fisms 1 YOUR „ [stow? J "Every morning I have a bad taste In my mouth; my tongue is coated; my head aches and 1 often feel dizzy. I have no appetite for breakfast and what food I eat distresses me. I have a heavy feeling in my stomach. 1 am getting so weak that sometimes I tremble and my nerves are all unstrung. I am getting pale and thin. I am as tired in the morning as at night." What does your doctor say? "You are suffering from im- Ja pure blood." V What is his remedy? 0 You must not have consti tated bowels if you expect the arsaparilla to doits best work. But Ayer's Pills cure constipa tion. We have a book on Paleness and Weakness which you may have for the asking. Wrltm to our Doctors. Perhaps you would like to consult eminent physicians about your condi tion. Write us freely all the partloulars In your case. You Will receive a prompt reply. Address, DR. J. C. AYER. Lowell, Mass. vpgpgftF**™ KIILUIYI A I 10111 treatment, postpaid, 10 cents. "ALEXANDER REMEDY CO. , :Uf. Greenwich St.. N Y. TITIGS, Plays, Trick® and Novelties. 111. Cat .Free. " Agts. wanted .O.MAUSH ALL, Mir. .Lockport.N.Y. F|ENSION»"?,E!.','. l .'i,' , , s : 112 Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal ExamintrU.S. Pension Bureau. *yrsiu civil war, 15 adjudicating claims, att.y uinca London's Italian Colony. The Italians in London are suffi cient of themselves to form a lurge town There are are as many as 14,- 000 of them; 2000 of these are ice cream vendors and 1000 organ grind ers. The other 11,000 are chietlv en gaged as plaster bust sellers, artists' models, cooks, valets, teachers, ar tists, restaurant and hotel keepers, and so on. Try t-rain-O I Try (Jrain-O! Ask your grocer to-day to show you ft package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. Children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it like It. GBAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but Is made from pure grains; the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. % the price of coffee. 15c. and Hse. per package. Sold by all grocers. Street refuse In Italy Is sold by public auction. Will Get There. It Is deep down to the Sciatic nerve, but St. Jacobs Oil will get there by vigorous rubbing, and will soothe the affected nerve and drive out the tormenting pain. The worst cases have been promptly cured. In some parts of Berlin, Germany, there are special public houses for women. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Uuf nine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it falls to cure. 25c. Forest fires in the United States cause an annual loss of $20,000,000. f.ane'u Family Ifledlclne. Moves the bowels each day, In order to oe healthy this is necessary. Acts gently the liver and kidneys. Cures slck"head »che. Price '25 and 50c. As a rule, a man's hair turns gray five years sooner than a woman's. Dr. Seth Arnold's Cough Killer best medi cine ever tried for Colds.— L. C. HA.MMO.NI> 22 (. olden St.. Nawburgh, N. Y., Nov, 2U, law! Soap has been in use for 3000 years, and is twice mentioned In the Bible. Ptso's Cure cured me of a Throat and Lung trouble of three years' standing.—E. CADY, Huntington, lnd.. Nov. 12.1MH. There are more Germans in America than in Bavaria. No-T'o-Hac for Fifty Cent*. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak ■Tien strong, blood pure 50c. 11. All druggists. The Dog and His Cham. Friendships between human beings, too, are shown and strengthened by little deeds of thoughtful kindness, like this one reported by the Barling ton Free Press: A very ordinary-looking farm hor%e harnessed to an old wagon stood by the curb, and on the board that served for a seat lay a small dog of such mixed blood that no guess can be made as to his breed. As a delivery wagon passed on the opposite side of tho street a large red apple fell off. Before it stopped roll ing the dog bounded across the street, picked it up with his teeth, and with tail wagging rushed back to the horse, in front of which he stood upon his hind legs while the apple was taken from his month. As the horse munched the apple he made the peculiar little noise that horses make when petted, and doggie replied with throaty little barks which plainly told what a pleasure it had been togo after that apple. Then he went back to his nap on the waKon seat. DR TALMAGES SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: "The Christian Home"—A Place For the Genesis and Rounding Out of Character—The Family Circle a HavAi of Kefug:e From the World's Storms* TEXT: "Let them loam first to show piety at home."—l Timothy v., 4. During the summer months the tendency Is to the fleld9, to visitation, to foreign travel ond the watering places, and the ocean steamers are thronged, but in the winter it is rather to gather in domestio circles, and during these months we spend many of the hours within doors, and the apostle comes to us and says that we ought to exercise Christian behavior amid all such circumstances. "Let them learn first to show piety at home." There are a great many people longing for some grand spher3 in which to serve God. They admire Luther at the diet of Worms, and only wish that they had some such great opportunity in which to display their Christian prowess. They admire Paul making Felix tremble, and they only wish that they had some such grand occa sion in which to preach righteousness, temperance and judgment to come. All tliev want is an opportunity to exhibit their Christian heroism. Now, the apostle practically says:"l will show you a place where you can exhibit ail that is grand and beautiful and glorious in Christian charac ter and that is the domestic circle. Let them learn first to show piety at home." If one is not faithful In an insignificant sphere, he will not be fnithful in a resound ing sphere. If Peter will not help the crip ple at tho gate of the temple, he will never be nble to preach 3000 into the king dom at tho Pentecost. If Paul will not i take pains to instruct in tho wav of salva : tion the jailor of the rtiilippian dungeon, I he will neverf make Felix tremble. He i who is not fatthful in a skirmish would not | bo faithful in on Armageddon. The fact is, we aro all placed in just the position in which wo can most grandly serve God, and we ought not to he chiefly thoughtful about some sphere of usefulness which we may after a while gain, but the all absorb ing question with >ou and with me ought to be, "Lord, what wilt Thou have me now and here to do?" There is one word In St. Paul's adjura tion around which the most of our thoughts will revolve. That word is "home." Ask ten different men the mean ing of that word and they will give you ten different definitions. To one it means love at the hearth, plenty at tho table, in dustry at the work stand, intelligence at the books, devotion at the alter. In that household discord never sounds its war whoop, and deception never tricks with its false face. To him it means a greeting at j the door and a smile at the chair, peace I hovering like wings, joy clapping its hands with laughter. Life is a tranquil lake. Tillowed on the ripples sleep the shadows. Ask another man wliat home Is and he will tell it is want looking out ot a cheerless lire-grate, kneading hunger in an empty bread tray. The damp air shivering with curses. No Bible on the shelf. Children robbers nnd murderers in embryo. Ob scene songs their lullaby. Every face a picture of ruin. Want in the background and sin staring from the front. No Sab bath wave rolling over that doorsill. Ves tibule of the pit. Shadow of infernal walls. Furnace for forging everlasting chains. Fagots for an unending funeral pile. Awful word. It is spelled with curses, it weeps with ruin, it chokes with woe, it sweats with the death agony of de spair. Tho word "home" in the one case means everything bright. The word "home" In the other case means every thing terrific. I shall speak now of home as a test of character, home as a refuge, home as a po litical safeguard, home as a school, and home as a type of heaven. And in the first place, home is a powerful test of char acter. The disposition in public may be in gay costume, while in private it is disha bille. As play actors may appear in one way on tho stage and may appear in an other way behind the scenes, so private character may be very different from pub lic character. Private character is often public character turned wrong side out. A man may receive you into hi? parlor as though he was a distillation of smiles, and yet his heart may be a swamp of nettles. There are business men who all day long are mild and courteous, and genial and good natured in commercial life, damming back their irritability and their petulance and their discontent, but at nightfall the dam breaks, and scolding pours forth in floods and freshets. As at sunset sometimes the wind rises, so after a sunshiny day there may be a tem pestuous night. There are people who in public act the philanthropist who at home act the Nero with respect to their slippers and their gown. Audubon, the great orni thologist, with gun 'and went through the forests of America to bring down and to sketch tho beautiful birds, and after years of toll and exposure completed his manuscript and put it In a trunk in Philadelphia and went off for a few days of recreation and rest and came back and found that the rats had utterly destroyed the manuscript, but without any discom posure and without any fret or bad temper he again picked up his gun and his pencil and visited again all tho great forests of America and reproduced his Immortal work. And yet there are people with the ten-thousandth part of that loss who Jare utterly irreconcilable, who at the loss of a pencil or an article of raiment will blow as long and loud and'sharp as a northeast storm. Now, that man who is affable in public and who is irritable in private is making a fraudulent and overissue of stock, and he is as bad as a bank that might have $400,000 or $500,000 of bills in circulation with no specie in the vault. Let us tlearn to show piety at home. If we have it not there, we have it not anywhere. If we have not genuine grace in the family circle, all our outward and public plausibility merely springs from the fenr of the world or from the slimy, putrid pool of our own selfish ness. I tell you the home Is a mighty test of character. What you are at home you are everywhere, whether you demonstrate it or not. Again, home Is a refuge. Life is the United States army on the national road to Mexico—a long march, with ever and anon a skirmish and a battie. At eventide we pitch our tent and stack the arms, we hang up the war cap, and our head on the knapsack we sleep until the morning bugle calls us to march to the action. How pleasant it is to rehearse the victories and the surprises and the attacks of the day seated by the still campflre of the home circlel Yea, life Is a stormy sea. With shivered masts and torn sails and hulk aleak we putin at the harbor of home. Blessed harbor! There we go for repairs in the drydock. The candle in the window is to the toiling man the lighthouse guid ing him into port. Children go forth to meet their fnthers as pilots at the Narrows take the hand of ships. The doorsill of the home is the wharf where heavy life is un luden. There Is the place where W9 may talk of what we have done without being charged with self adulation. There is the place where we may lounge without being thought ungraceful. There is the place where we may express affection without being thought silly. There is the place where we may forget our annoyances and exasperations and troubles. Forlorn earth pilgrim, no home? Then die. That is bet ter. The grave is brighter ami grander and more glorious than this world with no tent from marching, with no har'jor from the storm, with no place of rest from this scene of greed and gouge and loss and gain. God pity the man or the woman who has no home! Further, home is a political safeguard. The safety of the State must be built on the safety of the home. Why cannot trance come to a placid republic? Mac- Mahon appoints bis ministry,and all France is aquuke lest the republic be smothered. Gam bat to dies, and there are hundreds ol thousands of Frenchmen who are fearing the return of a monarchy. The Dreyfus case is at this moment a slumbering earth quake under Paris. France, as a nation, has not the right kind of a Christian home, The Christian hearthstone is the only hearthstone for a republic. The virtues cultured in the family circle are an abso lute necessity for the State. If there be not enough moral principle to make the family adhere, there will not be enough po litical principle to make the State adhere. No home means the Goths and Vandals, means the Nomads of Asia, means tne Numidians of Africa, changing from place to place according as the pasture happens to change. Confounded be all those babels of iniquity which would overpower and de stroy the home! The same storm that up sets the ship In which the family sail will sink the frigate of the constitution. Jails and penitentiaries and armies and navies are not our best defense. The door of the home is the best fortress. Household uten sils are our best artillery, and the chim neys of our dwelling houses are the grand est monuments to safety and triumph. No home, no republic. Further, home is a school. Old ground must be turned up with subsoil plow, and it must be harrowed and reharrowed, and then the crop will not be as large as that of the new ground with less culture. Now, youth and childhood are new ground, and all the influences thrown over their heart and life will come up lu after life luxuri antly. Every time you have given a smilo of approbation all the good cheer of your life will come up again In the geniality of your ehildren. And every ebullition of anger and every uncontrolable display of indignation will be fuel to this disposition of twenty or thirty or forty years from now , —fuel for a bad Are a quarter of n century from this. You praise the intelligence of your child too much sometimes when you think he is not aware of it, and you will see the result of it before ton years of age in his annoying affectations. You praise his beauty, supposing ho is not large enough to understand what vou say, and you will find him standing on a high chair before a liattering mirror. Oh, make your home the brightest place on earth if you would charm your children to the high path of virtue and rectitude and religion. Do not always turn the blinds the wrong way. Let the light, which puts gold on the gentian and spots the pansy, pour into your dwellings. Do not expect the little feet to keep step to a dead march. Do not cover up yonr walls with such pictures as West's "Death on u Pale Horse" or Tintoretto's "Massacre of the Innnocents." Rather cover them, if you have pictures, with "The Hawking Party," and"The Mill by the Mountain Stream," ana "The Fox Hunt," and the "Children Amid Flowers," nnd the "Harvest Scene," nnd "The Saturday Night Marketing." Get you no hint of cheerfulness from grasshopper's leap and lamb's frisk and quail's whistle and garrulous streamlet, which from the rock at the mountain top clear down to the meadow ferns under the shudow of the steep comes looking to see wliero it can find the steepest place to leap off at and talking just to hear itself talk? If all the skies hurtled with tempest and everlasting storm wandered over the sea ami every mountain stream were raving mad, froth ing at the month with mud foam, and there were nothing but simoons blowing among the hills, and there were neither lark s carol nor humming bird's trill nor waterfall's dash, but only bear's bark and panther's scream and wolf's howl, and you might well gather into your homes only the shadows. But when God has strewn the earth and the heavens with beautv and with gladness let us take into our home circles all Innocent hilarity, all brightness and all good cheer. A dark home makes bad boys and bad girls in preparation for bud men and bail women. Above all, my friends, take Into your hemes Christian principle. Can It be that in any of the comfortable homes whose in mates I confront the voice of prayer is never lifted? What! No supplication at night for protection? What! No thanks giving in the morning for care? How, my brother, my slstor, will you answer God in the day of judgment with reference to your children? It is a plain question, and there fore I ask it. In the tenth chapter of Jere miah God says he will pour out his fury upon the families that call not upon His name. Oh, parents, when you are dead and gone and the moss Is covering the In scription of the tombstone, will your chil dren look back and think of father and mother at family prayer? Will they take the old family Bible and open It and see the mark of tears of contrition and tears of consoling promise wept by eyos long before gone out Into darkness? Oh, If you do not inculcate Christian principle In the hearts of your children, and do not warn them against evil, and you do not invite them to holiness and to God, and they wander off Into dissipation and into infidelity, and at last make shipwreck of their immortal soul, on their deathbed and in the day of judgment they will curse you! Seated by the register or the stove, what if on the wall should come out the history of your children! What a history—the mortal and Immortal life of your loved oncsl Every parent is writing the history of his child. He is writing it, composing it into a song or pointing it with a groan. One night, lying on my lounge when very tired, my children all around about me, In full romp and hilarity and laughter—on ths lounge, half awake and half asleep—l dreamed this dream: I was in a far coun try. It was not Persia, although morethan oriental luxuriance ciowned the ci'les. It was not the tropics, although more than tropical fruitfulness filled the gardens. It was not Italy, although more than Italian softness filled the air. And I wandered about looking for thorns and nettles, but I found that none of them grew there. And I saw the sun rise, and I watched to see It set, but It sank not. And I saw the people in holiday attire, and I said, "When will they put off this and pat on workmen's garb, and again delve la the mine and swelter at the forge?" But they never put off the holiday attire. And I wandered in the suburbs of the city to find the place where the dead sleep, and I looked all along the line of the beau tiful hills, the place where the dead might most peacefully sleep, and I saw towers and castles, but not a mausoleum, or a monument, or a white slab could I see. And I went into the chapel of the great town, and I said, "Where do the poor wor ship and where are the hard benches on which they sit?" And the answer was made me, "We have no poor in this coun try."-n And then I wandered out to find the hovels of the destitute, and I found man sions of amber and ivory and gold, but not a tear could I see, not a Blgh could I hear. And I was bewildered, and I sat down under the branches of a great tree, and I said, "Where nm 1 and whence comes all this scene?" And then out from among the leaves and up the flowery paths and across the broad streams there came a beautiful group thronging all about me, and as I saw them come I thought I knew their step, and as they shouted I thought I knew their voices, but then they were so gloriously arrayed in apparel such as I had never before witnessed that I bowed as stranger to stranger. But when again they clapped their hands and shouted "Welcome, welcome," the mystery all van ished. and I found that time had gone and eternity had come, and we were all together again in our new home In heaven, and I looked around and I said, "Are we all here?" and the voices of manv generations responded. "All here!" And while tears of gladness were running down our cheeks, and the branches of the Lebanon cedars were clapping their hands, and the towers of the great city were chiming their wel come we all together began to leap and shout and sing, "Home, home, hotnel" Dominion Parliament to Meet. The Canadian Parliament has been sum moned to meet at Ottawa, Ont., on Mareh 16. A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS. AD Apostrophe to Water A Chicago Judge Declare* That Nine-tenth* ol Our Law-breaklna; 1* Hatched In tlia Saloons—At the Root of All Evil. What (alls from Heaven refreshingly? Not wine, but water clear! What drapes with bridt»-l;ke veil the moun« tain side? Not wine, but water clear! What gently drops from sympathetic eyes? Not wine, but water clear! What bears rich laden ships from land to land? Not wine, but water clear! In baptism's holy rite bedews the brow Bed wine, or water clear? Thank God, a Kipling song shall cheerl and cheerl Not wine, but water clearl —E. C. Martin. A Stern Indictment. The presiding judge of one of the Chi caßO courts said recently to an Inter Ocean interviewer: "You miy ransaok the pigeon holes all over the city and country, and look over such annual reports as are made up, but they will not tell half the truth. Not only are the saloons of Chicago responsiblo for the cost of the police force, the fifteen jus tice courts, the county jail, a great portion of Joliet State prison, the long murder trials, the coroner's office, the morgue, the poorhouse, the roform schools, the mad house. do anywhere you plense, and you will almost Invariably find that whiskey is at the root of all evil. The gambling houses of the city, and the bad houses of the city, are the direct outgrowth of the boon companions of drink. Of all the prostitutes of Chicago, the downfall ol al most every one can bo traced to drunken ness on the part of their parents or hus ! bunds, or drunkenness on their own part, i Of all the boys in the reform school at Pontiao, and in the various reformatories about the city, ntuety-flve per cont. are the children of parents who died through ! drink, or became criminals through the same cause. Of the insane or demented cases disposed of hero In court every Thurs day, a moderate estimate Is that ninety per cent, are caused by alcohol. I saw estimated the other day that there were ten thousand destitute boys In Chicago who are not confined at all, but aro run ning at large. I think that is a small esti mate. Men are sent to jail for drunken ness, and what becomes of their families? | Tho county agent and poorhouse provide j for some. It Is a direct expense to tho j community. Generally speaking, these : families goto destruction. The boys turn thieves, and the girls and mothers gen : orally resort to the slums. The sandbag gers, murdorers and thugs generally of to j day, who are prosecuted in the police courts and criminal courts, are the sons of meu who fell victims to drink. Tho per centage In this case is fully sixty-five per cent. "I know whereof I speak; 'This saloon,' 'that saloon,' 'the other saloon'—saloons, saloon, saloons, saloons—figured con stantly and universally In the anarchist trials. Conspirators mot In saloons; dyna mite was discussed in saloons; bombs were distributed over saloons; armed revolution j ists were drilled above, under, or in rear j saloons; treason made assignation in sa | loons, and time and time again witnesses [ say,'We went to such and suoh a saloon for wine and beer.' There is not a country j under the sun in which lurks so much treason, revolution and murder, as in the saloons of tho United States, and notably j in tho larger cities. These saloons pests harbor thieves, thugs, house-breakers, ; anurchists, robbers and murderers. Nlne | tenths of the law-breaking in America Is hatched in saloons, and the admitted fact is palliated by the axiom that saloons are headquarters for town, cltv, and even na tional gerrymandering. The liquor coun ter is the scafTold on which a half-hundred beautiful, vital American things are as sassinated, on which scores of horrid plagues are glorified." A Physician's Eiptrlcnce With Alcohol. I had never been much in sympathy with any temperance movement until I served a3 an interne in an alcoholic ward of a largo city hospital, writes a phvslclan in the New York Sun. I have Inquired into the habits of many alcoholics and the circum stances of their intoxication. I have come to believe restraint is im perative. Lessen the opportunities offered for alcoholic intoxication by progressive taxation of the liquor traffic; say add S2OO a year to Itaines law taxation for tea or twelve years as an initial step. Then take your soundings. Let benevolent men or the city found twenty-five "Cooper Unions" as "working men's clubs," or more, perhaps fifty—in different parts of the city for hall-room dwellers and others, and you will deprive the saloon of a large share of its patron age. Practloal agitation for legal redress will receive the support of alcoholics them selves. Class legislation, even against saloon keepers, Is always odious, and justly so. Agitation from the parson's study Is foolish. Too many clergymen know noth ing of the conditions under which fifty per cent, of the population of this town live. Physicians who, during their college years and after graduation, have worked among the poor and for them know of their naked ness and starvation and alcoholic indul gence, both by men and women. "No Drink While on Duty." Close upon the abolition of the "can teen" In the army comes the cutting off of Jacky's official "grog" by the Navy De partment. Both these moves are In re sponse to the elaborate experiments that have been made by the military and naval experts of the groat European war estab lishments. They are also in line with the rules now rigidly enforced by every great corporation forblddiug their employes to drink while on duty. The complicated and exaoting machin ery of modern civilization calls for com plete presence of mind at ail times in all of its dlreotors, high and humble. There can be no confusion, no slipshod work, no mixture of business and pleasure. There must be alertness, attention, clear-headed ness—the best servioe from every muscle and faculty. I "No drink while on duty" is an axiom rot of morals but of sagacious prudence,— New York World. A Good Book Worth a Dozen Drinks. Of this you may be sure: Your best thoughts and your best moments will be free from alcoholio stimulus. And the young man who wants to get on and win in the fight into which he was born need not complain if he drugs and dulls himself into even greater Inferiority than he got at birth. A good book is worth a dozen of the cups that cheer. A good friend, sober, quiet, Intelligent, is worth more than hogs heads full of cheering cups.—New York Journal. Temperance Notes. Homo of the generals are talking about introducing a free ration of beer and spirits Into the army. They claim that it would Increase the fighting and staying qualities of the soldiers. The other day, says thePaulist Calendar, New York, in one of our public schools a ohild of twelve years was noticed under the influence of drink. It bad come to sohool repeatedly in that condition. The silly mother thought whisky was good for its health, and so gave the ohild a dose before going to school. Suoh lnstanoes as the above may be Iboked for as long as the people are persuaded that intoxicating drinks axe essential to one's h«fthh_. nra a e a a a t a trrrcrrrrrvrvi angßdaatttmaaaa aria»'»»a ryy i o ° Riding in the wind and dust roughens the face and ® ® often causes painful chapping and cracking of the skin. 3 % Those who are so affected should use a pure soap. « % Ivory Soap is made of vegetable oils that are soothing in % \% their nature; it can be used freely even on tender faces, ; ° for there is nothing in it to irritate or injure. ® i IVORY SOAP IS 99« 4 XOO PER CENT. PURE. • ° O o A WORD OF WARNING.—There are many white soaps, each represented to be" just o ° as gbod as the ' Ivorythey ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and e 0 remarkable qualities of the genuine. 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Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Dis eases, Loss of Appetite, Headaobe, Con stipation, Costiveness, Indigestion, Bil iousness,Fever,lnflammation of the Bowels, Plies and all derangements of the Internal Viscera. PERFECT DIGESTION will be accomplished by taking RAD WAY'S PILLS. By so doing DYSPEPSIA, Sick Headache, Foul Stomach, Biliousness will be avoided, as the food that is eaten contributes its nourishing properties for the support ot the natural waste ol the body. Price, 25 cents per box. Sold by all druggists, or sent by mail on receipt of price. RADWAY & CO., 55 Elm St., N. Y. CONSTIPATION "I have gone 14 day* at a time without m Movement of the bowel., not being able to move them except by using hot water Injections. Chronic constipation for seven rears placed me in this terrible condition; during that time I did ev erything I heard of but never found any relief; such was my case until I began using CASCARETS. I now have from one to three passages a day, and If I was rich I would give 1100.00 for each movement; it ia suoh a relief." aylmer L. Hunt, 1689 Russell St.. Detroit, Mich. CANOV M CATHARTIC bl&CCMtito THADf MAMK MMTMO Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 30c, 60c. ... CURB CONSTIPATION. ... •UrllM l.>Kl; Cuapuj. Ibis.**, a..1r.i1, low T«*. W It ears. Colds,Coughs,Sore Throat,Oroßß.laiaoa aa, Whoojrtac Cough, Iroachltis aad Asthaa. A eertaia cure ror Coaaumptioa ia first .tagee, aai a sure relief ia advaaood stages. Use at oaoe. Tea will see the eaoeUoat effect after tahiaa the Sand Postal for Premium List to the Dr. Sstk Arnold Medical Corporation, Wooosockat, R. 1. tSt UNCLE SAM And good enough for you. There is more ol Carter's Ink used by the U. S. Government vhan of all other makes put together. It costs you n« more than the poorest —ask for it. Funny booklet" How to Make Ink Pictures M free. CARTER'S INK CO., Boston, MM*. Happy §1 SAANPL IJOHNSON-S MALARIA, CHILLS ft FBVER, Crippe * Liver Diseases'.- o _ _ v KNOWN DRUGGISTS. 35c. KFOR 14 CENTS;; We wiah to gain this year 900.000 . . y new customers, and hence offer ; ** 1 Pkg. 13 Day Radish, 10c 1 Pkg. Early Ripe Cabbage, 10c ( ) 1 '* Earliest Ked Beet, 10c ( | 1 " Long Lightn'g Cucumber 10c ( i I " Salter's Best Lettuce, 16c , , 1 " California Fig Tomato, 20c . 1 •• Early Dinner Onion, 10c 8 " Brilliant Flower Seeds, 13c < > Worth SI.OO, for 14 cents. ITuO ' I Above 10 pkgs. worth SI.OO, we will ] ' mail yon free, together with our ' 1 great Plant and Seed Catalogue I I npon receipt of this notice A 14e | | postage. We invite your trade aud | , snow when you once try Salzer'a , . •eednyou will never get along with njy outthein. Colon seed