"Courage and Strength in Times of Danger, ead the warning between the lines. What is that warn ing? It is of the danger from accumulation of badness in the blood, caused by the usual heavy living of the Winter nionihs. Spring is the clearing, cleansing time of the year t the forerunner of the brightness and beauty of glorious Summer, Follow tltn iirliiclil Hint Nntnrn Inys down. Htnrt In lit nnen and fiirlfy your Wood Willi Hint (treat niecllln. Hood's Hnr aapnrllln. nrrrr dirunpolnt. Tumor "A tumor ns hlu n n liinte mar. Mm r.iiinp under hit littiirue. nntt ln-t,nd nt l.'tt.lnn my physician imtmi on tt, I usiil my rnvorlto ftprlnv tonic, Hood's Snrsniinrlihi. The htini'h .oon disiipm-arrd." Mux, II. M. Column, oVIi Merit HI., Low HI, Musa. Rh'umntlfm -"I ! rlMiinmtlm for five years nml enn t-oiirh.itlnill) siiy Hint Hood's Hn rsn pn rl II 'i linn vlvcn me entire re. lief. An a hlooil nurltlcr It Ims hclisd my children wonderfully." M its. H, .A. H auaii. Kl Franklin Avenue. rinnlc. N. J, 3(ccd' Sa Uafmliffq HiMHf s Pills rnrn liver IIK. the nnn-lrrltittltip and thr only rmlinrtlc to tahi- with Hood'. Hartnpsrllla. Th A t liui t :i Heboid Hoard linn re fialed the rule tinder which children were permit ted to ntlond church on churcdi holidays without domorlt. Beauty Is Blond Pees. Clean Wood mean a clean akin. No beauty without it. L'ascnrela, Candy L'ntliar tio clean your blood nnd keep it clenn, by tirrinu up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Ilcain today to Jxmiidi pimplrn, boils, lilntchca, lilnckhcnds, and that sickly bilious complexion by Inking Caernreta, licntity for ten cent. All drug fists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Car. Without Wheels. Street cars without wheels nre tlio latest novelty In vehicles. Tho cars run on linll hearings, and beltiR nenr the line Instead of raised nbovo It, ore not pul ject to the same amount of resistance in tho form of centrlfiiR.tl force. Much Rrcater speed l.i thus oli talnrd, nnd the wear of the balls In carrying the car la much less tlinn the wear of the wheel rims. The move ment of tho trumcar is easy nnd nrreo able. ' Home va. Ronton. Rome la envious of Ilonton's subway and will start one of her own through tho Qttirlnnl hill to the slopes of the Vlmlnal and IOqulllno. The tunnel will be 63 feet wide, with tracks for car rlagcs, electric cars and foot passen gers. An electric street railroad from tho Torta del Poyolo to the Porta San Giovanni will pass through It. Tfit) .engineers give out that It will tako only seven months to build tho tunnel PAINFUL PERIODS NO MORE r MRS. GEORGE OSMUN, of Belvidere. Warren Co., N. J., writes! " Suffering' ns I hiul from weakness, Irivtfularillcs ami lmekneho for scverttl years, a reletvio from this sulrurlnK' was a lilesalnjr. Oh I how I wish move sufferliifr women would accept your kind offer and bo relieved. Tbere la no need for women to suffer. Mrs. Plnkbnm's ndvlco nnd Lvilla, B. Plnkham's ble of . ot 3 vMf J sv?Kf Mrs. H. A., 124 S. Cedar Street, Owosso, Mich., writes: " Nearly three years ago I wrote, to you asking advice In regard to my health. I was so miserable; suffered from painful menstruation and backache, was nervous, dizzy and faint. I received such a kind letter from you, telling me Just what to do. I followed your advice and I now am recommending Lydia 2. Ptukhsin's Vegetable Compound. I thank God. for this pain destroyer." Ify. STCPPED FREE I 4 PSTBisoestiy Csr4 laaaatti Prananla M. SUM'S SSESf V- ItRVE RESTORER VsaissK mm4 m. row' ! lusw TTwiJ rtrirM. fUtt4 I hr. Klin, l.4, FtHltrs Uausttu wf 4UlM. Kl Arab Kb-. lldUilii r STOCKS AND GRAIN , Coitiinlsslwii, I-10. . C'skrrcapoiMlciH'C Solicited. 't TESSCM & WIL$0,"SKS'llV? , rbosa. U31 llruad. AH llr.aday, Naw 1 wrk. ' GOLDEN CROWN ! !.fO CHIMNEYS An lha beat. Aak for thrm. Coat no more i, -1 eommon rbluiliy-. All ilea era. ' , r,rviJ OLA to, Allvghenr, Ca, Hall's Catarrh Cur ! a liquid nnd In taken Internally, and net dlrer-lly upon the 1Ikm nnd morons surfaces of the sysfo-m. Mend fbr teatlnionlnls, tree. Hold hy lriiKletn. VV, JT. J. C'ltanar A Co, Props., Toledo, O. We hare not been without Plan". Cnre for Consumption for gu yenm. I.irr.ir. Keiihkl, Camp HU, llnrrixburR, l'a., May 4, MM. Ann Ornnt, n domestic aervnnt, who died recently nt Linton, In Cnnilirldiie ahlie, nt the nwe of R7 yearn, hud served 71 yenm In one family. ftdnrnta Tnnr nnweta Wttn veareta. Cnndy Cnthnrtlr, cum constipation fornrnf. I0o,lo. II U O. O. fail, tlrucKlata refund uionuf. Mrn. Joiibei t. wife of the commander of t!ie Trnnnvntil foroen, nccomiuitilea her biinbnnd III the Meld, and hnn her mdf Ruined n connlderiilile knowledge, of military mntlrn. t Ta Our Conatlpattnn Torer Takeranenretn fniiOy fuMmrtlo. too orWa. If C. C. U. fall to euro, ilruviilata rafuuU uiouuy. LONQ TRIPS. An r Ik lit ThnuaniKl Mile Contlnnnnt Ititllwiiy .tnornry. Some Idea of the Immense extent ol nusslnn territory may bo glcnned from the enormous railway runs Uiat nrn posKlble there. In tho latest edition of the Continental ' llrndnhnw tbere may be 'found limes of stnrtlng and arrival of a rohtlniioiis series of rnll way trains making tip n connected railway Journey which would be;ln nt Calais and would end nt Kijutnchl, the most eastward station nt. present, open on the Trnns-Sllierlnn railway, about twenty hours' Journey east of Kras noyarsk In Central Siberia. Tho length nf this Journey la, ns Hourly as ptiHSl ble, fi.ino miles, and of this distance pome 3.000 mlleti arc traversed In Rus sian railway carriages, Tho time oc cupied would bo twelve days and twen ty hours. H Is possible to travel by rail as far ns Irkutsk, tho capital of Kastern Slberln, which Is (!i;o miles cast of Karnoyarslt. Thin exceeds tho bingont pospllilo American run by nearly l.ono miles. Our longest trans continental trip Is In Canndn from Halifax, In Nova Pcotln, where tho traveler may get Into n Canadian Pa cific car and go through to Vancouver on tho shores of the Pacific, 3,Glitl miles away. Tho longest pnsslblo run would bo from Halifax to Vera Cruz, on tho gulf of Mexico, via New York, Mont gomery nnd Mexico, a distance of nbout 4,200 miles. When the Trans Mauchiirlan railway Joins tfie Trnns Slberlnn, ns It will do, nt Onon, It will bo possible to 'ravel continuously by rail from Calais to Port Arthur. Tho latter part of tho route has not yet been definitely decided upon, but tho estimated totnl dlstanco will not bo much less than 8.000 miles, which will bo performed In about twenty days. A Nl Inkier for Fneln. Tired Tread well Ah, dat was ton bad! You asked for bread nnd dey gives you a stouo. Sauntering Sim Naw; Kit It rlpht. tilt It right! I flatted rlpm for hrpnd nnil tlev trlvna tr,A . u .... .. - ... .... ... j n ii, o ( a hunk of coal In do ueclt. Chlcajo Vawi Vc(fetublo Compound will relievo inom. Mrs. Ida Peters, Milan, Tcnn., writes: "Dkah Mrs. Pink ham When I wrote to yon the first time, asking your advice I was a great sufferer. Menstruations wero Irregular, some times a week too soon and then a weolc or two la to, anil when they appeared were very profuse! great pain and tenderness lu the bonvuls, pain In back and limbs, loncorrhica all tho time. I I was weak and nervous and had no appetite. Burning and choking sensation in my throat. X received your reply and followed all your Instructions and now 1 am cured. I owe ray ' recovery all to M rs. Piukham's advice and her wonderful remedies." Ella E. Brenner, East Rochester, Ohio, writes: "I have been thankful a thousand times since I wrote to you for what your Vegeta ble Compound has done for mo. I followed your advice carefully and now I feeL like a different person, My troubles weri back ache, headache, nervous tlrud fceliinj, pain ful menstruution and luuuorrluca. 1 toolc four bottles of Lydlu E. Plnkham's Vegeta Compound, ono box of Pills, one packugo Sanative Wnsh and am now well." Mrs. Maugib P. Stink, New Berlin, Pa., writes: ' " I have suffered with terrible backache In tho small of my buck for about seven years, andcould never get anything to help mo. 1 tried several physicians, but found no help. I have now tuken three bottles Lydla K. Plnkham's Vegetable Com pound, and fuel like a different woman. HBoth nr wlfa and uiiMlfkmbHn alna; CASCAKKTS and thev are lha twat madiulna we hava aver ba4 In the bouae. Laal I week my wlfo waa trantlo witb beadacbe for twoda, ihe tried aomaof yourCASCAKETS, and they relieved the pais In bar head almoat Immedlataly. We both recommend Caacarata." Cha. bTBusruHU. Pittaburs Safe Depoalt Co., Ptuaburg, Pa. Pleaunt. Pnlaiable. Pnient. Tatta Good, Do Gaud, Mever sioiteu. Wekn. or Grli. too, Xie.iUo. ... OURK CONSTIPATION. ... aiwune air cmimw. ruMrh Mml, Varik UT ! ft.TA.P I ft Sold and aiiarantrrd hj all draa- ZIS CANDY If CATHARTIC - Stmm mash Biaiaraaio OOCIOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I 1 FARM TOPICS y r'ooosooooooooooooooooooooo Itspa For Sheep, We have always had. soms tlonbt shout the profitableness of growing rape seed for sheep to food off during the summer. The rspe is a branch of the mustard family, with small seeds and needs to lie put in soil that is made vory mellow by cultivation. It grows rapidly nnd fans large leaves for no small a seed. Hut our esperiouoe in feeding down sowed grain with sheep is that they will trample down twice as much asjthey will eat. We find this to be true even of olover, nnd it is mnoh more true of any plant that grows in soil easily poached by sheep in a wet time. The sheep's foot is very small. It will sink into cultiva ted soil, especially in a wet time, and it will spoil all the herbage the Loof touchos, Snrclinm na tireen Fred. fielcot a good piece of land, not too rich, as it will lode badly on a very fertile soil. Ureali as enrly as possi ble, prcfernhly sod, and an soon as all danger of frost is over. Prepare thor oughly by harrowing nnd dragging or rolling, but never relirenk. Then have tho seed perfectly oltan. I prefer the rod top variety of sorghum. For send ing I use nn ordinary eight or nitto hoe wheat drill, and stop tip all the hoes except the second one from tho onlnide on each end. Hot the drill to sow about one-half btiHhel of wheat pot acre. You may think the crop will be too tliiu, but if your seod is good, time will prove that it is all right. Com mence on one tide and drill back and forth, as in sowing wheat, except thai tho wheel must run nbout ten inches from the otlior wheel track, instead of in the last hoe track, as in sow' ing wheat. I prefer sowing east and went, as the crop shades tho grottud and keeps it moist. Cnltivnto the same as corn, keeping down ail weeds nud grans while it is small. Commence feeding as soon as it is in bloom and feed ns long as it lasts. Cut it close to tho ground and feed it either ns it leaves the Held or cut into two-inch lengths and food in Hint condition. Cut each day only what you want to feed that day, and if you take it to the barn, don't lay it down, but set it up, ns otherwise it will heat rapidly. If you cut it shorter thau two inches tlio stalks will get rrosswise in the cow's mouth nud make it soro. Whoii there is danger of frost, cut and shook the same as corn, and you can feed it until Chiistmas. I don't think it a good plan to feed after that tiino, as the stalks have gen erally begun to sour. I feed it to hogs, horses and cattle, ami all got fat. There is nothing bet ter thau a field of sorghum to help out pastures in tho fall until you want to put your stock into winter quarters. The seod makes one of the very bent foods for poultry. I have boon rais ing it for a number of years, and I be hove I can got ns much feed from ono acre of sorghum as I can from two acres of , the bent corn. Where you first commence cutting your cane it will sprout np very rapidly, lint don't lot your cattle got to it, as it Iim been known to kill tliem. J. W. Hmill). iu the American Agriculturist, Green Mnitiirlns and Nllro-rfn, The uitrogon of the soil is the only one of its valuablo constituents which is snbjoct to serious loss by natural agenoios. Whatevor the form in which nitrogen is applied to the soil, whether in farm-yard manure, in driod blood, iu ground fish, ground bone, taukage, oottonseed moal, sulphate of ainmouia, or nitrate of soda, it sooner or lator is so changed by natural agonoies as to become soluble and in this form the oil cannot hold it. With heavy rains it Is dissolved in the downward sink ing wator, and with it is carried ulti mately into the streams and rivers and to the oceau. None of the other valuable elements ot plant food are subjoct to this loss by leaohing to anywhere near tho aamo extent. This loss of nitrogen csu be prevented lu a large measure by the growth of green manuring crops. The agencies ot nature which convert nitro gen into the soluble form are moat ndtive during tho later summer mocth3. At the close ot summer there is com monly present lu all fertile soils a large quantity of nftrogon in solublo form. If the field be loft bare during the autumn, winter and early spring this solublo nitrogen will be washed out ol the soil. The only practical method of preventing this is to cover the field with a growing crop. For this purpose those crops which grow late into the full will be found best, although ovon those which are killed by antumnnl frosts will before their death have taken a considerable share of this soluble nitrogen out of the soil. It will have become a part of the vegetable tissue. In such form it is not soluble and will not be sub joot to waste until this vegetable tis sue rots, as it will da with the advance of the warmer weather ot the follow ing season. It should be the aim of the farmer to leave his fields bare just ss little as possible. Keep the fields oovered, keep the soil filled with feed ing rootlets of growing plants. These hungry rootlets will take up nitrogen which would otherwise be lost. It will be locked up in vegetable tissues and safely kept to meet the demands of the growiug orop ot the next sea son. Green manuring, then, may be made an important means of saving or oonserring soil nitrogen. Prof. -W. P, Brown, in Orange Judd Farmer. Twa Chickens From On t, A Rouble yolked egg was bstohed by hen near Crystal Lake, I'enn., recently. The farmer was grestly stnszsd to find two little chicks grown together after the fashion of the Hiara so twins. THK MAKKKT8. FITTSHVRa f rain, Flnnr and Feed. WFIRAT No, 9 red M ,70 WHKAT No. 1 new 71 7i (HlltN No 8 yellow, enr, No. S yellow, Shaded tf 4H Mixed oar 8S 8J OA'tH No. a white I No. B white A4 89 nVK-No. 1 M I7 FI,OUH-Vlnter nntmit 1W Fnnpy nlrnlKlit winter 8 Ml 8 00 ltya Hour 8 40 8 61 IIAY-No. I timothy 10 5 10 60 Hover, No. 1 H Ml 1" ' KKKD-No. I white mid., ton.. J " n llrown nilddlbiKS it 7ft 1ft Oil llrnn. hulk II 60 14 78 Bill AW Wheat S Ml l 7' (Int 7 0 7 1 M'.KDH Plover. 00 IT.. 8 RO 8 00 Timothy, nrlme 1 80 1 60 Hairy Frmlneta flUTTF.lt F.l(jln creamery. .... 9 StT " Ohio creamery IS 1 Fanny country roll 14 HI CHKK.MF. -Ohio, new Ill 14 Nnw York, new 18 14 Frnlta nnd Vegetable. PFANfl -flreen V hit t 8 OOrtp S f.0 POI ATOKS- Kane) White. bit SS 7n CAHIIAOF. Per Hi 0ft tin ONKINri Choice yellow, V bx Hft VJ 1'onllry, Ktn, ( IIK KFNH- lVrtinlr, Bfimil..t f0 fi.l 1 1'HKK.YS Per II 17 It F.OOH ('it. and Oldo, treih.... l'i 18 CINCINNATI. Fi.orn s s i5 ,i si W IIK AT Na ! red 74 IIYF.-Nn.il f.J COIIN-Mliod 87 OATH HO E'MIH II llUT'l Kit - Ohio creamery 17 ilJ PIIII.AIIKLI'lltA Ft .nrn 8 mm 8 7.r. Wllr.AT- No. 2 red 77 7H t'OIIN -No. 2 mixed .19 40 OATH No. 1 whltn 8ft 8(1 HUT TF.lt t'renmery, extra.... 18. Id KUUH rentinylTiiiiln llrntn 13 nr.w I'ottK. Fl Oi rt-rnlentn S 3 KO 8 70 WHKAT-Na 8 red hi COIINNo. 8 4S 4!l OATH- White Wentern IIS 80 JUJTTF.II -Crenmerv. 1ft II tUC18 Htate of 1'oiin 18 14 I.IVK STOCK. Central Siork Varda, Kaat Liberty, Pa. C1TILS. Trlme. 1.100 to 1400 II. j ft II 20? 6 41 Good, IVOUto 1.1IK) lts 11(1 6 111 Tldv, 100 to 1160 Ida 4 Oi 4 85 Fair llk'ht ateem, WW to 1000 Itn 4 00 4 fi'l Common, IVO to WtO lha 8 7ft 4 0'J Boos. Medium 4 01 4 Oft ll.-Bvy 8 i 4 HO ltoUKha and atiiKS U DO 8 60 auarr. Trlme, nr to lot tl.a 4 85 4 45 t.'oml, 8ft to W Ilia 4 25 4 80 Fair, 70 to bO lbs 8 7 i 4 15 Common 2 00 8 01 Veal Calves 4 0J & 60 I AM !!S. Prl(rr, extrs 8 2?ft? 8 fi) 8rliiKr, good to choice 6 09 6 ' Common to fair 4 W) 6 10 F.xtrn yearllnsa. iiuht 4 2ft 4 f.0 (lood to choice yearlings 4 IS 4 25 Medium 8 OT 4 1ft Common a 60 8 0) REVIEW OF TRADE. Milla Cannot Meat the Heavy Dtmandi lor Bar Iron Cropa a Hindrance to Stock Speculation. 11. Q. Hun Sc C'o.'s weekly review ot trade reports us follows for lust week: NothltiK appears in luminous or in money markets to prevent continu ance of the heaviest trade ever trans acted at jrood profits. Tho pnyinent to Hpuln is supposed to have caused some rise in forelfrn exrhnnn which would amount to nothing; in any case, as linlnncea due from other countries more tlinn cover the payment, nnd ad vance bills tiKulnxt crops to come for ward In July nnd later will soon be of fored. Lou on on industrial securities are still nt hi if her rntes thun on rail way stocks, but on Rood commercial paper or railroad stocks money is In ample supply and at low rates. Nor have stock operations caused any appearance of pressure. The fi nancing of new corporations has passed thus far with less trouble than had been feared, thounh tho comple tion of some organizations Is hindered or has foiled. The usual time for fl- tiunclul troubles in the spring has passed and the usual alurm about cropa has done Its work, and still In dustries are undisturbed. The one hindrance in stock specula tion Is the crops, but the better un official reports have supported Infer ences warranted by tho heavy re ceipts from the farms In the West and Houth. Farmers do not send wheat or cotton to market in lars;e quantity when 'crops anywhere near them are extensively spoiled, Wheat receipt have been 7,511.343 bushels against 6, L'U6,t3 lunt year in three weeks of April, and the Improvement since April 1 Is worthy of notice. K.xports have fallen off, nmotintlnn from both coasts to only 0,774,774 bushels, flour Included, In three weeks, umilnst 10, il9,122 last year, nnd the price closes but half a cent hlKher than last week. Corn Is about shady In price, with a decrease In exports natural at this season. Almost nothing- Is done In pltr, thouKh southern Is sold largely at Chi cago and l'lttsburg. Heavy demand for bars to be. used In cur and other works cannot lie met at Chicago; plate mills there and elsewhere are refusing orders. Contracts for S.000 to 10,000 tons structural work at Pittsburg and some at Chicago are taken, though many others are. deferred, and sheets are less active because the works are generally too crowded. The coko pro duction Is still close to the maximum. London speculation lifted tin to 25 V4 cents, in spite nr 4,440 tons arrived hero, and copper Is very strong and scarce at 12 cents for lake, with 600 tons brought buck from Europe, inougn tne united states production was only 21,918 tons In March. Men who have held wool stiffly for more than a year are selling freely at bottom prices, admittedly the lowest of the year. Sales at the three chief markets in two weeks have been 23.- 204,285 pounds, of which 17.037,685 Vera domestic, against 15,806,100 pounds In 18H2. Territory wool. 2(10,000 pounds, was sold for export to England and 1, 250,000 Australian In bond, which has been held here L5 months, fine Wool being very high there, while cross bred Is so low that It can now be Im ported. With assurance of better prospects for goods, woolen manu facturers are waiting for the effect of various combinations. The demand i not, at present, especially large, and considerable machinery Is Idle. Cot ton has advanced an eighth, but ex ports are small, takings of spinners are small, and the prospects for the next crop are not based, while stocks an remarkably large. rpum n a rv ii.niiiftw r - nivnn Un.il hn M.f.kjMlii I'nnnn llfttilnaiin as Norrlslnn professor nf divinity at n.pnkrlil fr ITtilvernllv tina mail a mark as a scholar and preacher. Mrs Wln(dow'nSoothlnlTrnn fnrMilldren tiM'thlna, softens the sum, reduces liiflniiifpa- tlou, allnya Miln,riirea wlnil ooiicktki a home. Fire hns destroyed the rottnge In which Joseph Haydn was born nt Kohrau, In Lower Atistrln. The com memorative tablets were saved. ffn-To-Baa rot Fifty Cants. Ooaranteed tnhaooohahlt cure, manes WS Ben Btrong, blood pura. 60c.ll. AUOrugsiat To Ihatrnet Artlaana, ii.mi.m la to establish a series of lectures and demonstrations for tho Instruction of artisans and apprentices In all trades, and If they are found suc cessful they will be Instituted through out the empire. There are ta be model workshops, and exhibitions or tools ana machinery. tifRethcr with Instruction In bookkeeping nnd In making esti mates. The first course of lectures will be to rablnotmnkors, locksmiths, shoe makers dnd tailors, other trades being taken up one after another, the Inten tion being thnt higher Instruction In all shall he placed within roach of every learner or operative. The courtship period for Ayer's Sarsaparilla passed long since, wnen it won tlie con fidence and esteem of thoughtful men and women 50 years ago. You need have no doubts, if, when you go to buy Sarsaparilla, you simply say the old name "AVER'S" That is the kind that cured your fathers and their fathers before them, and it is the kind- that will cure you. Other Sarsaparillas may look like it. may even taste like it, but somehow or other they haven't the knack of curing people that Ayer's has. Just try one bottle of Ayer's ' today. ' THE GLORY OF MAN! Strength, Vitality, Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE ; OR, SELF-PRESERVATION. trrr cauiMi T...li,ml vunm mifsrie ...nm,.. Mill. IM&tLr. C"-viuKs. The binirnoKtlclan. or KnnvTtirMlf llDn,.-i nT,ir .n?!,.,-''n.;.n.T?.,,m.Wa rreaorlptlona for antra and etironlo diseases. EmhoMed. full silt. FRII E OM.Y fl I1V MAIL (sealed). (New eillticn, with lai.-st , .lerviiiiini nf lha author.) ltd thiaOKKAT V.OHK now and KNUW THVHF.t.P. for knowledire la power. A.lilrras TlM 1-HBliorty Me-liiiui Institute, No. 4 Hnlllnc-h Ht.. Boston. Miws" (Kt.il,liHhrdin ISftfl.) Chief r nnaulliiisT Hhyslcian and Author, Uraduataof Harvanl Medipal t'ollejre. t'luss lwi4. Hurireon y ifth Mnssauhusetu Kevlinent Vol. Th. Must Kml..a Wpai-lnlUt la Aatorlra. who tans Wk.ra w .1. L""""'' '"on in pei-son or hy letter. U t. : ttuiulara 10 lo I. l.'.inll.loiiiliil. - LJ , ii I"."? 1? e1 ,A",.'.".'?,,S',r'lml Lh" Mb,'' "r 0rni' Truatlae, which IBtrillr A HOOK FOlt KVKUV MIV Vmini, uu. u..i iii.i ??r?MTu "'5 p,, P'1'. ""cents, but mailed KRKKf..ril.livs. Bend now. It I. a iierfeet VADB J KLUMandof great vnlim for WEAK and fAlUMU UKS hv a Humanitarian and tvlehrated Mnlical Author. (lMtlnarmahed thrniivhuut thlaoiiiiiirr and F.uroDe. Adilrma aa above. The uraaa verrwhera hirhly endorsa the l.h.slr Mfsliml l Itute. ReadUia folluwinir .1 ,i !! Medical Institute has been estaiilislie.1 la Boston 117 yearn, and the fame which Ithaai M .. .7. "i l!"JUc,rJ a test whlrh only a meritorious Institution nonlil uiiiWko. - Jumrmit. "turn rtabvdy Jlcdwal iudtute haa uuuif imltaiun, but so equaia. "-ituslos ifnu. "Forbid a Fool a Thing and that he will Do." Don't Use APOLIO 5 I 0 PER WEEK. Lor.1 susnt w.ntsU at. uiiim in wvry ma. Urns or small. Suthlua l vll. short hours: salary, tuu uijiars j sr ash. Aihtrvsi wliu sianip, J. A. V., in UruaUaa' . Koolu . Nw Vurli City. r. s. u. 17 nut!MiTICTmia-Bartottt., 4tV K'lLUsSAIIanH tra.tui.nt, auMpalil, lit catila. "Iilliiiai Sanaa I Oa..ltnnmmUk Su. JLX. i SUMMER COMFORT. Whafs nicer than eoinforlnliln home? It tnkea very little money to furnish JcnTalosnn N tells all ahoiil till ore, Itntr noeiv. our ffnerai No. SI nt Fur friaera. tors, i'lo'lire.. Mat tlnirs, Hllvera-arn. Trice l.7ft. Mirrors, tlatir Carriages, moves, llMhlmt, Upholstery Uools,C'loik, Crockery, llu wnre, etc. Catslnirua No. 50 show wonderful tnr Kama In Pianos, Ononis, llicyvioa and Ki-winu Mnt'hliies. Our is-color Lithographed f'stnlnprua No. 47 shows t'ariiets. Nub's. Portieraa mid l.uea Curlnllis III hniid-imlntrd co:ora. Carpet Beared and llnrd free, and frtithl prrfwit'i. We maniirnetiiro ' riothlns (Ifi.Mt to fit w cut to your ' measure, aiinrnn- ' an teed to !!t, and ' irrprt f rprr rwltf'. cataingitn r.o.i. Jt,r!r(Ui showa Biimplei t f ftfei-'-S'MV 'Clot hand n any t Is -i VV laruaina in Hhoi-a, i' swA Huts, Mneklntosh- y ' es, nnd OeiitH' Fur Vrke 11.50. nishings. pnn , tiuv ehenper thiin your local Oenh-ry All , , caiiilosueB ate tree. Addrcsalu way I IUI.IIN KINKS & SON, Iiept. .Kir. IlHltlniorc, NI. v4W"v ::::": A Oreat Medical Treatise on Happy Marriages, the causo and cure of .Ex hausted Vitality. Nurvoiisaiul Divnical liability. Atrophy (wasting), nnd Vari cocele, also on A Mi UISKAMCS AND WEAKNE.SSK3 OK WAN J rum what- ariiing. True Principles of UTl, l.ln... ,:,l. V.. u(v l'l'. ui, nou x-n-, HEiL THYSELF. - ai ...... ui'. uj.u a a DF 1 f4 t rrea. nDflDCV"" DISCOTES.T; Hat U TV VJ t O aullirslisl sail saisa wont PociB w tssinnninsiosiio lit mnvs' irsstna.nt Bt. s. B. aaxaa'B auna. Boa t. AiUvaM. Sa. IBaai Uiuva ayrnp. Ta.ie.Uova. Caal I 1 I I la tuua Sold br dnurci.ii I I l : - J? i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers