41 A Good Name At Home b a Yowtr of Strength Abroad." In Lo-wttl, ffttss., wohert Hood's Sarsapa rOU is nude, H still has a larger salt than aU other blood purifiers, lis ftme and Cures and sates have spreadabrcad, and H Is universally recognized as the best blood medicine money can buy. fmember uMmMiai a i itrrar Fit. rrrmnnrTi1.lv finrM. No fit. nr nervntn fcre flrr (lrM ilay'a nn of lr. Kllnn'n iiiki. rve Keatorrr. 12 trial bntlleanfl lrivaie Irto. Dr.lMl.ki.iKr. l.t.l. Kit Arch aU'bllivl'a Mm Wlnilmv?inr,tMnir"rnir forrlillilren teethlnr, mifton the gum., riMhireti InflHiiinia tlou, allaye r.nln,rurea wind culli'.iV a bottle. Ronton batiks pntd out I'-'O.OOO.OOO In dlvldi-ml on July 1. New York bnnks are raid to have imlrl ton Units that. Cdneate Your Rowels Wltn OimircKb rni. , t . I- . ....... Wo, Mo. llC.g.0. tall. drugslals refund money. tANCE'S TARDY REPARATION. nnntrlee Like 1'enple Cnonot Do Wrong; with Impunity. Franca has tried to comfort herself flth the reflection that the life of one ti unimportant, and that her Inter. mar bent be served by an act of elbje lawlessness, gays the Spocta- But her hopes are doomed to dis- polntment and all her casuistry Is . no avail. Piece by piece the truth been uncovered, and though France has opposed discovery with added 4ecelt she has today no chance of going backward. She will be forced to perform with an 111 grace a common act of reparation, which some years ago might most gracefully have been performed. But she cannot for half a century undo the evil wh ch her un righteousness has caused. Discredited throughout Europe, she atrmds sullied among the nations, finding no confi dence In her Institutions, and Inspiring nothing else than distrust. And the moral of It all Is that nations, no more than Individuals, may stamp upon the elementary rules of right and wrong. The morality which governs peoples Is not precisely the same as governs men In the conduct of thnir lives; a coun try has not the same high obligation of truth and outspokenness as Is laid upon separate citizens. But countries, too, have their truth, and while they may simulate before rivals, they must 'exact within therr "borders a love of Justice. No defection may pass with impunity; when once the sense of duty Is obscured disaster Is certain; for there always remains one taper of light to Illumine the dim places. Had M. Zola never pierced the darkness then France might have had the satis faction of keeping Torevor tin dor lock and key a man who she knew had been illegally condemned; she might still have declared with infinite scorn that tier action was im affaire do cuisine .and that a Jew tnfl no rlpht to a gen erous protection. And though she would have sunYrcil In herself, when the moment of loitClo ramo she might for a while have t-seaped the notlco of Europe. But M. 'Zola was not to be 'extinguished; he revnaled to the whole, world his country's Injustice and made an ultimate reparation necessary. The national confidence In the army will for awhile be shaken, but justice will presently be re-established, and with It b proper sense of patriotism. Ten Wlea Maxima. 1. Never put off illl tomorrow what jrou can "do today. 2. Never trouble .another for what you can do yourself. .8. Never spend your money before you have it. 4. Never buy what you don't want because It is cheap. 6. Pride costs more than hunger, thirst, or cold. 6. TVe seldom repeat af having eaten too little. 7. Nothing Is troublesome that we do willingly. 8. How much pain tie rtls have cost us that have never happened. it: 'xako things always by the smooth handle. 10. When angry, count ten before you speak; If very angry, a hundred. ftsrris o nil. iikiuk era. 7.6$ I was a sufferer from female wealc mss. Every month regularly as the menses came, I suffered dreadful pains in uterus, ovaries PERIODS OF SUFFERING GIVE PLACE TO PERIODS OF JOY were affected and had leuoorrhfloo. I had my children, very f&at and it loft me very weak. A year ago I was taken with flood ing and almost died. The doctor even gave me np and wonders how I ever lived. " I wrote for Mrs. Plnkham's advice at Lynn, Mass., and took her mediolne and began to get welL I took several bottles of the Compound and used the 8anative Wash, and can truly say that I am cured. You would hardly know me, I am feeling and looking so well. Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Cora- rund made me what I am." Mas. F. Btritcii, 461 HsctfAHia Br Cxudeh, K. J. Bow Mr. Drown Was ITalped. "I must tell you that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has dun more for me than any doctor. "I was troubled with irregular menstruation. Lant summer I began the use of your Vegetable Compound, and after taking two bottles, I have fcan regular every month aioee. I recommend your mediolne to all" I'm. XiAaoia A. Baowx, Win Pft tASAJW, N. J. FARM AND GARDEN. Wreillng Rye from Wheat. The wliont-Rrowing farmer dislikes much to rultivnte rye, boennse where ever grown on the snme farm some of the rye will Hud its way through straw or innnitre to the fields whore tlin wheat is grown. It is not a difficult mattor to separate the two grains as thoy grow in the fiolil together. The rye heads out several dnyscnrlior than wheat, and it spires tip n foot or moro higher, milking it very conspicuous. It is an easy matter to go through the field with a pair of shears and clip oil all the rye heads, cutting down low enough to roach those that nro behind in growth. Wlicnt that is free from rye is worth several cents more per Imnhel, and, of course, wheat free- from rye should always he uhoiI for seed. Xew-f.nl1 Kick for Sfttlnjr. Everybody knows that in hot weather the exposure of eggs for two or three days to snimiier temperature efforts their quality for eating. Hut it is commonly supposed tliit for sot ting in an incubator or under a hen any egg that is from a week to ten days old is as good as ono that is freshly laid. This is a great mistnko. Unless brooded so constantly that the egg will never be chilled, the germ of life started iuto growth by heat during the day is pretty sure to be chillod nt night. When the young life is started it should never be allowed to get cold. Hut even if cored for in the best way, the egg a few days old is inferior. Its shell is porous, and as the moisture from the inside exhales through it the air space boeomcs larger inside, and the shell is bardor for tlio young chick to peck throngh. The best results are found from setting eggs the day when thoy are luid, and, if possible, while still warm from the hen which laid thorn. rntlivntlnn or Vegetable. To secure a good crop of vegetables three things, at loaHt, are necessary, namely: a suitable soil, pure seed, and clean culture, to which may be added. as equally necessary, an abundant supply of good barnyard manure, sup plemented when this runs short by artificial fertilizers. The exposure of A vegetable garden should be perfect ly south or eontliwest. The soil should be naturally rich and friable, a sandy loam being the best; if the soil be still' it should be gradually mellowed bv the free nse of barnyard manure or if couveuicnt by tho addition of sand: if wet or inclined to hold an excess of moisture it should be niiderdriined, preferably by tile, but if possible a location should be selected naturally dry and free from surface water. A dark colored soil or one supplied with a goodly portion of decayed vegetable mattor will produce the earliest crops, and to produce the bettt and most uniform results the vegetable carrion should have at least one foot of good, rich soil. The roots of large trees should not 'be allowed to eueioccu on any part of the gurdon, though large treoH, especial ly evergreens, an Hlciou tly fur oil', nll'ord a valuable protection on the north and west. Ditlry Ktijrircatlnnn. Aowwas fed 14 pounds of corn meal .a day ami made 100 pounds of butter 'in 90 days. If another eow of the same liord was fed over eight pounds she begun to take on fat A cow will ent much more rich grain feed, if she is fed succulent feed, thau she will if she is not. The ratio of nitrogenous and non-nitrogenous nu trients in the cow's ration should be about 1.0. Selection and good feed ing are the road to oow development Four pounds of corn meal, two pounls of oil meal, four pounds of bran and four ponuds of oats make an ideal ration for the .cow. A cow that has been compelled to do all that she can do right aloug, .ought to be worn oat at niue years old. If the ' milker is strange, or if the cow does not like him, the milk will contain less butter fat, A cow that is four or five years old will give more butter fat than a two-year old heifer. The greater the quantity at scilk, the larger the quantity of butter fat. It is best to got rid of a hard milker. The cow ouu taiut her milk by breathing im pure air. There is a great deal of butter that is spoiled by too high col oring, l'lout cora for eusilage this year, if milk and healthy cows are de sired next wiuter. If some cows that are utterly profitless, were fed ns duirymeu feed, and properly cared for, they would prove to be excellent eows. Feed beil'era, with their first calves, quite liberally. Feed oats in the bundle and save expeuse of thresh ing. Turnips and cabbages may be fed in limited quantities 10 hours be fore milking. Tubercnlosis is a local disease, and will attuck various parts of the system, sometimes the ndder. The more fat there is in milk the more and richer cheese it will make. The ooveiel barnyard is a fine thing for the herd. Have shade in the pasture eveu if you have to build an open hod. Water that is exposed to the air in a tauk, soou becomes foul and unfit for the cow to drink. The Epi touiist Poultry Car Town Home. The selection of a breed of fowls to keep in a limited space requires more care and knowledge than when un limited range may be given them. When fowls are kept solely for pets and ornament bantams are most pop ular, requiring but little room aud bearing coufiuemeut welL The best breeds are the Golden Seabrigbt, black-tail Japauese and the buff Pokiu. Amoug the larger breeds, wall formed, yet not heavy, are the Lffhorns, white, buff and brown; the white and the black Minorca and Hambnrgs. If any of these breeds are selected, especially tho Leghorns, must be provided with considerable outdoor space to do well, although if tho egg product is not considered thoy may be kept in narrow quarters if not highly fed. The large breeds, how. ever Ilrnhmas, Cochins, Plymouth Hocks nud Wyandottcs are to bo pre ferred to all othors as general -pnrpose fowls on smnll lots. They bear con finement well, are good producers of rggs and for tnblo use nre unsurpassed. Tho white Plymouth Hock and the white Wyandotles nro very attractive, and for coloring nothing is more at tractive thau tho soft, fluffy buff Wyandotte. Of necessity the spnro to be devoted to poultry of the average town lot is small, and the flock should bo corre spondingly small. For a house of 10 by 20 feet a dozen fowls of the largest broods or fifteen of the smaller breeds would bo cnouKh for comfort. If eggs are not wanted for hatching purposes then no male bird should be kept, for tho bens nre moro content without him and lay quito as ninny eggs. The house for poultry may bo as attractive in exterior finish as ono pleases, but it should be warm, dry and arranged so that it can bo thoroughly ventl lutod during the daytime. To keep the fowls in the best poxsiblo condi tion they must have a varioty of foods. Tho grain should be wheat, corn mid millet, fed alternate days. Green bone, meat scraps and plouty of green food, grass or any vegetable they like must be given in abundance. I. unit I'lnatrr ami Clover. The extraordinary effect which gyp siim or land plastar has on the clover growth has long been a puzzle to scientists. It is not the lime which the gypsum contains, for applications of pure (carbonate of lime, though helpful to clover where the soil is de ficient in that mineral, do not produce the marvelous effects which very slight applications of the sulphate w ill under favorable conditions develop. It is doubtless the strong affinity of sulphuric acid for w ater that is nt the bottom of this mystery. Wherever gypsum hns been sown on plants they will'be covered so heavily with dew that some of the dew will be shaken off the leaves and fall upon the soil. Where tho plaster has been sown early aad is washed iuto the soil it con denses moisture into water from air that is already iu the soil, and as this air contains a small amount of am monia, it furnishes just the stimulus that the clover roots roqnire to grow the nodules which develop nitrogen from the air in the soil by decompos ing it. Probably there is in the air at no time more than a small fraction of ammonia, but by milting this with water, so that tho roots can take it np, they are enabled to grow the nod ules that have the power to make full eighty per cent, of the air, which is the proportion of free nitrogou it con tains, nvnilnble as plaut food. The best results from gypsum are secured by sow ing it early, so that spring nud oven wiuter rains and melting snows can carry some of it into the soil, nnd then with clover follow this up with occasional appli cations during the early part of the season. The longer the dew remains on clover loaves iu tho morning the better its growth will tie. It is differ ent with corn, which loves warmth, aud which is sometimes injured by applying gypsum alone on it early in the season; but a mixture of gypsum and wood ashes or jxjtasli in other forms is always helpful to corn. As the gypsum condenses the moisture the slight trace of ammonia nuites with the potash and makes saltpetre, which is one of the most stimulating fertilizers known. Another time when gypsum aud potash can be profitably applied to all plants is during severe drought, when it seems as though there was no moisture in the air, aud even in the morning there will be very slight dew full. The gypsum always innkes a heavier dew fall, and this moderates the effect of dry weather by preventing evaporation of moisture from the leaves of plants. Peas aud beans being leguminous plants are also greatly helped in growth by applications of gypsum and potash, both of which they re quire iu producing their seed. The gypsum alone will make a large growth of hnnlm, bnt it will not produce seed iu proportion unless potash is aUo supplied. This is also true in grow ing clover seed. A liberal dressiug of potash early in spring will cause the pluiits to grow heads filled with seed, while if only gypsum is sown it is probable that most of the clover heads trill be empty. Too much stable manure which is rich in nitrogenous fertility produces the same effect as the gypsum. It is, in fact, because the latter an pplies available ammonia by condensing it from the air that it makes an excessive leaf growth, which is very rarely aooompanied by a large seed crop. We have seen many fields that in the second crop of clover would cut a ton or more of haulm to the acre that produced less than a bushel of clover seed, while a growth of less than half a ton of clover had its heads so filled with seed that it yielded fonr or five, and in one case we kuew six bushels of cleaued seed per aore. This is, we think, nearly always the difference wi h a greater or less sup ply of potash in the soil makes in all crops that are grown for seed, while the large growth of haulm with little seed is the result of relying too ex clusively on gypsum as a fertilizer. Killed Rig Indiana Hnalte. A very large snake was recently killed near Dismal Hill, fire miles northwest of Noblesville. Iud.. bv Joseph Baker. The reptile was jet black, measured seventeen feet six inebes in leogtU and nine Inches iu di Ulster. Are There four Tastes. Experiments recently performed glvt reason for believing that most so called sensations of taste are llttls more than combination of reports to the brain made by the nerves of sight, mcll and touch, says Science Slftlngs. Of a large number of persons tested, few could distinguish, when their eyes were covered and their noses closed, between weak solutions of tea, coffee and qulntno, nnd even those who wert most successful made frequent and ludicrous mistakes. Still great difficul ty was found In discrimination by mrans of tho unaided tonraie between meats as unlike as pork and turkey, especially when tho meat was first finely divided. Tho experiments Indi cated that there are at most only font real taste sensations, namely, sour, sweet, bitter and salt, and It Is doubt ful If there are more than two sweet and bitter. This may suggest to folks of frugal mind thnt a lot of money might be saved by going to table blind fold nnd with nose put temporarily out of commission. Ono could then enll Viands and liquids whatever ono chose, and tradesmen's bills could be mate rially reduced by the employment of a Judicious Imagination. In the course of the said tests a woman of great re pute as a rook said raw potatoes chopped were acorns, roast pork she called boiled beef, raw turnip chopped Bhe called cabbage sweetened, rRW ap ple was grape Juice, roast turkey was called beef, and horse radish she said was something she had never tasted. The Sweet Ulrl Grarinate. "My graduation essay will be Just dreadful," said the sweet girl. "Why do you think so, Ethel T" "Well, Aunt Jane wanted to help me, so I am let ting her write while ma and I worry about my gown." Detroit Free Press. Do Your Feet Ache and Iturn f Rbske Into your shoes Allen's Foot-Eos", a powuer for tlin fent It makes Tight or sw unoes reel f,aay. euros corns, nun Ions, Hwollon, Hot, Callous, Arhlng and HwentinK Feet Hold by all liruicalsts. flrorers and Khoe Stores. 2S1 Hnmpln sent Fh:K. Address Alien ft. Ulmstud, l.eltoy, N. V. There nre over TO miles of tunnels cut In the solid rock of tllliraltur. After phyalrtnnn hod given ma up, I was ssved by l'lao's Oire.-ltAi.ru Entity, WW Uumaport, V Nov. &, 1WW. The number of penniless men In the Klondike Is plneed at 3,000. Deantr la Itlood Dees). Clean blood means a clesn skin. No beauty without it. O'osrnrets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by itirring up the Iszy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Jlegin today to banish pimples, boils, LloU-hes, blackheads, and thnt sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 60c. A Chicago street beggar who died n few days ago left a fortune of 140,000. To Caw Conatlpntlon Forever. Take Caararets Cumlv Cuthsrtla lOoorSSc If C U. C. fall to cure, druuuutt refund niuuuy. Englishmen may now spend a fort night tn l'arls or Hwltserlnnd for $35 or enjoy a Norwegian tour for $."0. 1 era see as: SBQ3KP? we never did : but we have seen the clothing at this time of the year so covered with dandruff that it looked ss if it had been out in a regular snow storm. No jiced of this snowstorm. As the summer sun mould melt tbe falling snow so will IP melt these flakes of dandruff In the scalp. It goes further than this: it prevents their formation. It has still other properties: it will restore color to ersv hair In )ust ten times out of every ten cases. And it does even more: it feeds snd nourishes the roots of the hair. Thin hair becomes thick hair; snd short bsir be comes long hair. We have a book on the Hslr snd Scalp. It is yours, for the asking. If to 4n not nbtetn alt the Hentflta yea espaclod froaa the aa of the Vigor, write the doctor about It. I'robably mere M mm mtneuiir wnn rnn !' era! Tttein which may be aaatly re be aaatly re. 1 all, Mua. K mil Dai. t. C. AVtB. Lowell, Maaa. Poosn'l your bor writ well? Pcrhapa LL CARTER'S INK X THS BUT ZKX. More used than sny other. Dent coat IT you any mora than poor ink. Aak for It. X emffTWirWTTrTHTWT4 ni70PQYMIW DISCOVERY: eie mm. Baok al taanaieaialtauS IO a)ae' uaataal free. at. a. a. esau's MBS. gas D. atlaau.se. "You see, madam, Ivory Soap is really the most economical. The cake is so large that it easily divides into two cakes of the ordinary size. There is twice as much soap as you get in the usual cake of toilet soap. Then it is very economical in use, for although it lathers quickly, it is always firm and hard, even in hot water.. As it floats, you can not lose it or leave it to waste in the bowl. We sell it to all of our best trade for general use." coevaioHT leoe av tNi eaocTia PRIMITIVE CHRONOLOGY. la Mexico Months Are Named After the Arrival of tllrda. The moet primitive method In chro nology Is that whleh enables man to orient himself In the world of time by associating particular luratlona with vlckmltude of weather, with seasonal aspects of vegetation, and with the constantly changing sights and sounds of the animal world, cays Popular Bcl enro Monthly. In the calendar of the Creea, for example, we find aiieh desig nations as "duck-month," "frog moon," "leaf-moon," "berrles-rlpe month," "buffalo-rutting moon," "leaves entirely changed," "leaves In th9 trees," "flsh-catching moon," "moon that strikes the earth coltf," "coldest moon," "Ico-thawlng moon," "eagles-seen moon." Bo In the calen dars of Central America and Mexico the months are named variously after the arrival of birds, the blossoming of flowers, the blowing of winds, the re turn of mosquitoes and the appearance of fishes. The Greeks constantly used the movements of birds to mnrk tho seasons; the arrival of the swallow and kite were thus noted. Ileslod tells us how the cry of the crane signaled tho departure of winter, while the sitting of the plclades gave notice to the plow man when to begin his work. Tho In cas called Venus "the hairy," on ac count of the brightness of her rays, Just as the Peruvians named her the "eight-hour torch," or "tho twilight tamo." from the time of her shining. llonttfl to lie Married. Gallant Man (aside): "At lost I hav her all to myself. Now I can tell hoi how much I love her and ask her to b mine. How shall I do it, I wonderl Gentle Maid: "It is surely coming. I am so nervous and frightened! I knots he Is going to bo terrible dramatic. do hope I sha'n't have to help him ur oft his knees. Goodness! why doesn'l he say something? I must break thli horrlblo silence." (Aloud, recklessly: "Have you ever been abrpad?" Oal lant Man (smilingly): "No, I'm sav ing it for. a wedding trip." 'Gentle Maid (demurely): "Why, how funny! Bo am I." Gallant Man (Innocently): "Then why shouldn't we take It to gether!" Gentle Maid (Innocently): "Possibly your wife and my husband might object to going In such a crowd." Gallant Man (brilliantly): "The crowd would be objectionably large If your husband and my wife were husband and wife." (Further conversation dis jointed and Indistinct,) Regarding Hed Headed Tenple. Red-headed people, as Is well known, are less subject to baldness than oth ers. A London doctor explains the matter thus: The hair of the red headed Is relatively thick, one red hair being almost as thick as five fair or three brown hairs. With 30,000 red hairs the scalp Is well thatched, where as with the same number of fair halts one is comparatively bald. It taka 160,000 fair and 105,000 brown hairs to cover adequately an ordinary head. Dcmt Toesece Salt aaa saol Tear Ufa Iwa. To quit tobacco easily snd forever, be msf netlo. full of life, nerve and vigor, take Ko-To-Qao. tbe wnnder-worker, that makes weak men itrong. All druggiats, Moor (I. Cure guaran teed. Booklet snd sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. A good Ironer In a London laundry earns from ti to 2 SO dally. Ho-To-Dm for fifty cants. Guaranteed tobaooo habit ours, makes weak BMo atroug, blood pure. Wo, IL All druggula, A process has been Invented and pat ented in Brazil for preparing coffee In tabloids by a system of compression. W. H. flrlffln, JsekHon, Michigan, writeat "ftinVred with Catarrh fur fifteen Tears, llnll'n Catarrh Cure cured lue." cultl by lrug sieU. ISo. "A Handfu! of Dirt Uay Be a Houseful ot Shams." Keep Your House Clean With APOLIO a QAueif co. Cincinnati Sour Stomach "Aftr t wits) I ml need to try CACA BP.TKi 1 will ner bo without thmn lo tbe home. Mjr liver waa In vitrjr bail hat,). nd raj bead whrd and I had Utmarh trouble. Now. alnoe tak ing Cawurou. I foe I One. Mr wife ha alto nae4 ttittra with bmmflclal remit, fur wiur atumarb " Jus- Khkuu.nu. HXil CuDgreaa Ht-. 0t Lou la, MO. Plesiant. Palatable. I'ntcnt. Tn.te flood, fte 9uoU, Nutor Hlckon, Wenaeu.or Utiim, 10c, Itte.UM. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... (awtlae Iia4 !'..?. tl.. MMlrval. S. Vert, til A Tft f?gfl Sold and gnnmntfwt hy all dreg. HUMU'wAU gutato lVllt: Tobacco llablu lbtteb to tins. rtxKiiAM no. 48,970) "I had female com plaints so bad that it caused mc to have hysterical fits; have had as many as nine in one day. "Five bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound cured me and it has been a year since I had an attack. , rirs. Edna Jackson, Pearl, t-a. : If Mrs. rinkham'a Compound will cur such Severe cases ns this surely it must be a great medicine is there any sufferer foolish enough not tat give It ajrial? The Utaity of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME INDIANA. 'lnlr, l.rtffrj, Krnnotnlr nnd lllaiorya, .liiriiulUnt Art Hi'lciK'f. IMiHrmnry, Law, Civil, .tli-liiinili-iil nud l.lrrtrlt'ul iiliirrr liitf. Arclilifcliir 'j hornjli re pnrnlnrr nnd ('nmmcrrlnl 'ntirhf-e Kn-ltthUtotti al -tiMttntit t wit ratM. K no in Frrr Jui.it r or Kti)tr r, Jollg .at Cuiii-fr. ICoiima tn Kent iiKxUraie i-liaia. HI. Kilwnrd'a Hull l- r boya unitr U. Tin AUttt rnr mill ei. Ki'iirmbr Alba 1N1MI. t atnloif net Frrr. Aitdrr Itl V. A. .WOK.ilwM, V , . President. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Arthebete AakforUirm. Cmt nomorf tltatn common rlitiitney. All tlmlwra. FITTMIU KU (.Ukl CO., Ailrshaor. P. mf Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lnt PrtDcfDfcl ExAmlDr U S- Pamalon BureMva. 9 jf i 14 vU II ar . iS tuij udicalma vliaiiua. axt jr luo W ANTED-' aaaof bad haallh that B-I-P-A-N-S f will not hnvl.t. bait I eta. to Kipajia rhmkft Co.. fcaw Vurk, for lu aaiuiriaa aud luut iaiuBHOsl RHEUMATISM iuuu Haul Co., itfOneiiTica SL. P. Jt U. 80 'W fi $ CATHARTIC vsaof mask atoisnato tr i Beat Coutfa brrup.Te.ioe Ouu& TJel I I I , In time Si.'d by rtniirglata I I