'1 " 1 hud a most stubborn cough for trtuny years. It deprived me of sleep nnd 1 ere very thin. I then tried Aycr's Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured." R. N. Mann, Fall MIIU, Tenn. Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will do. Vc know It's the great est cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too, after you try it. There's cure in every drop. Teres ilm t JSc, f3c, It. All drotrlila. Consult roar letor. If be asy take It. titan itn M ha says. If lio tails Ton nat to tnaa It. tlian itun't taka It. Ha kaows. Lca H with htm, Wo ara wHilnr. J. C. AT til CO., Lowell, Mw. sssa'vsfv w.nmcOT a wwro A Trinity of Dangers. - Th-a trinity of danger which the re public tins to fear are Immorality, In dlffercntlo'n, and fanaticism. Immor ality produces one or the other, ac cording to temperament. Unfortunate ly, In the body politic, Indifferent .lent and fanaticism do not antidote each other. Tho one la dry rot; the other, ronibuBtlon nnd swift destruction. Men who lovo their country enough to Ira B'.ad to s.-rvc It, and are wise enoup'.j to steady It; who honor tho Inw, and therefore are careful what haws they enuot; men who can hasten ultraconservntlvcs without losing tho.tr hold upon tlrcni, nnd are able to check fanatics without driving them to rlotciis extremes; men who (11 cern where reform ends and destruc tlon begins, who wish t possess only what they can nsslmilnte and bene flcrntly govern these In each fener ation can savo tho state, and these only Contury. EVRf WALK IM LIFE. A. A. royce, a farmer, llv'ns three and a half mlbs from Trenton. Mo., rorcenlj net- K!Cf.vr? tied In my Or:--;' L:v t.t.i....... ....i Killing a .urn : "S'-i.' , ui.Uly that r.f'AAl 1 I. ... .. ( .j'V. count nC the ), '; icllllizlll 111V .11 ' ? I.'! - .. back tides, l'ora w.iW'a time 1 whs , unable to walk at .11, nml every mnlce. a'..lft I tried and all the medicine 1 took bud not the slightest e.Tcet. My bnck continued 1o ;;row wenker until I be gan taking noun's Kidney rills, and I must say I was more than surprised and gratified to notice tho back ache disappearing gradually until it finally stepped." Donn'a Kidney i'llls sold by nil dealers or mailed on receipt of price, n. cents per box. Foster-Milburn Co.. BulTnlo, X. Y. A Quaint People. The heart of Brittany never changes, .but Its face la rapidly losing many of Its prominent characteristics with, the leveling influence of the French republic. It is only far out of the beaten track, now, or on special occasions like fetes, that you ace universally the costumes and cus toms of the old Armorlcan pen.'nsula. Only an hour's Journey from Quimper, the modern Ired chief town of Flnis tere, and you arc among the Elpou dincs, a people whose dress suggests the Eskimos and Chinese, whose faces are atrongly Mongolian in type, and who in language, customs and beliefs seem to have no relation with the rest of France. More and more the picturesque problem they present is coming to attract attention. Artists, atudfnts. and tourists alike are fasci nated by It. Century. Vaaelln. Everybody knows the great value el this remedy in lliu household, but everybody dues not know that the imita tions of it, which iome arcond-claaa drug gist diahonorably palm off on their eus tomcra, have little or no vain. What should be understood by the public if, that it is not a mere queslion of comparative va'.ue between "Vaseline" and the imita t.ona, but tlint the imitations do not effect the wonderful healing results of the world renowned "Yar!inc," and that they are not the same thing nor made in the sain way. Besides this, many of the imitations re hnrmful irritant and not safe to uac, while Vaseline ia perfectly hnrmleas l'erfcct eafcty, therefore, lies in buying only original bottles and other packages put lip by the ('heaebrough Manufact'g Co. Attention ia railed to their Cipaicum Vaae line advertised in another column. President Pin says that Mexico needs thousands of Chinese to work in her nines and on plantations. To write a check la one thing, to have If honored dependa on a variety of circumstances. lull rimit aA.ird tn flo wltUoiit HII.U. II yon waul on (or tD'itvf, or n-l any ) inn :er, UunMir, bill) work uwiww bill Itl. ur liuxiii. T Vai at HTHI BOXES, U. tLIiS t BRO., Buffalo, N. ., I'ilRTiaV liii'ii.y. dlrrcit Iruin "' m hiiu fro tin. jur tot SKND 8TAMP and got losnrl.tton and pries it Ft ft j n tli :li iiet luiuis lu Ohio. II, M. atMCtturr, JuSorsuii, AsiaaUula Uuuntjr, O. 15 BOLD FILLED WATCH FOR 50 Cents. mm pc miliar, v. n. ror raniouiara. I O Uos .IM. HiH)U. alaaa P. N. U. BO. '08 I I Bast Cough Virup. TaatusUuud. Das I I WOMAN'S SKILL IN TRADE. THE INGENUITY OF FEMALE 8WINDLER3 19 NOTORIOUS. They, Art More Quick-witted, Mora Intuitive Than Men and are Able to Lie. te Schema and to Cheat More Successfully. Kvpr since the Humbert case first ramo before the public general and areat aurnrlse has been expressed on all hands that any one could for so long a time Impose on people) of the highest Intelligence with aurh amaa lng assurance and success. Criminol ogists, however, have long recognized and studied the Ingenuity of women In carrying out glgnntlt. frauds. A French expert In criminology re cently said that If In a criminal scheme the most minute points had been taken Into consideration and nev er lost sight of it was practically cer tain that tho conception and perpetra tion of the crime were mainly, If not entirely, the work of a woman an op inion which he supported by showing how a woman carries out a fraud anj aivlng a number of Illustrative cases. Schopenhauer long ago declared this to bo a fact, and few of his opinions were regarded in his life time as so thoroughly pessimistic as the follow, inc: "The art of deception is congen lal In women, who make use of It as animals mako use of their claws. What la the reason that women ex cel men In this respect? It Is prol ably to be found In tho fact that In all asres and all civilizations women have always been In an Inferior posl tlon to men, and consequently have had to exercise. In their own defense their power of observation and Insight Into human nature as much as possible. Hence they aro more quick-witted. more Intuitive than men, and are able to lie. to scheme, and to cheat more successfully. The Humbert Case has added little or notMug to tho knowledge of the criminal psychology of women, for there la practically nothing In the rase which does not find Us parallel in somo previous ease on record. Take for Instance, the case of Frauloln Adele Spitzorter. who, under the name ct the "Dachauer Hank," as far back as 1S71. opened a big banking establishment In Munich. By means ! of great profession of rellKlotis fer vor, extravagant gi iiero.-lty, a plaun lblo tongue and a magnetic personal ity, nhe so Impressed nil i lassos cf tho community that everybody was eager to trust her with Ms or her cash, on which she offered Interest of a consld crablo amount. People withdrew their money from banks and savings banks, mortgaged their property and Indeed raised as much cash at they could and paid It Into her bank. In a short time she had with her nearly 1,000,000 pounds. Tho result was that government and hanking securities were affected, and the luxurious manner In which Frl. Spltzeder, a former actress of no particular ability, lived and the money the squandered arousing suspicion, in quiries were Instituted, and the Frau- leln's "bank" was found to be a fraud. and Its guiding spirit was scut to pris on for three years. An even more remarkable case of female skill In fraud, and one which rrlmlnologists give as a good Instance M a woman's methods. Is that of Miss Eugene Sach, a young lady of about ?5 years of age, who Imposed upon the V;ad of the government of Croatia, the Banus. She begun by calling upon the Ban is and representing herself to be the daughter of a Croatian official who bad died shortly before. She asked for pe cuniary assistance, which was refused. A little while afterward she appeared again, this time with a visiting card of the Emperor of Brazil and a preci ous stone which she said the emperor had sent to Count Kuhen Hodervary, the Banus, as a present On the following day she received kick tho card and the stone, the Ba lms' secretary writing to say that the count feared she had been the victim of some fraudulent action. Neverthe less, she did not desist from her pur pose. Shortly before Christmas she sent the count a beautiful hand-made lamp mat, together with a letter contaln'n? reason's good wishes expressed ia ful neme and sentimental terms. This also else received back, but the Banus, in returning it. wrote on the back of bis visiting card a few words, to the cf feet that in returning her present he had no do3lre to hurt her fecltnjs The Banus' handwriting wa3 just what she had been trying to obtain from the first, and she at once set about learning to Imitate II, with so much success that before long It was impossible to differentiate between the genuine and the forged. Then she went privately to the cash ler of one of the largest banking estab lishments at Buccarl with a forged check for a sum amounting to 800 pounds and a letter which had appar ently been written by the Banus. The Inference to be drawn from the eon tents of the letter was that some Intl macy existed between the Banus and the young lady, and tho cashier, sus pecting nothing, very obligingly gave the young lady tbe amount required. Encouraged by tbe first success, tho young lady became bolder, and had no difficulty in cashing at the same bank forged checks for 1.200 pounds and t 000 pounds respectively, the caBbler, sharp business man of long export ence, being easily gulled. But this was not all. She went to Kbor banks at Buccarl, where har I -- fraud wnanni'e successful, and In the course cf two or three years not only got possession of -a very larg sum of moncyf but was clever enough not to arouse the least suspicion, in credible as this may seem. Having become rich in this way, she turned her thoughts to marriage, and fell In love with a young professor languages who was the son of a dl rector of a college of repute at Agram to gain this young man for a husband as quickly as possible she wrote a let ter In the handwriting which she had become mlstrex of, and took It, sealed In all secrecy, to the father. In It the father read that It was the wish of the Banus that the young lady who was the bearer of the letter should bo quietly married to the recipient's son, and as father and son were not only willing but anxious to comply with his highness' request, the wedding short ly afterward look place. The young couple departed for Italy to spend their honeymoon, but the bride's career of fraud was nearlnglts end. One of the bank's rashlers died, the forgeries were discovered, and the adventuress was brought back from Italy and sent to prison for seven years. All things considered, these frauds are among the cleverest in the history of crime. London Express, FINDING THE LOST LAMB. Old Father Uses Sheep's Cry While Searching for Lost Daughter. Shortly after the death of Eugene Field a friend from ono of the South ern States told him a pathetic story of a girl who bad wandered away from her home In tho country. She had grown weary of tho drudgery and dreariness of her life on tho farm, and her vanity and pride having been touched by unfortunate compliments to her beauty, she had run nwny from tho farm nnd taken refuge In a large city, with tho usual results of that dangerous slep. Her old father, who In his rouRh way had been devoted to her, mourn ed for tho girl he had lost; but In his simplicity It never occurred to him to try to find her, for the world be yond tho Ilnilt3 of his township was vast and forbidding. But word enmo to him one day that somebody had seen his daughter In tho city, a hun dred miles away, and with only thnt to guldo him ho went In search of her. Once In the city, he shrank from the noise nnd eonftiKlon of the crowds He waited until nlpht nnd then when tho Ktreets wero comparatively de serted he roamed up and down from one atrcct to another, giving tho P"'tt liar cry ho hnd always used w.icn looking for a lost lamb a cry tho girl herself had beard and given many times In her better days. A police man stopped tho old, man and warned him thnt ho was disturbing tno pence whereupon tho father told his. story and added: 'She will come to me If she hears that cry." The officer was moved by the old man's simplicity ano enrnestne, and offered to accompany him In his search. So on they went up nnd down Hie thoroughfares, and Into the most abandoned aoctlons of the city, the farmer giving the plaintive cry and the officer leading the way that aecmed the most promising of sue' cess. And success did come. The girl heard the cry, recognized It, and In tuitively felt that It was for her. She rushed Into the street and straight to her father's arms. She confessed the weariness and misery of her lot, and begged that he would take her hack to the farm where she might begin a new and better life. Togeth er they left the city the next day. The story deeply touched Mr. Field He often spoke of It and declared his Intention of making somo literary use of It. But he never quite mado up his mind whether he should treat It In prose or In verse, sometimes ia vortng tho one form and sometimes the other; and before ho had settled the matter death cut him off. and so the story of the old .farmer and Ws lost lamb awaits another poet. Youth's Companion. Wolf Reveals a Crime. Somo peasants, while recently work lng near Dyakonoff, a village In Rus sla, noticed a wolf running at a little distance and carrying In his mouth something that looked like a portion of a human body. Naturally they wero much disturbed and straightway began to search for the animal's lair, After crossing a broad field they found it, and in tho ditch near It they speedily unearthed the hat an clothes of a farmer named Agarkoff, who had disappeared a fow wcek3 pre viously in a mysterloua manner. The authorities weeo notified, an the investigation which they held soon showed tnat a terrlblo crime had been committed. Agarkoff's wife, it seems, waB Infatuated with a disrep utable fellow named Tchernlch, an as her husband was In the way she determined to get rid of him. Consequently she made Mm drunk one evening and induced Tchernlch to cut off his head with a batchct, after which ehe mutilated the corpso and burled It. Fortunately, and thanks to the wolf, she and Tchermch are now behind prison bars. The number of Insane In California tn 1860 was 1 to 1,000, and in 1870 1 to 500. At present the registered Insane number 1 to 2(19 of tbe geueral popula tion. In Hawaii the average wage (arm band la f 20 a month. oX a lhe Prisoner and His Mother. liy Mm. HnllltiKton TJootli. fAl YOUNO man was serving a twenty years' term In prison. Only a year more stood between him and liberty. Th.i old maker, over sev enty years of age, who had stood by her boy all through these weary years was very sick and reduced to direst poverty. Her husband hnd died and she had reached tho point wh-re sickness made enrnlng impossible and eviction was Imminent. In tnis hour of distress she appealed to her boy for help. He was amo . 1 WL1J to make a little money by ovcrtimo worK. a half a day, or five dollars In a whole year. He found on refcrrm w tne war den that he had already sent ell no possessed io ms miiMiui. 1 1 """"''", her need and possible death from want drove him nearly to distraction, and yet he felt himself utterly powerless to help her. In the same prison was anotnei man, also serving twenty years. When he learned or nts inow pi . xlety he took all his own earnings, twenty dollars, which represented the nara toll of four years, and sent them to the old mother, though It. meant depriving wi.n .i .it it,, ii. ! in xnmfnrt tin miehi tisvp nurchascd. There Is a sequel to this story. Both men came home to us. i ney nernm earn.-si. tlans and have good positions today where they have proved themselves abso lutely worthy of our confidence. They are earning goou wages nnu aro wun.c- by their employers. , . My experience gained by close contact with tho men In our prisons during h i. .ovnn vcor. hail ennvlnepd mn that but a small percentage of tho 80,- 000 now within prison walls should be ment I have been endorsed by wardens Intimate experience than I, and whose duty it Is to wateti very ciosciy ine ac tions, characters and tendencies of the men under their rharge. i hotiava thn in everv man's heart, however nardened or hopeless tho ex terlor, there is some tender spot, If one chord of sweetness that ran be made to hanvnn amiH ail tho innelina- discords nf cite, but I will quote one case of kindness which came under my personal ob servation. Leslie s Monthly. City-Crowding. It Ie an Important I'octor In Uy Jdnien tin modern crowding of the population Into cities Is a factor of the first Importance. Enthusiasts exttavagantly praise the virtues of country populations, and as extravagantly dlspnrago the moral T conditions of cities. This excites contradiction, ann in m ."" trovcrsy the fact Is overlooked that profound changes, some beneficial and others pernicious, have been and are being silently wrought by the aggregation Into titles of t o large a part of the We are entering upon the third generation of hotbed city life. piiMiiai mil. The offspring of those whose occupation lend Irregular and excited lives, mu.ii, ted Irritability of tho nervous system. of Impulse must bo tho result, and this A Inmentable change lias passed over tne couiory won nmu '"u i... lng cf trndes. Most temperaments rerpilie manual labor In tho earlier years or active life, nnd much exerclso at all p"riod3. Labor unions determine the number of apprentices which may be tnken. and this number Is ro small that It Is Impossible for the large majority or i...-i,io nf trmW n, tlm nlivslenl and Counting rooms and shops are crowded while thousands are left to roam tne atreeis, navins naitBir nam.-, yi-uivwu, nor knowledge of business. The struggle for success In society, finance, politics, literature, applied sci ence, nnd art grows more fierce ns the cities grow l.irper; the prosperous have often "paid too dear for the whistle"; tho?e who fall are, accarding to temper ament drwpondrnt or desperate, and the consequence Is a steady proreslon to the sanitarium or tho prison. And tho number of neurotic, romertlc, pamper ed youth of both sexes Is Incomputable. If the cotr.it rv often underestimates, tho' city oftener overestimates; and the prematurely blnre youth Is In. an ab normal condition which feeda upon Itself. I'nder s;uh clrcumstnnccs the very qus'ltles which made a good man may make his son a curse to tho community. The Century. i? j& i? Learning a Tirade. Why Trainltid In OneHhop Uy JtmitfM v n, irnnnrnl tmirelj nf Inn the day, and the o!d machinist has been practically ropluced by a dozen or more skilled workers In various lines, all, however, di rectly connected with the machinist's work; and today wo find tho machinist a specialist, frequently working tn very narrow lines, as, for Instance, running a lathe day after day, and month after month and even year alter year, with no cbungo whatevei in his daily routine. Another man will be known as a planer nana, runum metal planer and having practically no cxpcrleneo In any other lino of work. Then we have fitters of various degrees of skill, their business being to take the parts of a mechanism, large or email as the case may bo, and, by putting on tho finishing touches, either assemble them Into the finished machine or Lrcpare them for some other workman in tne worn or assemunnR. Aa a conBenuence. "learning a trade." as It is called today. Is a misnomer. Generally speaking, there are few opportunities for a young man today to ac ..i. h .-a,),. f a mnchiniHt in the nhons of this country. In Bhe first place, Aninklchmr,nta a no frenilpfltlv an sight of. If he meets his hours of work him satisfactorily, he is allowed to remain at his special lino innonnueiy, Frequently the training of years in one shop will not enable a man to got em ployment at good wages In another. St. Nicholas. The M&n of Yesterday. Hv T. Rex Toy. tn ti-L-na in an ntmosnhcre terday's bliss hangs yet upon his head. Hla soul finds exultation in the pleasures and palna of the past. His future lies behinJ him, and hla past, with Its attending coterie of good and evil hmia-hta runs, constantly before him. Mm In his youth, a few f via hnr mn th linautiru chimerical nream oi noute aeeua. monumental successes. Intellectual eclipses, ine worm ine, wun us mau, au i.i.. ,,n.,in man imcknnnd with outstretched arms for him and his. The embellishments of history might add another ray of lustre to their hue he was there. He In his youth, with his dream of glory, stands upon the scene the .v.i,Vi hi. ,-aT-enr Hn hesitates vet another dream, and then the world the magnitude. He dreams of love and fancies happiness secure of home and sheds a tear; of the sweet, beautiful creature he will call his wife, and hla soul wells up In sympathy; and last, of the luxuries and swectc of life that hang upon the tree and but await the plucking, for him and his, and hi spirit, the will, resounds again the determination of youth to conquer all. Ho in hla prime, with his glory in dreams , stands upon the declivity of worldly usefulness. He has reached the zenith of his career and looks but behind him. His little struggle has ceased and he has now become, among tne millions, one of the world's brawny workers. Noble deeds, great successes, In tellectual achievements belong not to him. He dwells. In his dream, on the story of his youth and lives his young Ufa over again. He sees now why the failures came, why successes never did. He knows that to dream is to dream, but to succeed is to think and to act He gloats over the few mediocre attainments because he sees in them the Index to greater things naa ne nut exercised with-his dream, tho friend and He prattles like a babe of the few things that he did, and of those things be might have done he dreams. New noru American. 0 i The Delight of Work. Uy Jnmea Ifiiclthrtm. T'S Just fun to work!" cried the enthusiastic girl; "fun to keep at it long and hard, to feci your energy telling, and see the results piling up! If it was Indomitable youtb that spoite in mat nign c.traln it was nono the less truth that was uttered. Has not Rmerson said the same ho declares, "is rollevod hla work and done his the feeling that springs from work well mm of restfulness and delight. Thero Is no case so sweet as that which rightfully follows the completion of a task which one has neither shirked nor bungled. And there Is no Itghtnesj of heart so absolute as this gayety of the satisfied toiler. Hla joy Is as pure end aa ephemeral aa sunlight. There Is no alloy Jn It; bo Is Just utterly glad. "Blessed be work!" cries everyone who has tasted the real delight of It by doing it heartily and with that fidelity which Insures satisfying results. Noth Ins Is sweeter than successful work nothing bitterer than work that has failed through conscious withholding There Is no real gladuess of spirit ia this fitting work. u wnn imy nu v.... - called criminals at heart. Ia this state w no nave nan a iir uinx.T .... .... knows rightly how to touch It, some vibrate to the very harmony of life. Many, many Instances could I 7 tne Present t'.rowtlt of Crime M. Hitculey. are sedentary, who tine siiniuiants. wun iew rxceiiu.nm. an...-. ....... An nnnormai hhciikui mm wi.v. Is fostered ny city lite. growing ihs ui t-ucnro cum-i mo mental l)"nellt.i of sterly employment with applicants for every vacant place, Olten 1m of .No Ue In Another, M. notice. nrovonicnt specializing was the order 01 lni - CO than an Individual Is entirely lost and 1s able to do Ohe work assigned to of past arnievements. ine naio oi yes years ago, there played across the fringe ine win to cmuu mem. archenemy of his youth, we leave him. thing, somewhat more soberly? "A man,' and gay when he has put his heart Into best." That Is an admirable analysis of and faithfully done. It is a mingling of one's heart and one's beat from It, world for him who has not found soma A College Creed. At the close of last year at Bowdoln colles:". the (17 graduates were asked to make brief statements of their ro- IIkIoub faith, They complied,' and from tho statements a committee of the faculty condensed the following creed: I believe In one Ood, treavnt In na ture as law; in science, as truth; In art, as beauty; in history, as justice; In society, as sympathy; In conscience, aa duty, and supremely In Christ, as our highest Idval. Not only Is this composite opinion a beautllul expression, from the literary standpoint, but Jt Is Interesting as the average doctrine of a college class of ardent, aggressive, educated young men, and as Indicating the state of re ligious faith toward which tho church Is tending. It may lack some of the features of Christian orthodoxy, but, so- far aa It goes, It recognises the Christian life as tire highest exhibi tion of divine desire. jrfTtr,armanantlroiir-l. fits ornsrvnna. nesaa'tfir flrat d iv'a ttsaof Dr. Kilns' Or: KerTetloatonir.t'l'.'lalhttlaanil tr itlaafr Dr.n.ll. Kt.iws. Ltd.. :! Arth Ht., I'hll t P i. Tim TTnilrd States will sell about 111.- OOO.noO worth of fruits to Kurope this year. Mrs Wlnslow's Hkiothlat flvrup for nilMri tetbln,aottti thsnms, reduces Inflamma tion, allay t'Sln.mtres wind nolle. Ufv;. ah jLtle Ormany, aernrdin(t to elulements. Is the country consuming the most potatoes. Jf yon "rant creamery prices do aa th creameries do, use Juns Tint Dutteb Lot, or. New Orlesna and flalvestort now export more wheat than iNew lork. . t a-nsurTIo'sCur! forCnnaHmrttrnnTed my llfethreo years niro. Mas. TnnaiAS lUia Jiisa, Slnplo St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, l'JOO. The rimitntion of American newspapers IS tj.UOU.UOO.'HKI cnp:rs year. Keie StittinaHiiea For France. Frntice Iihs Just ordered tbe construc tion of six submarines of a new type- that devised by Naval Knglneer Mnn gns. They will be the largest yet built, as when submerged they will have a t!lsplneenient of 4."0 tons. The con tract cnlls for twelve knots an hour under water. rteafoeaa Tinnnt 11a Cnre-f, rv leenlnonlli-illona in t Itey e tnnot remit IM rtirtied no-ll'iu ot the e tr." Thnrnla only one wriv to "V) d tftieaa, and t hut Is by ronstU Inttoual rrt ne IIm. Drtrnossl eiinsed hv an Infln-nfil condition o the nmoiis llnln'-o! tho Enst'iT'tim Tuhe, When this tube la In llnmeil y.vt linvo ji ruinhllnu sound orltnper teef henrhi-f, met when It la entirely i'lr,sed le.-lfnetiS la tho res'ilt.and llllleaa the Inlliun mntfon can ho tnkrn tut and lids tithe re. stored to lis normal ci trillion, lieiirlni.' witl t-e ilnutroyed fnrov-r. Nine eases out of ten nre eiiuseilhvitlarrh.whh'li is notliln.- hut iin ll tlnn ed e. ndiU'Oi or the rnneona surfm?-. Wo will t-lvo fine llundreil Itoll.-trafiir nnf enseof Iin-if-ie'e-iusedhv r!it:irrli)th:i: e.-in-not lie en re 1 hy M tir-H'uturrh Cure, Send for er?nlnrs frV l .1. CiikxeyA Co., Tolodo.O. Kol-1 hy Dei r,'ita, 7 Hull's Frt nlly I'llls are th Ins', The Oi ft of Making I'rlrnita. r.lesspd Is the mnn who has the clft v. making friends, for It Is one of fiod's best gifts. It Involves tunny things, but above all Is the power of going nut of one's self nnd seeing and appreciating whatever Is noble and lovable In another man. Thomas Hughes. Any fool can tell the truth, but it takies an artist to be a first-clnss liar. "I writ to let ra knnw how I ppr?.at yont Ce.rirti. I rommffnre)!. taking thm Nofio br But) took two tn cent boiti nd paaewd tn. worm U ft. Inns. Tban I comuiencrd tAkiog thm BLTAin ana vrannaty, April tu, i paiafu ninr tip worm tft ft. long an-l nrrr a tn on a and nina'-l worm a. l'rovlona to in v takinar C a arena I diiln't know I Lad tap-worm. falwaa taJ atuaU F. Browa, 1M frank lio St., Brook!r. M. T. Vlauant, Palatabla, Potent. Taata Qnod, T0 Oced. Vevar Blcksn. Weaken or (irfpH, 10c, ?tc. Mo. Never 2d Id in balk. The genotne tablet at a raped C J 0 i oat an teed to eura or your money back. 8 tor 11 of Remedy Co., Chicafoor N.V. 594 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES r Ton ff Jy The Dowels jt CdJt7VCATrUfmO Own This Book! 4 Should IT SHOULD BE IN EVERY HOUSEHOLD AS IT MAY BE NEEDED ANY MINUTE. 4 A c ni. in..,, T wmmt m A f ..m.v. m Long Sickness, With Its : EVERY MAN HIS 0WH DOCTOR ' Br J. BtMILION This is a moat Valuable Book for the Household, teaching as it does tha 4c eaaily-diatinguisued Symptoms of different Uiaeaaea, tha Cauaea and Means - of Preventing such Diseases', and the eiiinplest Keniediea which will aUeviaio or cura. 608 Pages. Profusely Illustrated. J - - j (St tions, Explanations of Botanical Praetice. Correct Ua of Ordinary Herb. New EditioD, Revised and Enlarged with Complete Index.. With this Book in tha house) thers is no eicuaa for not knowing what to do in an am- a) rgeney. Don't wait until you have Illness ia yotir family hefnre yon order hut sj send at one for this raluabl volum. ONT.Y tO CENTS rOST-PAIO. Brad postal notes or postage stamps of any denomination not larger than ( cants. )t BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Leonard St., N.Y. AAaAAAAAAAAAAAiaAAJu&AAAA a. T mtn tnasnilsr supports at body weaken and art to andar Backache at tumbaro. Tn restore, atranftbea and strilihtan up, use St. Jacobs Oil Frio 8Sc. and SOS. PTYTTVTTTTVTTTTTTTTTTTTT CAPSICUM VASELINE (POT IIP IK COI.I.ACSIUI.B TUBKSI Aanhstltuteforand sunerlorto mnstardor anr other plantar, and will not bllmrtlie mnaliielK aie sain, j ne pain-niiayinnena cu rati vermeil tii-sof thl ear tide are wonder ful. It will atop the toothache at onoe, end relieve hradar:ne and sciatica. We rerom- mi-nd it a the bfnt and safest external romiter-irritjfcnt known, also aaanexteroa) ri-ini-iW for pains In the cheat alio stomach anil nil rlinTniitir.1ieurrtfflcanl ffolltTCfitn- plalnta. A trll will prove what weclalm lor it. and It will he found to he Invalnahir I n the hmiaehiilil.MaiiypeotileBar-'lt, Isthe he-tof all of your preparations." Price is 'ts..at all driittclsta or other dealers, or l. scndliie;tht".t!iioiinf tnnNlnpoMair-e stem tie we w ; 1 1 send ym a t ii he h 7 inn 1 1. No a rtlol e shonld bwccent-rt hrthepuhllonnloMthe im ca rrles on r I n hel. a s at her w I ae 1 1 1 a nut Konuino. eiHjswimiiHin mm. wu., 17 Ptnlo Htrcet. Nsw Yoim Citt. Kipiius Tn littles arc-tin- best dyspepsia medicine ever made. A hundred millions em have been sold lu the united States In a single yenr. Every Illness arising from a disordered stomach is relieved or cured by their use. So coinuinn Is It that diseases originate from tbe stomach It may be safely as sorted there la no condition of 111 health thnt will not be benefited or cured by the occasional use of Illpans T.tbules. riiysielnus know them and speak highly of them. All druggists sell tbem. Tbe five-cent package la enough for nit ordinary occasion, and the r'umlly ltnttle. sixty tents, contains a household supply for a yenr. One ueuerally gives relief wltuiu twenty minutes. FOf? WOMEN A Koston physician's di3-'' covcrv which cleanses and heals all inflammation of the mucous membrane wherever located. In local treatment of female Ills Pax tine Is invaluable. Used as a douche it is a revelation in cleansing and healing power ; it kills all disease germs which cause inllammatinn and discharges. Thousand's of letters from women rirove that It ia the greatest curofor etieorrha-a ever discovered, l'axtine never fails to cure pelvic catarrh, nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore mouth and sore eyes, because these diseases are all caused by inflammation of the mucous membrane. For cleansing, whitening and pro serving tho teeth we challenge the world to produce its equal. Physicians and specialists everywhere prescribe and endorse Paxtine, and thou sandsof testimonial letters prove its value. At druggists, or sent postpaid 50 eta. A large trial package and bonk of Instructions absolutely free. Write The S. Paxtoa Co., Dept. J5 Boston, Kan. rNDADC V U.alfVtKY; (I'as U W 1 qaiaS rallaf aad aaraa worst ruH. laoa at taviunosiala aod IO aafa Iraauaaal Pre. Br. . S. aaam ssoas. Sas S. atlaata.aa. i - r Will Frnnntlv Prevent fl , ..... J - - " jq. Heavy Expenses end Anxieties. 4 AIISS, A. 11., M, l. w This 1100a la written in piam 4 very-day English, and ia free from the technical terms which render most doctor books so valueleaa to the generality of reader. This j. Book ia intended to be of Service . in the Family, and is ao worded as in ha readiiv understood bv ail. t Only The low cries onlr bcinz mad possible bv tha immense edition a printed. Not only doe this Book 4. contain an much Information Kela- tiv to Diaeases, but very properly j. a-ivea a Comnlcto Analvaia of every- I thing pertaining to Courtship, Mat riago and the Production and Rear- . inn of Healthv Families; together arirk alnaKl RwiinM and Proam-in Straighten Up -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers