—— - we Aon . Nap i AT THE TURN OF THE ROAD, Where the rough road turns, and the valley sweot Smiles bright with its balm and bloom, We'll forget the thorns that have pierced the foot And the nights with their grief and gloom, And the sky will smile, and the stars will beam, And we'll lay us down in the light to dream. We shall lay us down in the bloom and light With a prayer and a tear for rost, As tirad children who creep at night To the i And for all the grief of the stormy past, ve of a mother's breast, Rest shail be swoeter at last—at last! Sweeter because of the waary way And the lozesome night and long, While the With its splendor of light and song. darkness drifts to the perfect day The light that shall bless us and Kiss us and ) And sprinkle t ~Frank L. St A PINK ses of heaven above us! ant an I — SILK PARASOL UDITH SPENCER. HAT are to do ried Anne. “If Pa had stayed home garet, “But he said Helen. the lecture ended in and he has returned with empty pock ets, anda cold which threatens pneumonia!” “*Ob dear! and we off before little Mother married again,” Margaret murmured, dolefully. Pry cried Helen, stoutly; “not one word against Pa Pendergast —-the dearest old visionary thing that ever hived! we oe nng now?’ quer only quietly at !" sighed Mar- didn't,’ “And tonr wore so well MESON He certainly tries to make a for tune for us,” smiled Anne And has only succeeded in ing u the verge of supplemented Margaret “The expressman is stopping at the gat said Helen; “but, of it's ine beggary ! re Course Yes ing comes to ended Margaret nt later and Helen ealled “Oh, girls, it is for hen A here'sseventy-five cents 18 now but | 3 . back 0s, su fully, to pay!” At last up, eXpressman and the and their state of unusual excitement around the huge, irregular which, by their united had dr into the smitting ‘Who der al Anne. “What do » tioned Helen. ‘ife's loomily, “Madge !” in dismay, But even ¢ ut the strings the lopsiaed | ile burst asunder and shed ts contents of erumbled gOW all kinds of forl ra draggl i finery apon the floor Al 3 | _ her flamed wrathful But the me and it back the tears All her Life now gast had en used to even t she shown s and delicacy in sending their left-off but useful garments to those who were poorer than themse) i was a bitter hn miiiat now, when, for the first time s of dingy and inag propri had been I dump ] her doorstep, without ANY ALCO! nyin from the ricl City ym it un doubtedly had be ‘4 I Lire them adorning first to hand lens Ov JOY necessary amount was dle parted, ther, in a gathered bundle efforts, they middle of the made mi have sent 1 Suppose it 18? ques ld clothes,” Margaret said, an general chorus of Helen ¢ ball 1% and and lip, Margaret's eves vy and Helen laughed her's face worked piteously, was all that she conld doto ke ep Mrs. Pender comfort, and had always own literal 2 Message from wh 0 sent t a practical thing Ianghed Helen, herself with whatever came And Margaret econld not miling at the comieal picture her pretty young sister made with & crushed French bonnet perched eoquettishly on her far curls, a faded and alt wo-ample olive red. ingote onve loping her pretty form, and above her head skeleton of an its melan- choly ribs uplifted now, as if imploring pity Anne laughed hysterically ; but just then Pa's quernlous voice was heard in the room above, and the mother was wind of an excuse to hasten away. Night came The debris had dis- appeared, and the letter of thanks to Cousin Frances, which Helen had volunteered to write, was finished. ‘“Lasten. girls, while I read it." sho said ; ‘but interrupt. If you think of auvthing more to say just wait and I'll add it on at the and. “My Kenerons rich relative, } began, and vaardloss of the murmur of dista she hastily went on “dt was thoughttal of you to send us wieh a lot of old elothes (which we cali b possibly make nse of), and not to prepay the express (which is un- commonly high in this part of the world We now understand why it in ‘mare blessed to give than receive!’ But, nolorinostély, we don't know any one who wonld teke such stuff as a gift, unless is the gman’ — “Halon! “You shan't send suoh a letter!” and Margaret anabched the perfectly proper little note she had written from Helen's hand, while the young girl lsagheod merrily over tha snecess of her impromptu nonsense, She loved to tease her sober alder sisters, and with her happy disposition she found » way of getting fun ont of everything. Bat ansious and busy days came after this, Pa Pendergast was serious. Among who was even help wether the bony once splendid parasol don tL she rising wn, in Atlanta Constitution. | disaster : | lecture tours, with which he was always trying to retrieve their fallen for- tunes, At last, however, they had managed to persuade him to put it off until the fall. . There was no family in all the vil. | lage who hand once stood so high, or | who were more respocted in these days of their misfortunes. “Pay” | failings and good qualities were alike freely discussed, and his wife com miserated for having allowed her vis ionary spouse the control of her com fortable little fortune, which, under his childlike inoapacity for business, had disappeared in an incredibly short number of years, | Anne and Margaret were | main support of the family, now one | teaching music and the other having | | a good position in the village school. | The “little Mother” and Helen | were the “household angels" and it | was no light task to keep things nice | and comfortable with their extremely | limited purse, and to prevent “Pa” from seeing too plainly the ruin he had wrought The neighbors were very kind, and often some little delicacy found its way to their scanty table — given with wo much friendly good-will that sensi tive little Mrs. Pendergast was no more hurt by the attention than the neighbors were Helen brought them bunches of Mayflowers from the woods in spring But of late Helen's fingers had been busier than ever. Upon careful re-ex amination the “‘bundle” had possibilities which had not been ap parent at the first. And the old party dresses, dyed—for Helen had tered the dyepot’s mysteries long ago were ransformed into four pretty silk petiicoats h would ‘rustle delightfully” under their woolen gowns, “Just the last any of | | | when shown As now whie the world Helen ad fit for things in ns really wanted, mitted; “but the silk another thing, aud asit didn't ec anything I guess we can afford to ‘swell’ for ones Then in some had dainty a gown old gray opera wasn t wt us be magical way her deft fingers fashioned for herself as from lnmine the best ye ne ave the § is of rs and LLY the well worn eding pretty maiden we o church on a bright Sunday i I'he battered anew with apple over the kettle's reviving steam the crowning feature the costume was a beantiful pink silk wasin Frane Paris bonnet bloomed blossoms, freshened jut of parasol, « would certaidly never have recognized as the “‘skele ton of her bundle, newly clad in the pink lin if the cloak, and adorns flounces of the ch “Girls, how do anxious questi which C famons i ng 1 with th iffon gown. I look?” pe rsa freshest WAS H:« len's arraved for the first time in her glory WAS about to start with them for church “Just too sweet and lovely |” Mar garet said, with enthusiasm; and the mother, who thought her girls were perfect, echoed Margaret's nu all she always words Au hardly in sc ned circu the almost Quakerish simplicity but Helen was so that yuld not bring herself to speak her loubt fter all might prove without foundation Shs ke however, to sensation Helen's which, ne was troubled uch finery ord with neir with of the happy nstances, r which, a nly suive WAS which and the Bp pear during divided attention congregation with the words And v's straining ears of un i float ance all the of ROO i service the the minister & Ann ord than one which seen after the service, caught m fragment friend ing in the air “It does beat whispered to her neighbor, ly criticism, old Mrs. Sharp “how folks all, behind-hand in their rent ean buy sach fine ry : Pa Pend: his everlastin “Fraps rast has how made fortune,’ the audible answer “Did vou see ke pt lookin’ at her? to dress ife like that Bassett him so durin’ the tion." Chan Bassett He can't afford I heard Mis collec how aw tell “Jest sce that pink parasol! Why, ‘Many couldn't get one, plain dark blue, for less'n five dollars An’ silk petticoats, too, I know by the rustlin They're up an’ down extravagaut, or | else they ain't so poor as they've been | makin’ out.” ‘“An’ the neighbors sendin cake on’ pie st every bakin'!” Helen's checks were like roses as they went on their homeward way, and Anne wondered if she, too, had overheard the gossips’ whisperings, or whether the deeper flush was only the ‘em In reflection from the pink silk parasol, | which she held so bravely overhead Margaret was less observing, and was { evidently quite nnconscionsof any un- nsual stir going on around them. It waa the first Sunday in many motiths that Chauncey Bassett had not | walked home with Helen, He had been with his mother on the church steps when they came ont, but he had only bowed audthen had looked away. It was certainly strange, thought | Helen, but-if he didn’t want to come, {he needn't! And no one, not even | Anne, should know she eared! I The weeke rolled around, and sum: | mer followed spring. Every Sunday | | Helen went to church in her brave at- { fire, and walked home afterward with 'Anne and Margaret; and Chauncey Clever came. | She never montionad him; but | Anne, watching her darling with jeal- {ond eyes, saw how her cheeks grow i paler, and how listless she seemed to | be as the summer days went on, | One night a» Anne lay pondering upon these things, with Margaret asloop beside her, she heard a stifled jsob from the cot where Helen lay, RE . | ly ill for a time, and before he was | really able to ba around again he was | planning snother of those disastrous | the | | weren't That was all; but it was not lo: ~ be. fore Anne had determined what to do. And the next day, on her way home from the village, she stopped at Mrs, | Bassott's for the first time since that | spring Sunday when Chauncey had lingered at Lis mother's side. “It's ever so long since I've had a chance to run in,” Anne began, with friendly apology. ‘But I've been so busy, teaching right along. It was fortunate for us that the Bentons wanted their children to make up [all they lost when they had | whooping cough last spring. If {it wasn't for that and for two of | Margaret's music scholars, who have | kept right on, I hardly know what we should have done?” It was not like Amne to speak so freely of their affairs; but Mrs. Bas- sett showed no signs of unbending yet, “You know how it Anne con- | tinued, with heightened color, “Pa tries to do all he can; but he's always unfortunate,” ’ “Then that last 18, BO lecture tour wasn't n success?” said Mrs. Bassett, falling into Anne's skilfully opened net. “Everyone thought he must 'n’ been makin’ money, the way Helen out this spring “And didn’t she look Anne. “But people by appearances! I'm you, Mrs have CRIN sweet?” cried shouldn't judge going to tell it around, A cousin mother's in the city sent us a dle of old clothes. the most ingenious, girl get a bun Aud Helen is just most economical saw | for us at all, and 1 thought they'd be of no use whatever but Helen turned them and dyed them, and made the old worn ont party silks into the prettiest petticoats you ever and one for each of us! Then the poor child needed a8 new dress badly ; she hadn't a thing fit to wear to church, and conldn’t aflord to buy anything: so she to work tty gray of too when it you ever Those suitable Kaw wo went and somehow made that pre and gown ont nothing! And her bonnet, have ' Hive Just you mght to An i, cost seen it CAln« hysterically, “‘all that never us a single penny! ‘Yon don't mean to Mrs Bassett, in nu that pink silk parasol?’ she “Mandy Ward priced ons they sixteer say ! ejacn ints iT M queried in the dollars! tT amazement ty, an’ anked She m tos! half ie that, eried Ann “Oh, vou don't how clever Helen further, though? ly. “I wouldn't be CRIs know You won't let this RO ANDY she added, like well, bw 1% ANXIOUS. one it wa every know, . the first time old thiugs to Mother ‘I won't tel Mrs i must tell ee SIT ROY had over ried il but Chan,’ “But | home to An Your I a livin" = Bassett said, him night, you know, an’ I'm ma, right soon nne went her way with a lighter heart; and she had not fa Chauncey Bassett himself came into To her surprise he stopped. “It's ever i've earne He'll be over Sunday, round to comin wo view, so long since ween you,” he began awkwardly, “Why y asked in her ivi around?” y pleasant way, noting snd troubled he haven't you been {ace said, sad 0 UR I cant think f but--Helen! And I never realized until-—-until one Sun in the spring Aune the farmer's book keeper she best I could ever her would not be worthy as she i ““‘and 1] better for me before IN WA | tell wou “It's be one or anything way, denly. ROY far mbove ! was Then I saw that the hope to give f her—not having now I knew that if to--to mn h smiled even as Anne iid be her i» wo forget dreamed [ had thought I con but 1 madness t for me, her ; she ever be gun care | tarn my thoughts and though it is coul i vet nnst see to AWAY eYer Oar and tell not to, 1 her and, unless you tell me am coming this very night “Come, "said Anne, with a reassur ing smil Supper was over and the girls were putting the things away. As Margaret disappeared in the china closet with a pile of plates, Anne said cheerily: “Oh, I met Chauncey Bassett as I was coming home, and, do you know, he said he was coming aronnud-- to-night, “Anne! you didn’t say--an- thing?” “Yon dear little Not a word that the town crier couldn't pro- claim with propriety. But 1 thought he was looking thin and worried, poor fellow, There, I'll wipe the teacups, for you had better go light the lamp in the parlor, and put on your pretty gray gown, directly.” “If he had waited until he had seen his mother, I'd have hated him--al- | most,"” thought Anne, an hour later, when, above the murmur of voices in the little parlor she heard Helen's Inugh ring gayly, as of old. And tho next day, being Sunday, the village gossips had something new to talk of ; for Mrs. Bassett actually | waited and kissed Helen on the church { porch. And Channcoy walked home | with her again, as he used to do; but | thongh his face was radiant, no one ! could got sight of her emiles and blushes | then, for carefully and almost revor- entinlly Ohauncey was shielding hor lovely face with the pink silk parasol, «Indep ndent. You KOORe ! An Electric Tow Horse Another scheme has been proposed for ntilizing the trolley system on the canals. The plat consists in laying a narrow-gauge track on each bank and moving the boats in tows by means of a small oar furnished with a device for gripping the rail, to be driven by a motor from an overhead trolley line. «Detroit Free Pross, — Italy exported 4%0,000,009 dozen egus last year. Jassett tho' I should hate to | of things | before : KING COTTON'S STORY TOLD HISTORY OF THE STAPLRE'S PRO- DUCTION IN THIS COUNTRY A Hundred Years Ago the Entire | Crop Was 20,000 Bales Annual Product Is 9,000,000, 24 HE Manufacturers’ cotton production { country, by R. H. the editor. Just 100 years total crop of the South bales, but by 1820 this had increased to nearly 400,000 bales, Under this rapid gain in production prices gradu ally declined from forty-four cents pound in 1801 to thirteen and one-half cents in 1839, With prices ranging from thirteen to forty-four cents, and averaging for forty years, from 1800 to 1839, a frac tion over seventeen cents a pound, cot ton cnltivation was so profitable that we cannot wonder at the disposition of in Edmonds ago, the people of the South to concentrate | their efforts more and more caltivation to the exclusion of indus trwl interests. Beginning with 1840 there came a period of extremely low prices and the Cotton Btates suffered very much from this decline, In that year the New York prices dropped to nine o« nts, a decline of four cents from the preceding VOAr, and this was followed by a continnons decline until 1846, the 5.63 lowest on cotton average w hi n the ever known to the in 1891.92, RYerage wns cents, AVOr Re cotton trade. normou the de Baring price Even when an « surplns of cotton f« pression that failure forced claimed was the lowest point on re the nt New York » cents, or nearly two ceats higher thar in 1846, Moreover, 1846 the seed was without 1861.92 the a pound to How ng the what sneceeded prices to many ord, Average 7.1 1,00 in value, while added | weed almost the transportation was than in 1846 In short and pri i drop back to scale of A cent Valls even and one the ave rage for th leende, to 1849, the cotton trade, After giving in detail of prodnction, con owest ever known sumj t 1840, KB VH for each vear since ra of the going sven years of facturers’ He A study show that fore increasing crops, as from IRG1-92, was history of trade leading crop raised can shov unbroken Jumping from 5, R51 INCcreass for seven Your: ‘ O00, 000 bales 1 1884 y 6.500.000 bales 1n 1885.88 ther was practically no halting, as ations in two vears were too small be noticeble, to 9 085, 000 1591.92, of 3 bales in A gain 300,000 bales, or nearly sixty per cent. advance in seven years. It ought not to have been ex- pected that consumption could keep | pave with such an increase. Fortunate- ly there camen break, and we have now had two shorterops. This will help to reduce the enorm as sto that overweighted the market for YOArs With surplus sto off a fresh start can be next year'serop is m cotton treads on a sonnd basis for h ke himve several ks w made, lerately small ; then | igher price cause consumption will overtaken production In eighteen years cotton has brought into the South over 85, 700 000 000. a vast that the profits out of it ought to have been enough to enrich the ately, the following f the world wil then has SUN groatly Unfortun systems which the poverty the developed, of rais- ing cotton only and buying provisions and gre the West, left but little sarplus m : cotton crop. The West ) drained that section of He seciion wh WAT nn at hh { the and North al bundred ar, be for all of 11 as for ome« ones sever dollars every v them wie, as wy million anse it its the Hence, of the ived for cot depended upon manufactured go bulk of its food stuffs CRnormons amount recy on, South The increase farming, the raising of supplies, the de- velopment of trucking and the baild ing of factories are all uniting to keep at home the : went North and West cotton raiser himself be getting the full benefit of this or not, the South at large is necessarily doing so. The figures given in the tables show that yield per acre for the seventeen years under review was 145} pounds in 188], and the highest 200; pounds in 180], little remained in the in diversified home very money which formerly Whether the Had the yield per acre in 1891 been as | low as in 1881 the cro: would have been less than 6,700,000 bales, instead | of 9,035,000 bales, From 1840 to 1.49 price in New York wa pound, a lower averag than any single year sin: except 1801-92, the ight cents per nine has shown 4 © 104 The importance of cotton in our | foreign trade relations ean be appre. | ciated from the simple statement that since 18756 onr exports of this staple have been valued at §3,800,000,000, while the total exports of wheat and ! flour combined for the same period | have been £2,5600,000,000, showing a | difference of 81,500,000,000, or over fifty per cent in favor of colton, Moreover, during the same period we have manufactured cotton goods, making the full value really $4,000,000,000, Compared with the exports of whoat, flone and corn combined, the value of which since 1875 has been $3,100,000, 000, there is a difference in favor of cotton of $900,000,000. Going back to 1820, it is found that the total valoe of lone and wheat exporied for the last seventy -four years ix $3,018,000. 000, or $100,000,000 less than the value of the colton exported during the last cighteen years, . | Now the Record i publishes a brief history of | this | the | was 20, 000 foregoing the lowest average | i LYOTage Years | exported about §200,000,000 of | SELECT SIFTINGS, Fir is stronger than oak. Peanuts yield a superior oil, There are thirty species of tobacco, Tobacco grows wild in some parts of Texans, In Japan editors must be twenty-ons Years old, Three out of every 135 speaking people have red hair. Fug The mildest day England has seen for fifty-two years was last Christmas, Drovers say that a sheep weighs more lying down than when standing up. Mrs. Lmeinda Perry, of Tipton, Mo. , has married a widower with nineteen { children. The “‘Georgin thumper” grass hopper has a wing spread equal to that of a robin Recruits for the not necepted nuless they diteh six It is said that the human heir will turn white during violent emotion if the haul is laid upon it. Letters wre still occasionally re ceived at the Marshfield (Mass Post office addressed to “the Hon. Daniel Webster A missionary in New Yor visited 4516 families in found only one avowed infidel in whole What is supposed to be a meteorite has been unearthed at Windsor, Conn, It is about 3} feet by 2} feet and eighteen inches thick, with a knob on nd The Excelsior,” the largest mond in the world, is kept in a safe in the Bank of England, It is t and too valuable for use, and there fore remains locked up. Chinese Army are can jump a feet wide, who his district the number, HE) one « “ dia- n found sat Geneseo, mt to his telephone the is abstracted if up. that I and a sweet potato ARRATVA MEeARTres imference are of H. A. Bay. Fla f Boston, ciret the farn Andrew iwo p in ts fron Lusk near B. Carey, num ior legins, of the 1Hize sinmi tal, through infonts | a pair mad me tramped Florida, They ‘ SHAKes, wer Dy electric i} whe nto During the seg batts ries of allied army city over 50 000 the besieged shot The of Mi baston i] threw and shell cost of {| boats was | things Lo DO PpUrpoOss | tried tons of | | the | artillery firing and the waloe of thy | guns ruined and condemned is esti mated at 812,000, 000, Three ) VORTS while saffering re attack of the gr | LR Mrs f Williamsport, Pen: While attending St week her v R20, veer attrib idential aid, Lytle, of Hickory ounty, 18 probably teacher actual Township, M the dest service in n in He Venango ( VANIA oom menoeed in 1839, and ninety terms wie men He is as alert to forty-five, I — The Judge was a Fighter, A Western judge was listening {« attorney who had a mean habit of ne i procee i- was he and LT tee 4 into the terpolating remarks if the ¢ ely ever imbled would never re aay he heard except the judge, became exceedingly angry to the court bailiff, he thundered “Adjourn this cofirt !” as the bailiff had done his duty, judge stepped from the Ix nch, beck oned to the lawyer to follow him, and entered the clerk's office, went along. So did two or three other As as the judge fairly into the room, he seized a book, and turning upon the lawyer, hie fairly screamed: *'I was on the bench a while ago and you insulted me, I was a judge then, 1 am a man now, and the man will have an apology for the judge, or he will take it ont of your hide. Yon might make an apology to the judge, but you would not mean it. Now, however, the case more serious, and nuless you give me what I ask, I will smash your head.” The lawyer made a most abject apology, which the judge accepted, and then the party went back to the conrt-roon and resumed business —Argonaat. What h by any " ings irt “al heard rather SCAT one, a than spoke, mark whit h peat & Ie said meting nobody vho The lawyer ywonle, #O0nN Peo] got law. 1s ——— One Oven lor a Community, The oven is a communal institution in Brittany. In former times the ovens were owned by the barons, and the people who were under their pro- tection paid them for the use of them. Subsequently they were owned by the commune, to which payment was made, They still exist to-day and soe {a use, The fuel is farnished by those of the commune, snd at stated times the oven is fired, and the bread which has been prepared by those in the iamediate vicinity is brought to the oven fo be baked. The oven is about fifteen feet square, a very crude contrivance. The walls and doors are made of stone. It is arched over in a rude way and covered with earth. These ovens are nearly niways green with plants and vines which grow on the top. —Northwestern Miller. i 1] ! ounty at once | Tarning | ont * i Then, as soon | the | A Top Heavy War Steamer, tler Majesty's ship Resolution, one of the best war ships in the navy, as was supposed, recently left Plymouth for Gibraltar, was caught in a terrible gale in the Bay of Biscay, and had to put back to Queenstown, Tt is sated that during the height of the storm she rolled forty degrees each day, and her deck rails were frequently under water, The ship had to keep her head to the wind for two days, owing to the extreme danger of her enprizing if any attempt made before the gale abated to tury her head toward port, Two men were washed overboard to. gether, but the captain of the torpedo catcher Gleaner, it is reported, jumped overboard, and with the assistance of the Resolution’s lifeboat, saved one of the men. The other disappeared. It is nnderstood that at times the Resoln the gravest danger, being almost unmanageable and at the mercy of the which broke over her. Water in hundreds of tons got in the i und of the between decks smashed, —Scicntific Ameri- were tion was In et Ons | | Can. - cnet ——s Pawnbrokers of Wash., must furnish the every artici Falls, daily Bpokane poles with a list of handled by them. swat ——— A Sufe, Sound Trust, Not one mak corporations trusts, for morally speaking we place in things most successial, a1 lish a most substantial trust do it. “My Fairmont, Neb, way to wife Anes and was helpl Ath with sciatica I got It stop had me a trust founded said ‘no tine she here is on the s freer Tal ple . ¢ ! iy rom the exparien belng doubting Thomas take he sa g — y a trust r himsel max Grass nnd Clover Seed f Gr rot Beware of Olatments for Catarrk That Cosinin Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces, Buch articles should never be d except on prescriptions from reputable physitians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to Lhe good you can possibly derive from them, Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Ca, Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system Hall's Or arrh Cure be sure toget t Is taken Internally, and is mas Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Ca. Sa Solid by Drugeista, pric An Important Difterence, To make it apparent to thousands, who think themselves ill, that they are not affected with any disease, but that the sysiem simply needs cleansing, is fo bring comfort Lome to thelr cured by the bearte, as a oostive condition is easily using Syrup of Figs. Manufa Califc tured by rufa Fig Syrup Cx y Saver Remsen Ty A Beantitul Sesvonir Spoor Will he sent witl very hattle of Fy Ceviagin : pid } Ad are. Orders Y TBR i. dress. Hoxsie, Buffalo, N.Y of Se Paste ( remed: « and Harnesamaker 1's Arabyan Veterinary Read the ads make Lhe soid ty They known Dr Beccham's Pills « pation. Beecham s i 1 And ponst i. no ot he 4 a box Universal Cough Syrup put no an others and henefits more Micted with sore eyes u se Dr. Isanc Thomp. Druggists « aut I per bottle, Rev, O. H. Power Symptoms of Cancer Appeate] on my lip. Dissgrecable sruptions came on my neck. After taking § bottles of Hood's Sarsapariila, all the traces of disease have disappeared and the medicine has given me renewed vigor and strength. {am now al. most 73 years of age, and work Mike a ti. ger. And 1 knew that Hood's Sarssparilla has had much to do with vigor and strength. 1 recommended it to my wife, who has suffered so much with rheumatic troubles, In two years my ar ales with female weakness, Hood’s*=*Cures shie has used about § bottles of Hood's Sarsa- parilla, and today, and for the Inst 6 months, she seems like a new being.” Rev. GH. Pow. wa, 224 Hanover Street, Chicago, 1linois Hood's Pills cure all ver (lle, bilbonsmes, aun thor, Indigestion, sick headache, 20 conta wTHOMAS PP, SIMPSON, PATENT Washington, D.C. No at's fees wit Patten: obtained, Weite for Inventor's Guide K¥YNUwNs Mr. J ©. Jones, of Fulton. Arkansas, MERCURIAL: “About ten years 1 oon tracted a severe case of hood pots made my life one of agony. RHEUMATIS 1 8 Afr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers