CATARRH OF LUNQS. A Prominent Chicago Lady Cured by Pe-ru-na. Mim MiB;ie WolrV Secretary of the Betsey Kn Kduc-ntionnl and Hrncvolent Society, writes from H2H North Slate street, Vhieagn, III., tho following glowing words eonrerning l'rnina: "lat full I i iiigkt I lie miwt severe roM I ever had in my liiV. 1 coughed niRht and dsy, lind my lung nnd thnmt bersmn no tare t hut 1 wu in great distress. All cough 4 0) Miss MiipkIo Welch remedies nauseated mo, nnd nothing af forded mc rWief until my doctor said rather in inke. 'I tiuess I'eruna is the only medicine that, will aire you.' "I told hirn that I, would certainly try it, and immediately sent for a hortfe. I found thai relief rnme the first day, and aa 1 kept taking it faithfully the rough grad ually diminished and the' soreness left me. It is fine."- Magsie Welch. Addre the renin Medicine Co., Co Inmhus. Ohio, for free literature on catarrh. The Regulation of Clocks. The y.'tnnrkaldi? pondiilum export tin nt in tho 1'nnthoon nt Paris to jirnvo the rotation f tho rartii, strik ingly illustrates th. majretio nnrs of tho J'nmilinr -lock-m:il;tT's dovlcn It Hp'.nis nimott in. possible of hrlli-f, In an iici f will-rrmilHtcil w audit's, tJipt the clocks of OaliK'o's Unit' oiilil not bo kept eniim at a uniform spood. Cl.vki went, hy mciinn of a drasKinjr weight, litit tho pendulum had not. been HioiiKht. of as a regu lator. It oci-iinod to Oaliloo to ruako a clr.ck with the prr-ilnlum only, but of course, the work of turning tho wheels Ftoj-'Ped i'- It was loft to Huyfii-uf, In lCilfi. 1 1 lypars after tho print nilrnnompt' death, 1o com bine the prndnliim with the drapiriPi? weight and thus holvo tho problem of reckoning astronomical tlmo with exactitude It Is propose d to cut a railway tun Tel thnmsjh tho mountain known as the raucille. In tho Jura Alps, and to shorten the Journey between Pnrin and Switzerland by two and a half hours. The Gorman Rowrnment bast ap propriated $50,nnij to provido motor oars for se In tho coming nruiy maneuvers. Y)r. August Koenig's Hamburg Drops, aa blood purifier. strength and health restor er and a specific for all stomach, liver and kidney troublea lend nil other similar med icine" in ita wonderful alea and marvelous confidence of the people, especially our itmt Oennan population. It ia not a new and untried product, but waa made and old more than sixty years ago. The am all boy who makes fun of hia tit ter and her bean ought to be punished for contempt of court. There la more Catarrh In this section of the oonntry than all athardlseaaes put together, and until the last few years wan supposed to be Incurable. Foragrent ntanyyearsdoetora ironounoed It a local disease and prescribed ooal remedies, and by constantly failing to ears with local treatment, pronounced It in curable. Bclwnce has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. FI nil's Catarrh furo, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O., lathe only constitutional cure on the market. It la taken Internally in doses from 10 drops to a toaspoonf ul. It acts direct ly on the blood nnd muoous surfaces of the system. They offer oho hundred dollars for any uaae it fnils to cure. Kend for circulars and testimonials. Addross F. J. Cu.xri A Co.. Toledo, O. fold bv Dnigeists, 7Sc. Hall's Family rillt are the best. Every miin has his price, and it's gencr Jly u good deal leas than he marks it up. nT3nerminontly ourail.No tits or nnrrtits Beasafterflrst day's use of Or. K Hue's irro.it tiervalleatorer. frH rial bottle and trmitl3fra Dr.li. H. Ki.inc. Ltd. . UH1 ArohHt.. Ptoila.. l'. The girl with the big hat seema to be all lieitd until you begin to talk with her. Mrs.Wlnalow's Soothing Syru p forohll Jrea teetlilosF.snfieathe sum, roduoeilalliun na tion, alluyspnlu.eure wind nolle. 25a. ubiti.lo The f'z.-.r of Itiixaia bus established a ten-hour working duy. All creameries uc butter color. Why not do aa they do use June Tint Uux ffEB Color. The anthracite field ia limited to a space of 8300 siptare mile. I'tso'tiCure Is the bout medlalu we enr used for all aileotloua of tkrnat and Inngs. Wn, 4). nai,CT, Vanburea. Ind.. Fob. iO, lWaX Gen. Jou'iiprt's silver-fitted jaunt ing car, wlileh was captured in Soutli Africa, I now at Wu'.:wlel arsenal. TKi,ll l.flijar irlflnnri-lhi- liaeftll ifill. t'.vt ry liotni i.n-ild liuv-t h tuwl IJutKoarf . Tuis yuar l.y bwt IflVW MtMUV UUO & WEBSTER'S International Dictionary of ENGLISH, Biography, Geography, Fiction, itc. Tho Ooe Crcaf Standard Authority. TbrNow rrftiliunliuSj.ftwnrw iroril. Uul wtcw. .'.wHI (.IrnIt..T... Nrir thmuKliiiut. Lot U. Send You p p V "A Tt in Pronunciation" -- Arf.n-,1. ptra'Hiit f"l Ui.lfllfliv cninftinint-nT A VV ullr' ullcMiMteilU'tiunnry. llUUputfi. lliMlllliWlruliuua. HittlklUkX.'-Uli.ilti-. -' f ir.l-rlMM it) iiualilr. n'lU-.'U.4 III HUti." - lU.I'TIIT" I'mPHLKT AtJtU f KUl: 0. t C. MERMAN CO., Pubi., 8pilsgfitld, Msti. nnADOV HEW DISOOVEBT; (m UKll il I qaiak nIM Ul tcwinnt JkMk at UttiMoniftii ul lO 4jm' ImMinil jTre. t. . B. asui't aeaa. Bass. AUaaw. Ua- P. N. U. 49, '02. iraWetea with Ewa Beta Hhcu Animal Ihrlve. lloth very .voiiiib and very old ant mnla thrive better If their food Is made easy of tHrMlon. Cut clover, mixed with artil-.i mini. Is more digestible than grain only. A smnll quantity of the clover Is enough to prevent the grain menl from clogging In the stom ach. t-fTerl of Feed t'pon I'aef. That tho feed has its effects upon the beef Is well Illustrated by the com munication of an Illinois feeder to the Indiana Farmer. Ho said that when at. the Chicago stock yards with a load of steers hp met another man who had also a rarload that looked as fine its his. They both sold ' to packers tlia sam morning. The writer sold his it $8 per hundredweight, and the other received only $6.50. Both lots wers grade Shorthorns, a little more th!n 2 years old. He had fed . his on corn, stover, elovrr hay, cowpea hay and wheat brau. The o;hcr had fed onlv corn and stovr r. The expert buyer said the other man's cattle wero very good, but t"hey wero deficient In the thick lota beef which his bad, which made, bis beef more valuable. In this cane it wps not "half in the breed and half in the fped," but all in the feed. Th-i cowpea hay, clover and wheat bran were rlihrr in protein than corn and stover. The Cultivator. Orowth of Snrlns-Set Trees. Many people have wondered why sprlnK-set trees, with which much rare had been taken, should live and thrive the first seaon apparently as the best, and thp next season should fail to put forth a but, or after a scanty growth should drop their leaves and die, m l yet the solution Is very natural. The prowth of wood and foliage the drat season Is from the food that was stored tip In the roots, hut the tree does not put out such a ptowth nnother season. If limbs ami foliage are reduced t'te first year, more energy will ha gl.-en to the root growth, as there will be less loss of moisture through tho transpiration of the leaves, nnd the second yepr the tree may ho perniit tpd to make some new wood and to pro duce more follaee. While this is more true of some of the hardwood shade trv-s than of the fruit trees, it is to some extent true of the latter, and w prefer fall to spHnp; ifttlngs, other thliiKE '.ii lni equal, because we ran In duce a iraod root growth the next spring. This is not to be done by tho application of nitrogenous manures, or stable manure especially, nor by lib eral waterlnR after thry are set. Roth defeat the desired results by stimulat ing growth of wood and foliage, the wood often being go rank in growth and so tender as to be winter killed, but is boht done by having the soil mellow and moderately rich with the manure iifed for previous crops, lu tempi: the roots out beyond the branches, and the keeping of the wood growth limited by taking out of all tho superfluous branches and heading la the others. TThat to no With Cnrlpe Pnnashes. The question which confronts the farmer is, what to do with the unripe specimens. Shall he feen them to his cows or store them. Though cows like them at any stuge of growth, thera can be but little food value either for milk or beef making in a ball-grown squash, though I have always fed such, rather than throw them on the manure pile. Tho squashes which ore full grown, but not yet ripe, make another class, which for best economy bhoubl neither be left in the field at the meroy of frosts, thiown on the manure pllo, nor fed to the cows. Uuder proper treatment tiicse eun be ripened with a loss of but a small percent of their nunibpr, and keeping well after ripen ing, can be put on the market lato In the season, when they often bring a higher price than the field-ripened ones known by tbe gathering in of the stem where it Joins the flesh. When fully ripe the stem shrinks and divides, as suming a woody appearance. When not full grown both the outside and the stem have a shiny, varnished look. When full grown they lose this ap pearance and become dull In color. Now if these full grown ones are treat ed as tho ripe ones, piled in with them tn the bins of tho squash house, they will rot soon after the low tempera ture without compels the closing of the windows. If. Instead, they are carried into tho tipper story of the building and stored in the warmest place, especially Just ever where the funnel of the stove runs, my experience has been that they keep well there and gradually matur. Though there may not be a sound seed among them when gathered, such a change toward maturity takes place that the seed of nearly all of them will grow, plump out and fully mntun with as good vitality as Is possessed with seed taken from squashes that fully matured In the field. American Agriculturist . Motion llreeita or Sticep. But few sheep are kept on farms, but they pay well, considering their cost. Farmers who make u specialty of sheep ftn.l it profitable to give up tho best pastures for that purpose, but as a rule theep are kept by some farmers simply to serve as scavengers. Aa the sheep will consume young weeds, shoots and many kinds of her bage that is refused by ' the larger stock, they V.tui the greater portion of their food and need but llltlo grain. To make a profit on sheep the plan of giving them the poorest and most in ferior foods will not lead to the re sults. It la a system that belongs to the pant, nnd prevents improvement of the breeds. It Is a fact well known that there nro farmers who have per sistently refused to grado tip their flocks by tho tiso of males of the Intiio breeds, because It lessens the foraging capacity nnd activity of mem bers of the i'oek; and if improvement was mndp ut any time, in order to nveld ton close inbreeding, only tho Mr!no or t-outhdown was resorted to, they belnn tho snmllest ef the Im proved breeds. With the attention giv en pilnelpa!ly to the growlnt; of wool the farmers have failed to Inke ad vantage of tho profit that can be de rived from mutton. Those that have not Inspected the mutton breeds can not reallzo tho great improvement that has been made in the sire of such shoep, and alp in the quality of the meat therefrom. No animal has been brought to a higher point of excel lence than the sheep. Highly fed lambs have been made to weigh 100 pounds fllvo weight) when three months old. In the faco of these facts It Is but surprising that those who fall to Improve with tho Oxfords, Shropshlres or Hampshire find It Im possible to derive a profit, Tho largo breeds of sheep cannot be turned out on an inferior pasture to be compelled to find their food. They must, like tho stef r, bo made to produce ns much as possible in the shortest period of time. They will not grow rapidly nnd fatten rendily If they are to torago over the whole farm nnd bo forced to work for all they get. The foraging system will answer for the Merino, but the heavy brepds do not thrive so well in laro numbers. Only the best of pastures, tho flocks divided, and a mess of grain nt night, will force them. True, it re quires more labor and earc, but it pays, and as the matter of sheep rais ing is one for profit, the labor will al ways bo paid for before tho estimate of profit can be mnde. If mure money can he made on one good Bheep than from three Inferior ones It is a waste of time and pasture to keep the na tives. The greatest profit is derived from the mutton breeds, and the best pastures on the farm ran be given up to them with profit. Philadelphia Record. Wnort Ashes as a f-'erlttls-r. I think the average farmer does not fully realise the value of wood ashes ns a fertilizer, consequently they are In many instances made little or no account of. This is a (crave mlstnko and should be speedily remedied, for ashes allowed to waste aro tiollars thorwn away, something New 'Eng land farmers can ill afford. Wood ash es are generally considered unavail able for low meadow land. My experi ence proves this to bo untrue. I consider them fully ns efficient on damp ground as on dry hind. My farm is a low brook meadow. What ashes I make and obtain otherwise aro sown broadcast in the fall on that por tion of the farm which Is losing Its fertility and is manifest by a light, thin crop of grass. Tho result Is Astonishing. The spring following tho application a perfect mnt of whlto clover comes in with an Increased growth of herd's grass. Land that was cutting three-fourths ton per acre be fore this application cut from one Bin! three-quarters to two tons per aero afterward. The peculiar part of the process, and what I do not understand, Is where the white clover comes from. It always comes In where it was not seen before, frequpntly when it is not on any other part of the farm. The ashes are responsible for it, but how I do not know. I have sown ashes on a clean piece of herd's grass and the next spring there would be a thick bottom of white clover in addition. This admixture makes an admirahlo feed In winter for tho milch cows, which they respond to by filling tho palls. I have no definite plan in applying ns'ies for grass. simply sow on lib erally and nature does the rest. Tho fall Is the best time to top-dress with ashes. The winter rains and snows tend to aid assimilation. Tho ashca aro leached down to where tho graHS roots are and they promptly respond. I much prefer ashes to manure for top. dressing. Manure stimulates a rank growth of herd's grass, which cow's dIsliUo, and without materially in creasing the bottom growth Again, unless you have a manure spreader, tho dressing in applied In lumps and In consequence tho growth Is uneven. Ashes are fully as efflfflclent If applied to plowed ground and stocked with grass, although the white clover Is not quite so much In evidence unless it is sown at seeding. Grass is not tho only crop benefited by ashes. They cannot be equaled for cultivated strawberries and are In valuable when sown on to the onion bed in conjunction with the droppings from the hen roost. They are benefi cial to corn, .applied about the stalks at the first hoeing. I do not need to mention their value for grain, espe cially onta. Farmers that have raised oats on burned ground roali.a the value. More farmers are using ashes than formerly. Carloads are shipped Into tills section every year from Can ada and nearly every village bas an ash merchant who picks up. his mer chandise from house to house. Tho lasting qualities of ashes are remark able. One application will make a heavy crop of hay for years Their lasting qualities ure far ahead of ma nure J. Newell Colton, In New Eng land Homestead Pnblle Library Ailvanlagas. Barnes I suspect that Plngrey" la quite a literary man. I know he spends the greater part of his time In the public library. Howes Yes; be tells me It Is so quiet there ho can get a nap almost any time without being awakened. Boston Transcript, Why Syrup.of FkJs Ihfrbfcst family laxative It Is pure. It Is gentle. It is pleasant. It Is efficacious. It Is not expensive. t It is good for children. It is excellent for ladies. It is convenient for business men. It is perfectly safe under all circumstances. It is used by millions of families the world over. It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians. If you use it you have the best laxative the world produces. Oregon' Vigorous Old Man. A well-known citizen of 77 years, who had been out in tho country, and had a large paper sack of mushrooms In his hand, which he had gathered himself, was standing at tho corner of Fifth and Morrison streets, Satur day afternoon, waiting lor a enr. An other old-timo citizen, who will be 80 In a few months, came to the same cor ner to wait for the same ear. The man with the mushrooms exhibited them proudly, and said that they wero to bo put up In glnss, adding that ho had bought about. 100 pounds In tho market, which was al ready put up, but It was d I tll cut to find really fresh ones. He then asked his friend of 79V4: "Where have you been lately? I haven't seen you for a week or so." "I have been busy for n week," was the answer. "I had 12 cords of wood to put in, and it was so hard to find anyone to do It, 1 concluded to put It in myself." "Did you wheel It in In a wheelbarrow?" asked 77. "No, Indeed; I hnd to carry It up a flight of 11 steps, two or three sticks nt a time. I got in six cords in three days mid finished the other six this afternoon, and so bad tho after noon to como down town." As they boarded tho car which came up a stranger, who had- overheard their conversation, remarked: "By Jingo! they raise pretty husky old men here in Oregon." Japanese Ingenuity. Here is a good Instance of Japan ese ingPuuM:y: Cholera was epl demlc at Fukuoka, and a well was suspected of spreading Infection. A littlo. boiler was constructed, tho iiecesrary lubes sunk, end all tho water drawn for drinking purposes Is now being boiled, thus checking the further spread of tho disease. Another club woman. Mrs. Haule, of Edgcrton, Wis., tells how she was cured of irregulari ties and uterine trouble, terrible pains and backache by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "A while atro my health began to fall because of female troubles. The doctor did not help roe. I remembered that my mother hod used Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound on many occasions for irregularities and uterine troubles, and I felt sure that it could not harm me at any rate to give it a trial. "I was certainly glad to find that within a week I felt much better, the terrible pains in my back and side were beginning to 'ceane, and at the time of menstruation I did not have nearly as serious a time as hereto fore, ao I continued its use for two mouths, and at the end of that time I was like a new woman. I really have never felt better in my life, have not had a sick headache siuce, and weigh SO pounds more than I ever did, so I unhesitatingly recommend Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Mat IIaulk, Ed gerton, Wis., President Household Economics Club. tSOOO forfait If oV stout (( prmlnf gtnulnmeu cannot M froiidani. 'Women should remember there Is one tried and true remedy for all female ills, Lydia K. lMnk liam'H Vegetable Compound. Kc fuse to buy any other medicine, you need the best. JII.IJIJ.I.. snriijrac ii tia iini f- BustUuuiita Sjruii. TatwaUuud. I'M I I in lime, ru.ia Dv urugsl.l. ri fir The Original Carlbs. Very mysterious Is tho origin of thfl fierce Bavage, now almost extinct, who wero in possession of tho Carlbs, tho smaller West Indian Islands, when the white man discovered them. They showed a distinct Mongolian character nnd It would bo hard to distinguish a Carlb infant from a Chinese child. Twenty years ago a Chinaman who had drifted to Dominica dpplarpd tho Carlbs to be his own peoplo and married a pure-bred Carlb woman. The resultant child showed no deviation from the native type. Tho Carlbs have dropped their man-eating ways; but in the sixteenth century they scoured tho Spanish main in search of human food and from l'orto Rico alone aro said to have taken more than 5,000 men to bo eaten. Though Spaniards, French men, Wutchmen, npprocs or Arrowaks wero all meat to them, the Carlbs seem to have shown an interesting prefereneo for certain nationalities. Davis says in his "History of the Ca rlbby Isands," that "the Carlbbeans have tasted of all the nations that fre quented them, and affirm that the r'ronch are the most delicate and the Spaniards aro hardest of digestion." I.aborde In one of his Jaunts in St. Vin cent overtook on the road a communi cative Carlb who was beguiling the tedium of his Journey by gnawing at the remains of a boiled human foot. This man ate Arrowaks only. "Chris tians," he said, "gavo him indiges tion." Traveling Libraries In Ohio. Ohio clubwomen, already famous for traveling libraries, are congratulating themselves that $10,ono has been ap propriated for the furtherance of work tho coming year. This encouraging re port will bo mado at tho state conven tion at Cleveland this month. In addi tion to tho announcement that no less than 1)00 traveling libraries are now in circulation. This splendid record is largely duo to tho first chairman of the library extension committee of the Ohio Federation, Mrs. Edward I. Iluchwnller, of Springfield. Through tho activities of this committee tho stato library commission was organ ized, tho two co-operating at every stpp. Two-thirds of tho resulting iltiti traveling libraries are used in the women's clubs throughout Ohio. These books a club may keep for one year, if it wishes, and in several Instances tho commission has consulted individ ual clubs as to tho now books which will best servo their ptirposes. Now that clubwomen's interests aro so care fully consulted, and tho appropriation bus been Increased, through their de mands to tho present magnificent sum, tho Ohio clubwomen have another as piration. It 1b to push the traveling library Into the country districts, and to this end they would have opened on Sunday every sehonlhouso, with its rows of books. In ths way the lttle traveling library might develop Into a large; and permanent library at the crossroads. In the Stone Age. Near Marlow, England, has been discovered a quarry whence men of the stone age got flints to mako their knives and weapons. In It was found, among other relics of the old workers, a pick of stag's antlers, used by tbe prehistoric miner In making his gal lery. Tho Bite waa called locally "Grimes's graves," and consisted of a number of holes or pita sunk in the ground. It was found that these Norfolk pits were mado by miners in search of clear and large flints, the ready-made material for cutlery chip ped from stone. These ancient workers had quite as keen an instinct for find ing the best bed of flint as a modern prospector has for a bed of gold-bearing quartz, and somehow found out that about thirty foet below the surface there was a bed of tho largest sillcious pebbles In England. They therefore sunk the "graves" and ran galleries from them. In these galler ies were found not only the flints they had dug but rough lamps, cut in chalk, for thorn to see by and the picks which they had used to work with. The Imple ments were all mado of deer's horn, and it was noted that these old antler tools are exactly the same shape a tho picks of wood and iron used in tho flint Quarries of England to-day. The expenses of the city of New York for the first three months of tola year amounted to 141,990.251. . Because Its component parts are all wholesome. It acts gently without unpleasant after-effects. It is wholly free from objectionable substances. It contains the laxative principles of plants. It contains the carminative principles of plants. It contains wholesome aromatic liquids which are agreeable and refreshing to the taste. All are pure. All are delicately blended. All are skillfully and scientifically compounded. Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to the orginality and simplicity of the combination. To get its beneficial effects buy the genuine. Manufactured by UTORKiA pGVRllP San Francisco, Cal. Louisville. Ky. New York. N. Y. rOB BALE BY ALL LE AVISO POLICE DOGS IN GHENT. Trained Collies Supplant Officer and Chase Burglars. The distinction of the bloodhound of tho Southern and Western states as being the ony dog policemen in the world Is gone. The city of Ghent has recently supplemented its regular po lice force In tho suburbs by a corps of trained collies, whoso duty it Is to run down burglars and other evil-doers who might prove too swift for capture by the human custodians of the peace. Tim step tins been taken by tho Ghent commissioners of police as the result or an alarming Increase In burglary, robbi ry, with violence, and other crimes committed by night In the su burbs. Tho vigilance of the police proved unequal to cope with the evil, although their numbers were consider ably augmented. The police dogs are of the breed of Swlss-Llclglan sheep dogs, and are trained most carefully. They accompany the policemen on their nightly rounds, and not only pro tect them from being attacked by sur prise, but. by the quickness of their Instinct In scenting the presence of men they make It Impossible for any evil-doer to lurk In the darkest corner undetected. Great precaution, how ever, Is taken that tho dogs may do as little harm as possible, and to this end their management and diet Is carefully Vgulated. They are' kept In kennels which are cleaned daily and disinfected weekly, and they are frequently ex amined by a veterinary surgeon. That tho pangs of hunger may not tempt them to take a slice out of any of their victims, they are given two good meals a day, one at 12:30 and the other at 7 p'clock, each consisting of bread, rice and meat, and at midnight they aro given a biscuit for supper. When on duty eneh dog is armed with a spiked collar, and bears a medal with a number to show Its Identity. The sheets of steel for pen-making are, In their original condition, eight feet long and three feet wldu. From these strips are cut wide enough tn permit of tho cutting of tnrce or four pens. "One of my daughters had a terrible case of asthma. We tried almost everything, but without re lief. fe then tried Ayer'a Cherry Pectoral and three and one-half bottles cured her." Emma Jane Entsminger, Langsville, O. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral ccrtainlycures manycases of asthma. And it cures bronchitis, hoarseness, weak lungs, whooping-cough, croup, winter coughs, night coughs, and hard colds. Ttir. tttdt: 3V., enough fnr an ordinary eold; ftiie., JumI riitlit lur brouoblllt, linwi.tf !, liitrii coldt, etc.! ft. moit .ciinuuik-al fur otuoulo CA..1 mnt to ttn-p nn tmnil. J. C. AYEK CO., Lowsll, Mass. Ctoulne stamped C C C . Never told Id hoik. Beware of the dealer who tries to (ell "something just a good." FARQUHASi m bf Ul lUtuirsiM eauuof 01 turn a rSlTa' J rnzm maclilnwy ana A I iiHrHULKrl It ! DBVQ018T8. The city of Philadelphia has In IU treasury more than $75,000 belong ing to persons who never called for It when their bonds, registered anil non-reglstercd, matured and ibecanio payable, or who left uncollected cou pons on their bonds. Near Leeds, England, Is a aummet house made wholly of buttons of every Imaginable kind, and In tho same county is a room, the walls of which are adorned entirely by the ribbons of cigars, pearly 20,000 of these being represented. The shoe manufacture rs have mad and sold for the first half of this year 175,000 cases more than last. Nft MalfUmr nt nv .rut hi mmr awsMrWf T IncompetlnewlthSr. Jacobs Oil. Iti virtues nava been proclaimed by millions of restored iuffrrr. who hire been cured of RHEUMA. ' TISM, NEURALGIA, SCMTICA and many ' 1 other painful disease by its uu. It has been 1 aptly termed tha treat conqueror of pain. 1 ' FromltsuMdespfurtveBwayto)oy. It heals 1 1 quickly and surely. It ta simply marvelous. 25c. and 50c. sizes. ITS CHEAT FENETIJITINO P0WE1 REACHES THE CAUSE OP PAIN. ESTABLISHED PIETY TEA1S. 44 l CONQUERSl PAW For four years I had been troubled with constipation, which. brought on piles. I was induced to try Ripans Tabulcs. The results were better than I expected. As a regulator of the bowels I believe Ripans are without an equal, and I am never without them now. At dnimriata. rha Fiva-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, AU cents, contains a supply for a year. Capsicum Vaseline PUT IP IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES. A Snhfltltuta fnr and Huiwrior tn Mnarard or any o'h r i U-tfr, ; nj will not tJUttr th uioat Mlitut kin. The paiu alUtntraiMl curative qullUt or tnl art). -In ur won-Wtiil. It will at up the tooth arii e nt ono and rvllnvc h -ailarUw mid ai-latloa. ert.'ouii!inil1t an tli tvnt and eiUroul c'Uittr-lrriUiif known, la un 'xtwrual reiiiiilv tor nam in :he chfitt mid atomic), u hI nil rlinii luatli. iwurulartt' ami trnury .iui Ulnr -. A trtal will vrtjva U4t wwrluj u furl, and It will be fnnnd to b" Invaluable In tu hmfhoM. Muuv peoida say It ia t). lat tit U y.-ur i re rtr itii.n." Prl r, .) cuiitH, ut all d nutria? a, or niht'i dMln, or ty a diiuf this a -muiut t ua In putnaa iUmia Hill at n 1 vnu a tutte bv mail. No article ah iiild ai-ctsoted by the pqlillo unlftM tilt sumo uarrles our labU as uthurwiae It la not Ktmimtt. ri 17 State Strejt, New York City. Portable Sat? Mills Made in seven sites, friction food, cabla llgntning sa, pHtttut eiiitm tat worm una Imoruud uVtn. AJAX tKMKH ( It IKK ENGINE are onatniPh-d wub eaptvUl rWerru- io the peculiar work rwiulred of ttwm. Tlila ww- uuaUun or tmtnne ami mill nuia-fsina iwai sawuuu euLfli ua aartu. Il i' .':' v