J It! iecpteble ;i),l M.r oo; tliejr all the . Inn thiy RPt them. Who in thar filil r-funo Mich works it art when nn Ri-t thmn for almost nothing. Sur irrooer for it coupon bonk, which T'il l yon to irot onelnrRS 10c. pnek '' "licl Crosa" ntnrch, ono lnro Me. "" IB" of "HoblnRiir's Host" starch, with fwnluma. two 8linUoparo panels, ihS In twelve bnmitlfiil color, n nnt An'ii lll. or ono Twnllth Cunttiry Girl ' t'jar thi flnent of lt kind ever printed, i:K ' H 17.13 March 25 was the beRlmilng nl "i-anl year though Jnnimry 1 was uni fy fflcoKalwl as N,sw Vrart Day. " twomnrTrWoxt HI.Ib ltilll.'an Club. f'W Voi hnn nnilrtnk(n to mi tlint the " 1 1 1 ii law U enforced on Sunday. Ho; h" )l F ft 'die Time By The Forelock. ' ' Lj'f .n ntf n7KM overtakes you. Zl ihtt tired feeling, the f&tt rheu " pAin, the first utarnings of impure ,rt .Tuinifest, Uhe Hood's Srsp V' tnd you 'axil rescue ymir health And REV. DRJALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE, "'tir.f.. t Ktrlous sickness. j" ' - Tc sure it i llcxxfa, because II i Aanorloaulaael Children. ' am U Batlafied with the Amcr- education," said an i i'llaUmon residing In New York to a WKorfc Tribune man. "In fact, for y r'i esp rlnlly, I consider thnt It It hi V H wajra than 1110 KnEllBb ( km. do. howsver, object to some si: be (graphical Ideas that they l.1.: i '-....k..,! trt r'ntHnml T.nflt win III I'CBIU -' u..n. . oy little K'rl started to learn about 'states. ; From uctoner :ilai M utates. i From October until May 'f 'drew on pa of each one, learned 'i",.it tholf towns, rivers, mountain! nl(.ommrclnl products until she had I n-.a ail at her fingers' ends. That was tell enough, and I greatly admired 'It thoroughness of the teaching; sc Klyoar. when she told me that they :''"' beginning on England, Scotland T',:, Ireland. I felt quite pleased that "l ihould learn all about the dear old edi'ury, aid promised myself a good ""I of pleasure In talking to her of '' 'blil bnnnts. Woll, If you will be rliii'l It, In about a week she announced till they had finished up with Great "l'iu and that the cIbbb had Btarted Vjludy up the divisions of tho con ynnfit. Six months for the United i'. tc and a week for England, Scot- and Ireland! Then I felt, Indeed, niy children were Americanized." 151 KIP,' Sick 7 i i In :: lie: !tr. KU'f' ' b'$:?cttho mediolno that rJ '-? Aa record for tho number of abso- ires of female Ills LyJIa Pinkham's lz'.:-ble Compound U Second -Mrs. Pinkham f,'jw chow by her letter Ids .i lynn ffcaf a m women have been (" rod to health by her wtlip :'--.! and advice. Milled SI y fill Mvutgrt. tu iwirts. am are received, read and an- I by women only, plti:"- od. rat. tlv er'H to Hii itll:' rvo .'. of V- - ot Is certified to by i yor and postmas- c .' Lynn and others of c. mkham's own city for free book con j these certificates. y ailing woman Is I to write to Mrs m and net her ad . ee of charge. I'ftydU K. Pinkham Med. Co., Lyoa, Uuu. . 'O hundred bushels f Potatoes remove 3 4 pounds of "actual" Pot- from the soil. One thou 1 pounds of a fertilizer con- 8 "actual" Potash supply just the amount kdc If, there is a de- ,,,0,Jency ?f Potash, there will be falling-off in the crop. have some valuable about composi- uj n, us; and value of fertilizers various crops. They th v.- mil wlt.'i 9 S a nluH l.n' III "x'tiks telling are Itl0t fee. i.KRMAN KALI WORKS, yj KUHl SI., new York. -ftilpit Echoes ale (f ' .;."T, and nrABT, io.bu. r.roa Kxpcrlaucct ttc., utold 1' -.7 Jv. Moodll ! '1 , 'iUl Z " ""1 'r Vrmt la . . 1 ' lltl" . (I), llll' lie iln.'F a I" ,d' AT0ES'a'nab? 5 V"iri ri tri MM. Lt I UOMI, IRTERSBNK v o ether ink "juat aa good." nl.prt: Tlie Attwlre of Ollmn-The riii. hnily ! Mlanloii to IVrrorm Vhn 1 HI Molly Is looil Jlrnrnli Out the MUfirlUnd OBr Thain Conolatloli lOorrrlRh'i J'Ollln Klopcll, 100.1 Washinotox, D. C In thin dlnnonrse Dr. TalmiiRH shows bow wo should Intanwt ourselves In the nfTulM of others for thell bnnent, but nvr for tholr itammre; text, I Peter, tr., IS, "A bmybody In other meo'f mnttnrn." Hiimun nature n thosnmo In nil nge. In the second century of tho world' ex istence people had the Mine e!mrnoterlstlc h people In the nineteenth century, the only difference belni; thnt they had the ehiiracterlKthM for n longer time. It was 500 years of goodness or 500 years of menu, ness Instead of goodness or meanness f.ii forty or llfty yi-ars. Well, Hlmon I'oter, who was n keen obserrer of what was golim on around him, ouo dav caught sight or n man whose eharacterlstlns were severe Inspection and blatant erltlnlsm ot tho af fairs belonging to people for whom he had no responsibility, and with tho hand onoe browneil anil burdened by fishing tackle drew this portrait fur all mibseiiuent ages. "A busvbidv In other men's matters." v Thnt kind ot perxon has Iihhii a trouble mnker In every country since the world rtood. Appointing himself to the work ol exploration and detection, he goes forth mischief making. He genrally begins by reporting the lnfelleltr discovered. He Is the advertising agent of Inllrmltles and domestic Inhnrmooy and occurrences that but for him would never have ojme to tin' nubile eve or ear. He leels thnt the secret ought to he hauled out into light and linr- nlded. If he can get one line ot it into the newspapers, that he feels to be a noble achievement to start with, nut no must not let it stop. He whispers it to his neighbors, and they In turn whisper it to their neighbors, until the whole town is nbu7.7. and agog, You can no morn catch It or put it dowu than you cau n malaria. It Is in the air and on the wing nud alloat. Taken by ltseir.lt seemi ot little Impor tance, but after a hundred people have ban died It and each ba? given it an nitilttlonal twist It becomes a story In slr.e and shape marvelous. It it can be kept going, nttei awhile It will be Inrge enough to oall the attention of the courts or the presbyteries or oouterences or association. The tnosl of the scandals abroad are the work ot tbe one whom Peter In the text styles "a busy body In other men s matters. First, notice that such a mission Is most undesirable, beoause we all require all the time we can get to take care of our own affairs. To carry ourselves through tne treaoherons straits of this lite demand? that we all tbe time keep our baud on the wheel or our own cratt. While, as 1 snail show you before I get through, we all have a mission or kindness to others, we 1 1 a vi no time to waste in doing that whlou if damaging to others. There Is our worldly calling, wuicn musi be looked after or lt will baoome a failure Who succeeds In anything without concen trating all bis energies upon that one thing? All those who try to do ninny thluge go to pieces either as to tbelr health 01 tbelr fortune. They go on uutll they pav tea oents on tbe dollar or pay tbelr body Into tbe grave. We eannot manage the affairs of others and keep our own affairs KroBperous. While we are Inquiring ow precarious is the business of an other merchant and finding out how manv notes be line unpaid and how soon he will probably be wound up or make an assign ment or bear the sheriff's hammer smite his counter our own affairs are getting mixed up und endangered. While we lire erltlciBlng our neighbor for bis poor crops wears negleating the fertilization ot our owns Ileitis or allowing the woods to choke our own oorn. While we are trying to ex tract the mote from our neighbor's eye we fall under the weight of the beam in our own eye. Those men disturbed by the (aults or others are theinselvesthe depot at which whole trains of faults arrive und from which whole trains of faults start. The men who have succeeded In eecular things or relig ious things will tell you that they have no time for hunting out the dedolts of others. On the way to their counting room they may have heard that n firm in the same line ot business was In trouble, and they said, "Borry, very sorry." But tbey wont In and sat down nt their table and opened the book oontalulng a full statement of their affairs to seo it thoy were in peril of being oaught In a similar cyclone. Guilders about town, With bands In pockets and bats set tar back on the heud, waiting to bear baleful news, are failures now or will be failures. Christian men and women who go round with mouth and looks full ot Interrogation points to And bow some other church member is given to exaggeration or drinks too much or neglects his home lor greater outside attractions have themselves so little grace in their hearts that no ouo suspects they have any. In proportion as people nru oonseorated and holy nnd useful tbey are lenient with others nnd disposed to say: "Walt until we bear the other side of that matter. I cannot believe that charge made ugainst that man or woman until wo have some bettor testimony than that given by these scandal mongers. I guess it Is n lie." Furthermore, we nre incapacitated fot tl.e supervlsal of others because wo cannot see nil sides of the iifTalr reprehended. People are generally not so nnioli to blame as we suppose, it Is never rigst to no wrong, but there may be allevlatlous. There may have arisen a conjunction ol circumstances which would have Hung any. one of us. Tbe world gives only one side of the transaction, and that is always the worst side. That defaulter nt the bank who loaned money be ought not to havu loaned did it for the ndvnntage ot another not for his own. That young man who purloined from his employer did so be cause his mother was dying for the lack ol medicine. Tint young womau who wuut wrong did not get euough wanes to keot her from starving to death. Most people who make moral shipwreck would do right In some exigency, but tbey have not tbe courage to say "No," Furthermore, we make ourselves a dis gusting spectacle when we beuonio busy bodies. What a diabolical enterprise those undertake who are ever looking for the moral lapse or downfall ot others! As the humnu rice Is a most Imperfect race, ull such hunters tlnd plenty ol game. There have beeu sowing societies lu churches which toro to pieces more reputations than tbey made garments for the poor. With their sarcasms and sly bints aud deprecla tion or motives tbey punctured more good names than they bad needles. With tholt sulssors tbey out character bias nud back stitched every evil report they got hold of, Meetings or boards of directors have some' times rulued good business men by lnsliiU' atlous against them. Tbe bad work may not have beeu doue so muoh by words, foi I they would be libelous, but by a twinkle ol ; the eye or a shrug ot tho shoulder nrn sarcastlo acceutuntiou or a word. "Yes, he is all rght when he Is sober." "Have you Inquired Into that man's history?" "1)0 you know what business he was In be. fore lie entered this?" "I move that the application be laid on tbe table uutll some Investigations now going ou are consum mated." It Is easy enough to start a sus picion that will never down, but what u despicable niau is the one who started Itl All people make mistakes say things that afterward they are sorry for and miss opportunity ol uttering the right word and doing the right thing. Hut when chey say their prayers at night these defects are sure to be mentioned somewhere between the unine ot the Lord, for whose mercy tbey plead, and the amen that closes the supplication. "That has not bueu my on. servatlou," says some oue. well, I am sorry lor you, my brother, toy sister. What an awful crowd you must have got Intol Or, as Is mora probable, you are one of the oharaoters that my text sketahes. You have not been hunting for partridges aud quail, but for vul tures. You have been mlcrosoop l?.lug tho world's faults. You have been down in the marshes when you ought to have beeu on tbe uplands. I have caught you at last. You are "a busybody In other men's matters." How Is It that you oan always flu I two opinions about any one ami those two opinions exactly opposite? I will tell you the reason. It Is because there are two sides to every character the best side nud the worst side. A well disposed uiau chief ly seeks the best side. The badly disposed seeks chiefly the worst aide. lie ours the desire to see the bust side, for It U health ler for us so to do und stirs admiration, vMh t itn alMfcjMt alata wUll tha d sire to find the worst side keeps one In a spirit bf dfsqnletude and disgust aud moan saspldon, snd that Is a pulling down ot our own nature, a dlsfluurement of our own character. I am afraid tho Imperfections of other) will kill us yet. The habit I deplore Is apt to show Itself In tho visage. A kindly man who wishes everybody well soon demonstrates bis dis position in his looks. His features may fracture all the laws of handsome physiog nomy, but t3d puts into that man's eyes and (u the curve ot bis nostrils and In the upper aud lower Up tho signature or Di vine approval. And you see It at a glance, as plainly as though it had been written all over bis face in rose color: "This is one of My prlnoos. Ho Is on the way to corona, tlnn. I bless him now with nil tha bene dictions that Infinity can nfford. Look at him. Admire him. Congratulate him." But there is a worthy and Christian way ot looking abroa l upon others, not for the purpose ot bringing them to disadvantage or advertising their weaknesses or putting In "great primer" or "paragou" type their fralllties, hnt to offer help, sympathy and rescue. That is Christlike, nnd he who does so wins thu applause of tho high heavens. Just look abroad for the people who have made great mistakes and put a big plaster of condolence on their lacera tions. Much people nre never sympathized with although they noed an Inllnity ot so. lace. Domestic mistakes. Huolal mis takes. Ecclesiastical mistakes. Political mistakes. There is a public man who has made a political mistake from which he will never recover. At the next elections he will be put back nnd ptit down Into a place of dis approval from which be will Lever rise. Just go to that mnu and unroll tha scroll of 100 splendid Americans who, after occu pying high plaoes of promotion, were rele gated to private life and public scorn. Hhow him in what glorious company he has been placed by tbe auathoma ot the ballot box. There Is a man or womau who Ins made a conjugal mistake, and a vulture has been put Into the same cage with a dove or a lion nnd a lamb in the same Jungle. The world laughs at the misfortune, but It ts your business to weep with tholr woe. There Is a merchant who bought at the wrong time or n manufacturer whose old machinery bus beeu superseded by a new Invention or who under chnngn of tariff on certain styles of fabric has beeu dropped from affluence Into bankruptcy. Goto him nnd recall the names ot llrty business men who lost nil but their honesty aud Ood aud heaven. Lot them know there are hun dreds ot good men who have gone under that are thought ot In heavouly spheres more than many who are high up and going higher. All will acknowledge thnt gooil aud lovely Arthur Tappan, who failed lu busluess, was more to be admired than William Tweed in possejslou ot bis stolen millions. Hear itl Tho moro you go to busying yourselves In other men's matters tho bet ter if you havo design ot offering relief. Hearcn out, the quarrels, thnt you may set tle them; the fallen, that you may lift them; the pangs, that you may assuage tbem. Arm yourselt with two bottles ot Divine me Heine, the one atonic aud the other an aesthetic, the latter to soothe aud quiet, the tormer to stimulate to In spire to sublime action. That man's mat ters need looking after lu this respect. There are 10,000 men and women who need your help and need lt right away. They do uot sit down nnd cry. They make n appeal for help, but within ten yards ot where you sit in church and within tea minutes walk ot your notne mere are peo ple in enough trouble to make them shriek out with agony lt they had not re solved upon suppression. It you am rightly interested in other men's matters, go to those who nre just starting in tbelr occupations or profes sions and give them a boost. Those old physicians do not want your help, for they nre surrounded with more patients than tbey can attend to, but cheer those young doctors who are counting out their llrst drops to pntleuts who onunot afford to pay. Those old attorneys at the law waut no help from you, for they take retainers only from the more prosperous clients, but choor those young attorneys who have not hail a brief nt all lucrative. Those, old merchants have their business so well established that they feci Inde pendent ot bunks, ot all changes lu tariffs, of all panics, but cheer those young merchants who are making their llrst mistakes in bargain nnd sale. That old farmer who has '200 acres In host tillage und bis barns full ot harvested crops and the gralu morabaut havlug bought his wheat at high prices before It was reaped needs no sympathy from you, but obnet up that youug farmer whose acres are oovured with a big mortgage and the drought strikes them tha first yenr. That builder with contracts niuda for the con struction of bait a do.eu bouses nnd the owners Impatient for occupancy Is not to be pitied, but give your sympathy to that mechanic In early acquaintance with ham mer and saw nud bit nud nmld all the limitations of a Journeyman. And now my words are to the Invisible multitudes I rench week by week, but yet will never see In this world, but whom I ex peat to meet nt the bar ot Qod and hope to see in the blessed heaven. The last word that I) wight L. Moody, the great evan gelist, said to me at rialnlleld, N. J., aud be repeated the message for me to others, was, "Never be tempted under any circum stances to give up your weekly pub lication ot sermons throughout the world." Thnt solemn charge I will heed as long ns I have strength to give them nnd the newspaper types desire to take them. Oh, ye people back there In the Hheflleld mines of England, and ye In the sheep pastures of Australia, aud y nmld tbe pictured terraces of New Zealand, nnd ye among the cinnamon aud color in flamed groves of Ceylon, aud ye Armenians weeping over the gravos ot murdered households In Asia Minor, nnd yo amid the Idolatries of Denares ou tbe Granges, and ye dwellers ou the banks ot the Androscoggin, und the Alabama, nnd tbe Mississippi, and the Oregon, and tbe Shannon, nnd the llhino, nnd tha Tiber, and the Danube, aud the Nile, nud tbe Euphrates, and tbe Caspian and the Yellow seas; ye of the four corners of tbe earth who have greeted me again and niraiu. accept this point blank offer ot everything for nothing, or everything ot pardon and comfort and Illumination and satety und heaven, "without money and without Drlce." What n gospel tor all lands, all zones, all agesl Gospel of sym pathy! Gospel of hope! Gospel of eman olputlonl Gospel of sunlight! Gospel ot enthronement! Gospel ot eternal viotoryl Take It all ye people, uutll your slus nre all pardoned, nnd your sorrows all solaced, and your wrongs all righted, and your dying pillow be spread nt the foot or n ladder which, though like the oue thnt was lot down to Bethel, mny be thronged with descending nud ascending Immortals, shall neverthe less have room enough for you to climb, foot over foot, on rungs of light till you go olear up out of sight of all earthly perturoatiou into ine return wuere "iu wicked oense from troubling and the weary are at rest." "Tnnr.it years ago I wan badly aflllot ert" twith Eczema, ami used Tetterino with tbe most gratifying result. I made a permanent euro after doctors had failed to relieve me. I have symp tons of it breaking out on nuotlior part of my porson.Boyou will plenso send mo one box Tetterino by return mail for the 50c. enclosed. W. L. Mounce, 124 St. Marks avenue, Brooklyn, N, Y." Hold by druggists or by mail for !0o. by J. T. Shnptrine, Savannah, (In. rrlceless Volume. About four years ago it London blurkHmlth noticed on a Beoond-rmnd bookstall n very old book priced ut 2 rents. He bought It, nnd ufter at tempting to read it. threw lt nslde end noon forgot It. One of hie lodgers happening to Bee the book recently, nnd, noticing that It was dated 1450, asked permission to Rhow it to the Hrltlsh museum authorities. A duy or two later the blacksmith was request ed to rail, and the Hecretary, to his sur prise, asked him what he would take for the book. In somo slight confus ion the man said, "What will you give?" "Will $250 suit you?" wns tho answer of the secretary. The black smith was so dumfoundod thnt the secretary thought he was ridiculing bis offer, and thereupon Immediately increased It to 500, which was ttt once necepted. Sooner thun have lost the book, however, which was the first book that Gutenberg ever printed, und, therefore almost priceless, the mus eum authorities would havo paid al most any sum that had been asked. Cincinnati Enoulrer, How's This. We offer One Iliind nil Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be enrnd by Hull's Catarrh Cure. K.J. m:.vKV A Co., Props., Toledo. O. We, thn nnderslirnpd, have known K. .!. Che ney for the last Ift years, and believe him per fectly hotiorahlu In all business transactions ami nnnnefallv able to carry out auy obliga tion made by their Hnn. WkstoV Tiiuax, Wholoalo Druggists. Toledo, Ohio. Wai.uiko, Kinnai A Ma ii vi. Wholesale Dnmglsta, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure 1st ikon Internally, act ing directly upon tho blood an. I mucous sur faces of the sysleni. 1'rlce. 7"m per bottle. Hold by all Pniirirlsrs. Testimonials froe. Hairs Family Pills are the beet. OIOORAPHY FOR A PROFESSOR Peaches Were Meat Over Along with the Whl Blabber. Canadians are very touchy on the subjet't of climate, as Kudyard Kipling discovered when he somewhat thought lessly duhhed the dominion our Lady of the Snows, says the Philadelphia Post. When Arthur Stringer, the youns Canadian poet and author, first went to Oxford, he carried with him letters from Prof. Uoldwtn Smith of Toronto to ProL York Powell, tho distinguished historian of Christ Church. This old Oxford don, like one or two other Eng lishmen, had very vague Ideas about Canada, and somewhat surprised the young stranger by inquiring If he gut along nicely on English roast mutton after living so long on frozen seal meat. The young poet gravely protestod that he perhaps missed his whale blubber n little, but the next day cabled home and in less than a week tbe finest basket of Autumn peaches over grown In Ontario, carefully packed In saw dust, was on Its way to Oxford. A short time afterward the young author was again dining with the Regius profes sor of Oxford, nnd that gentleman pro duced at the meal a fruit dish loaded with tremendous peacheB. "Most ex traordinary," said the old professor, "but these peaches were sent to me to day, and I'm blessed If I know who sent them. From the Bouth of France, I sus pci t, so I saved a few of them for you. Stringer; they will be such a novelty, you know." The Canadian very quiet ly took a steamship company's bill of hiding from hlB pocket and handed it to the professor. Tho professor gazed at tho bill, then at the fruit, then at the poet. "I had somo whale blubber, too, professor," said thnt young man, "but I simply had to eat that. These other things were grown on my uncle's farm in Kent county, Ontario, you know. He has 200 bushels of them every yoar, and he sent me over a basket of little ones along with the whale blubber." A large cotton mill Is being erected In Mexico at Atotonllco on the lino ol the In- tor-Ocennln liailrond. rt'TNAM Fadeless Dyes do not spot, ttroak or give your goods an unevenly dyed ap pearunce. Hold by ail druggists. Ipissln In Europe has a forest area of about oOO.lHMJ.POO acres. Onc-tblrd of the country, Indeed, is forest. f ran recommend Piso's Cure for Consump tion to sufferers from Asthma. E. D. 1'OWJi bKM.. Ft Howard. Wis., May 4, WW. The 1H9H production ot bent-sugar in Min nesota was OI0.HW pounds, on which tbe Mtnte paid a bounty of t'JO.OtsD. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrnp for children fret hi ng.snl tens the uuni. reducing Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures windoollo. i. a but tie. Certain. Dauhaway Now, if I order nny clothes from you, I want to be sure beforehand that you won't dun me. I want it understood. Can you suggest any way to avoid this?" Tailor Well, you might pay me a deposit now, and the rest when the clothes are deliver ed. Detroit. Free Press. One Whole Show Fori Cent. Thero is a penny show iu New York city. It Is a museum of wonders, with a vuudevlllo nttiii'liinent. Tho general uduilsnlun is 1 cent, und reserved seats ut the performance aro t cents. The progruiuuie, which is changed every week, consists of songs, dunces, a two part dialogue aud n Juggler. The mu seum contains a few monkeys, some stuffed blrdx, a curious kaleidoscope, two or three distorting mirrors, a buuch of snakes, a live ulligutor and a case of Japanese carvings, The per formance Is continued from 2 o'clock In the afternoon uutll midnight, and tho attendance is (I'lite large; sufll clent, so the ticket taker told me, to pay a reasonable proUt. There are several 5 ceut shows on tbe Iiowery and over on the east side, but I believe this Is the only 1 cent show la the world. Correspoudeuce Chleuso rteeord. The fiend who slaps you on the back and thinks he is showing sood felloirship should paste in bis bat tbe story of Edward Watson, whose nncK was broken by the greeting of a too eulbusiastio friend. All except I bad onesi There are hun dreds of cough medi cines which relieve coughs, all coughs, except bad ones! The medicine which has been curing the worst of bad coughs for6oyearsisAyer's Cherry Pectoral. Here is evidence : "My wife was troubled with a dp-uattd caugh an !ur lungs for thrtt yean. Ono day I thought of how AyurM Cherry Pectoral saved the ltfu of my sister after the doctors had all given her up to die. So I purchased two bottles, and it cured my wifo completely. It took only one bottlo to cure my Msttr. So you seo that threo bot tles (one dollar each) saved two lives, We all send you our heart felt thanks for what you have done for us." J. H. UURCK, MacotitCoL, Jan. 13, 1899. Now, for the first time yon can get i trial bottle of Cherry Pectoral for 35 cents. Ask your druggist. 30)ir.Biall's s Tho bt-st remedy for urea as . Iho Ix-st remedy lOlirl Consumption. Ci O . . m Coughs. Oolds,Grippe, V Y I U U Bronchitis, Hoarse- ness. Asthma, Whooping- cotiKh, Croup, Hmall tlikse ; quick, sure results. Vt.Jiutftl'uUcurtloHitipatWH. 7rull,ijurji. Pi REAL GRAPHOPHONE sF0Rt s&T-yiX&i- Simple ."xM Visible, Clockwork Motor, Mechanism Constrvc- NO BOTHER, MUCH FUN Alt 1h Wnntftr and PlHtum ol S1itfa.Prlcl Talking Machine. Whfl accompanied by 11 Recorder ihti Orapho. phen can b used to mak Record. Prtce with Recorder, $t.90. Reproduce all the indird Kecorda. Srnd trdtr mt mtmty t wr mtMrta 4&i- COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO. DepLB 1. IIOE, Baltimore St., Baltimore, Met. 1032 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Nslirr's Cap. kit., kicn, ooe, St . . ' 8ptltt -J.I IIiTJ"w tvh.ii.iti sac. aw wtciiu tx loCSahir' Sm4) tr ffurrantMl U TrodiM. l Mahlom Luther. R.Tror.P. sitatl)id tb frlVtfV Jjt wrffrowtni J50liualtlt lllg Kour Oats. J. rilr. Vim g Hiahloou, Wii., U.ibui. b.rU-t; ad H. Lnjr, f lUdft'lnf, Wine .bf fr.wut.1bu.h.lflitr'af 1 A f Pr urt. If -uu Joubi, rli tbm. Wvwltfc tegeU lyM II IOU.OOOqiw m 1 twiners, h-nvt eUiMmlne irUI KJ II 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR lOo. T fl It pkfi or tars laita tm4, ritU uih, U -ar4 f 1 Cora Splu,proituciii)biih. IWI mi4 loni J O'jk but iisuiouil hiU. Hrouitia UerniLl KM Iba created (iu uai rftrtn; 5iit m. frf YV Ap. Mprtng VYiii-ri. .. lecliHliiig ur waru- f4J WV BMihPlant Kr'tltamCWW ii u Hint all Jr-W YV '"'eat Million l-IUr iC-f i'attate, all luailwl fur like. V?y V-V r"sillf mor.h 1 14 lt fttari.. aJV jel MalN f 1 . 1 11 bbl ft ad 9JTW ff nil thULlfoesw' ppff atnloi M'lr. with VfJ tTTJfini Mnne,i, 10c. to hkl jctr. aJik- i - iSJl DEERLESS CONES r 0 ei S i. mi S " Q (A V o e o eg a XVX THK I.ATKNT XCI XX KVriPH' II O !l K TB KATJIKVI' HO A 1. 1. 30 Days Treatment $1.00. Sample locts. Write us Con fidentially. THE PEERLESS COMPANY, 372 K 6,'lr.l St., Hlt'AUU, ILL. ore 1 VmIiImmh ftkratl H end. ftA Brat dai'ft Ufreet.ru 1 writs IMrlt laMlUW of STOPPED FREE Permanently drag bitealty Pretsatse bt DR. KLINE'S SKIAT RERVE RESTORER wsat DUwi. rm. mUmm. Vuef i-. -pttaorhflrottaftfti im. Treatise and At (rial bettla a lift U, leVrj eftMl aaprcftt baryta ottlf rd. rDQ M IT. nn. i.nt. sciieviiej ftlsNliuliw, 031 ana Hi., f atla4eli4t. fft. DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH KILLER lUN COUgltH HU(1 Colli. i'rvvaala Cuusuiiiutloit. Ail UiUiifc-iaU, to. RDnDQV HEW DISCOVERY a-lvea Le I e I f9 I quiek rvlf nd enree tttra Me. Mofft uf teftitiuiiDitU and IO days' ireaiftaeal Wtmmm W. H. . ttaifilf una, Bea atlaaia. , Zd Boat Couifh ttyrup. l'aaiua Good. UN fS Ivl In HuiB, Hold br druirulHtii. Pfl iHaBeavsesseaiesiiasMisiessM I 11 Is" u i. ISl 1..IIWI.SIIHIISMHHI III I'l II ,-T-i-" n m -ASdtR fci,w.w.....,?,..a SUCCESSFUL SHOOTERS SHOOT WINCHESTER Rifles, Repcatingf Shotg-uns, Ammunition and Loaded Shotgun Shells. Winchester guns and ammunition are the standard of the world, but they do not cost any more than poorer makes. All reliable dealers sell Winchester goods. FREE : Send name and address on a postal for 136 page illustrated Catalogue describing all the guns and ammunition made by the WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO., 178 WINCUSTER AVE., NEW HAVEN, CONN. BABY'S BATH. Nothing is more easily affected by irritation than the dainty, delicate skin of a young child. Ivory Soap is cleansing and refreshing. It is wholly free from impurities, and its mild, creamy lather leaves the tenderest skin unharmed. IT FLOATS. coovmiqht lee thi proctih a OAMair co. Cincinnati telling Burning Scaly Blotchy Humors Instantly Relieved and Speedily Cured by O Tbe Itching nnd burning I suffered In my feet and limbs for three years were terrible. At nljfht they were worse and would keep me awake a greater part of the night. I consulted doctor after doctor, as I was trarel ling on the roud most of my time, also oue of ouj clty doctors. None of the doctors knew what the trouble was. I got a lot of the different samples of the medicines I hud beeu using. I found them of to many different kluds that I concluded I would have to go to a Cincinnati hospital bt-fore I would get relief. I had frequently been urged to try CUl'ICUHA UEMED1E8, but I had uo fulih iu them. My wife finally prevailed upon me to try them. Presto 1 What a chauget I am now cured, and it la u perinaucnt cure. I feel 1IU kicking some doctor or myself for suffering three years when I could huvu ucd C'UTICUUA remedies. II. JENKINS, Mlddleboro, Ky. Complete Treatment $ 1 .25, ConaUta ot Cuticvba Soaf (28e.), to eloanM the skin ot oruiU and seolu and soften the tlilckeirM cuticle, Cuticuka Oiutuioul (00c.), to luauntly sllav Itchlug, irritation, and lurmmintilion.aud aootliesnd heal, and Cutiuuka UBaoLVSMT(00a.),ueool aud cluauxe the blnod. A Simolb Bet U often tuliiuleul to cure tbe niost torturlug, ilia, ttgurln nkin, scalp, and blood bumori, nuibaa, and irritations, with lost ot bLr, whau pbyaiciuuH, lioauiutli, aud all (1m tail. Sold throughout the world. Fottkb Dbixi amo Vuuu. Ooar., Bole frops., Uostou. " How to Cure Itching Uunion," fraa, Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soap Kxcluriraly for preaerrlDg, purifying, aud beautlfring tha kla, for claanttug the icalp ot oruu, iwaiM. aud uauilrutf, aud Ui topping of lalllug hair, for aoftaulng, whiwulnt, anij heallug mi, rough, aud tor hands, In th form at ualha for sonolug IrrltaUona, iuSaoi. DUiUoua, and chatluga, or too fius r oBenilr peraplraUon, In liia form at waihaa for ulnoraUva waakoewsa, aud for many aanaUva aoU.opUo purpona which nadlly auggwi themaulrot to womau, aud especially muthera, and for aU Uie purpoaaa of tha toilet, bath, aud nuraery. No auiouut of perauaaloa can induce thoae who har one aaad it to aea any other, especially for preaerylng and purifying tha akin, acalp, and hair of InfaaU aad children. ClITICUBA Boar eoiublnea dellcata emollleut propertle doiired froaa Oon. CUBA, the grwit akin cure, with Uie pureet of oleaualng lugredleuU aud tha moat ratrwto. lug of flowor odor, ha other medicated or toilet aoap erer compounded la to be compared with it for preaerrlng, purtfylug, and beauUfylng Uie kln, atlp. hair, and bead. N othor foreign or donieaUo toilet aoap, howerer eipeuelt a, la to be ooiu pared with U for a tho purpoaoa of U toilet, oath, aud oureery. Thu It oombluea la Omb hoar at IMa Vujub, yla., TwTr rivB CawTk, jhe but aka sad complexion soap, and the BSSJ tnUa aad Bawl bah aoap U the world. .MM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers