. mm I I 111! II A nervou8, irritable mother, often on the verge of hysteric, is unfit to care for children; it ruins a child's disposition tvnd reucts upon herself. The trouble between children and their mothers too often is due to the fact that the mother has some female weakness, and she is entirely unfit to bear the strain upon her nerves that governing a child involves; it is impossible for her to do anything calmly. She cannot help it, as her condition is due to suffering and shattered nerves caused by some derangement of the uterine system with backache, headache, and all kinds of pain, and she is on the verge of nervous prostration. When a mother finds that she cannot be calm and quiet with her children, she may be sure that hercondition needs attention, and she can not do better than to take Lydia E. IMiikliani's Vegetable Compound. This medicine will build up her system, strengthen her nerves, nnd enable her to calmly handle a disobedient child without a scene. The children will soon realize the difference, and seeing their mother quiet, will themselves become quiet. Mrs. May Brown, of Chicago, HI., says: f or- nave so imed LyUia pound if you came to Gratefully yours, Mks. Mat 1 1 you honor. How Mrs. Pinkham Helped Mrs. McKinny. " Dear Mbs. Pixkuam : I feel it my duty to write and let you know the good you and'your Vegetable Compound are doing. I hud Wen sick ever since my first baby was born, and at the birth of my second, my doctor, as well as myself thought I should never live through it. After that menstruation never came regular, and when it came I suffered terribly. I also had womb and ovarian trouble. A friend of my husband's advised him to get Lyilla 13. Pinkhiun's Vegetable Compound for me. At first I had no faith in it, but now nothing could induce me to be without it. Menstruation has become regular, and I feel like a new woman. Your medicine is a God-send to suffer ing women. I hope this letter will lead others to try Lydia K. I'lnkliun's Vegetable Compound. Yours truly, Mrs. Mii.drkd McKinny, 28 l'carl St., San Francisco, Cal." (March 10, 1901). FRKE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN". If there is anything in your case ahout which you would like special advice, write freely to Mrs. Pinkham. Address is Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free, and her advice is always helpful. $5000 FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produce the original letter! and signatures of above tosttmoulala, which will prove their abnnliite K;nuinencM , LvtU K. Pinkham MeUiciue Co.. Lynn, Uw, Coal-chute men at Mobcrly, Mo., whose business it is to load "and unload cars, have struck. They demand an in crease in wages. IMsos Curs for Consumption Is an Infallible medicine (or cough and aolds. N. W. Bamcil, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. Kleptomania moy not. be a contagious disease, but it is taking. Our money winning books, written by men who know, tell you all about Potash They are needed by every man who owns a field and a plow, and who desires to get the roost out of them. ThT arerM. Stud postal card, ... KAU WORKS msmi atrast. Saw Terk )L L- DOUCLA .shoegk rear Wttt '' Mia mre am i ttoixl Ji "oth. i "f Vtimn) shots is la. Kr.t aaion whs W I sCil'jHWS Uts stsl.a W I ","0' I "" total: Fitf jli ro4 i mam mmr . I i "Dear Mrs. Pinkham : 'Honor to whom honor is due.' and you deserve both the thanks and honor of the mothers' of America whom you Diecaertly Helped and benefited. 1 have l'j. I'liikliam's v egetable Com when I would feel run-down, nervous" and irritable, or have anv of the aches and rjains which but few women escape, and I have found that it relieved me at once and gave me new strength. Several ladies, members of our Lit erary Union, speak in the highest praise of your Vegetable Compound, as they have been cured irom serious lemalc troubles. Uno lady, who thought she must submit to an opera tion, wus cured without using anything in the world but Lyd ia K. I Mnkh a ni's Vege table Compound and Sanative Wash. You have hosts of friends in Chicago, and visit our citv we would deliirht to do Ilnowx, 57 Grant 1'lace, Chicago, 111. The Mtnlatcr Met H la Mntch. Nannie was a great "kirk haiin'," atu it was unfortunate that she took a dis like to the new minister who came t the parish. In her opinion he waf "licht," and he committed the, to her unpardonable offence of using notes ir his sermon, and, worse than all, six entertained urave doubts as to his be ing altogether "soun" on certain knottj fioints of doctrine. It so happened thai icr manner to him was not very gra cious when he visited her in the kitchen, as was his practice whenever he called at Baldinnic. On one of these occa sions the minister, finding Nannie more than usually intractable, considered it his duty to address her, in an indirect way of course, on the danger of prid and stubbornness. Warming to hit work, he did not notice the lapse of time, while she on her part sat befor him with her eyes fixed on the floor, the picture of patient attention. Sud denly, his eye lighted on the clock in the corner, and he rose hurriedly to his feet. "Dear me," he exclaimed, "how the time has flown! I must apol ogize for detaining you so long, Nan nie." The old woman, rising slowly to her feet, said, quietly, "Dinna fash yer set', sir. I hae been rale comfortable. It's schloin I hae the chance tae sil sae Inug, an' wi' nacthing tae think aboot!" The feelings of the good man may be "better imagined than de scribed." nuinnr In llaraea. Only those who are unfamiliar with animals doubt that Uiey have a sens of humor. Jimmy is a lively road horse who has ideas of his own and very original conceptions of what is amusing. One day the children had erected a small tent on the lawn, and sat within it drinking lemonade and playing that they were banditti. Jimmj walked softly up to the side of the tenl and softly inserted his nose through convenient slit, says Our Dumb Anl mals. Eyes and ears followed and, hii head once within at the back of thr unsuspicious reveries, Jimmv gave oni tremendous sneeze, of that kind which is half a snort. The banditti fell back in every direc tion and th horse, withdrawing hinv self from the tent, laughed silently to himself before going back to his grass, cropping. Jimmy's favorite amien.il is that of scattering a flock of sheep. When he is feeding with them in thi pasture he suddenly stops eating and then dashes among them, sending them scudding over the hillside. Then h, stands watching them until they again settle to their nibbling, and after a short luncheon of his own repeats the pleas ing diversion, Although this horse il the gentlest creature in tlie world, il pleases him exceedingly to frighten any one who has shown timidity in hii presence. Frank Gardner, the millionaire auto, mobilist and turfman of America, has been in litigation with the Empress Eu genie about two portraits of Napoleon the Third, and Empress Eugenie won the suit. The court ordered the resto ration of the portraits and some rant Sevres to the empress. The portraits are by the famous Wintcrhuller, and are now in Gardner's collection. Gard ner bought them at an auction sale. The empress intends presenting the uicturcs to the Louvre. i MATTERS. Lima aa Fertillier. Llmo Is not a commercial fertilizer in the slrlct sense, but nn Indirect fer illBpr, which nil farmers ought to be r.tuilllnr with ond use. Our fanners use llino ouco in about five yeiirs. Thny u.c It for two reasons: First. heraiiBo thry want It to act upon the Insoluble, plnut food and nmke It avail able, nnd in the ncrond place, It Is .Rood for sour land, Innd that bns been furnird n good while and an odd has developed. Ten or twenty bushels of )!me per ar-re will neutralize the acid. Sometimes clover does not grow well, nnd farmers tay It probably needs lime. Professor E. B. Voorhers, of New Jersey, to a Maine Institute. feed roan Coin Csrefally. Young eolts that hnve Just been wrancd should be fed very carefully, tilvo easily digested food, such as a mixture of oats and bran, Rood hay, bright com fodder and the like. If corn Is fed, It should be ground, as It Is difficult for colts to properly chew Imnl kernels. The liny should bo flue nnd well cured, A young colt's stom ach Rets out of order rather easily, nnd the best of feeds should be pro vided during the next three or four months. It will pay In the end, as the arowth will bo great, aud the animal will get n good start. A vigorous colt when a year old will take cure of ltsell without so much attention to the sefce Uou of foods. Rleanlilna; Old Comix. Old combs that hnve luid brood reared In them for any length of time become very dark colored, and honey, no matter how clear It be, will become stained If stored In them. But these old combs are tough and make the host of extracting combs If properly treated. Lay them out In a rain, turning oc casionally to get ach side filled, nnd let them soak for awhile. Tlace them on n division board, one nt a time, and give a quick, downward motion,. which will throw nearly nil the water out of the upper side. Turn the comb over nnd repeat. The water will be very dark and strong. Continue this opera tion of filling and soaking until the water runs clear. Use pure, soft water to pour on the combs if it docs not Ta!n" rr :1r,:i- A Warm Coop. When the chicks are about twenty four hours old, I put twenty with one hen aud place them In n dry goods box which lias an old window for the front so that In Btormy weather they A HOTHOUSE COOP, can be shut up with Just n crack for air. It has a good floor which is nec essary for curly chicks. In bright days I let them out In the middle' of the day. The chicks are not fed before twenty-four hours old. Then they nro given meal mixed with sour milk or water. Meal Is never fed as soon ns mixed, but Is allowed some time to swell and Is then fed warm. Chicks are fed four times n day until they weigh two pounds, and after they are a few weeks old cracked corn Is fed at night. The accompanying Illustra tion shows a picture of the coop. Adn liiio W. Jnuies, In New England Home stead. Photograph jr on I he Farm. We are only Just coming to under stand the vuluc of photography on the farm. For tho young folks It has the highest Interest, affording them u way of passing the time when other means of recreation fall. It Is by no menus wasted time nnd money to develop the artistic talent of the boys and girls In this way. Then, too, they are able to get representations of the farm buildings, the stock nnd the scenery about the old home which will prove of marked value In days to come. But photography hag still another form of worth to the farmer. A man near our homo asked through the tele phone tho other day If we could spare one of our boys long enough to get the picture of some choice pigs be bad for sale. A man lu a distant part of the State wanted to buy one of thcni, but desired to see tho markings before he decided whether to buy or not. The owner wished to send such a picture. Here is opened up n new valne for the camern. If we have a cow or a horse or a calf or a lamb to sell provided It be of some desirable stock, we may ndverllse It In the farm paper aud fol low tho advertisement up with pictures of tho animal we wish to dispose of. Such a picture might even be the means of selling still other stock than that particularly offered, for such ad vertisements pass through ninny hands aud grow In value the further they go. Cood outfits may now be procured at rcasonablo figures,- and we look for a constantly Increasing use of them as an ndjunct to tho farm equipment. E. L. Vincent, in New York Tribune Former. ' , Teillnc rerllllieri, ' It Is n common practice for those who wish to test the question of whether it la profitable to use n com mercial fertiliser or not. to try the ex periment of planting or sowing equal strips of tho same width, one with the fertilizer and the other without. We have seen many a field of wheat wheit tho fertilizer had been sown wltb the seed going one way, and had been 'shut off In going tho other way, thus leaving two strips of equal width, ono with nnd the other without the fertilizer. In almost. If not quite, ev ery caso there was gain enough to show a profit after paying the cost of tho fertilizer. This test suited the fertilizer manufacturer and their agents very well. vIt looked like a fair trial, nnd usually resulted In au in creased demand for the fertilizer an other season. But It wdi not a fair test for all t lint. We will nssumo that Urn fertilizer stltrulated tho Growth of FARM both stalk and root where It was used, as we should expect It to do. Th greater root growth has the power ti reach out Into the other territory unci rob the other plants of the nnturnl re sources of the soil. The greater stHlk growth, may overshadow It while heading out, nnd the crop on the un fertilized soli did not tome up to the usual capacity of that land for produc tion, and could not. A .fairer test would he to take from five to seven bouts of tho drill or rows in other crops, with the fertilizer nnd tho same number without, and then compare the results on the three centre rows or strips In each plat. We have little doubt but that the results even then would show a profit In using the fer tilizer, but it would give a bettor and qiore accurate answer to the questlqn, "How much lucrease is due to th use of the fertilizer?" Tho strips left un tested would at least take the question of soil robbing by more vigorous roots out of the test. Boston Cultivator. Seed Polatnei. --. S So far as known, the fungus which causes the common "rust" or late blight nnd rot of potatoes, lives over winter only in the potato tubers. It is, of course, possible that it may exist in n resting stage In the soil or the blighted vines or decnyed tubers, but most persistent search has fnilcd to discover this. If this belief Is correct, and tho only place where the fungus lives through the winter Is In the infected tubers, then the devel opment of the disease each succeeding year Is a direct result of the planting of some such Infected tubers. All oh servntlons are In harmony with this explanation. The unusually early and general de velopment of the fungus the punt sum mer is thus explained, for there was enough of the rot In the autumn of loot to Cause the widespread Infection of the tubers from which the seed of 1U02 was selected. It follows that the still worse development of rot this season Is prophetic of a disastrous occurrence of this disease in 1003, providing soil nnd weather conditions next summer are at nil favorable. I The practical question Is. what can be done to lessen this danger? There Is no method known of disinfecting such diseased seed. Surface washes are useless, for the fungus is safely housed In the depths of the living po tato tissue and any known means of killing the fungus by chemicals will kill the potato also. It has been suggested that heating the seed potatoes six hours or longer at 108 degrees F., or thereabouts, dry heat, would kill the fungus without In-, Juif to tho potato. This has not been fully demonstrated, and would not prove prncticnl to most farmers in case it is reliuble. -; The Vermont Experiment Station au thorities can only recommend two things ns practical. The first is that unusual pains be taken this autumn to secure and preserve for next year's seed purposes, early-planted potatoes grown on light, well-drained soil, which escaped the blight, or else those from fields so well sprayed ns to be pro tected. The second Is that next sum mer every potato grower be prepared beforehand with spraying outfit' nnd chemicals ready for prompt application of the bordeaux mixture when needed. Even in so discouraging n season as the last one this remesy has proved perfectly effective when used promptly and thoroughly. In the well-sprnyed fields at the Vermont Station nt Bur lington, a considerable portion of tho vines were still green and growing on October 1, nnd preliminary diggings have shown practically no rot. Ams"' lean Cultivator. Farm Galea That Will Not Sag. The tendency to sag may be over come in a great measure if the weight of the goto is rmide to rest evenly upon both posts. The accompanying Illus tration shows n gnto of this character. It has two latches, one near the top uud one near the bottom, which gives It greater flrmuess and security against all kinds of farm stock. . Its one Im portant feature Is the latches are Im movable. The catches, which are of hard wood aud are firmly spiked to J i IS i the post, are not deep; that Is, the notch which receives the lntch is not over an Inch deep. When the gate is closed the spring of the gate, with tho slight play in the hinges, permits the end to rise sufficiently for the latches to drop into their place. In this way the weight of the gate Is supported equally on both posts and there Is no tendency to drag one) over toward the other. To open it the end must be lifted a little, which will releaee both catches, and It will then swing on the hinges. Tho gate itself may be made In the barn, and will furnish good employ, mcnt for a rainy day; I use undressed pine or spruce for the purpose, making bottom board ten inches wide nnd the others five Inches. The end battens should be double; that is, there should be one ou each side, holding the hori zontal boards between them. The mid dle batten and the brace may be single, the latter being notched Into the ends ns shown. Small bolts may be pur chased very cheaply now, if bought by the package, and it Is better to use them freely than to trust to nailing the gnte together. I use for the purposo one-fourth-Incb carriage bolts, placing a washer under each nut and drawing the nuts down snugly. It keeps a gnto In good condition much longer than nails will. The latches must be of oak or other strong wood, for they sup port hnlf the weight, Hnd If it chances to blow to, they get the banging. The gate itself Is four feet wide and eleven feet long, which Is a convenient pro portion for ordinary purposes. For posts I use chestnut, rut in the win ter", peeled in the spring and thorough ly seastmcd la the sun before being set. I ought pei-lmps to odd that with all this precaution against sagging, it is still best to set tho posts very deep and tamp tho earth about them us solidly ns possible. A gate post can not be too well set. Charles B. Ben ton, lu Orange Judd Fu"uer. Of travelers on French railways, only 8.4 per cent, go first class; 30.4 per cent, take second, ond 01.2 third. 'Judgment Fled to l'rlllli limits." A remarkable story of animal percep tion has been told by Mr. Frank Bos tock, who may be considered an au thority on wild animals in captivity. "1 once had a trainer," Mr. Uostock ay, "an old Irishman, who had served in a British regiment in India, and who knew the ways of tigers in every de tail. J I c taught three of them to do .more work in the arena than I have ievcr sen done by any other tigers. I have seen him sitting down between two of them at rest times during re hearsals and examining their claws to see if any of them were sore or split. Any one who has ever tried that with even a house cat knows that it strikes -the feline nature as an unwarrantable familiarity; hut they never did more than show their teeth and whine, and .that half in playfulness. One day the old fellow got very drunk the first time in his life, to my knowledge. Be fore he was noticed, he had gone into the cage with his tigers and fallen in a heap nn the floor. The other keep ers made several attempts to take him out of the cage, but it was at once ap parent that to do so meant a bitter and bloody fight with the tigers. They guarded him all night in his drunken slumber. Bet the nrxt time he put them to work they balked, and he could neither persuade nor drive them. They had ceased to trii't him, or something of that sort, and his usefulness with thcin was at an end for ever." Fntnkrd ltlinelf1o llenttt. A most fantastic story is that of the strange and slow suicide of the Ba'on Bela Olnvi at Pest in the year 1875. The baron was supposed to be very wealthy. lie had a wife and six chil dren. He had lost his money in speculation.-but this was not known. lie went to Paris and ihsured his life for one hi'iulrcd thousand gulden each in five companies. 11c relumed to Pest, and his habits began to change. He ab sented himself from home for long pe riods every day. From the picture of health he began to droop and pine away. In ten months he died of what the doctors called galloping consump tion. J he insurance companies were suspicions, and their detectives tin earthed a most wonderful nlot. This nobleman was discovered to have hired a small room in a remote and mean portion of the citv. It was broken into and found to be furnished with a comfortable soia. a tabic, two chairs and two chests. In one of these were, found a comfortable dressing gown, a pair ol loose 1 urkish trousers, a fer. and a dozen long pipes. In the olhcr were found about two hundred strong Havana cigars and a half pound of common smoking tobacco. From the wrappers found in the bottom of the chest it would appear that in less than eight months the nobleman had smoked about thirty-five hundred cigars and about one hundred pounds of to bacco, having deliberately poisoned mmsell with nicotine. Two Spetlona of Land for llurrn- The land in some parts of Eastern Colorado and Western Kansas not yf watered by irrigation and void of trees is of extreme sterility, a square mile or section in some instances being con sidered almost an .encumbrance. A stranger in the town of D was, seen to ride out toward the farm of a man named Brown. He was mounted on a specimen of that comical and lovable animal, the burro a kind of donkey which can be bought at prices ranging irom fiity cents to five dollars. The next morning Mr. Brown was seen riding into town pn the stran ger's burro, ad in answer to the queries of his iricnds, said: "Waal, that stranger who came out to sec me yesterday wanted to go in the farming business, and finally per suaded mc into swapping the house and one section oi land, even, for this burro. When I fot'nd the fellow couldn't write. I wrote two sections in the deed of transfer instead of one. These tenderfoots better stay back East." ' The Blood. The blood is life. Wc derive from the blond lile, power, beauty and reason, us the doctora Imvc been saying from time im memorial. A healthy body, a fresh appear ance, nnd generally nil the abilitie we pos sets depend on that source of life. It ia tlierelorc the duty of every sensible man to keep the blood aa pure and normal aa pos sible. Nut'nre, in its infinite wisdom, ha given UK a thermometer indicating the utate of the b'.ood, which appeals to our reason by giving notice of itx impurity. Small eruptions of the skin, to which we scarcely pay any attention, headache, ringing noises in the ears, lassitude, sleeplessness, are generally a sifrn that the blood ia not in its normal stale, but ia filled with noxious sub stances. These symptoms deserve our full attention. If more attention were paid to those symptoms, and steps taken to re move them then many illnesses from which we suffer would become unknown, and the human body would become etrongcr and healthier. Attention therefore should be Haid to those warning signs, and the blood ran be purified and poisonous substances removed from it by the use of Dr. August Kocnia's Hamburg Drops, discovered mora than 00 years ago. There are 2055 counties in the United States. Texas has the largest number, 249, and Delaware the smallest number, three. FITSpermanently cured. o tits or nervous. dei.safterflrst day' use of Or. Kline's Great Kerveltestorer.titrlal bottle au J treatlsefrae Dr.K. H. Kliwk. Ltd.. 931 Area St.. Phlla., Pe, The yearly export of silks from Switzer land is valued at nearly $20,000,000. Mrs. Wlnslow 's HootUIng 8yru p for children teething-, softeo the gums, reduces inflamma tion .allays palu, euros wiad nolle. 25c. a botilo Six million pineapple are grown for shipment in the llahainas annually. riJTNAM Fadeless Dyes cost but 10 cents per package. 1 . Cabmen in Berlin are on duty a little over fifteen hour a dav. uans fJly lf ball asleep-seated cough for three yeaft. I purchased two bottles of Ayr!s Cherry Pectoral, large sUe, end It cured her com pletely.-- ,3, J. H. t Surge, Macon, Col. Probably you know of cough medicines that re lieve little coughs, all coughs, xcept deep ones I The medicine that has been curing the worst of deep coughs for' sixty years is Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. ?...,. -: TkrH tltssi 2i., Mc.lt. Ansncftsto. Oensalt rolls' SoeMT. If he ...a tn.w Ik inen aa as . as il SSTS. If lie tells ic. not to Mkt It Asa aont take It. lis kaew. Luf, Il with him Its a.iA.ril1l... J. C. AtKK till.. l w.!l. Mas. msi 1 in1 " 1 r ir-T't in i y-V, ,0 A DAOTnn .WHOWASBEFRII TH0IUII SAVED T 1 'VJ1' !",brnT,1ll. of Elkhorn, Wis., is pastor of tho Evangelical Lutheran St. Joiin s I hiireli, of thrtt piaee. Kev. Stubenvoll ia the possessor of two tliblcs pre sented to him by Kmperor Willium of (iirmniiy. Upon the ny kal of one of the ilibles the Kmperor has written in liis own handwriting a text. I his honored pastor, in a recent letter to the Peruua Medicine Co., of Columbus, Ulno, saya concerning their famous catarrh remedy, Peruna: The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. Gentlemen: "I had hemorrh'iae of thi lung for a long time, a nd all despaired of me. 1 took Feruna and ua cured. 11 gavK me nlrength and courage, and made healthy, pure blood. It Increaited ) weight, gave me a healthy color, and 1 eel well. It ts the bemt medicine in the world. If everyone kept Peruna in the house It wjuld nave mini from death every year." II. STCBEXVOLL. ' Thousands of people have eatarrh who would be surprised to know it, localise it has been called some other name than ca tarrh. The fact is catarrh is catarrh wher ever located, and another fact whirh ia of equally great importance is that Peruna cures catarrh wherever located. The man who doesn't hit the mark every time isn't a failure by a long shot. Deafness Cannot Be Cured bv local applications as they eaunot roaiMhc diseased portion of the- ear. There, is only ,u way to cure deafness, nml that Is by consti tutional remedies. De.ifnes is caused by hii inflamed condition of the mucous lining of tho Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, anil when it i entirely closed Deafness Is the. rusiilt. and unless the inflam mation enn lm tnkoii out. uud this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forevor. Nino eases out often are: caused by eatarrh. which is nothing but au inflamed condition of the mucous surface. Wo will give One Hundmd Dollars for iiuy easo of Deafness (caused by e;itnrrh) that ennnot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Cir culars Hint tree. F.J.Chkxey k Co.,Toledo, O. Hold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Fafnily IMIls lire the bet. Japan has an avenue of trees fifty miles lone, extending from the town of .Snm.ida to Nil:I(o. The Standard Rheumatic Remedy. TANTiAPn because able physicians declare that it is the only absolute JlijltlfAIyU cure for rheumatism in its various forms. A prominent ' physician recently said. : ','1 hsve never been able to svrite a, prescription that will cure rheumatism, owing to the fact that the usual reme dies do incalculable harm to the digestive orpins. RHECMACIDE com pletely overcomes this difficulty benefits rather than injures the organ of digestion hence it can be taken for an indefinite period, or a long as need be, to effect a permanent cure." The Doctor quoted covert the cue txtclly, " tfteumecide It sisotateb harmless. . 'J?' All Druggists, $1.00, Bobbltt Chemical Co., . ft FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS "New Rival" "Leader" "Repeater"' ETTTF you are looking for reliable shotgun am I I munition, the kind that shoots where you iJ point your gun, buy Winchester Factory Loaded Shotgun Shells: "New Rival," loaded with Black powder; "Leader" and "Repeater," .loaded with Smokeless. Insist upon having Winchester' Factory Loaded Shells, and i accept no . others. ALL DEALERS; KEEPitHEM. Cnil KRAftlliTFei Wspystudenursllrndrsr. U.MjU srsduauis lu u.lnt-iw. Wrlt iflrHuvclal run hilNUUAIEas Tui. MAkfcY UUl.tktt:oi.r.bUba, BlcDioua.v-Wrsulntliaiii.Ala. For twenty years I bed been a suf ferer from bronchial troubles ac companied wltb a backing cough, I at times suffered from extreme nervous prostration. About four years ago I began taklug IMpaus Tabuloa, and since then I have used them protty constantly. I rarely retire at night without taking my Tabule, and I find they keep my di gestive organs (wblcb naturally are weak) In good order, and thry also allay any 'tendency to nervousness and make me sloep. . -'AtdrugirUti. 'vV' The Five-Cant packs t it enoaib fr sa ordinary occasion. The family bottle, M Mats, oontain supply lor a yr. ADVERTlSE,sm'F IT PAYS IENDED BY AW EMPEROR BY PE-RU-fJA. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. llartman, giving 11 full statement of your case, and he will be plrased to give you hi valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hortman, President of The Hart man Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. 01 DrHfrim Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold fn bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "somitbbf; just u geod. DCJOPQY NEW DISCOVERY; W9 I quick reiMf and nirr. worrl Book of tntiinnnin snit 1() ilnvi' Iroi-lmrnt ITee. Or. U. H. OSUM'S SOUS, Ioie', At.nU, Oa- or expressaee prepaid. Baltimore fid V. 5. A. Capsicum Vaseline Put up In Collapsible Tubes. A Subatitut for and Superior to Mustard oi ant othar plaatrr, and will not tliatr tha bin. delicate ikln. Th itain allay Inn and ourativt quallUM of this article are wonderful. It wilt top the toothaoha at 01100 and reliava head ache and ac tat lea. We raoommend It aa tha brat and aafaat ax tarnal counter-irritant known, also aa an ex ternal remedy for pains In 0a oboet and etouv achandall rheu!natlu,xeura.jTle end pout com plalnta. A trial 111 prove wuatwa olalm for la and It wilt be found to ba Invaluable la tb household. Many people aay "It la tha beat ol all your preperatlens." Prloe 1 A eente, at all drupe; t eta, or ether deal' are, or by tending this amount to ue. In paaiue etarope we will eud you a tuba by mail. No article should b aooeptnd by the publle unless tha aaiua oar. lea our label, as other it) it la not genuine. ceESESttusa mNi'FACTir.r:a co, IT fttata direct, Maw York City. KK W f SN 8 K) N TI W . liJ7t jinijZ itiouB certain eurvivorsaal their vtdow ol thai diaii Wars irom lail to ife M will py a.. eve.7 ejiH4Jiti.raol Claim uudnr ttuv eot. Ac ul July l ii venaluus oartelu eolulers whv ha p-' coulWet shtvUi, elau wUo tuaj be oaar 4 a a aecartiuu. NitpuHi4u au lve. AUvliw 1 a ) 4 bleiikseaUfuUiatittuotlu!,, tadrtU W V t'MiitUi AtfwiKy, W-Uft butU.uif, tn la&i u kim., VV..iiU4(lon, 1'- O. iwotiy yatw. vistuUt ia Waa luaiui. tliS"' the ! mu for ft uuu.a. in 1 nri- it r- - v-r If. ! II WI I J Dost Cout'a Syrup. Toatrs G00& tJse R?J Li In tlnio. Srtld b-r clrt'ggl.t. r3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers