1 i ' The Cure that Cures i p Coughs, & V Colds, I $ Grippe, Ik K Whooping Cough, Asthma, V ;j Bronchitis and Incipient 2f Consumption, Is g . German remedy g j So o, o dturvste. 25c50tAA BUY GOODS IN OHiCAGQ J J, m ''!" ' - x- - H''," feji' t:!!'!:'.ifV.- - """'"""i"".'r-r T. Have you tried '.ho Cntalo system o( buying EVERYTHING you use at Wholesale Prices? We can save you 15 to 40 per conton your purchases. We are nowcroot'ng and will own and occupy the highest building in America, employ 2,000 clerks tilling country orders exclusively, and will refund purchase price if goods don't suit you. Our General Catalog 1.000 pages, IG.000 Jlustrations. 60,000 quotations costs us 72 cents to print and mail. We wiii send it to you upon receipt of 1 5 otntt, to show your good faith. MONTGOMERY WARD & GO. MICHIGAN AVE. AND MADISON ST. CHICAGO. LOOP POISON A SPECIALTY'S; lllarT Itl.OOD TUISON DCrmmrnM. ! cured In llitnjj days. Tou can bo treated at home f orsame price under eame gun ran ty. If too prefer tocome hero ne will con. tri'.cl to l.sr railroad fureaml lintel hi n. mmI ooeharae, if we fall toenro. If ruu have taken mer cury, lodtdo potash, and (till have aches and pain., SI ucoiisl'aic lira hi mouth, Sore Throat, Pimples, Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on any part of the b ly. Hair or Kychrowa falling out, It la this Hecondury liLOOM POISON e guarantee to care. We solicit the most oh.tl cato cases and challenge t lie world for a ease we cannot cure. This dheaso boa always raffled the aUlll of the ruost eminent phyal elans. SVIOO.OOO capital behlnoT our uncondi tional guaranty. Absolute proofs sent sealed 00 apphcatsin. Address COOK KKMKDY CO. 101 Uiuonto Temple, CUICAt.O, ftfa A BIG CLUB. cut this out and return to "s with ai.no nd we'll send the (ollowlmr, postage prepaid : VERMONT FARM lol ltNAI. l YEAR NEW YiillK WKKKI.V TRIBUNE l YEAR, AMKKI'AN I'tH I.TItYJOCKNAl, 1 YEAR, THE GENTLEWOMAN 1 YKAR, MARION HaHLAND'S COOK BOOK. TEN NIGHTS IN A BAR ROOM, All For $1.00. Regular Cost $4.00. Toll combination mis a family need. Two farm papers for the men The "Gentlewoman," an Ideal paper for the ladies N. v. Weekly Tribune (or all Marlon Hartand'a tjook Book with sno pages ami 1 ism practical recipes for the wile. and tbe bom, "Ten Nighta in a Bar Room," toe greatest Temperance novel of the age, A twe cent stamp brings samples of papers and our great clubbing list. Vermont Farm Journal WM.L. PACKARD, PUBLISHER. li'.M MnioSI.. Wilmliml VI. Dr. Humphreys' Specifics net directly upon the disease, without exciting disorder in other parts f the system. They Cure the Sick. IL crass. prices- 1 Fevers. Congestions, Inflammations. .US U Worms, Worm Kever, Worm Colic... .115 3- Terlhlng, Colic, Crying, Wakefulness .tS 4- Dlarrhra. of Children or Adults 'J 3 T -Coughs. Colds, Ilroneliltls 23 H Sruralcla, Toothache, Faceachc 15 Headache, Sick Headache, Vertigo., 10 Dyspepsia. lndlKestlon.WeakStomach.'JS 1 1 eiuppressed or Painful Periods 35 1'2-Whltcs, Too Profuse Periods 25 13 Croup, Laryngitis, Hoarseness t5 14 Kail llheusn, Eryslpolos.Eruptlons. . .45 15 Rheumatism. Rheumatic Pains 35 16 Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague '45 19 Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head .23 '2 -It hooping-cough 33 'If Kidney IMsensra '43 BB-MsrroM DeMllly 1.00 iO-1 rlnnry Wrakness. Wetting Bed... ,'45 77 Grip, Hay Fever 'iii Dr. Humphreys' Manual of all Diseases at your DruggMs or Mulled Free. Sold liv druggists, or sent nn receipt of price. Humphreys' Med. Co., Cor. William A John .m.-., Now Vork. Our Latest Music Offer. Please sentl n the names nnd ad dresses of three music teachers or performers on the piono or organ and twenty live cents in silver or postiii Mid we will send you all of the following new midmost popular pieces full sheet music arranged for piano or organ ; "The Flower that won my Heart' now being sung by tho best known siupers in the coun try, "Maniio O'Kourkn" the latest popular waltz song, "March Manila, Dewey's March Two Step'" as play ed by the famous TJ. S. Marine Band of Washington, D. C, and five other pages of popular music. Address, Popular Music Co., Indianapolis, Ind. tf. Dr. Fenner's Golden Relief. I50c A TRCB BPKClrlO IK ALL INFLAMMATIONS Old fleres, Wounds, Khtumatlim, KsoralguU "tX)lus." A BUne CUHE urlp For in pair mm or oit. inyaaallnrisrtiailsJIT. Ill . . :i D i m THE MAKEIAGE VOWS The Ease with Which They Are Broken Is Deplored. Timely DlHiinnr of Dr. I i.lmnge on the .MarllHl llclullons I ul furm Olvurcr l,nn Ate deeded. Copyright, 1S!0, by l.ouis Klopsch.J Waahington, Sept. 17. Dr. Tnlniuge in ihis diseourse dis niMei a question f national impor tance, which is confessedly as difficult as it is urgent. The text is Matthew rj:0: "What therefore God hath joined together let n man pu! asunder." That there are hundreds and thou sands of infelicitous homea in America no one will doubt. If there were only one skeleton in the closet, that might be locked i and abandoned, Imt in many a home there is a skeleton in the hall way and a skeleton in ail the apart ments. "Unhappily married" are two Words descriptive of many a homestead. It needs no orthodox minister to prove to a badly mated pair that there is a hell. They arc there now. Sometimes ii grand and gracious woman will be thus Incarcerated, and her life will be a crucifixion, as was the case with Mrs. Sigourney, the great poetess and the great soul. Sometimes a consecrated man will lie united to a fury, as was John Wesley, or united to a vixen, 01 was John Milton. Sometimes, and gen erally, both parties arc to blame, and Thomas t al ly Ic is an intolerable grum bler, and his wife has a pungent retort always ready, and Froude, the his torian, pledged lo tell the plain truth, has to pull aside the curtain from the lifelong siumIiIc at Cralgenputtock and S Cheyne row. Some say that for the alleviation of till t hese domestic disorders of which we hear easy divorce is a good prescription! Qod sometimes authorizes divorce as certainly as he authorizes marriage. 1 have just as much regard for one law fully divorced as I have for one lawfully married. l!ut y ou know and I know that w bolesale divorce la one of our national scourges. I uui not surprised at this when 1 think of the Influences which have been abroad militating against the marriage relation. Kor many years the platforms of the country rang with talk about a free love millennium. There were meetings of this kind held in the Academy of Music, Brooklyn! Cooper institute. New York; Tremont temple, Hostou, and nil over the land. Some of the women who were most prominent in that movement have since been dis tinguished for great promiscuosity of affection. Popular themes for such oc casions were the tyranny of man, the oppression of the marriage relation, women's rights and the nihilities. Prominent speakers were women with short curls and short dress and very long tongue, everlastingly at war with Cod because they were created women, while on the platform sat meek men with soft accent and cowed demeanor, apologetic for masculinity anil holding the parasols while the termagant ora tors went on preaching the gospel of free love. That campaign of about 20 years set more devils into the marriage relation than will be exorcised in the next 50, Men and women went home from such meetings so permanently confused as to who were their wives and husbands t hat 1 hey never got out of the perplexity, and the criminal and the civil courts tried to disentangle the Iliad of woes, and this one got alimony, and that one got a limited divorce, and this mother kept the children on condition that the father could sometimes come and look at them, and these went into poorhouses, and those went into an in sane asylum, and those went into dis solute public life, and all went to de struction. The mightiest war ever made against the marriage institution was that free love campaign, sometimes un der one name nnd sometimes under an other. Another Influence that has warred upon the marriage relation has been polygamy In Utah, That is a stereo typed caricature Of the marriage re lation an. I has poisoned the whole land. You might as well think that you can have an arm in a state of mortification and yet the whole body not be sickened as to have any territories or states polygamized and yet the body of the nation not feel the putrefaction. Hear it. gooil men and women of America, thai so long ago ns Hi2 a law was passed by congress forbidding polygamy in the territories and in all the places where they had jurisdiction. Thirty-seven years have passed along and nine ad ministrations, yet not until the passage of the Edmunds law in IHSL' was any active policy of polygamic suppression adopted. Armed with all the power of government and having an army at their disposal, the lirst brick had not till then been knocked from that fortress of lib ertinism. Every new president in his inaugural tickled that monster with the straw of condemnation, and every con gress Stultified itself in proposing some plan that would not work. Polygamy atood in Utah and in other of the terri" tories more intrenched, more brazen, more puissant, more braggart and more infernal than at any time in its history. James Iluchanan, a much abused man of his day, did more for the extirpation of this villainy than all the subsequent ad ministrations dared to do up to 1HS2. Mr. Iluchanan sent out nn nrmy, and, although it was halted In its work, still he accomplished more than the subse quent administrations, which did noth ing but talk, talk, talk. Kven at this late day and with the Kdmunds act In force the evil has not been wholly ex tirpated. Polygamy in Utah, though outlawed, Is still practiced in secret, it has warred against the marriage rela tion throughout the land. It is impos sible to have such an awful sewer of in iquity sending 'up its miasma, which Is wafted by the winds north, south, east and west without the whole land being aff acted by it. Another influence that has warred against the marriage relation in this country has been u pustulous literature, with its millions of sheets every week choked with stories of domestic wrongs nd Infidelities and msssucres and out rages, until it is a wonder to me that there are any decencies or any common sense left on the subject of marriage. One-half of the news stands of our great cities reek with the filth. The congress of the United States needs to move for a change of the na tional constitution nnd then to appoint a committee not made up of single gen tlemen, but of men of families, and, their familes in Washington who shall pre pare a good, honest, righteous, compre hensive, uniform law that will control everything from Sandy Hook to the Golden Gate, That will put an end to brokerages in marriage. Thai will send divorce lawyers into a decent business. That will set people agitated for many years on the question of how they shall get away from each other to planning how they can adjust themselves to the more or less unfavorable circumstances, Mori' difficult divorce will put an es toppel toagreat extent upon marriage as a financial speculation. There arc men who go into the relation just as they go into Wall street to purchase shares. The female to be invited into the part nership of wedlock is utterly unattrac tive and in disposition a suppressed Vesuvius. Everybody knows It, bul this masculine candidate for matrimonial orders, through the commercial agency or through the county records finds out how much estate is to be inherited, and he calculates it. He thinks out how long it will be before the old man will die. and whether he can stanil the re fractory temper until he does die. and then he enters the relation, for he says: "If I cannot stand it. then through the divorce law I will back out. That proc ess is going on all the time, and men en ter the relation without any moral principle, without any affection, and it is us much a matter of stock specula tion as anything that was transacted yesterday in Union Pacific, Wabash and Delaware and Lackawanna. Now, sup pose a man understood, as he ought to understand, that If he goes into that relation there is no possibility of his getting out, or no probability. He would be more slow to put his neck in the yoke. He should say to himself: "Rather than a Caribbean whirlwind with a whole fleet of shipping in its arms, give me a zephyr off fields of sun shine and gardens of peace." liigorous divorce law will also hinder women from the fatal mistake of mar rying men to reform them. If a young man, by L'.'i years of age or 3d years of age. have the habit of strong drink fixed on him, he is as certainly bound for a drunkard's grave as that a train start ing out from the (irand Central depot at eight o'clock to-morrow morning is bound for Albany. The train may not reach Albany, for it may be thrown from the trnck. The young man may not reach a drunkard's grave, for some thing may throw him off the Iron track of cfil habit. But the probability is that the train that starts to-morrow morning at eight o'clock for Albany will get there, and the probability is that the young man who has the habit of strong drink fixed on him before 2." or 30 years of age will arrive nt a drunk ard's grave. She knows he drinks, al though he tries to hide it by chewing cloves. Everybody knows he drinks. Parents Warn, neighbors and friends Warn, She will marry him; she will re form him. If she is unsuccessful in the experiment, why, then, the divorce law will emancipate her, because habitual drunkenness is a cause for divorce in Indiana, Kentucky. Florida, Connecti cut and nearly all the states. So the poor thing goes to the ultar of sacri fice, If you will show me the poverty struck streets in any city, I will show you the homes of the women who mar ried men to reform them. In one ease out of ten thousand it may be a success ful experiment. T never saw the suc cessful experiment, Hut have a rigor ous divorce law, and that woman will say: "If I am affianced to that mon, it is for life, nnd if now, in the ardor of his young love and 1 the prize to be won. he will not give up his cups, when he has won the prize surely he will not give up his cups." "No, sir; you are al ready married to the club, and you are married to that evil habit, and so you are married twice, and you are a biga mist. Co!" A rigorous divorce law will also do muh to hinder hasty and inconsiderate marriages. Under the impression that one eon be easily released, people enter the relation without Inquiry and with out reflection. Romance and impulse rule the day. Perhaps the only ground for the marriage compact is that she likes his looks, and he admires the graceful way she passes around the ice cream at the picnic! It is nil they know about each other. It is all the prepara tion for life. A man not able to pay his own board bill, with not a dollar in his possession, will stand at the altar and take the loving hand and say: "With nil my wordly goods I thee endow." A woman that could not make a loaf of bread to save her life will swear to love and keep him in sickness and in health. A Christian will marry nn atheist, and thnt always makes conjoined wretched ness; for if u man does not believe there is a (lod he is neither to be trusted with a dollar nor with your lifelong happi ness. Having read much about love in a cottage, people brought up In ease will go and starve in a hovel. Runaway mutches and elopements, nine hundred and ninety-nine out of a thousand of which mean death and hell, multiply ing on all hands. You see them in every day's newspapers. Our ministers in some;' regions have no defense such ns they have In other regions where the banns must be pre viously published and an officer of the law must give n certificate that all Is right, so clergymen are left defenseless and unite those who ought never to be united. Perhaps they are too young, or perhaps they are standing already In some domestic compact. By th wreck of 10,000 homes, by the holoeauat of 10,000 sacrifices men and women, by the hearthstone of the family, which is the corner stone of the state, and in the name of that God who hath set up the family institution nnd who hath made the breaking of the marital oath the most appalling of all perjuries, I Im plore the congress of the United States to make some righteous, uniform law for all the states and from ocean to ocean on this subject of marriage and divorce. Let me say to all young people, before you give your heart nnd hand in holy alliance, use all caution. Inquire out side as to habits, explore the disposi tion, scrutinize the taste, question the ancestry nnd find out the ambitions. Do not take the heroesand the heroines ol cheap novels for a model. Do not put your lifetime happiness in the keep ing of a man who has a reputation fur being a little loose in morals or In the keeping of a woman who dresses Im modestly. Remember that, while good looks are n kindly gift of Cod, wrinkles or accident may despoil them. Remem ber that Byron was no more celebrated for his beauty than for his depravity. Remember that Absalom's hair was not more splendid than hiy habits were despicable. Hear it! Hear it! the only foundation for happy marriage that ever has been or ever will be is good character. Ask the counsel of father and mother in this most important step of your life. They are good advisers. They are the best friends you ever had. They made more sacrifices for you than anyone else ever did, and they will do more to-day for your happiness than any other peo ple. Ask them. and. above all. ask God. 1 used to smile at John Hrown. of Had dington, because, when he was about to offer his hand nnd heart in marriage to one who became his lifelong compan ion, he opened the conversation by say- I ing: "Let us pray." Hut I have seen so many shipwrecks on the sea of mat rlmony I have made up my mind that John Drown, of Haddington, was right. A union formed in prayer will be a I happy union, though sickness pale the c heek and poverty empty the bread tray ; and death open the small graves and ail the path f life be strewn with thorns, from the marriage altar with its wed ding march and orange blossoms clear on down to the last farewell at 1hat gate where Isaac and Rebeccai Abra ham and Sarah, Adam and Eve, parted, And let me say to you who are in this relation, if you make one man or wom an happy you have not lived in vain. Christ says that what He is to the church you ought to be to each other, and if sometimes, through the differ ence of opinion or difference of diso sition, you make up your mind that your marriage was a mistake patiently bear and forbear, remembering that there is a glory in the patient endur ance of a sad yoke. Life at the longest is short, and for those who have been badly mated in this world death will give quick and final bill of divorcement written in letters of green grass on quiet graves. And perhaps, my brother, my sister, perhaps you may appreciate each other better In Heaven than you have appreciated each other on earth. In the "Farm Ballads" our American poet puts into the . lips of a repentant husband, after a life of married per turbation, these suggestive words: Anil when she dies I wish that she would be laid by me, And. lying together in silence, perhaps we will agree, And If ever we meet in Heaven I would not think It queer If we love each ether better because we quarreled here. And let me say to those of you who are in happy married union, avoid first quarrels; have no unexplained corre spondence with former admirers; cul tivate no suspicions; in n moment of bad tember do not rush out and tell the neighbors; do not let nny of those gadabouts of society unload in your house their baggage of gab and tittle tattle; do not make it nn invariable rule to stand on your rights; learn how to apologize; do not be so proud or so stubborn or so devilish that you will not make up. Remember that the worst domestic misfortunes nnd most scandalous divorce cases started from little infelicities. The whole piled up train of ten rail ears telescoped and smashed at the foot of an embankment 100 feet down came to that catastrophe by getting two or three inches off the track. Some of the greatest domestic misfortunes and the widest resounding divorce cases have started from little misunderstandings that were allowed to go on and go on until home and re kpectebility and religion nnd immortal soul went down in the crash. Fellow citizens ns well ns fellow Christians, let us have a divine rage against anything that wars on the mar riage state. Hlessed institution! In stead of two arms to fight the battle of life, four; instead of two eyes to scrutinize the path of life, four; instead of two shoulders to lift the burden of life, four; twice the energy, twice the courage, twice the holy ambition, twice the probability of worldly success, twice the prospect of Heaven. Into that matrimonial bower Cod fetches two souls. Outside the bower, room for all contentions, nnd nil bickerings, and all controversies, but inside that bower there is room for only one guest the angel of love. Let that angel stand at the floral doorway of this Kdenie bower with drawn sword to hew down the worst foe of thnt bower easy divorce, And for every pnrndise lost mny there be a paradise regained. And after we qui our home here may we have a brighter home In Heaven, at the win dows of which, this moment, are fa- mibar faces watching for our arrival and wondering why so long we tarry. A Faahlonable Novelty. It can be said with perfect safety that the collarette in it numerous different forms has come to stay. There was some doubt as to whether it would take well at first, especially in high-grade goods, but it is now a well-known fact that they will be largely used this fall and no doubt continue right through winter. Drr Goods Economist. DON T HESITATE BUILD 0R Young Men Vou are builders of your own fortunes. In youth you must builJ for future success. Are you building wisely ? A FEW WORDS OF ADVICE I BTsTaTaTavnaTaTaasTHrTaTSS I mm the most practical cducatioa that can be obtained anywhere, while the cost is Insignificant, QO NT HESITATE, enter Sc.hiss'er College now and build for future succest and prosperity as thousands of others havo done ILLUSTRATED PROSPECTUS SENT ON REQUEST A mof eomplel and tuccessfjl mall count Is provided fur those who cannot attend person ally. Particulars mailed on request COLLEGE iVOPPSTOWN PCHHik. A POSITIVE mi FOB RHEUMATISM R-RHEIMsTrSR Isa Tost i ve Oure for any Pains or Aches, sueli as !fiwMilar Hbeimiatisui, Sprains bruises or Kenralg.Ps This reparation not only chives install? relief, but 1 have isituty tes timonials limn prominent i csitlenls of thin unci other towns "howiug that "NO-RHEUMATISM" lias effected ptsnnaneut cures in enses "t long stuinliii"; Muscular Rheumatism, which would not yield to the licst treatment. GROWINGr ITT PAVOTI . Already a great reputation has been gained for "NO-RHEUMA-tiriin." Orders have been received from throughout the country fr it. It is the people's friend. There never was, or never will be, another remedy on the market to equal "No-Rheumatism." GUARANTEED TO CURE EVERY cask OF MUSCULAR RHEUMATISM, SPRAINS OR BRUISES. After an attack of ln grippe, I wns taken with severe muscular rheumatism. After trying several remedial ami all to no avail, I decided to ry "No-Rheumatism," and after several appli cations 1 felt locally relieved. I tl"rfully recommend same. MRS. H, P. NAULE, Hhamokln, Pa. Hei ne, Pa.. May '.'nd, 1S09. l bars linii to use cane for years on account ol rheumatism, i was toiu to try Australian "Na-Hheumatianr" 1 uui pleased to Hti that the first iM.ttle hos given great relief-hence cheer fully recommend it. Yours truly, SAITOH ZIMMtKMAN. Ptshervtlla, Dsuphia Connty, Pa., June 28, 1880. Having hud great pain In mjf back for soma time, and receiving a sample bottle of No RheuaaatUm," made three applications, and am entirely reWavad or PSIB! also a pain on my breast, which 1 cured by onenpplicatii.il. Advise all who arc- troubled with rheumatism or pain to try the same. JNO. i. MI.LINOLK, J. P., Hsherville, Pa, BtoBasrSirt twee ben uffertag for three (S years with rheumatism. I tried every known remedy. Internal and external, but never bad anjr relief, I saw your advartteamaai of "No ltheii mutism." and I thoiigt 1 would give it a fair trial, so I purchased one (1) bottle, and after using same. I received great relief. I liavo used live bottles of your famous Australian remedy and now I nm entirely free ho" aches and pains, and 1 cheerfully reeommend "No-Kheuma-ttsm" to nil sufferers of rheumatism. Yours truly, JOH1N OAJ"'t; . Cor. Cla and Shamokin Ms. nArbM''afew aDDlloationa of the Australian remedy, "No-Rheumatism," I was entirely re lieved of muscular rheumatism nml have not since been troubled by itslrelnrn. I take p easure in recommending "No-Itheumntism" as a positive cure for muscular and inflaminatory rheuina- 1 have used the Australian remedy called "No-Rheumatism" for my daughter and also my wifo and found thnt same gave relief after a few applications. Roth had been nMH with rlicumotu.ni. I would advise those who are subject Jo rheumatism to give the liniment n fair trial. Yours, c, A. Wof.K, 130 N. Hhamokln St. Shamokln, I a. BbIcahMttUy rComnandthf Australian remedy "No-Rheumatism" as n speedy and aurc cure for Inflammatory rheumatism as I have not Pt,jXrJti&l tb Brat few application, of No-Rheuni.tiam." Vo'rtShn 8.. Ileing a sufferer of periodical attacks of muscular rheumatism I tried nearly every prepara tion known nnd had received no permanent relief. I had given in despair and resigned mvself t,.th..e willful attacks. At last I was persuaded totry the Australian remedy. ' No-Rheumatism" ami after very few applications, have not experienced any palun since, lism, ami irr , CHKSTKKO. KU1.P, Cor. Dewarl and Orange SU., ShamOltln, Pa. W ''DeMS-Thinimint TOO to UndlV sent me by mall came to hand, and although I had largely recovered from my rheumatism when I received II still at times I felt the need of somertlVBCdklnd,MdT(lld aioftome ofH and received beneBt from its use and from whiu'n.'a'veLenof It .consider it . very BBS thing. JjgfSJST' h"ffipteSSnf y..u that your Australian remedy "No-Rheumatism,, entirely enred me after a few applications and 1 cheerfully l&theq, Mf eCbe'funymmtnd tU Australian Remedy 'No-Rheumatism' from personal aS perience as the speediest and sure cure nl''tf For sale by all Druggists throughout the State. Price 50 cents per bottle. Manufactured by mm a ci TO HolrtIH ul uymt 11V A iTlVS U l, snamokln, Fa. For sale in Middlcburg bv the Middleburg Drug Co. ami in Ccntreville "by Dr. J. W. Sampsell. Jv 20-3m Tilt: BEST OP ALL. For over fifty years Mas. Wisslow'h Pootii isu SvBL-r has been used by mothers for their children while teething. Are you disturbed at night and biokcn of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of cuttingtceth? If so send at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Win alow'a Soothing Syrup" for Children Tcothlnff. Its value 1 Incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Depend upon It, mot!iers,.there Is no mistake about it. U curea diarrh.ea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens tbe Gums, reduces Inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. "Mrs. Wlnslow s Soothing Sy rup" for children teething is pleasant to the taste and is tbe prescription of one of the old est and best female physicians and nurse, in the United State and ia for sale by all druggists throughout the world. Price, twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and get "Mas. Winslow's BooTHiKO Syrcp." V8-ly- .Bo tnorphlne or crplumln Dr. near Pan a, mraa ail raia. jam can. was. STRENGTH Young Women A course of business rtudies l at the Schissler College cf Business will give you the strongest, the most useful, p r sj k Ea bit. ' n H.l"I-l"l"M-l-l-l-I-r'l"Il"I"I-I"l-l-M-M- MIFFLINBURG i MARBLE WORKS. w o i R.H-LANCE, J neater in Jiarnie ana Scotch Urnnite . . . MONUMENTS, HEAD STONES & CEMETERY LOT ENCLOSURES. Old Siones Cleaned and Repaired. Prices as Low as the Lowest. Satisfaction Guaranteed. J. A. JENKINS, Agt., t Crcesfljove, 7ft. 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n i i-h-h Ripans Tabulos cure natulsoot, I.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers