——————————" i; ———— —. {—————————————— ". sp— LIFE'S VICTORIES, when, after the long drive and the Tha bravest man is ho who owns, I'hrough good report and ili, In sunshine, in the darkest hour, A self-reliant will, Lot come what may, no coward he, For {acing fate o'er fearlessly, fle braves the most tempesteous sea, dungeon at Peel Castle, and of the spectral dog which haunts the ruins— very content were all to sit round my snowy cloth on the green and partake of the good things spread thereon. “Shall you dream of the spectral dog?" asked Canon Goodman, laugh- ing, as we drove home at last through the twilight. “Don’t talk of it,” said younger of the boys. Others may ialter by the way, Others may faint and fall, But r he moots the worst, And nobly He ki The stars ¢'er shine, and grandly prove The b nward e's Albert, the ronquers all, It is all very ows that far the clouds above duylight, but by-and-by, when Ed ward and I are alone in that horrid little dark room of ours” “Lock your door,” said Edward ina sopuichral voice. “Oh, I dare say,”’ said Carry, with a nervous shiver; ‘‘but you ean’t lock ont a ghost,” undless measure of God's love, Whoever, Shall in the ranks of Truth, strive to reach the van, And lead the Right to victory, Does honor to the Man 10 slothful one, lay 30 No laggard h For ovem He te Thoug! and cares oppress, The ome and pain, He Enows there is in every grief A victory t He reads, encouragement to find, This warning precept on his mind fora! Look not behind! 0 gob begun, We got home late and very tired, and went at once to our rooms. Half an hour afterwards just as I was put- ting out my candle, Carrie came in in her dressing gown, with her beautiful hair down her back. Carrie really is a pretty girl, and her hair is wonder ful. It fell in bright soft nearly to her knees. “Jane,” she said, coaxingly, let me sleep with you to-night.” “This hot night!” I exclaimed; | “‘why, Carry, how uncomfortable we { should be.” “Do let me, Jane! Somehow I can think of nothing but that horrid dog. eth till his work is done, fortune ii! yagh sorrow gain. Hope points Who would life's noblest trinmphs win, Must struggle for the Right, 1" Wrong and Sin “do wsall, ight arth and night are o'er | walk that shining shore neth nevermore Caleb Dunn, in New York LAYING A GHOST. Ledger Of course I {and in five | asleep. | - . Next morning when we all met at breakfast, I asked, laughingly, if all gl party of seven | of them had *‘locked their doors.” Olt The girls laughed and shook the voung people, and 1€ gir aug n 8 er . | heads, “No one, I tral dog?" let her stay with me, minutes we E were a merry were spending ou summer vacation in the Isle of Man. said Carry. Our reynirements | Ihe girls again shook their heads, for a holiday resi- | but Edward colored and looked away. dence were that it | “Edward said Carry, “you look should bea pretty | guilty ; I am glad some one else was place, a afraid. ! was too frightened to sleep alone, and went in to Jane ty not frightened, ward, indignantly, me. I saw and felt “Saw it! once. ‘‘Oh, suppose, saw the spec seaside place and a cheap place. Inthe days of which I speak Ramsey combined all those Our little ons sister and myself, 1g girls who were in our charge and two South American boys, whose parents had placed them with my mother, in Birkhead, Europe to return home. was unable t leave mer, so | was the holiday twenty keeper representative ‘said Ed it came t WAS ““but ig exclaimed all the girls at what was it like? Hed it fiery eyes? Did it not feel cold and like? What did it did it only bark ?” “Oh, lovely to really know someone who, with his own eves, be held a ghost ! “It eame from your room, anvhow, Miss Carry. The night was so hot that I was restless and conld not sleep, and as I lay awake I heard your room door shut and something trail itself across the lobby; and then my door gently opened and something dim, and tall, and black, entered and towards the bed.” ‘“‘Horrible! Ind you start up? Did you scream? We heard no noise.” “No,” said Edward, “somehow it fascinated me and I felt that I must advantages ted cot nt party of my thre COT PS say, or on leaving My mother home that sum- eldest of the liitle and I was not yet age. Yet I was the ot the purse, the matron, the of authority, order in eur little community We had very nice lodgings in a beanti ful pre the They were more expensive then we wished, but the fact that the ouly other lodger was a quiet old lady, who lived there | winter and summer, and made it, in fact, her home, decided us to take the rooms. We were all so young that I felt it would not do to be where noisy | lie still and watch it. There was very - gxeursionists or objectionable young Hitdle light, so 1 only saw it like a people might share the house. All | dérker ee] in the derkivess “moving wenfi pleasantly for the first few days. | slowly towhrd the bed.” The ‘boys spent their mornings in| The three girls shivered: Carry’s ‘bathing and their afternoons in boat- face was as white as paper, so,to0 break ing—they were dear boys— and in the the spell, I said evenings, which I insisted we should ‘‘But the spectral dog could not look all spend together, they were the life | tall, Edward, though, of course, it of our little party Onur landlady de- | would look big vlared openly that we were the nicest “How can tell * lodgers she had ever had, and our fel- | ‘yon never saw a spectre, low inmat the old lady-—visited it do, Edward? in our parlor She was a tall, “It glided over toward the bed. handsome old very thin, with could hear it breathe quite distinctly sharp aquiline features and large, “I did mot know that glittering breathed," said 1 “My d Carry stamped her foot, we Vou “Do let Edward tell us, Jane; no : wonder it did not go No spectre would condescend to visit any one so prosaic and commonplace.” Edward continued his tale. “It stood up, tall and dim and dark, beside the bed, then it slowly bent wer, felt my head with its black paws, heaved a deep sigh, then slowly raised itself and again glided f room how party, years of discipline mition, facing HOA, came yon said Carry, What did us ittle lady, spectros hiack eves she said “I eame is my daty, as I know the Ways of the place You, of eannot know them, but I hope lock ; at night? Here she looked around our cirele and finally fixed her eyes on Edward, whe with a little nervous laugh Indeed, no, ma'am, 1 lock my door “Very wr Mg bo It is the yt “What wait Al it conrs to you. vou all FOUr QAOOrs answered never ¥ Very wr in- noiselessly way to ong from the Here all drew long breaths of won der. For some minutes there was dead silence, then all began to talk at once, “Well,” I said at last, ““if there is going to be nothing but ‘spectral con versation’ I shall go and hunt up Canon Goodman and get him to take me for a breezy walk on the hills to blow all this nonsense out of my brains,” in the afternoon our old fellow lodger, Mrs. Consadine, came in to us Her eyes looked blacker and more glistening than ever, and her manner was certainly very odd. She asked Carry if the noise of the sea did not prevent her sleeping, as it had been a | rongh night. “Oh,” I said, “Carry came in to me "Inst night, and you know my room is at the back of the house and away from the sea.” “Ah, Miss Carry has changed her room." “Only for one night,” I said. “They were all made nervous by hearing the legend of the spectral dog at Peel Cas- tle yesterday, and Carry could not sleep alone lest it should come to her." MmiyY possibie asked Edward, after s reasonable time for the old lady to finish her sentence, ““The draught, boy, thedraught."” Edward was now giggling openly, ntly that ‘a little extra air rather pleasant these hot nights,’ and I was relieved to find that the old Indy's attention had waadered to sister Carry. ‘My dear,” she said abruptly, have beautiful hair,” ‘Do yon think so, Carry modestly. “Think so; of course I think so.” said ths old lady, in an angry tone. ““Any one might covet such hair.” “Her wicked sister has often coveted it," said I, langhing, Our visitor looked at me sharply ; then rising abruptly said to Carry ‘‘Be advised, my dear, youn lock your door at night,” and left the room. The boys at once exploded in ap roarious langhter while the puzzled Carry turned to me. “What can should we lock on ain * ng 80 1 said @e * I Was my yon : ma'am?’ said she mean, and why our doors when she herself is the only stranger in the house! Bhe surely does not mean that we shonld lock our doors against each “Then now you will lock your door?" other?’ | said Mrs, Consadine, “For fear your wicked sister should | “Indeed I shall not,” said Carry. cut off your hair, eh, Cary? “I should always imagine I had locked At this moment a telegram was | it in with me.” brought in which made ds forget all! ‘Locked it in with you and that about the old Indy. It told us to be beautiful hair. Yes, I soe; it would ready early next morning for & drive | be most imprudent.” to Peel, as a cousin of mother's, an| On hearing this speech Oarry old clergyman, of whom we were very | glanoal at Edward, and catching his fond, would bring a carriage for us! eye they both tittered audibly. For. immediately after breakliost. All was tunately the landlady just then now hustle and preparation, the land: knocked at the door, and asked Mrs Indy taking orders and giving advice | Consadine to speak to her, so she left as to the substantial cold lunch which | vs withont noticing the two young I wished nicely packed and ready to | people's rudeness, o with us: aud very eleverly the land. at night T wakened with a sud- andy catered for us, and very content | den start and sat up in bed, listening were our hungry party the next day, | intently, I heard in the stillness low well while we are here together 1u the | ripples | I shall not close an eye if I am alone.” | were both | moan from the direction of Carry's sightseeing, and thrilling tales of the room, anda moment after the words: { “Oh, Jane, come to me" -—not | seronmed, but sent, as it were, by the {mere foree of their fervor—throngh the intervening space to my ear. Not | waiting to strike a match, I was in an instant in her room, the door of which {I found open. She was lying quite still, moaning most pitiably: Jane, Jane! come to me.” “My dearest, I am here,” | taking her in my arms. wrong? Are you ill or in pain?” “Oh, Jane, it has been here, just as | Edward described it! Oh, take me | inte your room; let us go away from { this horrible place.” Of course I understood that my poor { little sister had had a nightmare, and | that it was no use reasoning with her | just then, so I led her to my room, her eyes hidden on my shoulder, lest even in the darkness she should see dreaded shape. Once in my bed, I {| wrapped her in my arms and by de- | grees she ceased to tremble, and in a little time we were both quietly asleep, IT said, fast time, and were dressing hurriedly when suddenly it struck me that there was something very unusial about Carry's head. “Carry,” 1 said, done to your hair?" “Done to my hair?” “Nothing.” “That is nonsense, look at your hair." Carry went to the glass, “Then, Jane,’ said, white, awe-stricken face to me— “Jane, it was no dream ; something did lean over me in the night and touch my hair.” “want have yon my dear; just she “Some one has played a wicked, practical joke,” 1 said angrily ; besides frightening you most cruelly, has quite spoiled the front of your hair. is cut off; of course, now yon must ent the other side and wear a horrid fringe, Mother will be angry when you go home to her with a fringe Poor Carry began to ery and at that moment the breakfast bell rang. There was no help for it —a lock had to be cut off the left side of her hair to make it correspond with the now shorn condition of the right side, I locked the long, silken tress carefully and Carry combed her fringe over her white forehead, and was con- soled to find that she looked prettier than ever. The instant we entered the breskfast-room every one cried out: ‘Oh, Miss Carry, how nice you look with a fringe!” One side AWAY, Carry was too indignant fo answer, | and was I. One of the horrid young wretches had certainly played this cruel trick, and probably all the thers wore in the secret I resolved to say nothing sbout it till I could consult with Canon Godman =a to the best punishment for them, but in the mean time I really could not bring myself to speak to them. Unfortu- nately the canon had gone to Douglas Mo . #0 justice could aa Gre till on PétUTR, | the mean time their hypoerisy. They talked as though they believed Carry had her- self cut off her front hair just to see how she would look with a fringe. Carry kept her temper admirably, never answered them, snd never al- Inded to the occurrences of the night, but, of course, they all saw that we were not friends with them, and the more they tried to get back again into favor the more indignant 1 felt and the more 1 longed for the Canon's re- turn, that they might reap the conse- quences of their wickedness, I was quietly working that evening, soon after the lamps were lighted { The girls were playing ‘consequences’ and the boys had disappeared, when suddenly I heard Edward's voice at the door, asking earnestly if I would speak to him. I thought he was go ing to confess what he knew of last night's work, so I went to him at ones, “Miss Jane,” he said, ve ry (queer is going on sadine’s room. Do come dow and wee { I answered indignantly that I was not “in the habit of intruding on the privacy of ladies, not of spying through their windows.” “Bat it is dangerous,” said Edward. “She has a eandle, and I feel quite sure she has some of Miss Carry's hair —anybow, it is just like it." A light, dim, but distinet, began to | dawn on my bewildered mind. Edward gently by the hand. “Show me the window,” Lh in ‘something Mrs. Con- the win- in to side of the house, Edward | cross the little balcony and drew | from my view, and I saw poor Mra | Consadine, with flowers on her head, | a candle in one hand and a tress of | Carry's golden hair in the other, | dancing before a large mirror, talking | $0 herself and to the back of her hair alternately, but often going danger- ously near to the lace curtaine which | fluttered in the draught. | Tho spectral visitation was ox. plained. The poor crazy lady had | evidently been aware of her propensity | for wandering through the house at night, and had reslly wished us to | lock her out of our rooms ; but finally she had coveted my sister's lovely hair, and had contrived in the night to possess horself of a tress, which was evidently a cherished thing. I need not tell of my indignant remonstrance with the landlady for treacherously leaving us unwarned of the mental condition of her lodger, nor of the tears and humble apologies with which she propitiated me, “The poor old Indy was quite harm- | loa, would not hurt a fly—only she loved pretty things, and the young lady's besutiful hair was too much for the poor dear to withstand, and if she a ——_——— s- “Oh, | “What is | the We did not wake till nearly break- | said Carry. | turning =» “and, | I was disgusted with | (0d and tied | This mode of treatment is given until I took | do? might make so free, the young lady looked more sweeter than ever with her pretty fringe, so no harm were done, but in & manner of speaking, only good.” Will it be believed that it was Carry’s view of the subject also; that she begged and prayed of me not to give up the lodgings; that from that day she took the ‘‘poor dear,’ as she enlled Mrs. Ceonsadine, under her special protection, and that finally, when at the end of our holidays we were leaving Ramsey, she presented | her, asa parting gift, with the other | lock of hair. London Crosses, - I . WISE WORDS, Few, save the poor, feel for the poor. A { blind. lover's eye will gaze an eagle Our enemies are our outward con- | seiences. | If thon wouldst be borne with, then bear with others. Character iss diamond that scratches { every other stone. The truly sublime is always easy and always natural Be generous. Meanness means ene- mies and breeds distrust, The discernment of self-interest re- quies superior intelligence. The recording angel never seeks in formation from a gravestone. Sin in its own clothes would never find a place to stay all night. Some men never learn the difference between education and conceit, The usual fortune of complaint is t« excite contempt more than pity, He that will watch providence shall never want providence to watch. Cut off a rooster's spurs, and vou take the italics all out of his crow, When we are patient with some peo- ple it is only a successinl pretense, Human nature is human nature the throne as well as in the gutter. A million rend to one who needs a million dollars. that other out In us, on one dollar DETsonS something brought Character Pe ople's lives have The people dead are very eat, wish of what who they were careful they ee — Dwarfing Trees In Japan, The art tle known in description of its process is given Garden and Forest. The pines f dwarfing plants is so lit other lands that a short by may | truly be considered the most import. aut of all trees in Japan, and great eare is taken in their cultivation and preservation They are generally grown from seed, and great care taken to select the choicest quality of seed. In the spring of the second year, when the seedlings are about eight inches in height, they are staked with bamboo canes and tied with rice w | straw, the plants being bent in differ ent desirable shapes. In the next fall they are transplanted to richer soil sre well fertilized. In the follow- ing spring the plants are restaked and in fanciful forms. the seventh year, when the tree will have assumed fairly large proportions, the branches being trained in graceful forms snd the foliage like small crowds of dense green. The plants are now taken up and placed in pots one and a half feet in diameter, and are kept well watered every snoceoding year grost care must be taken to keep new shoot pinched back. After another three years of this treatment the trees | are virtually dwarfed, thers being no growth thereafter, The dwarfing of bamboo is another important branch of Japanes nursery business A few weeks after the shoots begin to grow, and when the trunks measure about three inches in circumference and five feet in height the bark is removed, piece by piece, from the joint. After five weeks, when the plants get some what stout, the stem is bent and tied in. After three mouths, when the side shoots grow strong enough, they are | all out off five or six inches from the main trunk, they are then dug up and potted in sand. Care should be taken not to use any fertilizer, but plenty of water should be given. large shoots every year in May or | June, and after three years the twigs and leaves will present admirable yel- | low and green tints, ———— - Machine Fingers and Thumbs, What is there that machinery cannot The Dwight Machine Company | of Connecticut has just completed two I said. | i . ind- We went quietly together round to the | ashinasoapable of sonnting and bind leaned ten hours. The postal cards are printed : ( » ) Pp, i t 1 | back the trailing sprays of creeper | and eut by another machine, but this | which partly screened the window | ing in packs 500,000 postal cards in one counts them, and makes them into packs of twenty-five each. The most ingenious parts of the machine are the fingers and thumbs, so to speak, used in wrapping the narrow strip of paper around each pack. The paper is pulled off the reel by two long, slender fin- gers that come up from underneath ; another finger dips itself into the box of mucilage and daabs the end of an: other finger which in turn applies the mucilege to the narrow strip of paper at just the right spot. The strip is wrapped about the pack of cards, a» thumb comes up and presses the muci- lage part down hard, and the thing is done, Buffalo Commercial, Third r of the Left Hand, The women of the ancients wore their rings on every finger, but as many as ps be worn at once were clustered upon the third finger of the left hand, which was believed to be invested with a peculiar power beonuso of an artery leading through it from the heart. The inns, Grecians and Romans all this superstition, and many per- sons it to this day, nuing that finger to apply lotions, believing it free from poison, — Detroit Free Pross, THE BIRD OF FREEDOM. BOMETHING ABOUT EAGLES THEIR WAYS, AND They Are Fond of Their Home, and Ldve to a Great Age Parent Eagles Are Good Providers, HE great golden eagle, nee cording to the Detroit Free Press, 1s one of the most dis- Gs tinguished members of its mighty family, It is found in many parts of the world, a kingly inhabit- ant of mountainous regions, where it builds its nest on rocky crags accessi- ble only to the most daring hunter, Bome large specimens which have been captured have measured nearly four feet in length, while the mag nificent wings expanded from eight to nine feet, The nest of this inhabitant of the | thos | massof twigs, dried grasses, brambles, | and hair heaped together to form wu | bed | talons which the eaglets eagerly devour. Cat off the | hike is a huge mountains not neatly made of smaller birds, but 1) the little Here mother bird lays three or four large, white eggs speckled with brown, The voung birds are almost coal black, and for Ones, the | only assume the golden and brownish tinge as they become full grown, which is not until about the fourth year. Eaglets two or three years old are de scribed in books of natural history as ring-tailed cagles and are sometimes taken for a digtinet species of the royal bird, while in reality they are the children of the golden eagle tribe habita- tion, and, unless disturbed, a pair will inhabit the for years. They live to a great age; captivity n hundred Eagles rarely change their same nest even in in royal gardens specimens have bee known to live me than an VEeArs Ie in Switz not so powe rial as which also Fagles are very abundant Although the great vulture, lofty mountains, they are enduring. For h MA In the above the mountain-tops, and erland. inhabits bolder ure the sir gt the and more golden eagle will se Move wide-sweeping circles with s perceptible motion of its n When on the hunt for prey, 1 cunning and sharp-sighted. rings through the all the smaller birds with terror it appr changes to mbl ng the Its shrill SOTERA air, filling When aches 11s victim its scream a quick kik-kak-kak, re barking of =» gradually sinking until sufficiently near, it darts in a straight line with the rapidity of Hthining upon its prey. None of the smaller birds and are safe from its clutches. Fawns, rabbits and hares, young sheep and goats, wild birds of all kinds, fall help- victims, for neither the running nor the most rapid flight can avail against this king of the air, The strength of the eagle that it will bear heavy burdens in its for miles until it reaches its nest, where the hungry little ones are dog, and beasts jens swiftest is such | eagerly waiting the parent's return. Here, standing on the ledge of rock, the eagle tears the food into morsels, is a curious fact that near an eagle's nest there is ususlly a storehouse or larder some convenient ledge of rock where the parent birdslay up hoards of provisions, Hunters have found remains of lambs, young pigs, rab- bits, partridges and other game heaped up ready for the morning meal. Over its hunting ground the eagle is king. It fears neither bird nor beast, its only enemy being man. InSwitzer- land, during the winter when the mountains are snow-bound, the eagle will descend to the plain in search of food. When driven by hunger, it will seize on carrion, and even fight desperstely with its own kind for the possession of the desired food. Bwiss hunters tell many stories of furious battles between eagles over the dead body of some poor chamois or other mountain game. Eagles are very affectionate and faithful to their little ones as long as they need care; but the young eaglets are able to take care of them selves, the parent birds drive them from the nest, and even from the hunting ground. The young birds are often taken from the nest by hunters, who with and daring seale the rocky hights during the absence of the parents MOR/ON, once empty nest. But it goes hard with the hunter if the keen eyes of the old birds discover him before he made his safe descent with his booty, Darting at him with terrible fury, they try their utmost to throw him from the oliff ; and unless he be well armed and use his weapons with skill snd rapidity, his position is one of the utmost peril. The young birds are easily tamed ; aud the experiment has already been tried with some success of using them as the falcon, to assist in hunting game, The golden eagle is an inhabitant of the Rocky Mountains, but is very seldom seen farther eastward. Aundu- bon reports having noticed single pairs in the Alleghanies, in Maine, and even in the valley of the Hudson ; but such examples are very rare, for this royal bird is truly a creature of the mountains. It fears neither cold por tempestuons winds nor joy soli tudes, The eagle's plume is an old and famous decoration of warriors and chieftains, and is constantly alluded to, especially in Seottish legend and song. The Northwestern Indians ornament their headdresses and their weapons with the tail feathers of the ongle, and institute hunts for the bird with the sole purpose of obtaining them. Indians prize these feathers so highly thet they will barter a valuable horse for the tail of a single bird san —— 5 The best emeralds found in the United Bates come from North Caro. loa, ——————— | It | “1 Man's Fall, Bince the original fall of man we bad wot Lo have some signal examples of grost fall include Niagara or the immense fall inv which the times have bition orougtt about in the nature of accidents One Olanta wileh waylay men at all times, such is of Mr, George W, Lord Pa, foil 4 stairs and suffered four weeks with a sprained back cured him, that who says he wn The use of Bt, Jacobs Oil ecompimtely Mr. G, J 17th Bt, jumped from eder. 600 he and sustained a Omaha, Seb, , relates that his engine in collision very bad sprajn to his ankie | he had 10 use 5 cane Jor weeks, but was finally cured by Bf, Jaco Of), Never fall out with so thing, Tur late W, B, VV, Fort North Carolinas, was | property granted 1o his 111. { Wayne County, and reared on oestors | b) George ( arn 3H) Dr. Kilmer's Swaxy-Roor all Kidpey and Bladder Pamphlet and Consults Laboratory Binghs cures fronbles, GLADSTONE King Duncan, of beth 's vietin trace ancestry back 10 who was Mace Six Toun ol Hay Per Acre. Balzer's Extra Grass Mixtures s this is possibile, Over fifty kinds of gras nd IVES ROTLIA, Largest growers of farm seeds in the world, Alsike Clover is the hardest: Crimson Clover is the quickest growing: Alfalfa Clover is the best fertilizing clover vhile Balzer's Extra the best mead Grrass Mixtures in the world, A Iv YOU wire COT THIS OUT with l4c postage to the Jol Co., La Crosse, Wis, packages grass and clover sorts AK: ws AKD BEND IT Salzer Seed you wi receive eleven ADA Dis TRIN moth f for the arm seed catalogue; full of good things farmer, the gardener and the citizen. Deafness Cannot be Cured by loeal applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitu. tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in. flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube, When this tube gets in. flamed you have a rumbling sour or imper- fect hearing and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the resuit, and unless the inflam. mation can be taken out and this tube re. stored to its normal condition, bearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are oan by catarrh, which is nothing but an in. famed condition of the mucous surfaces, We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by eatarrh) that cane not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. J. Caexey & Co. rules, The, oledo, 0. Best of the system cial manner, wher and be pleased, nia Fig Syrup Ce It Pays, It pays to read the family paper, for opportunities are broug For instance, B dot Se] Va especially your i= way good 1 fo your st- of tising, offering engage with t of their time to ht pay you to Papers often pL] La them, devott thelr busine write 01 Will be sent with every bottle of Dr. Hoxsic's (erfoin Croup Cwre, Ordered by mall, post. paid, 80 cts. Address Hoxsle, Buffalo, N. Y. Moral ~Boecbam's Pills with a drink of water, Hncham so others. 25 cents a box. All Run Down Weak Stomach, Ete, Headache Strength Imparted & System Built Up by Hood's Sarsaparilla. Hood & Oo., Lowell, Mass Dear Sire: 1 can recommend Hood's Sarsae | parilla to all my friends and sogusintances as skill | one of the best tonics 10 strengthen and build up the system when one feels all run down, For years | suffered with very severe | Headaches and Stomach Troubles. | These spells would unfit me for work and left which return to find a desolate and | me in & vory weak condition I commenced | taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and it helped me has | greatly. 1 can trathfully say 1 received more benefit and relief from Hood's Sarsaparilia Hood’s*=*Cures than from any other source or medicine | have ever taken. | am willing the above statement should be published for the benefit of other sufferers.” Mus O. E. Besse, Solon, N. Y. N. B.-Be sure to get Hood's Hood's Pills cures liver lis, constipation, hil onan, Jaundios, sok headache, indigestion _KYNXD- 10 the children for a medi cine that tastes bad. This explains the popular- ily among little ones of Scotts Emulsion, a preparation of cod-liver oil almost as palatable as milk. Many mothers have teful knowledge of its nefits to weak, sickly children.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers