hyme, celery irsley, onion, i, ete., fol pare various cpense.. Celd making soup, boiling point d, should not ood soup th The pre beef, etc., red, afford’ a ny, however, | home-made some easily ead of celery sint of water. 2d orion, also in a pint of 1g milk one | smooth ina celery in the iled and stir tter, salt and in and serve large potatoes rts of water a sieve and 1¢ tablespoon . Let it boil nt dried white norning drain, when it boils id one quart bout a quarter poil until the press through » kettle; add. d a small cup” and slice of sof fried or nels from six use two quarts hree quarts of green corn is water fifteen c- When the agh a strainer from escaping} he fire again, al each of but- nstantly in a ire, and poue 2 half of hot s add this, and or further sea- of onion is » milk to flavor: rench culinary ater in which ed and ex- after using three bottles amp-Boot, The following is Mr, Cradick’s unsolicited account of his distress- ing and painful case. eR GosPORT, Ind., Jan. from using your Swamp-Root: Kidney Liver : and Bladder Cure. Iam now 63 Sor old, ‘and have suffered almost. death for: aboul three years. ‘I had given up to die, but as } Ee dO pe a Christian. man and a great be. liever ieprayer of the righteous, I prayed that God would send something thc, would 3 ong my life, and I feel thankful to Him | You for the means that was sent. ‘May d spa Jour life many Fears yet that you hear the great good that your medicine On the 20th day of August, 1891, Frank Lawson, your agent at Spencer, me to take a bottle on. trial. bless you and your med 1 remain your oa E “1 in the five sl Pe and I | Virginia, | Georgia an i | i 3 # 5 Fo urteen Millions’ ‘of People . Absolutely Destitute of Food. Pestilence Adds Its Horrors to Hunger ‘and Cold, United States Minister Smith has reportad to the State Department at Washington these facts concerning the Russian famine, obtained from eye-witnessss and most trust- worthy sources: ; ors The famine is general in thirfesn prov- inces of Europzan Russia, viz; Kazan, Nijni-Nov; orod, Orenburg, Oufa, Pensa, Riazan, Samara, Baratof, Simbirsk, Tam- bov, Viatka, Toula 2nd Norenege; partial :¥ ox Vor: motnt, Massachusetts, Rhode d, Con- necticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsyl- vania, | ware, Maryland, Virginia, West North Carolina, South Carolina, >ntucky, and have ; fa | par rea the States ot Indiina, Iowa, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, : Iilinois, North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas. and half of Ohio, and have a population nearly double that of the eleven States. #This vast section isagricultural and ordinar. ily the most fruitful soil of Russia. .' | “It'is officially estimated that 14,000,000 persons in these provinces are without tood or means of support, and this estimate is probably below the true number. For three years the crops have fallen short of the average, and the deficiency of the past season left the storehouses well-nigh empty. 'With the increased failure ofthis yearit is’ positive, Minister Smith says, that unless adequate relief can be supplied the great present destitution and su ng will grow tion ofa ; he season continues.” <The peasants ke no savings generally, but live wholly drought leaves de reli . great pleasure in ing your letter, which: I received to- | misery of this people. When crops fail the ay. You say ‘‘you would like to'publish’ 7 testimonial in your Guides to odin for e.” I have no objections at all for I t to do all in my power for afflicted hu- ity. 1 send by this mail a las of the vel (about one-half of what I saved) that imp-Root dissolved and expelled from i /my. stomach and vomit ofte ffering a great deal from chills and: af mes these were so severe that I thought 1 ould freeze todeath. i ition for many wears, but since using your a Boon have been better than for a long ti fa ho hedicine has helped my appetite wonderfully and it seems as thoug x try from C 4 and hurch for forty-two years. dagen me for ¥risin £0 Spe for I feel t would never through praising your ‘remed ‘for K due or and Bladder es... Your%rue friend; ° Swamp-Root' have gener 1 ally first employed the tamily physician; or ‘used all the prescriptions within their reach without benefi case has become chronic, the symptoms come plicated and their constitution run dow / then they take this remedy, and it is just |. suchcases an: cures as the one: above that i bave mass Root famous. and given ita . 80ct. size, $1.00 size, or of wamp-Haot famous: and giver “wide reputation. ' At Druggists Dg. K1LMER & CO., BINGHAMTON, N YX, PNUSG . I had been troubled five. months with Dyspepsia. ‘1 had a fullness after eating, and a heavy loadin the pit of niy stomach.. Sometithes a deathly ‘sickness ‘would : overtake me. I was working for Thomas McHenry, Druggist, Allegheny City, Pa.,in whose employ I had been for seven years. Iused August Flower for two weeks. I was relieved ofall trouble. I can now eat things J dared not touch before.. I hake gained twenty pounds ‘since my re covery. J.D. Cox, Allegheny, Pa. a DR KILMER « painin: pack, brick d : pein enh brik Sunn #1 frozen.» Pwo or a last resort, when their * | grateful for their confidence. | Government loses revenue and ‘the peasants, while taxes and rental continue. lack all the necessaries of life; clothing, firewood, farm- . cattle, all depend upon this one resource— the crops. : : It is as difficult to get fuel as food in some sections, and cold as well as hunger causes terrible suffering, - In some neighborhoods large numbers of persons huddle together in some houses most conductive to warmth. {Barns have been torn down and the boards ‘used for firewood. Even thatched roofs are torn off and the straw burned for fuel: Cloth- ing is given away for Bread; horses and cat- ble are sacrificed at a titke of their value:” fodder is. as scaree as h 1 sustenance. ' During the winter théra is no work, and frequently fathers have left their wives and children to fight the battle of want alone, because they could ‘do nothing and their absence sould leave ' fey Vega 25 home. ai i ? of ‘The bread which many are posed of wild arrock, © Low tr g eaves, and these terriole c 0 bly producedisease. ithin the one mile there are 120 cases of Jphus mile t s of s fever; pestilence ‘and * hunger are daily gaining % gd t FR ple. i we ge Ten © LoS ine In January, February and March the roads are good, and sll energies ‘should be directed to pouring provisions into the suf- | fering provinces at once. The rivers are railroads: raninto-the famine-stricken region, but there are .na. branches bf these pailiiads and all provis i . be carried, for long distances on § middle of 2 gk figst of 1 Winter will break up, the roads become “heavy, aud the’ hofses now available for transportation will be needed for spring farming. Time is therefore a. most important factor in the work of relief; Every week is vital. “One hundred and Sighty million i ounds of. food are necessary. carloads should arrive every day in these stricken provinces, but only eleven carloads per day wera fte-. ceived Christmas week. The Imperial Govern. from the public treasury for the work of re- lief. But the work mustistill go on.i | | The Russian Emperor has personally given enormously and all classes are giving according to their means. The loss to the Government, revenus will be $10,000,000 or more, while a conservative estimate of the loss to Russia in view of all consequencs:s is place at not less than $500,000,000. Up to the present there have been few contribu. tions from abroad, but the Government and the people of Russia are’ deeply sensible of the spontaneous offers that have been made in various parts of the United States and the Emperor's Ministers, as well as others, ‘have manifested such to Minister Smith in their expressions of approbation. ——— ae BLAINE IS OUT OF THE RACE. Notice That he Will Not Be a Candidate For President. Washington, Feb. ~The following letter was made public Saturday, 3 ; Washington, Feb 6. To Hon. J. S. Ularkson, Chairman of the Re. publican National Committee: ‘My Dear Sir—1 am not a candidate for the Presidency, and my name will not go before the Republican National Convention for the nomination.’ I make this announcement in due season. To those who have tendered me their sup- port, Towe sincere thanks and am most They will, I am sure, make earnest efforts in the ap- proaching contest, which is rendered speci | ally important by reason of the industrial and financial policies of the Government being at stake. . : The popular decision on these issues is of great moment and will be of far-reaching consequence. = Very sincerely yours, +. JAMES G. Brang, TARDY CHILIAN JUSTICE. Three of the Assailants of the Baltimore , Seamen Sentenced at Last by the Court of Crimes, Subject to Appeal, Valparai:o, Feb, 6—Judge of Crimes : Fos: ter passed sentence in the long pending and much discussed Baltimore assault case of October 16, 1891, * His sentence is subject to review by the Court of Appeals. Tne sent- ences are as follows; Carlo Aréna, alas +-Gomez, killing Coal Heaver William Turn - will refund to you che % sts, 50c, Size, $1.00 Size, # ealth”’free—~Consultation free, Breeders ofthe Hary thins, - It rostores the song of Cage Birds: revents thir ailments And Keope then 4 condition. It makes Canarie ing even while ng feathers. Sem mail for 15 cents. Sold by all drag i , grocers and Sr bull, and other offenses, 920 days; Jose { ABumoda, injuring Turnball, 820 days; | Frederico Rodrigués, wounding Boatswain's Mate Chas. W. Riggin and ‘other offenses, 140 days; Gomez and 'Rodriglies, under the Chilian penal ‘code, must pay the families of Trumbull and Riggin damages, to be yedovered by civil suit, In Revolutionary times butter sold. for $1.25 per potnd, but as George ‘ashington truly remarked that was Kull, Olonetz, Orel, ond by oa pendent: pon. yeaHy. crops, . hence long { ing implements, the subsistence of: horses and | in ground, and pestilence is decimating the peos | ment so ‘far has appropriated $42,500,000 SATURDAY—The Senate was not in session "The House today continued the considera- tion of the proposed new: rules, but adjourned, after eulogies on the late Representative Houk, of Tennessee, without action. A 3 Moxpay—In the senate today the La Abra © aim bill was passed. It direets suit to be brought in the name of the United States in the court of clainis against the La Abra Silver Minine company, and - all persons makilig claim to any part of the award, to determine whether that award was o btained by fraud effectuated by means ‘of : false swearing. Aun appeal may be taken to the supreme court of the United States, and in case of final decision against the company the government of Mexico isto be released | from further payment and the amount un- distributed ig to be paid to the government of Mexico. A like bill in relationto the Benjamin Weil claim was then :takea up “and passad. Adjourned. : In the housenumerous bills’ and resolu~ tions were referred, the = most important being a resolution by Mr.Arnold of Missouri requesting the recall of Patrick [gan, nister to Chili. The remainder of the ay was taken up in continued discussion of the rules, the time for adjournment arriving before fingl action was taken. TuespAy—In the Sendte today the com- mittee on elections reported in favor of Du- ois as Senator from Idaho, There will be a inority reportin favor of Claggett. Mr. Ee I11., submitted a resolution for elec- tion o” Seuators by the people. ““ The House continued the discussion of the rules without making miuch progress. Rep- resentative Grady, of South Carolina; intro- duced a bill to reduce the President's salary to $25,000 a year. The bill also Proposes to reduce all other salaries, wages, fees and commutations exceeding $100 and tess than $167 per m nth by 10 percent. Mr. ¢ ulbertson reported the bill which proviles substantially that a corporation shall be deemed and held a citizen = for all judicial purposes in the State in which it may carry on its business, Adjourned. EDNESDAY—Senator Sawyer introduced a bill to construe the act of February, 1877, aliowing a pension of $36 a month io sol diers who have lost both an arm and a leg, 80 as to allow to those persons the same rate ‘of pension for each of the disabilifies describ- Mr. Dolph, from the Committee on ‘Foreign Relations, Jepoited to the Senate adversely a number of new Chinese Jnmign ‘tion restrictions and prohibitory: bills, and as © Thescarcity of provisions is’ not the only | _asubstitute therefor reported Senate bill 540 continuing all existing laws prohibiting and restricting Chinese immigration for a period of 10 years. : A ¢ i “The Senate passed a joint resolution direct. g the Secretary of the ‘Treasury to pay ta West Virginia its proportion of the Direct Tax Fund, Adjourned. : The House spent the entire session’ today in continued discussion of the Rules, making bat little progress. . oh THURSDAY—In the absegceof Vice Presi- dent Morton, the Senate was presided’ over by Mr. Mand rson; President pro tem today. After transacting some unimportant busi- mess the Senate proc to executive business. When the doors: were reopened Mr. Frye, who had nade an adverse report in the case of the bill for a bridge between New York and New Jersey, said ‘that the friends of the measure desired to have the bill and advérse report placed on the calen- “der, He had no objection; and the bill was therefore so placed. The report of the Com- mittee on Privileges and Elections in the case of the Flo! Mr. Call entitled to the seat, was taken up for action, and the report was read, closing with the sentence: The appointment of Mr. Davidson was an act of mere irrelevancey which it is not necessary farther to notice.” "After a long debate the resolution was agreed to without a division. Mr. Manderson, from the Committee on Military Affairs, reported a bill granting to the State of Wyoming certain lands in the Fort Russel military reservation as ‘grounds for agricultural exhibitions, and one for the t#improvement of the military reservation at alla’ Wallo, Washington. © Both were slaced on the calender, after which the Sen- ate adjourned till Monday. In the House the consideration of the rule reported by the committee on Rules having been concluded, Mr, Reed of Maine, on be- half of the Republicans, offered as a substi- _ tute therefore tne rules of the Fifry-first ' congress. Lost, without division. Thecode " of rules was then agreed to. Mr. Dickerson, of Kentucky, ' offered a resolution directing the committee on J udici- ary to make an investigation and report Whether Congress has ‘the constitutional ‘authority to appropriate money Tor the World's Columbian Exposition. Adopted. On motion of Mr. Goodnizht, cf Kentucky a Senate bill was p ssed to provide: for the creation of a fourth judicial district in the territory of Utah. ~The House adjourned until tomorrow.” Fripay.—The senate today. Upon the assembling of the House today, the Speaker stated that he. was suffering from a sore throat, and as the commiitees were to be called for reports, he would re- uest one of the reading clerks to ¢ill them. van Mr. McMillin took the chair. Mr. Fithian, of Iliinois, offered a biil lacing agricultural implemeats on the free ist, and asked that it be printed in the Record, but the permission was denied. The bill was referred to the Committee 6n Ways and Means. Sei The House then went into: Committee of the Whole on the Census Urgency Deficiency. bill. The bill was finally passed, and the House adjourned. it BATURDAY—The Senate was not in session today. > : Eulogieson the late Gen. W. H. F. Lee, was not in session Ld occupied the national house ‘of representu- tives all day, nothing else being done, A HORRIBLE BUTCHERY. Patrick Hurst Stabs His Wife 45 Times Because She Wanted to Be Boss. Chicago, Feb. '6—Patrick | Hurst ‘this afternoon murdered his wife Helen,to whom he had been married 35 years. .. The. crime ‘was deliberate and cold blooded. While all their children, were out of the house he went to his wife's bed where she was lying asleep, and plunged a huge bowie knife up to the hilt in her body 45 times inflicting wounds, ‘any one of which would have proved fatal. Hé gave himself up.’ When asked why he had committed the deed Hurst replied: “I killed her simply because she always wanted her own way,and because 1 thought she would not take care of me when I got old.” N : The Tomato Not Very Old, The tomato got no such early start in the world ‘as did its home-spun cousin, the potato. To be sure, it was carried to England in 1596, but never thought of. as being eatable then,. and was cultivated only for its ornamental appearance and possibly for medicinal purposes, Both there and on the Continent it was known as the love apple, the name which it gtill bears in France and Italy. Old ‘John Parkinson tells us in his quaint “way, #s early as 1629, ‘In’ hot coun- tries, where they naturally growe, they are much eaten of the people to cool and quench the heate and thirst of their hot stomaches.” Yet it is only within fifty years that they have come into general use. 4 JAGSON says that even the police- man wouldn't be nearly so apt to stay out nights if he didn’t have his club. Elmira rid’ Senatorsbip,” declaring |'| TWENTY OF THIRTY PEOPLE Lose Their Lives in a Firs Trap. The Hotel Royal Burned Early Sabbath Morning. New York, Feb. 8.—The Hotel Royal, at Fortieth street and Sixth . avenue, was destroyed by fire early Sunday morning and alarge number of people were burned to death, many suffocated by smoke and others crushed to death in the ruins. There were 133 people in the house at-the time the fire ‘broke out. Of these five have been found ‘dead and many are in the hospitals * Just | ‘how many escaped it is difficnlt to say, but late in the afternoon the firemen and the police came to the conclusion that the num- ber of lives lost would be between 20 and 30. The full number of deaths dus to the fire Tay not be known for days. The money Toss is $250,000. : “Four persons are known to be dead—3 not identified and Henry ¢. Levy, of Levy, Strauss & Freeman, New York. © The missing as far as known are: Mrs. [Slate, Mrs. Begley. housekeepers; Mrs. Corry, M 18. May and child, Mrs. Van Noorden, .Chalder Brandt, Mrs. ¥enderson, of Denver, iCo'o., Miss Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis, Mr. land Mrs. Guild, William ~E. Armstrong, Charles Close, Thomas Kennedy, four cham: bermaids. . Other employes who slept in the building were all saved. Of thetransient guests noth. ing definite is known, as the register is miss- ing, and even if the register were found it would give no clue to the missing, as it is thought many of the transients were regis- red under assumed names: i Theinjured are; C. W. Kleine, of Hazel- ton, Pa., Walter L. Yates, Isabella Meares, wife of proprietor of Hotel Royal, Herbert Harding, engineer at hotel, Richard Meares, proprietor of hotel. i i It was a few minutes after 3 o'clock Sun- day morning’ when the flames were first discovered. They never had better fuel. The building was composed of several old structures all combined into the Hotel Royal ears ago. In fifteen minutes the whole of he six story structure was ablaze, Flames shot out every window in the front of the house and people in the street could ste per- floor of “he burning building. Peopleleaped out of the windows to the sidewalks and were gathered up unconscious, burned, maimed ana mangled Ly the firemen and carried to places of safety. The most heroic efforts of the firemen were impotent against the devouring element. Harrowing scenes were witnessed by those who were assembled in sight of the hotel. One unknown man sprung from a window on the third floor and was dashed to death on the'sidewalk below before the horrified eyes of the spectators. A moment later an-\ other man leaped from a window and was mangled to death on the pavement. Shortly afterwards two women jumped from win- dows. Willing bands soon rasped them up but they were dead. Their bodies were at once removed tothe morgue: ' When the walls fell people were seen at several windows on the upper floors crying for help, but they fell back and were swal- owed up in the outburst of flames which rose from the ruins. How many then met their deaths, how many were suffocated in their rooms is not known. _ The origin of the blaze is a mystery. The janitor says the flames were shooting up the elevator shaft when he . first noticed them. FRANK Lustie’s WEErLy for this week is the strongest issue ever pub- lished. It hasa striking page picture of the ships of the new navy, another by Davidson entitled “Signaling the Fleet to Get Under Way,” a page of ‘ington by Clinedinst, some striking pictures of the new terminal facilities of the Pennsylvania Railroad in Jersey City, together with a hundsome picture of Cyrus W. Field from life. There are other fine-illustrations. © This number contains the last of the articles by Pro- fessor Totten on “The Coming Crisis.” MARKETS. : PITTSBURGH. BUTTER—Creamery Elgin..$ Country roll. ..... CHE! 8k =New Quio full cream New Yor EGGS ies POULTRY Jive Chickens, § pr : live Spring per pair live Turkeys, # b.. GAME-—Rabbits per pair .... Wild Turkeys ...... Pheasants per doz. . Quail per doz DUCKS-—Liive, per pdir ... POTATOES—Choice per bu ... SEEDS—Clover, western...... Timothy Bluegrass. coi chi sasanes Millet. @& = Bo Ov ZESZRLEESBE ro ter) BY Ui 28 BBVELESREZ No.:2red. ivi ani CORN—No:2 yellow ear...... xed @aT........... ...c. Shelled mixed..... » « saseee RY. FILOUR—Fancy winter pa Fancy spring pat's...... Clear winter Rye flour....... HAY—No. 1 Timothy Loose, from wagons... MIDDLINGS—W hite.. Brown........ Bran... ooiiia as FRUITS— Apples, fancy per bl DROI0R: usu veina sie FEATHERS —Live Geese,.... Mixed HONEY—New White Clo Ruckwheat MAPLE SYRUP—New TALLOW-—Country..... Cranberries . BERKEL ge i BO Ot S18 nr fk pt FOR GR nao; S85588228288% 35 ES8822ansustass | BY se sunsanss 88 od Jed 8 0 8 CINCINNATI. FLOUR—......,..... WHEAT—No. 2Red. RYE-—~No. 2... ..:., PHILADELPHIA. a $4 1 FLOUR— WHEAT—New No. 2. Red.... CORN—No. 2, Mixed..,... “OATS~—No. 2 White esses BUTTER—Creamery Extra... EGGS—Pa., firsts....... cocu0e : NEW YORK. FLOUR—~Patents......i.i i.e WHEAT—No. 2 Red ares E—Western...... “sen B LL KGGS—State and Pen LIVE-STOCK REPORT. East Liberty, Pittsburg Stock Yards. | OATTLE. i Prime steers...........0 Bulls and dry cows... Veal calves....... Heavy rough calves. Fresh-oows, per head.... i SHEEP, rim to 100-1b shee : onto 1b, hi Prime mmon 7 sons rushing frantically to and frowon every, sketches of Jife and character of Wash-. ; PATENTS foes ¥i unian: Jedi _ A WHOLE VILLAGE ATTACKED By La Grippe—Homes Desolated and Strong Men Prostrated—One Family Only Es- capes Without Serious Resnlts—A Shert History and Its Lesson. ‘Winona, Stark Co., Ind., Dec. 28,1891. . During the winter of 1891 1 and my family of six wére taken with the La Grippe. The disease was very prevalent at that time in the village where I resided, nearly every one beg sick with it. Our doctors treated as best they could, but were very unsuccessful in the treatment of it. Assoon as my family were taken sick T went to the drug store and bought six bottles of Pe-ru-na, and we all took it according to the directions given orL the bottle; and, although our cases seemed to be more thun usually violent in the outset, yet our recovery was prompt, and we were all well much sooner than those who were treated by the regular physician. In the beginning of the attack we all had a violent cough, bleeding at the nose and spitting of blood, but ‘the Pe-ru-na promptly relieved us, and we took no other medicine during our sickness. Many people died of the La Grippe daring this epidemic, and few, if any, were sick so short a time as myself and family. ‘after we were all sound and well again we still had one bottle of Pe-ru-na left in the house. I can cheerfully recommend the Pe-ru-na as a cure for the La Grippe and a general family medicine. : I shall not be without Pe- ru-na in my house again unless I am ab- solutely unable to get it. { I will answer any letters of inquiry from any one wishing to know more of the par- ticulars. ! C. T. HATFIELD. The aboveis the unsolicited testimony of an honest laboring man. . He &id exactly what hundreds of other parents have done, and what hundreds of others are doing, and what hundreds of hundreds will do as soon as they find out the value of Petu-naas a family medicine. Not only did Mr. Hatfield save inoney by resorting to Pe-ru-na, but his family recovered much sooner and more per- fectly than those treated mn the ordinary way. The fact is. there is no equal to Pe-ru-na for La Grippe, Catarrh (acute or chronic), Cou (oy Bronchitis and Consumption in the early stages. Pe-ru-ha is the pre- scription of a renowned physician who has in constant practice over thirty-five years, and this remedy has been used in four epidemics of La Grippe previous to this one with undeviating success. Complete direc- most droggists. : Send fon free copy of The Family Physi- cian No.2 on’ La Grippe, Catarrh, and all climatic diseases of winter. Address Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Co.. Columbus, O. GEN. Boon of the Salvation Arm) proposes to give a supper to 600 of London’s most notorious thieves. In some cities that could be mentioned Boards of Aldermen would attend in a body. FITS stopped free b ERYS ha ei IR Treatise botile tree. Dr. Kline, 881 Areh St., P Dr. ELINE'S day's bila. Far DR. SWAN'S PASTILES Cure female weaknesses; his T-Tablets cure chronic constipation, Sam- r. Swan, Beaver Dam, Wis. tions accompany each bottle, and is kept by |: Made welk. —the weak, nervous or ailing woman: who takes Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It’s a medicine that’s guaranteed to help her. It’s an in- vigorating, restorative tonic, sooth- ing cordial and bracing nervine — and a certain cure for all the fune- tional derangements, painful disor- ders or chronic weaknesses that affect women. For ulcerations, dis- placements, bearing-down sensations, everything that’s known as a “fe- male complaint,” it’s an unfailing remedy. It’s a peculiar one, too. Peculiar in’ composition, peculiar in its cures, and peculiar in the way it’s sold. It’s guaranteed to give satisfaction, in every case, or the money is refunded. You pay only for the good yon get. ; It’s the big, old - fashioned pill that makes the most disturbance— but.it’s one of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets that does the most good: Mild and gentle, but thorough and effective—the smallest, cheapest and easiest to take. They cleanse and regulate the liver, stomach and bowels. ! PNUG ELY'S GREAM BALM is worth $500 to any MAN, WOMAN OR CHILD suffering from CATARRH. Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY BROS, 56 Warren St.; N. ¥. Tutt's Tiny Pillse @é A single dose produces beneficial sults, giving cheerfulness of mind and buoyancy of body to which you were 4 before a stranger. They enjoy a @& ularity unparalleled. Price, 25¢cts. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp- ton’s Kye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle, Catarrh--Remove the Cause. I was afflicted from infancy with Catarrh, and for ten years with eruptions on my face: I was attended by the best physicians, and used a number of Blood remedies with no per-: / manent relief, MY LIFE BECAME A BURDEN TO ME, for my case was declared incurable. Isaw SS, 8S. advertised, and took eight bottles, which cured me entirely, and I feel like: a new person,—MIss Josie OWEN, Montpelier, Okio. : I was the victim of the worst case of Catarrh that I ever heard of. I was entirely: deaf in one ear, and all the inside of my nose, including part of the bone, sloughed offi. No sort of treatment benefited me, and physicians said “I would never be gny better,” As: a last resort I took Swift's Specific, and it entirely cured me and restored my hearing. X.. have been well for years, with no sign of return of the disease.—Mrs. JOSEPHINE PoLHILL, Due West, S. C.. 8. 8. 8. cures Catarrli; like it does other ‘Blood diseases, by elimina- ting the poison which causes it. Treatise on Blood and Skin mailed free. ; DO NOT BE DECEIVE FOES Rn with IIE RECEVED. and Paints which stain the hands, injure! ron. and bi it e Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor- 1ess, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. ty 3 don't wi ¥ you don't want the best, then don't want the Lace Back uspender. Your dealer has it if hes alive. Ifheisn’the shouldn't be your dealer, We will mail a pair on receipt of £1.00. None genuine without the stamp as ove. in Lacé Back Suspender Co, "BT Prince Ceol, N. Y. PEN i N W. H. DRUEN & C€O0.,U. S. Pension Claim Attorneys, Philadelphia and Chicago. 20 years' practice. Soldiers, Sailors, Widows and Minors entitled. Desertion Removed. Penna. or N.J. Advice Free, Call or write 0s. No fees in advance. Philadelphia Of- fices, corner Seventh and Sansom Streets. Mustrated Publications, with, ta, A Washington and Oregon, the } FREE OVERNMENT AND OHEAP A nd; = open to Settlers. Mailed FREE. Address Laud Com. N. P. R. R., 8, Paul, Minn, DON'T BUY SCALES i ——— Olustrated Catalogue and Price Ls of OSGOOD & THOMPSON, ; BINGHAMTON, N.Y. . REE on application. : Plso's Remedy for Catarrh is the Hest, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. Bold by druggists or sent by mail, § 506. B:7. Hazeltine, Warren; Pa.’ & SEL CURED 70 STAY CURED, y 1 CENT AE emcee yea ee Sample tee. Territory. DF. Bridgman, 378 Bway, N.X | Morphine Habit Cured in 10 x to 20 dn . till cured. oP TUM ESS ers nnss 0 WET dees 8 FREE x CAPITAL ple: XE tor, Bufo, =. Y ‘A NAVIGABLE BALLOON I Shi Ay ; Pa : i oY oH GLAZE: 10D PIT. r partion ress H. - BROOK, Sicon, NORPOLE. ONTARIO, CANADA. SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA. ; Largest business in | [$705 IN PRIZES given to the first persons who gives the correc answer to the following : & 3 ; g ) A rare 10 every Father and som, b ever, 0 Seoums one of the follow. ing Cash Prizes ; he Fourth “w oa - - - fil To each of the next Twenty, $5.00 cach {Ta each of tha next 100, Lh Ye of 8. is yeriise one publication and intredu: omens. Ia addition to the above we Oholco Ieuse or n Sanetimsenpicte git Vase prom ve Q ore, your Dame and address plainly anacnclose sub. scription money to ? g OME CHEER, 41 Beekman St., N. Y. Oitws Eczema, = Flatulence, - Female Cont planes Foul Breath, Headache, Heartburn, Hives, aundice, Kidney Com; Liver Troubles, Loss of Appetite, Men: Depression, Nausea e © 3 or impure blood or a failure in the proper perform: ance of their functions by the stomach, liver and es. Persons given to ov: areben- efited by jaking one tabule after each mal A continued use i r fend $0310 W, 45th, N.Y. , for Samples al } 8 : A No Wy for of vad sulngicures Sick Hondashor ? i; INSTITUTE, 1256 West 48a {roa. at office or by letter.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers