; finest . d of a as de- 3 so that , never high- nthe prices. E C0, Methods 18S. n obtain chase of ne than nd Cheap. If the qual- d to give uy it. LERS, JER C0., Jk up the nd tariff Mr. Vest int once the power * NEW POs- emarked e backing _offers a for reduc- AY. senate de- pay tariff. 1t On rec- of placing 0ssession. - onsidera- ic Scnate a special 1estion to on at ommittee AY 1e in the ussion of en Mr. ‘rat, and publican, sides of a wordy wed the tan bill, A Y. was re- g Chair tee. The [,210.916, e House > in cau- st route o Rican n all the r the bill AY the sub- nding a for Ha- roviding . Wash- in Con- at noth- fed as a iwaii as 1dments Chinese Hawaii Unite 10 have t since year Costs £2 XQ — sont Bo the C hilaren Drink n't give them tea or coffea, ott tried the new food drink ay BAIX-O? It is delicious and nourishing d takes the place of coffes. The more RBAIR-O you give the children the mote | ealth you distribute through their sys- tems. 'GRAIN-O is made of | pure grains; #nd when properly preparad tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about as much. All grocers sell it. 15¢. and 25¢. —_— Mexico is one of Best customers in the lire. the United States’ sewing machine What Shall We ifave For Dessert) This question arises in the family daily. Let us answer it to-d Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2min. No boiling! no baking! Simply dd a little hot water & set to cool. Flavors: Lemon ,Orange, Raspberry and | Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. The socialists and Doel k Workers tinion of London will build a $100,000 hall, capable of seating 1.500 people. BEER low, debilitated or exhausted cred ne's invieaambing Tonic. FREE $l weeks’ treatment. Dr. ji ine, fiesiet st. "Philadelphia. Founded 1871 Clear writers, like clear fountains, #0 not seem so deep as they are: thi turbid looks most profouns d.—Landor: Sweden ar 50,000 telephones and 63,000 miles of felephone v ire. 4 To Curc Constipation Forever. ake Cascarets Candy C athartic 10¢ or 25¢. It C.C.C. fail to cure, druggi efund otoe. There arc in Belgium 10.860 about the same number as in The TN ashingion Nun Co., Mutual Life Bldg gu s icachers, | Nentucky. Mining Investment eattle, Washington, ill con all invest- he vane | to small investors, Wria for circular. Highest references. New York Soobsis want the nine- hour day an May The Best Pronctiplion tor Chills end Fever is a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS CBILL ToNIC. It is simply iron and gninine in a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price Mineral production in the United States this year will reach a value ot | nearly $1,000,000,000. Jell=0, the New Dosaert, Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. The Glassworkers lish a co-operative Ind. estab- Eaton, | er may factory at Cleanse or Your Blood The toing most desired of a Spring Medicine is thorough purification of the blood. With this work of | cleansing going on there plete renovation of every part of your system. Not only is the cor- rupt blood made fresh, bright and lively, but the stomach also re- | sponds in better digestion, its | readiness for food at proper times gives sharp appetite, the kidneys and liver properly perform their allotted functions, and there is, in short, new brain, nerve, mental and digestive strength, Hood’s Sarsaparilla Possesses the peculiar qualities-— Peculiar to Itself—which accom- plish these good things for all who take it. An unlimited list of _._Youderfal cures proves its merit. The best remedy for Dr. Bull’s $ yhiooping. Cough, Sie Se ild Dr. 3 pale 2 . rup, relief wi Cough Syrup erro sufferer will soon be res Price only 25 cts, is com- When Housekeepers Are Brightening the Interiors of their Homes. Now that the backbone of this remarkable winter is broken, housekeepers are remark- ing the dingy look of the homes interior, The question of a new wall covering isup. Pap r {3 dear and short lived; kalsomines are dirty und scaly; paint is costly, The use of such, cement as Alabastine, for instance, will solve the problem. This admirable wall coat- ing is clean, pure and wholesome, It can ba put on with no trouble by anyone; there is choice of ma iy beautiful tints, and it is long lasting. Care of the Eyes. The care needed to be given fo our eyes is yearly becoming more apparent. The first step in caring for the eyes Is to use them but sparingly. The strain of steady and continuous work is gen- erally injurious even to strong eyes. The woman who has to use her eyes steadily should give them frequent, | sven if brief, vacations. If she has to | write all day, or if she sews continu- | ously, she should give her eyes five minutes’ resting spell every two hours. Dropping the work, closing the eyes, and keeping them closed for even this brief time, rests not only the eyes but the brain, and the work is easier and more inspiring afterward. Thoss who are obliged to use the eyes all day at | business should not use them more than Is necessary in the evening. Fine sewing, reading and writing should be quite eschewed. Marriageable women often go to thd | seashore in anticipation of a titlq | wave. Nothing in the Wide Woe idl has such a record for ab- solutely cersirg females ills and kidacy froshics as has Lydia E. Finkham’s Vegetahic Corngound. Medicines inat are ad- veriised fo cure avery- thing ca: 23d bo specifics for anyéiéiag. Lydia £. Piskfam’s Vegeiafie Conse wieaed will not cure every kind of f= ness faz may af friot men; | women 2nd children, but proof is menseneniz that | it will and Jdzos cure all | the ills pecuiiario Womeits | ‘This is 2 fact indispui- | able and cza ko vepificd by mors ii:an a million Wome V 25 you arc cick don’ perimant, {ake the eine tH:2¢ fas 3mm of the izr;zsi oures: Lydi ia IS tek ha. > 1 .wnn. Mass. iamictod with Thomnsan’s Eye Water | a beautiful new | the little one was contented. As soon, | of the little girl threw himself in de- | one day she earnestly begged her new | her Ring forth your trinmphs, Easter bells, Till earth shall learn the story; Bweet is the news your musie tells, Ie lives. the King of Glory! The Lamb, who was for sinners slain, Comes forth from death in might to reign. io lives the race of man to bless, I'o banish care and sadness, All griefs to heal, all wrongs redress, To fill the earth with gladne es: The Lamb, who was for sinners s Doth now for m: in, n’s redemption reign! DODD OCOOOTODISOOO! THE LITTLE HUMPBACKED BIRL. A Child's Easter Story. OOOO So000! QOSO000 DOO00 OOOO YQDSO OME over here, said Olivia, and I will tell you an Easter tale. There was once a woman who had an only daugh- ter that was very small and pale and altogether som e- what different from other children. When she took the little one out for a walk the people stood and looked at the child and whispered among them- selves. When the little girl asked her mother why the people looked at her so strangely the mother always re- plied, ‘It is because you have on such LOOKED IN THE MIRROR AND SAW WAS HUMPBACKED SHE dress.” Thereupon however, as they returned home the mother would clasp her little dangh- ter in her arms, kiss her again and againand say: ‘You sweet little angel, what would become of you if I were to die? No one, noteveun your father, knows what a dear little angel you are!” Some time afterward the mother he- same suddenly sick and she died on ;he ninth day. Thereupon the father spair on the deathbed and asked to be suried with his wife. His friends, 10wever, spoke to him and comforted aim, and so he left his wife’s body, wd a year later he took unto himself nother wife, who was lovelier, young- >» and richer than his first wife, but >y no means as good. And from the day that her mother died the little girl spent her whole sime from morning till evening seated it the window sill in the sitting room, since there was no one who would take her out for a walk. She had be- some even paler than before and she had not grown at all during the latter ears. When her new mother came to the nouse she said to herself: “Now I will zo out walking again in the city .and on the beautiful promenades where the sun shines so brightly, where there are so many lovely shrubs and flowers and where there is such a srowd of handsomely dressed people.” For she lived in a narrow little alley, in which the sun seldom shone, and when she sat on the window sill she saw only a little bit of the blue sky— a bit not larger than a pocket hand- kerchief. Her new mother went out nearly every day in the forenoon and afternoon, and each time she wore a very beautiful dress, much more beautiful than any dress the first mother had ever owned. But she never took the little girl with her. Finally the child took heart, and mother to take her out with her. The mother, however, refused bluntly, saying: ‘Youn are not smart enough. What would the people think if they were to see me with you? You are a little humpback. Humpbacked chil- | dren never 20 walking, but alwaye | stay at home.’ Thereupon the little girl became v ery | quiet, and as soon as her new mother had left the house she got on a chair and looked in a mirror and saw thatindeed she was humpbacked, badly humpbacked Then she sat again on the window sill AG looked out into the street and thought of her good old mother, who, in spite of her hump- back, had taken uer out walking every day. The she thought again of her Sump. . “What is inside of it, I wonder!” she said to herself. ‘‘There must be something inside of such a hump as this is.” Many a strange fancy entered her little head and many an hour she wiled away in wondering why her back, instead of being straight like the backs of other children, was dis- torted out of all shape by such an ug- ly hump. The stories of fairies which dear motler had told her came back to her memory, and in childish Behold, from winter’s thrall set free; The lilies fair are springing; Their radiant bloom, in holy glee The waking earth is bringing, A tribute to the Lamb once slain, Now raised in endless might to reign, Come forth ye souls, in glad new life, This blessed Easter morning; With bloom of love and beauty rife, His grace be your adorning; The Lamb, who once tor you was slain, Doth bid you rise with him and reign. who loved the sunshine and the flow- ers better than she, and yet among them all was there one who saw so little of the sunshine and the. flowers as she did? From her seat by the window she saw the little ones play- ing in the narrow street, and as their frequent peals of merry laughter came to her ear, her question, “Why am I not like other children?” became ever more urgent. So the summer passed, and when winter came the little girl was still pale and she had become so weak that she could no longer sit on her window sill, but was obliged to remain lying in bed, and, just when the snowdrops were beginning to peep above ground, the good old mother came to her one night and told her how glorious and beautiful it was in heaven. The following morning the child was dead. ‘Don’t weep, father” said her new mother; ‘‘it is best for the poor child.” And the girl’s father answered no word, but simply nodded his head. The little girl was bnried, but on Easter morn an angel with large white wings like a swan flew down from heaven, seated himself beside the grave and knocked thereon, as though it were a door. And soon the little girl came forth from the grave and the angel told her that he had come to take her to her mother in heaven. p—— Keeping Faster in Guba. HIRE HOSE of us who know Easter only in om have little concep- tion of the signifi- cance and solemn- ity of passion week in conntries where a hotter sun has mfused intenser warmth into the blood. interesting deseription of Easter as observed in Santiago and other Cuban cities. Thomas H. Graham gives an “‘During the entire week,” he says, “all sccial gaiety is suspended; even business assumes a quieter aspect, but the distinctive celebrations do not begin until Holy Thursday. On that day high mass is broken off in the cold and prosaic North can | | ners middle, and a procession of priests | carries an image of the Christ—the ‘Ecce Homo’—to the cathedral. In towns where there is no cathedral some church is selected, and there theimage, life size and robed.in white, is carried in solemn state, the entire populace joining the procession. This ceremony commemorates the journey to Pilate’s judgment hall. The image is left in the church and the people disperse in silence. Then the devout begin the ceremony of the pilgrimage. That is, they visit fourteen churches, indicative of the fourteen the cross, saying station. “Good Friday is something to be remembered. I'he sun rises on a city plunged in absolute ness of the grave. The very air is funeral. In the afternoon the pro- cession of the Holy Vi This is really the most striking of all the ceremonials. The sacred image, robed in black, is carried by priests and is followed by the eighteen canons of the church in singular costume, all black. On their heads they wear canonical black caps fully two and a half feet in height, and their robes have trains sixteen or eighteen feet long. Every canon is followed by an prayers at every Then the little girl asked in a tremb- ling voice whether even humpbacked acolyte, who carries his train. Then comes the populace, men and women, Oh, , Callie 178] And Ei pith care, A knot g ribfin here: zou kno A bu ih clfish care I if ¢ hubby hand he STC The beads and #2) £7 To chure And bo¥ Where le fol evoutly Jos Full many Tesi po figs: there! Si (Fa a fot / “his curls ass arp = ok or svhen swee ody maid ead matron kneel in E ge hat and gown. y Fis eyes are on his Foye boy i On love his thoughts And, ere he flits—the ST a heart i earl =z down -7 Bn 2 Bé 4 naj 7 children could enter heaven. She could uot conceive such a thing possi- ble. Yet the angel answered, good child, you are no longer hump- backed,’ * and with those words he passed his white hand over her back transformed being. And what was in it? Two beautiful white angel wings! The child spread | the angel through the dazzling sun- light up into the blue sky. On the] lottiest seat in heaven sat her good | old mother awaiting her with out- THE TRANSFORMATION. child flew —New arms, aud the into her lap.- stretched straight Herald. To or Easter I rgs. drop in the eggs and place Them up- By using cold water they heat gr ly and are not apt to crack. Severa this process put a little of days before them up with water: Eosin pink, yel- low, green, blue, scarlet, violet and or- anga. A spoonful of yellow first placed in a small dish; warm egg over and over in roll a it and a paper to dry. When all the eggs that are wauted ar another dye in the manner. Pretty baskets for {he cg re made by covering pasteboard shapes with white cotton batting and tying: with narrow ribbon bows. The lig colored eggs may be finished with in- THE EL MOTHER, ANG fashion she some good fairy would come and tak away blight her whole life. Oh, if she were only like children! Was there one of other sometimes ponyed that | the burden that threatened to them scriptions in darker colors or orna- | mented with bronze or gold powder. | The baskets may be sprinkled with | metallic flitter, | effectiveness. Let ITusbands Rejoice. announced that will be lee ear? Tf 1s nos jaster bounets this spring cheaper than ever belore. **You dear, ! them ont, as though she had always: known how to fly, and she flew with | | One of the quaint and interesting York | Fill a large kettle with cold water, on the stove. When the water has boiled for ten minutes remove them. adual- | these dyes into small bottles and fill: dye ‘is | when it is evenly dyed place it upon | which adds to their | Who says the year 1900 isn’t a jubi- | still in black, all candles. The scene medieval and impressive. “Through the entire day no bells have been rung. Then comes the ‘Saturday of glory,” with its wonder- { ful and dramatic change. carrying lighted is curiously ! ended. Everywhere rejoicing a | the place of mourning. Raster Sun- | day is a day of music and gladness.” Crigin of Easter Rabbits. | features of our modern Easter carniva is the appearance in shop windows, ! side by side with the emblematic col: lored egg, of a pert tall-eared rabbit, | and those who cannot understand why | bunny should have a place in our | Zaster decorations shrug their shoul: | ders and think it a trick to please the | children But the lezeud of the Easter rabbit is one of the oldest in mythology, and is mentioned in the early folklore of South Germany. Originally, it appears, the rabbit was a bird, which the ancient Teutonic goddess Ostara—goddess of the east spring—transformed into a or this reason the rab- and in remem- or of quadruped. bit or hare is grateful, | brance of its former condition as a { bird and as a swift messenger of | spring, and of the goddess whom it | served, is able to lay colored Easter | eggs on her festival in the spring | time, the colors illustrating the theory 5, and an egg has always resurrection, an illuastra- | colored eg: been a symbol of the | and, therefore, used as | tion at Easter is Toalion and it It comes from ripen two or ( Soluoniain chees made from goats’ milk. vear Milan and needs to three years. Ti of cheeses A Parmesan cheess has been kept 150 i and found to be good when eaten. | T~ORTUNES | & AS TOLD IN EGGS. ore who g2is an egz © alcus bs nd rot sere 8 who gcts an egg of ck and troubles ne = urs oe ind The onk who &% Wil many tears ol surr Who ges an egg 6f pu WIN dle 3 bachelor or A allver egg will bring much joy And nappiness without atioy. | A lucky one, the czz of b | The owner ne'er sces can The ono who gat: Will have estab! €5K Of brewa ts th totvh. The ono Who spe n Ckiad Wil go through life by ¢ A civiped gz bodes 4 sdlien man or stations of | stillness—still- | | American, gin takes place. | At 10 o’clock | and the ugly old hump fell off like a |in the morning all the church bays | great hollow shell, and this left her a j1ing out joyfully, and the ‘vigil’ i that when it was a bird the rabbit laic¢ | were are o few varieties | which keep many years. | BOYS Wve -ACK GOOD MANNER | i | They Nevsr Give e Up Thelr Seat in Pub- iic Conveyances to Ladies. Nine out of ten of the boys and young men who travel up and down the ele- vated roads of New York are absolute- ly void of good manners as are a lot of wild Indians—probably more so. Ii is so seldom that one of these will get up and give a lady a seat that when it does occur th event creates sur- prise. Scores, hundreds of times have I seen old and middle en hang on to a strap mile after mile te aged wom- while some unlicked whelp of a boy has sat in front of her in stolid indiffer- ence. Nor were these always loaf or boys going to their work—fully as will be a well- or one whose man- otherwis will show a decent bringing up and good manners at home. They don’t care, that’s all. They have been taught ic by somebody. Time and again I, have seen a mother sit complacently with a half grown boy or girl beside her, while other women stood up. Did she care? Did she sug- gest to the boy that he should arise and give his seat to some poor old woman? Not a bit of it. She had paid for that seat and meant to keep it in the family. In such cases I have always hoped that she might be clinging to a strap the next time, while some other mother’s darling kicked his feet against her dress and stared at her in complacent selfishness. There is prob- ably not a city in America that can compare with New York for the num- ber of street car hogs to the square h fellow often the self dressed schoc foot. This don’t mean the boys only, by a long shot.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. No Smoking in Abvsainia. Three travelers, one of whom is an were in Abyssinia recently. One afternoon after their midday cof- fee they lit cigars. Hardly had they done so when an official who was pass ing informed them through an inter- preter that smoking was prohibited in that country, and that it would be well for them not to indulge in the practice in public. The travelers took the hint. The use of tobacco, they learned after- ward had been prohibited in Abyssinia gince the year 1642. At that time priests were in the habit of smoking in churches, and the main object of the law then passed was to stop this practice. After a few years, however, the law was made applicable to all classes of the people, and today strang- ers in Abyssinia are politely informed that if they want to smoke they m go where none of the natives can s them or can smell the seduc ee Corset History. The first corsei—not counting an- sient modifications of the Grecian zone ar girdle—was introduced into France by Catherine de Medici. It was a strange affair, and hioned after the siyle of a knight's c ss, The frame- work was entirely of iron, and the vel- vel, which decorated the exterior only, served to hide a frightful and cumber- some article of t ure. In the days that followed 1 s of the court laced themselves frightfully and wore the dreadful prison night and day in their efforts to obtain what they considered a perfect figure. cure,—a perfect Sarsapariia name of the medicine, for in a great many remedies. and best «The only Sarsapa gradvales: $1.00 a bottle. “Last July my oldest daughter 5 to mend I was down sic and did not care much w bottle of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and its t put me on my feet and made a we Bentonsport, » Jan. 19, 1500, | ve weed. ! What a story of suffering that one word tells. That's Impure Blood Now you know what the trouble is, you certainly know the What you want 1s a Sarsaparilla that will make your blood pure, a Sarsaparilla that will make it rich and strong, a Sarsapa- rilla that 1s a powerful nerve tonic. That's AYERS rilla made under (he personal supervision of three § a gradvate in pharmacy, a gradvatc in chemistry, and a gradvale in medicine.” I live ¥ouschold Hints, If there is one thing on which the house- wife prides !, it is that of having her laundering done nicely, so that the wear- ing apparel may be the admiration of all. The washing is a small matter, anyone al- most can do that, but to have the linens present that flexible and glossy appear- ance after being ironed quality of starch. J. C. Hubinger’'s new laundry starch, “Red Cross” and ‘Hubinger's Best” brands are his latest inventions and the finest starch ever placel on the market; not a 1 starch made by a new manufac- turer, but a new starch by the leading and only manufacturer of fine laundry starch in the United States, His new method of introducing this starch with the Endless Chain Starch Book enables you to get one large 10c. package of “Red Cross” starch, one large 10e. pack- aga of “Hubinger’s Best’ stareh, with the premiums, beautiful Shakespeare panels, or one Twentieth Century Girl cal- endar, all for 5c. Ask your grocer. two Ralezgiris Warring on Slang. The salesgirls in a New Jersey town have started a crusade against the use of slang. Catarrh Cannot he Cured li Ant 0? zest ALC ot : que ack medici « the best physi 2h 1d is a regular pre- me Ise i of the best tonics «d with the best blood puri- :tly on the mucous surfaces. he p nation of the two ingredi- ents is what produces such wonderful Testis iv ? Cur ing C atarrh. Se ne for testimonials, free. J.Cn & , Pl Tops, Toledo, O. Hails rar pr P ills oe he Fest. The hardest worked persons in Ba- varia are the waiter girls. They are busy fourteen to sixteen hours a day, and include 27,000 un onists. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10¢, 2c. If C.C. c. fail, druggists refund money. South Africa's fayette, Col. de Villebois-Mareuli, Gen. Jou- pert’s chief of staff, the Frenchman to whom undoubtedly the Boers owe a large measure of the success that has attended their campaign against the British, is 52 years old. He was gradu- ated from the military academy at St. Cyr in 1868, and began his career as a tientenant of the marine infantry, serv- Cochin-China. Later he was to the chasseurs, and part in the Loire batties ing in transferred ain took as { cag | in 1870. He was severely wounded at | Blois, and for gallantry displayed in | that action he received a decoration. Some years later he was made a major and . acted of the staff in Al- After 30 years of servic , but was only out a short time solved to use his experience behalf of the Boers, who call him “South African Lafa “the ‘on Moltke the Boers.” 5 to have personally commanded ths troops at Colenso, and is now with the Boers who are confronting Lord Rob- erts. as ¢ Chief Source of Tuberculosis. he bacilli are found in the splita,and gettled by repeated researches that 3 y by driec It says: «I am all tired out. It seems to me I can hardly take another step. I haven'ta par- ticle of ambition. I can’t do half my work, I am weak, “ Sarsaparilla” is simply the perfect Sarsaparilla there are a You want the strongest All druggists. ken sick, and by the time sh 1 caring for her. d or died. fiects were i 1! woman of me. > began ca Ss a Th " BROW N, A KLOND Ing requires a fine ze he re-| uberculosis is spread nearly exclusive- | I] 4\ KEEP IT CLEAN. Nothing is more than a nursing bottle. difficult to keep clean and sweet Yet if it is not thoroughly cleaned, the particles of milk adhering to it become rancid ang affect the health of the infant. from this cause, if, after rinsed in cold water, then suds and let stand for half No trouble will arise ‘using the bottle, it is first filled with warm Ivory Soap an hour, and then well rinsed. The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soap is made fit it for many special uses for which other soaps are unsafe or unsatisfactory. COPYRIGHT 1899 BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATI 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- purities from the body. Begin to- day to bamsh pimples, boils, biotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug- gists, satisfaction uaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50c. INSECTS OF AUSTRALIA. Species of Insect Discovered on the Island. Australia is a veritable naturalist’s Nearly 10,000 Life paradise, presenting as it does an ever- fresh and inexhaustible field for the study of the various branches of natural history. The insect fauna is extremely large The characteristics of the numerous beetles, flies, wasps, butterflies, moths and other kinds of insects are so marked that European and American experts at once recog- nize a specimen from Australia. The , Australian insect fauna is estimated at 10,000 species, but it is believed that the actual number is considerably greater. Of these the greatest variety scientific collections formed in Sidney ,and elsewhere being of singular ( tractiveness and interest. In the vicin- {ty of streams may be found large and beautiful dragon flies, often of con- siderable size. Native honey bees are plentiful in many places and are easily recognizable by their small size, being little larger than the common house fly. Mosquitoes are practically un- known in the dry interior, but their i place is taken by the sand fly, an equal- ly mischievous insect. There are spid- [ers of all sizes, a few being poisonous, | but their webs are generally of a most | fanciful character. The splendid ap- | pearance of some of the butterflies riv- sls that of the most gorgeous insects | found in South American forests. | | i i i German Potors Invention, In Germany a doctor has taught his patients how to ‘‘massage” rheumatic finger points by thrusting the hand into a deep glass partially filled with mercury, which presses on them. The | aand is dipped in and out of the glass itbout thirty times at each treatment, and the swelling is thus reduced.— Washington Times. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag | aetic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To | Bac, the wonder worker, that makes weak men All druggists, 50c or #1. Cure guaran- Booklet and sample free. Address | Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New York ican’s pouch is are A pe conta seven or ci aquaris of To Cure a Cold in One Day. | Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All | druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. | B. ROVE'S signature is on each box. 23c. tha: once India ent more and thousands nly i'ew people in | | | a day S SON8, of Atlanta, Ga, are 11 ol Dropsy Specialists in the :ral offer in advertisement sun of this paper. s gi eT, » , in another cr | Toledo carpenters refuse to work o i jobs with non-unionists. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrap fi leething, softens the zums, reduc tion, alls pain. cure wind aol 37 the United od 80.000 pianos. I do not believe pis 's Cure for consumption has an equul for ¢ coughs and colds JOYER, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, | During the States manuf: HN I. 1900. the one secti saloons in and in block There ard of are are 746 Chicago. 20 in one cre | How Are Your Kidneys ? Dr. H TH Add. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicagoor N. ¥ { many Mid wins an Ce srie-. | The cemeteries around i.ondon cover | 2,000 acres, and the land i represents a capital of $100,000,000. IKE SCENE. g evidence of its virtue and popularity. cars on every box of the genuine article. No Cure, is to be found in New South Wales, the | at- | mL they occupy | Ihe Emperor's Expenses. Eignt millions a year isn’t enough for Emperor William. He wants ten millions. In his twenty-four palaces he keeps 1,500 lackeys and more than 2.000 maid servants, and there are hig royal stables and kennels and covery and cotes and playhouses. Sour Stomach try CASCA- in the hones. my head was indaoeed fo 1 withou + mes eal, New York. 318 all drug. co Habit. ers of spring —an t feeling of lan- Many a lows of need Cnre, No detention from ation, no opium or morphine, ppositories ble. or and box of ginsment $ stpaid by mail. Send tor book of valu able \Rforination on Flos , FREE, whether you use our Sry 9 THE DANIEL S's $k PILE CURE CO, 284 Arylum St., Hartford, Conn. Ww. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES Fig (= Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. f indorsed by over : 1,000,006 wearers, [2 of The genuine have W. L.§° i Dooy glas’ name and price § on bottom. Take itute claimed to. be E . ¢ Tia in d o Use s! in or ca Ca ne WL BousLAs ioe Go., raion, Ri / P. N. U. 15,700, pore inknown, Hes Al correspondenc JA MES SECURED OR Fee Refunded E Stent advertisad Free ad. E & ice as 10 i entabliitys Se APY iit Branches: Chicago, Cle d Detroit NEW DISCOVERY; gives nick ralisf and cures wo days’ treatme; EN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga, eases. a Book of testimonials an Free. Dr. H. H. GRE obbs’ Sparagus Pills cure all kidney ills. 8am. | [NG CURE] NO PAY. PRICE 25¢ t from Klondike to Cuba sells Laxative Bromo- Quinine Tablets act it is the only Cold and Grip prescription sold throughout this This No Pay. signature Price 23c,