"For the Sake of Fan Mischief is Done9 A vast amount of mischief Is done, too, because people neglect to keep their blood pure, appears In eruptions, dyspepsia, indigestion, nervousness, kidney diseases, and other ailments. Hood's Sarsaparill Cures a!C diseases promoted by tmpura blood or ton state of the system. 3tood& SaUafH Bishop Torivfflnnnl, head of the Hu man Otthollc Dlocrse of Armlditlp, Australia, weighs 365 pounds. Ask Yonr Dealer for Allen's Font :ase, A powder to shako Into yonr shoes; rests tha loot. Cures Corns, Ituntons, Hwollen, Bora. Hot, Cnlluus, Arhinff, Hwentlnir Fm-t nd IntrrowliiK Nail. Allen's Foot-Knse makes new or tltiht shoes eaajr. At nil drti. lsta and shoes stores, 2 Ms. Hsmple mailed HlEE. Adr'i Allen 8. Olmsted, I.olloy, N. V. The best price ever pnld In Hei-lln for property w fur a corner mfiis urlnsr two yards Ion and two wHe, for which a clKiir dealer a few years sro paid 1.5rt, iinrt which lie Bold th other day forl2,0o9. float tebeera Spit set KskAs Tear t.lfc amy. To quit tobacco candy and forerer, be mef telle, foil of lire, nerve and vigor, take No-T BaO. tha WODdor Worker, that mikM man Booklet ana snmnle free. Address rnna nemeav v.a . (jnicaffo or New vnrk. 3. Plerpont Morn-an suent four y.-ars me nnston r.npnsn j iifrn Uenooi, ere ho stood head of his clam ughouttheentlre course. MttB S..t.K-.f - .1 . . Wo, Me. It a 0, 0, tall, druggists refund none. Consrressman-plect Oordon, of Ohio, who succeeds Mr. Marahall, of that Btate, hnn the unique distinction of coming from a district that never Bent a. Republican to Congress. 6TTBor Onio, City or Toi.ioo, i LroAa Cochtt. (" Frawk J C'nKKtT makes oath that he Is tha senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chkssy A Co, doing baslneas In the City of Toledo, Conaty and Mitt aforesaid, and that said Brm will pay the sura of oni humikd noi Lars for each and every case of ATAlina thatoannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catabho Crna. Vrakk J.Chnnry. Bwoea to before me and subscribed tn my J, presence, this Oth dar of December, aAL V A. D. lwn. A. y). (ti.BAaoit, 1 Notary Puhllo. Hall's Catarrh Core Is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaoes of the system. Hcnd for testimonials, free. F. J. Chunky ft Co, Toledo, O. Bold by DruKirlsts, 78o. BaU's Family Pills are the beet Iteo'a Cure Is the medicine to hrenk is children's Coughs and CoUls. Mrs. M. u. Blbt, Bpratfue, Wash., March , WW. THE PULPIT AND THE PEW. Minister Makes the Congregation and tha Conrregatton tha Minister. Between a minister and his congre gation there Is an action and a reaction so that the minister makes the con gregation and the congregation the minister, Bays Ian MacLaren In the Ladles' Home Journal. When one speaks of a minister's service to his peupie oiio is nut luillKing oi pew rents and offertories and statistics and crowds; nor of schools and guilds and classes and lectures. The master achievement of the minister Is to form character and to make men. The chief question, therefore, to consider about a minister's work Is: What kind of men has he made? And one, at least, of the most deci sive questions by which the members of a congregation can bo judged Is: What have they made of their minis ter? By that one does not mean what salary they may give him, nor how agreeable they may be to him. but how far he bos become a man and risen to bis height In the atmosphere of his congregation. Some congregations tiave ruined ministers by harassing them till they lost heart and Belt-control and became peevish and ill-tempered. Some congregations, again, have ruined ministers by so humoring and petting them that they could en dure no contradiction and became childish. That congregation has don its duty most effectively which has cre ated an atmosphere so genial, and yet so bracing, that every good In Its min uter has been fostered and everything petty killed. Is vour breath had? Th.n urn, best friends turn their heads aside. A bad breath means a bad liver. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They euro constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, sick headache. 25c. All druggists. Win! your moustache or beard a beaulUul hrown or rich blank f Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE tttSr rQ-C?t. ftH yJOslTi. pi I m Co. N'seeu-j M. Mj lh University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME. INDIANA. Ulwaelee, Letters, Bcaaoastoa aad Hletery, Juarunlisai, Art, Hrlencr, I'ltaratary, Ue, plvll, Mebaenlcul and itlectrlcal Knalaeer. war. Architecture. Thorough Prrparntery and Commercial Caareee. KoclesUsth-al it lldenU at specis rates Hsmaaa Free. Junior or Saulor ssr, ColUujials Vouraon. Keume to Keel, moderate cuarse. l. Brimard'a Hull for boys uml.r H. Tlie Atltb Year will open Hcpieaaber Bib, I8IHI. Catnlosjues Free. AdUreas Uatr. A. Alolt it JHMU V, , V. at. C- Prealdeat. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP GIIIMIIEYS Aro tha best. Ask for them. Cost no more than eotnnioa tihlniuays. All dealara. riTTKUUMO ULASH tlOM Allebeny,Fa, TiinG nr::i I what Aht largett and beat sohool systaau um I k MvAAAAAAA FOR FARM AND GARDEN. I Amount nf Vnter for Irrigation. The season, climate and stage of growth of the plants will regulate the amount of water to be applied. Twenty or thirty gallons per acre is generally snllicient. Afler un orchard or field has been irrigated for n num ber of years the amount required each year will decrense. An Ksrellrnt Fertiliser. In a bnshel of good hardwood ashes there is about four pounds of potash, fifteen pounds of lime, two and one half pounds of mngnesia, one pound of phosphoric acid and three-quarters of a pound of sulphuric nc:d. All of this is either plant food, or assists in making available plant food in tin soil. Twenty bushels of such ahei. is none too much to use upon good land for almost any crop. Tnrt'lns the Sheep's Noses. After tho shoop are shorn, their noses should be rubbed with some tar, to repel the fly which lays the egg that hatches into a grub and en ters the hend. It is very little trouble to tar all the sheep's noses iu a (lock if yon only know how, I'ut a little salt over the tnr, and in their anxiety to get at the salt the sheep will tar their own noses efl'ectnally, nud will very likely rub their tarred noses on the sides and shonlders of other sheep. This is why it is best to shear the sheep before tarring them. Hpeakiug about tarring sheep reminds ns of the Knglish farmer who rode ont to his farm one summer dny with a bowl of tar and some snlt,and taking his little boy with him for a pleasant ride. The old farmer thought it a good occasion to impress some wholesome advice on the juvenile mind. Ho he began in the stereotyped way to declaim against the danger from keeping bad com pany, and at every sentence would add the injunction, "Mark me,, my lad," sometimes varied with "Mark me well." This continued nntil the boy astonished the farmer with the protest. "If I mark you much more, there'll be no tnr for the sheep." Every time he had been told to "mark me," he had obeyed literally by put ting some of the tar on the back of the farmer's coat. The Chicken Mite. This exceedingly troublesome and often fatul pest is the cause of many complniuts from those raising chick ens. The attacks of the pest are not confined to poultry, as it ia often found in pigeon houses and in the nests of other birds about farm build ings. Where tliey are numerous, they often find their way to animals confined in the infested buildings. The mites ore nocturnal in their habits. During the dny time, they are gen erally in hiding about the building, but at night they abandon their hid ing places and seek for food. Chickens are ofteu prevented from sleeping at night, nud not rarely forced to abandon their eggs whou setting. In stances have been recorded whore birds have been killod by this mite. There is no way to receive perman ent relief from the pest. The reme dies mnst be applied often and thor oughly, since the insect is able to live a long time without eating. Cleauli ness must be observed. The hen manure should be frequently removed as it often swarms with the pest. If the hen house is tight, fumigation by sulphur is very effective. To prevent any accident by Are, float the metal vessel coutuiniug the burning sulphur in a tub of water. After several hours of fumigation, air the building well before oocupaucy. Tnre kero sene is also to be recommended. The interior of the building, including perches, should be well sprayed with it. After nsing kerosene, reme'mber to air the bnilding before introducing a light. P, J, Tarrott of the Kansas Btute Agricultural College. Autumn Stanaar. ment of flees. Bnceessfnl winleringof bees largely depends on autumn management. . If bees received the attention they should have during the autumn months, win teriug would be almost an absolute certainty, but from the fact that they dp not, and are neglected, heavy losses result. It may be said that it matters not us to the couditiou iu which bees go into wiutor quarters, n very severe winter will go hard with them, but my experience ib, if bees are iu proper shape in late autumn, but a small per cent, of loss will ooour in wiuter. No one can expect to wiuter old bens successfully, nud in a great mouy instances, it might bo said, iu most cases, old bees are the cause of tho worst trouble. If bees do not have a late flow of honey during the autumn mouths, say September and October, they iuvariably go into the wiuter with a large majority of old bees. When bees have a good flow of honey at this period, or enough to keep them breeding well, they w ill ruiso a supply of young bees that will withstand the wiuter aud also early spring. This eondition of things can be brought about by feeling during this period, aud iu every case of the lack of a full flow of houoy, feediug is the proper course to pursue. It would seem that if a colour of baes had enough stores to carry them throngh the wiutor, that feeding would be foolish, but that is the only method by which we can iUHUi e brood rearing nud young bees to go through as they should. The proper time to begiu feediug is early iu autumn iu localities where wiuter begius as early as the first of November, say from the first to the middle of September. But in most localities iu this country, October feeding will briug the desired result. Feediug for brood rearing only re quires a small ainuunt of feed com pared to feeding for winter stores, bni the work mnst be regnlavly done, and kept tip the proper length of time. Fending for brood rearing, or ns it is termed "stimulating feeding," must be done in such a manner as to resem ble a nntnrnl honey flow. Feeding bees will always bring as good results if properly done, ns any natural flow of honey will. Feeding bees should always be done ns late in the evening as possible, so that nny danger oi lobbing may be prevented. -e - flay From I.ndsjcd Clover. On very rich land clover often grows so large that its own weight brings li to the ground, nud if this breaking down occurs while the nir is still, the clover is usually twisted so badly that except with a mower and on smooth surface it is almost impossible to ont it, A good deal depends on the wny lll.t nlm-jtr ia cut nut InarAlv fit HiA present hay crop, bnt for tho after growth. If cut close to the ground there will be a large amount of coarse stalks that are diflicult to cure.thongh they may be when cured as sweet and nutritious as nny of the hay. If not cut close, as must be the case when the mower runs the way that most oi the clover leans, n long, coarse stub ble is left from which the clover growth is very small, much ns it would be if n mass of young buds were left to grow on a newly transplanted tree, instead of reducing the top to merely one bud, and allowing that to make all the growth it will. Most farmers, for the good of the clover, try to cut as low as possible. Indeed, we have known some when the mower had left long stubble, fol low it with a scythe and cut down what the mower'knives passed over. Where the clover has been beaten down by rains most of it will fall one way. It is then possible by what is called "carrying the swath" to cut the whole against the fallen clover, and by letting the knives down close to the ground get the whole and make a closer cut than could be done by the most skilful mower with the scythe. In cntting clover no sod is left. The clover plants do not send ont many small leaves at the base of their stems as all the grasses do. Consequently a clover stubble is harsh to bare feeL and as it exudes a gum it makes the shoes slippory in walking over it in them, as this gum quickly dries when it is exposed to the air, and it makes a smooth coating over the leather. It is the gum which the thick clover stalks contain that makes clover hay ferment so quickly when piled iu manses. Vet so long ss it is not di luted with rains or dews this heating will nsunlly drv out the clover with- ont injury, so that it can be put in the barn without fear that it will there rot down into manure. After one heating in a small heap this clover has its moisture drawn ont of it, and in really much less likely to heat lniuri ously (hnn it was before. American Cultivator. Fattening Tattle. Well bred cattle will pay for feeding to a finish, but it is better to turn o4 common rattle just as soon as they art in a passable condition for tho mar ket. As the fattening procoss nil vauces cattle will usually eat less ravenously, unless they have a change of feed. If fed on ear corn they will tiro of it, but if it is shelled their de clining appetite will return; and it will be found that if an occasional change is made from ear corn to shelled corn, then to oats, from corn fodder to clover hay, and so on back and forth, the rattle will do better and the beef will be made at less cost. Corn meal can be very profitably used to make one of these changes, es pecially if mixed with bran, provided it is mixed with something like cut clover or othor roughage. It is waste ful to feed corn meal by itself. There are n number of things that might be fed to break the monotony of a steady corn diet. Boots of ail kinds could be thus utilized. We have sometimes fed good straw in place of hay just for a chauge, and the cattle liked it and were improved by it. Either man or beast will tire of eating one thing all the time, and tiring means a loss of appetite nnd a lesser consumption. Much has been written about warming water for cows, but never a word that we ever saw npon the temperature of water for fat tening cattle. Ice water uever should go into nuy system, the prevalent American habit of drinking copious draughts of ice water to the contrary, notwithstanding. The steer will not driuk it unless driven to it by exces sive thirst, and when he does it is ex peusive for the feeder. It reduces the temperature, which must be raised again by feed. Besides it interferes with digestiou, aud all the time that the system and digestion are got.iug into normal condition again, time is being wasted. The fatteuing steer ought never to be compelled to driuk water at a lower temperature thau it comes out if the well. Plenty of water should be provided. It is best, when possible, nud the weather is not too cold, to let the herd hava free access to water. If that is not practical, water twice a day. The system requires abundanoe of water. Provide good shelter at all seasons, warm shelter in winter, and shelter from storms in warmer weather, ' Hock salt should always be accessible. Feed regularly. Keep wati h of every animal, that you may kuo v its con dition, whether or not it is eating as it should, whether or not it is scour ing, whether or not, in a wind, it is gutting nloug as it should. Scouring should be checked at once, and iu order to do that the cause must be removed. Among the causes are too much salt when loose salt is fed not enough coarse feed, uusound grain aud mouldy hay or fodder. Remove the cause, and substitute oats for com and timothy for clover fur a day or two. The EpitoaOst THt MARKETf. riTTSBUMO. flraln, Flour and Feed. WHEAT Ko. .red. 6f S WHKAT No. I new (W tl CORN No lyrllow. enr. 88 tt No. 2 yellow, ihelleii 00 17 Mixed ear 87 88 OATH No. 1 whllo J5 S No. 8 white 94 SS FLOUR Winter patents 8 6J I 75 Ksnoy straight winter 8 60 8 CO Hve No. f 9 81 HAt-No. 1 timothy 11 tO 11 74 'lover. Ha I i 10 00 FF.KD No. 1 white mid., ton.. 17 00 17 60 Drown mlildlliiKS IA 03 16 23 Jlrnn. btilk 18 0) 18 75 8THAW Wheat 5 00 6 45 (1st 8 0) A M BF.KDR Fancy Blue Orasa.... 126 160 Timothy, prime .. . 123 160 Dairy I'rodneta BCTTEIt F.lifln creamery..... a 225 SS Ohio creamery II) KO Fancy country roll 14 13 CHKKHK Ohio, new 10 11 New York, new 10 11 Fruits and Vesetablet, HEANR-Oreen V bo ... PO 75 roTATOKH l-'nney Itoso,V bbl 1 M ' 175 OA Ml AGE Per barrel 1 00 12-5 ONIONH per bu 65 70 1'onltry, Ete, I1FNP per pnlr 70 75 t'HIt'KKNH dressed 14 15 Tl rIKKVH dressed 15 Iff E008 l a. and Ohio. Iteth.... 13 II 1IAI.TIMOHK. FI.OCR 8 8 73 I 01 W HKAT-No. 8 red 71 71 COHN-Mlied 85 OATH 2tl 27 EOOH U 13 IlUTTElt Ohio creamery IU 20 rniLADKLPniA Fl.Otn 8 65 8 73 WHKAT No. 8 red 72 73 t'OHN No. 3 mixed 86 87 OATH No. 3 white 27 88 Bl'TTEB Creamery, extra.... 21 22 EGCJtt Pennsylvania firsts.... 15 18 HKW lOKK. FI.OCB rstents 8 8 78 4 00 x heat-no. s red 78 CO U N No. 8 89 un 1 n n tine western 29 JllTTEH Creamery. 17 81 Ed OH Btate ot Tenn 12 15 LIVH STUCK. Central Block Vanls, Kast Liberty, Pa, CATTLE, Prime. 1900 to 1400 the 8 ft ft3 6 60 Good, 1200 to 13K) lts A 20 0 85 Tidy, 1000 to 1160 lh 6 0'J 6 15 Fair )lht steers, 000 to 1000 Ihs 4 40 4 90 Common, 700 to 800 Ihs 8 90 4 15 BOOS. Medium BOO Heavy.... 4 95 A 00 lioUKhs and stags 8 73 4 20 SHEEP. Trlme, S5 to 105 Ihs li 4 00 Oood, 86 to 90 ttia 4 01 4 70 Fair, 70 to 00 lbs 8 75 4 8J Common 1 jo 2 (0 Veal Calves AO) 7 23 la 11 us. Bprlrner, extra A 81 0 00 bprlnttor, good tocholco. A 00 A 81 Common to fair 4 60 AO) Extra yearlliiKS, Merit 4 9i 6 00 Oood to choice yearlings. 4 73 A 0) Medium 4 35 4 7 , Common. 3 ;i5 4 83 REVIEW OF TRADE. War Vessels Delayed on Account of an Enor. mo us Shortage cl Steel. R. it. Dunn & t'o.'s weekly review of trade reports: The Cramps have dis charged runny hundred hai.ds and bbIi Kumhiii to extend time fur c)iiiiletlon of two warships beeutise they cannot get the steel. Completion of 21 out of i7 vessels building In the LMitwnre la also ultected. It Is a curious experi ence for this country, but shows the gigantic, expansion of home demand. No one enn question the fact thai payments through the principal clear ing houses have been In August 65.9 per cent, linger than In ISM for the month thus far, and outl1e NVw York 23 per cent. No better ttst of the vol ume of business Is known, but there is a growing handicap In the advance of prices. How long nnd how for this ad vance can go without reaction Is the problem which level-headed business men are studying. Kvldences of cheeked consumption are rare, but It would be childish to hope that at sumo point higher prices would not hinder buying. In iron the question Is of steel bil lets, which the great consuming com panies have bought lar In advunce, sj that all new orders have a narrow market. For six months billets have old at 14 to higher thnn the rails made from them. Othor demands, not covered by contracts, are mainly tor various shapes and sizes only pre scribed In contracts. Whl e prices have risen 25 .cents for southern Pig Iron, 50 cents for Chicago local coke and 70 cents for gray forge at Pitts burg, rnilB have advanced II per ton, with work covered for all this year, and 400,0u0 tons or more taken beyond what can be delivered unlll next year. Other finished products do not change, although tho demand at all po'nta ex ceeds present capacity. Copper Is steady at lsi for lake, with produc tion for July 21,333 tons domestic and 7,390 tons foreign. Tin is lower at 30c, and lead weakens on the stop pages of the smelters' strike. Cotton rose a week ago at 6ic hut has fallen to ,19. Mr. Nell 1 having estimated the corning yield at ll,2b0,000 to 12,OliO,000 bales, tillloial and otner estimates ore all much snialltr, but the man who judged rightly a yeai oeo has the floor. Consumption here and abroad has been very larne, and prices of goods are rising, while cot ton falls, and stocks carried over must also be large, but will be less than present returns Indicate. Wheat has advanced tib nit 1 cent during the week, with Atluntic ex ports only 2.303.302 bushels, flour In cluded, against 3.059 3 iu lut year, and Pacific exports 9.11, 3:i9 bushels, against 171,400 last year. Western recipta have been only 8 212,117 bushels, against 3,3fi9,2:'9 last year. It la a question whether the sum ler receipts are due to recent hung In crop pros pects, giving holders of grain a better outlook. Exports of whe.it In three weeks have been from both coasts. Hour included. 9.9V3.7C4 bushels, against 10,114,246 bufhtls lart year, an I the western receipts have been 11.864.. 696 bushels, against 9 016,18'i lost year; but It is also significant that corn hat risen Kc with receipts of S02H.693 bushels for the week, aguinrt 8,61416:! last year, while the exi oris have been 4.034,302 bushels, against 2,370 313 last year. The figures clearly do not Indi cate a material decrease In fortln de mand on the whole, although for wheat It Is somewhat smaller than appeared In July. Failure's for the week have been: In the United Plates, Hit. against 164 lost year, and In Canada 24. against 17 last year. Purchased $10,000,000 Eggs. Contracts were closed at Kansas Oitv luat week for th sal - ,,.hi cate of Eastern commission merchants of 70 carloads of eggs now In store at Topeka, Abilens and Concordia, Kan. The eggs are to be alilpfd uv three special trains next week. If Dot had played with common soap What wreck there'd be to-morrow I Her hands all chapped, her dress past hope, Her toys a tale of sorrow. But mother lets her play like this And wash whate'er she chooses, For not a thing will go amiss When Ivory Soap she uses. IVORY SOAP-99. PER CENT. PURE. coeveawT nss er ths raoens a aunts ee. etaemssTt Benjamin I nichards, the new pres ident of the American Whist league, learned to play whist when 6 years ld. Ve Oar Constipation Torever. Take Cascnrets Candr Cathertto. 10s or Be. II tt O. O. fall to cure, druggtats refund money. The Church of Scotland hns 43 mis sion schools In India, w till 3,000 pupils. Ka-To-Ba for Fifty Casta. Onaranteed tobaoeo habit cure, makes weak Hen strong, blood purs. 60s, II. All druf (lata. The Princess of Naples Is said to be the most beautiful member ot a reign ing family. Mrs. Wlnslow'sRonthlng Syrup for children teethlnir. softens the gums, reduces intlatiinm Uon, allays pain, cures wind colic, in; alwttle. MANY a dutifut daughter pays in pain for her mother's ignorance or perhaps neglect. The mother suffered and she thinks her daughter must suffer also. This is true only to a limited extent. No excessive pain is healthy. Every mother should inform her INDULGENT MOTHERS Many a young girl's beauty is wasted by unnecessary pain at time of menstruation, and many indulgent mothers with mistaken kindness permit their daughters to grow careless about physical health. Miss Carrie M. Lamb, Big Beaver, Mich., writes: "Dear Mrs. Pinkham A year ago I suffered from profuse and irregular menstruation and leucorrhcea. My appetite was variable, stomach sour and bowels were not regular, and was subject to pains like colic duringmenstruation. I wrote you and began to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and used two packages of Sanative Wash. You can't imagine my relief. My courses are natural and general health improved." Mrs. Nannie Adkins. La Due, Mo., writes: "Dear Mrs. Pinkham I feel it my duty to tell you of the good your Vegetable Compound has done my daughter. She suffered untold agony at time of menstruation be fore taking your medicine ; but the Compound has relieved the pain, given her a better stronger, and has improved every way. you for the benefit she has received, for young girls." St Don't Put Off Till To-morrow tho Du ties of To-Day." Buy a Cake of SAPOLIO CONSTIPATION "1 bars tone 14 Sara at a time vsrlthoat at aaavaaiaat ot tke kawels, not belug alilo 10 mora ilieia eiuept tr Ufctuf hot wutar Injections Cbronie oonsilpatlon for seven years placed me In ibis terrible oouditloni durlus that time 1 did av arrtblusl beard of butuuver found an relief: suob was urease until I began lulus CABCAUKTU I now bare from one to tbrue pssssses a dar, and If I was rlob I would five IIUU.UI fur eavb morvmeoli it la suob a relief ." An.mii 1,. hunt, KaU UuswU bl.. Iwuolt, Mica. Pleasant, Palstable. Potent, Taste Oood. ro Good, Never blukeu. Weaken, or Urlue. kUu. aw, tuo, ... CURI CONSTIPATION. ... 1 lot. Sal Dr. Rleord't Eisinci if Lift .i!.. an, aever-falllna rsniedy for all osses of narvuus, auntal, Bkysl.arebllt)r, lust vitality aud pre. mature decay la belli ssissi positive, periuusal cure; full trealmsut St, ur SI a bottle: stamp fur tirvlef, .tl-Wl4,Assul,liaUv4wsy,. 2 fl d CATHARTIC -a TOADf mask eieriato a There are t.lfi professional guides) In the Tyrolese Mountains. Beast T la Blood Deaf). Clean blood means a clesn skin. No beauty without It. Csarsreta, Csndy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the laty liver and driving all im purities from the body, begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Csscarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 260,1100. About one German woman works In every 27 In a factory. Fits permanently cared. Ko fits or nervous ness alter llrst. day's use of I r. Kline's ((rest Nerve rtstr,.r. 2 trial bottle and treatise free. IJr.H.II.Kl.l.NK.LM. 9.11 Arch Kt.I'hila.fa self for her own sake and especially for the sake of her daughter. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., for her advice about all matters concerning the ills of the feminino organs. WW color, and she feels I am very grateful to It is a great medicino W. L. DOUGLAS $3&$3.50 SHOE8 union Worth f4 to f8 comparodwitti oinor manes. Indorsed by over I.OOO.OOO wearer. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLEI THIUKM INK k W. la. PastflsW MSB Mat prlM tUi mm koii a. Tako no ub.tttt.U eltltnod to be in gtsod. Larue. uik of W tutt .l.fiO .Ii.w. la tbc 'iirll. Yuurdt)alvrUuiakep them it out, we will muiI you ft nal r on ri'Hli.l nf nriVa. Miata kind of lamhere lr. and width, iiaia or iwp tuo I'Ktik.niHio ' tre W. L DOUGLAS SHOg CO., Brockton, Mast. J" Successfully Prosecutes Claims. .ale Prliu'luel Examiner US Puualou Bureau, 3 Jtsla civil Mer, IftmliudltatlUfc tuuuis.atly sluue KnCURIAIIom treatment, ptislld, l(i seuts. Uunssai BaitaiX Co., MsUtesuwkb If. . M. 0. 84 'W I !!", Sold by dnimuta ) I . .J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers