Experience And Not Experiment!, Should bo rour Aim In Buying Medlolno. Lt others experiment; yon should be guliled bf experience. Experiments are -certain In result; experience li Rare, Ex lurlments may do yon linrm: experience proves that Hood's Barsaparilla will do yon wonderful good. Thouaand gladly tell what Hood's bos dona (or them. They want you to know and they urge yon to try It. That la what la meant by the vast amber of testimonials written In behalf of Hood'a Bnrsaparllln. They give the re sults of experience and prove that HOOd'S 8apa8rH.a la America's Oreateat Medicine. Sold by all dnizirlste. tit six for fS. et only Howl's. Hood's Pills l'AA 'St Tho prettier n Rirfa spring dress is. the longer It nniy be known that hot father ia fussing nbout It. T Tore) Cnn.tlpatlon forf Take Caanirets iiindv Cathartic, too erfta It a O. O. fall to cure, drusgi.ta rotund moaey. Old Cnlro la changing visibly. The electric tramway to the Pyramids la an accomplish. d fact, and the elifht-mlle trip brfore o expensive la now possi ble for n few pence. Ismnll'a (treat causeway will In no way be spoiled, as the rails hnve been laid right along the aide of the avenue, and, Indeed, are icarcely noticeable. Fits permanently-cured. No fits or nervous. Rp. s after first day's nse nf Dr. Kline's (Irvnt erve He-t'iivr. JStrlnl bottle and trratlne free Dr.It.H.Kl.lNE l,td..ll Arch Ht-Phlla.,!', During the aleg of Torla 150,000 of ficial dlspatchea were carried Into the city by the "1'lgeon Post." Ho-Tn-tiee foe Fifty Cent. Guaranteed tohaero bablt core makes weak men sirouf, blood pur. Wo.U. Alldruu Thibet anil It Inhabitants. The linmeiiBe territory of Thibet la almost completely surrounded by moun tain ranges of nppnlllng magulturc, Which, especlnlly nlong tho southern, western and nortliern frontiers, consti tute formidable barriers against In gress. From the Tamir Plateau, In the extreme west "the world's ba.ck.bone" radiate the grent natural ramparts which shut out Iudla on the one hand ond the Tartar countries of Bokhara and Turkestan on the other. No Astatic or Western conqueror has ever dared to penetrate this mountain world; and even Genghis Khan, tho scourge of Asia, whose ravages extended from Fekln In the East to Moscow In the West, was obliged, when Invading ' Northern India, to take the circuitous rente, via Kaahghar and Afghanistan, Instead of crossing Thibet. Secure on their lofty plateau, and practically Iso lated from the rest of the world, the people of Thibet have remained undis turbed for ages, and hare developed characteristics for which we might vain ly search In any other race on the globe. The Chinese "conquest" has not pro duced the slightest change In their mode of life, or exercised any nnnre- clable Influence upon their peculiar cul ture, OPEN LETTERS FK0M Jenalo E. Croon agd Mrs. Barry Hardy. , Jessie E. GftfEj, Denmark, Iowa, writes to Mrs, IMnkhoi-f "I hod been sick at my monthly periods for seven years, and tried almost everything I over heard of, but without any benefit. Was troubled with backache, headache, pains in tho shoulder and dtzslness. Through my mother I was Induced to try Lydla E. , Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound, and , it has done mo so much good. I am now sound and well." " ' . Mrs. ItAnnr IIabdt, Riverside, Iowa, . . writes to Mrs. Pinkham the story of her struggle with serious ovarian trou ' ble, and the benefit she received from the use of Lydla E. Plnkham's Vege- table Compound. This is her letters " Bow thankful I am that I took your medicine. I was troubled for two years with Inflammation of the womb and ovarios, womb was also very - low. I was in constant misery. I had heart trouble, was short of breath and could not walk five blocks to save my life. Suffered very much with my back, had headache all the time, was nervous, menstruations were irregular and painful, had a bad discharge and ' was troubled with bloating. I was a perfect wreck. Had doctored and taken local treatments, but still was no better. I was advised by one of my neighbors to write to you. I have now .finished the second bottle of Mrs. Plnk ham's Vegetable Compound, and am better in every way. I am able to do all my own work and can walk nearly mile without fatigue; something I , had not been able to do for over two J years.. Your medicine has done roe more good than all the doctor. " H RE ATM I lutvakMW rAtCAKKTI mm4 Jild od edautiv Uwlrt tto.r are simply wob Hal. Mr dftusbutr and I v txtiri with tck tonach sud our feroaie w very td. After mf few iIoms of Ctsctreu w Lav improved uausriullf. Tnor are rei help In Uw fallr. WII.aKI.UlkA k'illtl. II8T kltuiobouw 81, Uuotuoatl. OUlo. CANOV CATHARTIC w w -J J ''-, fl mb'. Pol lit. ThU Gal. no I .. Waakmi.ur Ortp. an. . f CONSTIPATION. ... f I !? I , liwm. Tot, m v an tfss- Ik I. .. . A K,j,' lWAOt laaasia aay VILLAINOUS GUNC0TT0N THIS HICH EXPLOSIVE ADOPTED FOK THE ARMY AND NAVY. ferritin Hamate Wronht on Warship ly Shell I'harsed With Cordite In the M ar tlrtvreen China and Japan-Its De structive 1'ower - llnvr It la Made, Onncotton, one of the most power ful destroyers known to man, bus been adopted by the United Htatea as the service high explosive for the great gntiB of warships and seaeonst tie Inures, as the tests at the Indian Head and Hnntly Hook proving ground have demonstrated the entire teaxibility of firing from modern rifted guns, with smokeless powder as the propelling agent, steel sheila carrying heavy charges of gttucotton. Among nil the measures taken for strengthen ing the national defences, this is one of the moat important, Armor-piercing projectiles, heavily charged with guncottoti, would make our fortified harbors safe from an at tack by a hostile fleet. A single shell from the great Watervliet guu to be mounted on Homer Hliouls would carry such a weight of the powerful explosive as to put out of action the most heavily nrmored ship afloat. Should a portion of an attacking fleet run through the lire of the long range gnus and come within range of the inortar-batteriea, upon the decks would tall tons of gnueotton incased in deck-piercing shells, which would explode between decks with terrible effect. Armor plate would be crushed like tin, guns dismounted, boilers ex ploded, end crews decimated by the Hying fragments of steel and the force of the explosive. Modern high explosives have never been used in large quantities to charge rifle sheila iu warfare, but secret ex periments in Europe have met with such success that it ia believed that should there be another great Kttro peun war the combatants would all be found supplied with high explosive shells. Dynamite and gnnootton were used in torpedoes and anbmariiie mines in the war between Chili and Pern, the Turco-Rusaiau war of 1877, the Franco-Chinese war of 1881, the Urnziliau civil war, and the Inst war in the East, but only in the conflict be tween China and Japan was any use made of high explosive ' shell. Dur ing the few hours of naval fighting terrible destruction was wrought by Japauese shells charged with small quantities of cordite, the aorvice smokeless powder of England. Many of the shells failed to explode and the aim of the gunners was bad, but the effect of high explosive sheila, even under these adverse conditions, was terrific. In the action off Aaan on July 23, 1894, in which three Chinese and four Jupaneae warships were en gaged, the Tsi Yuen, one of the Chinese ships, received the heaviest fire. An English officer went aboard after the battle. "The vessel presented the appear ance of au old wreck." he said. "On deck the sight was cruel and beggars description. Woodwork, cordage, bits of irou and dead bodies all lay in con fusion. Bet neon decks matters were as bad. The slaughter had been awful, blood and human remains being scattered over the decks and guns. Three of tho five men working the four-ton gnu in the after turret were blown to pieces by a six-inch shell, and a fourth was shot down while at tempting to leave the turret. Tho re maining gunner stuck fo his post and managed to fire three rounds at the Naniwa, end one shell entering her engine room and another blowing her fore bridge away, ahehanledioff. The Chinese admiral awarded to tho plucky gunner 1000 taels. One shell struck the deck and, glancing, passed up through the conning tower and exploded, blow ing to pieeea the gunner-lieutenant and leaving his bead hanging on one of the voice pipes. Huge fragments of armor ami backing had been torn from their fastenings and carried in board, crushing a number of poor wretches into shapeless masses, even the upper part of the funnels being splashed with blood." Guucottou shells for heavy guns have beeu adopted by the United States as the result of experiments ex teuded over a period of years. Long ago the ordnance exports were con vinced that high explosive shells could be UHod with entire safety, aud emmeusite, a modern explosive of un certain action, was adopted for use in the army. The service charge of em mensite for common 12-inch mortar shells was fixed at soventoen poutids, and for deck-piercing shells at thirty eight pounds. Three years ago the army ordnance bureau announced that experiments were in progress with a view to adopting an armor-piercing projectile and a high-explosive shell. Several American inventors have since brought forward armor-pieroing shells meeting the government requirements. The projeotile factories are now work ing under rush orders makiug shells for the government. The armor piercers, deok piercers, and common shells are all made with powder cham bers, solid shot having been discarded. No more eminensite will be made, and the government is placing largo orders (or cellulose (cotton fibre) aud nitrio and sulphuric acids for the manu facture of gnnootton. The great power of gnnootton as a deHtrnctlve agent and the remarkable freedom with which it can be used safely alike make it a valuable mili tary explosive. Gnnootton is made by immersing pare dry cotton in a mixture of the purest and strongest nitric and snlphurio acids,and pressing it into blocks. When dry it is as easi ly electrified as a oat's baok, and is luminous when rubbed in the dark, Dry gnnootton may be exploded by wrapping It tightly in tiu-foil, strikiug it several light blows oa an anvil to eou'pres it,end the giving it a heavy blow but there is no certainty Hint it will explode. Saturated with water gnnootton is exploded with great dif ficulty, and it is in this condition that it is stored away iu magazines and nsed as a shell-charging explosive. The wet guucottou, in the process of pressing in its uiniiufacture at the United States torpedo station, Is sub jected to a pressure of about 0:'-0J pounds to the square inch, nnd the pressure has beeu carried to 15,1)00 pounds without causing explosion. Dry, loose guneotton bums with a flash, but without explosion; wet com pressed guneotton will not burn until the motature is dried out of it. In the torpedo station experiments a ton ol wet guneotton hns been placed in a bonfire, where it slowly burned away without explosion. WI6C0NSIN'sNATURAL BRIDGE. A Olaantln Arehvra.v In the Wilderness ol tho Htute YVIilrh few Have Keen. Few peoplo know that Wisconsin possesses a natural bridge, with near ly, if not quite, as much attractiveness as the one in Virginia, made famous by the visits of George Washington. The Undgor bridge is located iu the town of Honey Creek, about twenty miles from Milwaukee, and eight miles east of Prairie du Sao. The bridge is in fact only a gigantic archway detached from the face of a rocky bluff facing the Wisconsin river, by the action ol the elements, but ns n nnturnt curios ity has only a local reputation so far. Few visitors except from the imme diate vicinity hnve ever taken the trou ble to make a trip in thin direction, probably because this part of Sauk county was, until recent years, cut oft from railroads, and not easy of access. Even now it requires considerable pluck to endure the long ride through the sands of the Wisconsin river bot toms, which lie between the old prairie of the Sao Indiana and the bluff. One is amply repaid for a visit by the at tractiveness of the place. A devious route through a farmer's plowed field is trod by a guide in reaching the face of the elilT where is found the bridge. It is not until within a short distance of the blufl that the archway enn be seen becanse of the timber aud underbrush partial ly concealing it. Upou stepping between the blufl and the arch the inimenseuess of the tusk which nature has accomplished is apparent. The nndor part of the arch is about fifty feet above the floor in tu 3 highest part, and varies from that down to about thirty feet, where it joins the supporting rocks. The span is from ten to twenty-fire feet thick, and about fifteen feet wide. The pathway across the top is a trifle ovel three feet wide in its narrowest place, and a cool head is needed to make the passage over the span. The person standing upon the top of tho span is probably 100 feet above the average level of the surrounding country, and the scene spread before him is one of rural Wisconsin scenery unsurpassed. Although the country has been settled for many years, yet the rttggedneas of the scene seems hardly diminished by the hand of man in hit efforts to con quer the soil and make for himself a home in these romantic surroundings. Exoopt for the occasional loghouse, or, rarely, its frame successor, the place would seem as though iu its original condition, so completely hid den from view by tangled underbrush and heavy woods are the tilled lands oi the huhbandmaii. About the base of the nrchway are signs of human visitations, and the visitor learns that here the people of the surrounding country come to cel ebrate the Fourth of July, and the re maius of rustic booths, a broken beer glass or two, and other signs of past pleasures are noted. Undorneath the floor of the arch is a huge cavern seven feet high, tweuty-five feet deep, aud from 80 to 00 feet long, created by the action of the water rushing down the face of the hill, and under the archway after a heavy rain. This cavern makes a natural beer col lar, which the inhabitants of the re gion, nearly all of whom are Germans, utilize as a barroom upon the occasion of the celebration referred to. The Wisconsin natural bridge is certainly worth traveling miles to see. Born In a Rnun Mill. Gilbert Stuart, the artist, who made so familiar to Americans the features of Washington and his wife, was once visited by two Philadelphia artists. One of the artists asked Stuart for a pinch of snuff from the box in which he was inserting a thumb and finger every few minutes, and then applying them to his nostrils. "I will give it to you," said Stuart, proffering the box, "but I advise you not to take it. Snuff taking is a vile habit and should be avoided." "Your practice contradicts your precepts, Mr. Stuart," answered the gentleman. "Sir, I can't help it," replied Stnart. "Let me tell yon a story. Onoe I was traveling during a very dark night, and coaches dumped us in a ditch. We scrambled up, and on finding by examination that our legs aud arms were unbroken thought of the poor fellow shot up iu the basket with the baggage. He was found senseless and his neck twisted awry. "A passenger began to untwist the man's neck, that be might set his head straight on his shoulders. The senseless man, recovered by the wrenoh, roared out: " 'Let me alone! Let me alone I I'm not hurt! I was born sol' Gentle man," added Stuart, "I was born so. I was born in a snuff mill," and he emphasized the remark by taking an enormous pinch of snuff. . "This," says the anthor of "Heir, looms in Miniature," was literally true, as Gilbert Stuart' father, a Scotchman, bnilt the first snotT mill ever erected in New JTaglend."- Youth's- Companion. ' , A Ohrfal Woman.. from Uu Dtmoorat, Braiil, Int. Every woman eannot b heantlfal, bate ehtarful faoe often snppllea the deficiency. Bnt no ona can h ehaorfnl and bring Joy to others nnleaa they have perfect health. Fortunately, sel.no tint placed thla price less boon within the reach of every woman aa tha following Incident proves:! Mra. Amanda Robinson, wife ol William Jloblrwoo, farmer and stockman, near llowesvlllo, Olav County, Ind., la thirty two year old and had for several year been In declining health and despondent. For three months she waa not only nnahla to attend to her domestlo duties but too feoble toba up and about. To-day she Is In good health and able to attend to her household affair. Bhe relates ber el perlonoe aa follows: "I waa afflicted with female trouble's and was in a delicate stata of health. I lost my appetite, grew thin and was greatly depressed. After taking various remedies Without being benefited I waa Induced by a friend to try Ur. Williams' Pink Pills. -J5 a riy in th summer of 1S9T I pro eared live boxes of them and bfor fin ishing Iho second box I . began to lm- prove and by C.' tba time I bad i taken th Ave noxea i was a bl e to go abontrav A PricrUtm nnrm. usnal work and stopped taking tha pills. "Our daughter Anna, twelve years old, waa alao afflicted with decline and debility. Bhe loat flesh, seemed to ba bloodless and had no ambition. 8he took two boxes ol th pills and they restored her appetite, aided digestion and brought color to her cheeks. Bhe Is now In the best of health. I think Dr. Williams' Pink l'illa for Pale People the beat medlolna wo ever bad in our family and rooommond them to all needluga remedy for toning up and re building a shattered system. No dlsoovery of moibirn tlmoa has proved auob ahleaslng to woman as Dr. Williams' Pink Fills for Pale People. They restore strength and health to exhausted women when every effort of the physician proves unavailing. Those vegetable pills ar averywbero reoognlaed aa a spuoillo lor diseases of th blood and nerves. arttnHe into Vonr snoe Allen's Foot-Ense,a powdor for the feet. It euros iinluriil,swollnn,nervoua,amnrtlng font and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It'a the groatiwt comfort dla ouvery of the ago. Alleu'a Foot-F.ase makes tight or new shoes feel easy. It la a certain cure for swentlng, enllous and hot, tired, aohlng feet. Try il toirij. Bold by nil drug gists nnd shoe stores, 25c. Trial package FBEE. Address Allen B.Olmated.Le Boy.N.Y. Slam has 2BO.00O square miles, about the area of North and South Dakota, with Mlnneota added. . Beanty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood meana a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascareta, 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 banish pimple, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that aickly bilious complexion by taking Caacareta, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satUfaction guaranteed, 10c.25o.S0o. One of the oldest and most curious samples of the locksmith's are Is at tached to the door of Temple Church, Fleet street. London. The key weighs seven pounds, la 18 Inches long, and unlike other keys, It was not make for the lock. On the contrary, the lock was made for the key. To Core Cold In One Hay. Take Laxative BromoQulnlne Tablets. All DrUKiilets refund money If It fails toourn. tie. The Desert of Sahara Is as large as all that portion of the United States ly ing west of the Mississippi. M. L. Thompson Co.. Pruaitlst. Couders- port, Pa., say Unit's Catarrh Cure Is the best anil only sure cure for catarrh thoy ever sold. DruuKlbtB sell It, TSj, Mrs. Wlnslow'a Boothlng Syrup for children teething, soltona the gums, reducing in flammation, allaya pain, cure wind collu. 25c. a bottle. Portugal has 82,000 square miles, and Is, therefore, a little smaller than the State of Maine. daeata Tear Bowels With C a eat rata. Candy Cathartic, oure constipation forever. IOs,S6o. If U.G.G. fall. oruf tuuirafuod meaey. The Netherlands have 12,000 square miles, being about the combined area of Massachusetts and Connecticut. Both the method end results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and enres habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind over pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ao cerjtable to the stomach, nromnt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from tho most healthy ana agrecabfosubstanocs, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have mode it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in (SO cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliablo druggist who may not have it on hand will pro oure it promptly for any one who wishes to try ft Do not accept any UDStltUtO. CALIFORNIA FI3 SYRUP COL man mmuoo. 0AL uumm. at. hew tout, At. '7000 CIOYCLES . Mir r 14 ovr from mi mu4 mm IsmUfS eta ar. m IhI.mIhmwL Write " m i awn, l,,-, ivwdforeM, ai4Ht H. V nwti iraa . V. - tl- t-b.-wAAk'. taia. r i a. . . v. iv msr- Tj fl T isf iil 1 Viiri v vj its 'fa i r . V Where Drase la a Cariosity. At the London county council meet ing the chairman of the bridge com mittee stated that about fifty vehicles nnd GOO passengers per hour passed through tho Blnckwnll tunnel. He Incidentally remarked that a pathetic point was that children passed through to the south side of the river and car ried back to the east tufts of grass as though they were curiosities. The Cincinnati bootblacks have or ganised a trust but they don't Deat Totem Salt anl Smelt Tear Lift away To null tobacco easily and forever, be mat- netlo. lull ol tits, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Uae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men atrong. All drurxinia, SOoortl, Car guaran teed. Booklet n4 sample flee. Aridreee Sterling ttcmedy Co., Chicago or New York. Within the Inat ten years the number of railway stations In Oermany has In creased from 0,376 to 8,(93. PT. VITt'8' DANCK. PPASMf"and nil nerv. ens ilfsrnsc permanently rami by the use nf nr. Mine s irosi jverve Kenrorer. hemi ror KHKK Ul trlsl bottle and trentlse to Ur. H. It. Kline, Ltd, Bll Ann Street, fhlla, Fa. I could not act alona without Plan's Cure for Consumption. It nlwnya cures. Mua. E. C. MoI'I.ton, Nei-dhnm, Mass., Oct. Si 'W. r f - del iaht te douMfl. fli4 i A T. uo4 to.ru. tht norilni ptt afi - -t-T-v A -ANV AtKMQTO FOft A ROLL! AAlNG,irJT - Bluff, tttt-foint. ever lealtrif , pvwf i fU n.iff, UP'TO-DATI 9V MOTOR, ft FT. FOR Set 13 ft for II M-ft for f JO. Jhty run like bieycle, (and ir made lite a watch, tvery movable part on roll era. Doubles farA mil power. The Aertnotot tan when all other mills ttoM Mill, and niaalt lit windmill btutntn. THE N CW BEATS THE OLD AS TH OLD BEAT THE WOODEN WHEEL. On receipt -t anoint. ri4 motor (but not wheel or vane i win oe tent u retlM old m than to M -liinw, user -oiem w tanceiieJlon at anv tltn i yn-r ra weM m no, as jternetef , writ ror . tirota of iep-Bw for old to gn on old tower. It enm p II en. mwrwttar Csv, c tog. ttm. M paces. New Mnle. nrlglit l.ltcritnrf Hrerlal Uuinan oepnrtment. (treat clnhHrta oar. 1 yearly. Kam pie rnT ami prrails llta. 'rilli DOMINANT. 44 W. Villi. HI.. N. V. (jit I ft For three years we have been experimenting with, developing and perfecting Bevel-Gear Chainless Bicycles. Price $I25 " "" This work has been In the hands of the most expert cycle engineers in the pro fession and we have succeeded in build ing a bicycle that everyone who has ridden admits is a better hill climber than any chain wheel yet made. Columbia Clmln Wheels 75, Harttords550f Vedettes 4035 POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mail lor one 2-eent stamp, 800 OOFFIRSl ThM 1 tlTiMinbtiaiM woro twurofullj iitrrftvod frost wlootad wma. Which rut,rMflU 1 smII knnam Ma.lil nnewi -aid im rl nil. t m n fli SOO, IN CAIM ret TK1 1 a KAMI I. Hr-llrttarof ohUi-l-oorao thm Ilk IhUOorn. , B-i.ote..l t are U alo i. i.-Wf mt k. AU oxrp one ro naiurml alao. Zrry pra n givian ft nDo of tho mmi will ra evlvaa Ymnr Iftohar HrlM by ratuvn mtl. fffwaot yna intamoteyl In Iho Btt tht Orow- mmmm this adimtlnv oeed nrfor to know wbotherjou know good oaad wboa yrm aae It To wntr th OOfitMt and 88ontf) (allvar or mono-order) and wo wIlT tend -on bj retni mail a SOo. cer-tilicata. kTood for vhm amuDt ? to be MictsMl from our tsatalotro any llpw wltbia I roan, aiao fail parUeulara. Clav of t, !.-. I'm ( lee. a oval; If yoo don't know all It aeodo jfuu onirbf to know oft. thatirtve you a U prt, baaldaajraaj iraoi-ra.U-oaU-yo4a. Daa't alaalioa. AUtmm. PAUfVl.W SU rU-Uii. B.mmW.tCl. PAINOVALLSGEILINGS HURALO WATER COLOR PAINTS FOB DECORITIXB WALLS iKD CEILIXSS JiJo your grocer or paint dealer and do your own 1 1 M deco rating. Tbia material is a HABD FINISH to be applied with a brush and becomes aa bard as Cement. Milled in twsntv-fonr tints and work, equally aa well witb cold or hot water. BfiTSEND FOB SAMPLE CARD! and if yon eannot purchase this materia! from yonr local deal era let as know and we will pat yoa in the way of obtaining it. TTIK mi'BALO CO., NEW BRIGlaTOX, ft. I., SEW TOStB. i is.aaj.mi nj.pij.a taajj aa . L rrrnaUr furwl b atlng DU. WHITUiAl-L. Kllfcl'UATIO rUHC. Tha t-tejt an4 It teet atu.pl-a .km aw awaw-w yw.iaw.iy aaaa In i Vcrld Whtrt "Cljt:!Ir.3it Is Kti to Eo-:!::!!,1 no Prcist Is ) ' i X EaUbllfhtd 1780. I Baker's I Chocolate. celebrated for more ' than a century as a delicious, nutrltlpus, 1 and flesh-forming , beverage, has our 1 well-known Yellow Label -on the front of every package, and our trsde-mark,"La Bells Chocolatlere,"on the back. NONE OTHER OBNUINe. MAOt ONLV ev WALTER BAKER k CO. Ltd., FS n.La.a. ., It Pats ti know before buying. Write for t'irciilar and Frioes. Make more and liettrr batten trWK PA FRKKiHT. J. a KEAHNH. Manufacturer. MAITLAKD, PA. opiur.i and Liquor Bablt eared ra 10 to SO days. No pay till cured. Dr. J. f.. Stephen, Dept. A, Lebanon. Ohio. PATENTS wTnt i. retrmi, r.rot Lnwjgr, ft r Slr.t. Wtthlaatoft, Ik C U n r.f.rinM. Thompson'. Eyi Waftr P N 0 19 'ML 1 Mau4lSl fafli"" P k J Beat Cough Sirup. Tutei Good. TjM I I FjOt? NAMES OF 12 SEEDS! rX5S5 throutfhoa too ooaau-f m that OrOw wtnTtn taow IT tha rmut- rvof hUpaproM)tn ttieaa-tt. rtle twelv 4mwhoi b-km- Wo At clurwto Tim la knowlnsT illM mnA tharaf nr hva inula tbafotlowliur OUT - 'J'.1 . ''TJV wn a aa ova,aiuaaa4 aw ammm, tmrnti Tea Crest f:r i .1 V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers