A State Banquet Relic. Mrs. Harrison has made a number of most interesting discoveries within the past year in regard to pieces of furniture and articles used in the state dining room, the result of her researches hav ing from time to time been noted through these columns. The latest thing in this line, and de cidedly one of more than usual interest to the public, is in regard to the gold bordered mirror lake which has figured as the central ornament at countless numbers banquets. All that has heretofore been known in regard to it was that it had been in use for this pur pose far back iu the early days of the Government when state banquets were frequent occurrence, though none the less ceremonial affairs, than those of the present day. From papers containing undoubtedly reliable information it has now been as certained that the long mirror, with its beautiful gilt bronze openwork railing, embelislied with figures, was purchased in France by the United States Minister in accordance with an order to the effect from the first President of the Republic. Upon its arrival in this country the table ornamont was taken to Philadelphia and first used by General Washington on the occasion of a great state banquet at the Presidential mansicn in 1791.—Wash ington Post. Mrs. Amanda Paisley ALWAYS SAYS "THANK YOU" to Hood's Sarsaparilla What stronger proof Is needed of the efficacy 01 Hood's Sarsaparilla than this from Mrs. Amanda I'alsley, an estimable Christian lady, for many years ncominunlcaut of Trinity Episcopal Church, New burgh, N. Y.: "For several years 1 was badly nflllcted with ex terna and scrofula sores, covering almost the whole of one side of my face, nearly to the top of my head. Running sores discharged from both ears. M\ cy«-s were very bad, the Eyelids So Sore It was painful opening or closing them. For nearly n year I was so deaf* as to be unablo to hear any thing. 1 went to the hospital and had an operation performed for the removal of a cataract from one eye. One day my sister brought me two different medicines, oue of which was Hood's and offered me the choice. I too!c Hood's Sarsapa rilla and gradually began to feel better and stronger, and slowly the sores on my eyes and in my ears healed. 1 can now hear and see as well as ever. Then- art.* only blight traces of the eczema. When ever 1 see Hood's Sarsaparilla now I always feel like bowing and saying 'thank you.'" Mrs. Amanda Pajsi.ey, 170 Lander Street, Ncwburgh, N. Y. Hood's Pills •■m* Liver Ills Kennedy's Medical Discovery Takes hold in this order: Bowels, Liver, Kidnevs, Inside Skin, Outside Skin, Driving everything before it that ought to be out. You know whether you need it or not. Sold by every druggist, and manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, when applied into the nostrils will be ao- L^vATAR° nl sorbed, effectually Hb£PL.O IN 1 cleansing the head of - m Ski catarrhal virus, caus- jjyu pjryPß AT <o ing healthy secretions. * V.* It allays inflammation. brane from additiona' colds, completely heals the sores and re stores sense of taste 50 C J tryt'iie cure. HAY-FEVER A particle Is applied Into each nostril and is agree able. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mall. ELY BROTHERS, s<; Warren Street, New York. N Y X U—l _____ PROM THE "PACIFIC JOURNAL." "A great invention luw boon made by I>r. Tufct. That eminent chemist lias produced Tuffs lair Dye "which Imitates nature to perfection; W acts instantaneously ami is perfectly harmless." i'rice, gl. Offlco, &41 Parh Vj m:c, X. Y. O HATEFUL—COMFORTING, EPFSSCOCOA BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural lawe which govern the operations of digestion and nutri tion, and by a careful application of the riue proper ties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Eppa hat provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured nev er age which may save us inauy heavy doctors' bills. It is by the Judicious use of such artlcvs of diet that a constitution may IKS gradually ouilt up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating aroun- 4 uc ready to attack wherever thtie AH a weak point. We may escape inauv a fatal shaft by keeping our selves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame. '— Civil Service Uazette. Made simply with bolllna water or milk. Sola only in half-pound tins l>y Grocers labelled thus: JAMES KPPH A; CO 4 Homeopathic Chemists, London. England. AAf" A .HOVril tor :»bright Young Men or Hirlrl Ladles In each county. AddreM I'. \V. V***# tfIBGLKK <fcCO., rhiJu.. Pa, THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PBESS. Tlio Feather Boa—A Safe Guess—A Graceful Reply—Ht«l» Times In deed—Etc.. Etc. To keep the matdenn warm And ward off the razing storm. See the ohtekons, chickens, ehicttens Stripped of e'en their small pih feathers. How the dickens, dickens, dickens Can they live through all the weathers "When it thickens, thickens, thickens And the breezes 'gin to blow And the ground is white with snow? But these many little micklts Of gallinaceous growth. Doth the woman, nothing loath. Hang about her though it tickles. Though in undulations squirming 'round her jaw, jaw, jaw. With tufts and taillets worming in her maw, maw, maw. She goes fleetly on her way, Acknowledging the sway And the universal regnum of the boa, boa, boa. Of the tickling, prickling fad, the feather boa. —Philadelphia Press. A GRACEFUL REPLY. Cora—"Why nre you goiag to marry dint big, us;ly captain?" Dora—''lt's against the law, you know, to resist an officer."—Philadel phia Press A SAFE GUESS. He—"How old arc you. Miss Dolly? She (sweetly)—"llow old would you think?" He (carefully)—"l don't know, but I'm sure you're younger thin any one •would think."— Lift'. THE JUST PENALTY. "If time were money," said one artist to another, "that picture of your 3 would be a great investment. *' "Do you think so?" "Yes; you spent about three hours on it and you ought to have about ten years for it." MAKE HASTE SLOWLY. Wife—"l say, Gustave, our customers are beginning to grumble; we shall have to reduce the price of our bread." Husband—"Patience! We have only just begun to reduce the weight; you can't do too many things at once."— La Croix. HOW HE REGULATED HIS INTEREST. "Old man Grubround takes great in terest in financial matters, doesn't he?" asked McSwilligen. "Yes, all the way up to fitteeu cents, according to the hardupness of the bor rower," replied Squildig.— Pittiburg Chronicle. HIGH TIME INDEED. Mr 3. Morris —"So you have lost your girl?" Mrs. Benedict—"Yes; when she broke Charlie's pet coffee cup and gave him a new one with 'Love the giver' on it, I thought it was time to let her go."— Chicago News. FAMILY DIPLOMACY. She—"lf you could only ask papa and mama, I'm sure everything could be arranged satisfactorily." He—"When is the best time, dear est?" She—"Well, the Junta generally feels the best just after dinner." A PHYSIOGOMIST. "Oh!" exclaimed Miss Boudclipper, "what a clever man Mr. Gilhooly is! He is really quite a physiognomist. I was telling him last eveuing that I had be come quite proficient in painting, and he said: 'I am sure of it,madame; your face shows it.'" Chorus—"lndeed." — Texas Sif lings. IN THE FAR WEST. Interpid Widow—"Speaking of con undrums, Mr. Slocum, here's a good one: Why is the letter D like a wedding ring." Procrastinating Bachelor—"Oh, I'm no good at conundrums." I. W. —"You give it up? Why, be cause we can't be wed without! See?" -Life. A LUCID INTERVAL. (Things one would rather have ex pressed differently)—Doctor—"llow is the patient this morning?" Nurse—"Well he has been waudoring a good deal in his mind. Early this morning I heard him say: 'What an old woman that doctor is I'—and I think that was about the last really rational remark he made."— London Punch. IT ALWAYS APPEARS. "In writing up this execution," ob served the city editor, "you have made an unpardonable omission." "I—l thought I got all the facts," faltered the new reporter. "No," rejoined the city editor, kindly but firmly, "you did not. You failed to say that 'the doomed man slept soundly the night previous to his execu tion.' " — Chicago Tribune. SUFFERING FOR THEIR SENTIMENTS. Mr. B.—"My dear, how does it happen that those two handsome women are left all along in that corner?" Mrs. B.—"Well, they arc strong Wo men's Rights women, and said they did not care about meeting any men." Mr. B.—"But, my dear, did you be lieve them?" Mrs. B.—"Of course not,but I thought I'd punish them awhilo."— Life. WENT HUNTING. Kirby Stone —"Hello 1 Where have you been so long?" De D. Broke—"Out West." "What doing?" "Hunting." "Elk?" "Mo. I invested some money in Dug out City bonds, and I've b««n hunting tor Dugout City." "Find it?" "No.''— Puck. ONE TRUTHFUL WOMAH. "Do you lovo me, Jenny?" "I do." ••Have you ever loved before!" "I have." "Then, darling, be mine. I've long been looking for a truthful girl. If you had said 'No,' and I afterward found out that you had, it would have under mined my confidence in you." "That's what I thought,'' said Jenny, softly to herself.— Chicago News. TIIE IGNORANCE OF MAN. Inventor—"Oh, tho fatality of things! Ilere I have an invulnerable, non-atmo spheric, spectacular, refractivo, non-re. verberating, non-oscillatory watch, per fect in detail and mechanism; and yet I am almost starving." Friend—"Why don't you sell the pat ent?" Inventor—"The fools won't buy Jt, just because it won't keep time. Tho driveling idiots."— lhe Jeweler «' Circu lar. SMOOTH SAILING FOR HIM. "Your beautiful, amiable and all that sort of thing," he said, "but you're not perfect." "Wherein do I fail?" she asked. "Your heart is not in the right place." "Not in the right place?" "No; I ought to have it." "Then I shall endeavor to make my self perfect," she said demurely, and the moon at that instant went behind a cloud.— New York Press. HIS SAD CAREER. "Never had a chance to work for yourself?" said the kind, motherly old soul as she handed half a pie to the hun gry applicant for cold victuals, who had toid his weird, pathetic talc of woe. "Never, ma'ain," he replied. "Al ways had to work for other men. Al ways had to work hard, too, and got mightly little for it." "It must be dreadfully discouraging never to bo one's cyvn master." "Yes'm. It gives one thathircd feel ing, you know." And he laid his upper lip back and be gan on the pie.— Chicago Tribune. TOO ECONOMICAL. The celebrated physician Dr. Jacoby was walking along Broadway one day, when he met an old gentleman who was very rich, but who was at the same time noted for his extreme stinginess. Tiie old man, who was somewhat of a hypo chondriac, imagined that ho could get some medical advice from Jacoby with out paying for it. "Doctor, lam feeling very poorly." "Where do you suffer most?" "In my stomach, doctor." "Ah, that's bad. Please shut your eyes. That's right. Now put out your tongue, so that I can examine it closely." The iuvalid did as he was told. After he had waited patieutly for about ten minutes, he opened his eyes and found himself surrounded by a crowd who sup posed that he was crazy. . Dr. Jacoby had, in the meantime, disappeared.— New York Comic. Tlio Farms of the Future. "Do you not think, Senator, that the tendency of the times is toward small farms rather than large ones?" "No," replied Senator Casey (of North Dakota), "1 do not. I think everything points to expansive farming. The farms of the future in this country will be largo ones rather than small ones. Farming becomes more of a business every year, and tho probabilities are that from now on farming will be one of the best paying industries in the United States. The day of cheap lands is passing away. There is very little unoccupied Govern ment land left which is worth anything, and the day has come when the prices of cereals must rise and the people must pay the farmers what their products are worth. The increased consumption of wheat tho world over averages forty million bushels every year, and this in crease will goon. The time will come when there will be less wheat than the world wants, and prices will have togo up to induce the farmers to raise it. As it is now it does not pay to raise wheat in most parts of the United States. The State Board of Agriculture for Ohio lately investigated the matter and found that it costs S2O per acre to raise wheat in that State, and tho Secretary of tho Board of Trade of Toledo made a similar investigation and found it cost S2O per acre to raise wheat in Southern Michigan. We find that it costs us about $6 per acre for all the wheat we raise in North Dakota, and you cannot get the farmers to raise wheat in Ohio until you pay them a price that will aet them a good per centage over the S2O that it costs to raise it. I look for the time when wheat will be $1.50 a bushel, and oven at this rate it will hardly pay to raise it in some parts of the Union."— New York lltrald. Some Monster l)am». It is to be hoped that the gigantic dams which are being erected in tho West for irrigating purposes aro being constructed solidly enough to insure tho safety of the people living in the valleys below them. Persons who have nevet seen an irrigating dam have but a slight conception of their immensity. The fol lowing are the dimensions of four of the largest that have been completed within the past year: 1. The Walnut Grove Dam, near Prescott, Arizona, 110 feet high, enclosing 750 acres, with a capacity of 4,000,000,000 gallons. 2. The Merced Dam, Central California, one mile long, sixty feet high, t550 acres, capacity 5,- 500,000,000 gallons. 3. Sweetwater ltiver Darn, near San Diego, Cal., uinety feet high, 725 acres, capacity 6,000,- 000,000 gallons. 4. The Bear Valley Dam, in San Bernardino Couutv, Cali j fornia, is sixty feet high, enclosing 2250 acres and will hold 10,000,000,000 gal | lon* pf water.—-St. Ztftu* AtpuMic- Maclilne-Mado Music. Harp-playing by machinery is one of the latest novelties. Tho harp is ar ranged so that the plane of its strings is horizontal, the instrument lying on the table, after the fashion of a zither. Then, as regards the written music, the notation of the traditional stave has beon abandoned, and sheets upon which are imprinted mysterious groups of num bers are used in its stead. When one of these sheets is slid into a fmme made for the purpose tho meaning of the figures is interpreted. Each of them falls under a string of the instrument, and by picking at them in numerical order with a bevelled pen cil of ivory the operator produces a tunc. Time and phrasing are indicated by the spacing and alignment of the numbers, nor are the requirements of harmony forgotten. When the melcdy of the air is ad judged insufficient one of the figures is accompanied by a letter, indicating that a button attached to the instrument, and bearing the same symbol, should be at this juncture pressed. This nction, by bringing a small saw of ivory points into play, produces a cord suitable to tho oc casion.—Pall Mall Gazette. All Tlu.7Tr»cdrd. In our physical needs wo want the best of _ anything required, and we want all that is required to bo done, to lie done promptly and surely, and those in pain, especially, will tlnd nil that is needed in what Is herein recom mended. Mr. T. J. Murphy, (11 Debevoice pi. Brooklyn, X. V., says: "Having been afflict ed with sciatic rheumatism for some timo past and finding no relief, I tried St. Jacobs Oil which I found very efficacious."—Miss Clara Alcott, Mahwah, X. J., writes: "I bruised my limb, and it became greatly swollen and stiff. I used two bottles of a patent liniment which did not relievo nie. A physician was callod who ordered tho limb to be poulticed, and he gave me medicine internally, without benefit. I then got a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, which cured me. It acted like magic. "—Mr. Lorenzo Buck, Bancroft, Shiawassee Co., Mieh., says: "I had chronic rheumatism for years, con tracted during the war. After sitting or lying down, at times, I could not get up, from stiff ness and pains. At work my strength would give out, then 1 would pass through a sickness of several weeks. I had to walk with a cane and wasat one time so ill 1 could not lie down without terrible pains in back and limbs. 1 tried St. Jacobs Oil; next morning got up out of bed without assistance. To-day I'm a new man and walk without a cane."— Mr. A. 11. Cunningham, Perryopolls, Fayette County. I 'a., writes: "My wife was sorely afflicted with lame back for several years. She used innumerable liniments, but exper ienced little relief unlit St. Jacobs Oil was used. 1 can confidently say we owe her euro to its wonderful effects aud would not keep house without it." "August Flower" Mr. Lorenzo F. Sleeper is very well known to the citizens of Apple ton, Me., and neighborhood. He says: " Eight years ago I was taken " sick, and suffered as no one but a " dyspeptic can. I then begin tak "ing August Flower. At that time " I was a great sufferer. Every " thing I ate distressed me so that ] "had to throw it up. Then in a " few moments that horrid distress " would come on and I would have "to eat and suffer For that "again. I took a u .. " little of your med "icine, and felt much Stomach "better, and aftei " taking a little more Feeling. " August Flower my "Dyspepsia disap "peared, and since that time I " have never had the first sign of it. "lean eat anything without the "least fear of distress. I wish all " that arc afflicted with that terrible "disease or the troubles caused by "it would try August Flower, as I "am satisfied there is no medicine "equal to it." « Ever*M° THEB Should Have it in The House. Dropped on Su<jar 9 Chilaren to take JOHNSON'S ANODTNK LINIMEJCT lor Croup, Colds, Sore Throat, Tonsil It is, Colic, Cramps and i'alus. Re lieves all Summer Complaints, Cms and Bruises like ma«lc. Bold everywhere. PrleeWr. by mall; 6 bottles Express paid, LS.JOH.SSON & CO., BOSTON, MASS, KML Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. Rheumatism, Lumbapro, pain in joints or back, brick dust In urine, frequent calls, irritation, intlumntion* gravel, ulceration or catarrh oi bladder. Disordered Liver, Impaired illpeatlon, pout, bllllous-headnehe. SWAMP-IIOOT euros kidney difficulties, haUrippc, urinary trouble, brlirht'B disease. Impure Blood, Bcrofuln, malaria, pen'! weakness or debility. CJuuriintro -t'so content* of Olio Bottle. If not beiv cflbxi, l)rutfgibtß will refund to you the price paid. At Druggists, 500. Size, SI.OO Size, •'lnvalid** Guide to Health "free—Consultation free, DH. Krr '» *■ On.. P■ ■ ■ N. Y. sloos Invested In Pierre to-day will likely brlajf you 1000 lnalde of 10 years. Write to me for maps and £.rcu jur*. C'llAS. L. II YIIK, l'ierro. s. Utk. TTi rter Tnhn'a Illustrated In Dr. BroVn's unique JllUg Joans IV j., shakMperinn Alifanac. One Tnfamous or more for distribution among "tr . friends sent on receipt of j>oHtiU- Designs 47 Grand Street, Jersey City, N. J. ft HI ||lf Morphine Habit Curod In lu The use of the bridal veil originated in the custom of performing the nuptial ceremony under a square piece of cloth held between the faces of the bride and to conceal the blushes of the former. The "Barley Syndicate," of Chicago, 111., has purchased 250,000 acres of land in North Dakota on which to settle Ger mans to grow barley for malt pur poses. at TATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, I LUCAS COUNTY", S V Frank J. Cheney inake« oath thut he is the senior partner of the Arm of F. J. Cheney Co., doing: buslncßß in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said Arm will pay the sum of $1(J0 for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK j. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. I)., F - | A. WT ULEASUW. •J SEAL - ' ' Notary Public. HalPs Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Hold by Druggists, 75c. Tlio Mont I'lennant Way Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches, and fevers is to use the liquid laxative rem edy, Syrup of Figs, whenever the system needs a gentle, yet effective cleansing. To be benefited one must get the true remedy manufactured by tho California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all druggists in 50c. and ?1 bottles. __ "1 have been occasionally troubled with Coughs, and in each « ase have used BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES, which have never failed, and I must say they are seoond to none in the world.— FelLc A.. Mau% Cashier, St. Paul, Alinti. IF you are constipated, bilious or troubled with sick headuche, Beecham's Dills afford immediate relief. Of druggists. £*> cents. FITS stopped tree by Diu KLINE'S (TREAT NERVE KESTORER. No tits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, Ml Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Jfafflicted with sore eyes use Dr.lsaac Thomo ►on'sEye-water.Druggists seLl at 25c. per bottle FOR THE UMIJLD KKN. My little girl suffered for three years from a large Abscess on her hip, the resuu of a fall and dislocation. The Abscess was large, with six openings, all of which discharged puss. I was induced by friends to give her S. 8. S., by the time the fifth bottle was finished the Abscess was entirely healed, and the child was well and happy. —Mrs. J. A. WIEGNER, Slatingtcn, Pa. I had three little girls v/ho were attacked with obstinate ECZEMA, or Blood Trouble, which at first resembled heat, but soon grew to yellow blisters, tome o! them quite l?rge. One of the children died from the effects of it, but we got Swift's Specific and gave to the other two, and they Soon got well. S. S. S. forced out the poison promptly. The cure was wonderful.—J. I). Rains, Marthaville, La. S. S. S. has no equal for Children. It relieves the system promptly, and assists nature in developing the child's health. Our Treatise mailed free. SWT FT SPFr-TFir COMPANY. ATLANTA. GA. OM I V Wi! have CALLKI. BQCT AND —OCR Leai>eu.— UKF.AT 11 LT ; ' ** l A splendid Farmer * an-1 aMFRTPAW s ' U/ ADM lirorHn / man'* lllltten fur AiuiJiJiXL/AiV PM n will BUpply our cue- WAnlfli fioc. pernalr. lift nahl GLOVE CO., hllP tomera and attoth- II" - - h„nu>U. l Pair khkk with 51 111 I . A d ordered through one person. Uioveravmr n,». VW U I im hereafter ai Uy fk W [f , 11|ljr wn nted semi «il- vr»l the number DDD nI T n NVHOI.ESALI; IKICHS, , i ver i>r ntam | If more than of Inches around th«» lull JrAill, [direct l»v mall, thus L|KE one |ialr send Postal Xote or hand, ovi-r tlu* 111 saving them all m id- u, „ _ ~ Monev Order and deduct knuckles, but under ! ! I Uleme>r* profit*. IR O N from ai - t>..- thiii.il. IDO NOT OE DECEIVED with s. Knamels, and Palnta which stain I the hands, l«|nretha Iron, and burn off. | The Rlslnß Bun Store Polish is l)rllll*nt,Ooor. i lev. Durable,and tho consumer ;iay« tor no tin or glass package with every purchase. I gmk A VVE WANT AN \lfin AGENT IJg B H H nJI ill *'V. TV ro Willy (.» .-ill thr V I.T 1 * JACK FROST Ss© FREEZER, that makes Ice Cream In HO sveonda. We will s*»ll vou for $5" the exclusive Agent's rights In your county to a liu.slnesM that will pay you hundreds of dollar*. For the llrst 2«>o counties Hold, and In order to make our business co-operative, we will Give Away $20,000, anent, with dividends guaranteed at three percent. You will never have another such opportunity. Write at once for particulars. AMER. AUTO. VEND. MCH. CO., 503 & 505 PEAKL STBEET, MEW YORE. | MUSHROOMS f t°H\ MILLION | There s money in growing Mushrooms, fe n Constant demand al good prices. Any one ui t M p S for $5.00* Special fe ( rates on larpe lots. JOHN GARDINER & Co.. j~ S)Seed Growers, Importers aucl Dealers, e ( Philadelphia. I'a. ) 91 Gardiner's Seeds :—New Catalogue fig; J for 1892 now ready. Free. Send for it. £ % WIS # 4b 'ft* Farm Land In S. T)uk.; fine, rich soil, and such land as will t»o worth an iu*re Inside of five years can now be bouKht for s}i to s<i an acre. For special bargains write to I'll AH. L, IIYIIK, Pleiye, s. Dak. JONJS'scaiTES ===o FUUIiY WARf?ANTED°= sTcn SCALES S 60 FREIGHT Rmd Binbhamton,NY SICHFTVE OR EUCHRE PARTIES should send at once to JOHN SEPASTIAN, G. r. A. R. I. AP. R. R.. Chlcapco. TF.N CENTS, In stAmps. per pack the slickest cariH vou ever shuffled. l?or SI.OO you will receive free by er.press ten itacks. PAPERS COPIED b} W r!K Send manuscript and ton c<'iits for each humlrtHl words to N. Y. Reductlou for <mlorw. DO YOU WANT STr'wEJS It will 1m- safe and make a ip'od round profit. Satis, factory references. M.1.. McMiwi.Duluth, Minnesota. TUB HAYES DO lit I. E (VI. IN HE It inc. I'OKf'K IMMPM. Ciuarantied to be the beat on earth, sent on SO days'trial. \\ rite for elrenlars to HAVES PUMP & PLANTKK CO., Oalva, 111. B^SBE3^SSK3Q39ZXaVH I ConsumptlTea and people B who have weak lungs or Astli- H ma. should use Piso's Cure for H Rfl Consuraptlon. It has cored la dionaandi. It has not Injur- H ■ed one. It is not bsd to take. it la the best cough syrup. W H Hold ererrwhere. 3Ae. COPTWCHIIBSI All gone woman's suffering and woman's weakness. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription puts a stop to it. It's a remedy for all the delicate de rangements and disorders that make her suffer, and a cure for all the dis eases and disturbances that mako her weak. It's a legitimate medi cine, that corrects and cures; a. tonic that invigorates and bnilds up; a nervine that soothes and strengthens. For bearing - down pains, displacements, all the func tional irregularities peculiar to the sex, it's a safe and certain remedy. Other medicines claim to cure? That's true. But they don't claim to do this: if the Favorite Pre scription fails to give satisfaction, in any case for which it's recom mended, the money paid for it is refunded. Judge for yourself which is likely to be the better medicine. And think whether something else offered by the dealer is likely to be " just as good." You pay only for the good you get. On these terms it's the cheapest. (■nrr illustrated Publications, with K r r wrsssjs ss& I IBik Washington and Oregon, tb* mmSSSaS 1 NORTHERN j A ftjfl X PACIFIC rr ASIUO Intr ami Timber now open to xettler*. Mailed FIU'.E. Adiirefß ('HAS. IU LASKOKN. Laud Com. S. I». K. U., St. P»nl, Miaa. PIERRE Will bo the next younu city to surprise you with a wonderful growth. She Is the most promising city or her size In t!.•■ I'nlted states. Heslde* a large extent of fertile lands, there are worlds of wealth In miner als irlbutary to her, including Immense deposits of Coal. Iron, Tin, lead, Silver & Gold. Two railroads an 1 now build lug, ami throe others have lately surveyed into I'ierre. The harvest of ltftfl Is the greatest ever known. Now is THE Time certainly to invest. Correspondence solicited. For further iuforma *lJ \ . 1.. II VI)K. I'lerre. S. l)ak. SiE HJCNRT THOMPSON, tno Sjtju/k. N. most noted physician of F/ng i \ land, says that more than half of all diseases eome from Send lor Krce Sample of I ' * ar,u l' ca 10 Wert totb Street New York City. GMIMM s I r«iioroiComDl«*on; c «rc»Con#tipatloni# WOODBURY'S FACIAL SOAP, Kor the Skin, Srulpaivl I'ompleilon. Re p«lt'»f •-'O.Tears T *t'or»le / at Dnnrnrfxts or bv mail, Aop. sample / ae.d 12# i» look 0:1 I 'ermat-ology 1% mSRS and Beauty, LlUut.lt on Skin, Sealp, \sj ]RS, Nervous .mdlllood disease and their 17 *0 torment. sent sealed for I '-TV. niSKIOI KF.SIKM'S like BIRTH lUllkft. Wnrt% ' ,n,,i }{ T k sSHTH ■^ O ],JX e 'W »E«JU!R»tSo»r*k iHurrll'TF 1".. Ilrt ,2r.(l»N'roi't. S. Y. 4 llj t ontultatloD S "VX, Arei wanted In each plaatt. ■ ■L!9I9 liiliv Address of Every I ■ AWIS BSm ASTHMATIO I ■jffiif I» r VUap HaroldHayos,U.O.l j CURED TO STAY CURED. ] ouFPALO.W.Y. I UUUJ^^jyMLJJLJIJ J. H. DYK. Editor, Ituftalo. .VI. Psnvszonrs - I'-JO »I: SOLDIERS: V4 disabled « fee ior increase. year® ex perience. Write for L-aws. A.W MCCORMICK Sows. WASHINGTON. D. U. A C'IXCINNATI. Q. K Y X U—4 A Lovely Girl of Eighteen thus writes to ;i friend :—" Tney said I was consumptive, sent me to Florida, told me to keep quiet, etc. One day 1 found a book called ' Guide to Health and Etiquette,' by Mrs. Pinkliam: in it I found out what ailed me. I wrote to her, got a lovely replv. and I ant in splendid health now.' Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound conquers all those female complaints and weaknesses which baffle the doctors. All Hnieriota M-1 It. or wnt bv mall, in form of PHU or 1 All,l™n"rJ.i.ol oi «l.<M>. l.lvrr Pill.. H.V. Carmuondfncc frrciv Adtlrwt in contidtne* JiviUA t VI.VKUAiI MfcU CO , LYIrK, MAII,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers