OF NIGHT ———— THE COMING The loitering Day looked backward, smillng, And slipped out through the west, Where rosy, misty forms beguiling Besought her for their guest: “Oh, follow, follow through the west ! “Our golden portals wide are swinging For theealone, for thee, And wistful voloes clear are ringing Across the darkling sea, In eager welcoming to thee." Aloft her silver censer holding, The star-eyed Night drew close, Her mantle round the hushed earth folding. More sweetly breathed the rose, As Night with tender tears drew close, Her dusky sandals softly gleaming With wandering threads of gold, Broidered by vagrant fireflies, seeming Beneath each A fairy spinni wing to hold ng threads of gold. With siient footfall A mystic, slumb rous spell, weaving slowly She came; and somathing sweet and holy The woary earth befell When woven in the slumb'rous spell. —(olin A. Hayward, in Lippencott, rR ON THE BRINK. FRANCOIS COPIEE. a great gift, so that the little aban- | doned child could believe yet in Santa | Claus, and should retain, in spite of | her unhappiness and misery, some confidence and some hope in the good- | ness of Providonee. Twenty-five francs! There was in it several days’ rest and wealth for the | beggar, and Lucien wasupon the point | of awakening her to tell her of it, when he heard near his ear, like an hallucination, a voice -the voice of the Pole with his thick and drawing accent -that murmured low words: “1t is now two days that I have not left the elub, and during these two days I have not seen ‘seventeen’ win. I will cut off my right hand if soon, at midnight, this number is not the one.” Then this young man, twenty-three years old, who was descended from race of honorable people, who bore a | superb military name, was possessed with a mad, hysterical, monstrous de- sire ; street, and bending his knee and push- ing his hand tremblingly into the fallen shoe, he stole the twenty-five france piece. Then, running with all his strength, he returned to the gambling house, climbed the staircases with a few strides, pushed open with his fist the | HEN Lucien de Hern saw his last piece of money raked in by the | banker, and got up from the roulette | table where he had | just lost the re- mainder of his lit- | tle fortune which | he had brought | there for his | effort, he was| seized with verti- | go and narrowly escaped falling to the floor. : With a weary brain and trembling | legs, he threw himself leather which gambling table. For several minutes he looked vaguely about these private gambling rooms where he had spoiled the most | beautiful years of hie youth, recog- | nized the worn features of the differ ent gamblers, cruelly lighted by the great shaded lamps, heard the soft | clinking of the gold upon the green table, felt that he was ruined, lost, | and remembered that he had at home, in the drawer of the commode, a pair of pistols which had onve been the prop- | erty of his father, General de Hern, when be was a captain; then, only, | worn out with fatigue, he fell into | profound sleep. When he awakened, his mouth dry and parched, he ascertained by glance ing at the clock that he had scarcely slept a. quarter of an hour, and he felt | an overwhelming desire to breathe the | fresh, ight air. The hands of | the clock pointed to a quarter of an f inight. As he arose and remembered that re, and with memory, he final i long the npon a safe surrounded ’ COOl, I Pe ae an himself a little child and putting, be fore he of the At THE pillar of the place, Wearing 3 wen od, his shoes in front old Drouski, a typieal Pole, long coat, trimmed with 1 and large ornaments, aj proaches and muttered these words through his gray beard : ‘Lend lays 8 bral RT i Luei it is now loft t} a me five francs, sir since 1 not snd during these two days I have 1 win. You may la igh at me, if you wish, but | will cut off my right hand if soon, at midnight, this number not the one. Lucien de Hern shrugged his shoul ders. He had not even enough in hus pockets to give to that beggar, whom the jnenters of the place called “log cents sous dun Polonais He passed into the anteroom, took his hat and cost and went down the with a feverish agility, Since 4 o'clock, when Lucien went into the club, the snow had been fall ing steadily and the street one in the Paris, with high houses on either side-—was white with snow. In the ealm, black-blue sky the cold stars scintillated The ruined gambler shivered in his fars and began to walk rapidly, turn ing over always in his mind those hopeless thoughts and dreaming mors than ever of the box of pistols which awaited him in the drawer of his com mode ; but after having taken several steps, he stopped suddenly before a heart-rending spectacle, Upon a stone bench, placed accord ing to su old custom near the large door of a private house, a little girl scarcely six or seven yearsold, droased in a ragged black frock, was sitting in the snow, She had fallen asleep there | despite the ernel cold, in a pitiful at titude of fatigue snd dejection, and | her poor little head and tiny shoulder | had dropped into corner of the wall and were resting upon the icy stone, One of the old wooden shoes with which the child was shod had fallen from the-foot, which was hanging down, and Iny drearily before her, Mechanieally Lucien de Hern put iris hand to his vest pocket, but he re membered that a moment before he | did not Gad even.a france, and that he | could not give a fet to the cinb waiter ; nevertheless, pushed hy an instinotive sentimont of pity, he spprosched the little girl, and he started, perhaps, to | raise her in his nrms and to give her a | place of shelter for the night, when he | saw something glisten in the shoe which bad fallen trom her foot. Fle bout over it; it was a twonty- five-frane piece, A chariimbie person--8 woman, no doubt — lind passed that way, had seen on thst Christmas eve that shoes that had fallen in front of the ng shild, snd reeslling she tonching two have elub, t seen ‘seventeen’ 18 red staircase A Arrow centre of large amount on her; legend, she bad carefully placed there padded door of the cursed room, and | reached it just as the clock was strik- ing twelve placed upon the green cloth | the gold piece and cried: «1 stake it all on ‘seventeen! Number seventeen was the winning number, With a turn of the pface@® his double funds on “red.” Red was the winning color. He tried all of his money again on the same color. Red cameo the second time. He doubled his stakes twice, three times, always with the same luck. He had before him now " prece ding | a cup of gold and banknotes, and he | scattered them over the table franti- | cally. All the combinations success, of before. Something supernatural. One would have said ivory ball jumping into the pigeon ) jung Pig | holes of the roulette table was fasei- | nated and magnetized by the gambler and obeyed him. He had recovered in a score of plays the few miserable notes of a thousand francs, his last re- source, which he had lost at the begin- ning of the evening. At present covering with several | hundred francs at a time, and served always by his fantastic luck, he was in a fair way to regain all, and more than | his family fortune which he had in so | few years squandered. In his haste and desire to play he | had not taken off his overcoat ; already he had filled the great pockets with rolls of notes and gold pieces; and not | knowing where to heap up his gains he nockets of his inside coat, his vest and trousers pockets, his cigar case, his handkerchief, every place that could a receptacle. And he played he 1 always, like a " Serve As Kal always, ] dra ma | nken man! and he threw | of gold upon the tal at hazard, with a gesture of cer tainty and disdain! Only le ing burn in his breast like a red-hot iron, and he thought constantly of the little beg- gar from whom he had stolen. She is still in the same place! She there! Immediately, when the clock strikes one, I swear to myself that I will get away from this place, Arms, there was something be must I will take her home with me; she shall sleep in my bed to-night; 1! will bring her up and I will settle a I will love hor take care danehter, and I will f her always, always! the clock struck one, and a quar ter past and half past, and a quarter to and Lucien was still seated at that in ler table, At inst, one mim head of the said in a loud voices AS MY Jat two, ite before two, the house got up abrubtly and I'he bank enough for 1" broken, gentlemen ; to- das With one bound Lnecien was on his feet and, pushing aside recklessly the enrions who sarronnded and regarded | him with an envious admiration, he went out quickly, rushing down the stairs snd ranaicg to the stone bench there. of a gas jot, he could see the little girl. “Thank God!” he cried, ‘‘she is still | | there.” He approached her, and seized her | tiay hand. “Oh, how cold she is thing!” He took her in his arms, and raised her to earry her. The head of the child fell back without awakening her. “How one sleeps at her age!’ He prossed her against his breast to warm her: and, seized with a vague inquietude, he tried, in order to draw her from this heavy sleep, to kiss her on the eyelids, as one does to awaken gently a loved one. And then he perceived with horror Poor little » | that the eyelids of the child were half- open, ahd thet the eyeballs were glnsny, sot nnd sightless, His brain whirled with 2 horrible Ly m3 he pnt his month close to that of the little girl; not a breath enme from it. During the time Lucien had gained a fortune with the money stolen from the little beggar, the poor child with. ont a home had died, died from expos- ure to the cold. Feeling in his throat a horrible choking sensation, Lineien tried to ery ont, and in the effort that he made he woke up from this nightmare and found himself on the elub-room sofa, where he had fallen asleep a little be- fons * miduight, and where the waiter gembling room, in going out these | with one look he assured himself | that he was really alone in that deserted | hand Lucien | brought him | It was a chance never heard | that the little | thrust paper and gold into the | yes, J 1 will take her, asleep, in my | From a distance, by the light | about 5 o'clock, had left him sleep- ing, ont of pity for the ruined man. A misty December sunrise lighted | up the window panes, Lucien went ont, pawned his watch, took a bath, breakfasted, and went to a recruiting officer, where he signed a voluntary engagement in the First African Infantry. To-day I-1cien de Hern is a lieuten- ! ant, he has only his pay to live om, but he gets out of it very well, heing | a steady officer and never touching » card; it would seem also that he finds | it possible to save something out of it, | for the other day, at Algiers, one of | his comrades walking » little behind | in a hilly street of the Kaspa, saw him give something to =a little sleeping Spanish girl in a doorway, and he had | the indiscreet curiosity to sec what Lucien had given to the child. The inquisitive one was much sur- | prised at the generosity of the poor | lientenant. Lucien de Hern had put in the hand of this indigent child a twenty-five | franc piece, —Translated for Boston | Transcript. ._——.L His Hair Turned White, Andrew Lindsey, who has lived near Bottom, Montana, for many was strolling through the He was topped out in a | sombrero, and had a Western flavor to his speech. Said he: I want to tell you a yarn about how a man’s hair | was turned gray in one whack. It | was just after the Custer massacre that | an old feliow named Pease—we called him Major Pease, because I believe ho had been in the great and only Civil | War—well, he pressed forward several ! miles beyond the hog-back where the famous fight took place, and built a | stockade at what to be called, | after him, Pease Bottom. He and his men were carrying on a very thriving trade with the redskins, but at that time this business had to beconducted with great the | savages were ngly and scalp hungry. Two miles from the stockade was a high point, from which ssurvey of the | country could be had for miles in all directions A lookout was kept here for Indians, and suspicions eircum stances or warlike demonstrations | were at once reported to headquarters. One afternoon in the summer a man named Panl MeCormick and his | partner, named Edwards, were sent out to the observatory. They were | riding along st a gallop through the | tall grass, and were approaching the mouth of a little coulie. Edwards wasn't a tenderfoot, but he was a new comer in that region. As they eareered along, MeCormick said: | “Edwards, what would you do if the | Indians shonld bounce out of that lgoulie?’ “Well, I'd either fight or run.” These words hadn't fallen from his lips before bang! went a rifla snd war-whoops rent the air. Poor EK wards dropped from his horse, and Mac, hard pressed by a band of Black- feet Sioux, made for the stockade The people there knew what was up, and the pursuers were picked off as they came within range of the lead The gates were opened and McCormick rushed in. His hair was white, and has econtinned The body of Ed- wards was found lying in the bloody and disordered grass, and the scalp was missing. It was buried on the spot, and the legend of Edwards's Coulie is one'of the best known in the far West. The folks at the stockade put up a rude headboard, but*this has ne to decay. | Pease Years, Cochran, CRIN eantion, because 80 ao ® ] Mg ago I — A Mining Opportanity Missed, of gold excitements™ said George W. Beal in the presence of a little social gathering in West Park street a few evenings since, *‘re- | minds me of a chance 1 had to purchase a piacer claim in Confederate gulch. The men wo owned the bar offered it to me for $400 cash and were anxious to sell at that figure, but | hesitated. Finally I told them I would have an expert examine and test the ground and if it was what they repre- sented it to be I would purchase it, This was satisfactory, and my expert made the test and reported unfavor. ably upon it. That settled the deal, and I went on my way in search of other fields I returned to Confederate gulch and found a six-mule team and a wagon behind it containing two tons of gold taken from a portion of the bar those | men wanted to sell me for $400. The “Speaking ones | by thirty armed men, who were | guard the metal on the way. | men concluded to work it themselves, | and from a space of had taken the two — Butte Miner, II — The Arab at Home, Dr. J. P. Peters was the manager of the expedition sent out by the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania in 1888 to ex- | plore the ruins of Babylon. “‘Duri the two years [ was there,” said he, | lived with many of the wild tribes around the marshes of Arabistan. The | conditions in which I found tham were | most deplorable, They were a most depraved race, robbing, cheating, lying and fighting being the daily outline of their existence. The principal diet of these people is half-cooked barley bread, and with a large percentage of the tribes this forms the sole diet When I offered twelys counts a day for diggers and guards I had hell the population applying to me for work, and was foreed to reduce the day's wages to ten cents. When one of these men has a headache his friends burn him with red-hot irons, and many times 1 have seen wounds earefully filled with iron rust. Their . ment, or rather lsck of governiamt, u practical exhibition of anarchy. Ee | brown | pover it to keep in the steam. ‘a brush. | for About two months later | | fence, and the other twice the length | team was ready to start for Fort Ben. | ton with the gold snd was surrounded | to | After 1 | | refused to purchase the ground the | i | put on batiens and nail them firmly to 100 feet square | fons of gold. 1 | have not seen the ‘expert’ since then.” | : | three-eighth rod of iron COLD BRIDLE BITS. During the bitter, cold weather in winter much suffering is thonghtlessly inflicted on horses by putting cold bridle bits into their mouths If the tongue to a piece of iron on a frosty | what the suffering to the poor brutes | is, To slightly warm the bits before | putting them into the horse's mouth would require only a omall expendi- ture of labor. This ean be done by rubbing them with a blanket or other | cloth a moment or two if other means of warming are not at hand. The ben- efleinl results in the gentleness of the animal will amply compensate it, Detroit Free Press, BANKING UP THE HOUSE FOR WINTER, In exposed, bleak situations farmers and others find it very beneficial to bank up the north and west sides of their dwellings, ns a means of keeping, uot only the frost out of the cellar, but adding warmth to the joining the banking. More particu- larly is this advisable in old houses that have not been provided with a wovering of building paper, and in which the cellar wall is more or less dilapidated and open for frosty sir to enter, A cleanly plan is to lown stakes eighteen s from the wall, attaching boards to a foot or more in height, filling in the space with clean straw, hay or corn stalks, which should be firmly trodden down and the whole covered with loose boards. This looks better than half rotten manure piled slong the wall for the to There is staining of the painted surface with it may in contact. —American Agricul. rooms ad drive even chickens scratch away, also no which come turist, COLORING WHITEWASH, An inquirer who has been in the practice of simply whitewashing his fences and outbuildings, wishes infor mation for giving the work sa light or drab, more than many which he sees, which are so dark as to be positively gloomy, | and he inquires for the best way of i making the lime into the wash Pro- eure fresh or caustic lime, put a peck i or more into a tub or barrel, and cover | §& six inches above with hot water: wold, add encongh water to reduce ta a wash which may be easily applied with Two pounds of rice flour will make it spread more easily, mix- | ing it with cold water before itis put in; stir thoroughly. Or, instead of the rice water, add two poands of sul phate of zine and a pound of salt; this will harden it better on exposed wood-work. To give it the right color, add a pound or two of y¢ ochre creatn color, or two pounds of amber. or leas if lighter is desired, or for a light slate color or gray, add half a poun 1 of lampblack, or tity. We have found a durable wash for ontdnor work of a pe sk of water lime, half a peck of fine clear sand, or as much as the water will hold in snus pension, with enongh water to apply it, —~Country Gentleman. low at TO KEEP GATES LEVEL. A gate that sags is an eyesore on a farm, and makes the place look as if there was no one to take care of Besides this, it is a source of inconve nience to those who must use it and is always likely to left unfastened The following idea, communicated by some practioal and ingenious corre spondent of the Farmer's Voice, worthy the attention of be 1% those who would like to care the evil st a moder ate cont: . Take two pieces of three by four scantling, one piece four or five feet long, according to the height of the of the first; then let the boards into the uprights their thickness, and be- | | fore nailing them dovetail a brace in- to the notches already cut, running from the top of the latch end to the | This brace | bottom of the hinge end, ean he made of a three-fourths strip of board, andshould be about four inches wide, After putting the gate together the scantling ; also nail battens in the centre, and for these wrought nails should be used, To give a support, a should be fastened at the top of the hinge scant. ling and extend down to and pass | through the top of the latch end, with a nut upon the end, so that the rod may be drawn tight, After tightening, ent the end of the rod off even with the nut, nsec upon a» picket gate, as well as up- on one of boards, EDUCATION OF COWA, cows to Le rapid milkers? all cows be edusated thus? asks the Farming Worl. When a boy the writer worked on a dairy farm, the proprietor of which had the reputation of being a rapid milker. a number of heifers eash yoar, and al- ways milked theso himself. His claim wis that if was this early training Jargely that made the difference in the time required for milking. His method was simply to begin milking ss soon ax seated, and continue rapidly snd uninterruptedly nutil all the milk was drawn from the ndder, and $0 do no , The last part of the milk was sometimes draws by pressing from person who does this will apply his | morning he will understand at once | nearly white | When i a los quan- | it. | The rod support may be | Ts there such a thing as educating | And can | He broke in | | the upper part of the udder down- | ward, upon first one side of the udder | and then the other, with one hand, | drawing the milk from the corre- sponding teats with the other. With some cows not even this was neces | sary. He claimed that the habit of giving down milk rapidly and com- pletely, with no retention of the strippings, was easily formed with heifers if they were always milked thus; that if the milker dawdled over | his work the cows would get in the habit of giving down their milk inthe same manner, His cows. certainly sup- ported his claim, and little stripping was necessary in his herd. ally a cow was found which was a hard milker, and a teat slitter was usually employed to render the operation of | milking easier. Isn't this part of the snbject—the proper training of the heifers--worthy of more attention than it generally receives? Occasion- UNOCULTIVATED HONEY PRODUCERS, It is a singular fact that many of the best honey plants are what are char- acterized, in common language, as weeds, But whether it will pay to enltivate weeds for the honey which they produce is a point that yet lacks demonstration. Among these weeds there is none that takes higher rank as 8 honey producer than the mother wort. The patches of motherwort very busy during its sea of blossoming. The figwort is another excellent producer. Catnip wild mustard, milkweed, teasel, bone bees make son set, snapdragons, smart weeds, ish sunflowers, golden rod, wild asters, horchound, sage, and bergamont, are all honey producers of varying excellence. In New England the goldenrod is esteemed for both the quantity and quality of the honey | from its blossoms. Of trees, the best honey producer is, probably, the basswood. It blooms in July, and s basswood tree is one con- stant murmur, when in bloom, from the numerous bees busy in its top. But there are few basswood trees grown, snd the supply from this source is necessarily limited. The sumac produces a good supply of honey, as also does the talip tree. Some willows, the silver, red and rock mapies, aspen polars, locusts and fruit trees—-peach, plum, pear, cherry, ap- pie, quince-—all are honey producers; but the honey from them comes so early In the season ss 10 be used, gen- erally, in building up | vroods. Span needles, wild up the They are rather an indirect than a di- rect source of supply of stored honey, for they produce the producers rather than the product. For this reason only is mention made of them in this connection, for the fruit trees are really cultivated, not unecaltivated, honey producers. In some seasons, from fruit blossoms, and particularly from apple blossoms, a small amount of deliestely flavored honey, of very inviting appearance, is stored, but, as a rule, the nectar and pollen thence | derived are used in strengthening the colonies, so as to have a strong body of workers when the res] flow of the season begins, Without such a body of workers to gather in the harvest, | the surplus store of honey would be small, —~American Agriculturist, | - FARM AND GARDENS NOYES Sheep, in prime order, yield the strongest staple. Fresh manures often excite the trees to a too rapid growth. With young stock, much depends upon the first year's growth. Even the hardiest strawberry will do better if it has a winter mulch. It will pay to churn twice rather han mix cream in different stages ol ripening Cows that are for any reason imper fectly milked, soon degenerate into worthless animals. like sll other stock, want | good food regularly to do their best and return a profit. If the salt is not evenly distributed | the butter will present a streaked and mottled appearance, Feed cows twice a day-—only twice, Lot them chew the cud well between meals. They are built that way, When a cow leaks her milk badly, wotting with milk thoroughly after | milking her will sometimes stop it. Sheep, | a tree just above the roots is gaid to act ne A preservative against grubs, too small for market or table nse They are good for pigs or chickens, The comb of a fowl is a serious in dieator of the health of the bird long as it is red and fall size there is not much danger but the health is | | good. | coment are not to be used in a hen | house, on necoant of it being too cold, it chills the hen so &s to retard hor laying qualities, Nover let any animal got in poor flesh. If yon do your profit upon it is gone, o expense of restoring it to condition if greator than the profit in any sort of sock will war rant. Too much washing of butter ooo: sions a loss of flavor. Froesing dam- ager butter, but if it is to be held long in storage it is better to freeme it, as it will go off flavor faster when held unfrozen, | fog the memory | learn too little, Wa forget it at An old rubber shoe wrapped around | Wash and cook the potatoes that are | As | Stone floors or those made from | Fiectrios, There ought to be an electric machine to wo forget too much and know what's best but the wrong time, Brain action There ars thousands Let Oil, should be like a flash, now suffering intensely with neuralgia, them remember the © Bt, Jacots [ts offs ure, he & unre electrienl, Thmweet Sixteen.” Hood's ealendar, always a welcome Juest, has made its appearance lor and is more beautiful than ever, The head is that of 6 lovely girl just in delicate and natural colors, Besides being » thing of beauty, It Is especially vai bie | eral information present The figures are plaini) and harmonious colors, satisfactory, The calendars of any druggist, or by stamps for ons and ten cents on & Co., Lowell, Mans, ons of them were printed immense demand, These calendars are prietors of Hood's Bars known medicine which renown by its wonderful where the blood was The great laborator has a capacity for ties a day, and is the 04 | Ea) 4 Hayweot sixteen, un wr the wen H printed jn pleasing i the effect is most be obtained fix cents in rtwoto CL Over sight mil- to supply the an nn sending issued by the the pro- wells gained such cures In cabes poisoned or impure, in which it is made fity thousand bot. iargest in g in the world devoted to the are of a medicine, The sales of Hood's Barsaparilia in all sections of the country The proprietors have never would eure every allment, but they show by thousands of testi that Hood's Rarsaparilla purifies and vitalizes the blood, buflds up the system and those dis- cases caused by impure blood debility, as serofula stared, rheumatism, otc, ntiye of the grip, and it netted vital forces after a siege dreaded fortifying the The fact that great preparation of this me ing has ever warranted by previo with the confidenns urstive powers prietors is, “It is not what » food's’ Barsaparilia story, and it) i ue, as sb La ments of arilin, are enormous, Inimed that it IONLRS 1058 and such salt riaeum, It is a gre restores the w of t De at malady, attacks, exercised in the system & future und that noth r it except has much t as i beset {oes Sarsaparilla 3 tilished persons whom it has aired, thal has placed it at the head in the fleld of present day. 8 de plate. oe in the in nhs Catarrh Cannot Be Cured With local applications, as they o anot reach the seat of the disease. Ostarr + a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, snd acts di. rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians fn this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, com. bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di. rectly on the mucous surfaces, The perfect combination of the two ingredients Is wh oroduces such wonderful results io curing oa. farrh. Send for testimonials free, ¥. J. Cagxey & Co. Props, Toledo, O. Boid by druggists, price 7 The Most Pleasant Way Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches and fevers is to use the liquid laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, whenever the system needs 8 To be benefited one must get the true remedy manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all draggists in 50c. and $1 bottles, gentle, yet effective cleansing. “'Brows's Broscuial TRocHs' are ex cellent for the relief of Hoarseness or Sore Throst They are sxoeedingly effective ™- (ristion World, London, Eng A Beautitul Sesvenir Spoon Will be sent with every bottles of Dr. Hozwie's Certain Croup Cwre, Ordered by mall, post. paid, 80 cts. Address, Hoxsde, Buffalo, N. Y. 11 afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thom pe son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 2c per bottle Sw & A DUTY TO THE PUBLI “1 feit it a duty to the public to send this certificate. I had the grip in the winter of Wl and 92 so severely that it deprived me of the use of my arms so that my wife had to Cress and undress me. | tried Sve doctors and uot one sccomplished any Then 1 deter. mined to try Hood's Sarsaparilla Before 1 had taken one bottle | had the use of my arms, thank God. These are facts and can be verified by many persons here. | am pastor of the M. E Chuch™ C W. Ci HAM, Church Creek, Md. Get only H - Tiood's Pills are the best after-dinner pills. AY NU-4 thing. "Thin Children Grow Fat on Scott's Emulsion, because fat foods make fat children, They are thin, and remain thin just in proportion to their inability to assimilate food rich in fat, Scotts Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is especially adaptable to those of weak diges- tion—if is partly digested already. Astonishing how quickly a thin person gains solid flerh by its usel Almost as palatable as malk. wy “A XY. An BAD iis of mach rhennsed of wil ha bo | 8 Shitsostas vzigin, ani) bulge wpur. Frond oon. re i ot iy up the gen. Witte peass | aod Mhareshieh wih matneivt ol a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers