' The Cure that Cures Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Whooping Cough. Asthma, Bronchitis and Incipient Consumption, Is ones Tfc GERMAN REMEDY" Cures WvtvA. -atvA Vvwvn Girt? Your Horse a Chance! P 0 BOX 59 HARRISDURG PA f.t Drink and Don;, Add:ctioms NewlI Fuunishcd New Management l h ien)ib''l REV3VO IluUI IJII. RESTORES VITALITY Made a Well Man of Me. jptt.tjtntoh xm iva: edy produces the above results ln'80 days. It a-ti powi run jv rein -hik ki . vans wuuu an nun i ,ai,. v. . ( men will regala their lost nsnhood, and old ten . ill recover th. ir youthful vinor by using ii;vivo. it quickly and surely restores Nanroua oe ". r.o .t Vitality, Impotency. NlRhtly EmlsflloDB, U 1 1 nrer, Filling Memory, Wasting Discuss, ana ill effects nf te-lf-abupo or rxeetsand Indiscretion, ': ih unfits one for stody, business or marriage, u not only cures by starting attlmiiest of discasii.bJI Iss great nerve tonic nnd blood builder, bring ing bai k tho pink glow to pale cheek a'id re storing tho fire of youth. It ward' off Juianlty an ! Consumption. Inslxt on bsvlng REVIVOi op other. It can hocarrl-d in veot rocket, lly mail 1.00 per package, or sli forfr,.00. v-ltha poal tlve written guarantee t rnrc or refund tho money. Clrcnlarfree. Ac! i' a Royal Medicine Co., a&&oM. for mle in WMItbnrqh, '"., 6jy 1 MlDDLhm RGH DRUG ( 0 Our Ice i et timed i! we i.ttl. Any one lending Bketcli an 1 description1 "i any Invention will promptly receive our opinion free concerning patentability ol saine "How to Obtain a Patent" sent upon requests Patent secured through us Advertised tr sate :it out expense. Patent i tok u out thi niffh u ; receive tptcioX ttotid f with it charge, in The I' A rtsNT Ki.com, au lUustr.Uv i ini wldch circutnted jouiual. cons ilt fd by inul cturers nnd Investor Bcudfor? t ' v FKEE. Add; CSS, 1 " d. f-VANS A CO. WASHINGTON, c. C ' 1 - 'A u r V Burbiinan, Mich., Mny 22. ' (!' Purp Pood Co,, It'i l'.o. N. V. i vi 'li 'mks : Mv mat.imi hn i Krp:it doffie (lriuknr ami bat found it vorv ini iriouB. Having ' uhh 1 Revnral packages of vein OR vl o. the drink tbat takes tb pla:o of coffup, she fonud u muob In ; ter for Lnrself and for us uhildrei in- i iik. Sin- bag iriyeu up ooffei driukini; eutiroly. Wa uao a puck Age every week, I am ten vmrs old Respect fully vours, Fannie Willi vms 5 Cents "What is the price of Dobbins' Electric Soap?" "Five cents a liar, full size, just reduced from ton nnd your choice ol 130 125 cent books sent free, for each B wrappers, and 7 cent s for postage Hasn't been less than 10 cents foi 88 years. "Why that's the price of common brown soap. I can't afford to buy any other soap after this. Send me Ing inn " l- t hn" won I Itlu I of a cum- ft T-A Hurcka firmness OH r. f 'makestheharBeasend.the I.Vs ( i, .. i 'k battel hut nmlK th ' ' l.-,ri. r niiil iillahu-. put- It in Ya. ,,,,. , j t dlUnn to laM twice M long n m aa It ordinarily wouM. u Lh Ii7 1 nrt-rrli-r. t:i cut all it SlV STANDARD . 3h 1 P 0 BOX 594 v I P THE ' dftivJW, FACING TOWARD GOD. As the lilies look deep In the lens of the lake. To view the fair nlcturcs their second selves make, As I he blossoms of Infinite fashion and hue Eve tin mselves beautified In the prisms of dew, As the bird sees Itsejf In the sur;e of the sea ' When It wlnas Its way o'er It exultant and free. As the ray of the star or the golden sun beam I Sen their glorified Image In cascade and stream. So my soul gazing far, soaring high o'er the sod, I Sees Itself magnified In the goodness of Ood. I As the bird hears Its soul In the sweet ness of song. As the sea voices praise when the tem pest is strong, I As the flower opes fts heart to the kiss of the sun, I A.s the nightingale trills praise when day light Is done. As the turtle dove turns to Its nest and lis mate. j As the sky turns to gold when Heaven , opens Its gate, i As tli' vine to the oak In close harmony clings. , As the grub soars aloft when transfigured with wings, I As the bMo turns helm homeward across, the deeo sea. Bo t urn all my longlnrfs, Dear Father, to I Thee. As the limpet, though lowly, clings close to its rock, Protected and safe from the hurricane's shock, As the snowflake, though frail, so un questioning fibs. Obeying His bidding through stormiest Skies. As the flower lonkcth heavenward In sun. shlne or rain Ami offers swei t Incense from forest and plain, As the tints of the dawn turn to glory the cloud. I As the winter winds chant prayers and praises aloud, So mv heart hears Thy voice over land, over sea, And .loins all Creation In worshiping Thee. 1. EDGAR JONES. : Lifting the Mortgage 1 4- It v .Mr. Charles ('. Marble. " IfT V "l: v,! ,,IIN " mid a swi et- fueed wonian, gazing fondly In to tin eyes "f her pa fe, careworn lm linnd, "ii seems ti r"il to be true, I'm afraid I'll awnkc In the murn i nuil lllld it nil a da"( am." "A blissful dream, Ajrnes," he re plied; "m more nightmares fur you ami grandma, thank God!" "Poor grandma laughed aloud t day, the first time f'ir many tn i ji t li : i ' In't you, mother?" he said, turning in a feeble old lady ho lit Id- in her lap a sleeping infant. "Ys," assented 1lie old lady, with a smile, "ami 1 looked on ten the front winder, too, John; I did. It's been a Ioih; time Snce I done so afore, for the mortgage these past years seemed lile n terrible monster lurkin' round the front door, and I was afenrd all the time it would open its powerful jaws some day and ("Waller US all up. as your pour fat her said it would. You're a good son. John, a pood son; nnd your old tiinther'll die in peace now under the dear old roof. If only your father had lived to see this day!" she addedj with a si'h. "Dear, simple-hearted mother," cried her son, kissing her toil-worn hands, "llie monster debt has indeed made us all tremble for years. Heaven grant," he added, solemnly, in a husky voice, "that no other shadow may come to darken your declining years, Heaven grant it!" . "There can't come no more shi fl ows, son," replied the old lady, firmly, raising her fading eyes to hie. "There's no more f ar of bein' turned out of mv old home, w hi re you were born, niuj where you brought your young wife, and from w hi re my lit I le ones were car ried nut in i heir coffins years agone, No, no." sie added, in a sinking voice. "I shftil elosi my eyes in the same bed and in the same room as did your fa t In r. nnd lie carried outen the same door when you take me to sleep beside him in the old churchyard. No more shn do ws for me, John, till I enter that valley of shadows which'll briny me out to the light beyond." "1 pray it may be so." John answered, with a st rained, pained look in his eyes. "1 pray it may be so." "How vi m must hove worked, and saved, and suffered, John, to lay up so much money! Now I Know why you siit up so long after we all went to bed," said his wife, tenderly, "You worked In secret to surprise us. Dear John." "Yi ." assented her husband, "in se cret." But no answering smile sat upon his lip, no happy light In aim d in hi eye. Days and weeks rolled on days and weeks of torture to John Austin. The nightmare of anxiety had been driven from t he pillow of his loved ones, but above his it hovered, darker, more forbidding than ever. With .sleepless, wide-open. Staring eyes, he watched the terrible shape as it jeered and laughed and pointed with one skeleton fitifjer to an object which ever dangled before the troubled man's paze. He closed his eyes to shut out the picUirr , only to hear with startling dis tinctness the cold, merciless voice of his creditor. "I desire the property, John Austin," snys the voice, "nnd intend to foreclose. No more extensions of time. I am de termined, so make up your mind to pay the whole amount or vacate the prop erty." "Give me one yenr longer," plends the pnle, careworn John; "one year for my poor old mother's sake. She may stand In need of no earthly home after that," he adds, brokenly; "and, be sides you are so rich, Mr. Brown, and have so many houses. Have pity, I pray I?ul- .. "Pity!" sneers the rich man, "pity! t should go to the almshouse if I lis tened to such pleas. No. sir: my money or the house. Where there's a will there's a way, you know," he udded, with a chill smile, as he moved away; "bo, Mr. Austin, look out for the way." "There is a way," said a still, small voice, an John sat at his desk the next morning; "there is a way." And poor, overworked, struggling anxious John Austin listened, listened, and fell. When the clear, brilliant eyes of the stars looked down into his soul that niglit they saw written upon its once fair, spotless surface the hid eous name "forger." Then came those nights of agony, those trays of shud dering fear. "They will never know," ever whis pers that tempting voice at his elbow "who was the guilty one. lie tranquil, then. Think only of the happiness you have given your loved ones. Kejoice and be happy." ' "Happy! tranquil!" exclaims the tor tured man, straggling to look upward; "never, never again!" Day after day he scans the face of his employer; every opening of the door, every sudden exclamation of his fellow clerks brings the dew of agony to his brow, a piteous trembling to his weakened frame. "This suspense unnerves me," he ' murmurs. "Whin shall I know tin worst ?" And then! "Mr. Austin." sternly says his em-i plover, one memorable day, "I desire your presence in my private room, upon 1 a very disagreeable piece of business." bike a lorn nt of lava rushes the blood to the unfortunate man's brain. To his despairing eyes the room rocks as a ship on n stormy sea; in his ears ) are the roars of Niagara. He struggles to speak, but his tongue, parched with j the fever of fear, can utter no sound. Hlindly he makes a Mcp forward, sways, , and, like an oak struck by lightning, falls Insensible at the feet of his em ployer, the man whose name he had forged, "Guilty! T was sure of It," said that man. spurning the form with his foot. "I shall show him no mercy, 'An eye for an eye, a tooth for a toot h' has al ways been my Idea of justice, and I 1 shall exact if now." "Mercy!" he cried, turning around shnrply; "who asked for mercy?" The clerks looked at one another in atirprlst . No one had spoken. " Twn- my imagination," curtly sold the merchant, with n frown. "I sup pose, though, it seemed like a whisper in my ear. Ridiculous idea." he mut tered, t liming n waj ; "really ridiculous. Mercy, Indei d I" Then the object which John Austin had ever before his sleepless eyes vas placed upon his w rist s t hat day. "Manacles." he cried, with B shud der; "oh. my poor old mother, my wife, my child!" "Fifteen year- at hard labor!" The cold, emotionless voice of the judge is followed by a heartrending cry : "Mv son. oh, my son!" and n feeble old lady with outstretched arms totters toward the stricken prisoner. "He doesn't menn it, John; he can't mean it." s-he moans. "Tell him it was for tne, for the love of your poor old mother, you done it. ()! tell him, somebody, tell him nnd he'll take it back. The monster has swallowed us U)i after all. Join'." she cried in a dazed way; "my sun. (I my son!" "Mother." cried the agonized man. "mot her!" " The shadows. John, the shadows nre here. I can't see." moaned the old lady, groping her way. "You must come to me, iy buy, come to your old mother." nd as John Austin was led from the dock by the pitying officials bis old mother, supported In the arms of the faithful wife, passed Into the val ley of the shadows, to the mountain of light bej ond, Tim night of a stormy day In No vember of the year 18 was closing in, when a man stood irresolutely at the turning of a rood near the great city of ' . The trees shivered and tossed their long skeleton arms with melancholy murmurings. The dead leaves stirred by the wind turned with long quiver ing siL'hs upon t heir place of sepull lire, bemoaning with faint rustlings, their sad, untimely fate. "Drip, drib, flrln! Steadily, drearily, fell the rain." "In the winter of my days am I home 'i si and desolate," said the man, look ing about blm with a dull, apathetic expression of eye. "Homeless and des olate." With trembling fingers he drew his thin coat about him. and gazed pitiful ly, helplessly into the gray leaden sky a bove, "Even the heavens frown ami show I no mercy. In prison I had shelter, af least." he said, aloud; "but out here Under the sky 1 shiver with cold as well as hunger. I'll go back to the prison. They will not turn from me as the good people do outside of its I walls. I'll tell them the Prince of Heaven had not where to lay his head, and for His sake ask them to let me In." Drip. drip, drip! Heedless of the fast gathering dark ,ness, the cold, the rain, the man sank down at the foot of a tree, and sat star ing into vacancy. "Come, little one." he whispered, feebly, outstretching his hands to some imaginary object; "come to your fa her. Do not shrink," he moaned. "O, o not shrink from me!" Then a look of hope for a moment crept into bis eyes. "I forgot," he sighed; "she was but a bnbe. and it has been years, long, ter rible years, since then. All are dead now, mother, wife, child I Ah me!" Drip, drip, drip! Through the bare branches the chill ing drops fell upon the bowed head and weary form beneath. "I will go back," he murmureA dreamily; "back to the prison. Bill it's a long journey, and I feel BO ill, sa very ill." His head sank upon his breast, and for a long while the silence was un broken save by the monotonous, fal. of the rain. Then the man stirred uneasily. "Fifteen years," be murmured; "i; lony years. I must go home now home to Agnes, and mother and the baby." Drip, drip, drip! Motionless sat the figure. Angrily the wind rattled the bare boughs above him; rudely it tore from its one fastening the thin coat, dashing with malicious glee the chilling rain over the sunken chest, the white bowed head, into the ashen, peaceful face. Hound and round his unheeding form circled the dead leaves, tenderly covering his weary feet, vainly striving to touch his cold, wet handt. Drip, drip, drip! "Home," agaia murmured Mic man while a smile, tender and sweet, brokl ,over his face, "home." Lower and lower sank the poor white head, fixed became the smile, ever the sad eves drooped their heavy lids. An hour, two hours passed, but nn moveme nt made that silent sleeper at the foot of the tree. The rain had ceased, and now from behind the drifting clouds peeped the face of tin- moon. The stars came out one by one, the wind died away with sullen murmurs, colder and colder grew tlie night, yet motionless remained the ngtire. The niL'ht wanes. n tl :i-t appeal the tirst faint streaks of dawn, Highei and higher mounts the sun. With laughing glances he peers info tin sleeper's face; with h- brightest gh w does lie pityingly envelop him. The man stirs not. 'Dead.'" whisper the le::e t.-i one another, "dead!" Yes. dead I John Austin, tin- former the convict, let us hope, had Indeec L'one "home." Western Christian Ad v i ,r:i te. PROVERBS ABOUT WOMEN. A u ::i her of Chi neae Aphorism Tho t Have Reference to the Fair s,-v. There is much of phllosi oln in the subjoined sayings found in Chinese literature and having relation to women: Respect always a silent woman; great is the wisdom of the wi man lhat holdetli her tongue. A vain woman is to be feared, foi she will sacrifice all for her pride. Trust not 11 vain woman, for sin' it first in her own eye. A haughty woman Stunitdes, for she cannot see what may he In her way. Trust not the woman that thtnketh more of herself than another; 'mercy will not dwell in her heart. The gods honor her who thtnketh long before opening her Lips. Pearls come from her mouth. A woman that is not loved is a hite from which the string has been taken; she drives with every wind nnd cometh to naught by n long fall. A woman nnd a child are alike; each needs a strong, uplifting band. A woman that respects herself is more beautiful than a single star; more beautiful than many stars at night. Woman is the ease for that which pains the father; she is balm for his troubles, A woman who mistakes her place ran never return to where she first was; the path has been covered up from her eyes. A woman desirous of being seen by men is not trustworthy; fear the glance from her eye. Give heed to her to whom children have come; she walks iu the sacred ways and lacks not love. When firat a woman loves she fears; she fears not that to which she has become accustomed, A mother not spoken well of by her children is nn enemy of the state; she should not live within the king dom's wall. Tin- Children's Featlval. With nil tin- merriment of holly nnd mistletoe, of family reunions, and of lovers' (rifts, Chriatmns is still pe cullarly the children's festival, Noth ing can quite equal the ecstatic and unmixed joy of the little-girl who geta just the doll she wanted, or of the kniall boy who finds a coveted toy in his stocking m Christmas morning, Is there a living Bcrooge in .'ill this smoky city or iu nil this busy country who ran contemplate the childish joy in millions of American homes Christ mas morning and say in his heart that there is no Santa Clans? "If lUch there be. pn mark him well," for he has missed the gladdest and most significant fact of the Christmas sea son nnd of the century in which he lives. There is a Santa Claus. and ho has many millions of faithful depu ties in tli is happy country, who will fulfill his orders with loving hands and pet thereby n joy almost as pure BS that of the little ones themselves. No nation can decay as long as it is per meated with the Christmas spirit. Chicago Tribune. Pointer to !'rvr DncheaJi. If the new duchess of Manchester is j worth $1,000,000 in her own name she j would do well, recommends the Chica- I l 1 V I II i: ' ' urtuiu, iu ii.iini erilL s't lining money to the duke in 25-cent pieces if she wishea to retain her fortune. Statlatlea o( the British Election. At the last general election in Great Britain 3,876,000 votes were cast, at an average of 82 cents a vote for legitimate expenses. In the English counties the cost was $1.22 and in the boroughs 00 cents. MANY young women are completely prostrated for a week out of every month by menstrual sufferings. The terrors of menstruation overshadow their wholo lives. How needless this is In most cases is shown by the thousands of grateful letters onstantly coming to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. , from women she has helped. Miss Joie Saul, Dover, Mich., writes as follows to Mrs. Pinkham : "I suffered untold agony every month and could get no relief until I tried your medicine ; your letter of ad vice and a few bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound have made me the happiest woman alive. I shall bless you as long as I live." 9 K n .W LIT Bam - " f 'l.'r IBS -J ,1 HI ' oL..3'" Pain leaves its mark. Faces become pale and thin. Fea tures grow sharp and haggard. The stamp of suffering is un mistakable. Write to Mrs. Pinkham for ai'd. Her experienca is the widest in the world and her advice is free. Mil UllllU. No otreratlotia r Injections no pabi ordl comfort in any way. no pteel aiirltiffii or Iron frames, no wooden, Ivy or hard rulilier balls, cum, punchesor pinn- used. Nut tie- l -i-1 l isl ri -s or annua mice. Our outfit for the enrr of rnnture r her nia Is 1 mule of lit e -of 1 material, aueli aa felt, velvet, chamois -kin-and elastic welw 11 ill Iik- n glove iieil nn Iiarra yon no more si ln'his your mle -tin- - buck in 1 heir natural no. sitieii ami the tvolllltl Will lie il III; any tlier wound when it has a 1 hunee. The ohm yic.y loetire la to hold lite iittoiittnea In or itack all of tlie time until the wound nee aues grown to Kctlier Your ruuturu run not 1ms rnrtsl lit' any oilier way. ivu have li.nl 3S eai a constant ami hard experience in treatlny rtinliircttutid this onilii 1- tlx- ri suit. Ao n. women jo- 1 children made eumlurliiUlv hy using this outfit, 1'riei - rcaaonnole and i'i accordance with tlie eoHe, II unci cieil. pleane write f"i parti-j culars; which will mall you in-c. MOHAWK CATARRH CURE ( lioftpeal nnd it'."!. Corn nl.'ttrh in from 9 to tiny. Cumm old in tin 1 1 (Mil, 6 to i minutes ( lires Hi ml; it In 1 to 3 in ill ut h. Hecurelv pocked with full Instruction by hup' ro.S'l PAID. SWc fry it ami you will be tnoro than nleiuwd n Ith tin Investment Your moncfy buck if you are dlstotlsfled' t Stamps taken ) AOHAWK RBHEDY CO.. Rorro, N. Y. If troubl i d wilh a weak digestion belching, sour stoicacb, or if you feel dullafter eating, try Cbnoiber laio's Stouineb Bnd Livet Tablets, Price, 2) i eats. Samples tree at tlie Middleburg Drug Stint'. Practical Plaianolcrlnar, "The widow seems to take a great Interest in old Ooldthwnite. She thinks that if she takes Interest now she'll have the principal later." Tit Bits. Ponitht to Get ft. "Did you hear what Mrs. Wedder calls her alimony?" "No. What?" "Tlie spoils of war." Philadelphia Bulletin, hit on n Trip. She 1 haven't quarreled with my husband for six weeks. He Oh, has he been away fri in home as long na that? Vonkers Statesman, How It Happe I. Mr. Bleecker Oh, yes. Baxter lost nil his money but not his friends. Miss Chambers- How is that? Mr. Bleecker Well, he had the pood sense to die at the same time. Judge. An Apt lllnatration, Professor (at an examination in gsammar)- Tell me what you know about Verbs. Scholar (aftera moment's hesitation) Sir, the verbs Ure just the opposite of kinps. ProfessorHow so? Scholar Why, because they nlwaye agree with their subjects. N. Y. World. Math easfttlos, "There ia safety in numbers," anld the trite conversationalist. "There ia." answered the man who talks on politics. "If you can't con vince a man by your argument you enn always silence him by quoting a lot of statistics that he knows abso lutely nothing about." Washington Star. Two of a Klml. "Yea, look at yourself," exclaimed Mrs. Dt Kanter, "und see what a beast you are. A little sober reflection will do you good." "Shobe' rertlection?" snorted De Kanter, turning away from the mirror. "P'Jove, she rerflect-ion'sh jush' aa full's I am." -Philadelphia Preas. laaaaie Mystery. Customer I heard you scolding your aew boy about the disappearance of a sausage. What did he say ? Bu tclier He said the pithecanthrop us was in the canine. Customer What did he mean by that T Butcher He meant the missing link was 1b the dog. Chicago Daily News, HAGGARD FACES OF WOMEN Miss Rosa Helden, 126 W. Cleveland Ave., Canton, O., wntes; "Dear Mrs. Pinkham Four years ago I had almost given up hope of ever be ing well again. I was afflicted with those dreadful headache spells which would sometimes last three or four duys. Also had backache, bear- ine-down pains, leucor- rhira, dizziness, and terri ble pains at monthly periods confining mc to my bed. After reading so many testi monials for your medicine, I concluded to try it. I beg;an . ' ' c. 1 iu pic up auer laKinr tne hrst bottle, and have continued to gain rapidly, and now feel like a different woman. can recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cnrrmnnnrl in bicrheQt fprnm to all sick women." :--:--H--H-:-w-i-Hw-H--:-:-i--j-ri JWIFFLINBURG MARBLE WORKS. H ::- 4Qf R. H. LANCK, r til Mm -til- 1111(1 Scoldi . i it n 1 1 1- , . , MONUMENTS, HEAD STONES & CEMETERY LOT ENCLOSURES. Old Stones Cleaned and Repaired. Prices as Low as the Lowest. Satisfaction Guaranteed. J A. JENKINS, Agt.. f Crcssarove, Pa. 1 :-I-H-!--H-H-H-!-W-W-t-W-4-!- V A Ni'KIi Active man, ,,f v i character, to dellvei and collect, in Pennsylvania, for mi old establlshsd manufacturing whoiaaaala housa, S'.mil a year, mire puy. honesty, more Iban experience, raqnlrod. Our reference, any bank In tha city, Bnoioaa - if ,,in- ,i unit Ktampcd envelop. .Manufacturer-. Third Floor, BB4 Daarboa Street Chicago. u-iu-ict J AS. O. GROUSE, ATTIIHNKT AT LAW, MlDDLKHlIKe, PA. All Ltisiti. ( eiitrusted to bis cart will receive nroiuut attention. Veterinary sUrceoN, SELINSGROVE, PA. ah professloual busloesa entrusted tt- my care will receive prompt :ind eiireti,! attention. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Dfsicns Copyrights Ac. Anyone londlnf a Sketch and description may iniciily ascertain ouroplnloa free whethsr an invention In prolinl'ty piilciliil'le. Conimunlcu : . nn m nelly ciuitldeut lul. llaniltHKikiin Patent? ..,-nl free. Oldest accney for SOUUrblfDetOBtej Patents taken tnruimh Munn & Cu. receive --.-(I aotics, without charge, in tho Scientific inerican, yinn(linic!jr llluitrntP'l wocklr. I 'iivest rlr cuiMtlon if tiy FclentUl' J'tnriml. Tirni, $3 a fenTI four nittiitlm, L t all nowitdpatrr. .lUNN & Co.36,B oadwa New York llranch Olllcu, Ot K St., Waahluutiiii. IXC. A Prominent ' Im o;o Woman SpenkH. I'i of. Etoxa IM' r, of Chicago. Vice i 'resident Illinois Woman's Aliinnoe, inspeaking of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, says; " I suffered with a severe cold this winter winch threat ened to run into pneumonia. I tried different remedies but 1 seemed to grow worse and the medicine upset my stomach. A friend advised me to try ChBiubei'uin"n Cough Hemedy and 1 fouud it was pleasant to take and it iclieved meat ouce. I am now entirely recovered, saved a doctor's bill, time and suffering, and will neve r be without this splendid medicine strain. ' For sale by Mid dleburg Drug Store. What shall We Have for DeaertT The question arises in the family every day. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-o. a delicious desnert. Pre pared iu two minutes- No baking Add hot water nnd set to cool. Fla vors Lemon, orange, rasberry and strawberry. Dr. Fansers KIDNEY Backache Cure. For all Kidney, Bladder and Urtaa Plaaaaa, KBiumatum, i HwSikr- K rant ' "--' -aaanaaaaaaaaBaaaaaasaa , . . c'.. tate 1 tV 1 luLanaaannlaBannnnnn