen ears or so."—lndianapolis Journal. "Mamma, I saw a dog to day that ha i only three legs." "Weron't you awfully sorry for him?" "No'm ;he had one more leg thau I had."—Lon don Tit-Bits. Freddie —"What do you want to catch the fly for?" Little Johnnie— "Histoi has just made herself a glass of lemonade, and I'm awful dry."— Pittsburg Bulletin. "3ardonix encouraged mo to offer ray picture. He intimatod that it ought to be exhibited," said the artist. "What did he say?" "Ho said it was a sight."—Washington Star. "If I havo my coming-out paity at the same time as Daisy In net's, mam ma, not a society reporter will come." "Wo might advertise our supper an hour later than Jiers."—Puck. Smith—"You told mo your friend sang like a bird. I think ho has a hor ribly hoarse voice. How can you say it is like a bird?" Jones—"Well, the bird I meant was a crow."—Judge. "L don't know," cried the excited feminiuo voice in tho darkness, "whether you arc my husband or a burglar, but I'm going to bo on tho safo side and shoot."—Detroit Tri bune. • "I am a plain man," said Bloughly, "and I believe in being practical. I love you and I want you to bo my wife." "Well," roplied the fair one, "how much ure you worth?"— Phil adelphia Americau. She—"lt is true that I have broken the engagement, and that I still havo your ring, but do you know why I re tain that ring?" He (ruefully)—"Ou tho theory, 1 suppose, that to the vic tor belong the spoils."—Truth. Proprietor—"Why did you not give that gentleman tho roast chicken he asked for?" Waiter—"l know my business. I gave him something cheaper, so's he would have some money left to tip me with."—Stand ard. "Yes," remarked the proud father, "bo's tho finest baby tho neighbor hood has ever seen. My wife suys the sumo thing." "Aro yon going to make a musician of him?" "Ob, it's alto gether too curly to decide tlmt. His hair hasn't begun to grow yet."— Washington Star. Young Wife (wishing to please)— "Now, dear, what dress would you ad vise mo to wear lor the concert this evening?" Fond Husband—"Well, I think au accordeon skirt, with a brass band round the waist, and piped filouveo, might tit the oocasion."— Philadelphia Bulletin. Teacher—"As an example in frac tious, supposo a man kept a butcher's shop and a customer called for tivo pounds of meat, and he had only four to sell. What would tho butcher do?" Johnny (a butcher's bright son) "Keep his hand on tho meat while ho was weighing it."—Standard. "Ah, a new drama," repeated tho playwright. "About how decent would you like it? "Oh, from one huudrod and fifteen to ono hundred nnd twouty volts," answerod tho muuager. Peo ple were by no ineaus as easily shookod as formerly, and art had governed it eelf accordingly.—Detroit Tribune. He -"When I was in the Wost the last timo 1 had a very narrow escape from a burning Intel. I was awakened by tho smoke, and with not a minute to sparo rushed down the lire escape did you have on?" He (visibly em barrassed) — "Ah—hum—a vory lively hustle, miss."—Cardiff Western Mail. Street Sweeping* Utilized. Chelsea District, in London, utilizes its street refuse by separating the rags ..lid paper, which are converted into brown wrapping paper, while the rest of the refuse is burned in the furnaces of the reducing, works ,and tho resi j duum is used in brickmuking. A County's Criminal Record; Mingo County, West Virginia, lins a remarkable record. It Is a young coun ty, and but few terms of court linv been held. There are not quite I,BOC votes In the county, but there are ovei 1,000 criminal cases to be tried, most ol them on Indictments returned by the last two grand juries. CASCAnET* stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c. Woman's Nerves. Mrs. Piatt Talks About Hysteria. When a nerve or a set of nerves supplying any organ in the body with its due nutri- t ment grows weak, that organ languishes. [ f \ When the nerves become exhausted and f ' Sf / fl / )\ die, so to speak, the organ falls into de- V /( I I /] cay. What is to be done? The answer is, i v - / do not allow the weakness to progress; i\ j stop the deteriorating process ut once ! f ' k nating with restlessness? Are your spirits JjtEffl/fll easily affected, so that one moment you laugh Again, do you feel something like a ball rising |EpPi PBL in your throat and threatening to choke you, (NH 111 all the senses perverted, morbidly sensitive to 8 ||fl \V c light and sound, pain in ovary, and pain CG- Jfl \S > peeially between the shoulders, sometimes loss \ of voiee and nervous dyspepsia? If so, you are W / \ hysterical, your uterine nerves arc at fault. n LJ \ You must do something to restore their tone. Nothing is better for the purpose than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound; it will work a cure. I f you do not understand your symptoms, write to Mrs. Lynn, Mass., and she will give you honest, advice, free of charge. ■ x just described. Here is her own description of ' wjjwfPf " thought I could not be so benefited by any.- thing and keep it to myself. 1 had hysteria 4 moment I was alone I would cry from iWWlfflffi hour to hour; I did not care whether I lived tullU ° r * told my husband I believed Lydia PlHkham'a Vegetable Compound would do ▼ ''H'lljpf'-y' me good. 1 took it and am now well and 1 strong, and getting stouter. I have more color in my face than I have had for n year and a half. Please accept my thanks. I hope all who read this and who suffer from nervousness of this kind will do as I have done and be cured." A resident of Shawnee, Tennessee, says; "I want to tell of the benefit I received from taking Ripans Tabules. My stomach had got into such a fix I could not digest my victuals at all ; everything I ate I threw up, with great pains in my chest and bowels. I tried several doctors, who did me no good. At last, after spending about $75, a friend advised me to try Ripans Tabules. I commenced taking them ami soon I could eat almost anything, and I had the satisfaction of knowing thnt what I eat ' would stay with me.' lam grateful for such a medicine, and I hope before many years it will have place in the house of every family in these United States." r^S^LABASTMSfEd t fiup IT WON'T RUB OFF. i A FUPI ifTn? Wall Paper Is I nsanitary. HAI.soMINR TS i \ rtllll nrrr - TEMPORARY, MOTH, ICUIIM OFF AND SCALES, f 1 ALABASTINE gtacaH*® 1 v __J For Sale by Paint Wralers Everywhere. \ x r ni'/Jh°vo{Thvn FDCET A Tint Card showinrr 12 desirable tints, atso Alabastlne r iULL Souvenir Rock Bent free to nnv one mentioning tkisipaper. A fbutwinuotthrive" AEAIBAKTINE <.. Kapldii, Rtcli. f CATHARTIC vat> CG hoTl PATlOH^^r 25'° DRUGGISTS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED !? ™\7^ P c :£iKE 1 bnoklot frpp -_ Ad. STERLING REMEDY CO., Chicago. Montresl. Can., or!S>w TnrL til. jjw. jQHiiljiMjMHji THE STANDARD PAINT FOR STRUCTURAL PURPOSES. Pamphlet, "Snßßestions for Exterior Decoration," Bamplo Card and Descriptive Price List free by mall. Asbestos Itoofliitf, lluildiitw Frit, Stcnra Pncklnn. Roller CnvrrinnN Fire-Proof Pulnte, Etc. AnbrHloN Noii-Coiidiietlug mid Electrical liieiilnf iiift Materials. H. W. JOHNS MANUFACTURING CO., 87 Maiden Lane, New A ork. CHICAGO: 240&343 Randolph St. PHILADELPHIA: 170 k 173 Ncith 4th St. BOSTON: 77 * 79 Tcarl St. "IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUC CEED," TRY SAPOLIO "They say you hate no sympathy tot the struggling poor." "Me?" said th* accused gentleman. "I hare nothing but sympathy."—Cincinnati Enquirer. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gtitos. reduces inflamma tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 2f>c.a bottle. WnrN bilious or costive, ent a Cac,arei, candy cathartic; cure guaranteed; 10c., 25c. The funded debt of lioston Increased over six mlilons in the last fiscal year.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers