BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATIONS Of America Use Pe-ru-na For All Catarrhal Diseases. Woman's Benevolent Association of Chlcaito. Mrs. Henrietta A. S. Marsh, President Woman's lienevolrnt Association, of 327 Jackson . Park Terrace, Woodlawn, Chi cago, 111., aays: 'I uttered with la rippe for seven weeks, and nothing helped me until I tried l'cruna. I felt at once that I had at last secured the right medicine and kont stead ily improving. Within three weeks I was fully restored." Henrietta A. S. Marsh. Independent Order of Hood Templars, of Washington. Mrs. T. W. Collins, Treasurer I. 0. O. T., of Everett, Wash., has used the great catarrhal tonic, I'eruna, for an aggravated case of dyspepsia. She writes: "After having a severe attack of la (mppe, I also suffered with dyspepsia. After taking Pcruna I could eat my regu lar meal with relish, my system was built up, my health returned, and I have re mained in excellent strength and vigor now for over a year." Mrs. T. VV. Collins. If you do not derive prompt and satisfac tory results from the use of Pernna write at once to Dr. Hartuian, giving a full state ment of your case and ho win be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hnrtman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. "Like Cores I.Ike". Drunkenness is punished by impris onment in Norway. As soon as lie is incarcerated the delinquent lias no other food than a log of wine morning and evening. The bread is served in a wooden bowl full oL wine, in which it has been soaked for an hour previous. The first day the drunkard swallows his allowance willingly enough. The second day it seems less pleasing. At the end of eight days of this regimen prisoners have been known to abstain altogether from the food thus pitilessly presented. This course of treatment finished, the drunkard, except in rare instances, is radically cured. Many re nounce altogether the use of wine, the very smell of which creates a feeling of extreme disgust. When the Lacedemo nians did for morality by showing to the young of the aristocracy their drunken slaves, the Norwegians do .di rectly for - the drunkards themselves. It is the treatment by satiety and dis gust. If "like cures like" then there is sound philosophy in this homeo pathic treatment of inebriety. It Pnsxled II Ira. Grimes My wife paid me quite a compliment last night. She told me I would make a good novelist. Henderson How did she come to tell you that? Grimes That's what I don't know. I was explaining to her how I happened to be so late getting home, and all of a sudden and quite irrelevantly, she said, "Do you know, John, you would make a splendid novelist?" Naturally I felt flattered, but it seemed odd at the time, and it still puzzles mc, that she should have thought of it just at that moment. An Ancient Stlke, Probably the oldest strike on record is that of the bakers engaged in baking the shewbread for the Temple, which took place two years before the de struction of the building by Titus. The Temple authorities engaged a number of journeymen from Alexandria to take the place of the strikers, but the new comers not being initiated into the se crets of the trade the demands of the Jerusalem bakers had to be conceded. Hi air "About yeir ago m hair wii coming out very fast, o I bought bottle of Ayer't Hair Vigor. It (topped the falling and made my hair grow very rapidly, until now it i 45inchea in length." Mri. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kant. There's another hunger than that of the stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hair needs food, needs hair vigor Ayer's. This is why we say that Ayer's Hair Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy. tl-MlMtls. AlHrsjrUls. It your drurgitt cannot supply you, "nd us out oolW and we will express you a bottle. He sure aod aire the name oi your nearest exnrsis office. Address, J. C.AYKR CO., Lowell, Moss. CW"n?t,Uycd c c C "ever sold la bulk. ewait ofths dealer w!v U'.cn to eU wuMtalng just as ywd." Hjluuot,rllllu Ant of ,Tun 7, leal pan. " Wsnirow V'. """"uiltlnrtr widows of tu la- July I, p.uiSu' uuu tl.1. Vui. Aut ol wi,Wtta .'l!,u' soldiers who li4 urlol f '"luu. Mo uJ','u " "UJ t uuwgwt Willi XVullT, Will. 1? " wo. nun . 1,; ""'y irmo w was ""Unr. mm tut corns. , " ut lot couu. , SjPSY "Ew DISCOVERT; ' hook rt (JJ quuk r. 1.1 ul ,U1M trt4tmnt MRS. HENRIETTA A. 8. MARSH. j The NEW FARMER Nearly Everything Now Being Done by Machinery. 1"THE tired city mnn who Mirn. f longingly to thought of "tho old farm" of his lnylh mem ories nnd la impelled to go Micro or to i.onio place as nearly re sembling It na may bo Hint, like Autu mn, of the classic fable, he may recup ?rate his wattled energies by once nore touching Mother Eurtli. would do well to forget all traditions of pnxtoral 'ife or prepare himself for the shock )f a great disappointment. The man with the hoe. the sturdy irtlHt of the scythe nnd cradle, the lower who went forth to sow with a )ng of seed nroting bis neck, the nius ular plowman, whose strong hnnds ieep the Implement from tinning flip laps when Its point struck a root, the tripping milk inn Id carolling n song U these nnd many other familiar oli lects which the city man Inscpnralily associates with the old farm bear ibout the samo relation to the modern arm that the traditional salloiinnu of .ho days of wind-propelling craft bears io the oonl passer or the oiler In the shaft alley of the modern steamship, The best education for the up-to-date fanner Is a course In mechanical engi neering. Ills burn Is no longer the wn of the poets, with great wlnd iwt'pt floor spaces under fragrant now. It more resembles a store house !or miscellaneous machinery. Its por mill ne odor Is the smell of machine ill. and one makes his way about with 'lrcuinspectlou .liilem In.llfftrcnt to torn clothing nnd abraded cuticle. EXIT THIS OLD PLOW. In breaking the soil for planting the familiar plow, which gave even a itrong man plenty to do In managing It ind his team, has largely given place to the reversible sulky plow, on which ;he former rides ns comfortably as on i wagon seat, and which he controls by levers actuated by his foot, leaving lis hands free to manage his horses, bis cob pipe, or his cigarette, if ho orefers. His plowing finished, the farmer pro reeds to pulverize and smooth the land. Time was when he dragged It with a harrow of scrap Iron. The farmer now mounts the seat of ;be sulky harrow, flicks a fly off the liink of bis off horse and away he goes. The mnchlne pulverizes and smooths .'he soil much better than It was for merly done. Here, too, the horse Is menaced with displacement as a prime motor. As a mechanical proposition oats and hay are even less economical is fuel than anthracite in strike time. In fertilizing his land the modern farmer has the advantage of the work if the chemist who provides just what It needs in the form most convenient for application by machinery. The tin speakable operations connected with :he band distribution of barn yurd com post are no longer necessary. THE NEW MANURE. If this material is used the labor of spreading it is performed automatically by a machine which effects a desicca tion and distribution unattainable by hand Implements. The quarter acre of reeking quagmire;, once known as the barn yard, through which one must wade ankle deep in crossing it, has disappeared from the modern farm, for which every one having occasion to visit It, and who brings with him some respect for bis shoes, may de voutly give thanks. Composting and ensilage conserve the nitrogenous com ponents of barn yard ooze much better than was done when they were left to "weather." , For' planting there is a machine for every kind of seed, cunningly designed, well built and perfectly adapted to the work for which it is tntemled. It makes no mistakes, never skips an Inch, sows no moro thickly, in one place than in another, and does its "stunt" with an intelligence which even the Impossible Jonas of the. Itollo book could not have displayed. For grain and grass the "broadcast seeder" Is used. This Is attached to an ordinary wagon, and the only hu man co-operation It requires is keep lug its hopper full. It will distribute nil kinds of dry commercial fertilizers and will put them Just where they will do most good. A mechanical grain drill Is provided for such grains as need to be planted systematically in rows or hills. It Is infallible In its operation and would plant corn, for example, in the middle of a macadam road, If this was re quired of it. Among other attachments It has a land measure, something like a cyclometer, which records tho acreage planted and would calculate tho yield were It not for the element of uncer tainty Introduced by weather vicissi tudes, nnd. the variable industry of crop destroying birds nnd insects. To cover the seed it has planted It Is pro vided with a system of hoes which are adjusted to work straight or zigzag. THE KIW WEEDEB. A variant of this apparatus weeds as well tis sows. Still another is the benn planter, which is quite remarkable In its intelligence, so to speak. It drills the hole In the ground, plants the beans, covers them, and marks the po sition of the next row at one operation. It will even alternate corn and beans. turn and turn about or plant corn or beans, distribute fertilizer and cover everything Impartially. In fact, it will do anything for which the farmer has the Intelligence to adjust It. The potato planter would mnke the fanner of a generation ago sit up and rub his eyes. It requires thnt Hie po' tatocs be supplied, but will do all the rest of Its own initiative. It picks the potato up nnd looks It over or seems to cuts It Into halves, quarters, or any desired number of parts, separates the eyes and removes the seed ends. It plants whole potatoes or parts thereof, us desired, as near together or ns far apart as the Judgment of the farmer on the driving seat suggests. Having dropped the seed It covers tt, fertilizes it, tucks It In like a child put to bed, and paces off the next row with mathematical accuracy. With a phonograph attachment it might even repeat the familiar Invocation, "Now I lay me," etc.. If any advantage was discoverable therefrom In the cuse of a tuber. Certain vegetables, notably tomatoes, cabbages, cauliflower, celery, lettuce and some others, need to bo started In cold frames nnd transplanted for the practical business of growing. Vol this purpose there Is a plant-setting machine, which will bundle a sprout as If It loved It, establish it In its new environment, gather the enrth leiiderly about its roots, give it n copious drink of water from a tank it carries, and cover from four to six ncrcs In n day! The transplanting Is done so quickly that the plant Is snld to be established In Its new position before It realizes the fact that It lias been moved or has time to become homesick. MORE MACHINERY. The various operations gencrlcnily known ns "cultivating" were once the banc of the farmer's existence. For them he needed n hickory back with sole leather hinges and frequent stimu lation from the swltehel Jug. The hoe was his Implement, of greatest general utility. With It he lestrojed the weeds, loosened the soil, shaped up the hills, and did many other laborious and extremely monotonous tasks. It was, moreover, discouraging worft He could only do it by daylight, wheie- as the weeds kept growing night a'ld day. and by the time he had finished the Inst row of bis Held, behold, the weeds were a foot high nt tho point where he hud begun nnd he must do It nil over again. Now he has n machine for each and every operation of crop tending, with a driver's seat as comfortable as that of a buckboard. These machines seem to know a weed from u crop plant in tuitively, and while they will snake the former out by the roots without com punction, they pass the plant un harmedprovided, of course, It is grow ing In its proper place. Sonic of these machines will do almost anything ex cept entertain the farmer while at work with agreeable and Instructive conver sation; but they have been highly spe cialized, and for every operation con nected with the tending of every kind of crop there Is some one machine, which performs h a little better than any other. GATHERING THE CROPS, When the crop Is ready for gathering mechanism is seen at its best. The perfection of the modern reaper and binder Is illustrated by an incident which occurred this year in Illinois. A farmer had driven his reaper Into the edge of n field ready for cutting and dismounted from his seat to get a drink. While thus occupied the horses took fright at something and ran away. They tore round and round the field, cutting a full swath with every Jump, gathering up the grain, binding it with twine nnd tossing the bundles to mii' side. Before the team was cnuph'. it hnd covered six nnd a hnlf avres, leav ing only patches here nnd there to be gone over. This was accomplished In something less than twenty-four min utes. IN THE FARM HOUSE. Indoors the city man misses nil that made the farm house a museum of treasures. The sewing machine has usurped the place of the erstwhile spinning ' wheel, the brick oven has given place to the portable range, and the old bine churn has made way for the patent device which hicks every element of romance or of Interest. If he goes to the milking not even the hired girl goes with him. He finds n farm hand performing the operation by artificially induced vacuum and pouring the warm milk In a whirligig splrnster, where thn,t Is removed from it which gives him an uneasy sensation in the region of the abdominal dia phragm if he recalls bow, in guileless infancy, he was wont to drink the fluid dipped at about ninety degrees Fahrenheit from the milk maid's pall. Of a truth the old farm is no place for a city man who cherishes niemoriei of a boyhood rubricated by annual vacation visits to the homestead of his grandfather. New York Times. She Was of Full Ae. The zeal which some women display In attempting to bide their age is ofteu worthy of a better cause, for is not a woman Just as old as she looks'i And it is useless being twenty If she looks thirty, as It Is ridiculous to re fuse to acknowledge she Is thirty if alio looks only twenty. " Only the other day an intimate friend of the writer was married. She was grown up when the writer was n littlo girl, so that she hnd reached that age when a woman is said to be taken down from the shelf and dusted befor her husband saw her. The mortal fear of that woman at the Idea of lile discovering exactly how old she was would have been ludicrous if it had not been so pathetic. Even when it came to tho signing oi tho certificate she would not put down the actual figures, and site went to a lawyer relative to ask whether If, Id signing tho certificate, she put "full age," it would not be sufficient. Ills decision that It would be all right seemed to give her a great deal ol relief, and that was the way in which she filled up the blank. New York News. Main Water (iooil, If lou Like . "When a jnou gets used to drinking rain wuter," suld Mr. N. 1. McDonald, of New Orleans, to the Washington Tost, "there Is no other water in th world that tastes so good. Most of the people in New Orleans have els terns in their yards which hold an abundant supply of water caught from the clouds the purest and best In the world, uccordlng to my notion. ' Tb winter rainfall alone is used, the sum mer catch not being desirable'. It If somewhat curious that in northern lat itudes the cistern water dues not kecr. wholesome uud sweet as it does in our ciuutry." Rain Makes the Museum Topular. A stranger in Washington found bll way to the National Museum. It had been raining, and as he handed his wa brella to the wutchmun at the door b remarked, "I suppose you don't hav many visitors on a day like this." Foi answer the watchman pointed to a rack containing more than 400 timbrel las as evldeuce that at the time ther were over 4X) people In the building "It takes more than a rainstorm to keep people from coming here," h suld; "In fact, it Is on Just this sort of a day that people like to coiuo hurt and study." Value of Hteailr Onlus, Small and steady gains give compe tency with tranquility of mind. New York News. WIUMHUCMC EDITORS. The Local Newspaper Considered aa a Henevolent Institution. It seems singular that many persons entertain the Idea that newspapers are printed entirely for philanthropic mo fives, says the Cambridge (Mnss.l Times, nnd thnt their columns should bo devoted to their especlnl benefit. There is a class who think that ad vertising Is Inserted more to fill up space, and they consider that the pub Usher of a locnl paper should lie grate ful for the church notices they con tribute. In nine cases out of ten the notices w-hlch these benign brothers and sis ters send are really nothing more not less than advertising matter, for which they nsk publication without cost', while they at the same time derive a revenue by this method of reaching the people. They enter n newspaper office nnd place their notices of church fairs, fcstivols and other entertainments on the editor's table with as much grace ns though they were tendering a twenty-dollar bill. The up-to-date local paper employs a staff of men to collect news which Will be of Interest to all classes. These men ore hustlers, know their business thoroughly, and present the news In the most concise and condensed form possible. Instead of the publisher being dp pendent on personal or communicated matter to fill his columns, he Is fre quently at bis wits' ends as to how he shall contrive to find space for legiti mate local news. He is obliged to cull material furnished by bis newsgath crers nnd present to the public whot will be for the greatest interest of all. But It is not the news which sup ports the newspaper, and the actual returns from sales nre but poor re muneration for the time and patience devoted to it. Therefore the revenue received which sustains the plant is derived through Its advertising pa tronage. The publisher sells the space In his pnper Just as a merchant would dis pose of his wares, and reading notices are received at a higher rate than dis play advertising, there being no bar gain days in a newspoper office. We know of no profession where there is so much liberality shown as In the newspaper business, and so little appreciated by those who receive gra tuitous favors through Its columns. Fourth Estate. WORDS OF WISDOM. Hidden guilt is the most hurtful. Justice seeks those who will not seek mercy. Blank cartridges will often maCe the most noise. Only the unworthy cause will use unworthy means. Every man reveals himself when he describes another. True humility bows lower as pros perity rises higher. The temperature of the heart cannot be gaged by the head. We nre too altruistic over duties nnd egotistic over rewards. It tnkes two to make a quarrel, but only one may make peace. The only way to flee the vengeance of sin is to fear its veuoin. Selfishness is the cause of sin and sacrificing service its cure. Talk about "looking for opportunities of doing good!" We inuy as well talk about looking for firewood In a forest or for water during a flood. The world Is full of such opportunities. Kam's Horn. TV hat the Ejea Say. Blue eyes are said to be weakest. Upturned eyes are typical of devo tion. Wide-open eyes are Indicative of rashness. Side-glancing eyes are always to bo distrusted. Brown eyes are said by oculists to be the strongest. - Small eyes are commonly supposed to indicate cunning. The downcast eye has In all ages been typical of modesty. The proper distance between the eyes Is the width of one eye. People of melnncholic temperament rarely have blue eyes. Eyes of long, sharp corners indicate great discernment and penetration. , The white of the eye showing be neath the Iris Is indicative of cool de liberation. Gray eyes turning green in anger or excitement are Indicative of a choleric temperament. An eye the upper lid of which passes horizontally across the pupil indicates mental ability. The Premium Flan. In carrying out the premium plan of wages in conjunction with piece-work It has been found that owing to fluctua tions in tlie volume and nature of the work it is necessary to adjust the rate price from time to time. If an efficient workman mukes very large wuges on piece-work the, employer is apt to re duce the rate, und, nfter that the work man Is apt to do Just as much ns be thinks the employer will stand without another cut, and so reduce the possible output of bis machine. A modification of this system has been successfully tried In some very large English work shops. Piece-workers are given a cer tain stint, in American parlance, which constitutes an hour's work, being puld by the hour. All they do In excess of this is considered premium work, for which they receive half-wages. The employer thus shares to the extent of one-half in the Increused production, so that he need not be under tho necessity of cutting down the rate. Xleuhnnt'a Task Stolen. Thieves suwed off the great tusks of Jumbo II. last night and carried them away. Tho elephant was tho property of Bostock, and on account of his ugly disposition had caused bis owner much trouble.- Ue was known as. a man killer, and the deaths of a number of men are credited to him. When Bos tock left big -summer quarters, Jumbo II. was left behlud. J'rlduy be died. The thieves came prepared for a burd Job, and their work was fur from easy. The Iron baud which surrounded one tusk was almost sawed lu two before the vandals decided to saw on each side of the ring. The tusks were four inches In diameter and three feet louj(. Iudluuapolis News, & as. Professional Tips for Reporters. There are certain forms of expression all reporters should carefully adhere to. In rescuing drowning men, it must al ways be when they were going down for the third time. No case is on rec ord of a rescue when the sufferer was going down for the first time. When a gentleman gives a bank note, it must be "crisp." Thuds are of two de scriptions, the "dull" and the "sicken ing. ' Of course, every writer knows that fire is always mentioned as the "devouring flame." What "wildfire" is no one exactly knows, but when any thing spreads rapidly, remember, it "spreads like wildfire." Flags must al ways be "flung to the breeze," no mat ter whether there is any breeze or not. If you can manage. to get an assault, a forgery and a burglary all into one col umn, do it, tor it will secure that beau tiful and well-known heading, A Car nival of Crime. Always remember that a man is "launched into eternity," not hanged a certain time. When a person after an accident is found to be dead, it is best not to say so, but that the "vital spark had fled. Speeches on the political side which your paper ad vocates should always be ringing speeches. I.llnrs In Aulmnn. To pmduce lilac blossoms in autumn is a wonderful achievement, considering how peculiarly they are associated with the spring time, and the way in which it is accomplished is most curious and interesting. In a state o( nature the lilac olant reauircs a period ot rest be fore producing its flowers. That period is the winter, when the cold enforces repose. But it is found that the plant can be cheated into blossoming in au tumn by exposing it to the fumes of ether, which put it to sleep tor a little while, after which it proceeds to bios som luxuriantly. Florists grow the plants in pots, and in the tall place them, pots and all, in a large box which contains an uncorked bottle of ether. In this manner they are exposed to the jthcr vapor for forty-eight hours, the box being air-tight; and sometimes the operation is repeated a few days later. When they come out they arc ready to start right in at blossoming and the glass gardener obtains a fine crop of lilacs .for the early winter trade. The process sometimes weakens the colors af the flowers, but this does not matter in the case of lilacs, because the kind preferred by flotists is the white. The ('oilflsh. There is scarcely a fish in the whole finny kingdom that is more useful to man than the cod.' As an article of Jiet, whether fresh or salted and dried, t is a most important addition to our ood supplies, and is made use of in ,-arious ways for the support of man tnd beast over a widely extended area. The tongue is regarded as a delicacy, lie swimming bladder furnishes isin jlass almost equal to that of the stur geon, and the liver gives us the oil Ivhich is so much recommended as a :onic and a food in all wasting com plaints. The Norwegians give cod's head nixed with marine plants to the cows :o increase the yield of milk, the Ice landers give the bones to their cattle,, in Kamchatka the dogs are fed on them, and in icy wastes they are fre quently dried and used as fuel. The cod is prolific enough to admit M this extensive use, for one fish will produce nine million eggs. Manv of ns might be happy if we did not suffer from disorders of the liver. Then wo oiiKht to me Or. August Koenig's Hamburg Drops, which cure tlio disorders nnd bring the whole system to a healthy cond.tion. The projected railway from Khnrtouin to Suakim will traverse recently discov ered coal fields. How's This? ' We offer One Hnmlrsd Dollars Rewsril fot snv case of Catarrh that cannot be oured by Halt's Catarrh Cure. P. 3. I'HXKSt & Co., Toledo, O, We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Thenev for the last 16 years, and believe him )irfotly honorable, in nil buainess transac tions and nnmciiUty able to curry out an; obligation made bv tuolr linn. Wkst A TsuiX Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WiLiimu, Ki.sxia A Mabvim, Wholesale DrugirUts, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's t atarrli Cure Is takrn Internally, act Injr directly upon the blood and mucous ur Jaeee ot the system. TeaUwoniaui sent lire, i rice, 75c. per bottle. Hold by all Drucgmis. Hall's t'ully l'ilis r Ui hmt. The averane wrecks in the Multie Sca is ' one every day throughout '.he year THE CHILDREN ENJOY Life out of doors and out of the games which they play and the enjoy ment which they receive and the efforts which they make, comes the greater part of that healthful development which is so essential to their happiness when grown. When a laxative is needed the remedy which Is given to them to cleanse and sweeten and strengthen the internal organs on which It acts, should be such aa physicians would sanction, because its component parts are known to be wholesome and the remedy itself free from every objectionable quality. The one remedy which physicians and parents, well-informed, approve and recommend and which the little ones enjoy, because of its pleasant flavor, its jrentle action and its beneficial effects, is Syrup of Figs and for the same reason it is the only laxative which should be used by fathers and mothers. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy which acts gently, pleasantly and naturally without griping, Irritating, or nauseating and which cleanses the system effectually, without producing that constipated habit which results from the use of the old-time cathartics and modern imitations, and against which the children should be so carefully guarded. If you would have them prow to manhood and womanhood, strong, healthy and happy, do not g-ive them medicines, when medicines are not needed, and when nature needs assistance in the way of a laxative, give them, only the simple, pleasant and gentle Syrup of Figs. Its quality is due not only to the excellence of the combination of the laxative principles of plants with pleasant aromatic syrups and juices, but also to our original method of manufacture and as you value the health of the little ones, do not accept any of the substitutes which unscrupulous deal era sometimes offer to increase their profits. The genuine article may be bought anywhere of all reliable druggists at fifty cents per bottle. Please to remember, the full name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYR.UP the front of every pack age. In order to get its beneficial effects it is al ways necessary to buy the genuine only. A meeting of princesses held at Cas scl voted to join the newly organized Society o( German Princely Women for the Promotion of Social Morality. Secret service officers raided a house in Detroit, Mich., and arrested three men on the charge of counterfeiting. FITSnermnnently oared. No 11 ts or nervous nessaftertlrst day's use of Or. Kline's Oreat Nerveltestorer.titrlal bottleand treatlsefrea Hr.B. H. Eui, Ltd., 9J1 Arflh Sc., Fails., fa. Ths sun gives us 36,000,000 times as much light as all.tne stars put together, , Mrs. WInslow's Soothing Syrap for children ttetlilng.softenthe gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays patn.oures wind nolle. U5o, a bottle Orange juice is one of the best dressings lor DiacK snoes or uoots. Carpets can he colored on the floor with 1'LT.NAM f ADELE88.DYE8. There are only 800,000 white people io nnuen oouin Airica. I do not believe Plso's Cure for Consump tion baa an equal for ooughsand colds Joan i. BoTxa, Trinity Springs, Ind. , Feb. 15, 1 900. The chance of two finger prints being mine is not one in o,uuv,uuu. CH0000tOi0KlKiH00Ol0 ST. JACOBS OIL POSITIVELY CURES Rheumatism Neuralgia Backache Headache Feetache All Bodily Aches AND CONQUERS PAIN. OtHoooaoiKKSoKioa M.-st fcupri.lug. ccordinir to an American who has been traveling in Japan, the Japanese have a word of salutation which sounds like Ohio. When he was in 1 okobama a fellow countryman was seeing the siuhts from a rickshaw. The Japanese are very polite, and whenever the American met them they gave hurt the usual word of greeting. At first he wasn't quite certain, but as party after party bowed profoundly and said Ohm, lie became convinced that hey were uttering the name of his own State, and he was a badly puzzled Oc cidental. Finally, on passing a group of a dozen or more, who were more than usually courteous, and who vocif erated the word of welcome, he couldn't repress his astonishment any further. "Yes," he said, "I am from Ohio, and from Jefferson county; but how did you fellows get on to the fact?" Onru Khtoauuia ul Idttlcs srotnUiliif tht Il hi fctttw Uia Us silt Um4 suriitf. aU In the fall-winter of lyoo T mmm t)i n. that I bad to use a oaiip to assist me lu j, -t i genuine only. V7J 5 7 i 1 WWHWi . . .1 . j miij ipwiwuu iu wnioo i ooum oear mr lea waa straight out io troot of me, while In a leollnlng position, iloall.iua the uatura ot the dlaeasv. 1 began treatment st ouoe, but reoelved do relief until InUut .il br Mr. J, T. 1 luster of Greenville, of the dru( Arm of Hruoe ft buster, to tf 1 Dosier that If I bottles did not euro me the money w ;iuld be riu..--d. te Dot! la relieved ma, and I have had 110 louoh of rheumatism slnoe t -1 1 e. w, A. Paluior, who lived here st tlio time (Ivui), wudowa wnh ev- -t' V of rheuioailnui, and for sly wess had to be tarned In bed on a - . -v lug jihyslulsii. who Is a rat liellf iw lu ilie emuaoy of your . Vours truly, J. L. O. TUOMFSON. Kdltor i-ii aens S..., -e Miin.. nmvi . All DniL'-Ues, or upmnp urrpaid1, Piile f . Bobbltt Chemical to., . CO. - is printed on A Golden Rule of Agriculture: Be good to your land and your crop will be good. Plenty of Potash in the fertilizer spells quality nu ifuitiiiiiy mine lvl'iA vest, vwiic u HI1U we will send you, free, by next mail, our money winning books. HERMAN KAU WORKS, 1 Nssssi Strut, Mew Yerk. I suffered from indiges tion and thought I vou!d rather die than live. I was not able to work for four teen months. A friend rec ommended Ripans Tabules to me and I got a box. I immediately began to im prove. I enjoy hree good meals a day now and never felt better in my life. At druggist, rbe Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary oeeasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains siinnlv tor vr. Capsicum Vaseline Put up In Collapsible Tubes. A Subetitute for tnd Snnerlor to Mustard nv my other planter, and will not blister the moil delicate skin. The tmin allay In and curative qualititu of thli articlo are wonderful, It vtli atop the toothache at uooe and reller htad a'he and sciatica. We recommend It aa the best and safest ex ternal counter-irritant known, also as an ex ternal remedy for imins in the ehest and atom. ach andall rheumatlc,neuralf.c and gouty com plain ts. A trial will prove whet we cialni fur It. and It will be found to be invaluable In the household. Many people say "It is the best of Hrire 10 cenu, at all drurirlsts. or other deal. era, or by sending this amount to us In postatf: tamps we will send you a tube by mail. ro arnme anouie e aocepiea rjy the pun lid nnless the same carries our label, aa otherwise it lu not genuine. CHESEBBOUGQ MANUFACTURING CO, IT State Street. New York City. ITPAY5 TDWuTrro.OTlSrKW.MJlS SITUATIONS SECURED fOR CRADUATCS.OD MONET RCTURNCBXtPAYMWuH 14 A CCCV BUSINESS. riA.JL-l COLLEGES' Bl RMINOHAM.ALA. MICHMOND.VA HOJSTCN.TEX. COLUMBUSAA. ADVERTISE""."i"I';"" ITPAYS uU la tkt slctd Ml IriTisf tstrn est it III mtsa. Hops dUssmi JUMptl, M (Ms gntl nmtif. t.i with u.. . u v. .1 . walking. Upon sluing- down, there waa ja, ue was irrO00UHU0 Wll 1 t . k.ibJ- is. S.C. r MM lis S&tfff wmm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers