SUFFERED 25 YEARS With Catarrh of the Stomach Pe-ru-na Cured. Congressman Eotkin. iif WlnnVltl. Kan. v............. ...... In i tntnl Irttcr to Dr. llartman Con grt"tnan ilotkin nnya: "My Dear Doctor It given mo pleasure to certify to the excellent euiative nimli tie of vour meilk-inrs IVrtina anil Munn lin. 1 nave been nlllieted mure or less fur a quarter of a century with catarrh of the stomach and cnnt jpntion. A i-esiilt'tu-e in Washington has increawil thprtt tmutilt-n. A few bottle of your inejiciue have ujvtn me almost complete relief, and 1 am sure tliat a conliiiuiition of them will eflect a permanent cure." .1. 1). ltotkin. Mr. I.. V. enlcry, a prominent real es tate agent, of Augusta, it.. writrs: " I have brcna itrrit Kuflrrerfrnm cnlarriinl tl upcila. 1 ii lcii tnnny phitmlrla hm, vititrtl n fjnntl man; prftif;N, hut 1 believe l'erimn, ham ion more far tne than nil. of the above put loyether. Iret tike a new leraon. " I I-. Yrrdery. The niojt common form of mimmer ca tarrh is catarrh of the stntiut'-ii. 'l'hia in generally known ns dyicpiu. l'cruna curea these ca.c like inapt'. If you do not derive prompt ami aatia factory results from the use of l'cruna, write at once to Dr. ll.irtm.in, giving a full alHtcinent nl your i-nsc and he will lie plruxcd to give you Ilia vuluuble advice gratia. Addreas Tr. Hnrtmnn. Treidcnt of Th Hurtmun aniturium, olumbu. O. A HISTORIC FLAG. The One Made and Carried by Gil more'a Little Party. A unique relic of Lieutenant Gil more'8 captivity and rescue In the Philippine was shown by General En ttene Griffin at the recent dinner ol the officers of the First regiment of , volunteer engineers. Spanluh War vet erans. This wag the American flag which wag made by the sailor's In Lieutenant. Gllmore's party out ol patches and strips of their clothing. ' The rescue party, commanded by Colonel Hare, made a brllllnat march. ' lasting over five weeks and surmount ed the most difficult obstacles In their progress. They found Lieutenant Gilmore and his men abandoned, with out food or arms by the insurgent! In the wildest part of Luton among the headhunted, where their fate would have ueen only a matter of a few hours If the rescue party had not arrived so opportunely. In spite ol the fact that all of them were half naked, they had sacrifled enough clothing to make up a fair substitute for the regular Stars and Stripes. I Feel So Tired. How often do we hear this and aimilat expressions from tired, overworked women and weary men, who do not know where to find relief. For that intense weariness, so common and so discouraging, we earnestly recommend Vogeler's Curative Ci,.poanL It is not a stimulant but a true blood purifier and strength restoring tonic, safe and sure, which will gradually build up all the weak organs in such a way as to be a lasting benefit. A fair trial of a free sample bottle which St. Jacobs Oil, Ud., of Baltimore, Md , will send you for the asking, will con vince anyone of It wonderful medicinal value. It will drive all impurities from the blood, give nerve, mental and bodily strength and vigour and make the sufferer wholly a new being. It creates an appetite, makes one sleep and makes the weak strong. Do not forget that Vogeler's Curative Compound is made from the formula of a London physician, who has given years of study to same. Sample bottle free from St. Jacobs Oil, Ltd, Baltimore. Mm. Soak, "Tin Roval Standard," Frlmlej Road, FVimlcy, writes : " I wit a great sufferer Iron: aciatica for many year. 1 tried all sort ol liniment aad embrocations which had no good effect i 1 used St. Jacobs Oil, and the pun left me Instantly.'1 ALADASTHIE Tb Only Durable Wall Coating: Wall Paper is unsanitary. Kal somines are temporary, rot, rub off a .id scale. ALABASTINE is a pure, permanent and artistic wall coating! ready for the brush by mixing tn cold water. l'or sale by paint dealers everywhere. Buy In packages and beware of worthless imitations. ALABASTINE COMPANY, Grand Rapids, Mich. STuiatumii i HiwiiaUwli V.Stook Hms.i MKtl'W liioili.r. Stuiib. of .11 ....Irus, Twutinif Mil.4kiliflri(tcar s.rk..U l&,jrLJ flll .lstw. 1-rto.BI Mlwmi'i tl .Sl"i I) ij'" V1I i lilsuiU ! Uluirs, Hi Isaac sluuMTea, releasM. Is, i Teat Vina Hay. As most farmers have trouble curing pea vine hay, I will write my experi ence, which may be of value to them. The time for cutting Is when the earl iest pods turn yellow. Walt until dew Id oft, then cut and let He as the mow er leaves It. Alter one dny's sunning and wilting haul and stow away In barn loft, but do not haul while dew Is on. Haul up each tiny the cutting of the tiny previous if It bos hud u day's sun on It. The hay In the lolt will sweat and drip wnter as If It had been rained on and will get very hot, but will not cau?e comhustlen so do not handle It. The result will be finely cured hay, keeping fresh In color and fresh hny aroma, and stock will ent It In preieicnce to any other hay, rating the course ftnlVs and all up complete ly. This method snv s a gr?at deal rf labor, tnves all the leave that would be lost by frequent hnndlins. and se cures excellent hay. Ed. Ellcnberg, tn the Eploinlst. How fn Set I'lanta. Much depend on getting plants well startrd. I cover the plants for the iivsi three days alter transplanting to piotoit thtni from the sun, anil nn t over them In the evening. This would not be prat ticr.ble on h large scale and In not absolutely necessary. It Is nl ways host to relse the plants and take thi n: up only ns fast as you can trans plant tlicni. In setting cabbage plants I take tiie plant and trim It. pinching off all the '.eaves but those around t!i- crown. Then take tiie plant In nhe band and with the other make a hole for It. setting It In a natural position, and pies the earth very firm. Tomato plants, if tall, as they usually are, should be trimmed up to the leaves around the crown. Do not set the plant Ftralght down. Make a shallow trench and lay the plant In this, cover ing It all up but the top leaves. A multitude of new roots will start out along the stem and the plant soon be comes firmly fixed. D. S. Carnahan In New England Homestead. Iters ltllnilers. Seven teasons why horse blinders tdtould be abolished are given as lol lows: First They doubtless originated In an attempt to conceal on ocular defect, prompted by vanity and not by utility or a spirit of beneficence. Second Unnecessary and superflu ous. Third Productive of highway acci dents in giving the animal only an im perfect and distorted view of ordinary objects. Fourth By enforcing the use of his rars Instead of his eyes In guarding the rearward space, It Is a violent re versal of the t'wo Important senses rendering Pegasus at once mole-eyed and mule-eared, a degenerating pro cess. Fifth They .. "Hctlve. In limit ing the victim In his ..atural allowance ol light, making their use, thus, a pal pable form of cruelty. Sixth Blinders, to be held In post tlon, require heavy and cumbrous headstall, making a load on the horse's head as well as a hideous deformity. Can a mechanic improve the Creator's lfandiwork In the elegance and beauty of the horse's head? Seventh The blinders, and perhaps the check, are the only part of the harness not essential to the proper at tachment of the animal to the vehicle, and therefore the only parts for which no one has been able to furnish a plausible excuse. J. A. Mowris, M. D., In New York Tribune Farmer. Starting Ilia Dnlry Calf. The calf la the foundation of what we Intend to make our source of profit and Income from. Proper methods are the points I wish to emphasize In rear ing the bovine infant. In brief, some of the essentials are a warm, clean birth-place, mother's milk for the first five days, the next five days one half mother's milk with skimmed milk warmed to blood heat, a light pen to watch the condition of bowels, a warm soft bed to lie on, clean feeding re ceptacles, regularity In time of feeding and the amount fed. Never feed dry grain in milk. The ralf learns to take It dry aa soon as nature Is capable of digesting It. Dry grain In the milk causes scour too frequently. Last and most Important Is the ute of a calf feeder to feed the milk to the young calf tn natures own way. In this manner they take their food slowly, arid do not gulp it down without the saliva of the mouth. It Is a sure preventive of scours. It maintain a perfect diges tion, which is necessary in the cow to make hay and grain into milk. Over two years experience ha shown to me the Importance of the use of a calf feeder. It absolutely prevents the call from sucking the cows, and does away with starving a calf In the cruel manner to force htm to the unnatural method of drinking. I have spent my last hour astride a calf trying to force him to take hi milk as nature has al ways pointed out to me was wrong. Tn obviate fattening the dairy calf 1b an Important item, a it la the mllkmak Ing tendencies that we seek to devel op?. Provide clean, fresh hay, often and keep tho appetite healthy. J. H. Hall ia New York Tribune Farmer. Vsa tlia fanning Mill. Will it pay to buy and use a fanning mill? Some say It does not. especially now, when motit grain are so cheap, but that Is a mistake. It doe not pay to sow cliaH and seeds of half a Joztm kinds of weeds In with the grain. Your time and land Is too valuable fof that. In olden times the different kinds of grain were cleaned or win nowed by pouring It out of a vessel in a current of air. Modern Improve ments have brought about the fanning mill, which Is not a luxury but a ne ecHslty, If one wants to farm success fully. I hav used fanning mills for 25 years, mostly for cleaning seed grain wheat, oats, flax and timothy andhnvn found that my grain when threshed was of better quality and cleaner thun It nthaTwIse would have been. In Inter years I hate sold my grain thegreater pRrt of it for seed, Sudani getting coll slderably more than the market price. If takes but little figuring to find that I does not pay to sow foul seed. Weeds rhoke out the grain nnd use up moisture and fertility. If you are going to sow anything at all. be sure that your seed Is clean. You will get more grain to the acre and It will be t-f better quality. With reasonable rare a fanning mill will last 13 to 20 years and pay for Itpelf In a few years at the most. If you have large fields It may pay for It telf In one year. There are many kinds of fanning mills and prices differ somewhat, hui $15 ought to nuy n good one. Farmers are firming thnt they eannct farm In the old sllpshop way nut If they want to make nnine'y at It. There Is money In farming If It Is done systematically ami well. J. S. Field, In American Agriculturist. Selling f ertility front tint f arm. Prof, 11. E. Van Norman of Pnrdue university gives the Indiana Farmer certain figures, which should be Im pressed on the minds of the farmers. Ho divides the ratable products of the term Into ft:ur classes: Roughage, ns hay, straw ami fodder; grain, or corn, onts nnd wheat twe suppose ho would nb;o Include rye nnd barley); live stock, as cattle, sheep, hogs and wool; and dairy products, as milk, chose, cream and butter. Of the rough fol der he says each $H0 worth sold re moves from $tl5 to $!t9 worth of fer tility from the farm as measured ly the cost cf nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash to replace It In commercial fertilizers. The grain products taken away vary from $41 worth In wheat to $!4 worth In corn, a fact that mny not make It seem so much c heaper to feed wheat than corn, even at present prices. In live stock the amount of fertility taken from the farm Is less lor the $ino worth than In grain, be ing at ordlnnry prices about one fourth as much, or $10 to $16 for those sold for food purposes, ami f-carccly worth considering when breeding animals are sold at fancy prices, for one that sells for $511110 or more will take no more fertllty with It than the $25 cow or the $100 horse. In dairy products It varies from about $10 worth In fertility in $100 worth cf milk, to 11 cents worth In $100 worth of butter, and If the dairyman feeds a half ton of bran or cottonseed meal, the farm has from $t to $11 worth of fertilizer added to it. This explains why the dairy farms grow more pro fitable not by the price at which they sell their products, but because of the better crops they can grow. As a gen eral rule it may be said that the high er price the product sold the less It has taken from the fertility of the farm. rotate) Collar. I have lived upon a farm for the past twenty-five years, and have lalsed po tatoes every season, and my experience may be of some Interest to others. Therefore, I have attempted to write down a few rules In the way of potato culture, . The selection of soil, is perhaps, of an great importance as any one thing. Do not attempt to raise potatoes upon a cold, wet or stiff clap soil, for If you do, you may reasonably expect to fall of a paying crop. Next, perhaps, comes the Importance of the selection of seed. Do not plant poor seed or a poor variety of seed. Do not i-lant very small potatoes, for you may expect rmall vines, and con sequently mall potatoes. I never knew a farmer to show a friend a spe cimen of his potato crop by pulling up a hill with a small top growth. He al ways selects a hill with a large top growth, and I certainly could not, with my experience, get a satisfactory set of vines unlets I planted a good sized po tato and a thrifty one. I have invariably met with the best success when I selected a good, dry, loamy soil for my potato crop. Then It should be dressed fairly well with fine stable manure, well harrowed Into the soil. Next mark off rows about three fest and eight inches apart, and then drop In the hills good potato phos phate about twenty inches elistant in the rows well scattered. Put a Utile dirt tver this, then drop the seed, cut from good sized potatoes, one piece in the hill. It Is best that each piece should cary five or six eyes, which are a plenty. Then cover about one and one half or two Inches deep. When well up put a small quantity qt ashes upon each hill, but not directly upon the tops, but scatter around the hill; and when the growth (s large enough to hoe, go through them often, say two or three times befo. e the set ting of the tubers, but never after wards. Leave but four or five stalks tl grow In each hill. Keep the slugs nnd beetles off, and If a dec?nt season you will not fall of a paying crop. Potatoes need a fair treatment, but not to make the soil too rich In stable manure, a it often serves to cause them to rot. . Fair tillage end good culture Is the onl'y safe method to follow In potato raising; at. least this tia-J proved to be my experience In tvinty-ftve years work upon tho farm. A. E. Faoght, In American Cultivator. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Every right net Inn end true thought sets the seal of lis beauty on person nnd face. John Ruskln. One should tnke care not to grow too wise for ro great a pleasure of life M langhter.--Addlsrn. It a man Is unhappy, remember that Ms unhapplnrss Is his own fault; for God mado all men to be happy. Eplc tetus. There are souls In this world which have the gift of finding Joy every where nnd of leaving It behind them when they go. Fnbcr. Great and wise men have ever loved laughter. The vain, the Ignorant, the dishonest, the pretentious alone have dreaded or despised It. Fra Elbertus. If you would fall Into any extreme, let It be on the side of gentleness The human mind is po const meted that It resists rlfctir and yields to softness. 8. Francis do Sales. That which we nrc we shal tench, not voluntarily, but Involuntarily. Thoughts come into our minds by ave nues which we never left open, nntl thoughts go out tit our minds through avenues which we never voluntarily upr net!. Environ. Little sell-tlenlals little hnn"tles, 111 tie paf-ptr.g winds r.f sympathy, little pnwles? Rets of kiiidnot, little silent vlitiirles ever favorite temptatlms. tin so nre the sllr-nt threads of gold which, when woven together, gleam tiiit so brightly In the pattein of life that flod approve?. Canon Fariar. SHOT A SEA SERPENT. After a Qnlrt lliiir-linnr'a Study of Hint at Mtnrt IttitittP. A monstrous sea serpent, vicious nnd ew.ful hidl liiK. was the sight that brought fright to the crew of the schooner fanniel B. Hubbard only a few dayn ecu. This vessel, ef which Ct.pt. .Miihaftcy is master, has Junt ar rived at Brunswick, Ua., from New York. Her conimandi-r, ns Is well known to all the north Atlnntiti ports, vouches for the authenticity of the story, and the fat ts are corroborated I y his first mate, Mr. Covedale. Capt. Va'nafley says: "It was cn the 23d lr.stp.nt, In north attitude 34 degrees 41 minutes, and west longitude 'i degrees 10 minutes. The ship was lying becalmed about 12 nticn, whr-n the chief mate called my nt.. "-- 'o something in the water Just Bbtu. , a nnartor of a mile cff. A long, slim object, mov ing frcm side to side, and ft mlng toward us with such great tapltllty that it looked like an old thresher at work. It very quickly worked I'.ntler our quarter, and In the clear water we saw the queerest fish out As It lay quiet within about IS feet of tc v sp I, It appeared to be about 30 fect long by three feet In cir cumference. A smooth body, showing no fins but the dorsals, three of them, one short, one, sny, about a foot long, near the hend. Then half way down the body a long tall-like fin about seven feet long and about five Inches wide, nnd near the tall a small kind fin. The tall was unlike a fish, ending at a point, without a fin. The body J was a deep pink color to the middle, anti tiaiKcning 10 a ngnt urown at tne tall. "The head was fully three feet long, the mouth dose to the top. The eyes were large anil close to the top of the head. We had a good look at the fel lrw, as lie clayed by fully half an hour. Then the mat'; cot a shotgun and as the fish lay with half of his upper body exposed, tent a charge of smal shot in. It evidently hurl him, for he leaped out of tre water hnlf his legnth, nnd sounded like a whale. It came to the Itrfm-a In a few aai nmla oml If If bunt I " " ' l' up the gait it 1'tarted with tho serpent ' is near the western const of Africa by this time." Atlanta Journal. Tin. Order nf M. I'ntrlrk. The death of Lord Dufferln leaves a vatancy In the Order of St. Patrick which the man in the street, at any rate, has, had no hesitation In filling. If Lord Kitchener is not an' Irishman, he was born in Ireland. As Instituted by George III. February 5, 1783. the Or der comprised the sovereign and 15 knights, exclusive of royal and semi- royal personages. It row comprises a grand muEtcr and 22 knights. The I grand master Is the lord lieutenant. Thus, Lord Cadogan Is K. O. and K. P. I The chancelleir of the order Is the chief cecwtary of Ireland. Lord Charlemont Is the usher of the Black Rod. The 1 doyen is Sir Richard Edmund St. Law- I rence Boyle, Fori of Cork. He was 1 born In 1S2C. Lord Dufferln was next 1 in point of seniority. The junior , member at present is the Earl of Long ford, captain .a Lire uuards, who served in South Africa with bis regt tnent, and who, as captain 13th Im perial Yeomanry, was one of the wounded in Llndley fight. Pall Mall Gazette. Sleuth In Troob'.a for Uls Dlaculaa. Constable Walters, who captured notorious character named Dan Mul I lin by a clever ruse will probably be ' summoned for an Infraction of the Oawkers' and peddlers' net. The po Hi e man disguised bimselt as a peddler, 1 felling pictures, and it Is alleged that ! tie took lour orders, although he had rot a license to peddle. He caught I the man he was after, but It Is now tcltl that one of Mullln's relatives ha decided to lay an information against Walters and have him up before the ' magistrate. Toronto Mail and , Em pire. Anelfflit Maiiuscrltu. It Is a curious fact that, while many enclent manuscripts are almost Illegi ble, from the Ink fading, manusc:ipt (.f the fifth and of the twelfth ctntu r'es have, so far, shown hardly any ! trace, of fading. How Buenos Ayres Gets War New. It 'is not quite clear why the city of Buenos Ayres should take a keener Interest In the Boer war than any other places not Immediately con cerned. This Is evidently the case, since the leading journal, tho Prensa, has seen fit to make special arrange ments by means of which the public Is Informed at a moment's notice of sny notable event In the fortunes of the armies. A high tower Is part of the edifice In whlrh the Prensa Is printed and published, and the top of the tower Is used as a lighthouse, whence events are flashed upon the world by means of colored fires. Thus a British victory Is at once pro claimed by tho appearance of a yel low light, and a Boer success may be read In a brilliant green flame. Pneumatic postal tubes will be put In service again July 1 In New York, Brooklyn, Boston and Philadelphia. Their construction Is authorized in six other cities. ak Tnar Dealer For Allen's tnnt-Rasa, A powder. It rest" the fet. Puree form, Eunlnns.Rwollen. (tore, Hot, rsllous.Aehing, Hweatitti; Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allan a Foot -Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At all llrtiRRlxts anil Huoe stores, 26 cents. An rerit no stilistltute. Sample mailed Fast. Address Allen H. Olmsted. LeHor, N. Y. The hahl-hradt'd man sooner or later cornea to the scratch. Hall's Cnlarrh Cure Is n lbptid nnd Is taken Internally, nntl nets niton the blood and nitii'oiis Mirlnees nf the system. Mend for testimonials, tree. Sold by ilrtigRlxts, 76e. F. i. t'Hr.sr.T A o.,'l'rups, Toledo. O. The fellow w ho has lint limn to do ran generally be depended upon to tlo it well. FITS permanently cured. No Ills or nervous ness nfterflrst day's use of lr. Kline's eirent NervcUcstorer.tiitrinl Ixittleaiit! tretttlsefr" Lr. H. H. KLisM.td., Wll Arch St.. l'hila., I'a. .The mountain climber evidently believes JkiL there's plenty of room at the top. Slrs.Wlnslowa Soothing Syrup for children teeth in tr. soften the gums, reduces In tin muta tion, allays ptiiti. cures wind i'oIIc. ii5e. n bottle Always make wish on the first star you see at muht. I do not belva Pise's Cure for Consump tion has an equal for coughs and eohts Johi I'. Borcn, Trinity Springs, Intl., Feb. 15, WOO. The self made man is never apologetic. Weak? " I suffered terribly and was ex tremely weak for 12 years. The doctors said my blood was all turning to water. At last I tried Ayer's Sarsapnrilla, and was soon feeling all right again." Mrs. J. W. Fiala, Hadlyme, Cf. No matter how longyou have been ill, nor how poorly you may be today, Ayer s Sarsaparilla 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. SI.Msasttlr. AH trttiflsts. Ask year ttortnr srlist he ttilnks nf AVer's Ssrsspsrllls. Us knovssll shnnt this pranit oltl fsmtly mtritrtns. Follow bit aurleo and wrwlll ba tstmAsiV J. C. ATIS CO.. I.owsll. Mail. It. - lioualni madftif Iht Ofst tmpnrttd ttsft Atntriean Ifnineti, Itf tutting Patent Cortmm An, Voinna Colt and aiiftotiat nanaarow, rssl t'sle Bslstsassi siilssl.slr, A'of let ts rrtitt of taltt : I AOH. 748. 706 Pair. mil. I ,S6S, 720 Pain. h-uttlnl tq i It art. iWLDOUGLAS '3 SHOES '3 00 IslsklUkee Ul. TjOn mom thnn f)itnrter A nl ft century Hie r-Pini-tntton of W. I JiniiuiiiV Slini for ptjl, roniTorl, ami we.ir lin exrHW-ii nil othftr mnkM. Thjr Br rn ty more neii In all tin limit nf lilt than any olhtr make, hfraiiM tl.cy are the only Mux Hint In every way eqt.it I ft&.OO ami 6 00 vhnet. They art the MHiniftrd of the virld. Thli ii the reaaon W. I.. Ifciuglaa inakte and arllt mora inen'a $AAb and 153.00 aUfM titan any other tvn manufacturer!. A trial will convince yon tliejr are me oeai in ine worm. W. L DOUGLAS $4 SHOES CANNOT BE EXCELLED. ft'tld by 03 DnuffloJiatorM In American CUiee and ben ahoe deal cm erery where. TAt'XIOW. T.filM ! W.Im. fiat aaw pvtae Ma aa a' jb Bhon by mml. tf etntt axrn. liluitratfd CUahat$4 Frtt. tt. Is, DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mate. send pen eun past CATALOOUS OP PtSM. INa TACKLE. SICYCLI. KODAK AND SSINa AND UMMt POSIT. INQ QOOOS. AK FOAJ AM SIC OP OUSJ ASK BALL SUITS. OF. riCIAk IfAOUf DALLSI. ALL SOODS AT WHOLE SALE price ron CASH SCHMCLZES ARMS CO. KANSAS CITY, MO. CAM O-V- CATHASTIC ScBolae stomped C C C. Never sold In balk. ocware 01 tne aeaicr woo tries to sell "SOincthjofc just M toed." p "I'ltKIl IN flit TO Hit ltAVs) 'flit- for I'arlli-ularsaud 10 days' t -trt'ttmpm fteo. it, K. t 'nl I u in I Urup.l Mail. Cov Atlauta, Ua. n y if sa322Z Mrs. Mamie Herbert, 56 Elmwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y., Treasurer Empire State Fortnightly, Buffalo, N. Y., After Eight Years' Suffering Cured by Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. " Df.ar Mrs. Pikkham : - Inflammation and ulceration of tha uterus laid me low and robbed life of its joys for mc. Tor eight years I was in frequent pain and misery, and then Lydia K. I'Inkham'a Vegetable Compound came to mc, the greatest boon I hava known, for it brought new life and health to mc. I used several bottles of Compound and your Sanative Wash. My improvement was slow, but from the first bottle I felt that I was better, and so I kept up courage and continued the treatment. None of my friends ever dreamed that I would be well again, but I have now enjoyed lif to its fullest extent for three years." Mrs. Mamie IIf.rmf.rt. $500( FORFEIT IF TIIH ABOVF, LKTTKIt IS SOT GENUINE. When M'ompti nre troubled with Irrrfrular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leneorrlifpii. displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloat inn: (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous pros tration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all gone" ami " want-to-lie-left-alone " feelings, blues nnd hopelessness, they should rememlier there is one tried and true remedy. Lyriin E. IMnk hum's Vcjrrtnbl Compound nt once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the beRt. Mrs. Plnkham Invites all sick women to write her for advice. Sho tins guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. cod-i or Skin-Tortured Babies In Warm Baths with And gentle anoint'-ngs with CUTICURA, purest of emollients and greatest of skin cures, followed in severe cases by mild doses of CUTICURA RESOLVENT PILLS. This is the purest, sweetest, most speedy, permanent, and economical treatment for torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted, and pimply skin and scalp humours, rashes, irritations, and chafings, with loss of hair, of infants and children, and is lure to succeed when all other remedies fail Millions of Mothers Use Guticura Soap Assltttd by Ccticviu OtamlKT, tha r rest skin tan, tor prsssrrliij, parlf jlnf , snd beautify, tof Iks skin of infants and shlldrtn, for rashes, Itchlnaa, and shannas, for elsanslof tha scalp of crusts, sotlst, and dandruff, and tha atopplni of lullini hair, for softening, whllralnc and oothlnf rsd. rough, and snrn hnnilt, and for all ttia purposse of tha tollst, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women nso Ccrmtmi Busp In the form of baths for annoying Irritations, Inflamma tions, and eioortsilons, for too free or oHrusivo rwrsniratloo, In the form of washes tor nlmrsitvo wesknesaes, and far many sanative, autlseptlo purposes which readily eiittgest themselves to women, especially mothers. Uuriruru Bnr emtiuliii-a In Orin Boar at Oaa fnica, the aasr akin and complexion snap and the best toilet and baby aoap In the world. Complete External and Internal (ylicura consisting of Cvticitiia Boap ('ifie.), to cleanse the skin of oru.ts and scales, and soften the thickened outiuie; CttTirL'iu OtNTaaNT (60c-), to lustantly allny ttrblrtg. Inltsmmallon, and Irritation, and sooth and I heal; suii Ci'tki-ms Kisoi vent Pills Sio,l, to cm I and cleanie Hie bloiid. A HlMUI.B KMT Is oftsn sufllnlank tn fiiina thi. m.i.i mrtiirlnif THE SET SI. dlstiuurlng, and humiliating skin, scalp, and blood humours, with loss " w of hsir, whsn sIIsIm tails. Buld throughout the world. BrilUli Depot: 27 21, Charterhouse 8q., Loudon. Krench Depot: t ttus do la I'uii, f aria, forraa Data mo Cilia. C'oar., bole Traps., Uosloa, U, K. A. Ci-Tiriin R it solvent rtLi.a tChocolste Coated) are a new, tatlolesa, odourless, economical substitute fur the oelul.rntod liquid (ItTictiH UasuLVBNT, as well as for all other l.lojd punnere and humour eurce. Bach pill is equivalent to oue lea.pooufltl of liquid Hbsoi.vrnt. fill up to crew cap pocket vials, ouullulug Uu same Biuuber el dosus aa a sue. houle of liquid UaV aOLVBMT, price, 36a. "' You Can Homestead 1 6U actus , Valusbls fsniilna or tlmbor land In Mlrhhrsii, Wis. 1 Ti' t-IiKrrmi:l t 1 rouslu or Uiwusaii a. B.,iU it iu, oi.yotl,rlstlve nCT nuUTLfft 7, , tilrftif B !'"l!''" fe"'1' "J al1 ''.striirtlon, h.iw and a here to Kfj UUritS WhtHt ALL ILbt lAILa. 1 hu-stv. U. Ululerinelalrr. l.KU.I Kurru.il. 1 4 t2-Ce rotwh Syrup, 'rom-i U.khI. Cat I I ho. tanul H., fhlongo. 111. b. i: Hi a", Cy"Fiymfa ,r.V'i"-a Thompton'i Eyi Watar AND Rest FOR Tired Mo tiiers 0 D .A. WW v Treatment for Every Humour, A J (Y
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers