l'B.v In Ring*. It is interesting to note that th< early Egyptian custom of paying gold in the form of rings has not entirel} died out in Africa at the present day, and that English merchants trading •with the Congo are quite accustomed to receiving gold in the form of rings, frequently ornamented with the signc of the zodiac in relief. Acceptable? I should say so; they all say the same too, when they get them. Who is there that would refuse such works of art wheu they car get them for almost nothiug Ask yout grocer for a coupon book, which will ennble you to get one large 10c. pack age of "lied Cross" starch, one largo 10c yacknge of "Hubinger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful colors, ns nat ural as life, or one Twentieth Century Girl calendar, the lluest of its kind over printed all for sc. Beyond Ills lieaclt. "What has become of the big man who used to beat the bass drum?' asked the private of the drum-major. "He left us about three months ago." "Good drummer, too, wasn't he?' "Yes; very good. But he got so fal that wheu he marched he couldn't hit the drum in the middle."—Tit-Bits. "Nature Abhors a Vacuum." Soothing in the world stands still. If you arc ii'ell and strong day by day the blood supplies its tide of vigor. If you Are CI. the blood is <wrong and carries increas ing quantities of diseased germs. You can not change Nature, but you can aid her by keeping the blood pure. Hood's Sarsapa rilla does this as nothing else can. Be ture to get Hood's, because »Vhy Her Letterfi Were Not Delivered. The Postoffice Department lias been bothered a great deal lately by a cer tain woman who has been complain ing about the malls to Mauila and the apparent neglect to deliver the letters she lias been sending to her sweet heart, who is a soldier in the army. So persistent were her complaints that the department determined to pay cable tolls on an inquiry to Manila to find out why the twenty-two letters the woman claimed she had mailed had not reached the soldier. The in quiry has just been answered by the postal officials iu the Philippines. The report states that the soldier was traced to the tiring lines aud acknowl edged receiving his letters. He said he had not only received his mail promptly and regularly, but that he had received twenty-two letters from a woman who insisted upon writing to him, although he did not intend to answer her. —Washington Correspon dence New York Mail and Express. Maryland's tomato pack last yeai was nearly 3,000,000 cases, one-third af the entire pack of the United States. Nervous VWwmen are ailing woman. When a woman has some female trouble she is certain to be nervous and wretched. With many women the ! monthly suffering is so great that they are for days positively insane, ami the most diligent ef forts of ordinary treat msnt are unavailing. oomes promptly to the re fief of these women. The \ letters from women cured by it proves this. This paper is constantly print- Ing them. 112 The advice of Mrs. Pink ham should also be se cured by every nervous woman. This costs noth ing. Her address Is Lynn, Mass. IpoTatoWbS* i l.argmt Hi-rrt POTATO Growrm IN %mrrirn \ I I'ricrnlfl.lEOAup.F.BormauNotock'iomriiis i . Clover nad Fiirni Nrvdii. Mend thU notice nnd \ p:? VERt A NKKU NAMPLKN.VIaW W IM IV \ 112 J OIIS A. HAI.ZFR SEED CO., LA CUOSHE, WIS. A. C. 112 ARTERSUIK i Buy it of your storekeeper. YOI' «'AN «JRO\V Ji'ur own Coffee easily and ohearlj Mire crop, superior quality. Write to V. It. libvlx, Ml Mnai, 1.. I , N. V., and pave $ « tlf lUTCn l.tve airenta everywhere to sell our new YA/AN I tU OAS LA >1 P. Atlas Plant. Brighter than " electriclt yor elsbarh nit y «a». Cheapt rt him ker osene 1 (XI c audle light, cent a day. Polished bran. Fully guaranteed. Retails nig money uiaaer Standard Oat ..amp Co.. liw Michigan St., Chicago. tf ft ft ft CLEARED YEARLY. * I UIIU LADY OR GENTLEMAN Wanted to soil Dr. Carter's K. & B. Tea. One agent cleared a thousand dollars last year. We will send, prepaid .t wo 26c packages and an elegant silver pickle fork and free sample* and special agents' terms on receint of twenty-five ce'tts. Any lady can clear twelve dollars a week and not interfere with her nonaehold dnti**s. Write us for particulars. THIS Bit OWN M£UltlNE CO., Brie. P*. AFTERGLOW. After the clangor of battle. There comes a moment of rest. And the simpl. Intyus and tbe simple joys And the simple thoughts are best. After the victor's prean. After the thunder of gun. There comes that lull that must come to all Before tbe set of sun. Then what is the happiest memory? Is it the foe's defeat? Is it the splendid praise of a world That thunders by at your feet? Nay, nay, to the life-worn spirit The happiest thoughts ate those That carry us back to the simple joys And the sweetness of life's repose. A simple love and a simpler trust And a simple duty done Are truer torches to li«ht to death Than a whole world's victories won. A Temporary Exclaie. [ BY JAMES EUCKHAM £ r 1 WAS 8 o'clock of a Saturday •morning iu February wheu Mr. and Mrs. Stone drove out of their farmyard and took the •oad northward. The crisp snow of the highway, packed and polished by weeks of good sleighing, creaked ander the runners of their "cutter," And the sun was shining gloriously aver the wooded hills to the east ward. The'Stouas were going to spend Sunday with "Cousin Maria," Stone's second cousin, and the object of Mrs. Stone's admiration and envy. She declared that there was no house like Cousin Maria's, and no domestic con veniences and advantages like those she enjoyed; that nobody wore such beautiful clothes, or had such good things to eat, or commanded such je •tources to "do with"as Cousin Maria. Iu short, Mrs. Amasa Stone, who had not been a great while married, and who had one of the nicest little farm- Uouses in the country, as well as one of the best and most devoted husbands iu the world, was somehow a victim of ihat most disagreeable aud distress ing malady envious discontent; aud the immediate occasion of it was — L'ousin Maria. If she could only ex jhange places (perhaps not liusbauds, but everything else) with Cousin Maria, how happy she would be! Curiously enough—by that strange irony of fate which we often see crop ping out iu hmnun life—Cousin Maria :elt the same way toward Mrs. Stone. She secretely, but sincerely, envied the little woman with the big devoted, .overlike husband and the model farm aonse overlooking one of the most oeautiful and productive valley farms .11 New England. "If I could only ieep house like Cousin Ella!" sha tvould sometimes say to her husband; ind then she would ndd to herself, "Perhaps I might if I had as nice a aousi) and the thiugs to do with that she has." SiiiL-ere and cordial envy does not •.nak'3 people dislike each other, by iny M eaus; audit was natural enough thai Mrs. Stone and her cousin, Mrs. Holmes, should enjoy visiting each other and thereby adding fresh fuel ti> their mutual admiration. They traveled back aud forth on these social exchanges a gooil deal, and their hus bands, who liked each other (and each dhers fare, by the way), were never !i\ei'se to "driviug over" for a day's outing. The two farms lay some 20 miles apart, in different townships, mid about midway between them was i» village, where the Stones and the Ilolineses eadi had a special friend, with whom it was convenient nnd pleasant to stop for dinner while goiug a-visiting. The sleigh bells rang cheerily and the miles rapidly fell away behind the Stones' cutter this February morning, is they drove along toward Hvdeville, the half way village. "I hope nothing will happeu to the stock or the hens, over Sunday," said Mr. Stone. "Oh, don't worry about that!" ex claimed his wife. "You spoke to Leonard, as usual, didn't you?" "Tea, I asked him to fodder once a day and attend to the milking. Hut he lives quite a little piece away, and if it should come onto storm"— "Storm! Look at the sky!" ex claimed Mrs. Stone, with a scornful laugh. "I declare, if you aren't the greatest man to worry over nothing." It was still gloriously pleasant when they reached Hydeville, at 11 o'clock, and they stopped there two full hours. As they again took the road,at 1 o'clock,they noticed that the sky had become slightly filmy, but as it frequently does cloud over thns to ward the close of a flue winter day they wore neither surprised nor dis turbed. At 3 o'clock, however the wind began to rise, the sky grew more overcast,and before long was spitting sharply out of the northeast. "What do you think a'.iout a storm now?" asked Mr. Stone. "Drive along nnd get there as quick as you can,"was his wife's only reply, as she gathered the buffalo robe more tightly about her. When they reached the Holmes farm, at about 4 o'clock, the wind was howling and the snow driving across the sheets. Mr?. Stone got out at the side eutrauce and plunged shiveringly against the door, but turned at once to her husband with a look of surprise and consterna tion. The door was locked! So were the front door aud the kitchen door, as they speedi'y discovered. "They're away from home," an nounced Mr. Stone. "They've gone visiting," groaned his wife. "Oh dear! do you suppose it's possible they've gone to visit us?" "Shouldn't wonder a bit," replied Mr. Stone. "Come to think of it, I heard a man's laugh when I went over to tbe store in Hydeville that soun led like John Holmes's. But I couldn't tell where it came from, and couldn't see anybody that looked like him, bo gave it up." "Goose!" cried Mrs. Stone. "He was probably over at .Tason Soper's, where they always stop • out in the barn, like as not. If you'd only men tioned it! Well, we must just make the best of a bad job. I know where Maria puts the kitchen key when she's away, and we might as well go in and take possession—as they will have to do at our house, I reckon." The key was found on a nail under the stojp, aud Mrs Stone proceeded to take possession, while her husband stabled his horse. When Mr. Stone came in he found the lamps all lighted and his wife in a high state of excite ment and delight at the prospect of "using Cousin Maria's nice things for a while! I guess it's all for tbe best," she announced, with unexpected cheerfulness. "For once in our lives we will have a taste of keeping house with modern conveniences!" It was a tremendous snowstorm thai swept New England during Feb ruary 25 and 2H. Mr. and Mrs. Stone were snowbound for a week in the Holmes house, and Mr. and Mrs. Holmes, as it happened, were similarly imprisoned in theirs. Roads were not broken through for five days, and no one knew how his neighbor was fating. In the meantime Mr. Stone took care of Holmes's stock, aud Mr. Holmes took care of his, while their wives revelled to their hearts' content in the supposed domestic advantages and improvements for which they had envied each other so long. At last the two families were able to get word to oue another, and a day was set for the mutual evacuation of each other's premises and a meeting at Hvdeville on the way. Both parties were in vited to dine at Jason Soper's that memorable day,and tbe reader may be sure it was not one of those dinner par ties that languish for lack of conver sation. Late iu the afternoon,as the Stones came iu sight of their own pleasant farmhouse, Mr. Stoue said, hesitat ingly, "John and I had some talk of exchanging farms while we were har nessing up. We thought, it"— "Stop right there, Amasa Stone!" cried his wife, with a sudden uncalled for burst of tears, "if you ever men tion such a thing again" "Why!" exclaimed Mr. Stone, in glad astonishment, "I thought you were crazy for Cousin Maria's modern conveniences, aud Johu said that Maria made life a burden to hiin by hankering after yours. So we thought we'd please both of you by swapping farm#." "Well, you'll neither of you ever hear anything more on the subject from Maria or me,"sobbed Mrs. Stoue. "We were both of us so homesick and so ashamed that we burst out crying wheu we were up in the front chamber at Mrs. Soper's, aud confessed what fools we hail been. I guess neither of us will ever quarrel with her own things again —least of all, with her own husuand."—American Agricul turist. THE NEW WOMAN'S BABY. She Iti-ingn 111 in Up According to the Kill*** Laid Down in the HookH, "But haven't you any more books on the snbjoct?"asked the woman, np pealingly, much as if the person she was consulting had large installments of books hidden away, only forthcom ing when his heart should soften. "Not in, now," and the young man at the circulating library tnrnod to a newer comer. "Why don't you take something else?" advised her companion. "Because I do not coma here to get any books. 1 just want books that will give me information about caring for baby, liver since he was a wee little thiug 1 have been reading every thing 1 could eton the subject. I think," she said, crushingly, turning to the youug man in charge, "1 will not take any book today." Then as she started away her tone changed to oue of pity. "How was it," slio said to the other woman, "that babies used to struggle up, wheu there were no magazines or books about how they should be trained? Every oue of my friends who lias a baby does just as I do and gets evev article she can upon their physi cal or mental or moral well l>3ing. And one does get such help. Just the other day I was reading somewhere: 'No mother should be without a baby's diary. Jot down all the saviugs of the little oue, 'and so I've started with such a pretty book, leather bound,you know, ami I mean to keep it up." "That must be awfully interesting," said the other woman, "isn't it?" "This last book, the one I had given lack when 1 met you, gave me tine directions for caring for baby's teeth, especially the second teeth. I shall do exactly as it says, aud take him to the dentist iu time. In that way, you ku w, you avoid all trouble about teeth coming in crooked and all that. Kindergarten methods are fine, too, and I've been reading up about them, for I want him to have the ad vantage of the latest ideas." "How old is ho now?" asked the listener suddenly. "Three months old,"said the proud mother, fondly.—New York Sun. l*hillt|>ft* Devotion to Hi* Wife. A beautiful story is told of Wendell Phillips, the famous American orator, illustrating his lover-like devotion to his invalid wife. At the close of a lecture engagement in a neighboring town his friends entreated him not to return to Bos on. It was a fearful cold night, and the last traiu had gone, so he would have to return in a carriage. "You will have 12 miles of rough riding before you get home," they said. "But at th« other end," he replied, "I nhall And Ann* Pbillin* " t FARM AND GARDEN. £ Eating Neitn. In cold winter when forage is scarce lieus are liable to eat the hay of which the nest is made. To prevent this you can make the nest of shavings or ex celsior. Heus will eat very coarse fodder like long grass, pea vines, etc., if chopped up a little iu the feed cut ter. Mulching; the Garden. There is work that may be doue in the garden after the ground is frozen. The rhubarb or pie plant should be mulched as soon as the ground is frozen an inch or two, with coarse, strawy manure from the stables or poultry yards. If this is not at hand, any variety of mulch, as straw, leaves or evergreen branches will be better tliau nothing, but the plant is a rank feeder and cares little whether its fer tilizer is green or well rotted, or a chemical fertilizer, but the latter is best if put on in tlie spring. The mulch is, of course, to prevent alter nate freezing aud thawing. This will enable it to throw up stalks earlier in the spring, aud if manure is used lib erally aud the plants are not frost bonud, the stalks in the spring will make the marketmeu or the house keeper who gets them, think it is the mammoth sort. Of lotuse almost every strawberry grower understands the benefit of mulching the strawberry bed for win ter protection, but few know how much good it will do the currants and gooseberry bushes,the blackberry aud raspberry to have a heavy mulch put along the row at the same time. Try it once, aud the crop will pay for it aud leave a balance to pay for doing so another year. Iteware of the Earthworm. Who could suspect the earthworm of being a possible enemy to the chick ? Have wo not,froui our earliest infancy dug earthworms to feed to the youug chicks, aud have we not encouraged others to do likewise? This many times has been the cause of the little ones dying from attacks of gapes, but we did not suspect it. Not till science took the matter up aud demonstrated conclusively that the earthworm is the host by means of which the gape worm eggs are conveyed to the trachea of the fowl, did we recognize the earth worm as an enemy. The micro scops has revealed the process in euougli of its stages to prove the rest. The government experiments have shown that to keep the chicks free from gape worms they need only be kept from all possibility of pickiug up worms. Not that all worms have in them the eg;<B of the gape worm, but we never know when the danger is present. After the chick is a little more than half grown this precaution may be set aside, as the gape worms are unable to destroy good sized birds. Tho writer lias fed chicks earth worms aud, as an apparent result, has lost chicks. It is the best plan to keep the uew broods on a grass plot or on a board floor. The grass plot is preferable,unless the sod is very thin. Ttiei e is little or no danger of the earthworms coming within reach of the chicks, even iu wet weather, as would be the case on bare ground. A little caution iu this matter, espe cially where gapes hive prevailed,will save many chicks. Cliaft' Parking. I believe that exclusive chaff pack ing directly over bees will admit of too much ventilation, and more especially so if a limited amount is used, which is usually the case. Twelve inches of very fiue chaff thor oughly placed and weighted down, with the entrance of hive left open, will still admit of too much draft through the hives with the usual cov ering ou tliem. I have come to the conclusion that so much top dressing in the way of chaffcushious,etc.,aud leaving a largo entrance open to its full capacity, is about on the same principle as that of trying to keep a sitting room com fortable with the outside door opeu. We kuow that bees keep in good condition in a hive or anywhere else. A two-story hive that contaius a half bushel of bees, and is full of houey in the hottest part of the sea son, can get along and do business with a very small entrance, perhaps no larger than will admit of a half dozen bees at ouce. If this be the case, and I think no one will say it is not, then how much of an entrance does a hive require iu winter, with one-fourth tho amount of bees, and a set of combs containing only twenty five or thirty pounds of honey, to give them all necessary ventilation re quired? In answer to this I will say that no entrance whatever is required when the bees are not rtying, aud in addition, the top of the hive should be air tight as the bees make it by gluing up all tho cracks, aud also coatiug the cloth covered surface entirely as they do. I do not say that bees do uotrenuire a largfl entranco iu summer, for I am a believer iu a very large entrance in summer, and especially so during the houey season when colonies are strong. But in winter I have thor oughly experimented with all the dif ferent plans, and the last one referred to suits me best,and my bees have in variably come through the winter iu a more healthful condition aud stronger in number.—A. H. Duff in Farm, Field aud Fireside. Prefterving Knot Crops in Pit*. Mauy in their desire to have roots safely stored for winter overdo the matter. They like to make as short a job of it as possible, and as soon as the crop can be dug, the roots are placed in a heap, covered with straw and then enough earth is put on them to preveut freezing in the severest winter weather. This is a great mis take, and many pits are lost because of this over-protection. It is very desirable to avoid storing large quan tities of roots in the cellars of dwell ing houses. Consequently where no separate storage place is available, pitting outside is the best plan. (lather the roots after they have been dug and sufficient time has elapsed to allow them to dry off. Place in oblong heaps in a high spot in the field so that good drainage is possible, cover with straw and a few inches of earth so that moderate frost and the slight freeze of early winter will not injure the roots, dig a trench around the base of the pit so that water will not stand. Where the water rises near the surface during tbe wet period.it is best to place the roots on the top of the ground,as suggested above. However, if there is good drainage there is no reason why an excavation cannot be made six feet wide and about a foot deep aud as long as necessary. Begiu by carefully stacking the loots, filling the first two feet of the trench. This will form tbe first section, leave a space of about six inches, then putin another sec tion, and so on. Bouud up the top, fill the six inches of space between the heaps with straw aud cover the whole with straw and 18 or more inches of soil. This plan requires much less work iu covering aud is in reality a series of small pits each distinct. The tubers keep bettei 1 in this way, and as only one section at a time need be opened there is less liability to waste thau if the pit were a large one containing the entire crop. In some sections of the country the covering or soil must be two or three feet deep to prevent freezing.—New England Homestead. Dairy Kquipment. While it is to be freely admitted that the methods of some successful dairymen are crude and not include the equipment which other success ful dairymen deem essential, such cases are exceptions. The best suc cess depends upon complete equip ment, as a rule. A dairvmau may make a success that is entirely satis factory to him, by feeding whole corn stalks and uuhusked corn together. Some have claimed to have done so. They may have been satisfied with feeding iu racks outdoors in winter weather, but these methods are uot iu conformity with science aud common sense; aud in 9!) cases out of 100 they will result in at least partial failure. We make no attempt to explain the successes that, as claimed, resulted from such a system. We only know that we could never achieve success by such practices. Feeding uuhusked coru aud stalks together, of course, saves labor and the expense of grind ing. But the only grain that we ever found it profitable, or rather, the most profitable, to feed iu a similar way, are oats. Oat hay is the best shape for feeding oats, and, if it can be afforded, it makes a grand, good feed for the cow, as it doua for auy other animal. Every dairy farm ought to be equipped with feed grinders, feed cookers, water heaters, deliorniug im plements—unless the horns are al ready off—feed cutters, a shreddei aud a cream separator. Each of these machines is important and will prove profitable ou tbe farm. All of them, it is true, will uot be required foi steady use in the dairy, but there is not oue of them thnt will not be of occasional use, and most of tliem are a practical necessity. The feed cooker, while capable of increasing the value of feed for the hog many per cent, and often exceedingly useful in feed ing steers, may not be considered a necessity in dairy feeding, but au oc casional ration of cooked feed iu cold weather is of decided beuefit to the cow, increasing the milk yield aud greatly aiding lier digestive functions. The cow, in our judgment, never should be fed whole grain, except oats, as before stated, and after a time corn becomes so hard that it is utterly unfit to be fed unless it is ground, soaked or cooked. If it is ground, it should be ground on the farm, aud coru meal loses its aroma so t.uickly that much of it should not be grouud at oue time. Corn stalks are in the best condition for feeding wheu they are shredded. Occasionally the cow will greatly enjoy cut feed, hay, clover, or even good straw, mixed with meal, wet down and permitted to stand 21 to 3ti hours before feed ing. W r e have said nothing about the silo and the necessary machinery foi preparing gieen crops—preferably corn—for ensilage, but they are all important features of feeding aud will greatly simplify the problem. In manufacturing enterprises the plants are equipped with everything that is necessary and a convenience. The farm is a factory. J'airyingis manu facturing, and yet on mauy farms and iu many dairies the policy seems to be not to provide everything that will aid in achieving the largest measure ol success, but to get along with the very least equipment that will pos sibly answer; and it is a penny-wise and pound-foolish policy.—Agricul tural Epitomist. Small Diamond* More l'erfei-i. There are more perfect small dia monds than there are perfect large ones; and where a man gets togethei a collection of perfect diamonds ho is most likely to have a collection of perfect diamonds he is most likely to have a collection of small onefe. Thus, the diamonds owned by Americans are not, as a rule, so large as are the ones owned in Europe. Artificial light enables the European diamond wearer to wear big stones that are not altocretber perfect. Beatotrine the Victoria Cross. I asked the officer in charge of the medal branch of the British War Office how a Victoria Cross was ob tained after it had been won. "Why, there isn't so much red tape about it as you would fancy," he said. "The action as a reward for which the cross is given must be per formed in the presence of the enemy," audit is desirable that the superioi officer of the man who diatinguished himself should have witnessed it. It uappens sometimes, however, that no officer is present, and is a case like that the caudidate must prove by his ;ompanions that he really did do what he asserts that he did. When his immediate superior is satisfied that he ought to be rewarded he writes au account of the business and hands it to the officer iu command of the forces aud he indorses the papers and sends them onto the War Office. Here they are laid before Lord Wolse ley, Commandor-in-Chief, who passee apon them and decides to which ap plicants the Cross should be given. "Of course the Cross goes most )fteu to a soldier, sailor or marine, »ud when it happens that the for innate man is is England he receives ais medal from the hand of the Queen Uerself. If he is in the field, however, iron shipboard, he receives his dec oration from the Goneral or Admiral n chief command ou the semi-annual Inspection day aud iu the presence of :he men who were at the scene of hie exploit."—Correspondence New York Tress. Tool Making. If the human race'continues to exist aud to advance in morals, comfort and elegance of living, tool making must begin and must be earried to what now appears to bo a high develop ment. What is the limit of the tool .maker's art, and when and where should or must tool making stop? Commercially speaking, it must stop in any particular case when more tool making cannot cheapen the total tim« cost of production; if the demand foi the product is unlimited, then the only limitation to tool making is the limit of human understanding and mechanical resources. Broadly speaking, it is conceivable that iu some special production tool making may be carried to a point where no further profitable advantage can be made, and it is also conceiv able that there may be things useful and desirable to the few, which can not by improvement of quality aud lowering of cost be made useful and desirable to the many. Speaking nar rowly from existing facts and condi tions, it seems probable that the limit r.f tool making has never been reached in auy particular case. —Engineering Magazine. Proud of llin Profession. Speaking of the elder Bennett ot the New York Herald never having' held office puts a bright contributoi to the Journalist in mind of a story told about him. Having been told ot au editor who had "risen to be n Member of Congress," he snappishly replied, "risen! good God mon, what do you meau? I once knew a mon who, although he had been a Membei of Cougress, yet rapidly rose until h« became respectable as an editor; u noble example of perseverance undei terribly depressing circumstances Risen, mou, risen! why the Fresi deucv is not so high a position as the editorship of the greatest paper iu th< country. Hoot awa, mon, aud tails seuse." I am Past 80 and Not a Gray Hah " I have used Aver s Hair Vigor for a great many years, and although I am past eighty years of age, yet I have not a gray hair in my head."—Geo. Yel lott.Towson, Md., Aug. 3,1899. have You Lost It? mmmmßMaExnzsxsMKzi&mßmsjKmmMm&K We mean all that rich, dark color your hair used to have, jjj But there is no need of mourn- 3 ing over it, for you can find it n again. || Ayer's Hair Vigor always re stores color to gray hair. We know exactly what wc are say ing when we use that word " always." It makes the hair grow heavy and long, too: takes out every bit of dandruff, and stops fall ing of the hair. Keep it on your dressing table and use it every day. :i.OO a botiie. AM dmjsisu. ■■MwamaiMMßaM Write the Doctor If you do notobtainali tho benefits you desire from the uso of tlio Viitor, write the Doctor about it. He will tell you just the right thing to do, and will send you his book on tno Hair aud SC&lp if you request it. Address, Dr. J. C. AVER, Lowell, Mass.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers