- Make It a Point To Cet the Best Every Time,When You Buy Medicine. Health is too valuable to be trifled with. Po not experiment. Get Hood's Sarsapa- rilla and you will have the best medicine money can buy — the medicine that cures when all others fail. You have every reason to expect it will do for you what it has done for others. Remember Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Medicine. Price $L Hood's Pills are the favorite cathartic. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, asthey cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu- tional remedies. D:afness is caused by an in- flamed condition of the mucous liningof the Kustachian Tube. When this tube gets in- flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper- fect hearing and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the infiam- mation can be taken out and this tube re- stored to its normal condition, Liearing will be destroy«d forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing butan in- flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give Onc Hundred Dollars for amy case of Deafnes- (caused by catarrh) that can. not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Caexey & Co., Toledo, OQ. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Fits permanently cured. ness after first day’ suse of Dr. Kline's Great Verve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and {reatise free. Dr.R.I1L.KI NE, Ltd. 931 Arc h St. Phila, Pa Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle 80's Cure.— MARY THOMRON, 20) Ohio Ave., Alleghany, Pa., March 19, 1804. After six years’ suffering I was cured by Pi- A London department store real estate department. Doa’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 we “pr-worlter, that makes weak men strong. Al jruggists, 50c or &1. teed Bod. it and sample free. Address Sterling RB. edy Co., Chicago or New York Harrison M. Séal, of Whitcomb, Ind. probably holds the voting record that State. He voted for Jackson in 1828 and for each Democratic Presi- dential candidate sihce then. Apt to Affect the Nerves. Cold weather is just as apt to affect the | fall ; nerves as any other part of the body, and ! to fol) new, neuralgia sets in. St. Jacobs Oil is just as certain to cure it as it cures all the gen-| Sy | of the Vizcaya class were en barbette, eral pains and aches of the hody. The Rev. Dr. Withrow, the able pastor of the Bark Street Church, Beeston, which is commonly known as Brimstone Corner.” lives up to the old traditions of the church. see,” he says, ‘how a man can Christian who rejec ts the doctrine eternal punishment.’ Knocks Coughs and Colds. Dr. Arnold's Cough Killer cures Coughs: 1g Colds. Prevents Consumption. All druggists. of tase sister of: the eminent Joseph van Lerins, died a few aged 87. The painter weeks ago at Antwerp, left to the city all the paintings and sketches of her brother remaining in her possession, besides the sum of $30,- 000, the interest of which is to be de- voted to two annual | prizes To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25a It C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. A Use for Liguefied Alr. It is reported that a new use has been found for }iquefied air, the possi- bilities of which have been matters of discussion amdng scientific men for some time. Agcording to the Mihing Reporter, a disgovery was made recent- ly by which if is now practical to use liquefied air iA underground work, as mining, d¥iving tunnels and sinking shafts. i conditiong the liberation of air from the liquid can be effective in generat- ing power with which to run drills un- der ground, pumps, hoists, etc., while cool air can also be supplied in the deepest mines. The liquid air can al- 80 be used in freezing soft ground, making tunnel cutting less hazardous and tedious. If there is any reliabil- ity in this reported discovery, and its success can be practically demonstrat- ed, it will make a new departure in the lines of work named, and once again make the genius of science the soul of industrial progress. THE DUTY OF MOTHERS. Daughters Should be Carefully Guided in Early Womanhood. Cure guaran- . ,.o)) Jer heing [keep up the effort to I facttlat she the of t i that she was not struck | the vicinity of the harbor. vener- | { They had an overhead protection of a She { PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Light is the task where many share the toil. —Homer. | Victory belongs to the most perse- No fits or nervous- | has a | [ ten-inch water-line belts vering.—Napoleon. Everyone has a fair turn to be as great as he pleases, —Jeremy Collier. | If thou desire to be held wise, be so ‘wise as to hold thy tongue.-—Quarles. | He that wants money, means and "content, is without three good friends —~Shakespeare. That man may safely venture on his tway, who is so guided that he cannot | stray. —Walter Scott. The shortest life is long enough if lit lead to a better, and the longest life is too short if it do not.—Colton. of business, and i Leisure for men | business for men of leisure, would ‘cure many complaints.-—Murs. Thrale. The cheapest of all things is kind- ness, its exercise requiring the least possible trouble and self-sacrifice.— Smiles, There is an unfortunate disposition in man to attend much more to the {faults of his companions that offend | him, than to their perfections which Ip lease him. —Greville. A man’s ledger does not tell what he is, or what he is worth. Count what is in ine, not what is on him, if von would what worth— {whether rich or poor. —1. Beecher. he is Ww. Know CAPTAIN CHADWICK’S VIEWS, "The Value of Armor in a Sea Fight Was Not Tested at Santiago. Armor played but a small part: the of the Viz- class not struck by any caya were heavy shell, and the Colon was straek | tired from a | | | “TI do not | be a | such | It is said that under proper | What suffering frequently results from a mother’s ignorance; or more frequently from a mother’s neglect to properly instruct her daughter! Tradition says ‘‘woman must suffer, and young women are so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young woman suffers severely she needs treatment and her mother should see that she gets it. Many mothers hesitate to take their daughters to a physician for examina- tion; but no mother need hesitate to write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. Pinkham and secure ” the most efficient advice without | charge. Mrs. Pinkham’s address is Lynn, Mass. The following letter from Miss MARIE F. JounsoN, Centralia, Pa., shows what neglect will. do, and tells how Mrs. Pinkham helped her: “My health became so poor that I had to leave school. I was tired all the time, and had dreadful pains in my side and back. I was also troubled with irregularity of menses. I was very weak, and lost so much flesh that my friends became alarmed. My mother, who is a firm believer in your remedies from experience, thought per- haps they might benefit me, and wrote you for advice. I followed the advice you gave, and used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills as you directed, and am now as well as 1 ever was. I have gained flesh and have a good color. Iam sompletely cured of irregularity.” but tive times by due anything, her sur- to her inability to escape and the no chance against force of four heavy Her captain states after leaving When the the Oregon, range of 9000 yards— somewhat over five land miles-—began she at once saw the hope- lessness of her case. The eleven-inch guns in the turrets had overpowering ships in pursuit. thirteen-inch shells of that is, they looked over the turret and not through a port in the turret. spherical two-and-three-quarter-inch shield covering the entire turret. This, in the Oquendo, had been pierced by an eight-inch shell at the edge of the opening for the gun, which had burst inside and had killed every one in the turret. When boarded the second day after the action all were found at their posts, a petty officer in the attitude of aiming. This oceur- rence illustrates what was strongly borne in upon us, viz., that no armor should be used which is not sufficient to. protect. Light protection sufficient to burst a shell is far worse than none. In the case mentioned the shell, if the curved shield had not been there to burst it, by the resistance offered sufficient cause the fuse to act, might have passed over harmlessly. A six- inch had passed through a shield of a five and a half-inch broadside gun of the Maria Teresa, and bursting must have killed the entire gun’s crew. Of conrse such shields as men- tioned will protect from ordinary shell fragments, but the larger fragments of a moderate-sized sheil have enor- mous cutting power, the anchor-chain of the Towa, for example, the links of which are of iron two and ahalf inches in diameter, being cleanly cut in two by a fragment of a five and a half inch shell, which burst on her benth deck.—F. E. Chadwick, commanding the flagship New York, in Scribuer’s, A Victim of a Cruel Joke. A well known man—a staid and serious bank manager—was passing by the Liverpool town hall a few \ mornings ago, when he noticed a well- dressed man hurrying toward Castle street. They reached it together,and then the young man looked at him with a wervous start. **Oh, sir,”’ he gasped, “will yon please call my-riend for me? She is crossing the street. T-—I have lung trouble and can’t shout.” The elderly man looked: where he pointed, and, sure enough, there was a young woman with bright feathers in her hat just crossing the road at a brisk rate. “What’s her name?” “Ethel.” “Ethel!” shouted the ager. The young woman with thefeathers was almost across, and she didn’t turn around. ‘‘Ethel!’ he roared again. This time she stopped and looked round, and the excited old gentleman motioned to her. When she came across the elderly bank manager was turning round to receive the thanks of the young lung-troubled man, but he had gone! Then there was trouble. —W osely Telegraph, he asked. bank man- Police Searchlights, A miniature electric searchlight for the nse of policemen, watchmen, min- ers, engineers, etc., is on the market, It is a great improvement on the old oil-burning lamp. The new light is club-shaped, made of leather with nickel trimmings, with a lens in one end that throws a brilliant light of considerable dimensions. Flashed in dark corners, in the rear of stores, in dark streets it quickly reveals any person or thing. The light is of three and a half volts, and the lamp in length is eight or nine inches and weighs about a pound.. It is said to be good for several thousand flashes by simply pressing the thumb on a clasp. The illumination is furnished by a dry bat- tery which may be replenished at a cost of 30 cents. — Electricity. ateh Cold Easily ? Are you frequently hoarse? Do you have that annoying tickling in your throat? Would you feel relieved if you could raise something? Does your cough annoy you at night, and do you raise more mucus in the morning ? Then you should always keep- on hand a bottle of Ayer’s Cherry pPecioral If you have a weak throat you cannot be too careful. Yeu cannot begin treatment too eariy. Each cold makes you more liable to another, and the last one is always harder to cure than the one before it. Dr. Auer’s Cheprd Pectoral Plaster protecis the fangs from colds. Help at Hand. If you have any complaint whatever and desire the best medical advice you can pos- sibly obtain, write the doctor «freely. = You will receive a prompt reply. Address, DR. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass. L ‘‘A Perfect Type of the Highest Order of ¢ , Excellence in Manufacture.’’ 4 WalterBakersCo’s Absolutely Pure, Delicious, Nutritious. lasts Less Than OKE GENT a Cup.. Be sure that you get the Genuine Article, made at DORCHESTER, MASS. by } WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. EsTanrisuep 1780. aan afin cafe of dfs oc afi afin afte fie fle aaa A dh A A mpseptmptungtmpPaplapt apt asPopl ag spt apts pt phe Pampa pte pf eptupPo pt gtoepd apt aptaptong AN EN ANI Np SP pe Bilious ‘T have used your valuable CASCA-=- RETS and find them perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have used them for some time forindigestion and biliousness and am now com- pletely cured. Recommend them, to every one. Once tried, you will never be without them in EDW. A. MARX, Albany, N. Y. the family." CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant, Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do 00d, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10¢, 25¢, 50c. «+». CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. 321 NO-TO-BA Sold and nod by giststo € TASTES GOOD CHILDREN LIKE ve IT \( 854.8 2\CURES WHEN S| nariniteed by all drug- RE Tobacco Habit. ALL DRUGGISTS Send Postal for Premium List to the Dr. Seth Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonsocket, R. I. We give every girl or woman one sTolled gold-filled solitaire Puritan rose diamond ring, solld gold pattern, for selling 20 e krges GARFIELD PURE PEPSIN among friends at § age. Send name: we cents a 4 When sold send money eras will mall ring: few all 120 it from genuine dlymond. Unsold pun iaken back, GARFIEL p au M CO., Dept. 21, Meadville, P eee - Farms for Sale! Send stamp, get full Sescription and price of 40 cheapest farms in Ashtabula Co.,, O. Best state in the nid hess County in the state. MH. N. BANCROFT, Jefferson, Ashtabula Co., Ohlo. Top Snap FISH- TACKLE complete CHEAPER tas t SEW ERE r catalogu oy h $Q.99 Loader '$G POWELL SENET To, D R O PS NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worst cases. Send ‘or book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatme nt Free. Dr H H GREEN'S SONS, Atlanta, Ga. ANTED—Case of bad health that R'I'PAN‘S will not benefit Bend 5 cts. to Ripans Cheinical Co.. NewYork for 10 samples and 1000 testimonials. RHEUM ATISM CURED--One bottie—Postive relief in 24 hours. Postpaid, YALERANDER REMEDY Co, 246 Greenwich St., oy | Wanted. Unpat ted. INVENTION Jjsnted Unpaten First- 11 B'way.N. XY. HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES. The New Belts. The new belts are .of soft silk or satin ribbon, four inch wide, says Demorest’s Magazine, T cy are just the length of the waist ..easure and are claspedin front by buckles not over an inch or an inch and a half wide. The narrow clasp naturally holds the ribbon in folds. At the sides the rib- bon is allowed to widen to at least two inches, and in the back nearly the full width of the belt is revealed. This arrangement gives the very long- waisted effect in front which is just now so fashionable. Spiced Grapes. Squeeze the pulps from the skins of several pounds of grapes and then boil and press through a colander to get rid of the seeds: Place in a pre- serving kettle over the fire and add three and one-half pounds of sugar, one and one-half ounces of whole cloves and the same amonnt stick cinnamon. - Place the spices in a bag and let the sugar and vinegar come to a boil, and then put in the pulps and skins of the grapes, adding the bag of spices. The whole should be al- lowed to boil for an hour and a half, and should then be put in stone jars and served with oysters or meats. of Virginia Caramel Cake. Tus calls for two-thirds of a pound ' butter, one scant coffee-cup of milk, 4 o cups of granulated sugar, four egos beaten very light, two scant cups of well-sifted flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, stirred in at the last moment; bake in a quick oven in three layers. Make the caramel of one-half cup of milk; butter the size of a walnut, and three-quarters of a pound of chocolate; cook in a double boiler, stirring often until a bubble rises, but do not let it boil. Add three tablespoonfuls of vanilla extract after you take it from the fire. Use as fast as possible; it thickens ns it cools. Spread the layers and cover the top quickly. Use the same dry. Meat Omelet, Take one pound of finely chopped beef and to it add one and a half tea- spoonfuls of salt, a quarter of a tea- spoonful of black pepper and six eggs. Seat the yolks of the eggs until they are quite light, and add the beef and mix well, then beat the whites to a stiff froth and drop them into the mixture. Pnt a piece of butter and one of beef suet in a pan over the fire, and when it is hot drop the ome- let into the pan with a spoon and fry until it is a light brown, then drain on brown paper and serve at once on a dish on which has been placed a num- ber of chopped potatoes and a spoon- ful of minced varsley. Arrange the omelets as a border with a few pieces of celery here and there. French Chicken Salad. Take a large, cooked chicken, re- move all the fat, skin and bone and chop the meat in small pieces, with an equal quantity of white celery chopped fine. Mash the yolks of six hard- boiled eggs, and mix them to a smooth paste with a saltspoonful of salt, the some quantity of white pepper and a large teaspoonful of mixed mustard. Add two large tablespoontuls of olive oil and one of good, strong vinegar, alternately, a little at a time. Take some fine, tender lettuce leaves and the whites of the boiled eggs and chop them together very fine. Put the chicken in the middle of a large dish, making it into a eirenlar mound with a slightly flattened top, and pour the dressing over it. Tay the chopped lettuce and whites around the heap of chicken. Chop some pickled red beets and cuenmbers, and arrange them in a pretty pattern over the yel- low coating of the chicken. Garnish the edge of the dish with white celery tovs and parsley. Household Hints, Sugar in the water for basting meats will add to their flavor. This is espe- cially true of veal. To have broiled ham at its best boil the ham so that it is nearly cooked, let cool in the water, then slice to broil. : When cooking onions place a pail of eold water at the kitchen door, which will prevent the smell from as- cending. To whiten the kitchen table, spread | it all over with a thin paste made of chloride of lime and hot water; leave on all night and in the morning wash off. : To remove iron rust from marble, use a solution of oue part of nitric acid in twenty-five parts of water. Apply carefully to the spots only, then rinse with water and ammonia. Stains on white flannel are hard to remove. The best way is to mix to- gether equal parts of the yolk of eggs and glycerine, apply it to the stains and allow it to soak for® half an hour or so before the article is washed. In putting up portieres,in the place of rings and pins, hali-yard lengths of the cotton rope are sewed to the goods and thrown over the pole and tied. The ends are untwisted to make the ravelled rope tassels so much used now. Gloss can be quickly removed from a garment by a gentle friction with emery paper. The fabric must be rubbed hard enough to raise the nap; and in case of cashmere or other smooth goods, rub the place with a warmed silk handkerchief. Rub a little salad oil around the stopper that has stuck fast and then lay the bottle before the fire, being careful to place it at least eighteen inches away. When the glass is warm, the oil’ will ooze into the mouth of the bottle and the cork frequently comes away quite easily then with a little tapping. Christmas Res for Sensible People. This Seid Oak or Wal- nut Commoue meacure, when cloned, 18x18x18 in. It comes com plete with China Pan, ‘The entire Comodo ir strongly con structed and well finished, Retail price $4.00. O:iderns filled promptly. This Commode is but one of thousands of bargains ta be found in our 1to-page cata- logue of Christmas suggestions. Qur col- lection of sensible presents include Fancy Furniture, Silverware, Clocks, Pictures and Lamps, but the but five of the 32 we m anufac ture. , reliable Our 50 PRICE, $1.57. and prompt in filling Holiday orders. ars’of valuable experience is at your disposal. 590.9% 9% 3% 9% 3 RI IK RICH ARNRARARINAI CAN Perh aps you thought of giving a Carpet, some Rugs, Lace Curtains or Porticres for a present. We publish a lithographed catalogue which shows the actual patterns of these goods in hand-painted colors, and we also phy freight on Carpets, Rugs 4 ) and Curtains. Sew Carpets and furn- ish lining FREE. $3.95 buys this Desk mnde of Quartered Oakor fi nishad in vol: mirror and good in- ) tarior of pigeon holes and drawer. Retails y at $10.00. » Would you like = to save €o percent on your Holiday purchases? Our catalogue will tell you. Address this way. Price, $3.95. JULIUS HINES & SON, Dept 305 BALTIMORE, MD. TR an R14" 4 AAARAARARAR ISA SERN FINI IAI ARINIAY LIRA, SULTON PATTI than a — America consumes more any other nation. eggs No-To-Bac fo for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure. makes weak mean strong, blood pure. Bishop Watson, of astern Carolina, is said to bear so striking a likeness to Lincoln as to be popularly known the former President's ‘‘double.” . JAcoBs O1r cures Rheumatism, . Jacoss O1L cures Neuralgia. . Jacoss OIL cures Lumbago. Jacoss Orn cures Sciatica. ST. JAcoBs O1L cures Sprains, St. JAcoBs OIL cures Bruises, 3T. JACOBS OIL cures Soreness, JacoBs O1L cures Stiffness. Se. JAcoss Orn cures Backache. . JAcoss O1L cures Muscular Aches, It is said that the peasant of the south of France spends on food for a family of five an average of twopence a day. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarots. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 0c, Bc. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. More Equipments for Baltimore & Ohio The improvements that have been made on the Baltimore & Ohio Rail- road during the past tw2 years have rendered it possible to operate cars of a heavier capacity than have been in use in the past and the Receivers have just ordered from the Schoen Pressed Steel Company of Pittsburg 1,000 steel coal cars of a capacity of 100,000 Ibs. each. These cars will be used for the Seaboard trade and are expected to be in service during the early part of 1899. ; In additien to these cars, the Receiv- ers have also ordered from the Pitts- burg Locomotive Works 50 more of the Consolidated locomotives with inch cylinders. His Sarcasm, Farmer Grout (sourly)—Them relatives of ourn ‘per name. is ‘‘Misery.” Pshaw! a foolish sayin’ as that, Farmer Grout—It ain't sarcastic! 1 jedge they do by the way | city to believe my Mrs. Grout— beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy C | tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by | stirring up the Jazy liver and driving all 1m- { James McKinley | | 50c, 81. ‘All druggists. | as | what makes you git off seech { Lyman? | foolish—it’s.| | they seemni to think I love company.— ! Harper's Bazar. A Champion. Mrs. Ipsley—"They say your hus- band is one of the best golf-players in this town.” Mrs. Wanston—*‘Oh, yes, he is a thorough master of it. Why, he can actually talk the language in his steps.”—Chicago News. How London Lives. There are, according to the latest re- turns, at present in London 37,000 peo- ple living five in one room; 17,000 pen- ple living six in one room; 6,000 people living seven in one room; 1,800 people living eight in one room; 32,000 peo- ple living eight in two rooms, and 14, 000 people living nine in two rooms. The Triumph of the Season. A crop of sprains and bruises is harvested from outdoor sports. The cure is the erop St. Jacobs Oil delights in as the triumph of the season, the one that beats the record. Why does pointless conversation al- ways bore the quickest? Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Neo Cathar- purities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blote ‘hes, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drugs gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c¢, 25¢, 50c. General i erdinand Earle, owner of the famous Jumel mansion. on Washington Heights, New York, has decided to sell the place and move the house, This where Washington stopped and where Hamilton and Burr met before their duel. 24 is To Cure A Cola In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists Tefund money ifit fails to cure. 25¢. The Scotch foretathers of President McKinley spelt the name MacKinley, the first instance of the present spell- ing occurring in: the - signature of in the last century. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the Carirorxnia Fig SyRUP Co. only, and we wish vo impress upon all the importance of parchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of [Migs is manufactured by the CArirorniA Fic Syrup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par- ties. The high standing of the CALI- FORNIA Fig Syrup Co. with the medi- cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken- ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In orderto get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company — CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCIS00, Cal LOUISVILLE, Ky. | Thompson’ $ Ee Water If afflic tod s Ww vith § Sore eyes use AN CER or . TT umors cured or no pay. W Sie ME RKIL L INST. Middle sourne, WW, Vag N. U. 10 93 ea r. T= (= OLD F==——0==5 O) Qn Hh that Few are entirely of the digestive tract, AN AFFAIR +: NATION It has been said of Americans that they are “a nation of Sy Sperone and it 1s true free from disorders Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Stomach and Bowel trouble, or Constipation. The treatment of these diseases with cathartic medicines too often ag: gravates the trouble, THE LOGICAL TREATMENT ts the use oF a remedy that will build up the system, thereby enabling the various organs to act as Nature intended they should. &S Such a remed 1s found Pills for Pale People in Dr Williams Pink Here 1s the proof. In Detroit there are few soldiers more popular and efficient than Max R. Davies, first sergeant of Co. B. His home is at 416 Third Avenue. For four years he was a bookkeeper with the wholesale drug house of Farrand, Williams & Clark, and he says: “ry i have charged up many thousand orders for Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, but never knew their worth until I used them for the cure of chronic dyspepsia. For two ycars I suffered and doctored for that aggravating trouble but could only be helped temporarily. “I think dyspepsia is one of the most stubborn of ailments, and there is scarcely a clerk or office man but what is more or less a victim. Some days I could eat anything, Those distressed pains would force me to quit work. treatments and remedies but they would help only for a time. while at other times I would be starving. I have tried many A friend induced me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and aftegfak- ing a few doses I found much relief and after using several boxes I was cured. I know these pills will cure dyspepsia of its worst form and I am pleased to recommend them.” —Detroit (Mich.) Journal. The genuine package always bears the full name. At all druggists, of sent postpaid on receipt of pre 50 per box, by the Dr.williams Medicine Co, Schenectady, N.Y. fe— CJ LQ —=C45 = 435 ‘“Where Dirt Cathers, Waste Rules.” Creat Saving Results From the Uso cf SAPOLIO NEW YORK, N.Y. *