ADOPTED JUNE 20. Condemns Monopolies, Indorses the Protect ive Tariff nd Assures tho Guardianship of tht Flag to Citizen Everywhere. The following is the complete text of the platform adopted by the Republican National Convention: The Republicans of the United States through their chosen representative met in national convention, looking back upon an unsurpassed record of achieve ment and looking forward into a great field of duty and opportunity, and ap pealing to the judgment of their coun trymen, make these declarations: The expectation in which the Ameri can people, turning from the Democrat ic party, entrusted power four years ago to a Republican Chief Magistrate and a Republican Congress, has been met and satisfied. When the people then assem bled at the polls, after a term of Demo cratic legislation and administration, business was dead, industry paralyzed and the national credit disastrously im paired. The country's capital was hid den away and its labor distressed and unemployed. The Democrats had no other plan with which to improve the ruinous conditions which they had themselves produced titan to coin silver at the ratio of 16 to I. Republican Promis Redeemed. The Republican party, denouncing this plan as sure to produce conditions even worse than those from which re lief was sought, promised to restore prosperity by means of two legislative measures a protective tariff and a law making gold the standard of value. The people by great majorities issued to the Republican party a commission to enact these laws. This commission lias been executed and the Republican promise is redeemed. Prosperity more general and more abundant than we have ever known lias followed these enactments. There is no longer controversy as t) the value of any Government , obliga tions. Every American dollar is a gold dollar or its assured equivalent, and American credit stands higher than that of any nation. Capital is fully employ ed and labor everywhere is profitably occupied. No single fact can more strikingly tell the story of what Republican gov ernment means to the country than this that while, during the whole period cf 107 years from 1700 to i8)7 there was an increase of exports over imports of only $.18.1,0.28.407, there has been in the shon . three years of the present Republican administration an excess of exports .n--er imports of the enormous sum of fi,- Purposes and Results of War. And while the American people, sus tained by this Republican legislation, have been achieving these splendid tri umphs in their business and commerce, they have conducted and in victory con cluded a war for liberty and human rights. No thought of national ng grandizemcnt tarnished the high pur pose with which American standards were unfurled. It was a war unsought and patiently resisted, but when it came the American Government was ready. Its fleets were cleared for action. Its armies were in the field, and the quick and signal triumph of its forces on land and sea bore equal tribute to the cour N age of American soldiers and sailors and to the skill and foresight of Re publican statesmanship. To ten mil lions of the human race there was given "a new birth of freedom," and to the American people a new and noble re sponsibility. McKinley't Administration. We endorse the Administration of William McKinlcy. Its acts have been established in wisdom and in patriotism, and at home and abroad it has distinctly elevated and extended tlie influence of the American nation. Walking untried paths and facing unforeseen responsibil ities. President McKinlcy has been in every situation the true American pa triot and the upright statesman, clear in vision, strong in judgment, firm in ac tion, always inspiring and deserving the confidence of his countrymen. Unntliab.lity of Democracy. ', In asking the American people to en dorse this Republican record and to re new their commission to the Rcpubli- aii puny, nc itiimiu uiviii ui 111c hat the menace to their prosperity has lways resided in Democratic principles 1T1U 11(1 ira 111 LUC UCIICIUI HIldUdLlir Ul Democratic party to conduct public s. lne prime essential ot business enty is public continence in t lie 1 sense of the Government and in 1 1 . 1 1 n: 1. w problem of administration and leg- latir,n That rmififlenre the Tlonin- ratic party has never earned. It is hopelessly inadequate, and the country s prosperity, when Democratic success at the polls is announced, halts and ceases in mere anticipation ol Democratic blunders and failures. Stability of the Currency. We renew our allegiance to the prin ciple of the gold standard and declare our confidence in the wisdom of the leg islation of the Fifty-sixth Congress by which the parity 01 all our money and the stability of our currency upon a gold basis has been secured. We recognize that interest rates are a potent factor in production and business activity, and tor the purpose of further equalizing and a ui lurmcr iuwciiuh uic mica ui interest, I we favor such monetary legislation us will enable the varying needs of the sea l ton and of all sections to be promptly met in order that trade may be evenly sustained, labor steadily employed ami I commerce enlarged. The volume of money in circuiaiiun was never tu grcu per capita as it it to-day. We declare our steadfast opposition to tTie free and unlimited coinage of silver. No meas ure to that end could be considered which was without the support of the leading commercial countries of the world. However firmly Republican leg islation may seem to have secured the leountry against the peril of base and discredited currency, the election of a Democratic President could not fail to impair the country's credit and to bring once more into question the intention of the American people to maintain upon the gold standard the parity of their money circulation. The Democratic party must be convinced that the Amer ican people will never tolerate the Chi fcago platform. Combination) Against Trad. We recognize the necessity and pro priety of the honest co-operation of cap- ilal to meet new business conditions ami especially 10 extend our rapiiuy in creasing foreign trade, but we condemn all conspiracies and combinations in tended to restri -t business, to create monopolies, to limit production, or to control prices, and favor such legislation as well effectively restrain and prevent all such nbiises, protect anil promote competition nnd secure the rights ol producers, laborers nnd nil who are en gaged in industry nnd commerce. Protection by Tariff. We renew our faith in the policy ol protection to American labor. In that policy our industries have been cstab fished, diversified and maintained. I5v protecting the home market, compel tion hns been stimulated and production cheapened. Opportunity to the inven tive genius of our people tins been se cured and wages in every department of labor maintained at high rates, higher now than ever before, and always dis tinguishing our working people in their better conditions of life from those ol any competing country. Knjoying the blessings of the American common school, secure in the right of self-gov eminent and protected in the occupancy ot their own markets, tlieir constantly increasing knowledge nnd skill have en abled t'lictn finally to enter the markets of the world. W c favor the associated policy of reciprocity so directed as to open our markets on lavorablc terms for what we do not ourselves produce in return tor tree foreign markets. Restriction ol Immigration. In the further interest of American workmen, we favor a more effective re striction of the immigration of cheap labor from foreign lands, the extension of opportunities of education for work ing children, the raising of the age limit for child labor, the protection of free labor ns against contract convict labor and an effective system of labor insur ancc. The Merchant Marine. Our present dependence upon foreign shipping for nine-tenths of our foreign carrying is a great loss to the industry of tins country. It is also a serious dan gcr to our trade, for its sudden with drawal in the event of European war would seriously cripple our expanding foreign commerce. The national de fense and naval efficiency of this coun try, moreover, supply a compelling rea son for legislation which will enable us to recover our former place among tlie trade carrying llects of the world Tho Pension Follcy. The nation owes a debt of profound gratitude to the soldiers and sailors who have fought its battles, nnd it is tip Government's duty to provide for the survivors and for the widows and or phans of those who have fallen in the country's wars. The pension laws, founded in this just sentiment, should be liberally administered, and preferences should be given wherever practicable with respect to employment in the pub lic service to soldiers nnd sailors and to their widows nnd orphans, We commend the policy of the Re publican party in maintaining the effi ciency of the civil service. TJic Admin istration has acted wisely in its effort to secure for public service in Cuba, Puer to Rico, Hawaii and the Philippine Isl ands only those whose fitness has been determined by training and rxpcricnc Wc believe that employment in the nub lie service in these territories should be confined as far as practicable to their in- Habitants. Disfranchisement of the Negro. It was the plain purpose of the fif teenth amendment to the Constitution to prevent discrimination on account ot race or color in regulating the elective franchise. Devices of state govern ments, whether by statutory or constitu tional enactment, to avoid the purpose 01 tins amendment are revolutionary and should be condemned. Public movements looking to a per manent improvement of the roads and highways of the country meet with out cordial approval, and we recommend this subject to the earnest consideration of the people and of the Legislatures of the several States. We favor the extension of the rural free delivery service wherever its ex tension may be justified. In further pursuance of the constant policy of the Republican party to pro vide free homes on the public domain wc recommend adequate national legis lation to reclaim trie arid lands of the United States, reserving control of the distribution of water for irrigation to the respective states and Territories. We favor home rule for and the early admission to Statehood of the Terri tories of New Mexico, Arizona and Ok lahotna. Reduction of War Taxes. The Dingley act amended to provide sufficient revenue for the conduct of the war has so well performed its work that it has been possible to reduce the war debt in the sum of $40,030,000. So aninle are the Government's revenues and so great is the public confidence in the integrity of its obligations tliat its new ly-funded two per cent, bonds sell at a premium. The country is now justified in expecting and it will be the policy of me nepiiuiican party to bring about a reduction ot tne war texes. Canal Across the Isthmus. We favor the construction, ownership, control and protection of an isthmian canal by the Government of the United States. New markets arc necessary for 111c increasing surplus 01 our farm prod ucts. Every effort should be made to open and obtain new markets, especially in the Orient, and the Administration is warmly to be commended for its suc cessful effort to commit all trading and colonizing nations to the policy of the open door in China. In the interest oi our expanding commerce we recom mend that Congress create a department of commerce and industries in the charge of a secretary, with a scat in the cabinet. The United States consular system should be reorganized under the lupervision of this new department upon such a basis of appointment and tenure as will render it still more serviceable to the nation's increasing trade. The American Government must pro tect the person and property of every citizen wherever they are wrongfully violated or placed in peril. We congratulate the women of Amer ica upon their splendid record of public service in the volunteer aid associations and as nurses in camp and hospital dur ing the recent campaign of our armies in the Eastern and Western Indies, and we appreciate their fruitful co-operatioo in all works of education and industry. McKinley't Foreign Policy. President' McKinlcy hat conducted the foreign affairs of the United States with distinguished credit to the Ameri can people. In releasing us from the vexatious conditions of a fcuropenn al liance for tlie government of Samoa his course is especially to be commended, lly securing to our undivided control the most important island of the Sa nioan group nnd the best harbor in the southern Pacific every American inter est has been safe-guarded. Wc npprovc the annexation of the Hawaiian Islands to the United Stntcs. We commend the part taken by our iiovernment In the peace conlerence tit The Hague. Wc assert our steadfast ad herence to the policy nnnounced in the Monroe doctrine. The provisions ol the Hague convention were wisely re garded w'hen President McKinlcy ten dered his friendly offices in the interest of peace between Great Ilrltnin and the south African republics. lulc the American Government must continue the policy prescribed by Washington, af firmed by every succeeding President and imposed upon us by The Hague treaty, of non-intervention in European controversies, the American people ear nestly hope that a way may soon lie found, honorable nlike to Kith contest ing parties, to terminate the strife be twecn them. The Philip pine Problem. In accepting, by tlie treaty of Paris, the just responsibility of our victories in the Spanish war the President and the Senate won the undoubted approval of the American people. No other course wns possible than to destroy Spain's sovereignty throughout the Western Indies and the Philippine Isl ands. That course created our respon sibility before the world nnd with the unorganized population when our inter vention had freed from Spain, to pro vide for the maintenance of law and or der and for the establishment of good government ami for the performance of international obligations. Our authority could not be less than our responsibility, and wherever sovereign rights were ex tended it became the high duty of the Government to maintain its authority ti put down armed insurrection and to confer the blessings of liberty and civil ization upon all the rescued peoples. The largest measure of self-government con sistent with their welfare and our duties shall be secured to thein by law. To Cuba independence and self-government were assured in the same voice by which war was declared and to the letter this pledge shall be performed. The Republican party, upon its history and upon this declaration of its princi ples and policies, confidently invokes the considerate and approving judg ment of the American people. The Republican Determination. Wc will not abandon our task. V: will neither surrender nor retreat. V will not write failure across this page of our history. We will do our duty, our full duty, to the people of the Phil ippines, and strive by every means to give them freedom, contentment and prosperity. We have no belief in the old slaveholders' doctrine that the Con stitution of its own force marches into every newly-acquired territory, ami this doctrine, which we cast out in 1H00, we still reject. We do not mean that the Philippines shall come without our tariff system or become part of our body politic. Wc do mean that they shall, under our tcacfling. learn to govern them selves and remain under our flag with the largest possible measure of home rule. Vc make no hypocritical pretense of being interested iii the Philippines whol ly on account of others. While we re gard the welfare of those people as a sacred trust, wc regard the welfare of the people first. Wc see our duty to ourselves as well as to others. We be lieve in trade expansion. Hy every le gitimate means within the province of Government legislation, we mean to stimulate the expansion of our trade and to open new markets. The Trade ol the Orlen!. Greatest of all markets is China. Our trade there is growing by leaps "ami bounds. Manila, the prize of war, gives us inestimable advantages in developing that trade. It is the corner stone of our Eastern policy, and the brilliant diplo macy of John Hay in securing from nil nations a guarantee of our treaty rights and oi the open door in China rests up on it. We ask the American people whether they will throw away these new markets and widening opportunities for trade and commerce by putting in power the Democratic party, who seek, under cover of a newly discovered affection for the rights of man, to give us these isl ands of the East and make Dewey't vic tory fruitless. The choice lies betwee.i this' Democratic policy of retreat and the Republican policy, which would hold the islands, give them freedom and prosperity and enlarge those great op portunities for ourselves and our pos terity. We are true to our own. Wc have no distrust of the honor, the hu manity, the capacity of the. American people. To feel or do otherwise is to doubt ourselves, our Government and our civilization. Wc take issue with the Democrats who would cast off the Philippines because the American peo ple cannot be trusted with them, nnd we declare that the American nconlr can be trusted to deal justly, wisely and generously with these distant islands, and will lift them up to a higher pros perity, a broader freedom anil a nobler civilization than they have ever known. wc nave not tailed elsewhere. Wc shall not fail here. Prosperity Under Bryan. Suppose the' candidate of the Demo crats, the Populists, the foes of expan sion, the dissatisfied and the envious should come into power, what kind ol an Administration would he give us? What would his Cabinet be? Think what an electric smirk of confidence would run through every business inter est in tne country when such a Cabi net was announced as we can readily imagine he would make. More import ant still, we ask the American people whether they will put in the White House the hero of uncounted platforms, the prodigal spendthrift of words, the champion of free silver, the opponent of expansion, the assailant of the courts; or whether they will retain in the Presi dency the Union soldier, the leader ol the House of Representatives, the train ed statesman who has borne victoriously the heavy burdens of the last four years: the champion of protection and sound money, tne tearless supporter of law and order wherever the flag floats? now long will your good times last if you turn out the Kemiblicani and give political power to those who cry nothing but "Woe! Woe!" the lovers of calamity and foes of prosperity, who hold success in business to be a crime? rronusc Based on Performance, It is on tlirse facta that we shall nstt for the support of the American people. What we have done is known, and about what we intend to do there is neither lecrery nor deception. What we prom ise we will perform. Our old policies are here, nlive, successful ami full ol vigor. Our new policies have been be gun nnd for them we ask support. When the clouds of impending civil war hung dark over the country in 1861 we took up the great task then laid up on us and never flinched until we had carried it through to victory. Now. at the dawn of a new century, with new policies nnd new opportunities opening before ns, in the bright sunshine of prosperity, we again ask the American people to entrust us with their future. Wc have profound faith in the people. We do not distrust their capacity oi nieeting new responsibilities, even as thev met the old, and we shall await ivith confidence, under the leadership ol William McKinlcy, the verdict of No rember. STRIKING FIGURES. two Rcamenleal Delegate Who ITava Had Rare Experience. In attendance upon the conference to dolegatts are (wo men who, In their missionary work, hare been through aa grave perils end aa strange experi ences, probably, as any living beings, saya the New York Sun. They are Robert Laws, doctor of dltlnlty and medicine, who comes from the mis sions on the shores of Lake Nyassa In Africa, and Dr. John O. Paton, whose life work has been among the can nibal South Sea Islanders of the New Hebrides, "One of the greatest re wards of yonr work." mid a mission ary from Japan to Dr. Paton upon be In trod need to him, "must be the knowledge that by the spread of Chris tianity the practices of cannibalism have been rooted out" "It would be," said the venerable missionary, "If It were only eo." "Are there still any cannibals remaining In the New Hebrides?" asked the other In sur prise. "There are plenty of Islands, unfortunately," was the reply, "where cannibalism Is constantly practiced, and human flesh Is esteemed the great est delicacy obtainable. The Ills of an unarmed man wouldn't be worth a moment's purchase on any of those Islands. A thing that constantly sur prises ma," added the doctor as hit questioner turned away, "Is tl pre vailing Impression here that canni balism Is a thing of the past. Where the missionaries have gained a foot hold the practice has been eradicated, though I have known of sporadic out breaks In the vicinity of the missions. Kut people here at home do not seem to comprehend the vast extent of thi South Sea Islands. There are thou sands and tens ot thousands ot na tives who have never seen a mission ary and who, perhaps, have never seen a white man of any kind. They eat human flesh to-day, as they hav from time Immemorial." SAW A OHQ8T to Cemetery That Diiim4 cm Dead Men's Graven, New Haven (Conn.) Special Now Vork World: TTo those that are In clined to scoff at the residents near Mapledale cemotery because they are excited over a ghost that dances night ly over new-made graves the point Is mode that the believers bave seen the wrath while the unbelievers bave not For three dark nights many persons have gathered at the cemetery gates, and the ghost, being a well-bred and considerate specter, has not disap pointed them. It has walked regular ly and dunced with Its usual grace. Any one who does not believe In ghoBta should talk to John Bertram and George. E. Backmaller. They laughed at the suggestion of disem bodied spirits promenading In a cem etery or anywhere elBo, and the sug j gestton that a ghost would danoe they declared was manifestly absurd. Last night the young men announced that they would clear up the ghost mys tery and placed themselves on guard In tho cemetery, thereby winning many compliments for their pluck until the ghost appeared. Then the two brave young men took to their heels and never stopped running until they were exhausted. They said that nothing would persuade tbem to enter the cemetery again at night so long as the weird manifestations contin ued. Several spiritualists were among those on guard last night. They also saw tho ghost. They explained It by saying that tt was a spirit seeking someone It had wronged In life. It has not been determined whether It la a man ghost or a woman ghost, but It Is properly attired, according to all traditions, In a long, flowing robe ot white. It violates one of the rules of ghosts, however. In that It makes Its appearance before midnight. It wat about H o'clock last night when It suddenly appeared out of nowhere, and after floating about for half an hourt melted into thin air In the most approved fashion. From the stories ot those who have seen It the ghost appears to be moet capricious In Its movements, having no fixity of pur- pose. Sometimes It moves slowly, and then' It darts along. Occasionally II stops. At times It hops from mound to mound, and when It finds a new made grave executes a curious .slow and dlgnlP ' '-" There Is a large cat "farm" in Lin coln county, Oregon, and the residents In the vicinity have obtained the con sent of the poatoftlce department to the christening ot their postofflce by the name ot Angora. The first post master of Angora, singularly enough, la Thomas Tom. Mapolaon't Tcleaespa Found. According to tbe London Chronicle, the telescope which Napoleon I used to carry has turned up in Turin. At the April sale of ostrich feathers In London $7,000 pounds were taken at prices aggregating $610,000. Medlral nook Free, "Know Thyself." a book for men only' aunt free, poetpald. sealed, to any mils reader mentioning this pat or 6n. for pott, ssa. The rVlence of Life, or Reir-Preser-yatlon, the Oold Medal fries Trestles, Ins bett Medlral Hook ot this or any sen, B70 pp., with engraving sod prescriptions. Pi!' P'"' "". Library Edition, Jul gilt. -1.1)0. Address The reabody Med-l-nl Institute, No. IiulOnch gt., Boston, flaan., Ilia oldest nnd beet In this country. Write to-dsy for these bookti keys to health. London newsboys are now prohibit? I from yelling lorth tlie contents of their wares. What Shall XWm Wave Wr Dwsaartf Tblt qamtloa arises In the faintly dally. Let Hi answer It to-day. Try Joll-O, a delicious snd healthful dessert. Prepared In I mis. No bolllngl do baking I Hlmply add a llttls bot water Atet tooool. Flavors: Lemon, Ornne;, Batpborryand strawberry. At grooert. 10a Hasbeesh is the cause of 31 out of every hundred cases of insanity in Egypt. Ara Ton t'alns; Allen's Foot. Pa It la the only curs for Rwo'len, Hmsrtlng, Tlrad, Aching, Hot, Rweat'inr Fwt, Corns sud liunlona. Ask tor Allen's Poot-hae. a powder 10 bo shaken Into the ahoea. ( un a while, you wulk. At all Urugulsta and Khoe Ktoree, SSa Mmple sent HIKE. Address Allan M. (Jlmslad, Leltoy, N. 1". More than 1.000 kinds of rubber shoes arc made in the United States. T Cnrm a Cotit In One tay. Tska t,stTiTB Bsoso gcmiKS Tisisrs. All druaal; refund tbe m,,my If It tan. tetr. . W. Usovs s alsuatura la on aaoh box. as Statistics show that women marry later in life than they used to. A dyre tie la never on gord terms with lilmsi-lf. Komolhlug always wronv. Get It rlgbt Ly chewing Uwmau'a Pepsin Oum. Of the .1700 Chinese in New Zealand only twenty-six are females. K. n.Wilthatl A Co., T)ni(rrlta Tforae Tuva, Ky..ejr: "HalPa t-nfjirrh C'uro cures every oaeUal Wkralt" t-olU by LniKKlKt. Ida. The animal that first succumbs to ex treme cold is the horse. tTnpJa Sam usa the be't of ererrlhlnf. Uncle Sam uiea Carter's Ink, He Juruns. In KafTraria cattle constitute the chief currency. Fit permanently cured. No flt or nervous. Bees after llrt dar'a use of Dr. Kline's (ireat JJerre lUstorer. tJ trial bottle and treatise Lraa. Dr.lUl.b.UKB.LW.Wl Axca Stl'ulla.i' Wanted Corpae MtufTed. In Yorkshire a clergyman, the othor day, visiting a poor man who had Just lost blB little boy, endeavored to con sole him. The poor man burst Into tears, and In the midst of bis sobs exclaimed: "If 'twarna ag'n flaw A should ha' liked to have t'litUe beggar ttoofed." TO WOMEN WHO DOUBT. Every Bofferlng Woman ShonM Read this Letter and be Convinced that Lydla E. Plnkham't Vegetable Compoand Iloes Cora Female Weakness. " I have been troubled with female weakness in its worst form for about ten years. I had leucorrhrra and was so weak that I could not do my housework. 1 also had fall ing of the womb and inflammation of the womb and ovaries and at menstrual periods I suffered ter ribly. At times my back would ache very hard, I could not lift anything or do any heavy work) wasnotabla to stand on my feet My husband spenti hundreds of dollars for doctors but they did me no good. After a time I concluded to try your medicine and I can truly aay it does all that you claim for it to do. Ten bottles of Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and seven pack ages of Sanative Wash ha.ee made a new woman of me. I have had no womb trouble since taking the fifth bottle. I weigh more than I have in years can do all my own housework, sleep well, have a good appetite and now feel that life is worth living. I owe all to Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegeta ble Compound. I feel that it has saved my life and would not be without it for anything. 1 am always glad to recom mend your mediclno to all my sex, for I know if they follow your directions, they trill be cured." Mas, Asms Thompson, South Hot Springs, Ark. A 200-Pagt) Illustrate Book ol w r 1 1 LsttAV ana Kectpes for th Farmsr arid tho Farmer'. Wlta. And ovary Olnar man ring from tbs experience wuo nave pasa experimenting; ana practising ins re Suits of those experiments, generation attar generation, to obtain tbs beat knowledga as to how certain things oan ba aoeoropHebedTontll all that valuable Information Is gathered togetbar In tblt volume, to ba spread broad cast for tbs benefit of mankind at tba popular prtoe ol -IHOUSEHOLbl- S lift Cents la Poitf e The low nrir ia nnlv tniita mi I libit by the enormous number of the books being? nrinted and anlri. it treats 01 almost evsrythlng In tbs wsy of Houaebold Maltsrt, Inoludlns RnUKH tan vnin v r.u ,.. mu . ani i-r.r. e-.ii rA.iisi.i rmrc. I uu.mih.wi m.uniniunD uompwilll 1 and aivine the Mutt le-t and most Ap proved Uethoda of Iraatuieal. COOKING KKC.'BIPTS. Including all ku da of Plain and Fa'iev biahae fog Br.akfagt, Ittuser and aiupi-er. UAKK OF CIIII.DltF.Sf, lu the most rational war from birth , to tbe tlroe they ere old euongh lo ar-oo nnmarons 10 meotlon-a verltabla Household Advbier. In an raTI 5'-l!ch " e.011 V V"' ooBtalalof doctor, this book It worth many times Its low prloa. 1 Sant PostpeVd for 80 Oanta In Stamp. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUCE. 184 LCONARD STRICT, NCW VORK CITV. Look in your mirror today. Take a last look at your uray hair. If sure ly may be the last if you want It so ; you needn'tkeep your gray longer than There's no about this: VEAOS hair a week you wish, guesswork It's sure every time. 10 re store color to Cray hair use After uslne it for two or three weeks notice how much younger you ap pear, ten years younger at least. Ayer's Hair Vigor also cures dandruff, prevents falling of the hair, makes hair grow, and is a splen did hair dressing. It cannot help but do these things, for it's a hair-food, when the hair is well fed, It cannot help but grow. It makes the ' scalp healthy and this cures the disease that causes dandruff. II .00 a bottle. All drnggtsts. ' My hair was coming out badly, tint Ayer'a Hair Vlipor stopped the falling; and ha mnla my hair very thick and mtirh riiuker than before. I think there la nothing Ilka it for the hair." Cuba M. I.r.A, April 25, 1890. Yarrow, I. T. ! Ihm Oeeop. Tf Ton tin not obtain all the benefits ynu tlnnlra from Ilia una of the Vigor, write the doctor about It. Alor., Da. J.C. AVKK, Lowell, Haas, Twelve thousand people in the Missouri-Kansas mineral district live in tents the year round. Jell-O, (be Near Dessert, Pleases nil the family. Four flors: Lemon, Orange, Itnspl.erry snd Strawberry. At your groonrs. 10 ot. According to Salt Lake City figures the number oi Mormons now in exist ence is 360,000. Mrs Wlnlr.wPnoth!nirrtip forrbllilren teetbln?, eoftenatheKuina, rt'dures Inflamma tion, allays jiain. curve wind colic. liVj a buttle. In 1870 there were 9,000 Shakers in the United States. At present they do not number more than 1,000. I am anrs Plso'g Cure for Consumption saved my Ufa three yeam ano Mrs. Thok. Hob dins, Maple St., Norwich, N. V Feb. 17, 11)0 The annual death rate of Geneva, Switzerland, is only 147 a thousand. The Best Prsserlptlna for Chills ana Fever Is a bottle of Orovs's TaersiiM CsiLl Tonio. It la aim pi 7 Iron and quinine Is a Uaielaaa form. No cure no na. frtoa tOa. In Kansas it is proposed to start a magazine which shall be contributed to PRPY'Q n N. Wilt. S,im, Rf, aaret Fray's Vernilfnir la tbe ! Vwnrro destroyr f have ever found, l leaaa t? Kiftfl oie Mini. riitht ,i,v U ,rB- '''' Mvnn. OoMonvUle, Va.i - - 1 lri ' nr"t FtrV'11 Vermifuge the 'vtry sws a liettt one I havevr u-ed. I write you Hire. 1 a I cannot nn.l It II hi the norea, anl I iuul have this kiud and no Vs a- other. W. E. Fowler, Ameebnry, Ma"., rare: Plesae send one bottle of yonr Frev'a vermlfoiie rammt net It here. At druggiata or by mail for SA rents. K, V H. Film-, Hnlilmora, MA. P. KU. 8P, '00. YOUR COW'S PRODUCTION will ) e lnrreaeedS0pereent.br aslns onr aluminum ('ream Separators and np-tn-late rhnrna. $ tin. 10 days trial. Catalogue free. A 'litre, a, . lb. in.u.Slewarl Alls;, ta., Oluauula, Vm. flDHDCV "RW DISCOVERY; gtvea llf Wl Q 1 flute rftitafand eurea worst M.aa- Boa f tMtimomaU and lOilaya' lraataiata Vres. Sr. S. a. sassa's loss. .i S. AUaai. ta. I Stmt Cuuiih fcjrup. TuttM CcnX Cm 1 in lima ti. i k. d..i.. Information ) (25 CENTS IN PONTAGE KTA.MP. and woman who la dealrona of benefit ot thoss brainy and patient sooia- iimp esMWtc 0DV15ER.IQ 1 wr Tag HORMR, " ' wog sua ronitry, with uoat LfaVacloua Treatment, HIM-M.LANKOI ItKCBIPTM. Wlat to Keeping better Swaat. 1 irora tJleanlna WSIIC HTAT.1IBNTof DIMKASE brmutoms of eeca l.ia aae w.th the MVT.VuVT."0 MUM "Ting 1; aieiaoa 01 uurws. mm I