Pimples Are the danger signals of impure blood. They show that the vital blood is in bad condition, that health is in danger of wreck. Clear the track by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and the blood will be made pure, complexion fair and healthy, and life’s journey pleasant and successful. Sarsa- Hood’s ana Is America's s Greatest Medicine. $1; qix for $% Hood's Pills cure indiz restion, biliousncss. Ever Have a Dor Bother You When riding a wheel, making you wonder for a few minutes whetheror not you are to zeta fall and a broken neck? W ouldn't you have given a small farm just then for some means of driving off the beast? A few drops of am- monia shot from a Liquid Pistol would do it effectually and still not permane ntly injure the animal. Such pistols sent gosipald for fifty cents in stamps by New ork Union Supply Co., 135 Leonard * New York City. Every bicyclist at times wishes he had one a We think Piso’s Cure for A the only medicine for Coughs. —JEN IE PINCKARD, Springfield, Ills. Oct. 1, 1894, It is said that in some of the farm- ing districts of China pigs are har- nessed to small wagons and made to draw them. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, biood pure. boc, 81. A All druggista A new sunbonnet, a sort of poke headgear, has been designed and tried on a thousand camels. Out of these animals, which have marched all the way from Assiout, only one animal died from the effects of the sun, and that was a camel which had lost its hat. ¥ive Cen Everybody knows that Dobbins' Electric Boap is the best in the world, and for 33 years it has sold at the highest price. Its price is now b cents, same as common brown soap. Bars full size and quality.Order of grocer. 4dv According to oculists, poor window glass is responsible for eye strain, on account of the faulty refraction. The silkworm is liable to over one hundred diseases. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag- netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or &l. Cure guaran- teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York EUGENIE AT COMPIEGNE. Rarely Beautiful and Fascinating Woman in Her Prime. Much has been said and written about this beautiful and fascinating woman, but, however great the praises bestowed, they have never, to my mind, been exaggerated, says the Corn- hill Magazine. It would be esssible, no doubt, to find more perfectly fauit- less features, even more beautiful eyes and complexion, but I have never seen the woman who united so many per- fections. The creamy Muster of the skin, the expression of those tender and sympathetic eyes, the radiant smile, the glorious mass of quite gold- .en hair, the slope of the graceful shoul- ders, all these charms, enhanced by a toilet as exquisite as Parisian taste could conceive, united to make a per- fection that seemed to eclipse and ut- terly to destroy the beauty of every other woman present, although there were many celebrities of all nations present who were famed, and justly famed, for the gifts that Venus had be- stowed upon ‘them. But yet the em- press was not just now what the French call en beaute, for thé“event s0 deeply interesting to France, so im- portant to the imperial pair concerned, was not' very far distant, and great | care was needed, although the imperial lady herself somewhat pooh-poohed many extra precautions; at any rate, slie never allowed herself to show or professed to | feel any unusual fatigue. Only Case on Record. Through all his passionate pleadings she sat absolutely unmoved. It was the first instance ever noted where a woman sat thus who had secured pos- session of a piazza rocker.—Cincinnati Enquirer. REGAINED HEALTH. CGratifying Letters to Mrs. Pinks kam From Happy Women. “1 Owe You My Life” Mrs. £. WOOLHISER, Mills, Neb., “DEAR Mns. PINkHAM:—I owe my life to your Vegetable Compound. The doctors said I had consumption and nothing eould be done for me. My menstruation had stopped and they said my blood was turning to water. 1 had several doctors. They all said I could notlive. Ibegan the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it helped me right away; menses returned and I have gained in weight. I havebetter health than I have had for years. Itiswonderful what your Com- pound has done for me.” writes: “3X Feel Like a New Person.” Mrs. Gro. LEACH, 1609 Belle St., Alton, Ill., writes: ‘“ Before I began to take your Vege- table Compound I was a great sufferer from womb trouble. Mcnses would ap- pear two and three times in a month, causing me to be so weak I could not stand. Icould neither sleepnor eat,and looked so badly my friends hardly knew me. “1 took doctor's medicine but did not derive much benefit from it. My drug- gist gave me one of your little books, and after reading it I decided to try Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Com- pound. I feel like a mew person. I would not give your Cempound for all the doctors’ medicine in the world. I san not praise it enough.” > VW OVW © ON CHILDREN'S COLUMN. “VV VD © VV VW Long Comes 'Liza With the Broom, Just as soon’s I get to playiu’ Noah's ark or train of cars, Out there in a nice warm kitchen, Trouble’s in for mo—my stars! Long comes ’Liza with the broom: “Took out now, I've lots to do; Clear your duds outof my way— Can’t be bothered here by you!” Then I think I'll try the stoop; So I move as meek’s a lamb Get to playin’ nice as ever— Out comes Liza's broom, ker-slam! “Come now, boy—you're in my way!" Out she flies. “I've got to sweep!” My Noah's ark, my cars and me All go tumbling in a heap. “Want to sweep me off the earth?" That’s how I talk back to her; But it’s not a mite of good— ’Liza comes with such a whir, Sweepin’ dust right in my face, That I have to cut an’ run, Glad to hurry from a place Where there’s not a bit of fun! When I have a little boy, He shall play just where he likes, Litterin’ up the kitchen floor All he wants to, makin’ kites, Pastin’ scrap- books, playin’ cars— Jolliest place in all the town; There shan’t be a "Liza then Always bossin’ my boy roun’! —Harriet Francene Crocker, in St. Nicholas. Pretty Custom in Merrie England. ‘‘Haying’’ parties are now the pop- ular al fresco entertainment among the children of the English gentry. When the hay on the farms ‘connected with the estates is cut and dried, and just before being carried to the barn, invitations are sent out to the children of the neighborhood, who come at the stated hour under the convoy of their nurses, to play for awhile under the fragrant cocks of hay, then ride on the overflowingloads to the open barn, A supper on the lawn crowns the little fete. School That Began at Noon. “The Three R’s at Circle City” is the subject of a paper by Miss Anna Falconer in the Century. The author says: During the short winter days it would often be naon before all the children put in an appearance. When I arrived, at 9 o’clock, it would either be dark or brilliant moonlight. Smoke might be seen lazily rising from four or five cabins out of the four or five hundred. I would lightone lamp,and wait. By 10 o’clock a few children would straggle sleepily in, just as the day began to dawn. By 11 o’clock, shortly after sunrise, the majority of the children were at school, some coming without their breakfasts. By half past twelve all who were coming that day would have appeared. It was hard to get up before daylight on those cold, dark mornings. TI often used to wish. that I was one of the little girls, so that I too might sleep until daylight. No one in camp pre- tended to get up early, must be done. to my lunch at noon, sometimes call out to me: morning! Come breakfast. and hot cakes.” On Saturdays and Sundays I lived and slept as did other people. Even when one did not sit up later at night than ten or half-past it required an daylight. air and in the manner of life which makes one sleepy. As the lengthened the children came earlier to school. in and have some A Big Bee Story. From California by way of the San | account of | what is believed to be the largest bee- | Francisco Call comes an hive in the world, a cleft in the face of a cliff. There is no danger of getting very near this natural beehive without knowing it, for at all hours of the day | a swarm of insects hover about it for several hundred feet in all directions, and an incessant buzz that can be heard an eighth of a mile fills the air. But men do. venture near after having first prit-on a suit of leather clothing, their hat brims and torch. 1t takes nerve to approach close to the opening in the rock, and the ex- perience is memorable. Bees in- numerable light on the intruder, hum- ming fiendishly and endeavoring to sting him to death. They form a per- fect cloud, and the air fetid smell and a fine dust through the wire screen and causes an irritation of the eyes. The insects really show signs of viciousness, and fly into the flames of - the torch in cewftless numbers, as if theyintended to extinguish it. Around and around they fly with a deafening buzz, and strong, indeed, is the man who can stand their onsiaught for more than a few minutes. It is almost impossible to make out just where the entrance to this na- tural beehive is. There is a sort of cavern in the cliff that seems to have a crack through the inner wall from top to bottom, but most of the bees hover around a hole about eighteen inches wide, and appear to make that the point of ingress and egress. Many days it is impossible even to see the cliff, so thickly covered is it with the insects, and they roll in and out of the opening like a stream af molasses. During the summer dead birds can always be seen on the ground around the mouth of the hive. They have been stung to death while attempting to fly through the swarm of insects. Four-footed creatures never venture within half a mile, seeming to know that death lurks there. . Sem The Boat-Dwellers of Japan. Young people who live in London or New York may fancy that our cities We have fine moose-steak | | the wheels passed | in before the thunderstorm days | | shaking-np | wi is uncle to fastened sn mask of wire screen around vith his u C lighted a big |. is filled with a | that gets | are crowded, and that many families must live without very much air to breathe or space for the boys and girls to play in. What would they say to the boat-dwellers of Japan? In that crowded country hundreds of families spend their lives and bring up their children upon the water, and know nothing of the land, except as they make an occasional visit to it when obliged to purchase supplies or attend to some unusual business. In every bay along: the coast are found hundreds, if not thousands, of small craft called ‘‘unks.’” These are small, flat-bottomed boats, and are owned and inhabited by a man and his family, just as houses are in other parts of the world. Their busi- ness is the transportation of goods and merchandise of all kinds, and their navigation is a sort of family affair. One traveler says: “I have seen a boat twenty feet long most adroitly managed by three children, all under seven years of age. I am told that, notwithstanding their aptness at swimming, many boatmen get drowned, for no boat ever goes to another’s aid, nor will any boatman save another from drowning, because, as he says, it is all fate, and he who interferes with fate will be severely punished in som: way.” Among these wonderful aquatic families children of three years oid will sometimes swim like little fish, and if one is backward in learning, he will be thrown overboard and teased’ and tormented until he is obliged to learn the art in self defense. Ah! it is in reading and learning about the people of other lands that we find how much we have to love and be thankful for in the broad, free life of our own. But even here there are children who would be the better for such frequent baths, and perhaps you would have great difficulty in per- sudding the little Japs that life in the hot and crowded streets of our great cities was to be preferred to that of the juukmen on the rivers and harbors of their own country.-—Detroit Free Press. A Little Haymaker. When haying began every one on the farm worked with might and main, and none harder than Charlie. He follbwed the mowing machine round and round the ‘piece which his uncle was cutting, watching the grass- heads and daisies nod and fall before the sharp teeth which he had turned the grindstone for his uncle to sharpen, until he was so tired that he could not sleep when bedtime came, and was discovered one night trying to climb the bureau, for what purpose was not known, unless to get in walk- ing trim for the next day’s mowing. And when it came to raking and “tumbling” he was on hand with the little pitchfork which had been found for him, and Charlie could make as good a tumble as any man on the hay field, although it took all his pluck to attack the windrows in which the hay { was heaviest. unless there | was some special work on hand which | As I was going home | and that was riding to the field on the friends would | “Good | There was one thing that he always disliked, though he never shirked it, hay-rack. It was all right until the wagon turned into the meadow and began to bob and bump over the rough ground. Then began his troubies. Every hummock over which would throw him up in the air with a bounce like a effort to rise before | rubber ball, There is something in the | And when the horses were put into a trot, so that the hay mightbe gotten came up, and the pitchforks rattléd and tossed about in the bottom of the wagon, the that he endured was enough to turn him to jelly, if he had not been so tough—to say nothing of the danger of “pitching overboard— while the men laughed aloud at his unwilling antics. He was more than repaid for this, though, in riding back on top of the load after havi ing raked after so clean that not a handful of hay was left behind. When the load went rumbling into the barn his services usually ceased, except such matters as running to the well for a pail of fresh water for the men. But one day Charlie pleaded so hard be allowed to help “mow away,” which means to stand in the haymow and stow the hay away as it is thrown up from the bed, that he finally won his consent, and Charlie clambered up on themow with his pitehfork and made ready for duty. Proud that he was at last to do what only the men had done before, he waited for the first throw. How it did come piling up on him under the vigorous unloading of Uncle Kent—great forkfuls, heavy and dusty, and how hot it was up here where no breath of air came! Would the load never be off? Faster and faster it came. Charlie could hardly get one forkful out of the way before another was waiting. At last, as he was struggling to pull his fork out of some that he had stowed away with great effort, a big forkful came upon him unawares which knocked him over and buried him up completely. Nearly smothered, he worked his way out, thinking that he should have to call out a surrender; but great was his relief to find that this was the last forkful and that the rack was empty. “Well, how do you like mowing away?’ said his uncle as he came sliding down from the mow, covered with dust, his cheeks aflame and his arms and legs trembling with the ex- ertion. “Oh, pretty well,” said Charlie, but he never asked to mow away again.— Youth's Compation, The Game of Dominoes, Two persons paying dominoes ten hours a day, and making a minute, could continue 118,090,000 years without exhausting all the com- binations of the game, the total of which is 248,528,211, 840. four moves: FOR THE WHEELING WORLD. On tour, a leaky valve may cause much inconvenience. Press it all around with a piece of damp clay, or if that be unobtainable, damp soap will answer. In outlying districts it is often diffi- cult to procure a cord for relacing a gear case, in which case it is worth re- membering that a couple of long boot- laces joined together will answer equally well. The Gretna Green race carried ou: at a recent bicycle tournament consist- ed of a lady and a gentleman riding hand-in-hand to a given point, dis- mounting and signing their names ant addresses in a register, remounting and riding back hand-in-hand. According to a London newspaper, a young widow of Rio de Janeiro, wro was introduced to her late husband while out wheeling, ordered a sculptor to depict the meeting, bicycles and all, on the marble gravestone in relief. The effect is described as more novel than artistic, especially as the lady is chis- eled as attired in bloomer costume, In the inscription, which: is in Spanish, 1s a sentence which may’ be translated: “My dear soul had the tire of hig life prematurely’ punctured.” Gladstonean anecdotes are begin- ning to pall, but one fact related of the late statesman is worth repeating as a possible suggestion to other owners of extensive lands—namely, the kind- ly feeling which prompted him to throw open the grounds of Hawarden to cyclists on Sunday. Local folk wers not included in the privilege, as their opportunities were legion, but those wanderers who came awheel from a distance found Hawarden a delightful piace for a restful stroll. neroes or ia. srom the Chicago Tiwes-Herald, The feeling of admiration for heroes of war seems to be innate in the human heart, and is brought to the surface as the oppor- tun ty and object for such hero worship presents itself. Among those who proved their heroism during our Civil War was A. Se bhiffeneder, of 161 Sedg- wick street, Chicago. He is an Austrian by birth,came to America at the age of twenty and soon became an American citizen. Hz was living in Milwaukee when the call for volun- teers came, early in 1862, and he promptly en- listed in Company A, of the Twenty-sixth WisconsingVolunteers. In the Army of the PotomacsHur hero saw much fighting, cam- paigningdn the Shenandoah Valley. In the first day’s fighting at the be ttle of Gettyshurg, Schiffeneder received a wound in the right side, which afterward caused him mue 1 trouble. With a portion of his regiment he was captured and im- prisoned at Bell Island and Andersonvil'e, and afterward exchanged. He returned (0 his regiment, which was transferred to ths army of General Sherman, and marched with him through Georgia to the sea. In this eampaign Mr. Schiffeneder’s old wound began to trouble him and he was sent to the hospital and then home. He had also contracted catarrh of the stomach and found no relief for years. “I happened to read an account of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pule People about a year ago,” he said, “and thought that the y might be good for my trouble. cluded to try them. I bought one box and began to takethem according to directions. They gave me great relief. that box I bought another, and when I had He received a wound. recovered my appetite and ate heartily. I can testify to the good the pills did me.’ Mr. Schiffeneder is a prominent Grand | whither he moved | Army man in Chicago, some years ago with his family. OUR GREAT GRAND- MOTHERS. The Clothes They Wore Were Not Comfortable. I.ondon Truth: great-grandfathers were delighted with the belongings of our great-grand- mothers. But for comfort one would hardly select the eighteenth century straight-laced corset. corsage all lined with buckram and whalebone. was garlanded with artificial flowers or other fallals. properly in it. When once the wearer sat down, she liked to remain seated. | A bolt-upright position was obligatory. The hair was expected to remain un- | Hence the | when one retired for the | disturbed for several days. necessity, night, to be propped up with pillows. There was really no other way of en- | The coverlets | joying a little comfort. and pillow cases were considered ad- juncts to the bedgown, a most luxurious object for the time. There were bath coverlets of embroidered flannel, for visitors might be received in the bath- room. Fashionable people, under all circumstances, lived in a glass house, unless when at les petits chateaux. The children were early trained to bear en- nui and to behave like little stoics. I really do not see the harm. Thus trained, they died ‘‘game’” on the guil- lotine. The only woman who made a row was La Dubarry. She was a low- born person. The snuffbox belonged properly to l'art de la femme. What skill was lavished on it! One showed one’s ring in taking a.pinch of snuff. The taste for scents was not much de- veloped. How could it be when nos- trils were filled with snuff? But I can imagine the snuffbox as being indis- pensable. Snuff was the only deodor- izer. Ladies quite gave it up after the revolution. It was on the wane before. La Nouvelle Heloise did not take snuff, nor did Marie Antoinette National Flags Growing Fewer. Of thirty-five flags shown in a flags of all nations supplement to a Lon- don weekly in 1858, barely 40 years ago, eleven have disappeared, among them those of the East India Company, of the Ionian islands, Tuscany, Naples and the States of the Church; of the Russian-American Company and of Sardinia. fter {finishing | y 3 AT | which occurs frequently taken the pills I felt that I was cured. I] every four or five I dare say that our |B Above it was a | : The hoop-expanded skirt | It was hard to sit down | | The bath can be made an exhilarating pleasure by the use of Ivory Soap. It cleanses the pores of all impurities, leaving the skin soft, smooth, ruddy and healthy. made of pure, vegetable oils. readily and abundantly. IT FLOATS. 3 Copyright. 1898. by The Procter & Gamble Co., Cinclanatl. RHEE REHAB SERRE RHR ASR FRE | FORHORRERFRASRR 2: Ivory Soap is The lather forms The Czarina’'s Health. From St. Petersburg come poor ac- counts of the health of the Empress of Russia. Very little is said about it, as the Tear greatly objects to all ref- erences to the subject; but, as a mat- ter of fact, there has been cause for some anxiety about the empress for some time past. She has never been very robust, and the attack of meas- les from which she suffered early in the winter has left her painfully weak. An English visitor, writing from Rus- sia, says: “The Tsaritza looks so fra- gile that it seems scarcely possible that she can be the mother of the two exceedingly fat babies to whom she is so passionately devoted. 3 Dante in Chinese. At a recent lecture delivered in Nuhl- hausen, Germany, a missionary named Eichler read extracts from a Chinese book of the eleventh century which presents some striking points of re- semblance to Dante's “Inferno.” ¥ Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Ne beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, bw stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- urities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils blotches, blackheads, { and that sickly bilious complexion by taking | Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. I con- | { All drug- gists, satisfaction ‘guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50¢c. .— el the sheds his skin, as often. as weeks the skin of the eye comes off with the rest. Translu- cent in most parts, the skin over the snake's eye is perfectly transparent. Wkcen snake To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or | It C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists retund money. round A traveler can journey world in 50 ing PAINT the paint dealer and do sour own decorating. with a brush and beco me s as hard as ¢ ‘ement. well with cold or hot wa g¥ SEND FOR SAMPL | are Just a Suggestion. A Frenchman applied to a local offi cial for a passport to visit Klatterwing- schen, in Switzerland. The fellow, wha was not a fellow of any geographical society, struggled in vain with the spelling of the -place’s names. Then, unwilling to confess this difficulty, he blandly added: “Wouldn't you as lief visit some other town?’-—Judy. How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollir- Reward for any ca-e of Catarrh that cannot b: cured by Hall's Catarrh Curve. F.J. CHENEY & Co., P.ops., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known EF. J. Che- ney for thela t 15 years. and believe h m per- Tectly honorable in all business t an actions and financially able to carry out any obliga- tion m de by their firm. West & TrRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Oh o. WALDING, KINNAN & MARrvIN, Wholesale Drugeists Toledo, Ohio. all's Catarrh Ciré istaken in‘ernally, vct- ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- 1aces of th~ system. Piic , Toe. pe bottle. Sold by all Diuggists. Testimonials free. "Hall's Family Pills are the best. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces intlammae tion, aliays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢.a bottle. The carrier pigeon was in use by the State Department of the Ottoman Em- pire as early as the fourteenth cen- tury. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarats. Candy Cathartie, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25¢c. If C.C.C, tail, druggists refand money. nber have yia, which, 1ipply the amber Valuable discoveries of been made in British Colur it is claimed, will be able to i pipemakers of the world with for 100 years. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money § ifit fails to cure. Xo. Mr. 1... H.: Pray. of No rei N. H., has a United States n sum of -$30 which was isst 1775. and the all legible. Conway, te for the May 10, printing and signatures. WALLS: CEILINGS MURALO WATER COLOR PAINTS FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILING This material is'a HARD F INTSH to Milled 1n twenty-four tints and works equ LE as Purchase package of from Your grocer « MURALO § te applied E 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. ‘LY; nun ALO <0. NEW BRIGILLON; Ss, 18 Nyy ORL BS co pe AT FIRST YOU DON’ T - suc- CEED,” TRY ~ SAPOLIO Lazy Liver/™ «YI have been troubled a great deal with a torpid liver, which produces constipa- tion. I found CASCARETS tobeall you claim for them, and secured such relief the first trial, that { purchased another supply and was com- pletely cured. I shall only be too glad to rec- ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity is presented.” SM 2020 Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. CANDY CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REGISTERED EES Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25¢, 50c. «.«. CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. 320 HO- T0- BAC Sold and gu naranteed by all Jug. gist to cv RE Tobacco Habit. ENSIO Washington, D.C. Succ ssfully Pr Prosecutes Claims. Late nal ension Bureau. 3yrsiulast war, EE ils Sam atty siuce. P. N. U. 36 '%3 \1 JOHN W.MORRIS, 8 ~ ONSUMPTION MITCHELLA COMPOUND Makes CHILDBIRTH safe, sure and easy. So why suffer untold pain and torture (Indorsed by leading physicians. Thousands of testimonials). Sent prepaid on receipt of price, $1.00. Write us and we will send you FREE our book,** Glad Tid, ings to Mothe rs.’? LADY AGENTS WANTE Those now at work for us are waking good =D Address: ool. oJ H. DYE MEDICAL INSTITUTE: BuF¥aLo, N.Y. STOPPED FREE ~ Permanently Cured 1 Is BR. DR. KLINE'S 'ORERT NERVE | RESTORER Positive cute for 811 5 —. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers