I 4 This Spring ? fired, nervous? - _ Oan'tiget rested? Tortured with boils, humors? “That is-not strange. Impurities have peen accumulating in your blood during inter and it has become impoverished. i is the experience of most people. fore they take Hood’s Barsaparilla 80 purify their blood in spring. | "My daughter was rur down and tired Mrhile ia school, and I have been giving her Hood's Sarsaparillfa, which has puri- Red ber blood and built her up, and she 1s mow getting well and strong. Ihavetaken Hood's Sarsaparilla myselt with excellent results, and whenever we have any little ailment we resort to this medicine. It koeps me in good health and good spirits, ssa makes me feel younger. My husband poen taking Hood’s Pills, and says he ever found any he likea as well.” -BM=s. EXNIE Pravzoear, 424 Warren Street, New York, N. Y. Remember Hood’s Sarsa- parilla America’s Greatest Medicine, Sold by all druggists. $1;six for 85. Get only Hood's. Hood's Pills 335.5020 Sater The vine attains a great age, contin- uing fruitful for at least 400 years. It is supposed to be equal to the oak as regards longevity. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25¢. If C. C. C, fail, druggists refund money. Novel Use for X Ray. { Spurious mummies have from time to time been palmed oif on the publie, and ® doubt arose in a Vienna museum as to khe validity of one daughter of the Pharaohs in their collection. It oc- curred to them, in view of the general hollowness of life, that the young lady might have been manufactured in Bir- mingham. So they turned the Roent- gen rays upon her and saw at once through her many tolded wraps the pmulets which the Egyptians placed upon the bosoms of their dead, thus proving the genuineness of their speci- men. A Good Dictionary Fer Twe Cents. ' A dictionary containinz 10,000 of the most useful words in the English language, is published by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. While it contains pome advertising, it is a complete diction- bry, concise and correct. n compiling this book care has been taken to omit one of those common words whose spell- ng or exact use occasions at times a momentary difficulty, even to well edu- cated people. The main aim has been to give as much useful information as pos- pible In a limited space. To.those who already have a dictionary, this book will commend {itself because it is compact, light and convenient; to those who have no dictionary whatever, it will be invaluable. One may be secured by writing totheabove concern, mentioning this paper, and en- closing a two-cent stamp. A Klondyke “Olean-Up."" _ In the Century John Sidmey Webb describes “The River Trip to the Klon- ike.” In telling of his visit to the El : orado mines, the auther says: The Bluice-boxes are made of boards, ma- chine or ship sawed, and roughly nailed up into troughs or boxes, and fitted to- ther like stovepipes. Cleats are nail- dinto the last boxes, called ‘riffies,” or, in some instances, shallow auger- holes are bored into the bottom boards. he boxes are then set up in line on a gentle slope, and the pay afrt 1s shovel- ed in at the top, and a stream of water, controlled by a dam, sluices over the dirt and gold. The weight of gold is so great that it falls, and the dirt and use- less gravel washes off, the gold being caught upon the cleats or fn the holes scattered about. In the last bexes quicksilver is put in to eatch the very fine gold. When the gold is taken from the boxes it is called a “clean-up.” On the day I was there (Aug. 17), at No. BO El Dorado twenty thousand dollars was “eleaned up” in twenty-four hours, with only ore man shoveling in the dirt. Such wonderful results: may mean, however, months of expensive work; but “when it eomes, it comes quick,” as the saying is ameng the min. ers. : TO MRS. PINKHAM From Mrs. Walter E. Budd, of Pat- chogue, New York. Mrs. Bupp, in the following letter, tells a familiar story of weakness and suffering, and thanks Mrs. Pinkham for complete relief: *“DeAR Mes. PINEEAM:—T think it is my duty to write to youandtellyou what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. I feel like another woman. Ihadsuch dread- ful headaches through my temples and on top of my head, that I nearly went crazy;wasalso A troubled with [ ,wasvery weak; my left side from my shoulders to : - my waist pain- ed me terribly. I could not sleep for the pain. Plasters would Help for a while, but as soon as taken off, the pain would be just as bad as ever. Doctors _ prescribed medicine, but it gave me no welief. : “Now I feel so well and strong, ve’ no more headaches, and no paim id side, and it is all owing to your Compound. I cannot praise it enough. It is a wonderful medicine. X recommend it to every woman I mow. j SERNORS BY EINE DIVRES. GOSPEL MESSAGES. — Subject: “Herding the Sheep'—Prays That His Flock May Listen to the Pip- ing of the Good Shepherd, Bidding Them to Renounce Sin and Ask Pardon. 3 Text: “The Lord is my shepherd.”— Psalms xxiif., 1. What with post and rail fences and our Tide in Southdown, Astrakhan and Flem- h varieties of sheep, there is no use now of the old-time shepherd. Such a one had abundance of opportunity of becoming a poet, being out of doors twelve hours a day, and ofttimes waking up in the night on the hills. If the stars orthe torrents or the sun or the flowers had anything to say, he was very apt to hear it. The Et- trick Shepherd of Scotland, who afterward took his seat in the brilliant circle of Wil- son and Logekhart, got his wonderful poetic inspiration in the ten years in which he was watching the flocks of Mr. Laidlaw. There is often a sweet poetry in the rugged prose of the Scotch shepherd. One of these Scotch shepherds lost his only son, and he knelt down in prayer and was over- heard to say, ‘“O Lord, it has seemed good in Thy providence to take from me the staff of my right hand at the time shen to us sand blind mortals I seemed to be most in need of it, and how I shall climb up the hill of sorrow and auld age without it Thou mayst ken, but I dinna!” David, the shepherd boy, is watching his father’s sheep. They are pasturing on the very hills where afterward a Lamb was born of which you have heard much, “the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world: David, the shepherd boy, was beautiful, brave, musical and poetic. I think he often forgot the sheep in his reveries. There in the solitude he struck the harp string that is thrilling through all ages. David the boy was gathering the material for David the poet and David the man.. Like other boys, David was fond of using his knife among the saplings, and he had noticed the exuding of the juiea of the tree, and when he became a man he said, ‘The trees of the Lord are full of gap.” David the boy,-like other boys, had been fond of hunting the birds’ nests, and he had driven the old stork off the nest to find how many eggs were under her, and when he became a man he said, “As for the stork, the fir trees are her house.” In boyhood he had heard the terrific thunderstorm that frightened the red deer into.prema- ture sickness, and when he became a man he said, “The voice of the Lord maketh the hinds to calve.” David the boy had lain upon his back looking up at the stars and examining the sky, and to his boyish imagination the sky seemed like a piece of divine embroidery, the divine fingers work- ing in the threads of light and the beads of stars, and he became a man and wrote, ‘““When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers.” When he became an old man, thinking of the goodness: of-God, he seemed to hear the bleating of his father's sheep across many years and to think of the time when he tended them on the Beth- lehem hills, and he cries out in the text, ‘“The Lord is my shepherd.” If God will help me, I will talk to you of the shepherd's plaid, the.shepherd’s crook, the shepherd’s dogs, the shepherd’s past- ure grounds and the shepherd’s flocks. And first the shepherd’s plaid. It would be preposterous for a man going out to rough and besoiling work to put on splendid apparel. The potter does not work in velvet; the serving maid does not put on satin while toiling at her duties; the shep- herd does not wear a splendid robe in which to go out amid the storms and the rocked and the nettles; he puts on the rough ap- pagel appropriate to his exposed work. The ord our Shepherd, coming out to hunt the lost sheep, puts on no regal apparel, but the plain garment of our humanity. There was nothing pretentious about it. I know the old painters represent a halo around the babe Jesus, but I do not suppose that there was any more halo about that child than about the head of any otherbabe that was born that Christmas eve in Judea. Be- coming a man, he wore a seamless garment. The scissors and needle had done nothing to make it graceful. I take it tohave been a sack with three holes in it—one for the neck and two for the arms. Although the gamblers quarreled over it that is ‘no evi- dence of its value. I have geen two rag- ickers quarrel over tho refuse of an ash arrel. No, in the wardrobe of heaven he left the sandals of light, the girdles of beauty, the robes of power and put on the besoiled and tattered raiment of our hu- manpity. Sometimes he did not even wear the seamless robe. What is that hanging about the waist of Christ? Is ita badge of authority? Is it a royal coat of arms? No, itis a towel. The disciples’ feet are flithy from the walk on the long way and are not “fit to be put upon the sofas on which ‘they are to.recline at the meal, and so Jesus washes their feet and gathers: them up in the towel to dry them. The work of saving this world was rough work, rugged work, hard work, and Jesus put on the raiment, the plain raiment, of our flesh. Next I mention the shepherd’s crook. This was a rod with a curve at the end, which, when a sheep was going astray, was thrown over its neek, and in that way it was pulled back. When the gheep wore not going astray the shepherd would often use it ag a sort of crutch, leuning on it, but when the sheep were out of the way the crook was always busy pulling them back. All we, like sheep, have gone astray, and had it not been for the Shepherd's erook we would have fallen long ago over the precipices. Here is a man who is making too much money. He is getting very vain. He says: ‘‘After awhile I shall be independent of all the world.” Oh, my soul, eat, drink and be merry!” Business disaster comes to him. What is God going to do with him? Has God any grudge against him? Oh, no. God is throwing over him the shepherd’s crook and pulling him back into better pastures. Here is a man who has always been well. He has never had any sympathy for in= valids. He calls them coughing, wheezing nuisances. After awhile sickness comes to him. He does not understand what God is going to do with him. He says, ‘Is the Lord angry with me?” Oh, no. With the shepherd’s crook he has been pulled baek into better pastures. Here is a happy household circle. The parent .does not realize the truth that these children are only loaned to him, and he forgets from what source came his domestic blessings. Bickness drops upon those children and death swoops upon a little one. He says, “Is God'angry with me?” No. His shep- herd’s crook pulls him back into better pasiures. I do not know what would have ecome of us if it had not been for the shepherd’s crook. Oh, the mercies of our troubles! You take up apples and plums from under the shade of the trees, and the very best fruits of Christian character we find in the deep shade of trouble. When I was on the steamer coming across the ocean, IT got a cinder in my eye, and several persons tried to get it out very gently, but it could not be taken out in that way. I was told that the engineer had a facility in such cases. I went to him. He put his large, sooty hand on me, took a knife and wrapped the lid of the eye around the knife. I expected to be hurt very much, but without any pain and in- stantly he removed the cinder. Oh, there come times in our Christian life when our spiritual vision is being spoiled and all gentle appliances fail. Then there comes some giant trouble and, black handed, .lays hold of us and removes that which would have ruined our vision forever. I will gather all your joys together in one regiment of ten companies, and I will put them under Colonel Joy. Then I will gather all your sorrows together in one regiment of ten companies and put them under Colonel Breakheart. Then I will ask which of these regiments has gained for you the greater spiritual victories, Certainly that under Colonel Breakheart. . cer has sold out in disgust. There is no animal that struggles more violently than a sheep when you corner it and catch hold of it, Down in the glen £ see agroup of men around a lost sheep. A plowman comes along and seizes the sheep and tries to pacify it, but it is more frightened than ever. A miller comes along, puts down his grist and caresses the sheep, and it seems as if it would die ot fright. After awhile some one breaks through the thicket. He says, ‘‘Let me have the poor thing.” He comes up and lays his arms around the sheep, and it is immediately quiet. Who is the last man that comes? It. is the shepherd. Ah, my friends, be not afraid of the shepherds crook, It is never used on you save in mercy to pull you back. The hard, cold iceberg of trouble will melt in the warm gulf stream of divine sympathy. here 1s one passage I think you misin- terpret, ‘‘The bruised reed He will not break.” Do you know that the shepherd in olden times played upon these reeds? They were very easily bruised, but when they were bruised they were never mended. The shepherd could so easily make another one, he would snap the old one and throw it away and get another. The Bibla says it is not so with our Shepherd. When the music is gone out of a man’s soul, God does not snap-him in twain and throw himaway. He mends and restores, ‘“The bruised reed He will not break.” Next Ispeak of theshepherds’ dogs. They watch the straying sheep and drive them back again. Every shepherd has his dog, from the nomads of the Bible times down to the Scotch herdsman watching his flocks on the Grampian hills. Our shepherd em- ploys the criticisms and persecutions of the world as his dogs. There are those, you know, whose whole work it is to watoh the inconsistencies of Christians and bark at them. If one of God’s sheep gets astray, the world howls. With more avidity than a shepherd’s dog ever caught a stray sheep by the flanks or lugged it by the ears worldlings seize the Christian astray. It ought to do us good to ‘know that we are thus watched. It ought to put us on our guard. They cannot biteus if we stay near the Shepton) The sharp knife of worldly assault will only trim the vines until; they produce better grapes. The more you pound marjoram and rosemary the sweeter they smell. The more dogs take after you the auicker you will get to the gate. You have noticed that different flocks of sheep have different marks upon them— sometimes .a red mark, sometimes a blue -mark, sometimes a straight mark and some- times a crooked mark. -The Lord our Shep- herd has a mark for his sheep. Itis a red mark, the mark of the cross. ‘Blessed are they that are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” Furthermore, consider the shepherds’ pasture grounds. The old shepherds used to take the sheep upon the mountains in the summer and dwell in the valleys in the winter. The sheep being out of doors per- petually, their wool was better than if they had been kept in the hot atmosphere of the sheep cot. Wells were dug for the sheep and covered with large stones in order that the hot weather might not spoil the water. And then the shepherd led his flock wher- ever he would. Nobody disputed his right. So the Lord our Shepherd has a large pas- ture ground. He takes us in the summer to the mountains and in the winter to the valleys. Warm days of prosperity come, and we stand on sun gilt Sabbaths and on hills of transfiguration, and we are so high up we can catch a glimpse of the pinnacles of the heavenly city. Then cold wintry days of trouble come, and we go down into the valley of sickness, want and bereave- ment, and we say, ‘‘Is there any sorrow like unto my sorrow?’ But, blessed be God, the Lord’s sheep can find pasture any- where. Between two rocks of trouble a tuft of succulent promises, green pastures beside still waters, long sweet grass be- tween bitter graves. You have noticed the structure of the sheep’s mouth? It is so sharp that it cantake up a blade of grass or clover top from the very narrowest spot. And so God’s sheep can pick up comfort whereothers can gather none. ‘‘“The secret of the Lord 1s with them that fear him.” Lastly, consider the shepherd’s fold. The time of sheep shearing was a very glad time. The neighbors gathered together, and they poured wine and danced for joy. The : sheep were put in a place inclosed by a wall, where it was very easy to count them and know whether any of them had been taken by the jackals or dogs. The inclosure was called the sheepfold, Good news I have to tell you, in that our Lord the Shepherd has a sheepfold, and those who are gathered in it shall never be ‘struck by the storm, shall never bs touched by the jackals of temptation and‘ trouble. It has a high wall—so high that no troubles can get in—so high that the joys cannot get out. How glad the old sheep will beto find the iambs that left them a good many years ago. Millions of children in heaven. Oh, what a merry heaven it wlll make! Not many long meter psalms there. They will be in the majority and will run away with our song, carrying it up to a still higher point of ecstasy, Oh, there will be shouting. If children on earth glapped their hands and danced for joy, what will they ‘do when to the glad- ness of childhood on earth is added the gladnegs of childhood in heaven? It is time we got over these morbid ideas of how we shall get out of this world. You make your religion an undertaker planing coffins and driving hearses. Your religion smells of the yarnish of a funeral casket. Rather let your religion to-day come out and show you the sheepfold that God has provided for you. Ah, you say, there is a river between this and that. 1 know it, but that Jordan is only for the sheep washing, and they shall go up on the other banks snow white. They follow the great Shepherd. They heard his voice long ago. They are safe now—one fold and one Shepherd. Alas for those who are finally found out- side the inclosurel The night of their sin howls with jackals; thay are thirsting for their blood. The very moment that a lamb may be frisking upon the hiils a bear may be looking at it from the thicket, In June, 1815, there was a very noble party gathercd in a house in St. James’ square, London. The (prince regent was present, and the occasion was mada fas- cinating by music and banqueting and by jewels. While a quadrille was being formed suddenly all the people rushed to the windows. What is the matter? Henry Percy had arrived with the news that Waterloo had been fought and rhat Eng- land had won the day. The dance was abandoned, the party dispersed, lords, la- dies and musicians rushed into the street, and in fifteen minutes from the first an- nouncement of the good news the house was emptied of all its guests. Ok, ye who are seated at the banquet of this world or whirling in its gayeties and frivolities, if you could hear the sweet strains of the gospel trumpet announcing Christ’s vie- tory over sin and death and kell, you would rush forth, glad in the eternal de- liverance. The Waterloo against sin has been fought, and our Commander-in- Chief hath won the day. Oh, the joys of this salvation! I do not care what meta. phor, what comparison you have, bring it to.me, that I may use it. Awos shall bring one simile, Isaiah” another; John another. Beautiful with pardon. Beautiful with peace. Beautiful with anticipations. Or to return to the pastoral figure of my text, come out of the poor pasturage of this world into the rich fortunes of the Good Shepherd. . The shepherd of old used to play beauti- ful music, and sometimes the sheep would gather around him and listen. To-day my heavenly 8hepherd calls to you with the very music of heaven, bidding you to leave your sin and accept His pardon. Oh, that all this flock would hear the piping of the Good Shepherd. After having been robbed a dozen times in three months, a Huntington (Ind.) gro- His successor announces his readiness to greet the rob- bers, if they come again, with a warmth that will make them remember him as well as they have remembered the store. ‘all been built since 1883. How to Itise Karly. Thomas and Simms live opposite each bther in a narrow street. They were going on a fishing excursiongthe other ay, and as they wanted to be sure to | fake in time to catch the carly train, they ran a bit ¢f clothesine across the btreet in at the second story windows, tnd each tied an end to his leg, so that one awoke the other would imme- filately feel a pull, says Tit-Bits. ; The scheme was an excellent one, we know of no reason ‘why, under Be circumstances, it should not ve worked well ! But about five o'clock that morning pome laborers assembled in front of Pimms’ for the purpose of erecting a telegraph pole. When the hole was dug they began to put the pole upon end. But, unfortunately, it slipped down with tremendous force upon the clothes-line. Mrs. Simms was very much surprised to see Henry go over the foot of the bed and shoot feet foremost out of the window; but even she was not more gmazed than Mra. Thompson was when Archibald performed the same feat. They met in the middle of the street, clustering as it werey round the pole, but each with a broken leg. They wake themselves now with alarm clocks. It is safer—and less exciting. Guard Pupils’ Emotions. “The Board of Education out in Ala- meda, Cal, has a tender regard for the sensitive feelings of children,” remark- ed Edward J. Holland, of San Fran- cisco, at Willard’s. “A recent order by the board forbids the wearing of mourning garb on the part of any pub- lic school teacher. The chairman of these wise officials, in explaining the order, said it was in the Interest of boys and girls whose spirits became weighed down through casting their eyes on the habiliments of grief, and were thus unable to attend properly to their studies. ? “As an instance of ultra consideration for the young, I think this action of the Alameda School Board beats the rec- ord, but how about the feelings of some young lady teacher, who might desire to clothe herself in black as an evidence of family bereavement ?”’—Washington Post. Some bare-facead lies are old enough to wear a full beard. The Cause of Dyspepsia. From the Republican, Scranion, Penna. The primary cause of:dyspepsia is lack of vitality; the absence of nerve force; the loss of the life-sustaining elements of the blood, No organ can properly perform its fanc- tion when tha source of nutriment fails. When the stomach 1s robbed of the nourish- ment demanded by nature, assim{lation ceases, unnatural gases are generated; the entire Bystem responds to the discord. i A practical illustration of the symptoms and torture of dyspepsia is furnished by the case of Joseph T. Vandyke, 440 Hickory Bt., Scranton, Pa. ’ In telling his story, Mr. Vandyke says: “Five years ago 1 was afflicted with a trouble of the stomach, es which was very aggravat- ing. I had no appetite, could not enjoy myself at any time, and especially was the trouble severe when { awoke {n the morn- fag. I didnot know what the ailment was, but it be- camé steadily worse and I was in gonstant misery. “I oalléd in ny family physician, end he diag- nosed the case as catarrh of the stomach. He HA scribed for me and I had = : his prescription filled. I Im Misery. took nearly all of the medicine, but still the trouble became worse, and I {felt that my condition was hopeless. - I tried several remedies recommended by my friends but without benefit. After I had been suffering several months, Thomas Campbell, also a resident of this city, urged me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. “He finally persuaded me to buy a box and I began to use the Jie according to directions. Before I had taken the second box I bagan to feel relieved, and after tak- Ing a few more hoxes, I considered myself restored to health. The pills gave me new life, strength, ambition and happiness,’ : Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cure dyspepsia by restoring to the blood the requisite con- stituents tof life, by renewing the nerve force and enabling the stomach to prompt- ly and properly assimilate the food. ‘These pus are a specific for all diseases having heir origination in impoverished blood or disordered nerves. They contain every element requisite to general nutrition, to restore strength to the weak, good health to the afling. Some Chinese rosaries are made of wooden beads, with leather tassels on which are small brass rings, and are finished at the ends with brass orna- ments and tags of leather. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- urities from the a Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. A drug- gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50c. The American navy has practically How's This ? offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any oase of Catarrh that cannot be cured ‘by Hall's Catarrh Care. ; 'y & CO., Props., Toledo, O, . igned, have known F. J. Che- ney for the last 15 Feats, snl believe him per- fectly honorable in all business tranzactions and financially able to carry out any obliga- tion made by their. firm. Wess & TruAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, io. WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system. Price, 75¢c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forchildren teething, softens the gums, reducing in- flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25¢. a bottle. Fits Jermanently cured. No fitsornervous- ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2trial bottle and treatise {ree.Dr.R.H.KLINE Ltd. 831 Arch St.Phila., Pa. We In Germany and Holland girls are chosen in preference to young men in all occupations where they can be ad- vantageously employed. No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco babit cure, makes weak men strong, b. pure. 50c, $1. All druggists. THe Siamese have a great horror of odd numbers, and were never known. to put five, nine or eleven windows in a house or temple.- Notwithstanding the hard times, seal- skins are worn ‘the year round—by the seals, Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag: petio, full of life, nerve and vigor, take Ne-Teo- Bag, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 500 or 1. Cure guaran- teed. Booklet snd sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York The names of no fewer than 105 bat- tles are emblazoned on the banners of the various regiments which form the British army. * To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails tocure. 25c. Corks are being made for medicine bottles which will drop the liquid in- stead of pouring it, an air inlet pas- sage and liquid outlet passage being cut in opposite sides of the cork with a bulb over the air inlet to control the air vacuum inside the bottle. Chew Star Tobacco—The Best, Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. An act of Congress in 1872 abolished flogging in the navy. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 256. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Barge horses are longer-lived than carriage horses. I have found Piso’s Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine.—F. LoTz, 1305 Scott St,, Covington, Ky., Oct. 1, 1894. SF suffered the tortures of the damned with protruding piles brought on by constipa=- tion with which I was afflicted for twenty years. Iran across your CASCARETS in the town of Newell, Ia., and never found anything to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from piles and feel like a new man.” C. H. KEITZ, 1411 Jones St., Sioux City, Ia. « A canDY . CATHARTIC Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10¢, 25¢, 50c. ..». CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chiengo, Montreal, New York, 312 NO-TO-BA Sold and uaranteed by. all drug- gists to cv JB E Tobacco Habit. OPIUM — ST. VITUS’ DANCE, SPASMS and all nerv« ous filscages permanently gured by the uge of r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE $100 trial bottle and treatise to: 5 R. H. Kline, Ltd. 981 Arch Street, Phila. P 3 “JONES HE PAYS THE FREIGHT.” wi Farm and Wagon United States Standard. All Sizes and All Kinds. Not made by a trust or controlled by a combinati For TR Book and Price Lix, pining ons JONES OF BINGHAMTON, Biaghamten, N, X,., U.S. A, THE DOMINANT AR unsurpassed Musical Monthly Magazine for Bands and Orches- tras. 54 pages. New Music, Bright Literature. Special Woman’s Department. Great Clubbing Offer. $1.00 early. Sample copy and preminvm list, 10c. HE DOMINANT, 44 W. 29th St., N.Y. City. IT PAYS to know before buying. Write for Clircular and Prices, Make more and better butter. NS WE PAY FREIGHT. J.C. KEARNS. Manufacturer, MAITLAND, PA. [JETEGTIVES WANTED Ye want indus- trious, trust worthy men to represent us; experi- ence unnecessury; apply with references. RELIABLE DETECTIVE AGENCY, 330 Broazdwsay, New York City- Poon i PATENTS, CLAIMS, JOHN W. MORRIS, WASHINGTON, D. GQ ate Principal Examiner U. 8. Pension Bureau. 3 yrs. in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty. since. EN AND WOMEN WANTED TO TRAVEL for old established house. Per- manent position. #40 per month and all ex- penses, P.W,ZIEGLER & CO., 238 Locust St, P. . and Liquor Habit cured in 10 to 20 days. No pay till cured. Dr.J.L.Stephens, Dept. A, Lebanon, Ohio. E. HUME TAXl« BERT,Attorney at Law and Soe lieitor of Patents, 501 F St., Washe ington, D. C. Correspondence Solicited. PNU 16 '98 ERC CE [3 CURES WRER S. 1 Sd Best Cough ALi Jus Use ww in time. Sold by druggists. TN LEONSUMPTIO / STANDARD OF THE WORLD POPE MFG 0. HARTFORD. CONN. ART CATALOGUE OF COLUMBIA BICYCLES BY MAIL TO ANY ADDRESS FOR ONE TWO CENT STAMP. THE (OLUMBIA (HAINLESS MAKES HILL CLIMBING EASY PRICE $125 All Colu mins are made of famous 5% Nickel Steel Tubing— the strongest material If anything better can be known to the art. found we will put it in Columbias. ET YOUR OWN PAIN] UR a2 WALLS:GEILI CIMO FRESCO TINTS FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS grocer or paint dealer and do your own kal- This material is made on scientific principles by ma in twenty-four tints and is superior to any concoction of Glue and Wh Purchase a package of CALGIMO 5000 inery and milled ing that can possibly be made by hand. To BE arxep WITH Corp WATER. 3" SEND FOR SAMPLE COLOR CARDS and if you cannot purchase this material from your local dealers let us know and we will put you in the way of obtaining it. E MURALO CO., NEW BRIGHTON, S. I, N A W YORK a tl a ie RR tly red by using DR. WHITEHALL'S EE a ation of Sen ohilcation. THE DR. RIKUMATIO CURE, The sutcst and the best. Samplo send WHITENALL MEGRIMINE CO. South Bend. lndians, The Pot Called the Kettle Black Because the Housewife Didn't Use SAPOLIOC
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers