BM«(r la Blood Dee*. Clean blood means a clean akin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by atirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking CaHcarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. The first provincial Congress of Massa chusetts was held in Salem on October 7 1.774. Do lour Feet Ac-lie and Burn? Shake Into your shoes Allen's Foot Ease a powder for tbo feet. It makes Tight 01 New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun lons, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching an: Sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FIiEE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy N. Y. There are sixty-five steamers on the Swiss lakes. The largest can transport 1200 people. 1 Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yo*r Mfe Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full ot life, nerve and vigor, take No-To □ac, the wnnder-worker, tbat makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or (1. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Addres! Sterling Remedy Co., Cbicago or New York. The last year appears to have been the warmest on record in England for half u century. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness alter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 8~ trial bottle and treatise free Du. R. H. KLINE, Ltd..931 Arch St.,Phila.,Pa Criminals sentenced to death in Utah have a choice between hanging and shooting. Hall's Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Write fortes timonials, free. Manufactured by F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O In Vienna organ grinders are allowed to play only between midday and sunset. "Pride Goeth { Before a Fall." r Some proud people think they Are strong, ridicule the idea of disease, neglect health, let the blood run down, and stomach, kid neys and liver become deranged. Take Hood's Sarsaparilla and you 'will prevent the fall and save your pride. flvg *° y° ur g rocer to-day ML and get a 15c. package of I Grain-0 WK It takes the place of cof- fee at J the cost. Made from pure grains it Sib i s nourishing and health uQ . Insist that yonr jrrocer gives you GRAIN -O- Accept no imitation. Cultivation of Grape Fruit. Grape fruit has always been grown in southern California, but only lately has there been any demand for it. It is practically a new luxury. But prices are high, the consumption is large and many people are therefore going into the business. A man named McGin nis, near Pasadena, has twelve trees from which he shipped last year fifty nine boxes of grape fruit that him an average of $5 a box. Thus fai the shipments of grape fruit from this part of the country have been furnished from a lew scattering trees. There has been 110 cultivation until the lasi few years, but now the people are set ting out extensive orchards and ar< grafting the trees up in a skillful man ner to improve the fruit and iucreasi the juice and reduce the percentage oJ pulp- A Literary Coincidence. General McArthur sent them, unde. the escort of Major Mallory—the con junction of the names of"the son o Arthur" and Mallory, the Homer o the Arthurian legend, is a prett; literary coincidence—to Manila, wher General Otis, the American command er-in-chief, received them.—Londo' Spectator. <Jfappy 77f other s Sratitude [LETTER TO UAS. PINKBAU N*. 26,785] * " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —I have many many thanks to five you for what you) Vegetable Compound has done for me After first confinement I was sick foi Bine years with prolapsus of the womb had pain in left side, in small of back a great deal of headache, palpitation of heart and leucorrhoea. I felt s« weak and tired that I could not do my ♦vork. I became pregnant again and took your Compound' all through, and now have a sweet baby girl. I never before had such an easy time during labor, and I feel it was due to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I am now able to do my work and feel better than I have for years. I cannot thank you enough."— MßS. ED. EH LINGER, DEVINE, TEX. Wonderfully Strengthened. " I have been taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, Blood Purifier and Liver Pills and feel won derfully strengthened. Before using your remedies I was in a terrible state; felt like fainting every little while. I thought I must surely die. But now, thanks to your remedies, those feel ings are all gone."— MßS. EMILIE SCHNEIDER, 1244 HELEN ATE., DETROIT Kiav ! EASILY DISTIN.GUISHED. When you hear a person tellin' how the world has gone awry, An' relatin' all the trouble we'll encounter by cad by. When you hear him prophesyln' nothln' else but doubt an' gloom— How the sun will soon get the ague an' the flow'rs forget to bloom, If you've any mind for guessin', you kin alius hit it right. His luck has gone agin him. He's the man that lost the flght. An' when you meet another, steppin' high an' lookln' proud, A-shakin' hands so cheery an' a-smilin' on the crowd, An' tellin' folks to brace up; that the troubles they go through Is all imagination; things thut vanish like the dew; Who says this earth's all right, no matter what is sai£ or Cone, Yon kin reoo'nize him easy. He's the lucky oha? that won. —Washington Star. Z AN— | 1 Improved Typewriter. | 2 BY K. CHER. £ Joe Maxton was an inventive genius. While other boys were employing their out of school hours iu learning to smoke cigarettes and play cards and acquire a surreptitious vocabulary of foul language, Joe, apparently with little gregarious instinct, was building water mills, queer kites, mouse traps, fly traps, fish traps aud other ma chines, perfectly happy and contented in his mechanics, without auy com pany at all. Joe has already made a name for himself, with some of the best that vague term generally includes, but iu this writing we have only to do with an incident iu which his pretty sister, Sarah, was concerned. Sarah was bright aud amiable, aud not without energy. At eighteen, fairly educated, comely and sound, she perceived the advautage to be de rived from some salaried occupation, and proceeded to learn to operate the typewriter. While she was tediously clicking through the primary degrees of typewriter progress, Jeo came and looked oil thoughtfully,once iu while. "Oh, Joe!" said she one day, fall ing back in her chair in a sort of help less discouragement. "I have not the smallest chance iu the world at the judge's competition. True, it is six mouths ahead, but these fingers aud this head of mine are twelve mouths behind." Judge Kimace was a power in the locality. He lived iu Burgtowu which had a population of no less than twenty-live thousand, and wielded his scepter for miles around. He was a patron of home institutions aud home talent, which undoubtedly had some thing to do with his popularity; so when he found it necessary to employ a typewriter, for which office he could afford a good salary, he aunouueed a competition for the situatiou, open to Burgtowuites or neighbors only, to be given iu six mouths' time. Every- j body in the limits was welcome to compete, male or female, old or young, and attar thorough aud impartial ' judgment, the typewritist of highest i speed should receive the situatiou and : a prize, too. Even those who might fail would be beuefited by the accom- I plishmeut the iucontive would have giveu them, and he himself was pretty sure to secure an able assistant. Very neat arrangement all around. The Maxton family were poor. Joe had not yet begun to reap any goldetf. fruits from his inventive genius. But he had the hearty goodwill of a manu facturer or two, which proved to be a pretty good thing of itself. The typewriter Sarah had been able to buy was uot of the best, and with it she could not hope to compete with the best makes, even though her skill was high. They all tried not to see this disagreeable point except Joe, who looked it square in the face, from top to bottom, all around, and even clear through. That was right in his line of business. "Oh, Joe, don't raiso my hopes just to disappoint them!" "Well, you know what I've done before. My present idea is a clear one, and Mr. Richards' factory is open to mc. I will commence at once. But I say again, if I were you I wouldn't work ou that machine any more at present. If my idea is a success,you will have it all to unlearn." It was nearly sixweeks before -Toe's idea materialized, aud he brought his machine home to Sarali. When uu boxed, it proved to be more uncouth than the first one, if possible. When Sarah made her discouraged observation, Joe had been thought fully looking on for some time. "If I were you," he said slowly, "I wouldn't click another click on that machine at present. You are right; the case is hopeless under the circumstances. Skill would not help you against a better machine. But I have au idea. In a few days I can bring you a machine, I think,that will outwrito the best of them under their most skilful operators, and with out much extra work for you to learu it, if any." "Oh, it don't go much on looks," Baid Joe, in free and expressive work man's phraseology. "But if you want a machine to write fast, here it is." Joe's idea was an addition to the ordinary alphabet, consisting of a row of buttous containing the more used syllables, such as "in, im, ing, ble, con, ough, tiou, the, from, to, by, since, Dear Sir," and even "Very truly yours." The type of the sylla bles was linrdly oxtinguishable from the single letters. He had solved the difliculty of type in different sized bodio*. "Very truly yours" was printed iu a single touch, as easily as A. B. or C. Wbcr. Sarah comprehended Joe's improveiceat. and perceived the mart- cal ease with whicli she could write "Very truly yourd," she nearly went into hysterics. The former clattering was condensed to a single click. She earnestly set about learning to write, and in two months broke the record with ease. Of course the improvement was kept secret, and Joe applied for a patent. The typewriter contest aroused so much interest that it was arranged to take place in the opera house. Sarah's name was safely entered in the goodly list, aud Joe chuckled as he furtively peeped at such old model machines among the eutries as he could find. The evening avrived. There were twenty-seven competitors, and an auditorium full of spectators. Tho omnipresent directing spirit of such occasions had provided a nice little program of music and other en tertainments, leaving the main feature, the contest, for the last, which, to be sure, was all nice and agreeably for mal. This preliminary program was gone i through at last, and the audience buzzed iu awakening interest. When the curtain arose on the twenty-seven competitors, mostly young women, there was prompt applause. The judge came forward with a complimentary little speech, and briefly announced the conditions of the contest. The first test was to be the copying of a blackboard passage containing about two hundred words. The blackboard was brought out and the signal for the start given. Sarah soon announced it finished. "Cheat!" came a clear keen voice, from a girl at one side. "Cheat, I say! I can prove that I have equalled the world's rpcord for two hundred words, yet I am not now more than three-quarters through. This is a private understanding!" This was more dramatic thau had been expected. The accusation shocked everybody. The audience was perfectly still. The old judge bit his lip. He came forward. "This young lady must be satisfied," he said, "before we continue the pro gram. The accusation is an unpleas ant one, and she must be given means to prove or disprove it immediately before this audience. Miss Meyers," to the accuser, "you are allowed to write ou this board, or have written, two hundred words of your own choosing. Our three judges and time keepers are to approve of the legibility of the writing and its fairness. Then you and Miss Maxtou will be timed in copying it. Bliss Meyers, whose nerve was good, or whose indignation very strengthen ing,coolly selected two hundred words from a volume of history, and chose a good chalk writer, who reversed the blackboard aud went to work. There was strained silence till the work was done. Sarah had not said a word, but was troubled iu conscience, for the thought came to her that pos sibly there were grounds for the ac cusation in her having a different machine. Still, it had distinctly been stated that competitors were free to choose their machines, ami she decided to keep nnd use her advantage. The next test resulted in the same way. Sarah had fiuished before Miss Meyers was near the end. "I don't believe it!" she hotly cried. "Make her show the sheet." Sarah was already very willingly holding the sheet out toward the judges. The judges had no grounds for in decision. They showed the sheet to Miss Meyers herself. That young lady, still convinced of fraud, left the opera house at once, much offended. Then followed a dozen or more dif ferent tests, in most of which Sarah won without any extra exertion. She was awarded the prize and the situa tion. As the judge announced this de cision, to the audience, he mentioned that Joe Maxtou had a word to say on the matter, and forthwith introduced Joe. People had "pricked up their ears," Jack-rabbit-cally speaking, when Joo's name was mentioned, for his inven tions had begun to be talked of. What ever the discontent of Miss Meyers, the audience was satisfied, and even the unsuccessful competitors, with Joe's explanation, and on hearing hints of what he had already beeu offered for the patent, gave him a good willed rouud of applause and dispersed. Joe's rise next came and was con veyed to the family. Sarah eventually transferred her position to Miss Meyers. But she kept the prize. Waverley. A Deathbed Prank. The sense of humor must be stroug in the man who perpetrates jokes on his deathbed; but such has beeu doue ou more than one occasion. Sir John Soane, who died in 1836, made such conditions in his will that their fulfilment caused people to re gard them as nothing but a joke. He directed that a certain bos belonging to him should not be opened until thirty years after his decease. A secoud box was not to be opened until twenty years after tho first, and a third was to remain intact until another ten years had passed away. The boxes were opened when the stipulated periods had expired, but were found to contain nothing what ever of any value, and the only con clusion people could come towns that these very precise directions were only intended by the testator as a little joke.—London Mail. Slow but Sure. Apropos of the intolerable slowness of the cabs in Berlin,Germany,it is re lated that, a child having been run over by one of them and killed, Mark Twain, who was living in Berlin at the time, exclaimed on hearing of the accident: "What a lingering death 1" —The Argonaut. JtAAiVAAAAAA.AAAA [FOR FARM AND GARDEN.] Kerosene Emulsion for Poultry. Tbe kerosene emulsion used as a spray for the garden is excellent as a wash for scaly legs of poultry, and nothing is better for lice in the chicken house thau a good wash of it applied to the sides and roof of the house with a spraying pump. lengthen tlie First Milking Period. An authority claims that if you want your heifer to develop into a profitable cow you should extend her first milking period as far as possible in order to promote and fix the milk ing habit. A cow to be really profit able must give a good yield of milk for at least ten months in the year, but it will be difficult to get her to do this if you do not milk her the first year just as long as possible—even beyond the period when there is profit from her product.—Weekly Witness. Fertilizer for an Apple Orchard. A fish and potash fertilizer will do no harm to an old apple orchard on dry laud, but we would not put on too much of this mixture, because it is so nitrogenous that it might force too great a growth of wood. Ordinarily boue and potash, or bone meal and wood ashes are among the best fertil izers for apple trees of all ages. There is little dauger of the ordinary farmer putting on too njuch fertilizer in the orchard, as in most cases 200 to 400 pounds is all that is used and twice or thrice that quantity will do no harm. It ought to be put on at once, as the trees are already well started and it would have been better had the plant food been applied Inst fall or on the enow. A little air-slaked lime in the potato hill will do no harm, but we doubt if it will keep away the white grub to any extent. The Soy Bean a* a Farm Crop. The Purdue university, Indiana agricultural experiment station, has recently issued a bulletin treating of this new and promising leguminous crop, stating that it has been success fully grown in different parts of In diana, as well as further north in the United States, thriving well in good corn soil and growing wherever com can be successfully produced. We have BO many other good legu minous crops available for the south ern states that this beau has not yet attracted the attention of our agricul turists that perhaps it may deserve. It is said to yield per acre from 9 to 12 tons of green fodder, from 1 1-2 to 2 1-2 tons of hay aud 10 to 40 bushels of seed, according to its variety, the coudition of the soil, etc. Iu food value it compares favorably with clover hay. The seed is very rich iu protein and can be fed advan tageously with corn, but they should be ground before feeding. The price of the bean seed is so high, £2.50 to $5.00 per bushel, as to seriously in terfere with the development of this as a farming crop, and farmers are ad vised to bigiu growing it in a small ■way and thus to learn from their own experience what to think of tho crop. Producing lledtop Seed. Redtop seed of fine quality is grown on our prairie soil iu large quantities and usually with a fair profit, depend ing in a great measure upon the char acter of the soil, writes G. M. Davies of Wayne county, Illinois, iu the New England Homestead. Very little is grown on the white oak soils. Seed is usually sown in February ou coru or oat stubble or ground prepared iu the fall. Fall seeding after cowpeas or buckwheat will usually produce line seed the next year. Spring seed ing is always mowed about the Ist of August, but produces little seed. The grass, when ripe, is cut, cured and stacked as for hay. Threshiug is done with a small grain separator, remov ing part of the concave teeth and shut ting off the blower. A No. 22 screen is used as a rule. The best machine for threshiug red top seed has not ap peared. For the best results we de pend on the experience and good judg ment of the machine manager. The seed is sacked iu five bushel burlaps and sold in the chaff. Dealers base their prices on the amouut of clean or export seed in a bushel of 14 pounds. There are no regular market quotations, the price running with the supply and demand. For sowing I prefer the clean seed, 3 1-2 pounds to the acre. The hay threshed makes good feed, but it is too short to handle easily. One of our growers runs a baler behind the thresher, one engine pulling both ma chines. This saves all the hay. lted top is our best pasture grass, growing well on thin, dry soils, standing close grazing and any amount of tramping. Is self-seeding, much easier to get a stand of than timothy. If properly cured it makes good hay. It is a sur face feeder, leavos few roots in the soil aud has a poor reputation as soil improver. This county produces nbout all the redtop seed harvested in the Unitod States. The soil and sur roundings seem espseially adapted to the crop and farmers have become skilled in its culture and are looked to for the annual supply. ISuttcr Color Is to Blame. If oleamargariue were put upon the market undisguised and sold honestly for what it is there could be no ground for complaint, either moral or legal. If people kuowing what it is deliber ately buy and use it, they have a per fect right to do so, aud any law for biddiug its manufacture or sale would be not only unfair and unjust, but in ! direct violation of the letter aud spirit of the rights of American freemen. But there is, we presume, no case on record where uncolored oleomargarine was offered for sale as oleomargarine and sold for use a3 a substitute for butter. If it were not colored to re semble butter the amount sold would never trouble any butter maker. In fact, if there were no butter color there would practicallv be no oleo margarine sold. It is in coloring it, shaping it and stamping it to resem ble butter that the fraud consists. It is against the butter color that the law is aimed. In the same way so-called but ter, ringed, streaked, striped aud and spotted, without regard to previous condition or composition, is colored and moulded to imitate first-class but ter. The original stuff out of which this process butter is compounded is but little, if any, better than the raw material of oleomargarine. But but ter color cures all defects for the pur pose of sale, just as with oleomar garine. Against this aud process butter all real dairymen wage open aud relent less war, but with the utmost incon sistency they take the very same but ter color and übo it precisely as the oleomargarine aud process people do —for the same purpose, too; that is, for giving their butter a uniform and attractive color, the color of the best butter when at its best—Jersey butter from June grass. Tho difference is ol degree an 1 not of kind—of bad, worse, worst. The whole practice is inex cusable!— Jersey Bulletin. Succft*nfiil Duck Breeding. G. H. Pollard of Massachusetts, who is one of the largest and most successful duck breeders in the United States,in an address delivered recently before the Rhode Island Poultry school said: Let us begin with the lo cation of the plant, and that may be almost anything that you can get. While water is one of the almost necessary points, there are many leading breeders who do not have water running through their yards and do not consider it necessary- In establishing a plant, if you could se lect just what you wanted I should ad vise you to choose a place with a good sizable pond or running stream of water, for iu that way you would gaiu in the fertility of the eggs. The Pekin duck we advocate alto gether because of the deep keel. Iu the improved type the breast line should be nearly parallel with the back and the breast should be nearly the same length as the back. The old lino bird is something the shape of a Bartlett pear. Of course it is possible with the old type of bird to get a heavy weight, but the weight does not come in the right place; it is mostly back of the legs, which is where most of tho waste comes, and there is no frame to build on. In selecting birds for breeding I would choose pre ferably birds that only weigh from six to seven pounds apiece alive, and mate them carefully with medium sized drakes. We used to mate five ducks to one drake, but now I should like to mate up iu single pens one drake with five, six or seven females. We feed them lightly until about the Ist of November, when we gener ally mate them. lam trying not to force them this year, thinking that it destroys the vitality of the birds aud the fertility of the eggs, aud so we are feeding what we call "harmless food"—largely clover, perhaps one part clover and three parts bran nnd two parts coru meal, and we have not fed any meat scraps yet. It is not the question lrnw many eggs they lay, but what we get out of them. 1 have never kept a very accurate account of the number of eggs, but Ido know that they do not lay anything like 140 eggs, such as tho records we often see printed in the papers. As a rule we get less than 100 rather thau over. I think that 'JO is nearer what we really get. Now if we get only 90, it is a great point to get 50 good eggs, rather than so many poor ones. It is not the point to get a large number of eggs, but to get fertile ones. By forcing we destroy the fertility, yet the eggs are quite profitable if it does not take too much out of the breeding stock to get them. I would prefer not to have them begin to lay before some time in Febiuary. The first few eggs laid will not be very valuable, they are al most always infertile; perhaps the first two or three eggs from each breeder, and the first machinefuls do not aver age more tliau 40 per cent, fertile. If you hatch 25 per cent, of them it will be doing well. If you try the eggs you will see that 35 or 40 pqr cent, conies nearer tha average. Alter starting to hatch with hens aud ma chines you will probably find that you average more with hens than machines, but if you uverage in either case 50 per cent, you will be doing fairly well. From the 40 per cent, you will natur ally except to raise 85 to 90 ducklings, aud that is all that you can expect,aud 75 per cent, will often cover those raised by experts. Wo feed tho old breeding ducks,be fore wo begin to force them for eggs, about a third clover aud sometimes plain hay and the rest bran and meal. The idea is to fill them up with some thing bulky and when they begin to lay we begin with fivo per cent, of beef scrap nnd work up gradually, until in a week or so we will be giv ing them 10 or 12 per cent. We keep water before them all the time. At a season of the year when it is possible we let them have it for swimming. Automatic K illroitil <>nte«. Bcrliu's Society of Pailroad Inter ests offers a prize of #SOO for an ac ceptable scheme for automatic gates at railroad crossings. Tho provisions are that the gates must be closed by the oncoming train about two miu utes before the train teaches the cross ing and opened automatically imme diately after the train has passed the crossing The directorates are eager to find st. _V3thing better than human employes to depeud upon for the pro tection of their railroad crossings. »vr For«t«l4 In England An English writer, in discnspini the question of the unemployed, sijg pests that the-waste lands of the Unite Kingdom be planted with trees to in sure a good supply of wood in th near future. This visionary is woi ried by the wooden things importe into England from America. He says "A visit to the docks elicited a deal c curious information. The manufac ture of such useful little articles a clothes pegs, umbrella sticks, mous traps and skewers lias almost ceafe in this country, yet the profit attach ing to these goods must be consider able, or it would not pay to cut dowi the timber, make the goods, pay th railway charges to the nearest port then expenses of shipping them fron America to England, cost of unload ing, middleman's charges, cost of cai riage to the places where they ar sold and cartage to the shops. Th same applies to oors—of which, at th. Jocks, there were a vast number "ollers for washing machines, lathes flooring boards and palings. Thi coopers' trade is also declining America sends over enormous quanti ties of wood all cut to measurement with staves, heads and wooden hoop complete. All that the coopers hav> to do is to put them together."—Ne? York Press. Dos* Fight a Wildcat. Sim Bandall, a Gulf Summit lum berman, and his two dogs treed a bi) wildcat near the Cascade. The cathii in the branches of the tree, and whil Bandall was circling around in th Orush and fallen timber to catch sigh of the beast it sprang with a screar lpon his back. The cat struck Kan lall with such force as to knock hit lown. Immediately the two dogs ttei it the animal to protect their mastei md a terrific rougli-aud-tumble figb 'ollowed. The dogs made it so ho 'or the cat that it ran up another tret Randall then shot it dead.—New Yor Press. Hume spent fifteen years in collect ng materials a«nl writing his "His ;ory of England," and two years mor .n revising and correcting it. A Paris paper says that Presidei Faure used to receive daily twent jegging letters and about 100 anonj nous letters abusing him. Byron spent the leisure hours o learly four years in the preparatioi >f the first two cantos of "Childi Harold." Educate Your Bowel* With Caacareta. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation fore vet 10c, 25c. It C. C. C. tail, druggists refund money Russia in Europe has a forest area o ibout 500,000,000 acres. I believe Plso's Cure for Consumption snvei xi y boy's life last hummer.—Mrs. Allie Douu .ass, Le Roy, Mich., Oct. 20, 1884. Krupp, the grunt (ierman stun mauufao "urer, has made 20,000 cannon. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, tnaltes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, CI. All druggists- Oil the average in Russia there is oul} me village school for 12,000 persons. Mrs. Winslow's.Soothins Syrup torchiidrer 4-ething, softens the cuius, reduces lutlammiv Jon. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle Australia Is capable of supporting a' .east 10,000,000 inhabitants. To Cure Conatlpatlon Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10oorS5o If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money China has begun the manufacture o) smokeless powder. peep | |YMr | H YOlltll | LJ If you are young you nat- M M urally appear so. k J Pfl If you are old, why ap- M Lj pear so? k4 Keep young inwardly; we LI Bl will look after the out- Pfl t J wardly. LJ Ffl You need not worry longer rj |J about those little streaks of Bd [V gray; advance agents of age. rj gAyera 1— 1 § vigor B will surely restore color to l| Pfl gray hair: and it will also rj kJ give your hair all the wealth Pfl II and gloss of early life. k J pfl Do not allow tne falling of rfl Lj your hair to threaten you M fl lender with baldness. Do not 11 B| be annoyed with dandruff. Pfl M We will send you our book kJ Pfl on the Hair and Scalp, free rl Bg upon request. Pfl [' Wrttm to Ihm Omotmr. U rl If yon do not obtain all the bene* K j L 1 fit* too txpwted from too of BJ Pfl the Vlaor. »rtta tha doctor about It. Pfl t Probably thara la «oma difficulty 11 kJ with your general aratem which n may be saally remorea. II k J Addreaa. DR- J- C. ATBR. flfl Pfl Lowell, Maaa. rfl
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers