TO WORKING GIRLS TREE MEDICAL ADVICE Every working girl who it not trell Is cordially Invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice ; it is freely given, and has restored thousands to health. nss Paine's Experience. V I Want to thank you for what you hare done for nj'e, and recommend I.ydla E. Plnkhnm's Vegetable Coiiipotind to all girls whose work keeps them standing on their feet in the store. The doctor said I must atop work l he did rot seem to realize that a frirl cannot afford to stop work ing. My back ached, my appetite was poor, I could not sleep, and menstrua tion' vrasj scanty and Tery painful. One day when sufferinir I commenced to soph found -that my menstrual periods were free from pain and natural ; everyone is surprised at the change in me, jjnd I am well, and cannot be too grateful for what you hare done for SnMJ-Viss Jajm Paine, 630 West 2.th Si, New York City. $sooo forfeit ' Mutual if (ton letter proving menulneeue can Kit to promote: Take no substitute, for it is Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound that cures. rar ' 1 wi wfc Irwin. vnw CTcirnnw kU A I Uok for the Sifs of the rWnd rAWA 7 the rMM TOV on Uw buttons. AtfAjS) I mm IUKATI ti. Ct of the Skin and Blood Should Bein NOW BLOOD HUMOURS, Skin Humours, Scalp Humours, Baby Humours and every kind of Humour from Pimples to Scrofula, with Premature Loss of Hair, may now be speedily, permanently and economically cured by Cuticura Resolvent, greatest of Blood and Skin Purifiers, assisted by the external use of Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Soap. Thousands of the world's best people have found Instant relief and speedy cure by the use of Cuticura Resolvent, Ointment and boap m the most torturing and disfiguring of ITCHING, BURN ING and SCALY HUMOURS, ECZEMAS, RASHES, ITCH INGS and INFLAMMATIONS. . Thousands of Tired, Fretted Mothers, of Skin-Tortured and f isfipured Babies, of all ages and conditions, have certified to almost miraculous cures by the Cuticura Remedies when the best medical skill has failed to relieve, much less cure. Cuticura Treatment is local and constitutional complete and perfect, pure, sweet and wholesome. Bathe the affected surfaces with Cuticura Soap and Hot Water to cleanse the skin of Crusts and Scales and Soften the Thickened Cuticle, dry without hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Ointment freely to allay Itching, Irritation, and inflammation, and Soothe and Heal, and lastly take Cuticura Resolvent to Cool and Cleanse the Blood, and put every function in a state of healthy activity. To those who have suffered long and hopelessly from Humours of the Blood, Skin and Scalp, and who have lost faith In doctors, medicines, and all things human, Cuticura Remedies appeal with a force hardly to be realized. Every hope, every expectation awi Jtened y them has been more than fulfilled. More great cures of .Simple, scrofulous, and Hereditary Humours are daily made by the m than by all other Blood and Skin Remedies combined, a single set being often sufficient to cure the most distressing cases when all else fails. ODTICCBA UMEDUM on aoM OmoshMt etrlUua world. niOMl OaUewe Basel. Jjet. SO, pee kettle Oa tee km f Ckeealete- OoeM rills, sit. pet ml tf so), Vwa OUtawat, SOt. ar ka, sa Outleara Soap, IS, par take. SM tar to trait . "Bums at tke Bleat. Skla s4 Scalp, awl Haw t Our. Iotas," S4 ratw, SO Dts . WIU lUaatfettMO, TmUohoUIs, D traction Is all lipM. 'lactaslas Jsmmc aae cfctaM. MU Pt. ST-tS CfeorwrkM So.. Uoow, . C frwck Depot. ( ie ZT ta- AosttalUa 9ft. B. as Co., Syeaoy. VOXXm SSUO AMD CUsUs Oali oavosunos, sts swuwa, . o. . a. B. B. ft SENT FREE. Cmrei Blood and ikla diimm, Caaears, Itching Ramon, Ban Paint, Botanio Blood Balm B. B. B.) enreff Pimples, scabby, soaljr, itohing Eaenij Cleers, Xattog Boras, Bcrotala, Blood Poison, Bone. Pains, BwoUlngn, Rheums. IlsmOaaoar. Especially sdrtsod (or ehroale eases that doctors, patent medicines and Hot Springs fall to ears ot help. Strength ens weak kidneys. Druggists, II per large bottle. To prore it cures B. B. B. sent free by writing Btooo Balm Co.; 13 Mitchell Btreot, tlaata, Ge, Describe trouble and tree medloal advice sent in lealed letter. Medicine .sent at onoe, pre paid. AU we ask Is that yon will speak s good word for B. B. B. ,Xh man who wants the earth some, times merely succeeds in getting a little dust in his eyes. DaarnMr psnnar nv cotm by local application a they cannot reach the diseased portion ot the ear. There Is only one way to ob re deafness, and that Is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous linlnjr oi the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is In flamed you have a rumbling sound or Imper fect hearing, and when It Is entirely olosed Deafness Is the result, and unless the In nam. motion can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, heating will be destroyed forevor. Nine1 oases out of ten are oaused by catarrh.whieh Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surface. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (eoiiBed by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Clr cu Inrs sent free. F. J.t'nixii 4 Co..Toledo. O. Bold by Druggists, 75c, Hall's Family Fills are the best. A fat woman thinks she is plump, and a thin one flatters herself that she if svelte. , Many Schnot Children Are Sickly. Mother dray's Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse In Children's Home, Now York, break upcolds In 84 hours, l,1"" .wtciiDuuTDB, vonscipauon, ctomacn Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At all druggists, S5c. Sample mailed " anuresi Alien a. Umstea, L. Aof, M.Yi The more we tell our troubles, the larger kukj Ken m grvw. H. H. Gaums Sous, ot Atlanta, Oa., are the only successful. Dropsy Specialists in the nurm. on iiieir iiDersi oner in aavertua meat in another column of this paper. You n judge some people by the things FITS permanently cured.No fits or servos. P.!" "'Orst day5 use of Dr. Kline's Great K erveRestorer. S3 trial bottleand treatise free a.uim, x,w.,vai Area Bt PaIla..Fa. The sii forim'if 'r 'W4yi tat name Mrs. Wtosiow's SoothlngSyrup for ehlldrea teethlng.eof ten the gums, reduces Inflamma tlon.aliays pala.oures wind eolio. ate, a bottle Silence is golden where hush money is concerned. Plso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a oough cure. J. W. O'Bbisk. 823 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 8, 1900. . good thing to count the cost, but aon t forget to say. it. A VIlnnMA ifimii MiiiuiA. - - - bis stamps for nearly ,000. lUiliv 7V THE PIRATES AND BUCCANEERS OF VENEZUELA Thrilling N a natives of the Seventeenth Century When the Coasts Where Ravaged by Morgan and L'Olonnois . i N the good old days of buccaneers and pirates Venezuela, the little war-swept country of the South, so much in the public eye of lute, ffas the very speclul fleld of the world's most notorious free-booters. Francis L'Olonnois nnd Henry Mor gan, who remain unequalled for their unlawful daring nnd skill, and a score ot others were sailing 300 years ago the very seas now patrolled by England nnd Germany, and they were fearless ly pillaging and plundering right and left. This piracy lasted from 1(100 to 1080, during which time England nnd Frnnce wre at ulmoet continuous wur with Bpnln. The richest of nil the towns nnd cities of the Spun lull Mniu in those days were La tiunyni. a place called (librultnr, which to-day is nothing more tlinn n miserable village of lints; Mnracnlho nnd Meriila, in Venezuela, nnd Teurto Hello nnd l'minnm, on either Hide of the Minims. Here, since the days of Cortes and I'lxnrro, the merchandiHC coining from Spniu nnd destined for the colonics of Ecuador, Peru nnd Chile on the south, nud Mexico on the north, and tlio gold, sil ver, emeralds nnd other products from thfr colonies Intended for shipment to Spain were handled, the entire six cities forming a cluster of distributing and collecting points for the products of some of the richest countries on earth. These towns were full of mer chants, Mnrlcnlbo being a settlement of Christianized Jews, and all of them were fabulously rich. It was In 1634 thot Francis L'Olon nois, the most intrepid of the bucca neers, gathered a fleet and set sail for Peurto Cabello, then a mere pirate's resort, from which point he fitted out nnd proceeded toward Maracalbo. A short time before be started on the Venezuelan expedition the Governor of Cuba sent a man-of-war ngnlnst lilm, with Instructions to show L'Olon nois and his crew no quarter. The latter was lying off Haiti, and ascer taining the location of the Spanish ship, armed himself with n meat cleav er, and telling his men that he would give them a lesson in bravery, left with one companion for the hostile vessel. Climbing on board he surprised and killed the sentinels on guard, nnd, go ing below among the sleeping otllcers and crew, he, single-handed, beheaded them one by one, placing the cleaver to his lips and tasting the blood as he despatched them one at a time. This feat stands unparalleled for daring and courage. Henry Morgan, a Welshman, the greatest of the English buccaneers, was a different sort of man from L'Olonnois, but as great a rogue. It was in the year 1007 that Morgan undertook what turned out to be one of the most remarkable naval engage nients ever fought, and which is of In terest to Americans owing to the fact that the conditions were almost exactly the same as those which prevailed in the Santiago fight, of the late Spanish American war. Maracnlbo had been sacked In 1054 by L'Olonnois, but had recovered from the shock, and In 1008 was again a very rich town. Like Snn tlngo, in Cuba, it is situated on the shores of a long bay or lake, having a very narrow mouth so narrow, in fact, that one ship could almost block It. Morgan entered this peculiar bay with three ships, stormed the town and took the fort. His entire command en tered the building nnd were making merry with some wine which the gar rlson had left, when Morgan stepped outside to take a view of the place. Ihe city was deserted, but Morgan sent 100 men into the woods to hunt tip the fugitives, who with their wealth were secreted in the forests round about. They returned with thirty men nnd women. This was kept up for days, and the most inhuman tortures were employed to force these unfortunates to confess where they had hidden their wealth. Some were broken on the jack, while others were tied uud burn ing torches placed between their lin gers. Weary of scenes of bloodshed nnd suffering, Morgan Anally Bulled away, but, to the dismay of hia crew, found the entrance to the harbor blocked by three Spanish wurshlps ill tliu same ilia nner that the Meet of Cervcra was blockaded In Suntlago harbor. They had also rebuilt the fort nt the mouth of the harbor. Undismayed Morgan coolly removed the plunder and prisoners from his largest vessel to the smaller ships of his fleet, and filled it with all the gun powder, pitch, tar, rosin and other com bustibles that ho could find in Mara calbo. Then he mounted wooden can non about over the vessel nnd covered theecks with posts dressed to resem ble men. Having finished all this he scut word to the Spanish commander, stating that tinleBs he paid a heavy ransom for Maracalbo ho would burn the place to the ground. The Spaulsh Admiral replied that unless he surrendered In three days he would enter the harbor and puy the ransom in lead. This brought matters to a bead, and next morning Morgan sailed down the harbor, single file, after the manner of Cervers, leaving Suntiugo harbor, the dummy ship leading, in charge of few resoluto men, who, at a signal from Morgan, were to apply the match to the fuses ami escape In a small boat to the other ships. When the Spanish Admiral saw the first vessel of Morgan's squadron com ing out of the harbor and heading di rectly toward him be sailed In to meet him, grappMng and making fast to the vessel's aides for what he expected would be a hand-to-hand conflict. Then the matches were applied and pandemonium followed. The Spanish Admiral could not unfasten the chains and clampa with which be bad fast ened his own vessel to what be thought was Morgan' flagship, and In a few! minutes his own ship was ablaze from stem to stern. He nnd the members of bis crew Jumped overboard to drown rather than to fall into the hands of Morgon, while the two remaining vessels of his fleet were run aground and abandoned by the officers nnd crews, who fled to the woods. The fort, further down the harbor, hud still to be passed, but Morgan exe cuted a mancuvrc which threw the garrison into a state of alarm, causing them to expect an attack in the rear, and to meet this threotcned onslaught they removed their cannon to a point Home distance from the fort. When this was done Morgan sailed out of the harbor, his sailors jeering at the Spanish garrison, who were nimble to bring their ordnance bark in time to Are on the bold and resourceful pirate. Xew York World. THE DOMAIN OF DESPAIR. The Awful Great Bnnln lletnreen the Kock lec and the Slerrai. There are various kinds uud degrees of deserts in this country, but the most utterly hopeless are found in the so-called Great Basin between the Kockles and the Sierras. This is A vast region of deserts, with here and there an area where nature in prankish mood seems actually to have made an effort to produce spectacular effects of horror. From the Wasatch Moun tains to the Sierra Nevada extends a ghastly stretch of territory which is intersected by a series of high moun tain ranges running parallel north and south, with valleys between. A blrdseye view of the landscape shows three principal run.?s, two of which are known as the Amurgosa and ranamlnt, and between these is Death Valley, so called because It li the very abode of death. Imagine a narrow strip of arid plain shut up between two mighty moun tain walls, the penjvs stretching up 10,000 feet into a burning sky. The surface of this plain, which Is 175 feet below sea level, is a mere crust of salt and alkull, through which a ridden horse breaks up to his knees Into n horrid paste that eats both hair and hide. A gray haze that never lifts makes everything Indistinct nnd puzzling to the view. No vegetation Is to be seen save a very scunty sagebrush, with leaves that are not green, but gray, and here nnd there a sort of cactus that grows to five or six feet in height, with extended branches. It is called the "dead man," because In the night each stalk looks like a corpse by the way side. But the supreme horror of the place is the heat, which is unspenkable. There is a breeze, but it is so scorch ing hot as to blister your face. Streams flow from springs down toward the vullcy, but never reach It, because the heat dries them up on the wuy. Sutur day Evening Post. Killtar and Ioet. The poet entered the sanctum, and the editor, noticing the manner in which the sweet sluger's trousers "bagged at the knees, culled his atten tion to the fact by remarking: "Your trousers ripple like a cloth sea on the stage. They are simply corru gated. Why don't you Iron them?" "Because I have no Iron," replied the hard, somewhat crestfallen. "Then why don't you have them iroupd?" persisted the editor. "Beenuse I haven't another pair, and I can't have them ironed on me, can I ?" "Not very well," coincided the editor; "but I'll tell you what you could do; you could wear them as you do to-day and turn them Uislde out for to-morrow. Wear them alternately right side and wrong side out, and then the bulge creuted one day will be reversed on the next, and your trousers will al ways be as straight ns If Ironed night ly, nnd will be ns artistic as a re versible object which an uncle of mine has Just patented, which Is n piano on one side and a huge refrigerutor on the other, nnd which works lu such a way that the cold ham never interferes with Mendelssohn, and Beethoven doesn't spoil the flavor of the corned beef and cabbage." lie paused, nud the poet bowed low and said: "I will try the snrtorlal experiment you suggest If " He hesitated, uud the editor nsked: 'If what?" "If you'll neeeift my 'Ode to the Rabbit Stew' which you now have un der consideration." New York Times. Aniaalua; Adventurers. In few of the fascinating stories of "The Arabian Nights" are there talus moru bewildering than tlio a ut lion tic accounts of the operation!) of the Hum berts, -wl succeeded in borrowing millions of frillies from the shrewdest money lenders lu France and else where upon the Coutlueut of Europe. These g loans were obtained solely by means of the Ingenious fabrications of the bwlnillers concerning a colossal fortune which never existed. It wus entirely mythical, like the riches of the Count of Monte C'rlsto. The Humbert fled to Bpnln when the bubble burst. After a tedious delay, for which It la not easy to account, they were ar rested In Madrid, -where they had ought refuge. Who can explain why they were not discovered and taken Into custody In the Spaulsh capital long ago? However, they ore notr back In Paris, and the French lawi gainst swindling are entirely severe, and French prosecutious of men or women guilty of gigantic frauds are proverbially relentless. It U likely to go hard with the Humbert. But their pecullur carters have been at astonish ing as were those of the celebrated adventurers Cagliostro and Cassanova la the elehtaenth century. New Tcrk Trjbm A VENERABLE PASTOR CURED BY PE-RU-iMA. Pe ru-na is a Catarrhal Tonic Especially Adapted to the Declining Powers of Uld Age. The Oldest Man in America At tributes His Long Life and Good Health to Pe-ru-na. Mr. Isaac Rrork. of McLennan Count v. Texas, has attained the great age of ll4 years. He is an ardent friend ot Peruna, and speaks of it in the following terms. Mr. llrock says: "After a man Iias lived In the wnrld as Ions, as I have he ought to have found out a great many things by experience, I think I nave done so. "One of the things I have found out to my entire satistnc tion is the proper remedy for ailments due direr-fly to the effcots of the cli mate. "For 114 ychrs 1 have withstood the "I RELY UPOH PE-RU-KA tAR ALL CATARH'IaI. DISEASES.'' of the I nitntl fJlates. During my long life I have known a grcnt many remedies for rouiilis. roliK rntarrh nnd diarrhoea. I had hmiy supposed these affections to he niucreni iinonses. ror the last ten or tilteen years I have been reading Dr. Ilart- ni.ui liuukk, una nave icarnea trom them one thinir in Particular. That Mir.o nf. feetinns arc the same, nud that they arc iMtc?riv canca caiarrn. "As for Dr. llartman's remedv. reruna, I have found it to be the hot, if not the only, reliable remedy for these affections. It Una been mi; xland-bu tor tnanu yeurttand lattrtbute mygond health and my extreme old age to this rcm edu. "It exactly meets all my requirements. I nave conic to relv upon it almost entire ly for the many little things for which 1 need medicine. I believe it to be espe cially valuable to old people, although I hae no doubt it is just as good for the .A..n ' ' I I J 1. - A New nan at 0. Major Frank O'Mahoney, West Side, Hannibal, Mo., writes: "I am professionally a newspaper corre spondent, now "9 years old. I hare watched the growing -power, of the Peruna plant from its ineipieney in the. little log 'cabin, through its gradations of success up to-'its present establishment in Columbus, Ohio, and I conclude that merit brings its. full reward. . "t'n to a few years ago I felt no need to test its medicinal potency, but lately whpn my system needed it, your I'eruna' re lieved me of many catarrhal troubles. Some two years ago I weighed 210 pounds, but fell away down to 108 pounds, and besides lots of flesh I was subject to stomach I troubles, indigestion, loss of nppctite, in somnia, night sweats, and d foreboding of yetting my entire system out of order. During some months I gave Pernna a fair trial, and it rejuvenated mv whole system. I feel thankful, therefore, for. although 79: vears oil. I teel like a young man. Major Frank O'Mahoney. In old age the mucous membrane be come thickened and partly lose their func tion. This leads to partial loss of heari"g, smell and taste, as well as digestive dis turbances. Peruna corrects all this by its specific IIQC TAVIftD'Q Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and lYlUiIein r,tor' Great UOE I HI LUn 0 Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe & lALSZffi rfi.V XCkr.0V C ATM A STI C vcunina siampca C C C. Never sold In balk. Bcwaro of the dealer who tries to sell ".axetblng just as good." Exchange of Compliments. I lie village sexton, in addition to being grave-digger, acted as a stone cutter, house repairer and furniture re mover. The local doctor, having obtained, a more lucrative appointment in another county, employed the sexton to assist in Ins remove!. w ncn it came to settling up accounts tne doctor deducted an old contra ac count due him by the sexton. He wrote at the same time, objecting to the charge made for removing Ins furniture. "If this was steady, it would pay much better than gravedigging. The sexton replied: "Indadc, Oi would be glad ave a steady job; gravediggin' is very slack since you left." To Save Postage. An Irishman who had emigrated to Scotland secured a situation as a butler to a gentleman in Perthshire. The Irishman had a younger brother in Dublin who was very poor, so lie '.bought he would scud him ail old suit A'hich belonged to a former butler in the gentleman's service. Inside the coat he placed the following note: "Dear Brother Mike. Oi am send ing you this ould suit; but I have cut the buttons off the coat and waist- Mat, as tlicy are heavy, and Ui want :o save postage. ours truly, Patrick Maloony." f. a. ui nave put tlic buttons in the trousers pocket." The successful man is by no means nelp4ul to liimsell alone; he bclps lumber of other people as well. There s not a healthy, vigorous, energetic, ielt-rcliant, succcsslul man whose ex imnle does not breed the same ciuali :ies in others, and personal contact with luch a mam is an active stimulant and lirect aid to success. He awakens new ilrcngth and arouses ambition. Flowers that come from a loved hand ihould be in,orc prized than diamonds. My Hair "I had a very severe sickness that took off all my hair. I pur chased a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor snd it brought all my bair back again." W. D. Quinn, Marseilles, 111. One thing is certain, Ayer's Hair Vigor makes the hair grow. This is because it is a hair food. It feeds the hair and the hair grows, that's all there is to it. It stops falling of the hair, too, and al ways restores color to gray hair. U.M status. All Sragjists. It your dronrlat eaauot Supply yo, ouiiar ana f wui apiasa i. h sar sad give Uw suuna nSanMlllE. AdHru.. 9u a botuw, ot yoai ihimI nnrau o J. C. aykji CO., Unr.ll, aUs. operation on all the mucous membranes of the body. Te K,,!'e wi" convince any one. Once used and I'eruna becomes a lifelong stand by with old and young. Mr. Samuel Saunders, of Blvthedale, Mo., writes: "My disease was catarrh of the urethra and bladder. I got a bottle of 1 e-ru-na and hrirnn alrif. i. m-A 1. - t days I was relieved and could sleep and rest all night. I think that Pe ru na is a valuable remedy. I had tried other very nitrniv roenminaniaH v. ..a. n . .. t r;ta..n i. 'ym i i i i i i ir- In I"4" letter Mr. Saunders savs: "I I i' ftffl sA4t ftff, am still of the same mind with regard to I 1 lUffll --illa'l Mill your 1 mllwSJM0'W S'rona- nnd Vlgorou. at the Age mi I 0T . r - t yearn, but not to much effected but that I could hold convert clth my friends; but in June, 1001, my eente of hearing fet me to that I could hear no tound tchatever. I wa$ alto troubled with teve re rheumatic palnm in my Urn 6s. I commenced taking Perum and now my hearing U re stored an good a it ea prior to June, loot. My rheumatic paint are all gone. J cannot tpeak too htghly of Peruna and now, when SS year old, can tay that it hat invigorated mv wole tvttem, 1 cannot hut think, dear Doctor, that you mutt eel very thankful to the all loving Father that yov have been permitted to live, and by your skill bs such, a blasting at you have been to tufferlnj humanity." Rev. J. A". Parker. Mrs. F. E. Little, Tolona, HI., writes: "I can recommend I'eruna as a good medi cine tor chronic ca- A TRAVELER AT SEVENTY-ONE YEARS OF AGE. tarrh of the stora ach and bowels. 1 have been troubled severely with it for over a year, and also a couch. X'nur my cougn is ail gone, and all the distress ing symptoms ot catarrh of the stomach and bowels have disappeared. I will rec ommend it to all as a rare remedy. I am so well I am contemplating a trip' to Yel low Stone Park this coming season. How is that for ne 71 years old? Live fnr something. Do good ar.d leave behind you a monument of virtue that the storm r.f time r:m ncvi-r rip. I ,ii-nt 'ritu i.;...i..c. . ,ut mm, lining iii i i iki hi love and mercy on the hearts of thous ands you come in contact with year by year; you will be as legible on the hearts you leave behind as the stars on the brow oi the evening. Good deeds will shine as the stars oi heaven. Men arc sometimes well acquainted with their head, when they are not so with their heart. Bathluc; the Sick. Youn mothers naturally feel anxious about the baby's bath. It is best to begin at six weeks to put the little one in the water, first folding a soft towel in the bot tom of the basin. Use only Ivory boap, as many of the highly colored and perfumed soaps are very injurious to the tender skin of an infant. Eleanor R. Parker. The potato may not be particular1 sus ceptible, and yet it always succumbs to Perfectly simple and simplv perfect is dyeing with Pt TNAM Fadkless Dyes. The pen is mightier than the sword when ;t comes to signing checks. B)H;Hl;KjHIH,gilCTTHre- The Standard Rheumatic Remedy. STANHAPfi becau,c ,ole physicians declare that it is the only absolute wlflnifAfw cure for rheumatism in its various forms. A prominent physician recently said : "I have never been able to write a prescription that will cure rheumatism, owing to the fact that the usual reme dies do incalculable harm to the digestive organs. KHEL'MACIDE com pletely overcomes this ditficulty benefits rather than injures the organs of digestion hence it ran be taken for an indefinite period, or at long as need be, to effect a permanent cure." Tht Doctor qmtti covtrj ihe cue eitctly, "KheumtdJe ' it tbsoluttfy termless. All Druggists, Ji.oo, Bobbltt Chemical Co., . 2IO Kinds for 16 e. tuaiaciim.lrvilior'aiHltnre found tuor Biirdtjna &ud on rnorc farms than. may otbt-r in Amine. 1 U. re in f rcaaoD fur tin. H e on n and no Uoa of ourrho.'viM tx, J u order to i ttw fellow inn unin-(stciiUa4 o fleet Fo 16 Cents Postpaid A If tssrit sjitfttJcrf al MltM, A II M clfruiL auMisifs), IImms iflfsU srr4sj, t rrlfM ktUr arUUa rtf UsrloM r4Uau tUatiajfUlal h.t asarlau 14 rlaulf LWaullfial n UN fio kind p.UTfiy furnitimur luidloiaof riini. r null our a-rmtr About UsVAront U lor (firsMav Tttsriiil. if-, all f wuy Itt. aftUuiaitU 0?- OhUm tx4 mi tat 4. muu4, f JOHM A. CAi fFB seen rrt. i La ftMsiaisi UfU FBI IT TRBES. enSj AMBNTAL THBBS TRAWBRRiHr PLANia, SURia. ROSBS SRATB TI.Ma K1 ASPARAelS. BTC Catoloca Mat oa arprlleaUoa. A atca lot a Lakarasaa4 tUrrrt flvasasnk RaM-ha run SU44 imrktrn aa fallals as 1 1 ark iftrjfiJfLu chiMa afioafa. tni Miiiu J. ax WATKina PRO, HallaWraVa. I I BM VouikrruB?aMa hvat tja I in lima. Sola br "'-'4. , 20 r . I m -jbbbsV aV T. U1K llliWrTUiid lot L I uiif.-tljM lwL J t!otnf teliWall . Itroit. no. KnollaQ1 1 II Wi M V.lM "In June, tOOl, 1 lost my sense hearing entirely, ify hearing had been eomewhat imnaired fanmral In a later letter she says: "I am only too thankful to you for your kind advice and 'or the good health that I am enjoying wholly from the use of your Peruna. Have been out to the Yellow Stone National a j i , msny otter P'ic in the West, and shall alwavs thank you for your gener osity ."-Mrs. f E. Little. If you do not derive prompt and satiefao' tory results from the use of Pertna, writ at once to Dr. llartman, giving a full state mcnt of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of Tna iiumuuii cuuiiarium, lOiumDUS, Uuio. Our money winning books, written by men who know, tell you all about Potash They are needed by every man who owns a ticld and a plow, and who desires to get the most out of them. They vtrrt. Scad pottal card, GFRVA CAM wosma t8 'ihi Mrrct, New Tvrlc or expressive prepaid. . Baltimore fid.. U. S. A. 2 -.fa UNION MIDI V. L. Doualmm mmkam mnH eutlim poem mmei'm Ooodymmr Wait Hand. Sowmel froeass) ateoai thmn an othoe mmnufmatueme in Ihm world. $25,000 REWARD will b paid to Karon who cd dlspruvo Ihu utmeal. Iln-aiiM W. I.. Douplui Istlie lswttpst mniiufiK turer he ran buy cheaper and frodure Ii la shooa at a ower cost than other con cerns, which enublt him to sell shuri fur J.I. AO aud J.i.uu equal In every war to those sold elsn where fur ft and $.VU. 1 . L. Uoualaa and S.'Uhorsare worn by thousanda o( uien who hare been paying and la.uot helievlucthey could t a Brsuclnss shoe for 3.80 or 3.(W. He has convinced them that lha styto. flu and wear of hU 83.40 and 3.00 ahoea is Jnt " (rood. Civ them a trial and save money. Immsm im sin: ., aau,! la Unlar.il tmH.l: ..m,am mm A sa ol ,,. tS la four Vua. JJ. L. DOUOLAB tM3 OltT BOOB LINK, worth SaVOO OomsaraS with Oihar Makaa, r f impart erne Mmerttm temtnen. Httfm eaten! Calf, iemmel. toe Calf, Calf. ici Mif Cwwa Calt, lirt Hothmol Kaneeroe. fait Colee f ...(a IJIltlnn un haro W. L. DOUULAS Caution: T f ailllaj otl iKHUlWa W. lea AMt4AUAiaa tl B04 H TO Vill ADVERTISE1" Vi'lIV" IT PAYS ffl w Pi eV, A DnOPCY,KtiI eaemt. Bo at SWiaialiU aJ IP 4ms a' wili.. a, a. a. a ax a aoas, las, aumte, c 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers