"Uneasy Lies the Head That Wears a Crown/' But such are not the only uneasy heads. Overworked, harrassed, anxious people of alt ages and both sexes are uneasy ivith aches, pains, impure blood, disordered sta.iachs, deranged kidneys and liver. For all such, Hood's SarsaparOla is the effective and faultless cure. It infuses fresh life Cvough purified blood. Mahogany I* Plentiful Nowaday!. Mahogany is no longer the rare and hardly procurable wood that it was in our grandparents' days, when a table or chest made from it was an unmiS' takable indication of prosperity anc gentility. Now it is used in railroad cars, in the finish of private houses, hotels, and for a hundred purposes formerly undreamed of. A steamer in the service of a larg< importing house brings in over a million feet of mahogany lumber on a single trip. Where 1000 feet of lum ber were brought to this country on slow sailing vessels twenty-five years ago, 1,000,000 feet are brought on rapid steamers now. The character of the wood has changed, however. The best mahogany came from Cuba and San Domingo, but all the ma hogany near the roads and water ways was used. There is still plenty of mahogany in Cuba, but it is too difficult and expensive to obtain. The mahogany of San Domingo and Cuba was superior in hardness, in the beauty of its grain and in its sus ceptibility to high polish. Next in quality is the Nicaraguan wood, which is imported in large quantities. The American firm which has the sole con trol of the wood on the Atlantic coast of Nicaragua is under contract to plant two trees for every one cut down, and these, it is estimated, will be ready for the market in fifty years. Africa has millions of acres of ma hogany, which is just beginning to j come into the market, but it is not as good in quality as the Nicaragua wood. —New York Press. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tonr T.lfe Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netlc, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To' Bac, tbe wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York. The highest prleo ever paid for a race horse wns $150,000 for the famous Or monde. Ever nave a Dog Bollier You When riding a wheel, making vou wonder for a few minutes Whether or not you aro to get a fall and a broken neck ? Wouldn't you ave given a small farm ,lust then for some means of driving oil the beast ? A few drops of ammonia shot from a Liquid Pistol would do It effectually and sUll not permanently I injure the animal. Much pistols sent postpaid for fifty cents in stamps by New York Union ' Supply Co., IHB Leonard St., New York City. 1 Bvery bicyclist at times wishes he had one. soldier costs bis country ' f4OO every year. Albert Burch, West Toledo. Ohio, says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure saved my life." Write him for particulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Wales tias eighty clergymen of the name of Evauis. Educate Your Bowela With Caicareti. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, too, 25c. Xf C. O- O. fail, druggists refund money. Amerlonn trade with Australia in leather goods hai quadrupled In five years. Piso's Cure cured me of a Throat nnd Lung trouble of three years' etanding.— E. CADV, Huntington, Ind., >'ov. 12. lai)l. Gunpowder datos from A. D. 846, while smokeless gunpowder dates back to 1845. To Care Comtlpatlon Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 100 or 25c. VC.C.C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. Washington has 219 shingle mills, with j daily cayaolty of 165 car-loads. Mrs. Wlnslow'sSoothing Syrup forchlldren teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. lijc.a bottle* An artesian well in Missouri har been junk to a depth of 1100 feet. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit eure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 11. All druggists. It requires $100,000,000 capital to mske candy for our noarly 80,000,000 Inhabitants. An Excellent Combination. Tho pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, STRUP OF FIGS, manufactured by the CAMFOMSIA FIG SYRUP CO., illustrate tho value of obtaining the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to bo medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system. It Is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from fcvery objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to tho CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid Imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, OAX» ROUTSYIIXB. KT. NSW TO Kit, N. T. firtM»h- fW I.'i—l'rltt 50:.pittsttl* THE EVE OF HER WEDDING. Hush! Let me hide my happiness, A little while let grief hold sway, And sweetness blend with bitterness, Before I give myself away. Soon, soon, must pass for evermore The snenes of old; new paths I olioosej Oh, let me count my treasures o'er, That, winning love's delights, I lose. Dear home! How all its nooks and trees, Recall my childhood's joys and tears, Mixed with immortal memories Of twenty tranquil, transient years ! Familiar sounds of birds and bees On summer eevnings fair and still, Set to the musio of the breeze, Or twilight tinkling of the rill. Oh, babbling brook ; oh, darling glade, Old church beside thine ancient yow, Where oft my childish feet have strayed, 1 bid you all a last adieu ! My father smiles, and chides in vain Tbe tears my mother's love lets fall ; My sister's heart is wrung with pain— Oood-by ! I soon must leave you all! This little hour I glvo to grief, With tender thoughts my eyes aro wet; I almost seem to llnd relief In rominlsconce and regret 1 One little hour ! Mino woman's eyes With waning childhood's dews aro dim. Away ! Lovo calls ! I must arise. And husten forth and follow him. |ft Fori-liidiilDess • \ \ - - djjliu Bate \ BY CAROLINE FRANCES LITTLE. VWWirW-W-'WWWWW It was on Selina's seventeenth birth day, and while she was washing the breakfast dishes, that her mother said to her : "Now, Selina, it's about time you began to make your clothes; my mother began hers at 16 and I did the same, everything in dozens with night caps to match, and all tbe sheets and pillow cases in pairs. I told your pa and he has ordered a piece of sheeting aud another of cotton cloth of lighter weight, aud it's our birthday present to you, for we vaut you to have a good setting out." Selina looked surprised, for there was no prospect of her marrying, but she said: "Thank you, ma, but I guess there ain't no great hurry." "Xo one knows,"replied Mrs.Bates, as she moulded her loaves of bread and placed them in the pans; "it's allers best to be forehanded, but I do wish you didn't favor you pa; it's well enough for a man to have red hair, but it looks kinder bold in a woman." Selina cut out tho first garment for her trousseau that very day, aud as the weeks went by she found a certain pleasure in it. When each garment or sheet was finished she laid it away in her mother's wedding trunk, plac ing a sprig of lavender between the folds. There was a great deal to bo done in the farmhouse, so that Selina did not find as much time for her new work as she wished, but then, as she often said, "There ain't no great hurry, ma." When she was 10 a man came to the village and opened a singing class in the schoolhouse; tbe term was to con sist of twelve lessons. Seliua and her friends all joined, but as she had the best voice the teacher soon be gan to show signs of interest in her, aud during tlie last few weeks of the term he called for her aud escorted her home from the class; ou Suuday evenings he frequently dropped in, "to take a dish of tea," as Airs. Bates expressed it, nnd goto meeting with Seliua. The happy girl worked all the time that she could spare from her duties upon her mysterious white gar ments. The last night of tho singing school came, and as he walked home with her her heart beat fast. "Seline," he said, "I have been a wanting to tell you something, but somehow I never get to it." Her cheeks grew as red as her hair as he continued: "I'm going to be married iu the spring." "You don't say!" she ejaculated, with a little nervous giggle. She wished that she had begun her "set ting out" when she was 16 as her gra idmother and mother had done. "Yes," said he, "she aud I have been keeping company for a long spell back. She's right pretty, with brown hair, but her voice ain't as strong as yours; she works in the cotton mills up to Lowell, and I guess that's bad for her throat." So that romance ended, but still Selina sewed on, for it tnkes a long time to make everything iu sets of dozens with nightcaps to match. When she was 27 her mother died, and her last injunction was: "Don't wear any of them garments; your unbleached is good enough, aud add to your stock as you get time. It's aller's 1 est to be forehanded. When she was 31 her father died, and the farm was hers; but oh! the loneliness of her life. Hiram, "the hired help," whom her father had em ployed, carried on the farm for her. The years came and went until at last her 37th birthday dawned. She went up to the trunk that day (she al ways aired the contents of it twice a year, and renewed the sprigs of lavender). "Twenty years ago today,"she said rather bitterly, as she unfolded the garments, "I cut out the first one, and they are all done, aud have been for years, with caps to match! Twenty years! But as mother said, 'lt's allers best to be forehanded,' and I'm I that if I ain't nothing else." When she was washing the few tea dishes that night she heard a knock at the kitchen door. Drying her hands on the roller she opened it,and I there stood Silas McCabe, who had recently returned from the far west. "Well, Silas, walk right in and set while Idoup my dishes. lam awful glad to Bee yon." "Law, now, Selina, this 'ere does look homelike! I've come to settle down and so I'm callin' 'round to see the neighbors." "That's right, Silas," she added, "and you must feel kiuder lonely now that Sairy Ann is dead." "Yes; I lost her nearly a year ago, and as we never had no children, I'm all alone." "That's hard lines Tii you, Silas." "Yes, and your pa and ma is gone, too, ain't they ?" When he rose togo he said: "Well, I'll drop in again, Selina; I'm staying at Cousin Pete's, aud it's none too lively there." "Do call again," she sa'd sweetly. On his way over to the farm the next night he thought to himself: "Sairy Ann never had no faculty for gettin' on aud Selina seems real fore handed; the year is nearly up, and I'd kiuder like to be married when the anniversary comes round." He found everything very neat in the little kitched and Selina seemed glad to see him. During the evening he drew his splint-bottomed chair up close to hers and said: "Say, Selina, the year is nearly up; could you get ready by that time? "How soon is it, Silas?" " 'Bout ten days, I reckon; I allers cared for you, Selina, iu school more than I dij for Sairy £nn and I wish I hadn't minded your hali- then; I tLink it's real peart now; and somehow Sairy Ann never seemed to have any faculty for gettin'on." "Well, I guess I'm forehanded enough to get ready in that time," re plied blushing Seliua. As she blew out her caudle that night she said to liereslf: "Only ten days ! Well Miss Clark can make over ma's green silk ami I'll net a new alapaca; that'll be all I'll need, for my trunk of clother is all ready. Ma was in the right when she said 'it's allers best to be forehanded,' even if pa did say it was gal's foolishness." Atlanta Constitution. WESTERN SCOUT NO MORE. Their Picturesque fulling Knitted by C'i vilizal ion. About tho most pitifully cheerless men iu the west uowa lays are those who have given the greater part of their lives to scouting for the army, and occasionally for a cattle company or a band of miners, who have endured a generation of savage hardships and have braved all the dangers of the plains, and now, grizzled and gray, realize that their occupation is gone forever. There are scores of the old fellows in the Territories. Several hundred of the youngor scouts have become vaqueros, sheep herders, ex press messengers aud guards, cattle men, railroad men, miners aud pros pectors. Electricity and railroads principally have made scouting obso lete, and sincj the Apaches iu the southwest and the Sioux iu the north west have been beaten iuto peaceful relations with the white settlers there has been no demand for the services of tho old-time scout. Th i war department kept some of the scouts on the payroll! at the frontier garrisons long after scouting had be come comparatively useless to tli6 army, but iu 1890 the pay of many of the old heroes was cut off, and by 189G less than a dozen white scouts remained in the employ of the depart ment ill the southwest. In every town of any size in this region one may see some of the veteran scouts—poor in purse, tattered of person—loafing about the saloons, telling visitors from the east of the glories of the frontier be fore civilization and railroads spoiled it all, aud half heartedly building hopes of the day when something un expected may transpire aud scouting may be called into demand again. There are a dozen scouts of 25 and 30 years' service spending their last days in poverty aud melancholy in Phcenix, Arizona. At Prescott, Arizona, a score of old-time scouts live on the bouuty of cattlemen and gold miners. As years come and go and the scouts see not the least sign of a revival of their departed occupatiou, they be come more touchiuglv glum. Like the knight in the band of Richard the Lion Heart, who thanked God he was not a clerk, the true scout of the Western plains has few if any counterparts. Along with the Rang ers of Texas he is one of America's most characteristic aud picturesque types. No wonder he was seized upon so unanimously by authors and paint ers as material for romance and pic ture. The wilduess aud at the same time the peculiar tcuderuess of the scout's life, the adventurous charac ter of his daring, his coolness and sa gacity in the midst of danger, his use of simplest facts in nature to gain his ends, his roamiugs iu regions hitherto untrodden by white men, his thor ough knowledge of tho ways of red men, and especially his craftiness, are all features iu the life of a genuine scout of the plaius that stimulate the imagination of story tellers aud pic ture makers. It is hard in these days to realize how great a part the scouts of tho forties and fifties played in the settlement aud the civilization of the plains aud the Pacific coast. Kit Carson was the earliest aud he still remains the most famous Ameri can scout. The way he guided the Fremont exploring expedition through the Rocky mountains in 1811, and thence, iu 1843, some 1700 miles across the trackless desert plaius. abounding with Indians, past Salt Lake in Utah, through the snow and ice of the passes of the Sierras to California, is as thril* liug a chapter as may be found in fiction. From that time till ten years ago the war department constantly euployed scouts in the Western army service. fFOR WOMAN'S BENEFIT.! ft A Novel Accomplishment. Miss Willetta Parker of Boston has an accomplishment out of the ordin ary. She has a full repertory of folk sougs of many countries—songs which she studied on their native heaths— aud with them she has been delight ing parlor parties and afternoon teas for several months, both iu Boston and in other places. Generally she sings "groups" of songs in the afternoon, leaving time between for a tea and a talk. For evening functions she fre quently gives a little lecture, illustrat ing, if ueed be, with voice and piano. Mrs. McKinley's Allowance. Mrs. McKiuley has 85000 which she does not know how to spend. Con gress appropriates a sum of money for the White House expeuses every year. Mrs. Cleveland, like Mrs. Washing ton, chose a carriageway. Mrs. Har rison invested the money iu dishes aud linen, and, in consequence, the White House is so complete there isn't really anything needed. Mrs. McKiuley has had suggestions galore, for her friends are auxious to have their fingers iu a White House pie. One suggested a drinking foun tain for the benefit of sightseers. A young girl friend of Mrs. McKiuley made a plea for au ideal tennis court. New York Tribune. New Style in Skirts. n There are a great many fascinating bargains displayed now iu the shops in the ready made silk petticoats. These are sold for considerably less thau the amount of silk put into them would cost by the yard; but, like all bargains, they have some bad points. The cheap skirts are made on the old fashioned lines. The front b'eadth is so narrow that the skirt wears out very quickly, and in the back there is too much fulness. The clever seams tress now buys these petticoats, opens them out as far as the drawing string will permit, folds over the extra ful ness until she has a bias seam directly up the middle of the back, whi.-h of course cuts out quite a lot of silk from around the hips. With this piece she puts extra pieces ou either side of the front breadth, giving tho re |uired width across the front. As a rule, these ready made skirts are very well cut around the hips, and tit fair ly well aiouud the waist, and can without any trouble be made to tit perfectly when the additional fulness is taken out of the back, and if, in stead of being fastened with a drawing string, the f.tlness is laid in a small pleat aud a 1 uttou and buttonhole made to lanteu the petticoat.— Har per's Bazar. Women and Money. A good deal of newspaper discussion has boeu aroused by au article iu the Popular Science Monthly iu regard to the alleged ignorance of women in money matters. Tho author of the article in question asserts that the business education of tho daughters of America has been grievously neg lected, and he urges tho importance of a thorough course of instruction, with respect to the functions of i hecks aud drafts, and the proper use of money in general. No doubt the feminine mind, as a rule, is little versed in even the sim pler principles of banking, and no doubt there a'e nunibeis of women just as there are many men, who are foolishly extravagant. But it is a mis take to assume, as some of our con temporaries have done, that these sweeping accusations of womanly ex travagance aro founded on fact. An impartial observation of the conditions of modern society will show that they are far from true. The aver age American woman appreciates the worth of a dollar more keenly and cal culates its purchasing power more closely than tho typical man. It is not for men, but for "women, that the "special sales" and "bargain counter offerings" are displayed. Whe e a man, if he wants a shirt, a hat or a pair of shoes, goes to the most con venient place and gets tho article without expenditure of time or thought, most women are resolute to make their purchases where their dol lars go farthest, even though they have to spend much time aud undergo considerable inconvenience iu order to.reach them. It might bo well if women were more generally acquainted with busi ness methods and the handling of property. But, as a sex, they assur edly need no tuition from masculinity iu the art of getting full value for their money. —Philadelphia Bulletin. Women Are Growing Ta 1 »r. "If g'rls goon increasing the age stature of women as they ha\e done for the last decade, where will they stop?" was the question asked the other day by a fond mother, half un on sciously aud half pro idly, as she stood by the side of and looking up to her threo tall and athletic daughters. The average height of the woman of the last generat'on was not more than five feet three inches, but five feet six inches is not considered too high a figure today. A well formed woman of today weighs 145 pounds—a gain of 20 pounds over her grandmother. When the arms are extended a perfectly formed woman should measure from the tip of the middle finger to the tip Df the middle finger just five feet six inches, or exactly her own height. From the thighs to the grouud she ahould measure just what she meas ures from the thighs to the top of the head. The knee should come exactly midway beneath the thigh and the he»l. A woman of the last generation took Dride in a wa : st of 18 inches but today i a woman is uot considered well formed if she has a waist measuring less than 28 inches and a bust less than 36 inches. Reasons for this change are not far to seek. Never before were girls so active or so varied in their pastimes as they are today. Girls of the present day are good at the oar, they are great at cycling, they are not easily beaten on the teniiiS com-t or golf links, and they excel at basket ball and hockey. Their graudmothers would be shocked at the liberty enjoyed by the young folk of this generation. Boys are not developing in ratio with the girls. The height has not in creased in late years, and the meas urements of the average man of to day are not different from those of the average man of 50 years ago. Women now live longer than men. The late Professor Buchner compiled statistics showing that in Germany only 413 out of 1000 males reach the age of 50, while more than 500 out of 1000 females reach that age. In the United States there are 2583 female to 1398 male ceutenarians. In France, often centenarians seven were women. —New York Herald. Wcnirn at the Front. When the deeds of courage and valor in the Philippines have become a part of familiar history one of its brightest pages will be given to the wives and maidens who bore a part so nobly with tlio Kansas troops. They were present in the trendies, ready with their 1 autlag?J*to'§iCe first aid to any stricken soldier, aud about il:e hospitals their cheerful presence and deft nursing gave comfort to many a wounded boy. In the letters written to home folk by the Kansas wounded we find mentioned the names of Mrs. Funston, wife of the colonel; Mrs. Schlieman, wife of the chaplain; Mrs. Whitman, wife of the junior major, and perhaps more frequently yet the names of Miss Bradner and Miss Ollie O'Brien. Miss Bradner went from Kansas to India several years ago as a missionary. With the breaking out of the Spanish war she proceeded to Hong Kong, and then, after Manila had fallen, to the Phil ippine capital, where she at once in stalled herself as a nurse in the Twen tieth Kansas. Slio kept at the front with the boys all through the late campaign and applied the first relief to all that came within her reach. Miss Ollie O'Brien is a Topeka girl who went to Manila last summer on pleasure bent. She accompanied Mrs. Stuteusburg, wife of a regular army otlicer who is now serving with the volnnteero from Nebraska. When the wounded commenced to come from the front she volunteered togo to hospital as a nurse, and she has at tended to her duties faithfully aud well. Miss O'Brien is naturally of the army. When a bit of a babe she was adopted into the family of Captain M. O'Brien, and the people 6f Hays City remember well the pretty little girl who used to Hit about their town when the captain was stationed at a nearby fort. Miss O'Brien is tasting for the fiist time in her life the delight of being something in the world besides a so cial favorite. She is learning to be th:illed by the crash of guns, the tramp of men and the blast of the bugle. The ling is no longer a pretty tlag fluttering in the whilom of the breezes —it is the soul of a nation, speaking serious thoughts. When she wraps the wounds of patriots she feels that she is soothing the hurts of her coun try, and ttie strength and broadness of it is coming to her like a great light out of darkness. All of this Miss O'Brien tells in her letters, and she says that she is uot shocked nor griev iug, but happy—fiercely happy.—Kan sas City Journal. Fashion's Fancies. Emeralds are the most fashiouab'.e jewols of the moment. White and vellow are one of the fa vorite combinations for the season's costumes. It is the pale yellow and golden yellow rather than orange yel low shades that prevail. Ornaments for the hair mado of tiny feathers which have the appear ance of skeletonized leaves are among the latest Parisian novelties. They come in both back aud white aud are spangled delicately with silver or gold, while in shape they are like rounded wings or leaves. Long strings of coral beads in the old-fashioned ir.egular shapes are worn by the French women, but auy sort of tiinket made of polished iron seems to find favor. Long chains of iron, fine, of course, with balls as large as a pea set iu pearls, are one of the modes of using this homely metal. Several old-faahione:l materials are coming back into style, such as chal lis, nuu's vtil ug and Irish poplin. 'lhe designs in challis this year are most artistic. A tunic of white challis over whii h is scattered forget-me-nots, with ruffles of blue satin edged with shirrings of blue chiffon, would be a creation worthy of auy garden party. Little turn-over collars of fine linen lawn, hemstitched in small battlement squares, ea h finished at the end with a design iu heavy cream applique lace, are one of the many novelties recently imported. Entire collar bands are also made of the linen,finished on the lower edge with the narrow, heavy lace, which edges the turu over part as well. Golfing shoes are high or low cut, as you please,aud the handsomest are made of very dark brown leather with uppers of cloth. The shape of a mau'a cricketing hoe, having big rubber plugs or genuine hobnails in the pro digious sole, is almost irresistible to the sporting woman. Those who have an eye to their looks wear brown ties with the tops of brown cloth picked out in small black figures. Franch "Hn. Partington." Calino, the French "Mrs. Parting* ton." does not amnse BO much BY the confusion of bis words as by the quaintness and unintended plainness of bis remarks. He entered the ser vice of a w«il-kuown doctor, who, af- Cal>no bad been buying hay for his horses for a while, made up his mind that the bay was worthless. "That is very poor hay that you bave been buying," the doctor com plained. "But the horses eat it, sir," said Calino. "No matter; it's bad hay." "Yes, sir," said Calino, respectfully. "I'll change it. I know you are a much better judge of hay than the horses are." One day the bell rang, and Calino came in. "A patient has arrived, sir," he re ported. "An old patient or a new one?" asked the doctor. "New one, of course, sir," said Calino. "The old ones never come, back!" Calino admired very much tho beau tiful teeth of a lady among his mas ter's patients. "Ah!" he exclaimed. "Her teeth ire as fresh and sound and white as a lew-boru baby's I"—Youth's Com panion. Saving! Banks of Roman Children. The children of the Romans used to put their pennies into savings banks iust as the children of the Yankees do to-day. In ISBC, when Professor Ihomiita Wilson, of the Smithsonian Institution, was wandering about Os :ia, the seaport of ancient Home, he lound a group of peasants excavating. They had dug out of the sand a num ber of pots and jars that had been juried for ages, and one of them had !ound a child's saving bank which sontained 175 silver coins issued by •he emperors of Home between the fears 200 and 10 B. C. As none of the later date were found, it is to be tssumed that some child lost this sank shortly before our era, and it Rras covered for nineteen centuries by the encroaching sand. The little savings bank was almost perfect when it was uncovered, but the peasant who found it broke it open to jet the coins within. Professor Wil lon found most of the pieces, how sver, and has been able to put it to jether. It consists of a single piece >f pottery about three inches wide, vitli a slit in the top through which the money was dropped.—Chicago Record. Are You Vkinir Allen's Foot-Ease > It Is the only cure for Swollen, Srusrt- Bg, Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Test, Corns and Bunions. A9k for Allen's Toot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the ihoos. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25 hlla.,Pa. Tho average speed of trains, including ltoppage9, is eighteen mllos an hour. Ape\/oo Everi« Depressed And Is it not due to nervous exhaustion? Things always look so much brighter when we | are in good health. How can A you have courage when suffer |ng with headache, nervous prostration and great physical weakness? Would you not like to be rid W of this depression of spirits? T. How? By removing the ikj cause. By taking It gives aotivity to all parts that cany away useless and T i poisonous materials from your 1 ' body. It removes the cause of your suffering, because It re* 3K moves all impurities from your bleed. Send for our book on Nervousness. II |» To keep in good health you must have perfect action of the bowels. Ayer's Pills cure cen stipation and biliousness. W WMteleewoMrafe< IXI Ptrbaat yt» wtaM Ilk* ta emiwlt •MM mtant pkyiletias ataat year B t taaitit a. Tata writ* at fratlr all Ma yaftMalan la MI MM. IM »IH ta* ■ ertva a waaiat rtylr, wtthtat etil. ▲44 MM. PA. i. C. ATE*. ■ LtwtU. Kill, ■