Both tho method and results when fijriip- of Figs 'is tahen ; it' is pleasant and' refreshing to tho tasto, and acts fently yet promptly on tho Kidneys, aver and Bowels, cleanses tho sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers' and cures habitual constipation. Syrup bf Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to tho tasto and ac ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial iri its effects, prepared only from tho moat healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all' and have made it tho most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in -50c and 61 bottles by all leading 'drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. ' SAN 'FRANCISCO, CAl. LOUISVILLE, K1 NEW YORK, N.Y, "THE ELECTRIC" (John McNeil's old stand) East Centre St., Shenandoah, Pa. Too flaest, purest and best Liqifors, Beers, Ales, Porters ! Cigars, &c, In tbe county. Tbe urovci i place nas been entirely renovated ana inv a. I'oltto attention and honorable treat- merit to all, CURE Blck neadaehb and relieve all tho troubles Incf dent to a billons utato of the system, suoh aa dizziness. Nausea. Drowsiness. Distress afteff eating. Pain in the Side, &c While their most yemrrtble success haa.bean shown In cadcq IS 113 K iTeafiacne, yet Carter's littlo Liver VtOB ar9 cquaUy valuablo In Constipation; Curing and pre senting this annoying complain t,whllo they also correct all disorders or t heB tomachitlmnlate tho .liver and regulate tho bowels.' Erontf theyoalj HEAD L&ebtheyvouldbeknn6atprl&ea3totb.osswha alter from this distressing complaint; but f orto xatslythelrgoodnessdoesnotendhere,andthoas who once try them will And those 11 ttle pills valu able In so many ways that they will not bo wil ling to do without t bom. But after all sick hea4 AGUE fit the bane of so many lives that here la where vie make our great boasb OurpUUcureltwhila Dthersdonot . Carter's Little Liver Fills aro .very small and very easy to take. One or two pills mako a dose. Shey are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all wha itiseihem. InvislsatSSeentst flvoforfl. Sold 1 by druggists everywhere, or sent by mau. CARTER MEOlCINECO., New York! SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE Unlike the Dutch Process Np AJLUftlics on .Otlior Chemicals 'are" used lit.' the preparation of 'ytt BAKER & CO.'S a ' which l AioluUly jmre and toluble. ItKaamorethan'thteettmci thtttrenythiol Cocoa mixed with Starch. Arrowroot nr ' . . DyKi "u is'iar more eco- nomlcalconinjr lets than ens cent a cup. It Is delicious.' nourishing, and easily DIOESTED. Sold by Ororers eterywhtrs. v ffi. BAKER & CO., Dorcheiter, Man. NEW DRUG STORE. Ed ward A. Morgan & Co. (Formerly Shapiro's" Pharmacy) ' .107 South! Main Street, NEXT DOOR TO POST OFFICE. Prescriptions carefully compounded by registered pharmacists. TO PROTECT YOUR LUNfrS Procure one of our Chest Protectors. nilnrnnr We, the uudersUned, were tlUr I II Mr entirely oured of rupture by .,..-? p it. j. ii. Mayer, ksi a uimuoiuuiu, t-., m. Jones r Bquare, Ia.: T. A. Kreltz, Hlat! M. Hmall, Mount Alto, i-a.s II in rumps, Kennet Ulatlngton, I'a.i K. . . Ilau U 11. UhAi. Munburyafa.! D.J. Dellett. 2U 8.12111 Ht.. iteadl nit, fa.; Win. Dlz, 1824 Montrose tit.. Philadelphia; lJls;'!!&fl'?'S'anJl l'A Wurkart, 439,Locust HU Heading, Pa. Hand for circular. MEN WANTED TO test a I'otiiiv yure lor me entMts or seu-atraas. Sexual i'ower, Jtupoteecr, our ttneclflo vre vlll sund os, jierv..iFebiiitr( Ioesot one ull Alontk Medk'b In SAd Uucb Vajunblb Irorraatlpn Vltl'K. .iddrwj ii. M.C'U., BSallrdw,,1,w i i CARTER'S! -Viver Warn 'sHOrln BreakfastCoco A BRIDGE OF SIZE. One of the Greatest of Modern Structure? to Span the Thames. London bridge will bo rclloved of a largo part of Its burden of traffic when tho sightly now structure shown hero Is completed. Already work on tho tow ers Is well advanced, and thousands of workmen aro hurrying It to completion. Tho great structure will cross tho Thames near tho tower of London, and Is therefore to bo known as tho Tower bridge. The illustration shows tho bridge open. When it Is closed tho'two leaves of the opening span, each weighing1 950 tons, are let down by counter-balance gil A I THE TOWEB BIUDOE OF LONDON. iweights to the level of tho bridge, 80 feet abovo high water. A hundred feci abovo the bridge level is another rood tway for foot passengers, who will be taken up by elevators In tho towers whenever tho bridge is open and travel below Is impeded. The side spans ars 370 feet wido with a headway above high water of from 20 to 27 feet; the foundations ore 00 feet below high wa ter mark and 27 feet below tho bed of 'the river, and tho bridge has a'sectional larea of waterway o"f '20,020 square feet 'as compared with the 19,800 square feet of London bridge. The total length ol tho bridge and abutments is 040 feet and of the bridge and approaches 2,640 feet, whilo tho steepest gradient of ap proach is only 1 in 40. That of Lon don bridgo Is 1 in 27. It will thus ba .seen that tho bridge, when 'completed, will be one of the most remarkable' in the world, spanning as it does what is perhaps the busiest waterway on earth. Some 81,000,000 bricks, 70J600 cubio yards of concrete, 19,500 tons of cement, 235,000 cubio feet of granite and other stone, and 15,000 tons of iron and steel are to be used In construction. At tached to tho bridgo will albo be two steam pumping engines for hydraulio machinery, each 800 horse power; eight .largo hydraulic engines and six accu mulators, and four hydraulio elevators for passengers. It will cost 3,500,000. FOR LAND AND WATER. The Unique Tricycle Itocently Designed f by st Gerinau Inventor. Tho contrivance represented in tho .accompanying cut is a tricycle, tho in vention of a German, George Pinkert by name, adapted for uso on either dry land or water surfaces. Tho driving wheels of 'this machine aro" hollowed "bodies' divided into' two air-tight com .partmcnts'by a'p'erpVndlcular partition, 'tho two halves being firmly bolted together. Th'd "object of this arrange ment is to insure the vehicle against 'sinking in case of accident to either, sido of the metal plato. To adapt' the inachine for use' on land, the wheels ' ore provided with prominent rubber i tires; -while in the water the latter serve as d sort of keol. Propulsion In LAND AND WATKB TBI CYCLE. water is effected' by paddle-like cor rugations pressed into the metal sides of thelibllow vheels. The wheel-body Is held In " position either by steel spokes extending from the hub or mbre economically by cones mado of sheet Iron. ' TJhe front or steering wheel' also is hollow, divided Into two compart ments, and provided with a' rubber tiro. Theso wheels, it is' claimed, may easily bo attached to almost any common tricycle. Great 'services are expected from a machine of tho type under dis cussion, In military tactics, in harbor work and riding rapid streams. i .) r . Hought Copper for Gold. "I have biade Arrangements with a number of miners in Siberia to buy gold dust and small pieces of gold of them. They are able to secrete hese in tho folds o!f their dress, take them homo dnd there sell them to me for a nominal prlco. After having collected a quan tity and brought it here I-now oiler it you for sale. I do not proposo to sell you the precious metal for a trlflo, but I will guarantco that the metal shall pass tho frontiers of both Russia and France without paying any tax or ,duty. Thus your profit Will bo the' amounts total of these government charges." Such' tvere the contents of a letter received by a rich Parisian jeweler from Riga, in Prussia. ' He went to Riga to see tho dealer. Ho had the powder and gold pieces weighed with care, chemically examined, and, after f aying for them, had it well packed under his own eyes. Tho Riga man had promised to take tho goods over the frontiers to escape pay ing duty. II o traveled with tho Parisian by way of Belgium. JI a vlng passed tho French frontior, ho took his leavo at the first depot on French soit When tho Parisian arrived at home and opened his precious box ho found In it nothing but copper dust and copper pieces. Tbe clever crook has not yet been found. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report, ABSOLUVEttf PURE CARAWAY FLOWERS. Cnch Seed l'lnnteil Grow a Whole Pot for Itseir. When little Roy and his mother moved into their1 new house, there were no flowers in the front yard. Itoy was so fond of flowers that this was a great grief to him. "' "I am going to plant some flowers right away," lib saidj "I want our front yard to look llko the one next door," for tho yard of 'tho next house, which Was divided by a hedge from their own, was full of all kinds of lovely flowers. As soon as the boxes were unpacked Boy got out his little spade and rake and spent tho whole morning digging in a plot of ground under tho dining room windows. ,He was too busy to notice that a Httlo girl was peeping nt him through tho thick hedge, very much interested in his work. "What aro you doing, Hoy?" asked his mother that afternoon, when she saw him standing by his little plot of ground with a tin cup in his hand. "I am planting some seeds, mamma; I found them in a little tin box in one of your dishes," Roy answered. "Let:me see," said his mother. Roy ran to her with tho tin cup. It was half full of caraway seeds that Mrs. Helm had bought to put in cake. i Sho laughed as she handed the cup back to him. "Do you expect to raise caraway flowers?" she asked. "Yes, mamma, and I hopo they'll be pretty," Roy answered. "Anyhow, they aro all the seeds I could find." He made little holes in tho ground, and dropped tho caraway seeds in, cov ering them up, and patting the earth down with his fat little hands. And all the time 'the littlo girl next door was watching him through tho hedge. She had heard what he had said to his moth er. The next morning Roy got up very early. "I want to go out to pick you somo flowers, mamma," he said. "There won't be any flowers there, dear;" said his mother, i But Roy went out to see, and soon he came racing back with his hands full oi geraniums and panslcs. "Look, look, mamma," he said, all my caraway seeds have come up, and every one has grown a whole pot for it self in the ground. I can just see the rims." Mrs. Ilelm went to the dining-room window and looked out. Roy's garden was indeed full of flowers. She did not understand it until she saw the little girl, with a smiling face, looking through tho hedge. Then Bhe knew where, the flowers had como from. Roy called them his "caraway flow ers" and every morning all summer long he had a little bouquet to bring his mother to put on tho breakfast ta ble. And the little girl next door used , to lauirh to herself when she saw him ' picking them. Florence B. Hallowell, in Examiner. 'PLEASANT 10 :XT MORNINO T FFFI BRIGHT AND AND MV COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor says It acts gendy'on-ths" stomach, liver and kidneys, ami is a pleasant laxative. Thu drink is made from be res and Is prepared tot uso untnnii, u Kik .11 ui ca.il ci tt ar nnMVaii A4 druggists sinut Jituk unit f i.u) perparkuKe. 5UT aoe UHlay, line's, l;'iinill' ,ireillrlne loves the llowels each uuy. In order tube U. au 117, uus u ucveotutry. FIRE INSURANCE. Largest and oldest reliable purely cm U a m panles represented by FAUST, 120 S. JardinSt., Shenanaoah.Pa. HEEVE in FILLS Act on a' new principle xegttf ate tbe liver, stomach ana bowels, through t.U nervu. Un. Mans' Pnxa ipeidit'i cure blUouenees, torpid liver and constipa tion. Smallest, mildest, Burestl spdcoes.35 eta. (jamplee tree at drunirtats. Br. Elki Bed. Co., Elltut, Ul VIGOR OF MEN EASILY, QUICKLY, PERMANENTLY RESTORED 'WeLne, NerrBacM llebllltr, ud rlla tnm 4flj erron ( UUr hium, Um retolla f erervork, pttknet vorrj. ftu. Fall alrennli, dtTolopinc&t ul too gi? eo to Tn7 orio ud portion of lb bodr. felmpU, mturti meibodf. JmrnMlsvU Improtemwl o. rUor lmpulbl, HjQQ ptr bott IUih for 14.00. WrhUa nuutM to tar with tTitr lis botes. 8(XO rtftn-fne!, Sud Munp far took tfkNiN tlTV MK1UUAL CO, J'J.iu4eBkU, I'm. VIGOR OF MEN easily, Qulokly, Permanently Restored, tveukneii, Nervousness, llebtllly. end ell Ihn Irntii nf nvtla f mm AurlT errors nrl&tflp amasses. tbe rosults of overwork, sickness, worry, etc Hull strengtb. development, and tone Klrea to every organ aod portion of tbe body. Blmpto, natural tuetbods. Immediate luiproyouiont .seen. Failure Impossible, references, nook, 'explanations tnaprooratpaUeddealedlfree. Address , ERIE MEDIOAU CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. J. GALLAPHER. Justice of tbe Peace, Real Estate and Insurance Agency. Offlca Muldoon's Ilulldlnc, Sbenandoab, Pa &m AT THE Nf THE PAPAL BLESSING. An Impressive Ceremony of Great Pomp nnil Solemnity. At that moment a strain of musio broke out above the great, soft, muf fled whispering that filled the basilica. Some thirty chosen voices of tho choir of St. Peter's had begun the hymn Tu nsi Pntmia n e ttin tirnrincolnri iinrfn n ir 3 1 VUl Ui) v7 miu jjs. vyvjvu.jiiys UVgUII VJ 1 defile from tho south aisle to the nave, close by the great door to travcrs tho whole distance thence to the high altar. I Tho pope's own choir, consisting solely of tho singers of tho Sistine chapel, waltcic silently uenina tno lattico unuer the statue of St. Veronica. The song rang out louder and louder, simple and grand. Those who have heard Italian singers at their bestknow i that thirty young ' Roman throats can j emit a volume of sound equal to that which ono hundred men of any other nation could produce. Tho stillness ar6und them Increased, too, as the pro cession lengthened. Tho great dark crowd stood shoulder to shoulder, breathless with expectation, each man and woman feeling for a short moment that thrill of mysterious anxiety and impatience which Orslno had felt. No one who was there can ever forget what followed. More than forty cardinals filed out in front from tho chapel of tho Plota. Then tho hereditary assistants of tho Holy See, the heads of the Col onna and the Orsini houses entered tho nave, side by sido for the first time, I believe, in history. Immediately after them, high above all tho procession and tho crowd appeared tho great chair of state, the huge white-feathered fans moving slowly 'on each side, and upon the throne, the central figure of that vast display, sat the pope, Leo XIII. Then, without warning and without hesitation, a shout went up such as has , never been heard before in that dim ca- j thedral, nor will, perhaps, be heard i again: "Viva il Papa-Re!" Long life to the pope-king! I At tho same instant, as though at a preconcerted signal utterly Impossible in such a throng in tho twinkling of an eye, the dark crowd was as white as snow. In every hand a white handker chief was raised, fluttering and waving , .above every head. And tho shout, once taken up, drowned tho strong voices of the singers as long-drawn thunder drowns the pattering of tho raindrops . and tho sighing of the wind. The wonderful face, that seemed to bo carved out of transparent alabaster, smiled and slowly turned from side to side, as it passed by. The thin, fragile hand moved unceasingly, blessing the people. Thd stupendous pageant went on bo fore him; the choir sang; tho sweet boys' voices answered back, like an angels' song, out of the lofty dome; tho incenso rose in columns through the streaming sunlight,-as the high mass proceeded. Again tho popo was raised upon tho chair and borne out into the nave, whence1 in the solemn silence 'the thin, clear aged voice intoned the benediction three tiiries, slowly rising' and falling, pausing and beginning again. Onro more the enormous shout. broke out, louder and deeper than ever,-as the pro cession moved away. Then all was over. Marion Crawford, ' la Atlantic Monthly. A PLEA FOR STRENGTH. iVeed of a Strong? and Vigorous Purpose In Newspapers. Newspapers aro jnore interesting than they used to be and more refreshing. Wo meet in our daily Walks so much' that Is depressing, gle' us in our family news paper whoie bundles of spice, harmless satire, caricatures of the world's foibles and looking-glasses in which to see our failings. Yes, give place occasionally to the mucn-abused pun, Those nnlv despise the pun who cannot make one. Take the quill, aucVafter you' have mado tho split in it, sharpen it down until the point is keen enough to puncturo the toughest inconsistency. Let tho sheet bo fresh and healthy, in it a smell of a cedar and new-cut grass. Let us hear in the rhythm of some of the sen tences the moim of an untravellod wood and the sweep of the wing of a part tridge.' Instead of the artificial dye of stale imagery, crush against the printed leaf a bunch" of hubkleberrles 'ttnd. sumac We aro tired out with all this about the nightingale; for pity's sake catch for us a brown. thresher and let ushearahon cluck. Instead of rldlilg Bucephalus to death, halter that sorrel colt. Talk not so much to us about frankincense, to the neglect of penny royal and brookmlnt. Enough of that cbmmonplace remark about "solitary horseman coming over tho hill." Tal mace. Sirs. Boston "I don't know whether to lot Anneta have that talking doll her uncle sent her or not." Mr, Hoston "Why, what's tho matter with it?'1 Mrs, Ilostori'-J-'"It's 'accent Is so'dlstressingly Now York." Restaurant Oor. Main nnd Coal Sts., Ulieuundoali, fa. Ilogular meals at popular prices served at all limes, .Ladles' dlnlDn uui re. frestunent rooms attach, ed liar stocked with the flueBt brands of cigars and lunty drinks. Leading Restaurant in Town. WALT WHITMAN'S TOMB. It Is a Pretty nillslde Vault rtullt or Graft lte 'Bowlders. During Walt Whitman's outdoor trips last silmmcr he was frequently driven out to Ilarlcigh cemetery to personally superintend tho construction of his tomb. Tho site, tho material and the manner of construction aro all of his choosing, and he took pleasuro In watch ing the' work as it progressed. Two miles from tho Philadelphia ferries, on the main road to Haddonfield, lies liar. WALT WHITMAN'S TOUD. leigh cemetery, beautifully situated in one of the few picturcsquo spots of Camden's neighborhood. Passing along smooth drives and by woll-kept lawns dotted with flower beds tho visitor ,comes to a little valloy in' which nestles 'a tiny lake fed by springs from the hill side. It is here, among a cluster of .beech and magnolia trees, at the head of tho lake, that Walt Whitman selected the spot for his tomb. The vault is built into the hill on the west side of tho ground and is composed of enormous bowlders of granite. The stono door is hung on massive brass hinges and require tho united efforts of three strong men to swing it. Tho two front stones stand like immovable son tries and aro very Imposing. A solid block of granlto is laid across these on tho top and a heavy triangular capstone is placed on this, with tho simple in- I seription: "Walt Whitman," carved out of the solid rock. POOL-PLAYING MARVELS. A Sli-YrHr-OliI ClilciiRO Doy Handles the Cue I.Ike a Veteran. Joseph II. Zilligcn plays pooL He Is six years old und forty-two inches tall Vet, says tho Chicago News, ho pockets tho balls, makes beautiful combinations nnd executes "bank" shots with all the nonchalance and skill of a Clarence Green or a DeOro. He recently played a gamo with Joseph P. Cody, a well known expert, for ten dollars a sido and littlo Joseph came out an easy winner over tho big Joseph. He is to play IJTTLE JOSEPH rulfs POOL. Frederick Overhole for a purse in few -weeks, and is regarded by all who frequent his father's billiard hall to be a greater "young phenomenon' than Josef Ilofman or Wallie Eddin, ger. The little fellow was born June 18, 1880, in Chicago, and only exhibited his unusual ability a few months ago. In handling the cue his childishness is not apparent, for he ploys with tho strength and confidence of a man. Ho uses no I bench' to compensate for his. size, but peering over the cushions, grasps tho cue wen up toward the butt and pock ' eta tne oaU. Uo sometimes is obliged i to ffot on top of the table to execute shot, but bo Is expert In using the butt of the cue where the ball Is out of reach. lie la tin Intelligent youngster and not 'particularly precocious except In play ing pooL Carious 1'aots Coneernlnc Gold. Most -0601116 believe1 that there Is no known chemical that has any effect! upon1 particles' .of gold. This is a mis take. Lelenlo acid' will dissolve as readily as aqua fortls does the baser metals. A mixture of nitric and hydro chloric acids (aqua regia) will also dis solve it, forming chloride of gold; so will a solution of ohlorino gas In water. Chloride Of gold is the only salt of im portance obtained from the yellow ' metal. This chloride is used in color ing glass, also In photography. When used by the glass-worker he finds that tho hundredth part of a grain will deep ly color a cubic inch of glass, lly beat ing' out between two pieces of mem brano, gold may bo flattened Into leaves of such thinness that 282,000 of them may be laid one upon the other in order to mako tho pllo 1 Inch high. Gold beaters have succeeded In spreading a singlo ounce of gold over a surfaco of 100 square feet. In making gold threads for embroidery it has been found that six ounces of gold can be drawn into 200 miles of wire I Queer Echoes. In a cavo In the Pantheon tho guide, by striking tho flaps of his coat, makes a nolso equal to that produced by firing a twelve-pound cannon. In the cave of Smellin, near Vlborg, Finland, a stono thrown down a certain abyss makes a reverberating echo which sounds like the dying wail of some wild animal. The price of Wolff's Acme Blacking is 20c. a bottle, and it is cheap at that. It costs more to (ilia bottle wjtli Acme Black ing than other liquid DressinRS cost com plete for thomarkct, including fancy boxes, artistic stoppers, ond other paraphernalia. H'e tell the Blacking not the package. As It Is our dcslro to rcll Acmk Blackiko chenjicr If possible, but fir.d ourselves un nblo to do to owl ncr to ltt present cost of making, we bold a prlzo of i Open Competition Until the'lst day of Jantinry, 1893, to bo paid to nny one who furnisbes n formula ena bling ns. to make It at fcucli a price thnt a retailer can profitably sell It nt 10c. a bottle. WOLFF & HANDOrjPII, Philadelphia. It costs 10c. to find out whnt Pik-Ron is and does. A whole puce of information could not give a correctidc.i. lMk-Kon la tbe name ol the only pint wmen mages rfeim whits glass look like colored glass. au jeuncrs teu it. Morning Noon Night! i Good all the time. It removes 1 the languor of morning, sus- t tains the energies of noon, lulls ' J the weariness of night. iHires'K ' delicious, sparkling, appetizing. Don't be deceived If a dealer, for trie salte of lireer profit, tells vou some other kind i Is "just as good " 'tis false. No imitation ( is as good as tne genuine hires . S3 SHOE GENTLEMEN THE BEST SHOE tt THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY J It la a eeamlesa Bhoe, -with no tacks or wax. thread to hurt tliofeet; mado of the best line callYstvIlsli and easy, and because tve make more hotlof thit grade than any ether manufacturer. It equals hand sewed ehoes coating from $i.0Q to $5.00. CC U(M3enulup 1 1 ami -sewed, the finest call shoe ever offered for (VOD; equals FrencU Imported shoes which cost from $la to $12.00. &A 00 Ilnntl-Sfuvcil Writ Shoo, fine calf. SMmTm stylish, comfortable and durable. Tbebesi shoo over offered at this price i same grado as custom-made shoes costing from $0.00 to $9.00, CO 50 Police Khoci Farmers, Railroad Men iiJn nod Letter Carriersall wear them; dnecalf. Beamless, smooth Inside, heavy three boIcs, extea elon edge. One pair will wear a year. CO 30 fine cnlfi no better shoe ever offered a$ 7fiB this price; .one trial will convince thaw who want a shoo for comfort and service. tffiO 5 nnd S'-00 Vorklnsnir.fis shoe Sam are very strong and durable. Those wha have given them a trial will wear no other make. PnVe! &OC nnd 8175 school shoes ara J UI a worn by the boys everywhere; they eU on their merits, ns the Increasing Bales show. I nrliaOG llnml-seived shoe, best sWClU IC3 Uongola, very stylish; equals French Imported shoes costing from 4U.W to $s.u). Indies .30, S'200 nud $1.75 fihoo for Misses are the best fine Liongolo. .stylish and dur&bla. Caution See that V. L. Douglas nomo ao4 price are stamped on the bottom of each shoe. IT" TAKE. .NO SUnSTITUTE.J Insist on local advertised dealers supplying you, W. J0U(;LA8. Jlrockton.Maas. Soldhy JOSEPH BALL, Nortli nitVin St., Shenandoah KIRKS D Healthful, Agreeable; Cleansing. Cures Chapped Hands, Wounds, Burns, Etc Removes and Prevents Dandruff. WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP. Specially Adapted for Use in Hard Water. DR. THEEL, 538 Bf 0SPllS!lJBi! til onlr leaulu ivBtt Amrloa PjrKi.UU.lQ UtfUbltod Btt wit u tbi to son Blood Poison. Nervous Debility a Spe cial Diseases t bou. mi, bkla IUicmm. H4 BpoU Flint la Un tHw-.8oroThroQt Mouth, Bhtob-, ftmitfi. Eruption i, t hr4 tlmi, titclaait, Inittvllooi, n:lunmftllOD nd Roaotait, ISutotumi WeUntH in Itrl iekf, loil memory etk btwik. ratoUl toiNtr, I.dnty u4 Itltldrr I'lieuei aod u l)tMtuw reiultjof from Eiocim, Iiidlictctlon er Overwork, Retu ttwf CUfJ la 4 M 10 dfcjri teller stbo. Do not Iom top, do mtsttcr wltt w3it tlnlnf DoeUar, Qatwk, runllT r ItMplUt Pbjiiclu bu fUU )r. TUEEL tw positively wtibonl drtraUoa ftou luiloeai, ols, Toawa, utorLi aio AWPtMMi currMPLiim fiRiuni. rich er poor -tnX to tump tor book TRUTH ctpflrinc Qauk inder iwara trsdmontivU, Ilout, MtJIf rrm 9 to S, kr-ffi I W , Wrt. ud SU "y'n I to 10. 8andtT 9 till IS. Writ r cftl) Ud t 1 vr Ib'hrrtisKt sVM tlnli. tad Pur4 i'UJ. itllj ftlAttb Q M. HAMILTON, M.U., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. omoe-sa Wet Lloya Btreet, Hbnaii(lddri '''"why USKY i1IAMnMlK TAR SOAP
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers