Catarrh In tha head, trlth Its rinsing r,ols In ths Mr, burning, snapping sounds, snrere hnnilnnlina nnd illmffrconhln dlseharRns, Is fiermnnc-ntly cured by Hood's Rnrsnpnrllln. I0 not dully with local appllnntlnn.. Take Hood' RarsnpRrllla and mnke a thorough and uomplnto cure by eradicating from t lis blood tho aoolulous tulnts tlmt pniie pntnrrh. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla la Amnrlca'a Greatest Moitlalne, St; "Is for $ Hood's Pill cure nil Liver Ills. M cents. lotteries oilginnted Rome. In ancient No-To-rlae for Fifty Cents. Qnarameed toharoo habit cure, mnlnn wen Mo strong, blood pure. 600. 11. AUUruggiata. The Paris Petit Journal diK-lnrea that It In In a position to nsirt that up to the present miimpnt no less a mm than tT.oon.POO frnnis hns been ex pended upon the Dreyfus nirltatlon, A Treat denl of whli-h. It nmrnin, has been supplied, by Knglnnd. Hn vended Dr.Helh A mold's Couffh Killer for v unopiliK OMKhwilh U'hmi i run It ..!. '.K KM I, 1376 No. luivy .it., Ilnli imn-,.Ml., July 14, lttlw. rinolev'a Friend, f.orrl do la Wnrr. Lord da la Wnrr, whose nnmo has become well known through the Hoo ley scandals, Is not yet thirty yeari old, yet he has had a varied and In one respects remarkable career. At first he tried the Inviting but difficult game of diplomacy, and failed. Tli"ii he went out as a commissioner on pearl fishing for a well-known Jeweler Then he tried telegraphy. But he hai been signally successful In nothing. In person Lord de la Worr Is tall, thin with a small, light mustache one slightly bent shoulders. When a bo) he used to play with the dukes of Clar ence and York. Hide-and-seek wat their favorite amusement. The W'alei boys also wanted to win, and being bigger and older they occasional!) found it convenient to use a llttla healthy coercion. And once the dux of York soundly thrashed Lord de la Warr because he would not let him win. From present appearances it looks as though Hooley were also thrashing Lord de la Warr tor not let ting him win, Jaer What He Unlit. Jones It's six months since I lent you that ten, and you said you only neeaea it ror a short time" Smith Well, that's all right. It lasted only half an houi. New York World. STRONG STATEMENTS. Three Women Believed or. Female Troubles by Mrs. Plnkham. From, Mrs. A. W. Smith, 50 Summer St., Hlddeforcl, Me.: "For sevcial years I suffered with various diseases peculiar to mv sex. Was troubled with a burning sensation cross the smnll of my back, that nll- gohe feeling-, was despondent, fretful and discouraged; tho least exertion tired me. I tried scvcrul doctors but received little benefit. At last I de- elded to frlvo yonr Lydia K. Plnklium's Vegetable Compound a trial. The ef fect of the first bottle was magical. Those symptoms of weakness thut I was aClicted with, vanished like" vapor before the sun. I cannot speak too highly of your valuable remedy. It is truly a boon to woinnn." From Mrs. Mki.isha rnii.i.ips, Lex ington, Intl., to Mrs. Pinkhnm: "Before I began takingyour medicine I hnd suffered for two years with that tired feeling, headache, backache, noap petite, and a run-down condition of the system. I could not walk across the room. I have taken four bottles of the 'Vegetable Compound, one box of Liver Pills and used one package of Sanative Wash, and now feel like a new woman, and ant able to do my work." From Mrs. Mollis E. Herrel, Pow ell Station, Tenn.: "For three years I su ffered with such weakness of the bock, I could not perform my household duties. I also had falling of tho womb, terrible bear--ing-down pains and headache. 1 have taken two bottles of Lydia E. Fink ham's Vegetable Compound and feel like a new woman, I recommend your medicine to every woman-1 know." g Established 1780. g Baker's I Chocolate, celebrated for mora than a century as a delicious, nutritious, and flesh-forming beverage,, has ear well-known-,. Yellow Label " en the front of every package, and ouf trad-mark,"I.s Belle Chocolaller,"oa the back. NONB OTHER QBNUINB. KADI ONLY BV WALTER BAKER k CO. Ltd., 2 Dorchester, Mass. u n to dw hahv a j eaajr Wril baby w.lshad u Ilia, el S Mti a. . u. y. ia am never new anyone eel aloug au well and be et stroag erur Mrtli. Advlne I ree" a. 4. i. V. 9XB mu. INstT Bst ale. N. Y. am PTc::elia compound i"i'HILi;IBTH safe, .nr. and ea.v. "Jlo . J., wrlle:-I wish all euurtn aoen knew of your vreurieri al aaedl. e.aa. I BedbMu 111 very delict. lialth.tu' I heii.u Jo f iruumlk as soon a. I usad aUTCHKLI.A. 1"4 all HIV Work un to iIav hahv wu lutm.- m ACRICULTUHA1. T0PIC3 Fart Hneklng. Whether a man shall all his life bo fast or slow busker dopemls very liinch on how he begins. If he is always slow and easy, nutt does not try to hnsk fast, he will gat this habit so fixed that try as he may he will not get rid of it. Yet tho hnsker mast avoid all nervousness. TUtt may make him seem to work fast, but he will niuke many false motions, and the work will go on mnah slower than it looks. Tho fastest buskers say the secret of this work is to havo strong hands, thumbs and Augers, and to make every motion tell. WrnnlnR the Colt. A spring colt ought to be weaned before the pastures have been destroyed by frost. At the same time it should be used to taking a little grain twice a day while it is still rnnning at pasture. Tho oat is, of course, the best grain for colts, as it is also for the horse. It does not take much oats or meal t keep a young colt thriftily growing during its first winter. If oats and corn are ground together, without the cob, and some wheat bran is added, it will, in most cases, make a better ration fed with cut hay than conld bo got from feeding onts alone. No corn and cob meal should be fed to young colts, or, in fact, to any young animal. The cob is extremely hard to digest, and at least for any yoiin? stock has not enoui'i u.it-itio:i tj compensate for the d.tuir from minj il. Sow Gran Html After Grain. Tt is a common mistake of farmers in sowing grass or clover seeds with drilled grain to try to sow it as quickly after the grain is deposited as possi ble. Many grain drills havo been made with grass seed sowers attachod, so as to drop the grass seed immediately after the grain drills had deposited the grain nnd whilo the loosened soil was still falling on tho seed. The plea of course is that the grass seed is thus "better covered." It is, in fact, usually covered ranch too deeply, sometimes not coining np until several weeks lator. The truth is that grass seed ou cnltivnted soil needs no cover ing save what rains, frost and melting snows will give it. Nor is it best with winter grain to sow the grass seed until two to four weeks after the grain is put on the ground. In that way it will grow largo enongh, and yet will not injure the grain crop the following season. - Wheat llran for Feed. Wheat bran is rich in bone and muscle forming elemonts of food, and in addition serves another purpose, in that it helps materially to keep the bowels open, doing away with the con stipating effects cf dry food so usually depended upon in winter. With all breeding nnd growing stock more or less wheat bran can be nsed daring the winter to advantage. It is, however, not a complete food, and on this ac count better results iu feeding can be secured if used in connection with other material. Oilmeal, cornmeat and wheat bran make one of the best rations to feed milk cows, especially when it is an item to maintain a good flow of milk. Ground oats and wheat bran make one of the best rations for growing oolts, as it can be fed to growing eolts with corn to an advantage. One of the cheapest aud best rations for colts, sheep or growing cattle is unthreshed oats rnn through, a feed box and a small quantity of bran added. This makes up a complete ration furnishiug the needed growth of bone and muscle, and is not only wholesome but econ omical. It should not, however, be fed to excess, as it may cause diarrhoea. It is one of the materials that in many eases oan be purchased and used to an advantage on the farm, and especially so when there is plenty of roughness and but littlo grain. In addition to being a good feed it adds to the valne of the manure as a fertilizer. Wis consin Agriculturist. The Capacity of ftlloe. One of the first questions, after do- oidiiig to bnild a silo, is, "How large a one Bball I bnild?" Regarding this question Hoard's Dairyman says: It would seem as though we might be exoused from an swering over and over again questions relating to the capaoity of silos, but it is peruaps lair to assume that others are much like ourselves not over careful to preserve the information not especially needed for present use. Silage varies in weight per oubio foot principally for the amount of pressure to which it has been sub jected. Hence the last foot, or fire feet, in a silo, which has been filled np to twenty foot deep, is muoh heavier (beoause more compact) than the first foot, or five feet. The following table gives the aver age weight per oubio foot of well ma tured corn silage, at different depths, after settling two days, and the aver age for the entire depth: Average for Average for A . lbs. total depth, lbs. First t feet ..' 22.0 ti.O Heoond t feet 80.0 30.1 Third 6 feet.... ,, 8!).S SI9.M Fourth 0 feet....;, 1S.8 , 88.8 Fifth 6 feet 49.6 - 86.5 ... rJIxth 6 feet 64.5 89.8 Find the number of snnaro feet in the bottom of the silo, multiply this by aeptu oi silage ana the produot will be the total oubio feet of silage. For iustanoe, if a silo is 12x15 feet inside measurement, and twenty feet deep, it will have 8000 eubio feet, and when well filled with mature oorn, the aver- ago weight, per oubio foot, will be 83.3 pounds, or 120.000 pounds (sixty tons) for the whole. The lower layer of five feet in depth will be nearly twenty tons, the one above is about seventeen aud one-half tons, aud in this propor tion for other depths. In three years the expense of ran uing an Atlsntio steamship exceed" the mrst nf ooostraetjon. LITERARY NOTES. George W. Cable, who has Juj-t ended a somewhat lengthy visit to England, where he was very cordially received, promises to write a book of his impres sions of England. Turn about Is fair play. The demolition of Furnlvall's Inn, Holborn, Is now almost complete. The last portion of tho birthplace of Pick wick to fall under the destroyer's hand will be the gateway, whleh still ntflnds forlorn amid the ru'.iv-leadlng no where. , Surprise has been expressed that the Ashburnhnm first folio Shakespeare brought only $2,925 at a recent sale. It was supposed that not less than $4, 000 would be realized from It. The reason given ts that after It was cata logued two or three small blemishes were discovered, which were thought to detract from Its value. ir. Swinburne left Oxford without taking a degree and takes pride In avowing his illiteracy. Notwithstand ing this fact, he Is a master of Greek and French. He grows more eccentrla in his waxing years, now approaching, three score and ten, lives near London, but Is almost never seen In society, n-1 Is particularly fond of children. Audible. Mr. Third Flat Great Scott! Who Is that thumping the piano? Mrs. Third Flat Thumping, Indeed! Perhaps you'd be surprised to hear that Gladys Is practicing how to read music. Mr. Third Flat Can't she learn without reading aloud T New York World. tlia Frnfiheej. Gerald If you don't marry me I hall go to the dogs. Geraldlne You won't have to go far. There's one waiting for you at the gate. New York World. Co-operation In Fngland. Distributive co-operation In England now embraces more than 1.800 socle ties, with a capital ot $100,000,000 and a trade of close up to $350,000,000 annually. reepg Consapiion Do not think for s single moment that consumption will ever strike you a sudden blow. It does not come that way. It creeps its way along. First, you think it is a little cold j nothing but a little hack Ing cough ; then a little loss in weight: then a hsrder couth; then the fever and the night sweats. The suddenness comes when yeu have a hemorrhage. v Better stop the disease while it is yet creeping. You can do it with Aprs 3 9 You first notice that you cough less. The pressure on the chest is lifted. That feeling of suffocation is removed. A cure is hastened byplscingone of Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plaster over the Chest. A Book Free. It is on the Disesses of the Throat and Lungs. WrMm urn fVejay. if vn l,.v .... m..t.l end dn.tre th. be.t muftlcnl erlvtre you cen po.ithly receive, write the doctor rreiy. You will rflcnlve ft prompt ruply, UK. J o. Al Kit, Lowell, Mm. al S.SV Aa BLOOD "CAaCAKET d all clntn fbr tXtmm And are truly wonderful meuicino. biTeo(ia 1 1 bed for a wodicin plea unit to take and at latit pave fuund It In Casoorou. wince taking ibem. air blood has bean no rt tied and tnjr oomi'teiTon bai Im proved wonderfully and 1 feel niucb belter In everr war." Him. Salus K. baUaaua. LuttrU. Teua. CANDY 'its Oood, Never Blcten. Weaken, or Gripe. lOorttc'eJe. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... mVm Imm UnqMer, Ckk.., aaalm!, fHt. ill M-TA.Rlfi Sold end jruarsnteed by ll drug " I U'BAU el.u in CV H B TobMOO Habit: DRO PR Y"EW DOOVET; ln . - 1 lquloki.ll.iaBd suw Kuril M.M. Rend er book of te.llinuni.1 and IO das a' tMnimai Free. Pr as Bum n's sons. aiUata.Sa. RHEUMATISM AUUKDKalll I CrKFn-One betMe-r-oem . - v ... . . w... ,n num.. rn.rii.ia, ai M Auunuu Hihkui Co.. im Uraeuwkli wu.n.V. P. 'N. U. 47 "8i 1 (Z;HbbZ ? I to time. o4 bydmroiMaT f I J cueiru mora tnnstmas tuna, buo. to siuuu.uu. a Sl.rar'lli lonr. Th bnn A mfud, ori T thnhrstptlVl A is) ard mtk- T BsMhttft lutti- W ran-!? com- I ftult ftfttr. 9 Our 4 (liitnlitiriiA la mil nf m PRICE. $14.28. liia.i.liil..!i 4 a M rmxWM.. Rr-aHnrr Mnclllnofl. HII- 4 verwnrc, Clock.. Mirruie, Icon iK.-rntnrn, 4 I I'loluii-o. HciMln, Mtovoa. l)pui''y Untul. Ilnhv t'nrrlnffCfl. TIllW lire. l.ailllM. !tc, aM of which you can buy from l he 4 meniifiictnrer nt 40 to wi pcri-cnr I i-low X rnmll irluce. OiirMlhOi;rniir(l Oirnfovue T of .'rM.M, Idiir.. Poiti. n-. unit Lace t'tir- 4 talna how tho nctnal rteaUns In hand- X tinliitod colore. We aowCaruuts fieo, lur- T a nlsh Carper. Itnlnir T f res an-l proper S f reiirht on rnrH'te, A liuirftand Curlulna. T 4 b.i thi. ii-. . a 1 w, wi.il or .oi i, ... T wii t. M.pi. or flnuli.e 0 !. M.hoi.nr or Vnil. cutuiugune win ica von. AililreHB PRICE, t3.es JVLItia MINES & SON, T T nept. on nAi.TiMonn, mo. T WANTf:n-('e of ha-t l,elrh that M-P-A-lf-ll II not iMiimrlt M.,n,f 11 liin.. ..i I Co.. NewYurk for lo uiuulo. anil luoo IratluionUli, CURE FOR COLD FEET. Slnapla Heana for Avoiding a Coramoa Winter Affliction. Before many more days shall have elapsed not a few Chicago women will he suffering from a complaint which makes the shortest Journey out of doors a terror and thus aggravates the trouble when going abroad becomes unavoidable. Co'id feet are not un common even In warm weather, but the suffering nt such times Is mild, while in the fall and winter it is littlo less than torture. A doctor who was consulted on the subject has this to say: "Physical disorders of the most unexpected nature are traceable to this complaint. It can be safely said that a large proportion of lung diseases are due to cold feet. The blood repelled from the extremities goes to the lungs nd congests them. Asthma arises from the same cause, and brain and eye troubles can sometimes be traced to habitually cold feet. I don't say that women are wholly to blame for this a miction, because that Is not true. The cause Is often traced back to child hood, when thin stockings and shoes too small for growing feet prevented a proper circulation of the blood. And some perhaps wore garters which had to be tight to do their duty, and when they reached womanhood the mischief had been fully done. They were then obliged to suffer on. It they knew enough, to mitigate their suffering by such sensible remedies as rubbing and warm bathing, with a proper regard for the covering of the feet. Wear woolen, ctton or silk stockings, ac cording to your comfort. If the feet are prone to be dry as well as cold they should bo soaked In hot water for ten minutes every night, thoroughly orled and rubbed with a small quan tity of sweat oil, bestowing special at tention upon the soles. Nothing that can keep the feet comfortable shou'.d be considered a trouble, as, aside from the fact of their affecting the physical condition, their relation to the nerves must be considered. Trouble with the feet means a nerve-wearing strain. The following has sometimes proved a simple cure for cold feet: Stand erect and gradually lift yourself to the tips of the toes, coming to the natural po sition In the same easy manner. Re peat this exercise several times each day and the circulation of the blood must be Improved. Diet has some thing to do with the degreo of improve ment, and ailllcted women are advlsjd to shun much salted meat.ples and rich puddings. " I l'roper Way. "Abner." asked the wife of the ed itor of the Plunkvllle Bugle, looking up from her latest "take," "don't you think It is a sin for you to write thoue Washington dlspntches right here In the office?" "No, I don't," stoutly re sponded the editor.' "I have always been taught that the way to get a thing done right Is to do It yourself." Ex To Cure A Cold In One Day. Taka Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AU DruytfUta refund money If It fails to cure. 360. Among; the cities In the t'nlted States Ban Francisco hue the least and Philadelphia has the greatest debt. The debt of Ban Francisco Is 1133,917 01, and of Philadelphia r8.872,75 22. In the bonded debt per capita, Boston Is the highest with 7 38, while Ban Francisco Ih the lowest, being ,18 cents. To Car Coaetlpattoa Forever. Take Caacarets Candy Cathartic too or Z5e BUO.C fall to ours, drugglwa refund money. Of horned cattle only the buffalo Is a native of America. Beware of Olntmenta. for Catarrh That Contain. Mercury, as mercury will aurely destroy the aenee of amell and completely deren the k hole eye. torn when entering It tliiuuvb the inuonua aurfacea. Kuub artlclea nuould never be uaod except on preacriptlona.friiin reputable puynl. Jlaua, aa tut daman, they will do la teu fold T T, ... lmn poMimy derive rroin v i"Wal1 a Tata rrh Cure manufactured by . . m vii, iiiinia couuiina no mercury, and la tnkcn Internally, acting ill rectly uuou the blood and iniicoii. urlncw of the .yetum. Iu buylug Hall'e Catarrh Cure -...y u mv m. genuine, it In taken luterually and U made in Toledo. Ohio. II u I I'J L'.. ...II ..1,11 I- L L' 111 r """I"' . r.iuui f 111. are le uv.u Mm. Wlnidow'B Konthlnir Mrpnn r.,vAlkll,lUH '"ethlnn. auftena thaKume. reduce. liinaminH. mm. auajre pain, cure, wina colic, Hoc a bottle Plao'a Core for Conaumptlon relieve, tho moat obatinat cough.. Ilev. I). Uni'UalVSI. LUi, LealuiUm, Mo., February 34, im. I liiw. M m. b'th. 1 ini-hH. Jf I b-r.l.l ai-rior 14110 In. f 1h. nr-'-inv tlil. n- I t ill t I10.OU. Ord.rl 1 k fllvrl prompllf. V. I Our goods nro a I I knovn In every 1 I corner of ilioiivll- I I . Iwd World, nml I I why? Our FltKB I HERE th,tV Know by the sign ST. JACOBS OIL CURRS Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Sciatica, Lumbago, Sprains. Bruises, Soreness, Stiffness. Carry Tlirni In Your rocket. Hnxnlc's Dirks will check nny coiirIi or cold In an hour. For slngprs and speakers they ate Invaluable. 25 cts. HreerhHS among the Greeks were a sign of sin very. Doal Tebarro Spit ted Ro Tear t.lft) amy. To qmt tnbucco easily and forever, be mac netio. full of liro. nerve nnd vlpnr, take No-To-Bao. the ammlcr-wnrlccr, thut nmkca weak men strong. All drut-KlL, 60c or tl. Curogunrun toed. Booklet mid sample free. Adilrras Sterling UemoUy Co., Chicago or New York i'lnn nre snld to hnve arlncn In Prntlnnd In the reign of King Malcolm, about ions. Educate Tone Rowels With Caaeareta. Cnmly Cnthnrtlr, cure cnntlpntlnn forever. Wo. 24c If c. C. C. fall, druKKiete refund money. Bnyonets were Invented at Bnyonne In France, nnd to that fact the name Is due. Fit. rerninnciiHy runvl. No fit. or norron. pi'jb niter lliBtday' n.e nf lr. Kline's 4rent Nervo Hi-.tnrer. J trlnl buttle nnd treatise li w. Dr.K.ll.Kl.lNR. I.til.,mi Aruh tit. I'll I In, Ha In 1775 the heaviest cannon used were 13-pounders. IN crime, it AMONQ ANIMALS. Moakeye, Ape, Rata, Blrda and Imeeta Bhow Liking for Intoilcanta. It Is a curious fact that there are topers Innumerable In the animal kingdom. Bipeds arid quadrupeds alike are fond of alcoholic drinks, and although some display aversion when first tasting liquor, they soon acquire a craving for It. Chickens and ducks, after having once tasted brandy, be come absolute slaves to the drink. They refuse to eat, grow thin, and ex hibit symptoms of dejection when un able to obtain their favorite tipple. Monkeys and apes are passionately fond of spirituous liquors. Of these, Burton's wine-blbblng chlmpansee was a shining example, and Brehmn, the German' zoologist, owned several man drills that drank wine regularly and did not disdain brandy. Herbivorous animals frequently become Intoxicated, Innocently enough, through eating de cayed fruit. In orchards, oxen and cows, after eating overripe apples, have been seen to display all the symptoms of drunkenness. They stagger, their eyes lose expression and they grow sleepy. It seems that animals are sus ceptible to alcoholism In proportion to the development ot their Intelligence. Elephants are fond of wine and rum, and rats gnaw the staves of wine casks to get at the contents. Cats, how ever, rarely exhibit a fondness for In toxicants. Among birds tho parrot takes flrst place as an habitual toper. Insects have many opportunities to be come Intoxicated, and it Is the most active that most frequently avail themselves of the chanco. There Is an aromatic. Intoxicating fluid in linden blossoms for which bees show an especial fondness. Instances have been observed where swarms of bees re galed themselves with the poisonous linden nectar until they exhibited all the signs of Intoxication, Hundreds fell helplessly to the roadside, to be trampled under foot. New York Her ald. How to Get Strong A tvftem which has become run down by the try ino, weather of the bast summer is not in a condition to meet the severe winter of this climate and will easily fall a brey to disease unless a proper tonic is used. Dr.Williams'Pink Pills for Pale People are the best medicine in the world for build in fl up and strengthen ing an enervated system. Do not confuse thaca hillcuiin nrrl inary purgative pills. They do NOTacton thebovels.thereby further weakening the body. They build up the blood and strengthen the nerves. Valor A. C. Bl.hon. of in Third Ave., Detroit, Mich., la well-known civil ruxinrer. Hesayei When 1 hail my la.t apell of aicknesaand came out of llie luikiiitiil I will sorry alsht. 1 could not regain my atrvuirtta, aud cotild not walk ovri- a block fuv several week.. I noticed some articles In the newspaper. rviiariliiiK Dr. William.' Pink Pills for Pale People, which ennviuerd ine that they were worth Irving and I boiutht two boxes. I diil not take them fur my complexion but for .trvngth. Afirr uaing them I felt better, and know they did me world, of good. 1 am pleased to recoinmeud them to invalids who need a louic or to build up a shattered r constitution." Ptiril rtt Prut, M all dToddit av dirtct CI n Company, Athene ctedy, 7 Don't Put Off Till To-morrow the Du ties of To-Day." Buy a Cake of APOLIO nattleettlp Only I.ikeit. "Battleship gray" la the newest col or. The haberdashers have It In ties, scarfs, hosiery and gloves. It Is com ing In on headgear for men and wom en. In the dry goods houses It IS found In ribbons and tho other trim- ( mlngs that delight the feminine heart. The mills are beginning to turn out fnbrlcs for men and women, and the serviceable dull but withal attractive rolor promises to become a fad for all kinds of wear during the winter. Newly Minted. "I've got a new Idea." "Hmhl If ought, then, to be a bright one." BaV Beaotr ts Blood Oeer. Clean blood means a clean akin. K beauty without it. l.'ascaretk, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the buy liver ami driving nil im Iiurities from the body. Benin to-dny to mnisli pimples, boils, blotches, blnckhends, and timt sickly bilioiia complexion by taking Cascarets, benuty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c Chloroform wns dlscoercd Pnmucl Uuthrle Is 1831. by 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 sclcntifia processes known to the C'ai.ifohnia Fio Syrup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the Importance of pjroluisinff the trim nnd original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the Calipohnia Fio SvRtrp Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one In avoiding tho worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cali fornia Fio Nvni-p Co. with the medi cal profession, and tho satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty ol tho excellence of its remedy. It Is far In advance of all other lnxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, Oat LOCISTILLE, K,. MEW YORK. KT.. WfBil n.tsl fnr Prem nm List to the lr. Heth Arnold Medical Coriioratlun, Wounaucket, II. I. Reii-ms for Sale! Peml fctnn.p, (ret full disrrlptlon nnd price nf 40 eticaiM'st furm In AttfitiiiHilrt Co., O. Kent stttttt Iu the union; bent .minify ii, th atato. II. N. IIANCKO.TT, Jeflrtton, Alitabt.l Co.. Ohio. Top Snap loinlit lotthln FISH TACKLI WikTnMi:!.-N M-fiTim ClIKAPKHtlian RL.OWQl:R twM Stamp for oatalofua. POWELL 4 CLEMENT CO. 4imJaMt.4 iU IX H ATI. r'err ! Thompson's Eye Water Jrom tht Dv. William Mtrlt. C N.Y. Prict fifty nt. ptt boil atTB im; l.a-r rra; x j, lillMV! uuwu V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers