i ';.C'..; 3$? rainiii Head, Side and Back. For years I suffered with pfttn In the bead lmin in t hi tstdj , ami in I la sit mil of t be back v as nervous and constipated ami could not sleep. Tlie pit la and other nn itclnea l tried only madenbud inntter worse Then I tried Celery Klntr- One package cored me and made a new vomnr ofme. Mr Th. Rlee hktiinier i !rotuti-onHudsoni N. Y. Celery K hut cures 'nnstlpntton and Nerve Minitiit 'i, l.ivii'iiml Kiitui'y lisiure. 2 !KEELEYIHST;4 WVO BOX 594 " I n nK nl jdu r j ,r Cures all Doink and Drug Addictions FuONISHED Nfw MfcNAGt Mr NT rholnfrnihd fron Ufa. REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY Made a Well Man THE "S k of Me. PREJicn SUUM9D33TY produce tho above reralta In" 30 ilaya. It icU I ii iwi rf nl i v aud quickly. Curefl when all others fall. Youngm nwlll rrn.nn tbmr lout manhood, and old men will recover their youthful vigor by ualnf KKVIVO. It quickly and euraly reatorea Nervou dobs, Lost Vitality, Impotoncy. Nightly Bmlaalont, Loat Power, Falling Memory, Waetina Dlseaeea. and all effect of self -abuao or excels and lndlacretlon, which unfits ono for atuily.b 'nean or marriage. bot only curea by ptarting at mo seat of dlaease, but lfl a great nerve tonic and blood builder, bring ing back tho pink glow to pule cheeks and re atorlng tho flro of youth. It wards off fnsanlti and Consumption. Insist on baring KE VIVO, Bf other. It can bo carrli-il in Test pocket. Dy mall 1.00 per t )-, or six for SB.OO, with a poal tlve iviIim .i frunruntce to rnre or refund thoroonnT. Circular f too. Addresa Royal Alcdiciue Co., a8$33SSS5t? hot sale in MitldlcOui'un, i n. MIDI) L LB I ll(Jll DRUG ( 6 Our fee returned if we fail Any one sending aketcb ninl description f any invention will promptly receive our opinion free concerning the pntcntabitity of same. "How to Obtain a Patent1 sent upon request Patents secured through us idvei tised tr sale at our expense. Patents taken out through us receive ipteial neiice withuitt charge, in The Patent Record, an illustrated and widely circulated jouiual, consuiu-'l by Manufacturers and Investors Bend fur riamulecopy FREE. Address, VICTOP J. EVANS & CO- -(cut Attorneys,) Evans Bui' k, WASHINGTON) O. C Cm mttm ,11 imcli" wwm ' mm ?LD EVERYVVHEgJc v WEAR TWICE AS, J-u '0- Buchanan, Mich., May 22. Gcnossco rum Food Co., L Roy. N. Y. (ir.NTLEMK.x : My mamma has been a riat coffee drinker and bat found it very injurious. Having ut'd neveral packages of youi GRUN Oi f he drink that takes tb. place of coffee, she found it much better for herself and for UB children t o ti rink. She ha triven up coffee drinking entirely. We use a paok Hge every week, I am ten vetrs old, Ujbpect fully yourw, Famnii Williams 'JK ' V 3! II K til 5 CENTS ! DOBBINS' ELECTRIC SOAP S Just Seduced from Ten Cents jj Your choice of 817 twenty.nvc- cen m booka aeot free, for each three wrappers E " " 'ir noala H ' e 6 ' A 1 I ! 'VV-l borseand poor limit- Inn liurnuiH H tiio wornl kluO u u com ' A Eureka Harness Oil " ' X l notnnlymakeathobarneMiandtb I Ma. J honw lank bettei but make I'' ' leather aoft anil lable.pulaltlneon- nt . , il , dill' -II I ' tv Ico aa loof LM J, J .. it . . II u ly would. iff. ,', .' 3 I I ,.,- in c.m-.H U I ' l ; '1 1 y ' STANDARD fc. 0,LC0;Jivi GVe yi Your X'5h $J Worse a X y 1 Ciaacc jj pt 'NeSJ JB"1- t uiW y& wArVsHAil. SWS .rank oi captain. I JENNY'S POSITION a Itj Mrs. Charles f. Marble. ' T 1:NNY!' Tlie tone w;s qtiern il Imis, to be stire, but tin fatigUC rTii plainly expressed upon t lie tpeak fr's face, fully atoned for it. "Jenny, I want that you should (,'it slipper to night." The pirl readjusted the hit of ribbon she was placing upon a hat of rather ancient shape, and answered only with un Impal lent frown. Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed, and Ji nny still continued in the same em ploj nu nt. The mot her, wit h a weary siph. arose from the clilntz-eovered rocking chair and moved towards the kitchen. "Your fatlier ami the boys'll he com Ing In afore long," she said, "and yon Know how cross they he when the tabic nin"t set and the victuals ready." " There you po." replied Jenny, nn grlly, tossing the hat from her; "al ways complaining! Your time must Ik everybody's time. 1 didn't say 1 wasn't going tO pet supper. (Idi I?" The mother by this time was in the kitchen, turning some flour into a bowl ,ii nny picked up the hat again, and twisted and retwisted the rihhon. "I'm determined to have this hat trimmed for church to-morrow," she said, aloud. "It's nothinp hut cook, sweep, wash dishes; wash dishes, gwee and cook. Life is becoming almost un bearable." From the kitchen, presently, cami the mother's voice again, "Jenny, ain't you goin' to pet tin table? You ain't done a thing about the house to-day, and I'm en ii v most ready to drop." '"Of course I intend to set the table.' impatiently returned the pirl, having adjusted the ribbon to her satisfac tlon. "Anybody, to hear you talk mother, would think you did all tin work of the house." "Well!" iii a weary tone, "it's true Jenny, that you shirk more and mon every day you live. I'm the first on up in the mornin", and the breakfast is nil done long afore ever you comi down, that you know. I'm pittin' old loo, and t his pit t in' up uv w inter morn iu's in the cold hes hrunp on the rheu mntiz mighty bad. Kf I pit laid up with it. I don't see what's to become of all of you, I rally don't." '"Why, father will have tohireaserv But. that'R all," retorted Jenny. "Foi my part, I'm about tired of poking nlonp in this country place, anyway I'm poing up to the city to learn type writing, and get a position." The mother made no reply, hut thoughtfully, with her thumb, pressed nn indentation into the biscuits befort resigning them to the oven. The follow ing morning dawned mih1 and sunny. Sweet and clenr to thf Bently family came the distant sound of church bells, and as Mrs. Rent It I stood upon the kitchen porch, brnon: ! In hand, the look of weariness upon hei face lightened. "I hev a notion to go to church my 1 self," said she, addressing her husband I "We hed such a late breakfast that 1 ealkerlate we kin do without dinnn mi late into tne afternoon. It'll be n change and a rest for me, too." Farmer Bently, who was filling hi pipe, hummed unconsciously a bar ol the hymn "There is rest for the weary.' but after a whiff or two, said un amiably : "I don't like to be th rowed out ov m rcg'lar meals, Mariar Jane, on n Sun day no more'n ov week days, and 1 rcckin' the boys air ov the same mind as me." "You bet!" slanged the boys, wht were blacking their boots and doing other persona chores, "it don't seem like eaten ef you don't sot down tc meals at reg'lar hours." "Then I'll not po," submissively re plied the mother, "and maybe it would I n't hev done me no pood, nohow. I'll sot down, howsomever, and read thf Bible a spell. I git a pood deal ov con solation ont'n ovit; more'n I do out ov Parson White's wrmnnti T inmitlm., I think. The last time I went to church be preached about the angel bavin' the key ov the bottomless pit, and about the dragon and the beasts, and set tin n seal onto Satan. There weren't out word ov comfort for me in the whole sermont. Nothln' of love fer the heart nor rest fer the speret." I Monday found Jenny more deter mined than ever upon seeking a liveli hood in the city. i "Alice Brown and her sister had on! lovely new hats in church yesterday,' she said, fretfully, to her mother'at breakfast, "and I am going to earn money and dress myself like other girls I am indeed! Father will have to ptve me that $100 which grandfather willed me. ,-md before that is gone I'll be earning $1(1 a week or more." Through the mother's mind darted a vision of her daughter dressed in a manner Ill-befitting her slender means and station in life, a target for sly in nuendoes and questioning smiles, but the only said: "Suppose, Jenny. I pit sick and you so fer away? There wouldn't be one Hvin' soul to take care of me as a dart e i ought, and your father will find it mighty hard, I'm a thinkin", to raise that $1(K) now. He hes been a-usin' ov it. you know, onto the farm. It do seem as though I hev about everything to bear, it do so," and the over-worked, troubled little woman sat down and fried silently behind the corner of her gingham apron. ltut it enled In the girl having hei way. Routs and frowns and sharp re torts had their effect, but more than nil, to her "close-fisted" father, was the tempting bait of her future earnings. And so to the city went Jenny, fully confident that her pretty face and quick ap ehension would serve her in lieu of - the teacher of typewriting and short hund whose advertisemt lit in their home paper had decided her upon this step -resulted iu her securing board in a very genteel and correspondingly high-priced boarding house. To her unsophisticated mind that $100 appeared a small fortune, jet she saw it slip away with but little apprehen sion as the weeks rolled on. In the space of six weeks, by diligent appli cation, she had acquired the "art" of typew riting, and as she was assured by the "professor" speed only was nec essary now to render her eligible for a first-class position, a position com manding $15 or $L'0 per week. How glibly tlie sums rolled from the pro fessor's lips! "But one dollar left," ruefully said Jenny one morning. "My, how money does fly in the city. Why, I could have made that sum do me for years at home." and for the first time the pirl thought with a pang of regret of that home, of the loving care and the simp!'' home comforts which had ever been hers without this weekly bargaining. So that dnj, with much care and pre cision, Jenny answered several adver tisements, confidently expecting a fa vorable reply from one at least, How anxiously she watched for the post man. Ray after day passed, and there came no reply. At length, oh. joy. an answer, bid ding her call at a downtown office Donning her most becoming hat and jacket. Jenny tripped forth, and be fore ten o'clock had struck stood in the office designated. " The gentleman ain't down yet." re plied an Idle boy who serenely revolved in a handsome otliee chair in front ol the desk; "he don't most generally come down till II o'clock." "What is the business'.'" she next In quired. "I dunno, ma'am: I was only engaged this week. 1 reckon it's stocks, though or a agency, or somethin' or other ' Further speculation was cut short by t he cut ranee of t he proprietor, to w hom Jenny timidly introduced herself. He nodded affably, and the girl, blushing under his cool stare of ad miration, forgot all she had prepared herself to say. The gentleman first divested him self of his overcoat, opened his desk, fumbled among some papers, then se lecting one, directed the boy to go to that address and deliver it. "Now!" said he, when they were alone, settling himself comfortably in his chair, "tell me something about yourself!" Jenny wondered if that wbr the way business men interviewed ap plicants for positions, as she, with no little embarrassment, complied. "Ah! but a few weeks in the great otty," he remarked with a cordial smile, "unsophisticated, etc., etc, That suitR me. What salary, may I ask, do you expect?" "I I leave that to you, sir," she stammered. "II m! Well." reflectively, "suppose we say ten dollars per week. Wheth er it. shall lie increased in the future will depend upon yourself." Jenny's eyes sparkled. Ten dollars a week! The sum had Seemed a large one in that modest home In the country, but how insuf ficient it seemed now that her eyes had feasted upon the costly fabrics displayed in numberless shop win dows, the elegant attire of women in the churches, upon the street, and even in the parlor of her genteel boarding house. "It will be some time before 1 can spare any money towards hiring help for mother," she soliloquised that night. "I shall need all I can make to keep up appearances here." and with visions of new and stylish addi tions to her wardrobe. Jenny fell into a sweet, untroubled sleep. How contented she was with her lot as the weeks flew by! Row thoughtful of her comfort and pleas ures, even, was her handsome em ployer! How kindly he sought to break the monotony of her lonely evenings by escorting to concert and theater! And then the little suppers, and often the delightful luncheons at noon, while the oflice boy Idly dangled his legs before the handsome desk. Letters from home were but few, and as the days wore on, hers to the waiting, weary little mother grew shorter, arid more and more infre quent. "There's a change come over our Jenny," said Mrs. Rcntlv to her un sympathetic husband, "her letters don't sound as they used to, I'm thinkin'. I wish some of us didn't feel so tired when night comes, so's we could write to her oftener. It don't seem right," sadly, "to hev our girl go off 'mong strangers to live, guided by notion' but her own fan cies. It railly don't look right on our part, an' ef anything should hap pen to her I'd " "Ah, there you go a-croakin'," re plied her husband with a frown, "you're either croakln' or complain in'. I never see such a woman." t which the boys laughed good-naturedly, telling the mother "not to mind Rop, who had been cross as two sticks all day." More business than usual one day appeared to be doing in the inner of fice. The men who dropped in spoke In high and angry tones, and her em ployer looked disquieted and moody. The day was drawing to a close, and it ill there were several men closeted with him. "We will lunch together to-morrow," he whispered, as she prepared to depart, "my darling!" and those two endearing words shortened the way home, turned winter to summer, lent to the lowering, mow-laden clouds a tinge of brightest gold. With a smile on her lip and a song in her heart she stood equipped the V mnnlniv ' - ' ' - the stairs she slowly sauntered, think ing only of that voice which would aoon speak thoe tender words again. A loud peal of the door bell. "A dispatch for Miss Jenny Bently," Said the messenger boy, handing her the ominous yellow envelope. ""Had anything happened to him?" was the girl's shuddering thought, as her trembling ftngi rs opi ned it. "Come! Your mother is living." A cry of mingled pain and relief broke from her. Her mother! Not the man she loved. "Jenny," how plainly she heard the querulous voice of her mother "Jen ny, come!" "Yes," murmured the girl, as she had always done, "after awhile, after 1 have seen him," and wiping the tears from her eyes she hastened to the oflice. How eagerly, when there, she looked for his coming. The usual hour had passed, another, still another, and he came not. "Jenny, come!" The mother's voice was no longer querulous. Faint and low came the words. "Jenny, come!" "I must go," at last cried Jenny, with a r us li of tears, and hastily scribbling a few words to her em ployer the girl hastened to the train. The oflice boy chuckled. "She's a ninny, that she ain't smelt a mouse afore this," he muttered, pocketing the letter. "I knowed the game was up yesterday. It Coined a little suddlnl on to him, I'm B think in', or he wouldn't hev left his papers about," and straightway the preco cious youth betook himself to ran sacking every drawer and pigeon hole of the desk before him. For many miles of the journey the riri's thoughts alternated between the man she was then suddenly loreeri to leave ami tne iireiess, un voted mother to whom she was hasten ing. Never before had her ear caught the rhythm of a moving train. To day there was a voice in the wheels which seemed to say : "Jenny come, Jenny come, Jenny conic!" and then across the strings of lo r memory swept a note or two of a poem long since forgotten: "Life and Thought have gone away side by side," and before her vision flashed the pic ture of a stark form outlined beneath a winding sheet, and through an open window, upon spreading wing, the de parture of the two spirits bide by side. "Life and thought," "life and thought," now began the wheels, "have gone away," and the girl, with fast falling tears, forgetting all else in listening to that refrain, silently implored the figures to stay for awhile their departure. "Rut one word, one look," cried the girl, as she stood once again upon the threshold of her bumble home. "Jenny!" Oh, to see that dear form in the fa miliar old rocking chair, to hear her name spoken, even in that old-time, querulous tone. Rut below stairs all was silent, "Life and Thought have gone away side by side." Each footfall upon the creaking stairs seemed in unison with the car wheels; the rustle of her silken skirts as she ascended them repeated the lines, and to the strained senses of the girl the fl lit tiling of the simple muslin curtains at the window marked the departure of those winged spirits, side by side. "Jenny!" R was the father's voice which Spoke. That form under the white sheet upon the lied stirred not. The closed eyes never opened; the rigid lips remained dumb. "She called you to the last," said a neighbor. "It was 'Jenny, come; Jen ny, come.' the whole day long." The girl, remembering how often that call had been unheeded, unheed ed even at the last moment, knelt in silent anguish beside the Stiffened form. "She breathed her last but one short hour ago," continued the neigh bor, "a-watchin ami a-waitin' for you." "Watching and waiting." sobbed Jenny, bitterly conscious for whom she had wasted those precious hours. "Alas! watching and waiting for me." And now the last sad rites were over, and the toiling mother lay at rest in her narrow home, forevermore indifferent to dust and decay. The remorseful Jenny, listening to the voice of inclination, was already in thought planning her return to the city. "I must po bnck to my duties," she I said to her father, but her heart in I stead said: "to him! I must go back to him." And with that resolve in her heart she one day scanned their weekly pa per. The story of an absconded swindler, a noted forger, a ruined gambler; the disappearance the same day of his I pretty typewriter; a handsome office i in which a mere pretense of business I had been ever done; an idle, non ! comniital oflice boy; a weeping woman ! who claimed the handsome abscond ' er as her husband that was all. But ' the name, the street, the number, was enough to blanch Jenny's cheek J and wring from her lips the cry: ! "From what a fate have I been res j cued!" And so she went not back from the city, but instead took up the threads of life which her mother had droppet a sadder and a wiser woman ani I when in after years a daughter of hei j own, named Jenny, looked with long ing eyes towara the city and a "posi Hon," she shrank not from opening that long closed wound to relate in the manner and for the same purpose that story, which I have sought to thus simply teu here Yankee Blade. ' Hard work does not hurt a well woman. It is the weak woman, suf fering from diseases peculiar to her sex, who breaks down under the daily strain of household duties. For dis eases of the delicate womanly organs Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the standard remedy. Over half a million women owe health and hap piness to Dr. Tierce's treatment. "No tongue could expreN the jam that I endured before I commenced taking Dr. Pierce's medicine," writei Mrs. Mollie Col gate, of Randolph, Charlotte Co.. vu. i was not atik- to do anything at all. Coald not eat anvthins rm i t bread nml tranr if 1 Hill till- top u IB ht id my Fiend hurt so it nfenuil it would kill me; but now I ran eat a lit tie of almost anything I want and can do n good day's work as well as any body can. Am better than 1 have lieen for years. I think your medicine is the beat that ever wai made for it is the only thing that ever ;lnl me any nood. I tried many other kinds but none did me anv d but your 1 Favorite 1'rcM.riiitioti ' iiii.l -, v 1 , l . - UmIImI iiImm ery.' lean never praise Hum too highly." u. Nn operntloiit comfort in mi) frames, no wm ir Injections nn pa'n riis wny, mi sUel spring or Iron Irii. ivy or nurd rnliher bettlsj, I ulUlM 1l-ctl. Net tin' li'ltsl lll'S, pilll- I.i H illMtr4ir MtiKtj) niiee Our outfit for the fii- of riif nr or ticr- nlN Is miulti of hoe noft materials, such as felt, Velvet, clltt-inuis -kin- ami uiastlfl w'l It lit" hk" a glove and an harm you no tnoro It iii-iu your I litest! n - bai k In i heir natural po sition ami thf wound ill hi'iti iik' any other wound when it line a thanre. The oiii wn to cure is to hold Hie Intestines In or hack all of t in- time until tin wound bee mes grown to tether Your rupture run not be ctifetl In any other way. i have liad -' ears constant ami haul experience In treating rtitfnra and this omlii m ihe result. Men, women ami child r u made eoiitlorlitlil.' by using thin Oil tilt. Prlct s reason a ole and In accordance with the case, li oi4'n .n i. please write for parti' culars; hi h we will mail ou lr. MOHAWK CATARRH CURE !heape Cures 'atarrh In in Cute Cold in tin' H nr. h headaehe 1 ti t ami IfrMt n H to Iti days, nd, 5 to IK minutes. ininuti Secure tv packed with full Instructions by imi'' i osi PAIII. 25e iry it ami you will he more then pleased with the Investment Your money hack if you are dissatisfied- Btamps taken ftOHAWK RENEDY CO., Rome. N. Y. Il troubl cil wi'h n weak digestion belching, sour stnirach. or if you feel dullaftsr inlipg, liy Ll'i n ber Iain's Sti I'liieh Hint Lict Tablet Prici , -o i iii .. Si niplt s. In e at the Miauieiiurg Druy Stole, GREW HIS UMBRELLA STOCK. Inllnltp Palna n SI. Lonll Man Be- tOW ell I pon II Maple Ba ii In it. A guest at one of the principal ho tels the other day exhibited a curious and beautiful umbrella handle to a party of admiring friends. It was a crook of silver maple wood bearing the natural bark and its ornament con s is 1 1 il of three heavy ejold bands, or rii:-s, encircling the shaft at erpial distances. What made it remarkable w;us the self-evident, fact that the bands had been put on when the branch from which the handle was made was part of a living tree and much smaller In diameter. The wood had' grown through and around the confining metal and bulged out at either side, producing an odd and striking effect, says the New Orleans Times-Democrat. "It took me four years to pet the material ready for this umbrella han dle," said the proud owner. "I live In the suburbs of St. Louis and have several fine maple trees on the prem ises. In 1S93 the idea occurred to me and I had a jeweler make me these three rinps, which I slipped ove.- a small branch and tied at the. proper distance with cords. I had to select a veryi diminutive branch, because otherwise the twips would have pre vented the rinps from poing on, and I picked out one pretty high up so It would be out of the way of pilfer ers. Then I waited patiently for na ture to clinch the banila by process of growth. I said nothing about the experiment and the family often won dered why In the world 1 climbed thnt tree so often. I am a traveling man and whenever I returned from the road I would lose no time In taking a look at. my prospective umbrella handle. It was slow work, however, and the fall of 1S97 had rolled around before I Anal ly cut the branch. Then I turned it over to an expert, who kept it ten months longer, feasoning and polish ing it and bending the upper end into the crook, which was done by a process of steaming. The result la what you see. I am convinced It is the only thing of Its kind in the world, and I take good care to keep it away from umbrella thieves." He Feel Thai Way, Anyhow. A husband waiting for his wife at a bargain sale is about the cheapest thing In sight. Chicago Daily News. Th Falthfal Oat. Mrs. Bacon Do you keep a oat? Mrs. Egbert Yea; we don't seem to be able to gat rid of it Yonkers Statesman. A KTew story , Born to Serve! A htrong. dramatic, thrilling " serial stoi v by the world's most 7 popular writer, Charles M. Sheldon Author of " In Ilia Stepa," etc. . On "the Servant-Girl Qaistion.'1 The storv ileal with lha scri'iint vi. I hi no home, church, and aoeiety relation. ltabomli InatriklagtttaaMoni Bad teachen powerfully- Nome giaallyi Beaded I on PUBLISHED EXCLUSIVELY IN f The Christian Endeavor World lleKiuniiiK December . Subscription Price, f la year . Xe SMbMrlken ateealw ihe Paper the. Real anas kiiki:, i Bllbaoribe now and gal ihe whole of thla re markabl story i alio the autobiography of w II llam T. stead, lha famous English trfornri i Inn Maelarsn' serial on "Th BobmIjp Vir- l tuei": .1opili Cook on (Ireut Orator) III Cuyler'i and Joseph Parkw'a brilliant iartk.lm, ami Mi nion of attractive features. The Christian Endeavor World1 do-j Tremonl Temple,BotoB, Maaa. US Iji Snlie Street, chfengo, III. H-'"?--M"I"l-K--H-H"MH-i-H"I"I'-l"I"H-l MIFFLINBURG MARBLE WORKS. -:? -:k- -:- il R. H. LANCE, tf ii. ni. i in Marble ami I Setileli (.nililli- . . . i MONUMENTS, HEAD- STONES V CEMETERY LOT ENCLOSURES. j- Old Siones Cleaned and Repaired. A. 3. Prices as Low as the Lowest V Satisfaction Guaranteed. A. JENKINS, Agt., Crcsscjove, Fa. $ i r ANTED Active man, of good chn meter. to. " dellvai and oolleet, in renniylvaaia, I or an old eatabiiahed manufacturing wholseNTie limine J'lCO a year, sure tiny. Iionesty, mure I him experience, i squired. Our reference, any bank in the city. Bnelnae elf-addrd a aS htamped envelop. Manufactured Third Floor MM Desrbon Street Chicago. !m;m6i TAB. U. GROUSE, ATTORNKT AT LAW, HlD 'LKBURa, Pu. All tusiij. . eittnsied to hit care lll receive nrotuct attention- A. 1 Potties, veterinary surceon. SELINSGROVE, PA. All professloual busia, s e mrumed to my o&ru win receive prompt una careful attention. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Marks DraifiNSt PnDvoir.uTC A r qofoklr ascertain our opinion free whether mi invention In prnhnhly patentable. CommuntrA t imn Mtrivtly confident lid. Handbook on I'atenle sunt free. Uldsst Hirency for securing; patents. Patents taken tnroujrh Murm St Co. receive spniiU wticet without charge, la the Scientific American A hnnrisomelv Ulnxtrated weekly. I.nrrent clr t'ulallon of any nclentltlo Journal. Term. 93 a rear) four months, 9L Bold by all newidealern. jVIUNN & Co.36,B"- New York Branch Office, IB8 K St.. Washington. D. C. A ninna inn dlrtf W at nVi anil lnaoelnl,m at A Prominent I'hlcngo Woman Npenk. Prof. Hi i i Tjl r, of Cbicapo. Vice Hrecident lllmoih Woman's Allium, inspttkiiiK of Cbaniberlaiu's Cough Reuieuy, sayx: " I suffered with a severe cold this winter which threat ened to run into pupumonia. I tried difl'erent remedies but 1 set-med to grow worse and the medicine upset n. y ntnuiHch. A friend advised me to try ChHiiiberlain's Cough Remedy aud 1 foutid it wan pleasant to take and it 1 elieved ue at once. I am now entirely recovered, saved a doctor's bill, time and suffering, and will ne vi r be without this splendid merljeiuo again ' For stile by Mid- I dleburg Drug Store. What Shall W Hava for Desert? The question arises in the family every tiny. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-o, a delicious dessert. Pre pared in two minutes. No baking. Add hot water and set to cool. Fla vors Lemon, oiange, rasberry and strawberry. The Mother' favorite. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is the mother's futorite. It is pleas ant and safe for children to take and alwaya cures. It is intended especially for couglm' cclds, croup and whooping cough, and is the best medicine made for these qis eaees. There is not tbe least dan ger in giving it to children for it contains no opium or otLer injuri ous drug and may be given as con fidently to a babe as to an adult. For sale by Middleburgh Drug Slore. Dr.Fenner'iKIDNEYI andBackiche Cure. Trouble., Lama faek3eart Dleae,SUi For all Kldner. Bladder Bad Urtaarr b. H nan ma, ja, naa wetting, aw. it -i-i-i"i-l-l-l-l-l-i"i-I-i-I"l-I"I"I--I"r,g. L jhWMShv 1 21130