HOUSEHOLD DON'TS. Thinn* One Should Sot Do Inn Well ordered and Truly WtrU-l'ur -11 lulled House. Truth publishes a few "don'ts" that might well be recommended to the young housekeeper: Don't ornament your table in a mixed color of embroideries. The well-ap pointed board is one in which a tone is well carried out, not only in the needle work, but in the floral decorations. Don't dress your walls with conflict ing colors. A fine background for pic tures is a cartridge paper of a solid tint, which, as a foil, will show off an}' subject which tends as a decoration. Don't buy a piece of furniture be cause it is "one of the latest styles." The artistic home-maker knows that fashionable furnishings are often crude, and that an atmosphere may be given by the homeliest of appoint ments, provided the placing is a right one. Don't select covers in which there is overelaboration of design. Quiet tones art' always the best; they do not intrude, are restful, and generally hold their own. Don't let your rug be one of loud pat tern; remember it is the foundation of your color scheme, and often the charm of your room. Don't serve your food on china dishes of different make; give the pure white ware, with the ordinary gilt band, a precedence above all others. Li t your decorations be in your damask, em broideries and flowers. Don't let your kitchen be a work room only. For the convenience of your maid, let there be an easy-chair; in or.e corner put a looking-glass, in the oilier a timepiece. If there is an unused door, make it a prett\ closet by setting in the framework some three or four shelves, which, when painted, make a tidy place for odds and ends of table ware. Don't decorate your rooms with pho tographs, either of your friends, of actresses, or of people you don't know. In every house there should be a folio large enough to hold these treasures. Don't hang your pictures too high or too low; recollect 1 lie level of the e\ e is the correct guide. Don t fill up your walls with poor prints; one good etch ing is worth a dozen such. Don't purchase furnishings merely for their own beauty. Bear in mind the room in which they are to be placed, and above all their relation to other ef fects. Don't buy over-ornamental pots for your plants; they should serve as foils rather than attract too much attention in themselves. COOL DRINKING WATER. A Plan Thnt Annweri for Until Sum mer and W inter and HUM lleen Tented '".nrefully. George 11. Young, of Elmira, N. V., Bends to the Scientific American a de scription of a simple means of cooling drinking water, which he has tested in an experimental i>lant at his residence. The plan answers both for summer and •winter. Mr. Young's well is about 16 11' COOLING DRINKING WATER. feet deep and the water in the well is about three feet deep. A tank made of any suitable material is putin connec tion with tiie city main or the supply from a tank. The outlet pipe ends near the bottom of the tank, insuring the coldest part of the supply being deliv ered in the house. The device is simple and can lie made by any plumber or steam fitter. Often wells have been abandoned when the town or city lias putin a system of water supply, and they can be utilized to cool the water from the mains. After wells have be come somewhat contaminated, making the use of such water questionable from a sanitary point of view, they can be fitted with the device we have described with perfect safety, provided all the connections are tight. 111 winter the tank takes off the icy chill from the wa ter. and in Mr. Young's plant the water is drawn at a temperature of about 50 degrees. To ( lean Pur*. Furs will look much improved if they art cleaned with bran. The bran should be placed in an earthen recep tacle and heated in the oven. When hot it should be rubbed well into the fur. Flunnel is the best thing to use for rubbing t lie bran into the fur. After the husk h:u; remained in the garment for about.half an hour shake it thor oughly to remove all particles and brush until the article is perfectly clean. Fur collars that have become soiled from rubbing against the hair may be made to look like new by using hot bran on them. Two applications of the bran, and probably three, will be necessary if the fur is badly soiled. AFTERNOON BODICE. A >'ew Mode Carried tint en Troljr Kletiiiut 1.1 11 CM in CblfTon and KenalNMiince I.at-e The accompanying model is a spe cially pretty design for an afternoon bodice, and an elegant one. The yoke is made of renaissance lace set over a foundation of white silk, and the sleeves are of the same material. At the sides a short corsage of the lace fits close into tlie figure and extends below the belt line at tlie front. The bodice proper is made of dark mousseline de soie embroidered in fig ures of swirling design, ltows of rib bon to correspond with the color of t lie mousseline de soie plentifully trim the bodice and is run through the lace of the sleeves. At the elbow there DAINTY AFTERNOON BODICE. Is a scant ruffle of white mousseline <ll soie edged with a narrow band ol renaissance lace. The hat which matches the bodice has a roll of chiffon set around the edge of the brim. Over Hie chiffon are bands of the ribbon used upon the bod ice. At the left side there is a large buckle which confines several curling quills and a bunch of "watered" erepon. Under the brim are massed white roses with rosettes of dark mousseline de soie. ARRANGING THE VEIL. To .Indue by the Appearance ol Many \\ omen TliU I* \«t Sueli u Very Kniy Tn*k. The art of arranging a veil success fully, and at the same time fashion ably, cannot be so simple as it seems, since so many women fail to accom plish the desired result. They put their veils 011 so tight thnt they wrin kle across the face and flatten the end of the nose, and the unneeded length is left to hang in untidy ends at the back. All veils should be gathered a few inches from the middle of the upper edge to make them fit. Fashion va ries in the disposition of this little ar ticle of dress which, if not properly ar ranged, can make a woman look as if everything she has on had been thrown at her. Just at present veils are made crescent shape with applique lace bor ders, and are worn very loose, leav ing the chin entirely free. Afternoon teas are responsible for this fashion, as loose veils are more easily managed than tight ones. The latest novelty in veiling has a blue chenille dot, and Russian net mounted over white tulle. The Cure of Oak Furniture, Oak furniture is better for being rubbed with linseed oil, in which some alkanet root has been steeped, and then brushed with a brush stiff enough to get into every crevice of the carving. Or dinarily an application of beeswax and polishing cloths is sufficient, but the oil and the root preserve the wood and keep the furniture in excellent color and ap pearance. The time-honored beeswax and turpentine, used by our grandmoth ers for polishing furniture, is still as good a polisher as can be found. Tench Children to Head. A mother should take great pains to teach her children to read aloud accept ably. Much time and money are often expended in cultivating the voice for singing, and yet quite as much pleasure may be given by the person who reads aloud in a pleasing manner. No at tempt need be made at elocution as the word is ordinarily understood; distinct utterance and proper emphasis so as to convey easily to the hearer the mean ing of the sentences read are all that i* necessary.—Ladies' Home Journal. DcNlroyiiiK liiftcctn. A most effective way to clear a house or room of insects of any description is by burning sulphur. The first thing to be done is to remove everything that will tarnish. The handles of furniture can be easily taken off. Every window : hould lie sealed up and also the key holes. Shut the room up and do not open for twenty-four hours and you will be safe in feeling that all animal lifts of every description is killed. Friend. Take an old broom and cover it with canton or tennis flannel and use foi sweeping up polished floors. The cov ers should be made with a drawing string at the top, so that they can be taken off and washed. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1899. STORAGE OF APPLES. RloiiniliiiK Ip and Coverlnj? with Earth, Tlilw Writer Says, IN the Mokt Satisfactory Method. Now that there is a generous crop of apples in some localities this year, the general query arises how to winter them in the best manner. We have found no way that answers the require ments of the majority of farmers so well as to mound them up and cover with earth. By this method the apple retains or rather secures a flavor far superior to that of apples kept in the cellar. It is therefore quite desirable to bury them up with earth, only re moving them to the cellar as they are required for use. The proper method of mounding in winter apples is better explained in the illustration. A box five feet long is SECTIONAL VIEW OF FRUIT MOUND. (A, Apples: S, Straw; E, Earth; V, Ven tilating Box or Shaft.) nailed up from two by six-inch boards and perforated as shown in illustra tion with holes to permit escape of jases and foul air. A small watershed is erected at top, leaving vents in gables for ventilation. This box is erected and apples mounded upon straw around it until a foot from the top. The mound of fruit is then incased around with old boards and covered with a heavy cduting of straw and several inches of earth. This is sufficient until freezing weather,when another coating of straw and earth should be placed upon tiie mound. This may be done after the weather is quite cold and frozen by throwing a litter of straw around the heap base, in order that the earth may not be frozen and be accessible for covering. After the last covering is in place a load or two of coarse manure may be scattered over the mound. By this method the farmer may have apples in cold storage until late spring and also have them secure from frost in the cold est weather. The board covering is very necessary in order that the apples may not be come compacted and mashed from the weight of covering, and the pile also is much easier to use from than a mound not protected by boards, thus caving in as the fruit is used out. Many, however, who have cellars pre fer to store in them, as it is somewhat more convenient, even though the flavor and crispness be not so well re tained. Very convenient crates may be made for this purpose by sawing plastering lath in two equally and nailing them up with ends prepared from inch boards 1014x12 inches in dimension. These boxes will hold a bushel each, are cheaply made and can be stacked into rows or upon temporary shelves in the cellar, where they may be easily ac cessible to use from, in regard to vari ety, keeping, quality, etc. These crates tire very superior to storing in barrels or bins, as no lurge quantity can be crushed together, nec essarily making it inconvenient to sort or discard decayed fruit. —(ieorge W Brown, in Ohio Farmer. ORCHARD AND GARDEN. Soil and location will change the ap pearanee of fruit and also the quality. Mixed husbandry in gardening and fruit growing is necessary to the best success. In pruning trees of any kind it is bet ter to have one strong branch than two or three weak ones. Whenever water is given to house plants enough should be given to wet the soil thoroughly. A few apple and peach trees should be planted every year in order to keep up a good supply on the farm. Sod is a protection to an orchard in winter. It is an exceptional case when it is best to plow in the fall. The English walnut is said to be tin; most profitable of all nut-bearing trees When in full bearing they will yield übout 300 pounds of nuts to the tree. The nut sells on an average at about eight cents per pound. If only 27 trees are planted on an acre the income would be about $075. —St. Louis Uepublic. (inod and Inferior Cider. Cider made from windfalls and sjreen apples, which contain a much less pro portion of sugar lhari ripe apples, is consequently the poorest, being sour and watery. Where the apples are green but well matured the quality of the cider made from them will be founo vastly improved by the simple process of throwing them in small piles in the orchard and allowing them to ripen When a first-class eider is desired it ii necessary to select the fruit. If you have been in the habit of throwing in half-matured, partially rotten and all sorts of fruit, try by way of experiment a press full of well-matured, solid ap ples, free from dirt. Filter through a clean muslin cloth, and the result will be a surprise. HAS MANY ADVANTAGES. A Cheap, I'npatented, lllrt-Ku'ludlni Milk I'll 11 That Can I-Znully He Made at Home. It is simply impossible to have good milk or gilt-edged milk products while the milk is contaminated by the filth of the barnyard. Few people have any idea of the amount of tilth they con sume in a lifetime in the milk and milk products they consume. The proverbial peek of dirt is a mere trifle to that. A convenient milk pail, almost entirely proof against such elements, may be cheaply and conveniently made in the following manner: Take an ordinary tin or zinc milk pail; have a spout made on one side with a cap; make a- cover to latch on. In the center of the cover make a hole six inches in diameter, and around this hole put a protecting rim about iy. inches high, and flaring out ward. This will greatly reduce the dirt-catching area. Next make a bag of the thickest, closest wove tow eling. about eight inches in diameter and about eight inches deep, with a draw string in the top. Suspend this in the hole in the lid, doubling the top over tiie protecting rim and pulling the draw string tight to hold it in place. Put inside this a similar bag of cheese* cloth. Milk into the bag and the milk will filter into the pail as it is milked. When dirt falls into the bag it can lis picked off and not go into the milk. When the pail is full empty through the spout, take out the cheesecloth bug with all its accumulated hairs and dirt and putin a clean one. Such a course might seem troublesome to dirty milk ers. but it is a cheap and effective way to make gilt-edged milk and to increase the price and popularity of your milk products. 1 will enumerate some of its advantages: (1) It keeps filth and hairs out of the milk. (2) It keeps the odors of the barnyard from the milk. (H) It makes it almost impossible for ihe cow to put her foot in the milk pail. This item alone would, on the average, more than pay for its cost and trouble in a year. (4) The milk need spill but little should the pail get tipped over—• another item of economy. (.">) People who eat your milk and its products, in eluding yourself, will have far .finer flavor and eat far less dirt, (fi) With all these advantages your milk will keep sweet much longer, early souring beinfc a sure sign of filth. —M. W. Gunn, iu Prairie Farmer. A DAIRY OF DAIRIES. Ilnlter Churned In Silver and «>n CouMtei'M of Marble and Tiling iu Rarest of Tint*. Probably the most ideal dairy in ex istence is that of the princess of Wales, in which not only she but her various daughters have learned to make the most perfect butter. The w alls arc cov ered with tiles presented to the prince of Wales, who placed them here as a surprise to the royal dairymaids. They were made in Bombny, and, are of a deep peacock blue, the rose, the sham rock and thistle being intertwined with the motto "Jeh dlen." A white marble counter, running around the room, holds silver pans of milk from the Alderneys grazing with out. Above this, on broad bracket shelves of marble, is a collection, in every imaginable material, of cows, bullocks and calves-—ltalian and Parian marble, alabaster, porcelain, terra cot ta and silver—all gifts. A long milk can, painted by Prin cess Louise to match the Indian tiling, stands in one corner, and opposite is the head of the princess' pet Alderney, with a silver plate recording her vir tues. Here the princess sometimes churns in a silver churn, and in the next room tiie butter for the family is made up and sent fresh every morn ing when Ihey are in London. The day's supply is made up into little pats and scrolls all ready for table, and the princess requires a spe cial order of pats. Not a grain of salt is allowed in them, and they are made the size of a half crown and the thick* tiers of three, with either the crown, the coat of arms or the three feathers stamped on each. SAVING STABLE WASTE. How a Michigan Farmer Makes a CompoMt Heap of Wonderful Power. My plan is that a cistern be dug ten feet deep and wide, at the end of a [ire pared place, for the barnyard manure, to be dug in a sloping position from one side to a depth oft hree or four feet, and long enough and wide enout'h to ac commodate the manure. A stone wall is built at each end and at the back to gt(,i g t (,i iMn if HOW TO SAVE FERTILIZERS, keep the earth from caving in. Into this cistern, at the end of the compost heap, drains are constructed from the stables to carry the liquid, and also a drain or small sewer from the kitchen sink to lotivey the waste and keep clean. Then we have ii where we can utilise it io a good purpose. In the cistern is a i>ump, and occasionally the aceuHiti lated liquid is pumped and thrown over 'his compost or manure heap, is readily taken in and absorbed, and the fertiliz ing elements preserved, thus making one of the best compost heaps I have tried.—T. F. Collins, in Farm and Home. ItlKrht After Pulilie Seliool*. After the public schools come the public highways in their effect on the public welfare and on economic pros perity. The head of tl»r» tree should always be :ut back to correspond with the rovlo. i HE COULDN'T BE BLAMED. Did Every 111 In HE in Hi* Power to Se cure Support Hut Win linn <] it'll |>l>e<l. "'I suppose it was a little cheeky," »aid the young man to the old fellow or. the rear platform of the car, "liut what are you going to do in such a case?" "Yes, what are you going to do?" queried the old fellow, in reply, though having no knowledge of what was meant. "[ got up the courage to ask her hand in marriage and she murmured yes." "They generally murmur." "Then to l>e in good form. I had togo and ask the old mans consent. "Perfectly correct, young man—perfectly j correct." "1 took a bracer and walked in on him, ' ; continued the young man,"and indue time j 1 had stated my case. He waited a decent length of tune and then said i couid have her." "That was beautiful —beautiful." "Yes, as far as it went. Yes that was all right, but I wasn't through with him vet. 1 had to ask him li he'd lend ine a hundred dollars to pel married on. Wasn't no other way. you know." "No, no other way," repeated the old fellow as he uot a new brace for hi.-: back. "And he loaned it to you?" "Noap. Threw me down with a dull thud." "You don't say!" "Did for a fact. Yes, the whole thing is off, and I have loved and lost. 1 don't see where I'm to blame, though." "Not a bit of it. You loved and wanted to marry; but it takes money to get mar ried on. lie had it, but wouldn't lend it. No money—no marriage. Plain as the nose on your tace, and you're not a bit to blame. "Put it thar, young man, and cheer up and get a new hold with your toes. ou had to do it—had to do it —and anybody as says you hadn't is a liar and a ho'.s thief and da.-n't stand tip before the undersigned for three rounds! — Cleveland Plain Dealer. Stature oi J>tft"ei-<'iil Kacr«. Dr. Thomson studies differences of height, in ninn and establishes three categories: (1) lull races thai meas ure five feet seven inches and over. This group includes the Patatroni'tns, West Afrieai: negroes, some Polyne sians, some American Indians. Scandi navians, Seoteli and Mngiish. (2) Races 'if medium height, vary ing from five feet three inches to five feet seven inches. (':) Short races, having a height of five feet three inches or un der. Among the short races are the .Malays, Lapps, Irishmen, Hottentots, Negritos (or dwarf Asiatic negroes) and the AUkar. According to Sorgi. people of a height not exceeding four feet eleven inches are found in Sicily and Sardinia, where they form !4 per cent of the population, and a corre sponding short race is found in central European Russia.—Knowledge. The portion of the state of Washing ton west, of the summit of the Cascade range is covered with the heaviest con tinuous belt of forest growth in the United States. This forest extends over the slopes of the Cascade and Coast ranges, and occupies the entire drift plain surrounding the waters of I'uget sound. Excepting the highest moun tain peaks and the sand dunes of the coast, which are treeless, the valleys of the Cowlitz and Chehalis rivers, which are dotted with small oaks and other deciduous trees, and the stunted yellow ])ines •occupying with open growth the barren Steilacoom plain, all of western Washington is covered with a magnifi cent forest. Neeilles* Adjectives. Little Willie —"Say, pa, what's a redund ancy of expression? Pa —Using more words than are necessary to express one's meaning, such as "wealthy iceman," "wealthy plumber," etc. —Chicago Evening News. DenfnetiH Cnnnot Be Cnretl by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an intlamed condition of the mu cous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inilammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal con dition, healing will be destroyed forever; nine cases of of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an intlamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give < tne Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. I*. .1. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7oe. Hall's Eamily Pills are the best. He (ardently) —I am heels over head in love with you." She (the cruel coquette)— "How awfully upset you must be! ' —Town Topics. Don't putin tc.o much time standing on dignity or riding a hobby.—Chicago Daily News. THE MARKETS. New York, Nov. 10. FLOUR $ 1! 5 i J 4 10 WHEAT No. 2 red 7." a © TiX CORN—No 2 4UV& 4ii'i OATS No.'J white. ;io;4 RYE -Northwestern C.'Vtfr '>-!i BKKP Mess 10 (it) win 50 PORK—Family II 75 © 12 0.1 LARD Western steam'd .... 140 hi> •*> 45 BUTTER Western .rc unery is © 25 CHEESE Larue colored 12 I'> 12^ EGOS Western H & ID WOOL— Domestic fleece. 1 (■(, 20 Texas. 14 it. Hi CATTLE St <-r>. 4 ;0 (n, 6 GO SHE! P SSO © 4 24 HOtiS 4 E0 ft 4 SO CLEVELAND. FLOUlS—Winter wheat pit's 403 © 4 15 Minnesota patents., sUO © 4 10 Miiincset, bakers... 3 10 'a, 3 15 WHEAT No. - red OS'V.o Od'-fc CORN No :i yellow on track. :o , \ 37 OATS—No. 2 white :>■», /. 28H HI'TTEIt Creamery, llr.-> s -I <s 24',, CHEESE—York sia e. creaui. lit j . 1* Oi.lo .state, cream.. 12 ,© 13 EGGS -Fresh lukl 20 POTATOES Per bush 11, 4o SEEDS—Tin o'Hy. 1 20 (® 1 45 (.lover 450 © I so HAY—Tin otliy DM © 13 00 Hull: on market 11 no (m 13 50 CATTI.E Steers, c ioice 4 OS ® 5 25 SHEEP- Fair to pood 3 10 © 3 75 HOGS Vo leers. 42, no 4 ;.o CINCINNATI. FLOUR— Family S 50 © 2 So WHEAT No 2 red :» (y, 70!^ CORN- No. 2 mixed ;.4 •,© ;>5 OATS No 2 mixed u5 1 . 25^ R i E -No. 2 OP, 02 IIOGS 3 50 © 4 30 'IOLEDO. WHEAT No. 2 cash a i Co'« COKN No. 2 mixed.. . 33',® 34 OATS- No. 2 mixed 22', io 23 BCFFALO. BEEVES- G iod steers 4 CO © 4 65 Veals (i 00 © 7 75 SHEEP—Wethers I; 5 © 450 Lambs 5 O.i © ft 25 HOGS—Yorkers 441 (,& 4 45 Plfe'S 4 45 © 4 50 PITTSBURG. BEEVES—Prime 550 © 0 fH) Fair 5 00 © 5 Si SHEEP Prime wethers 425 © 435 La nil iv 5 (KJ 5 20 HOGS—Prime heavy 4 IS © 4 50 Pik'S 4 25 © 4 30 ICATAERH COLDS SORE-«|LHQARSE M OC,\FPAL jor. WKWIJiI IrJ |;.'j Says of Pcruna: "I join Sena- .|jß P fors Sullivan, Roach and Mc- L!» Entry' I n their good opinion oi UJSJ (aj Pervna as an effective catarrh jS [H remedy." [||| p.*!!'"i-Trs. -TM ■■ . ~~7~ •V- ify ■ YI:LI FTP •-#%</ J P & WI ;: ' V -£^L to**' F'II *.«/ V A 4F\. /< *• <••"•'.•' •••• tv',vA / V % ' &<S R V V^ I \ LI , |P% * HAL; 7 V" ACT r . --v v i -j- _—Si'V-'i I'mlrr Two Fins*. "What a grand picture it mu.-i have beerj," remarked tlie boarder who had t i: ( |)'..\vey, "to have seen the Olympia .-.eimlng hi rue, the stars and i-tripi - on one mast and tlie homeward pennant on the other. "Magnificent!" echoed tlie man in black suspenders, "but think what a picture it would have been to have seen the star:- and s:ripes on one mast and the l>a- I all pennant on the other." —Chicago Evening News \<mv Everybody Can Hide. If you have any doubt about it be sure to read the advertisement of the John M. I Smyth Co., Chicago, in this pair r, in which. ' they propose to sell a high-grade Top Buggy | for 834.9"). How they do il is a puzzle, but as the firm is one of the largest in the coun try and of the highest standing, that's their in itter. Better find the advertisement now, while you think of it, and read it through carefully. The firm issues a Mammoth Catalogue, in which is listed "everything to eat, wear and use at lowest wholesale prices." Can't Mlms the Place. Stranger—Where does that new dentist have his office? Policeman—You mean the one who pulls teeth without pain? "Yes." "Go right around the corner. You will' have no trouble finding his office. You can hear his patients yell half a block away."— Ohio State .Journal. Consrhinjf Lends to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cough at once. Goto your druggist to-day anil get a sample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and S< cents. Go at once; delays are dangeroust. lis Orlßin. "Hoot!" cried the owl ever and anon. The fowls of the air and the beasts of the, field stirred uneasily in their sleep and mut tered maledictions. "Why are they so angry?" asked the owle at last, "They are envious, my child," replied tb» owl, "of my Scotch dialect, lloot, hoot!" Detroit Journal. To Cure n Cold la One Hay Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. At. druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c Be sure you are right—but don't be to, sure that everybody else is wrong.—Chicagc Daily News. II II How Mrs. Psrikhani HELPED MRS. GOODEN. [LETTER TO URS. PINKHAH NO. 12,733] "I ara very grateful to you for your kindness and the interest you have taken in me, and truly believe your medicines and advice are worth more to a woman than all the doctors in the world. For years I had female troubles and did nothing' for them. Of course I became no better and finally broke down entirely. My troubles began with inflammation and hemorrhages from the kidneys, then inflammation, congestion and falling of the womb and inflammation of ovaries. " I underwent local treatment every day for some time; then after nearly two months the doctor gave me permis sion togo back to work. I went back, but in less than a week was com pelled to givo up and goto bed. On breaking down the second time, I de cided to let doctors and their medicine alone and try your remedies. Before the first bottle was gone I felt the ef fects of it. Three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and a package of her Sanative Wash did me more good than all the doctors' treat ments and medicine. " The first remark that greets me now is 'How much better you look!' and you may be sure I never hesitate to tell the cause of my health."— MKS. E. J. Gooden, Acki-ey, la. ' ■ Tho bast remedy f >.r Consumption. Curea U*. Coughs,Colds,Grippe, V I* LI O Bronchitis, Hoarse- J ness, Afthma, Whooping^ cough. Croup. Small doses , fruick, sure result*. Jjr. Bull's Pull cure Const ipaltbiK Trial , 20 Jor s£» DATCMTO Adfice aa to patentability and lotmj tors' |A I Lll I O *»• »• EVANS, 1010 F, Washington, I>. 0» 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers