) TO YOUNJT LADIES. from the Treamirer of the Young People's Christian Tern- prance Association, Elizabeth alne, Fond du Lac, Wis. "Dmn Mux. riNKiUM! I want to tU ,you and all the voting ladlea of the otiiitry, how frateful 1 am to you for all the brneBt I hare reeeived from wng Lydlft 12. rinkhnm's Vefre toblfl Compound. 1 Buffered for MIS3 ELI7.ABKTH CAHTE. Ifrht months from aunpreaaed men Rtruatton, and it effected my entire .yetem until I"beenme weak ami deVill Hated, and at times felt that I had a hundred aches in aft many places. I only used the lomponnd for, a few weeks, but it wrought a chnnjre in ma whleh I felt from the very beginning. I have been very regular since, have no pains, and find thnt my entire body ia as if it was renewed. I gladly recom mend I.vrUn. K. Pinkhnm'a Vrgre table Compound to everybody." Wiis Emzabkth Caisk, 89 W. Division St., Fond dn I.ne. Wis. fSOOO forfait If moot testimonial lo "ft ffravaa. At auch a time the greatest aid to nature Is Lydla 13. Ptnkham's Vcg-etftblo Compound. It prepares the young system for the coming change, and la the surest reliance for woman's ills of every nature, Mrs. Plnkhant invite all yonrtfr women who are ill to write her for free advice. Ad dress Lynn, Mass. Natives Keep Valuable Secret. The Antalmoro, one of the oldest tribes of Madagascar, possess the sec ret of making, from the pulp of a na tive shrub, a very beautiful and endur ing kind of paper, resembling parch- ment. Each family possesses a few sheets of this paper, on which Its chronicles and traditions are recorded, Mid the same paper Is used for trans ciblng the laws of Mohammedanism. Tie paper is said to have been Invent ec In the middle of the ninth century by a Mohammedan shipwrecked on the const, who desired to transcribe hif torii and, water-soaked copy of the Korln In an enduring form. The An taUrrforo will only make the paper for safe when some pressing necessity "arises. The more you flatter tome people the more they rise in their own estimation. FITS permanently on red. Ko fits ornorvons Hms after flrst day's use o( Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Kaatorar. fa trial bottle and treatiaetroe Dr. B. 11. Kuhb, Ltd., 931 Arch St., l'hila., Pa. Over one-third of the manufactured goods which are made in France are the products of female labor. Catarrh Cannot Bm Camxl With loeal applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease, ('atarrh Is a blood or constitutional disenao, and in order to en re It you must take Internal rnnieclloa. Han Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, nnd aota directly on tho blood and mucous surf ane. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the beot physi cians In this country for years, and is a reg ular prescription, It Is composed of the best tonios known, combined with the bent blood purlflors, acting directly on tho mu eous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Ingredients is what produces such wonderful results la curing catarrh. Bend for testimonials, free. F. J. Chssev ft Co., Props., Toledo, O. Bold by drugglHts, price, 75c. Boll's Family Tills are the best. The largest order of merit in the world is the French Legion of Honor, which now ho reached half a million members. A Nasty Praattea. A nasty practice is what the Chicngo In ter Ooean calls the pasting of repeated lay ers of wall paper, one upon another, thus covering up the filth and geims of disease that may be propagated In the very absorb ent ud decaying mass of flour paste, paper, animal glue, colors, etc They give opinion of eminent hoalth nfn ears and sanitarians, urging that such prae. tloe should be stopped by legal enactment, and also take occasion to say that these sanitarians recommend Alnbastlne as a dur able, pure and sanitary coating for walls. Tbe Inter Ocean say: "This is a very Im portant question, and. as It costs nothing to avoid this dangar, why take nny chances?" How much of the alarming spread of small- fox and other dlauaaes may be duo to unsaii tary wall coverings? The planetoida, of which there are over 800 known, have all been discovered since January 1. 1801. Lost His Rhei mzsit i sm Dy the use of a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil. Seegbant Jeef.miah Mahee. of Ard cath, iyyal Irish Constabulary, says i 11 My friend, Mr. Thomas Hand, has been a great sufferer from rheumatism in the back and joints for the last four years, daring which time he has employed many different methods of treatment, bat obtained no relief whatever, and for the last two years has been unable to walk without a stick, and sometimes two sticks, and was la great pain constantly. 1 induced him to procure a bottle of St Jacobs Oil, which he applied with the most astonishing and marvellous effects. Before he bad finished using the contents of tbe first bottle he could walk' readily without the aid of a stick, and after s few application! from the second bottle ha was free from pin, and has been ever since and although fifty years of age and a former. he coa- walk and work without experiencing t J . U. I . L M h Vkwlsb'i CnaATivs Compound, iha (rut rowdy n paopl wall l it ia and Irom Uw formula i t ..-Ml Londoa phyatciaa. Send to at Jacobs w. -( a ...imoc, mo., is a arte aaaapu bottle. The Yatfie nf Sheet, Sheep are the only animals whlrh do not really exhaust the land on which they feed. They dlatrlhute man ure evenly on the field nnd trample It Into the soil, feeding upon plants that other animals will not consume. Varied HIM for Chlrka. The Importance of hnvlng a greatly varied diet for growing rhli ks should be kepi In lew. Variety templs their appetites, while a contlnilotm feeding of nny one kind f food will mime nau sea nnd bowe! ailments If long persist ed In. Do not use damaged food of any kind. Feed In clean places never on the around conlaniinnted with drop ping. If feeding trntmlis are not used fiwecp n place clean on the ground be fore feeding, nnd If you can get good clean n'inrp snnd. scatter some on tho clean feeding ground nl least every day. Poultry Culture. I Iclifln? Iltiga anil mights. Tiie fig'itlng of Insert and f litmus enemies Is as important, ns any other part of potato culture. 1 lie applica tion of nn arsenical poleon Ih the only rellaUc. Inexpensive method for fight ing the Insect pesls. and bordeaux nilx tuie is the only sure preventive of the nllght. As soon as the potatoes are three or four inches high, they should be sprayed with bordeaux mix ture and parls green, or bordeaux mix ture and lead arsenate. This should be repeated as often as the plants make five or nix Inches of additional growth. When the danger of the Colorado beetle Is pnnsed. bordeaux mixture alone can be used. The spraying should be continued as long as tho po tatoes continue to make rapid growth To ward off the blights it Is necessary that each leaf be protected, so far as practicable, with a coating of cop per. Spraying is the most effective method of applying Insecticides and fun gicides. To obtain the best results tho material must be forced through a pro per tio7.le so as lo make a very line mist. On small fields for force pump a hose, nozzle and a barrel for holding the spraying mixture and a wagon for carrying the above would consti tute the necessary Rpraing outfit. This form of an outfit can be used not only for spraying potatoes, hut a!:io used on fruit trees. In largo fields, ten and twenty acres or more, it is advisable to use an automatic sprayer. In our practice we have found those that spray four rows better than where it Is attempted to spray a larger number at one time. Professor Charles D. Woods, in American Agriculturist. Feat According to the Work, I rare for farm horses through the winter according to tho amount of work they have to do. Somo winters we have more work than we can do, or than we can get to do during some other winters. Last winter I broke all of my corn ground. Thl3 winter I have no plowing that I can do at ail. So our horses last year, or wlntor rather, were fed differently from the way they wil bo fed this winter. Dur ing the winter feed Just enough to keep the" horses in good flesh, and solid flesh at that. I don't like the idea of getting horses ovcrfat in win ter and running thorn down to poor in summer. Would rather have them in good flesh tho year round. To do this feed according to tho work to bo done. For winter fend a little corn and oats, plenty of straw (oats straw preferred), a little shredded fodder and only occasionally a small feed of clover hay; and be sure that they get plenty of water at regular hours of the day. Salt regularly and give plenty of exor cise when weather will permit. I find that horses wintered in this way are in bettor fchnpc for work when spring comes. Then, of course, increase their grain diet and put them on hay, mixed preferred. In place of tho straw fodder, You will bo surprised how they will stand work and hold tholr flesh. One year I worked four horses all the year on four loads of hay, but whon they were not at work they wero in good pasture during summer and fall, and in the winter they wero fed this straw and fodder I have Just mentioned. So by feeding in this way we not only eave feed, but keep our horses with good appetites as well. T. A. P., in In dlana Farmer. The Cirapa. The grape, as we know It today. Is an American plant Indigenous spe cies, found wild over the entire United States, are nearly equal to the whole number in the remaining world. Hence, the insect enemies are, to the greater extent, American in origin. There fore, the great increase in the vine in dustry In this country, and a desire to grow the less vigorous European grapes, make it of vital Importance to familiarize ourselves with all insect enemies and diseases, to the end that we may find quick remedy. In some cases it is desirable to know a pre ventive. Tho grape phylloxera, toge ther with such blighting fungous dis eases as tbe two mildews and the bleach rot, outrank all other vine evils. Upwards of 200 different insects have already been listed as enemies to the vine in this country, and the records of the experimental department show over 100 different Insects. Taking this for text the grape grower has an Im portant lesson to learn, and If the best results are to be obtained the grower must enter upon these studies at once. The Insect enemies and diseases are referred to here In a broad sense, yet It li avlthln reach of every grower to know these Insects and diseases and arn the remedies and preventives and to know what and how to apply them. Tho Pacific coast produces more than one-half the grape crop of the united fltntes. The varieties grown In this re gion are mostly derived from one spa tes of grape, Vltls vlnlfera, which Is supposed to be a native of Asia, but by many years of extensive cultivation in Europe It has become known as the luropean grape. The varieties through out the Central and Eastern portions of the Vnlted Stales are largely orig inated from the native North American pedes, and are less liable to the Bl acks of the phyllo era, and are much ess Injured when attacked. Coulure a a malady found In the Pacific coast districts to a greater extent than else- I where In the United States. The word Is taken from the French meaning Imperfect bloom nnd growth of grape. ho bunches having berries of different sizes anil stnto of ripening. Tho cause 1 of Coulure attributed, by good author- Itv, lo climatic changes, and Is the most damaging In Ihn raising vine- aids, though the same trouble Is often found In the market vineyards of the cnRt.nnd causes a great deal of troublo n rlnssing and grading grapes for mar- ket. Grapes that are sell fertllo in bloom may bo benefited In this matter by sacking as soon as the fruit stem forms. S, II. Linton, In Tho Epltom lt. The Strawherry Crop. The new strawberry bed must bo prepnred as early as possible. The young plants set out this spring are tho ones that, bear the male crop next year, although beds two or three years old also produce fruit, but, as such beds are dlitlcult to keep clean of weeds and grass, strawberry growers find It more profitable to give good cultivation nnd an abundance of plant food to now beds using the old bods for some other crop. If old beds are to be preserved, however, cultivation ran be given only between the rows, using fertilizer lib- I orally, .lnnuie should not now bo ap plied to strawberry plnnts, as it may Injure the berries later, and that ap plied last fall should be raked over with a fine rake at tho time of remov ing tho mulch. If weeds appear In old beds, they should be pulled out by hand, and such work will have lo bo done frcnuentlv. If the bed was well l cultivated last year there may be but few wee In. and for that reason all new beds should be kept as clean an pos-, Mhlo: In fact, nny cultivation the fit-Bt yesr will save labor the next season. When applying fertllli'.ers It should be done early, and before the crowns begin to grow In tho spring. If the land was well manured last Fall but little fertllier will fie necessary, but nitrate of soda, at the rate of 200 pounds per acre, nearly always gives good resulU on strawberries. Old beds are those that have produced one crop. The new fruiting bods are those that are expected to bear tho first crop thlB year. It Is the latter thnt should bo given tho most fertilizer. A mixture of 200 pounds nitrate of soda. 200 pounds superphosphate and 150 pounds muriate of potash per acre may bo ap- nllivl The annprnlinniifltA also inn- tains a proportion of nitrogen, but which Is less Uul)le than the nitrate, and will consequently last longer in the season. Some growers prefer to us9 lili' pounds of nitrate of soda and 100 pounds of ground dried blood, fearing that in case of ground ant rain a por tion of the nitrate, which Is very solu ble, will be loKt or carried beyond tho reach of the: roots on light soils. After applying tho fertilizer it will bo an ad vantage to mulch around the plants in order to protect against drought as much as possible, success with straw berries depend largely upon the sup- ply of moisture, as the best crops aro obtained when there Is a plentiful sup ply of water to dissolve tho fertilizer. By keeping the ground covered with a mulch evlporaiion of moisture is largely prevented. When setting out. new beds this spring, which should be done in April, or sooner if tho ground will permit use only the runners from last year's plants, and aim to secure those that arc largo and strong, having only whito roots, which are well rooted. A runner, or plant, which has blos somed or boron fruit should be dis carded, and when planting tho run- ners let tho roots be well spread out and not cramped. They should bo set one's tongue, charging $5 a glance, out On fine, deep soft ground, that has flive me tho doctor who is unknown been well prepared. Any manure and hasn't nn Bntoroom full of patients used should bo fine and free from lit- wno aro waiting to ten him whnt's ler. The plants are usually placed 12 the matter with them. Death Is the Inches apart In the rows, but may be JudBp. J"rV nnrt witnesses, that the doc given more room with advantage. Tho tor naa to fae- ,and neither a reputa rows may be far enough apart to admit tlon "or a blg "ttir c,"nt8 " cenU of cultivation with a horse hoe. or worth.-Chlcago Record-Herald, closer If hand hoes are preferred. : Not a weed or blade of grass should Four of lawyers. be allowed, and the top soil should Thero aro today, roughly speaking. ho Isnt lnnto hu TCnrklnir tha anil ft,.r fOUT ClOSSCS Of lawyers first. the every rain. When the plants are weil under way and before the dry season begins, fertilizer may be applied and worked into the soil, the mixture sug gested for bearing beds being suit able. Philadelphia Record, What He I.afr. I In a little New England village ltvel a lawyer famous for drawing wills. In which branch of the business rae had leng enjoyed a monopoly of the bust, ness of the country. On the death of a certain respected citizen there was much speculation as to the value of the property, and tna village go -sip undertook to find out the) facts.' He hunted up the lawyer and said, rather bluntly 1 "I suppose you made Blank's will?" "Yes." "Then you prubbly know now much be left. Would you mind telling me?" "Not at all," answered the lawyer, deliberately. "He left everything fee bad."Youth'i Companion, LAST NEW THING IN MICROBES. If your hair Is growing gray, lo you know what turns it thus? 'TIs a mlorobe, savants ssy, ( nlle.l the ria-me-tuph-a-gust Which, entrenched In every hair, Feeds upon thu pigment there. Bo, henceforward, vou should say, When each lock to silver turns. Not that you are growing gray Helnnce such brief phrases spurns Vou should It you'd not be musty Hay you're plgmetophagusty 1 London Truth, HUMOROUS. Mabel "Is ho an entertaining con vorralutlonlst?" Beth "Very. He lots you do all the talking." Wlcwa "I naked him hv h. .m mnrrlo,,i nm, ,10 .JlHt for u . .. enpecklo-"ne must have a pecu .. . . !,,,. "" " """' "" rwvuiuuons in ' ,,ofor' alighting?" asked the 'urious stranger oi me circus acroimi. "Say." replied the acrobat, "I'm no H'""n American repiipuc: "Will thcup bo any honor for (he man who discovers the North Pole?" "Certainly! Iln will be a groat life saver." "A llfesaver?" "Yes, ex plorers will ceaso going then." Kinsley "You'vo been to these lit erary clubs and nmtaphyslenl things for two or threo years now, and whnt does your culture amount to?" Mrs. Klngsley "Don't I know everybody?" "And sho Isn't married yet? Orac loiiti! She's well preserved! She Is Hie samn ltlrdlo Hopplndyke she was fifteen years ago." "No, she's not the same. She spells it 'Byrdyt1' now." Hook "Do you believe in having your fortune told? Nye "Well, a fortune tcllc-r told me once to expect troiiblo from a stout, dark woman, Bn, tno ve,-y ext day I had to Are tho cook. Fogg "I heard a pretty compliment for you tho other day." Mrs. Passcy "Indeed, may I ask what It was?" Fogg "1 heard pome one say bow pretty you UKod to be." Mrs. Passey "Used to bo! Do you call that a compliment? I call It an obituary no lice." tinn now no you no .nan 'a? How did you like the reading of Browning nt tho club lattt night Mrs. Bluff "Oh. pretty well. But , 1 lldu t IIUo tho way her dress hung. Mrs. (lush "Nor I cither. And it seemed to mo that she might have lie. tho book more gracefully." "Sadie, how are you getting along .,-hool In your iihvnloloRV?.. "All right, I guess." "How many bones an? thero In tho human body?" "Two hundred." "When I went to school dear, thero were two hundred and right." "Well, people arn't as bonja as thoy used to be when you went to school, mamma." "What Is heredity, mamma?" Ask ed tho llttlo girl, spelling the word out through her falling tears, and waiting to write down the meaning. "It is m. bow shall I explain It? Oh," said tl,fl '"otho,. 'something you get from your father or mo." And the small child wroto down on her paper of homo lessons: "Heredity spank ing." Opinions of nenjaniln Klbha, "When I have to fight a case In court I want to find a lawyer who has a reputation ono who Is able to have a suite of offices splendidly fur nished, who employs five or six type writers and stenographers, and who lias to turn clients away because he is so busy. If I can get such a lawyer to ,ko my caso 1 have It more than half won at tho start. He will bo allowed to do things in court t'.iat a young, un known attorney would not dare to try, and If he can't browbeat tho judge him self ho can at least awe the Jur ors and tho witnesses, all of whom have hoard of him. They know that ho Is a great lawyer, and, therefore, his words have weight with them. Always get a lawyer with a reputation when you go to court. "But when my child is sick I will not go after a doctor who makes his rounds In a coupe, with a liveried driv er on the box, and lias so many pa tients that ho can spare only tlmo enough to run in and glance at each corporation attorney, who dra an' assured salary or retainer of ample magnitude; second, tho lawyer of the old school, who maintains the Ideals of his profession, anl who is being slowly crushed between centralization of commercial interests on the one hand, and tho sharp practice of hla competitors on the other; third, those mon nominally lawyers' who supple ment their meagre professional in come by collections, loan and Insur ance business; fourth, the "rustler,' who seeks business by Rio same meth ods as the travelling salesman secures his orders, and who either never knew, or has forgotten that the duty of an upright counsellor Is to prevent, not to foster, litigation. From Julge Stephen A. Lowell's Address at the University of Oregon. ' Korway, Ireland and Spain have more blind people In proportion to population than any other European countries. . Spain has 218 per 100,000, Norway 208 and Ireland 111. LARGER PENSION AT 103. Hiram Cronk the Last Pensioner cf War of 1812. A bill Is pending in the House to Increase the pension of Hiram Cronk, of Oneida county. New York, who Is said to be the sole survivor of the Wsr of 1812. from $12 to $25 per month. Hiram Cronk is said to be 103 years old. There are now on tho pen sion rolls 1.B27 names of widows cred ited to soldiers of the War of 1812, but the most of these married men much older than themselves, and tholr hero soldier boys have long since passed away. Personally Cronk took no part In thr fighting, but he enlist ed and was ready to meet the British. As his services were not required he was discharged. Next day he was in Wstertown, snd in thn night was aroused by the sound of cannonading. A day later he learned that a British gunboat had passed and fired a few shots at the defenses of Saekett's Har bor. Cronk went homo, but enlisted again on October 8, 1814. He served 4il days as a private, and assisted in building log barracks along thn shore at Saekett's Harbor. Ho was honor ably discharged Novemhor 18 follow ing. Hiram Cronk married Polly Thornton at Western (now Western vllle). Oneida county, March 21, 1825, and In the years that followed sev eral children were born to them. He subsequently received from the Fed eral government two military bounty land warrants, one for 120 acres and one for 40 acres, but sold them. In 1871 he filed a pension claim, but It was rejected. It was reopened In 1878 and $8 a month was allowed him. In 188(5 his pension was Increased to $12 a month. Of late years ho has been quite feeble, and has required a guard ian. He lives on a little farm (mort gaged to almost its full value), and his daughter and son-in-law live with him. Tho daughter Is 70 years old. Cronk still takes an Interest In war matters and current politics. His eye sight and hearing are still fairly good. New Petroleum Motor. A new Invention Is announced, which, If all that Is said of It be true, will revolutionize the petroleum motor. As is known, engines of the kind, In their present form, require the Introduction Into the cylinder ot air, the latter producing with tho pe troleum vapor a mixture which Is ex ploded by the electric spark. Car bonic acid gas Is thrown off through the escape pipes. Tho new Invention Is that of a chemical process, still kept secret, by which, It Is said, the escape of gas In question can be utilized pre cisely to feed tho cylinder. A contin uous series of chemical transforma tions, so to speak, Is established. Tho twofold result of the process Is that tho engine, first, does not deprive the atmosphere of pure oxygen by appro priating the gas for Its own consump tion; and, secondly, does ont further reduce the proportion of pure oxygon Ir. the air around by throwing out car bonic acid gas. The Invention is chiefly ot Importance for submarine navigation, and its author is Bald to be a naval engineer. Hitherto, sub marine boats have necessarily been propelled by electric power. If the petroleum motor can bo Improved so that It does not Impoverish the air around. It will be applicable to vessels ot the kind. This will be an obvious saving of weight and bulk In the en gines of submarine boats. Apart from this consideration the now Invention will obviously effect a considerable economy of weight in tho petroleum motor itself, an advantage of import ance for automoblllsm generally and in particular tor aerial navigation. It requires no experience to dye with Pitt SAM Pauf.lt.ss Dyes. Hlmply boiling your goods in the dye is all that is necussary. bold by all druggists. It Is expected that the railway now being built to connect Valparaiso with the Rio de la Plata will be com pleted in five or six years. neat ror the sowali. Ho matter what alls you , headaoba tea aan rer, you will never gat woll until your bowels are put right. Casuabktb help nature, cure yon without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you lust lOoantsto start gottlng your health bank. CAacaasra Candy Cathartin. the genu Ine, put n p In metal boxes, every tnblnt lias 0. C C. stumped ou it. Ueware of imitations. Camels aro the only animuls thnt cannot iwim. Man Mrhnnl ('HlMren Are Mlrkiv. Mot liar Gray's Hweot Powders for Chi Idren, used by Mother Gray, a nurxe in Children's Home, New York, brouk up Colilitlu 24 hours, cure Feverltthuoss, Huadueho, Htomach Troublea, Teatlilug Dlaordors and Destroy Worms. At all druggists' 26o. Hampln mailed Free. Address Allen H. Olmsted, l,w Koy, NX Germany is to expend $75,000 on mili tary motor-cars. Piso's Cure eannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure. J. W. O'Uuikn, 822 Third Avouuo, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1UU0 The favorite air of the average girl if a nJlionaire. Weak? . " I suffered terribly and was ex tremely weak for 12 years. The doctors aaid my blood was all turning to water. At last I tried Ayer's Sarsaparllla, and waa soon feeling all right again." Mrs. J. W. Fiala, Hadlyme, Ct. No matter how long you have been ill, nor how poorly you may be today, Ayer s Sarsaparllla Is the best medicine you can take for purifying and en riching the blood. Don't doubt it, put your whole trust in it, throw away everything else. li a a mim. au Ak roar doctor what ha thlnka of AyWa Baraaparllla. Ha kuowaatl about thla srana old family madlclna. Follow blaadrloa au4 wIUbaaU.AMt. i. C. tril Ce., lorn-all, Maas. DAM GROSVENOR SAYS: "Pe-ru-na is an Excellent Spring C&f&rrh Remedy I am as Well as Ever." 1105. DAS. A. UH0SVENOK, OF TIIE FAMOUS OHIO FASIILT. Hon. Kim. A. flrosvenor. Deputy Auditor for the Wnr Department, in a let ter written from Washington, D. C, snys: "Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit derived from one bottle of Peruna. One week has brought won derful changes and I am now as well as ever. Besides belnir one of the very best spring- tonics It la an excellent catarrh remedy." DAN. A. GROSVEINOR. In a recent letter be says: "I consider Peruna really more meritorious than I did when I wrote you last. I receive numerous letters from acquaintances nil over the Country asking me If my certificate la genuine. I Invariably answer, yes. "nan. A Cmin-reaainan'a letter, Hon. II. W. Ogclen. Congressman from Lnulsltimi, In a letter written nt Washington, D. C. says the following of reruns, the mitlonul catarrh rem edy: "t can cnnitrlenttoumlu rrrnm- ttietid iintir I'eruna an a linn tonlr and all around gond medicine to III on icno a re tn nrea or a catarrh rented). It ha been commended to me bi; people who have vned it, am a rem edit particularly effective in the cure of catarrh, for those trhoneed a good catarrh medicine 1 know of nothing better." II. If. Ogden, Treat Catarrh In Mprliiar. The spring Is the time to trent cn tarrh. Cold, wet winter wenther often retards a cure of catarrh. If a course Pest Your Eyes. Strong eyes are said to give their possessor both pleasure and confi dence, while weak eyes that feel and look hot and tired certainly give no delight to their owner nor to those who look back into them. It rests the eyes to shut them, If only for a min ute at a time. In some convenient In terval, and If It is any way possible to lie flat on the back for any length of tlmo tho gain to the eyes as well as to the whole body Is immense. England's Wnr Expenses. The army estimates Issued in Eng land show a grand total for the year 1902-03 of $301,550,000, which Is In tended to provide for 420,000 men, of which 219,700 men are for the ordi nary army service snd 200,300 for war services. The estimates, of which $200,000,000 Is required for war, show a decrease under this head of $ 116. 250,000 compared with 19012. -One of the Buenos Ay res newspa pers has a consultation room in which the poor can get medical aid and med icine free. Sold by u 1 'oub la Stores in Ameritan ci:ir. and the best retail alios dealers cverywhers. Cant Ion! The tenulne have : v Jj W. 1,. 1'ui.aUj' name aitd prk tumped on ilie bottom. Xutic 1nerftU4 of $aln in tatot oWoim !hbwBbw1qHbwIVII lHUttrrrHUH.iM-j Pi. I in. lHOQ l,25t,754 Pairs. 190lrl,SBtt,7ao Pair. tiatMM Hon Than Oouoloi In font Jfaora, mi?4.?uuSit? and sells wore mn't 9a.no ajvl $3.60 atiufs llian any ui tir iwonuimjiau-luma. W . L. Ituim Jae td.un and $a.U)alio placed aide by Sdewiih S&.uuami $.( aW-e of (.titer makes are mud to h just as it.. They will outwear two pairs of ordinary $ti uu and $a.U eJioe. Had of tti swat Itathtrt. including PaUmt Corona Kid, Coronm Colt and National Kangaroo. 99t Celer It'lHa m4 always VlMfc H4i 1'm4. t.L. IrMilu 4 tm K4e LiMeauaBetkwMMlUa. fchoes by rall,liA ta.)xtrtk. Catalog 1W. W. F.. li-Orr.rAS, Hrorkton, Heat. lcABOLT.Wir ploa Ire. Eini Wall r. Hoftlar aaine price, c. Sc. 4t. be up. bam . Boatar Falli, Pa. P. Ni H:S:;Zr: Thompson's Eyi tfatsr tjfl JB UNIOINMtDI, I A. Orosvenor. of IVrunii Is Inken during tho early spring months the cure will be prompt nnd permanent. There can be uo ruii ures If I'ci'ium Is taken Intelligently during the favorable weather of sprlii:.'. As a systemic eutnrrh remedy IV runii 'eradicates catarrh from the sys tem wherever It may be located. It cures entiirrii of the stomach or bow els with the same certainty as catarrh of the bend. If you do not derive prompt und sat Isfnctory results from the use of re runs write at once to Dr. Ilartmuu, giving a full statement of your case, nnd be will he pleased to give you bis valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hnrtmnn, President of The Hurt man Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. GOOD WEATHER FORDUCKS (009 WEATHER FOR YOU Y00 WEAR THE CEHUiNt OILED CLOTHING IHAtR Ot fELLOaV WET WEATHER PROTECTION IS CBARANTrXD BNDEt THIS TRADE MARK. OUR ruu LINS Of WATUPtOOP clotmik U ML r ftmStSTATIVt TRAM EVEVYNHfBt. A. J.TOWERCO. IOSTOH.MAiS. ,. Capsicum Vaseline Put up In Collapsible Tubes. A 8nbrtUnt for and Htiparior to Mart anl or nny Mbr planter. axl will notblitr th moat M.cm kin. The pais all ay in nd enratlv qua'tltoa of thiaartl ! ara wonderful. It will stop tu toth.-h at onca. and rellTa haadacna and a-Matica. We rarommn1 It aa tba beat and aihtut external countaiMirltant known, also aa an eiteraal rrme ly for painatn thrbat andsto.-narbaudaUrhmna W, neural trie and front y c implalnta. A trial will prove what we claim for it, and It will be found to be Inralnable la the houeehold. Mny people r "It ! tbe heat of all yuiir preparations. ' i?rlce, 15 centa, at all dnunriati or other donli.a or by ar-ndinvtlila s'nonnt to us 1a poatatre stamp wa will atm a you s tube by nisll. No article aUonld be accepted by the public uu1im tbe Ham carries our label, aa otbarwiaa it la not renuln. CHEESEBROUGH PtARUFACTURING CO., 17 StiU 8trot, Now York City. I have used "Ripans for several i years in my general practice as a first-class extempore remedy for late dinners' distress, and have carried them in my vest pocket in the little paper cartons. At ban quets and at lodge meetings ! have often passed one to an adjacent brother. At dniKirUta. Tbe Five-Cent paukut la enouirh for an ordinary oucaaton. Tbe family bottle, 00 cents, contain a aupply for a year. SALZER'S SEEDS. Oraat rataloaua, with lara anuibar of mw! muiii Halzer;tlaaU Cruabril Mktlla. Bi-at ou r;b. i..iSi.rmib. l.or. ; as. !6 t.ir ioillia. ,i.Mrnr feunt. JOHN A SALZS SEED CO., La Croii. Wil. T "cuatrpm I 1 Beat L'uiwh I 1 In iliua. utS anirit AIL 'uiuit. Myruo. T. In itrua. Hold b? ilrugjf lutit. I A. 1 wu Cat f I