Thousandsof Women ARE MADE WELL AND STRONG Iiooms of Lydla E. Plnk.hs.sy, Vegetable Compound Roots Upoi the Fact that It Really Doea Hako Sick Women Well Thousands upon thousands of Ameri can women have been restored to health by Lydia E. I'inkhnm's Vegeta ble Compound. Their letters are on file In Mrs. l'inkham's office, and prove this Statement to be a fact and not a mere boast. Overshadowing Indeed is the success cf this great medicine, and compared with it all other medicines and treat ment for women are experiments. Why has Lydia E. I'inkhnm's Vepe table Compound accomplished its wide spread results for good ? Why has it lived and thrived and done its glorious work for a quarter of a century V Simply and surely because of Its ster ling worth. The reason no other med icine has even approached its success is plainly and positively because there is no other medicine in the world so good for women's ills. The wonderful power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound over the diseases of womankind is not be cause it is a stimulant not because it is a palliative, but simply because it is the most wonderful tonic and recon structor ever discovered to act directly upon the uterine system, positively Cukino disease and displacements and restoring health and vigor. Marvelous enres are reported from all parts of the country by women who have been cured, trained nurses who bave witnessed cures, and physicians who have recognized the virtue in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, and are fair enough to give credit where it is due. If physicians dared to be frank and open, hundreds of them would acknowledge that they constantly prescribe Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound in severe cases of female ills, as they know by experience that it will effect a cure. Women who are troubled with painful 9r irregular menstruation, backache, floating (or flatulence), leucorrhcea, falling, inflammation or ulceration of fee uterus, ovarian troubles, that "bearing-down" feeling, dizziness, faintness. indigestion, nervous pros tration, or the blues, should take im enediate action to ward off the serious Consequences and be restored to health and strength bv taking Lydia E. I'ink liam's Vegetable Compound. Anyway, write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn. Mass., lor advice. It's free and al ways helpful. QROVN yAGOH MADE IN ALL STYLES. Bend for Bonk lot ghrlng full description. BROWN MANUFACTURING CO ZAN ESVILLE. OHIO. HDnDCV111 DISCOVERT; n. WnVrO I quick rrll.f .01 tur.. wont CiMt. AtDd ftr book of ttitimonii). and 10 Days' toutmul fret. Dr. I. H. SSEES OKI. Atl.ot.. Oft. When yon ire tt a loss, to know what to serve (or luncheon, dinner or supper when you crave something both appetizing and satisfying try Libby's R! Food Products Once tried, you will always have a supply on hand Ox Tongues Chili Con Carne Veal Loaf Brisket Beef Ham Loaf Soups your Grocer ha them Llbby. McNeill & Libby, Chicaga The Secret oi Good Coif ce Even the best housekeepers cannot make s good cup of coffee without good material. Dirty, adulterated and queerly blended coffee such as unscrupulous dealers shovel over their counters won't do. But take the pure, clean, natural flavored LION COFFEE, the leader ol all package eoHees the coffee that for over a quarter of a century has been daily welcomed in millions of homes and you will moke a drink fit for a king in this way: 1 HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE. true LION COFFEE, becanM to get beat remits you moat net the beet eoffea. Grind jour UON COFFKit rather fin. l tableepoonfal to wen cap, and m extra for the pot." First mix it with a little cold water, enoujrh to make a Stic seete, and add wbJta of an egg (If egg la to be naed aa a settler), then follow one of the following niiee : 1st. WITH BOILING WATER. Add boiling water, and let ft boll THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add lltUc cold water aad act aside live antomtea to settle. Serve promptly. 2d. WITH COLD WATER. Add your cold water to the paste and artea it to a boll. Tfaea act aside, add UtUe cold water, and la live D Jt (Dont boll It too long?. " VDon'tlet (tartandmorethanten minute befora serving. BOOT'S IDont uso water that has been boiled before. TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE. 1st 1Mb Ease. TJss part of the white of an egg, mixing It with the ground LION COFFEE beforeYoUtoK. Id. Wis CM Wain instead of eggs. After bnlllnr add daah of cold water, and set aside for eight or tea minutes, then serve through s trainer. Insist on getting m package ol genuine UON COFFEE, nsre It ccordlaMi to this recipe and yon will only use ON COFFEE la tatwe. (Laon-bsad oa every package.; (Ear these lion-heads for valuable premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOL60N BPIOE CO., Toledo, Ohio. A Well-informed Guide. The late John W, Mackay was at tending to business at the great Coin stock mine one day when a party ol tourfcts approached and askvd If he knew of a guide who would take them about. Evidently none of them knew him. Mackay offered to escort them and did so, explaining the whole mystery of gold and silver quartz mining. When they emerged the visitors clubbed together and made up a small sum for the guide. Among them was Andrew D. White, re cently ambassador to Germany, and at that time president of Cornell Vniverslty. "Here, my man, take this," he said. "Your explanation ci the. working of the mine has been slnguunrly clear and informing." "Well, It ought to be," replied the guide, as he slipped the half-dollar in his overalls pocket. "I dug 'em and I own "em." A Sure Cure for Gout. Dr. William Osier, in one of his Baltimore lectures, recited a quaint old cure for the gout a cure, from a seventeenth century medical work thnt was designed to show gout's hopelessness. "First pick," said the old cure, "a handkerchief from the pocket of a spinster of 35 who never wished to wed; second, wash the handkerchief in an honest miller's pond; third, dry It on the hedge of a parson who never was covetous; fourth, send it to the shop of a physician who never killed a patient; fifth, mark it with a lawyer's ink who never cheated a client, and, sixth, apply it, hot, to the gout-tormented part. A speedy cure must follow." Large Fossils Found. Scientists of the University of Cali fornia, who have been searching for prehistoric animals on the Nevada desert for the past few months, have succeeded In finding skeletons of some sea mammoths on the dry wastes. One of the specimens Is 29 feet long, and, racked occupies 64 boxes. This specimen was found on the great 40 mile desert in Humbolt county and Is considered one of the most valu able fossils ever unearthed. Before finding this one the scientists suc ceeded in locating several smaller rep tiles, which must have lived in that region ages ago. FITRpermanently eared. No (Its ornervous- ' j.... .... nrTiF Kline'. DrnAt IirfG mtur 111 l i . a un - . . NerveRestoror,S2trlal bottleand treatise frea Dr. B. H. Hum, iia.,aJi atop pi., imia., . Cabbages were introduced into England in the sixteenth century. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Hyrop ror uniiaren teethint?, soften the gums.reduoes inflamma tion.allays pain.cureswina oolio, 25c. a bottle Cromwell is said to have originated the board of trade idei. IMso's Cure for Consumption Is an Infallible medioino for coughs and colds. N, W BiMCSX, Ooean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1901V A baby was born the other day on a Gotham trolley car. Snake Tries to Swallow China Egg. Mrs. Young, a widow living near Bellefonte, Pa was terrified on be holding a blacksnake coiled up in a chicken nest. The snake was killed, when an InvesMgatlon revealed that the reptile had been endeavoring tc swallow a china nest egg. (Sold onlj in 1 lb. smled packages.) A Livestock Hint. Everybody who Is familiar with the work of the live stock breeders must recognize the importance of their work, and the strides that they have made in the various lines of livestock breeding; in beef and dairy cattle; in the production of pork and wool and In the speed and power of their horses. The results of their work are the reward of vigilance, care and well directed energy. However great may be the work of live stock breeders, ib must take second place when com pared with the improvement in corn. For it is corn that makes their work possible. Our corn crop is of greater rational importance than all the live stock raised. It has a large and ever Increasing demand. As a raw mate rial it gives rise to 150 manufactured products. It is probably the greatest money earner raised on the farm. Weekly Witness. Black Knot on Plum Trees. It is getting to a point where we must fight this enemy of the jMum or give up this excellent fruit. We take the following from the Country Gen tleman: "Now is the time when the orchard should have a thorough going over for the removal of black knot. Every plum tree should be closely examined before the leaves put out. Every knot should be cut away, carried off and burned. No exceptions should be made even for large knots which appear on the main branches. It is better to cut off a tree next to the ground than to leave a large knot standing to infect the orchard. A thorough removal of all knots will usually prevent any no ticeable damage. In fact, we have never known of any difficulty with black knot where an orchard was care fully looked after. It has been shown however, that the disease can be con trolled even under considerable disad vantages by spraying. ' The spraying, however, should always be reinforced by pruning. Just recommended. Early spraying with Bordeaux mixture is most effective, but summer spraying undoubtedly serves to some extent to hold the black knot in check." Roots for Pasture. Experiments have repeatedly shown that it pays to let swine do their own harvesting with certain root crops, al though it must be remembered that other feed constituting as nearly a bal anced ration as possible must also be fed. Mangles or beets (sugar beets) sown now and cultivated more or less during the summer will make a pas ture crop on to which the swine may be turned in the fall with excellent re sults. When turned on to such a pas ture they should be permitted to do as they please, which is generally to con sume the tops and then dig out the roots. Of course, the seed must be sown on fairly good soil and soil that does. not bake too hard, else the swine can not get at the roots. We make it a prac tice to turn them into this field for about two hours daily and keep tip the barn feed of a mixture of corn meal and middlings, which, with the roots, constitute an almost perfect ration. Sometimes the pasture is varied by giving them a turn on to the last crop of rape or on to grass of some kind and the change is satisfactory. Handled In this way the cost of preparing the hog for the fattening period is com paratively small and the animal Is in excellent shape to take on weight quickly. Indianapolis News. Using a Separator. Much of the trouble with the cream from farm separators is, according to a contributor in Farm Stock and Home, the result of a misconception on the part of the dairymen and of will ful misrepresentation on the part of the separator company or agent that sold the separator. Whenever It is stn'od that it is not necessary to wash the separator bowl every time it !s used, or that it Is possible to properly wash it without taking it apart, the person making such statements is either ignorant or a knave. In either case he is mis-stating facts. It is true that visible dirt may be washed off, but the worst form of filth, the filthy bacteria, remain and develop, ready to contaminate the first cream that passes through it. Not even the agent that may make such statements would be willing to eat from dishes that bad been washed but once a day. If we examine the argument, we soon see bow false it is. For instance, if it is possible to use the separator twice a day and wash it but once, why may we not use it three times or four times without washing? Or If it be possible to wash the machine without taking it apart but once a day why take Jt apart more than once in two days or three or four, ad infinitum? The Sooner users of farm machines awake to the fact that the separator must be thoroughly cleaned every time it Is used the sooner it will be pos sible to deliver cream in first-class con dition. Another defect is the result of holding milk and cream on the farm too long. This is especially true witto cream. It is true cream may be kept sv.eet for several days, but under the existing conditions of the average farm it is impossible to keep cream free from bacterial contamination; and while it is possible to stop the lactic GARDEN and acid bacteria (the souring kind) from developing by keeping the cream or niilk at low temperature it is im possible to stop the other kinds from growing, consequently milk or cream held for some time develop off flavors. Milk or cream, like women, may grow old without becoming sour. The soon er milk or cream is gotten into the hands of the buttermaker, the better butter he can make of it, and conse quently the more money may be re' turned to the patrons. . Alfalfa Crop. I am trying my luck in a small sec tlon to produce a crop of alfalfa of 3 1-2 acres, which is the highest and dryest of my rock bound New Eng land farm, which I have taken o!f more than a thousand ton of rocks to the acre and plenty of them left yet. There is a very little loam mixed with the gravel and stone with the surface. I am Intensely Interested in cultivating it to learn whether I can produce al falfa on this kind of land with proper cultivation or not; that is the ques tion. I am sowing twenty-five pounds to the acre of alfalfa seed this morning, and eight hundred- pounds of high grade-fertilizer to the acre, am har rowing with my smoothing harrow in four directions. That rakes the seed in about 1 1-2 Inches, then I shall roll It down lightly and see what will come of it. There has been no rain of any account on the field for nearly two months, dry and light as an ash heap down at least six Inches, with every thing In the shape of vegetation killed out so that the alfalfa will have the best chance it can have in such a dry section of land. My grass file of 111-8 acres, from which I produced eighty seven tons of well-dried hay In two crops last year, Is looking very well indeed. Its aver age height at the present time is not far from twenty inches, as it stands, and most of it stands so thick that at that height you can't see into it two inches. I wish your readers could come here and see It. If they would I think they would change their minds in relation to my statement of being of the Ananias type. George M. Clark in the Massachusetts Ploughman. Why Feed the Balanced Ration. Line upon line seems to be neces sary to impress cow owners that to insure any sort of success with cows it is necessary that they have a well balanced ration. The Daily Produce gets close to an explanation of this matter in the following: "By a balanced ration we mean a ration or feed which has in it the elements necessary to yield a large amount of good milk. In a good May or June pasture we have a balanced ration of nature's making. That is one reason why fresh cows always do their best in May and June. It is not the only reason, for In these months thi fly does not trouble, and otherwise con ditions are at their best. Many farm ers fall down by not feeding a bal anced ration. They expect their cows to work miracles, to make bricks with out straw, to provide milk without having the proper raw material. We have abundant examples of cows being picked up by the experiment stations, notably in Kansas, just common coun try cows, that when brought to the college and properly fed prove to be exceptionally profitable milkers. They were not profitable on the farm, be cause the farmer did not give them a balanced ration. This balanced ration is not some new-fangled scientific notion gotten up by agricultural papers, colleges and ex periment stations, but. Just a plain, everyday, common sense, practical proposition. It is just giving the cow what she needs for the work she has on hand, just as our grandmothers gave us pork and beans the pork fur nishing the carbohydrates and the beans the albuminoids; just as they give us bread and butter, the bread furnishing the albumoids, the butter the carbohydrates; just as they give us roast beef and potatoes, the beef furnishing the flesh-formers, the pota toes the carbohydrates; just as they give us a good old-fashioned New Eng land boiled dinner, which has in it about everything you can think of some meat, potatoes, turnips, parsnips, cabbage, carrots all going to the right spot the cheapest and best dinner that a man can get at a restaurant. Now we must apply this Bame com mon sense to the feeding of dairy cows, if they are to be profitable. There Is nothing better than good pasture and its grasses during May and June. There is nothing better during the winter than corn silage with alfalfa and clover hay. The 'one question which dairy farmers and all other far mers must study with increased dili gence during the years to come is what constitutes a balanced ration, or the ration that goes to the right spot and does the business. Indiana Farmer. Lowest of the Low. "No man Is so low," remarked the citizen who Is fond of moral reflec tions, "but what there la some one lower." "That's so." assented the fat citi zen. "Even the tainted oil millionaire ran look down on the chap who puts plg-lron into life-preservers." Louis ville Courier-Journal. THE PLAYWRIGHT-STAR. Odetts Tyler, Famous Aetna Vaiaas Uosn's Kidney Fills. Miss Odette Tyler la not only one of the best known dramatic stars In America, but has written and produced a successful play of her own. Miss Tyler bus written the following grateful note, ex pressing her ap preciation of Douu's ' Kidney rills: Foster-Mllburn Co.," Buffalo, N. Y.: Gentlemen My yler experience with yonr valuable remedy has been equally gratifying to both myself and friends. (Signed) ODETTE TILER. Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo. N. T. For sale by all dealers. Price, CO cents per box. A Sailor's Burial at Cherbourg. The most impressive feature, how ever, of the day on which John Paul Jones' body arrived at Cherbourg was the real funeral of Seaman Rodgers of the Chattanooga, who died yes terday in the Civil hospital here from nephritis. In the afternoon 100 sailors and a firing squad of marines, accomimnied by the scarlet coated band of the Brooklyn, marched to the hospital and received the body. The escort was augmented; there by a detachment of French sailors and soldiers and a number of professional mourners. The route was lined with spectators. Thousands of the inhabit ants joined the cortege as It passed along, tbe band playing the Dead March In Saul. The body of blue jackets mourning their 'comrade marched In perfect alignment and step. As the coffin passed the male spectators removed their hats, and the women crossed themselves. The coffin was draped with the American flag, and was flanked by six mess mates of the dead sailor. Arriving at the oemetery the escort formed a hollow square about the grave, and the Episcopal burial service was read. Then the firing squad deliv ered three volleys, mourning taps were sounded on the bugle, and America had given France a sailor for the one she was to take on the next day. The Largest Lump of Ice. ' The largest mass of Ice In the world Is probably the one which fills up nearly the whole of the interior of Greenland, where it has accumulated since before the dawn of history. It ts believed now to form a block about COO.OOO square miles in area, and averaging a mile and a half in thickness. According to these statis tics the lump of ice is larger in volume than the whole body of water In the Mediterranean, and there Is enough of it to cover the whole of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland with a layer about seven miles thlok. If It were cut Into two convenient slabs and built up equal ly upon the entire surface of "gal lant little Wales," It would form a pile more than 120 miles high. There Is ice enough in Greenland to cover the entire surface of the United States a quarter of a mile deep. What May Be Found at Skibo. The sporting attractions of Skibo, Mr. Carnegie's highland home are thin summed up: The extent of his shoot ing is about 20,000 acres, of which about 10,000 acres are moor, 6,000 acres arable and 4.000 acres wood; 800 to 800 brace grouse, 22 stags, 4 fallow bucks, 42 roe deer, besides black game partrklges, pheasants, Biilps, wood cock, hares, rabbits and wild fowl may be expected. There is a fair Bal mon and sea trout fishing In about 15 miles of the Evellx, and good trout fishing in Lochs Mlgdale, Laggan, Lars and Buidhe Westminster Gazette. Electro-Magnetic Surgery. A huge elect ro-niagnct has been Bet up In a certain hospital in England. It drew out splinters of steel which had become lodged In the eyes of patients. In one Instance It drew out a piece of a hammer head which had been driven Into the muscles of a patient's upper arm, and in another case drew out a piece of a cold-chisel in a forearm. EVER TREAT YOU SO 7 Coffee Acta the .fonalt anil Will Come Up j A clergyman who pursues bis noble calling in a country parish in Iowa tells of bis coffee experience: "My wife and I used coffee regularly for breakfast, frequently for dinner and occasionally for supper always the very best quality package coffee never could find a place on our table. "In tbe spring of 1800 my wife was taken with violent vomiting, which, we bad great difficulty in stopping. "It seemed to come frcm coffee drink ing, but we could not decide. "In the following July, however, she was attacked a second time by tbe vomiting. I was away from home till ing an appointment at tbe time, and on my return I found her very low; she had literally vomited herself almost to dentil, and it took some days to quiet tbe trouble and restore her stomach. J'l bad also experienced tbe same trouble, but not so violently, and had relieved It each time by a resort to medicine. 'But my wife's second attack satis fied me that the "se of coffee was at the bottom of our troubles, and so we stopped it forthwith and took on Pos turn Food Coffee. The old symptoms of disease'disappeared, and during tbe 9 years that we have been using Tos- turn instead of coffee .we nave never had a recurrence of the vomiting. We never weary of Tostum, to which we know we owe our good health. This Is simple statement of facts." Name given by Postum Company, Battle Creek. Mich. Read tbe little book, "The Road to ITS! VO Ddatto 1X1 ' '' A Modern Buccaneer "The days of piracy may be gone, but there is a bold buccaneer In the waters of the North Pacific ocean who comes perilously near, duplicating the exploits of Lafitte and Captain Kldd," said E. R. Birdwell, of San Francisco. "This rover of the deep, Alexander McLean by name, Is the master of the famous Carmenclta, a craft which has for a long time been engaged in-selling whisky Illicit y to Indians and in poaching on the fur seal preserves of Russia and the United States. It Is hinted that the owner of this outlaw ship has done even darker deeds than swindling redskins and sealing seals, but he has thus far escaped capture, either through his remarkable luck or the inefficiency of the government revenue service. The latest McLean exploits have been committed in wa ters that are under Russian Jurisdic tion, and right now Russia has her hands too full in Manchuria to bother with minor affairs. Washington Post Work and Wage. Paul Morton gets $100,000 a year, and Admiral Togo $3,000. That's about right. Morton hus GO0.O00 dis satisfied policy holders to placate, and Togo has only a few thousand Russians to show how to lead a different life. Besides, Togo's labors are over, and Morton's have just be gun and may never end. All Togo has got to do to keep his job and the esteem of the public is to stay afloat, where he cannot spend all his money, and to avoid home com ings. What Morton must do could not be told In a day. Portland Ore gonian. A Queer Thing About July. How we came to pronounce July as we do now with the accent on the second syllable is one of tbe unsolved mysteries of speech. Named! of course, after Julius Caesar, it Bhould really be pronounced to rhyme with "duly," and so our forefathers actu ally did pronounce It. Spenser, for Instance, has the line, "Then came hot July boyling like a fire," and even so late as Johnson's time the accent was still on the "Ju." It is one of many words which would startle those ancestors of ours spoken as we speak them now. London Chron icle. Shaking Hands. When a stranger doei not grasp the hand you offer him, you are en titled to doubt his honesty. If he favors you with a couple of fingers you may set him down as haughty. If his hand lies limply in yours, he is timid. If he gives you the "Ameri can squeeze," he Is audacious. If his hand slips away, he is indolent; but if he Is good, loyal, sincere, well- balanced, mentally and physically, he lets you have a grip, ample, firm, modest and yet genial. New York Globe. 15 YEARS OF TORTURE Itchlna aad Vslnfnl Bores Covered Bead and Body Cared In Week bj Callcnrs. "For fifteen years my scalp and fore head was one mass of scuba, and my body Was covered with sores. Words cannot express how I suffered from the itching and pain. I had given tip hope when a friend told me to get L'uticura. After bathing with Cuticura Soap and applying Cuticura' Ointment for three dovs my head was as clear aa ever, and to my "surpriae and joy, one cake of aoap and one box of omtment made a complete cure in one week. (Signed) H. B. Franklin, 717 Wash ington St., Allegheny, l'a." More Plagues in Egypt. Cairo is now in the throes of a caterpillar plague, and ninny of the older reslrents say they never saw so many of the destructive insects as are now in evidence. In some sec tions of the city they have almost destroyed the foliage on scores of trees,' and In a few places have even devout ed much of the grass. Wlckliffe (111.) Yeoman. WE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR $195 To introduce. Buy direct and save t lie dif ference. Kasy terms. Writo us and we'll tell you nil Rlimit it. HOtHIAN.N'S MTSir HOt'SK, S87 Siiiltliflelil Street, l'lttnlxira;. Pa. FOR WOMEN 3 troubled with ills peculiar to their ftcx. used s A douche is marvelous. cc- VCOUIUia eV UVtvUfcUlT VIlSUiBCS), HID UI3tOD UII. 6topi discharge, oealt inflammation and loci soreness, cures leucorrhcea and natal catarrh. Pax tine is In powJer form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansinf, healing, rermkidal and economical than liquid antiseptics fur all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPF.C1AL USES For sale at dnisgtuti, 00 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. Thc R. Paxton Company boston, Mas. It. ully Prosecutes Claims. Bim1nr U.S. Pension bureau. 5yr in dWll war. 1& iuQ hlieatiug claiiua. at t v hum LUH.IMWII:iag5Er I Best Cough Syrup. Taste (ioud. Usi I CUHtfe WntHfc ALL t!SI lilLS. iq tima. nolo ot dniinrt!- J4,MM:,laSfl3ZC BEST FOR HfirilTn GUARANTEED i CURB for all bow.! troubles, appendicitis, biliotuani. tad broth blood, wind on th. .toni.ch, bloated bowel., foul liouth, headBcnsTindlaWdoaiW.t!? I pain, after ..tin,, live, trouble. ..How .k.o and di..ine. When bowVl. d?t a re.ul.rlv VM m .irW CaiutinatiAn bill mn.. .1 , . 7 . OOW. aon t BWV. tarts chronic ailments snd loof rear, of lufferln, . No matter whet . CASCARET8 today, foraou wflf nerer set well and I sUr wTl " HT'JS, rlh I... j, adrl... .tart wl.h Cuc.rw today aadw Jblu iSTj! money refuaoed. The r.nulne tablet .temped C C C. NeeiTSIld li!!S. S cr T WoSlit free. ' Acidre, flerllns Remedy CoHny, ChieMOTN v', Smf'" it '.'.a r : . MISS SLIA OFF, Indianapolis, Ini. SUFFERED JOR MONTHS. Pe-ru-na, the Remedy That Cured Miss Ella Of!, 1127 Linden St., lodum spobs, iDd., writes: "I suffered with run dauro rsst Mtutiof far mevtal month, aid feared that I wmid have to give my work. "On teektnp the advice of a pAysi rtan, he prescribed a (onto. 1 found, however, that It did me no good. Ots. eeektng the advice of our druayls). he asked me to try Ptmtna. in at few weeks I began to feel and art Hlca a different person. My appetite creased, I did not have that worts out feeling, and 1 could sleep splem dldly. In a couple of months i me entirety recovered. 1 thank you for vhat your medicine has done for me. " Ella Off. Write Dr. Hartmarj, President of The Hartmaa Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for free medical advice. All corresponde w beld strictly confidential. Instantly Relieved and Spseditg; ' Cured by Baths with Soap to cleanse the skirt, gentle applications of Cuti cura Ointment to soothe and heal, and mild doses of Cuti cura Pills to cool the blood. A single Set,costingbut One Dollar often cures. Sold throughout th world. Potter Drtiff ant Qaaa. Corp-. Botlon, N'! Propp. - mr buul tut u 'l' he Ureal Humor Cart. Malla4afata WE MANUFACTURE Gas Saving Gas Burners For Boilers and Hot Air Furnaeac Write for Catalogue. STANDARD HEATING AND RADIATOR CtU PITTSBURC. PA. : f THE BOWELS CANDY CATHARTI8 "sau ... i . ; . TOnTUHlllQ mm Wellville." In eaca pkg.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers