HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. CEMENT FOR CHINA. The following cement for mending china and glass has been recommended as perfectly efficacious for resisting the combined effects of fire and water. Take any quantity of lime recently prepared from calcined oyster shells and mix it to the consistency of paste with white of egg. Lay it immediately upon the fissure, where it will at once consolidate to tho hardness of stone. If suffered to get quite dry while being used it be comes quito insoluble even by strong acid.— Detroit Free Press. TRYING OITT LARD IN THE HOUSE. I attend to frying out the lard myself and xio the most of the work, writes Mrs. W. 8. Coun. I lay the leaf and fat pieces in a cool place for a day or two, and if it freezes I like it all the better, for it seems to take some of the water out of it. I first cut out all the lean possible to lessen the quantity of scraps, and then cut the fat into small bits and put it into two iron pots on the stove over a dull fire. As the lard is melted out the fat pieces settle down, and when they are pretty well browned into scraps I dip some of the melted lard out of one of the pots into the other and with a skimmer lift the scraps out of that pot into the first, so as to havo them nearly all in one, until they are thoroughly cooked. I then put them into a coarse linen bag and squeeze all the fat I can out of them. If there is a cheese press that can be brought into the kitchen, it may be used for that purpose, but squeezers that will do very well can bo made from two smooth pieces of boards two feet long and three inches wide, hinged with a strap of leather at one end, and shaped into handles at tho other, so that a bag containing scraps cau be squeezed between them with tho hands. This is hard work, but if they are kept hot a good deal of grease will run out of them. The lard must then be strained to take all the floating particles out of it, and it is quite well to heat it slowly again until 6ure the water has all been evaporated. Lard should never bo dipped out and put away to keep while the melting is going on, and before the scraps have become crisp and very brawn.— Aetc Fori World. CREAM BOUPS. Cream soups may be made without meat, states Mrs. E. R. Parker, in tho Courier-Journal , and aro much more delicate than other soups, and as they furnish a variety for the table at this season of the year,housekeepers will find them acceptable to the family. Cream of Rice Soup—Wash half a cup ful of rice, putin a kettle and pour over a quart of white soup stock, with a stalk of celery, half of a small onion. Let simmer slowly two hours, press it through a sieve, return to kettle, add a table spoonful of butter and a quart of milk with salt and pepper to season; stir until it comes to a boil and serve. Cream of Salsify Soup—Scrape a dozen roots of salsify, cut in slices, cover with boiling water and boil slowly one hour, or until tender, add a quart of milk and boil slowly one hour, thicken with an ounce of butter rolled in flour, add a blade of mace, half a dozen allspice and two or three eleves; stir until it boils. Season with pepper and salt and serve. Cream of Corn Soup—Open a can of corn. Putin a kettle and add a pint of white stock; let simmer twenty minutes and press through a sieve. Rub a table spoonful each of butter and flour to gether, add to tho soup and stir until thick, add to tho boiling soup a pint of milk, take from the fire and stir in tho beaten yolks of two eggs. Season with salt and pepper and serve. Cream of Celery Soup —Wash threo roots of celery, and cut in small pieces; cover with water and boil thirty min utes; then press through a colander. Put a quart of milk onto boil, add the water to the celery,with one small onion. Rub a tablespoonful of flour and butter each together, and stir in the boiling soup, and stir until it thickens. Season with salt and pepper, and serve. Cream of Tomato Soup—Put a pint of canned tomatoes onto stew with a sprig of parsley and a blade of mace and let stew fifteen minutes. Put a quart of milk onto boil. Rub butter and flour together and add to the milk, stirring until thick. Strain the tomatoes through a sieve, add half a teaspoonful of soda and a teaspoonful of sugar and stir in the boiling milk. Break a dozen crackers in the soup tureen and pour the soup over. Cream of Cheese Soup—Put a quart of milk into a saucepan with a sliced carrot, one sliced onion and a blade of mace. Rub two tablespoonsful each of butter and flour together. Strain the soup, thicken with butter and flour and Btir until it boils, then add three table spoonsful of grated cheese and take from the lire, add the beaten yokes of two eggs, with salt and pepper. Serve. Cream of Potato Soup—Put three good, sound potatoes onto boil in a quart of cold water. Let cook fifteen minutes, drain off the water and pour over fresh boiling water; add a slice of a small onion, a sprig of parsley aud a stalk of celery and boil until the potatoes are done. Put a quart of milk onto boil, press the potatoes through a sieve. Thicken with butter and flour, aud stir; pour over the potatoes, and serve im mediately. Cream of Asparagus Soup—Wash a bunch of asparagus, or open a quart can of it, aud put it iu a saucepan of boiling water; let simmer gently for half an hour. Take it from the water, cut off the tops and put aside. Put a quart of milk on to boil; press the asparagus stalks through a colander, and add to the milk. Rub an ounce of butter aud two table spoonsful of flour together, and stir in; let thicken; putin the asparagus tops; season with salt aud pepper, uud serve. The scheme for a duplicate of the Eif icl Tower in London, England, has been abandoned, SCIENTIFIC AMD INDUSTRIAL. A gun machine measures 1-1000 of an inch. London, England, has an underground electric road. Cold weather increases a locomotive's consumption of coal. It is thought that telephones tend to bring on deafness when otae ear is used to the exclusion of the other. The great majority of cases of deaf ness are hereditary, and due to the too close consanguinity of the parents. The busine6s men of Galveston, Texas, have organized a stock company for the establishment of tho ramie industry In that'Btate. The London (England) General Post office was saved S3OOO last year in the sick-leave account by the substitution of electricity for other means of lighting its buildings. Celluloid in solution is now being ex tensively used as a lacquer for all kinds of fine metal work and as a wood varnish with results that are sail to be superior to the old methods. Add carbon to pure iron and it be comes steel. Add hydro-carbon to iron, and steel itself becomes so extensively modified that its properties are not recog nizable. Thus steel may be as soft as pure iron. The following is recommended as a suro way of finding where a crack in a piece of metal ends: Moisten the surfaco with petroleum, then wipe it, and then immediately rub it with chalk. The oil that has penetrated into tho crack ex udes, and thus indicates where the crack ends. An electric balance has been devised, in which the placing in the pan of the object to be weighed closes an electric circuit; and a moter carries the weight out on the boam until the equipoise is established, breaking tho circuit. With the emptying of the pan the weight re- Gum arabic, which was once univers ally used, lfts become very scarce and dear, and a substitute for it is being made from starch, which is subjected under pressure and at a high tempera ture to the action of sulphurous acid. The product, atter neutralization, is soluble and extremely adhesive. The Queer" Costa Rica Dogs. The Costa Rica Indian dogs are pecu liar from the fact that they can't bark naturally. These dogs are big, slouch ing,light-colored beasts and are evident ly related to tho coyotes, although as puppies theso dogs soon learn to imitato the bark TTf other dogs, which are kept to teach them to bark, tho same as one canary bird teaches another to sing, while the coyote domesticated never learns to bark until tho third generation. These Costa Kican dogs would be ot lit tle service as watch dogs, even if they were wanted for that purpose, but it would go hard with anyone who intruded on premises where these silent brutes run at large. Without warning ho would bo pounced upon immediately find torn to pieces. But these dogs are not kept for household protection, for few of their owners have much of a house hold to protect. They are used chietly for hunting the puma and jaguar, the two fierce and destructive members of tho tiger family, which are so numerous in tho mountains and the reedy plains of Central America and especially in the southern province of Costa Rica.— Forut and Stream. Insects and Cold. Entomologists have determined that the severity of winters is not destruc tive to insect life. Larva) may be frozen stiff, and yet they will revive with tho return of the warmth. Bumblebees and butterflies are often met with iu the arc tic regions. Disease microbes are even more tenacious of life. Watch nurth and Verna found that they could Le subjected to cold forty degrees below zero, bo powdered with a mortar, and yet be cap ablo of transmitting diseases.— Chicago Timet. Prepare For Spring By Building up Your System Bo as to Prevent That Tired Feeling Or Other Illness. Nov/ Take Hood's Sarsaparilla EVEBVMO^ Should Have JU in Tlie Howie. Dropped on Sugar, Children Love TO take JOHNSON'S ANODYNE LINIMENT for Ooup, Cold*, flore Threat, Tonsilitis, (Tollc, «'ramps and I'sin*. Ko ltuvcs Summer Complaints, Cuts, Bruises liko rnagla THTNK OF IT. In U»P over 40 YEARS In one family. Dr. I. S. JOHNSON A Co.— lt la sixty year* sine* I flr»i learned of your JOHNSON'S ANODYNE LINIMENT; for mora than forty i/nii A I have used it in my family. 1 regard it ax one of the liest and safest family remedies that eau he found, aaed internal or external, in all caws. O. H. INUALLS, L»ewon 2nd Baptist Cnurch, Bangor, Mo. Pi/OfV/ QllfforAi* From Rheumatism,Scl tvery OUllCl CI at tea. Neuralgia, Ner vous headache, Diphtheria, Coughs, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Cholera Morbus, Dtarrnn-a, ljumeneaa.SoreueH* In Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, will Una in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure. Pamphlet free. Bold everywhere. Price 35 eta., by mail. 8 bottles. Express paid. $2. 1. 8. JOHNSON A CO.. BOSTON, MAM. * LADIES! * Wo will present you a <*ol«l Watch* a Stl'< l)r«'*N, <»r your choice from 100 other articles. Full Instructions and sample worth one dollar sent you for V-ceut Htnmp to pay return faisl-age. S. L PAINE Sc CO.. Court St., Huston, M»n> KEA I) "A Little Chat With Farmers." Fine hoolc; bound; paper. 50c.; cloth, 75c. Geo. A. William* lulia Chamber of Commerce, Chicago, 111, 1 The. Do* Milliner of Parte. The American Remitter describes the story of a "dog modiste" in Paris: The sights were verj amusing. The place was not so much of a ptorc as an estab lishment, with halls and rooms rlcHly furnished. Ladies tripped in and out all day long, most of the visitors having with them pugs or terriers. The pet dogs were scattered through the rooms, eacn awaiting its- turn. Many small mats and rugs were around the waxed floors, and every bit of carpeting of the kind was occupied by some pretty little creature. These dogs have various dresses. The robe used in the morning is a garment of dark blue cloth. It is called a paletot, and is lined with red flannel. From a leather collar little bells jrasle as its wearer walks along. Sometimes a bunch of violets is fastened on the left shoulder of a dog. On very cold days tho pet is clad in sealskin of the same pattern, the collar being ii fur, mounted in silver.— Chicago Herald. In Praise of Hackney Horses. The introduction of the hackney horse of England into this country marks an important era in the breeding of carriage horses. There is great need in this country of a good, fine acting carriage horse and I think you will find him in the hackney. Both the hackney and our trotting horse are founded on the same blood, that of tho Arabian, in fact, our trotter camo originally from a Norfolk hackney, old Bellfounder, who was very fast and of great bottom. A horse to trot must have a reach, and to have a reach his shoulders must lie well into his back, or in other words he must have what the English call a "tobby' appear anco. The hackney undoubtedly has this, and having been bred so long for one purpose their every idea is bent to ward that one thing— to trot.— New Turk Telegram. The Telephone as a Weather Prophet The telephone is about to have a new application—that of foretelling storms. A new discovery has been made as to one of the properties of this means of trans mitting sound. By placing two iron bar at seven or eight meters distance from each other, and then putting them in communication on one side by a copper wire covered with rubber, and on the other side with a telephone, a storm can be predicted at least twelve hours ahead through a dead sound heard in the re ceiver. According as the storm advances the sound resembles the beating of hailstones against the windows. Every flash of lightning, and, of course, every clap of tiiunder that accompanies the produces a shock similar to that of the stroke of a stone cast between the diaphragm and the instrument.— Chicago Herald. Ilect Pulp is Good Fodder. An important fact in the beet sugar industry is that the refuge pulp makes a valuable fodder for cattle. The tops are also available for the same use. This refuse is stored In mounds, and will re main in good condition for six months. Wherever beet-sugar factories have been established there lias been an immense improvement in the agriculture of the surrounding country. It is fouud that although three tons of the pulp are equal in nutriment value only bo one ton of the host hay. yet when fed in connec tion with coarso |>rovender it possesses a value of its own in keeping animals in a sleek, growthy condition, and, strange to say, one not indicated by its chemical analysis.— Ch ientfo Nete*. HOW TO GET WELL is a question of vital importance, but it is equally important that you use some harmless remedy; many people completely wreck their health by taking mercury and potash mixtures, for pimples and blotches, or some othel trivial disease. S. S. S. is purely vegetable containing no mercury or poison of any kind. And is at the same time an infallible cure for skin diseases. Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta, Ga. ■■is 112 Apply into the Nottrllt. ft U Quickly Abtorbed. ■■BBHiwc. Druggists or bj mail SLY BROS.,M Warren St., N. Wi DADWAY'S II READY RELIEF. (HE GREAT CORQUERO.t OF PAII For Sprains, Ilruiaem Hackncho, Ptln li llie Chest or Sides, ileudncue, Pouthnche, or auy other external palu, a few applica tions rubbed ou oy naud, act like magic, causing the pain to instantly stop. ForCongciitiouisC'oliU, iSroncuitis, Pnei. mom a, i ntlaiuiuatious, Rheumatism. Nei. ralgia, sciatica, more thoroag* ami repeat ed applications are necessary. All internal Pains, Diarrhtra, (Jollt, HpaNiUß, Nausea, Puiuting Spells, Nervoun ness, sleeplessness are relieved instautij, ana Quickly enred by taking inwardly 'Ai to tfU drops in nali a tumbler ot watet. oOc.u bottle. Ail Druggists. DADWAY'S " PILLS, An excellent and mild Cathartle, rnrelf Vegetable. Tlie Safest and iftent Medicine In the world tor the Cure ot ali Disorder* of the LIVER, STOMACH OR ROWELS. Taken according to directions they wih restore health uud renew vitality* Fries 25 cts. a Box. Sold by all DragsUh The farmer who doe* not preserve his implements inflicts a great loss On him self. An account of the sum annually expended for repairs would show that a great leak in the expenses exists from carelessness in the care of tools and im ments. "Penny wise and pound foolish" are those who think It eeonomy to use cheap noda and roein soaps, instead of the pood old Dobbins]! Electric Soap; for sale by all grocers since IBM- Try it once. Be sure, buy genuine. OißMAirr is the classical land of suicides and Saxony is its most suicidal province. Deaftaeea Can't be Cared By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the car. 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 sound or imper fect healing, and when it is entirely closed, deaf ness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will bo destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which Is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that we cannot cure by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Semd for circulars, free. F. J. OHENKY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75 cents. I .OVERS of Spanish olives are distressed to bear the predictions of a scarcity of them. We take pleasure in calling the attention of our readers to the advertisement of the Chese brough Manufacturing Company, which ap pears In another column. This company are the original dlscovorers and only manufactur ers of Vaseline, which Is known all over the world as the best emollient, and the most val uable family remedy In use. Their goods are sold by druggists throughout the country, but we wish to caution our readers, when buying, to accept only goods in original packages, and labeled Chesebrough Manufacturing Com pany, as sometimes unscrupulous dealers try to substitute preparations which are of little value when compared with vaseline, and some are injurious and unsafe to use. By sending the company a dollar by mall,the sender will receive free quite an assortment of these beautiful and valuable goods without any charge for delivery. We know whereof we write when we say the "Vaseline" Soap Is a revelation. __ Progress. It Is in this ag# of 'vast ma terial progress that a remedy tie pleasing to the taste and to tho eye, easily taken, accept able to the stomach and healthy In its nature and effects. Possessing these qualities. Syrup of Figs is the one perfect laxative and most gentle diuretic known. A Olrl Worth^Havlne. JMfer heurlng Mr. Gray's experience In the plating business, I sent 88 to the Lake Electric Co., Englewood, 111., for a plater, and cleared g2l In a week. Isn't this pretty good for a girl? There Is tableware and Jewelry to plate at every house; then, why should any person be poor or out of employment with such an op portunity at hand. A Mcßßcnißgu. Causes no Xnunea. Dr. Hoxsle's Certain Croup Curo is univer sally conceded to be the only sure and safe remedy for croup sold. It speedily allays In flammation to throat or lungs. Sold by drug gists, or address A. P. Hoxsle, Buffalo, N. Y. Price DO eta. The Convenience of Holld Trains. The Erie li tho only railwny running solid trains over Its own tracks between New York and ("hit-ago. No change of cars for any class of possengers. Rates lower than Vta. any other flret-class line. FITS stopped free by I)R. KI.TNK'K ORF.AT NKRVB KBSTOHKH. NO nts after first day's uso. Marvelous cures. Treatise anil 82 frlal bottlo free. Dr. Kline, Hill Arch St., Phi la.. Pa. Beechatn's Pills cure Sick-Headache. for Qire of , & ( r..»«v STIFFNESS- StrSfccWness If Y N U—ll IAFIITO are Coining Money ABEllTs o^^pr D w Id February. Ladles do as well as men. Roya» Edition of tne Peerless Atlas of the World, nas lar«* maps in colors. Accurate location of towns,cities, rail roads.etc. Oenensof IW. Everybody wants it. Sells on sight. AgentsClenr lOOpcrct. For terms addrest MAST, CROwILL & IIMPATKICI. 917 Ckcstnut 8t Pkilidelphis.Pt PROF. LOIBETTE'B NEW MEMORY BOOKS. Criticisms on two recent Memory Systems. Read} about April Ist- Full Tables of Contents forwarder only to those who send stamped directed envelope. Also Prospectus POST FREE of the ixjiaettlaii Arl ol Never Forgetting. Address Prof. LOISETTE, 287 Fifth Ave., New York. FRAZERAXM JMCBT IW THE WOaii)BHbWS gZT Got the Genuine. doWJtmywb«* ■ ■Ayr STUd V, Book-keeping, Business Form* HUNK Penmanship, Arithmetic, Short-hand, ©COL. II thoroughly trught by JLAll* Circulars free. Bryant's College, 437 Main St.. Buffalo, N. Y. DArCV If IITEC FOMTITBT/T RUMIDIRD. DMUISI IVIfK.Lv Oreely pant Ktretcher. Adopted by students at Harvard, Amherst, and othsl Collates, also, by professions! sod bsslnes* men e«rf> Where. If not for isle In your town r>end IRs. to B. J. UK K.ELY, 71A Washington Rtrret. Bsstoa. nm WETI agsysr. FREE TP. If P.l l l l Send for sample. Da ■ ,1111 '» JLIAJJU J. H. DYE, Editor, Buffalo, H.Y PATENTS ■ 1 ™ ■ W 40-i>h(« book frre msmm Let's reason together. Here's a firm, one of the largest the country over, the world over; it has grown, step by step, through the years to greatness—ana it sells patent medicines I—ugh! " That's enough! " Wait a little— This firm pays the news papers good money (expen sive work, this advertising!) to tell the people that they have faith in what they sell, so much faith that if they can't benefit or cure they don t want your money. Their guarantee is not indefinite and relative, but definite and absolute —if the medicine doesn't help, your money is " on call." Suppose every sick man and every feeble woman tried these medicines and found them worthless, who would be the loser, you or they ? The medicines are Doctor Pierce's "Golden Medical Dis covery," for blood diseases, and nis " Favorite Prescrip tion," for woman's peculiar ills. If they help toward health, they cost SI.OO a bottle each 1 If they don't, they cost nothing I gM TEN POUNDS i mm™ weekß l WW 112 THINK OF IT I! As a Flesh Proscar there can be I i no question but that ' i SCOTT'S { EMULSION Of Lime and loda ! is without a rival. Many have < I rained a pound a day by the use if it. It cares CONSUMPTION, i SCROFULA, BRONCHITIS, COUGHS AND S } COLDS. AND ALL FORMS OF WASTING DIS- ) | EASES, AH PALATABLE AS MILK. I I Jlc *ure you get the genuine at there are j jw>or imitations. ( NY N P—ll THE Remington Standard Typewriter f'resents the practical results achievod by tbe best inventive and mechanical skill, aided by capital and tbe experience gained during tho Fifteen Years in which it has been the Standard Writing Machine of the World Wyokoff, Seaman* & Benedict, 837 Brondwfly, New York. |M Tnm unlrewel faror eo M/J corded TILLINGIIAST'S PUOKT BOUND Cabbage RICKI* leads me to offer a P. H. GROW* Onion, lAs fine* Ytltow Gh>U MfwJ To introduce It and ■l/i. IJ| I n)|4. \\l show ito capabilities 1 will pay m\ DL2I FIBS |II 9 ioo for the best yield obtain v|lii A Fi iT MJxf ed from lonnee of seed which WlkkllAlKff I will mail for tO cto. Cat a- Isaac F.^T lHj n 8 Best Truss Evfer Used. Will Mold tbe wont esse with jeomJort. Worn * s nijiWMdday. Positively H «* A DXIV II cures rupture. Sent by ■LTRUSS jm mall everywhere. Send for descriptive catalogue and testimonials \ / U.V. lloune Mfe.c*. VF W y 744 Broadway, New York City. Will awi N m-uutitui MI lit A MAI In Wll'vanilllluspra enough to cover SCR "u :na 20c,; best, 35a. I.KBAIUE'HSILK MILL, IJttleFcrry .N.J. Strange indeed &ke every Hi ing sob rii|h Kb u b "A needle clothes others,&nd is ibselft n&ked'.Try ihin your next house-cleaning What folly it would be to cut grass with a pair of scfeecrs! Yet, peo ple do equally silly things every day. Modern progress nan grown up from the hooked sickle to the swinging scj tho and thence to tuo lawn mower. So don't use scissors! But do you use SAPOLIO ? If you don't you arc as much brluad the ace as if you cut grass with a dinner knife. Once there were 110 aoapa. Then one soap served all purposes. Now the sensible folli3 useJ" l ™' in the toilet, another in the tub, one soap in the stablos, and b ii CJ.LJ.tJ for all scouring and house-cleaning. Cures where aU else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the 'fJfffl EU taste. Children take it without objection. By dmirtriata. jftyg > Jli-\ CHICHCSTCR'S EMUO.i, RED CROSS DIAMOND BXANO /\ rtnuNßONJih * rvuhs & ABk - . THI ORIGINAL AND GENUINE The only Kuft. Pill fi.r rale \Yv I=7 I / m b®*#j with blue, ribbofi Take ao Mhfr l> Ind. lirfu** L.hm aful hixtaiiony. V 1 MS All pills In Mstrbosrtl boxes, pink wrappers, an- <btiig«-n>u« ronn tor Ml*. At Dnurpli.ia, or iec4 m v W ftr f *• i" i"L Blp ! i«id»oni»Js, and "Relief tar (.utile*. •in by return Mali MX M JV»M« Paper. CHICHCSTCR CHEMICAL CO., VinitlMii s »•" »r an Ur.cfUM. *.>«-* J "Germain Syrup" J. C. Davis, Rector of St. James 1 ' Episcopal Church, Eufaula, Ala. J "My sou has been badly afflicted with a fearful and threatening cougb for several mouths, and after trying several prescriptions from physicians which failed to relieve him, he has been perfectly restored by the use oi two bottles of Bo- An Episcopal seliee's German Syr up. I can recom- Rector. mend it without hesitation." Chronic severe, deep-seated coughs like this are as severe tests as a remedy caa be subjected to. It is for these long standing cases that Boschee's Ger man Syrup is made a specialty. Many others afflicted as this lad was, will do well to make a note of this. , s J. F. Arnold, Montevideo, Minn., writes: I always use German Syrup for a Cold on the Lungs. I have never found an equal to it—far less a superior. <D G. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr,Woodbury,N.J. GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. EPPSSCOCOA BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of (lie natural lawi wliicn govern the operations of digest ion and nutri tion, and by u careful application «>f th«- tine proper ties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided pur breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bev erage which may nave us many heavy doctors* bills. It is by the Judicious use of such artlcH ; .if diet that h constitution may be gradually built v.j» until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hun dreds of subtle maladies are floating around us, rea<ly to attaclc wherever there is n weak jw»lnt. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping our selves well fortlfled with pure blood and a properly nourished frame.Cfei7 Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sola only In half-pound tiny by Grocers, labelled thus: JAMKM EFPH tV C 0., Homo-oputbio ChemlMi, -TASELInE : FOR A ONK.DOL.LAIt 111 I<L wot us »y m»tl wo will deliver, free oi ail charges, to any person la the United States, ull oC toe tollowiui aruoUJ, fully pack ear One two-ounoe t»ottle of Pur© Vnsollno. 10 cti» One two-ounce bottle of Vasellue Pomade* • 15 * One Jar of Vaseline Cold Cre.un, - - - • • W - One Cuke of Vaseline Camphor Icq, - • ••»()•• Cue Cake of Vaacliue soap, unaoentsd, • • l) ** One Cake of Vaaeltno Soap, exquisitely scented,3s * One iwv-ounce bottio of WiiUo yasellne, - • -J *• sl.l> Or for postaff* stamp* (tnv Biml6 i rtw.m af the prfe# named. On no account he persuale-i to aooto t from your druggist any Vaseline or preparation there fr wi unless labelled with our name, because you mill cor* receive an imitation which has little or no o~il im Cho«ebrough .Ufg. Co., 'l-i Statw St., S. V« frrnl wo ridenf:irj ftCJ^COMBININGSAnTICLES N^C.&S-' ;^U,'J Wotctml r.t ttrj ' '/-i ri:,i|rn'rf tchn'.rMlle/iu-Svr'J prtc:?{Kj /7j L-KFF ard tb-n G^ds to (i~'jim miEi;!. fI!H33 , paid for on ctolivory. to ill BE. Band stamp lor Cats- V YCcpkcijl F&&B lagua. name gaodt Nfc&r. dfi ivt.UK, IiUVUCQ iirc. CO., 145 M. Bth CU PATENTS Wukl'■ «110 n. '1 J! c! • *» ■ hKND VUU i. IKCDI^B.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers