One Cent a Bolt Wall Paper. Gold, Seta., 3cta.; Gol I Em bossed, 4ots,; ln- E*ln. l ive Cents. Gold Border, let. a yard. lt"D --$3 Worlh of Hood's Cured When Others Failed Bait Rheum or Psoriasis Severe Mr. N. J. McConn Kingsli-y, lowa. "In 1879 I bad an eruption appear on my left leg and nrin. Sometimes it would ulcerate and on account of it I was unable to work a great deal of ibo time. I had sevend' ctors ex amine and In-at mo without success. Some called it psora-is, s mo eczema, some salt rheum and one kn iwing one called it prairie i 1 ch. AH the doctors in the coun'y had a trial but none did me a part iclo of good. I spent, nil my spare money trying t > get relief. Finally X was persuaded to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. After using one and a half bottlos I saw the benefit. 1 have now used tho third bottle and am completely cured. I received more HOOD'S Sarsaparil'a CUKES benefit from three dollars' worth of Hood's Sarsaparilla than from the hundreds of dollars paid for advice and other medicine. Any one Buffering from skin trouble will surely get re lief In Hood's Sarsaparilla." N. J. MCL'OUN, Kingpley, lowa. We Know This to Bo True "We know Mr. N.J. McConn; saw his leg and arm before taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and know he was terribly afflicted; now ho Is cured." "E. H. HANKS, Druggist, " I). A. OI.TMANN, " J. P.DASPEM, "it. B. ELLIS, " C. C. BAKU Kit, Kings ley, lowa. llnod'e I*lllm are the best after-dinner I'llls, a* •Ist dlgesliuu, cure hcailacho. Try a Box. v w u i"ii ' Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT Makes Another Remarkable Cure! GIVEN UP TO DIE! Swamp-Root Dissolves a Stono In tlie Bladder na Largo as a Gooeo ICjfg;. Dr. Kilmer & Co., ninßhnmton, N. Y. Gentlemen:—l don't think there is a person living who can recommend your Swamp-Hoot more highly than myself. I have been a great sufferer for several years; every organ in my tody seemed to bo out of order: was under the tcarc of different physicians for nearly two years; tried every doctor in our town and used other medicine, but continued to suffer and decline until I was a prn f - Ira I tcreck, Tho most learned physicians made examinations and pro nounced my caso one of Grarel or Stone in t!:e It/adder, and said that I would never beany better until it was remov ed by asurgical operation. Oh! I thought next? Every one felt sad; I myself gave up, as an operation teemed to us certain ileal/ i. NO USE FOR THE KNIFE I I shall never forget how timely tho good news of your Swamp Root reached me. I send you by this same mail a eample of the stone cr gravel thufc was dleeolred aml o.\i>elled by tho use of your Swamp-Hoot. it must have been as large as a good size gooso egg. I am now in excellent, health, as my photograph will •how. I have done a very hard summer's work and feci us well to-day as I ever did. I kept right on using Swamp ltoot and it snvod my life. Ifntiy one doubts my statement I will furnish proof. LAIIORKE Bow EnsM ITH, Dec. 30th, 1892. Marysvillo, Ohio. OWAMn Cunrntfc..t'M contents of On# VI Jiv K Bottlo. If you are not lamented, Drug. Tf gy \ * gift will refund to you the price paid. dlLjfip "Invalids' Guide to Ilralth" and Dr. Kilmer A Co., Blughamton, N. Y. At DrurgUta, tOc. or SI.OO Hire. Waterproof IlttßKM* Coat PLSH WORLDJ_ SLICKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted water proof, and will keep you dry ia tho hardest Rtorm. Ihe new POMMEL HLU'KEIt is a perfect rldln coat, anil cover the entlro addlc. Bcwareof imitations. I)'n i # buy a coat if tho "Fish Brand" Is not on It. Illustra ted Catalogue free. A. J. TOWER. Boston. Mass. Howjs YirBlood? I had a malignant breaking out on my leg below tho knee, and was cured sound and well with two and a half bottles of (UjtfsEßy Othei blood mcdlciues had failed to do mo any good. WILL C. EEATY, Yorkville, S. C. I was troubled from childhood with an air ofTetter. and threo> buttles of Our book on Wood and Skin Diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPFCIFIO CO., Atlanta, ft* j.loia"io Lyphlleno ixibeon y Uiln. thut w.ll euro permanently. P .I'lTti front m M .l, , I OOK iaT CO.. Ohio-fa, IU AN ALMOST EXTINCT TRIBE '.CHE REMNANT OP THE ALABAMA INDIANS IN TEXAS. Always the Stanch Friends of tho AVhites—Their Wild, Irregular Code ot Dueling-. ~1 TEW persons in Texas, and piob -I=/ ably nobody outside of the State, I are aware of the fact that thcte (f still oxists within its borders tho remnant of a once powerful tribe of In dians, even in the darkest days of the iufant Republic the stauch friends of the white race. While tho Coinanches, Kiovcas, Li pans aud other wild tribes, who in years past left a trail of blood on the unprotected frontiers, have long since been gathered on Government res ervations and compelled to pretermit their depredations, tho remnant of Ala bama and Coshatta tribes, numbering now about 250 soul§, still pursue a peace ful existence on the banks of tho Trinity Itiver in Polk, San Jacinto and Liberty Counties. These Indians arc a branch of the Creek Nation, who early in tho present century withdrew from the contest with the white race as hopeless, and sought a home on tho Trinity River, in Texas, then under Spanish rule. When immi gration again brought Americans around them they persisted in their peaceful policy, receiving their former foes with kinducss and hospitality, sharing provi sions with them, and doing all iu their power to alleviate tho sufferings of set tlers in a new country. In tho war with Mexico they adhered to tho cause of Texas, remaining quietly in their villages, ready to take up arms with tho rest of tho population in case the Mexican Army should succeed in reach the Trinity. Several years ago the State bought a tract of land foi the Ala'oamos and set tled them upon it. They have made clearings in the forests, and constructed comfortable log cabins, having good stocks of horses, hogs and cattle, and raising sufficient crops for their support. The crops are cultivated rather for their own use than for sale. Indian corn is the principal one, though many of them plact sweet potatoes, and all of them vegetables, aud they usually fill their villages with fruit trees. During the season of cultivation they remain closely at home, working industriously and hunting only at such leisure times as their crops allow them. Tho interval between tho working and the gathering of the crops is usually spent iu re3t and social intercourse and occasional hunting parties. But when everything is gathere3 and housed, and the last ere vies in their, granaries closed to exclude light and air, as a guard agairst the depredations ot that South-Texan corn pe3tkuown as the weevil, then comes the return to Indian life and Indian employment. They breakup iuto hunting parties, after the Arab fashion, taking with them their wives and children, their horses and tents and household utens:l9. They seek the forests which settlements have not yet reached, and work their way to the dense cane brakes on the rivers which the white man has not yet penetrated. They soon till their camps with game, and alone with themselves and naturo, aud safe from the intrusion of a superior and conquering race, enjoy the rsalizi tion of Indian life as it was before the white man discovered their country"! Devoted to the wild and exciting sports ftf the chase, nnd reveling in that ab solute freedom which is their ruling passion, they lind iu these hunting ex cursions their times of greatest enjoy ment. When weary of the chase or satisfied with its result, they return to their villages, their horses loaded with dried meat aud deer skins, to be dressed for market, and bears' oil aud hide 3 tor their own use and for sale. Like all other Indians, they have that fatal passion for drink which seems des tined to result in their extermination. But it is gonerally kept svithiu reason able bounds, and they do not drink habitually. A constitutional depression of spirits to which they nro peculiarly subject, or au overflow of social feoliug on the reunion of friouds returning from Iboir hunting expeditions, usually leads to a beginning. Oue after another is drawn in, and the revel sometimes ex tends over three days and nights. When it is over they carefully efface all traces of debauchery, dress themselves hand somely,return to their usual occupations, and for a long timo drink nothing in toxicating. They listen with patience ind good humor to remonstrances on the subject, and a friend can often dis suade them from drinking, or induce thorn to close a revel sooner than they otherwise would have done. They are fond of dress aud show con siderable taste in the selection and adap tion of the colors which be3t become :hem. They are fond of ornaments, ispecinlly those made of pure silver, but will not wear jewelry of the baser metals. They have a wild, irregular code of duel ing of their own, and are always ready ;o throw life away on a point of honor. Tliey do it with a coolness and indiffer mce which would excite the eDvy of a shite follower of the code. In fact they io not seem to feel thnt instinctive dread >f death which characterizes the white nan. They speak of it with as much ndifference as any other future event, ind meet it apparently without fear or •eluctaace. The Indians all speak English, and in iddition converse in three different anguages, all evidently dialects of the Ireek, and most of them understand the lervile Choctaw, which was once the reneral lauguage among the different ribes nnd their usual means of com nunication with the whites. They are ond of festivals, ball play, dances and racial asssmblages of every kind, all of which are conducted with the best of rood feeling and seem to be sources of inalloyed enjoyment. When their own crops are worked to i point of safety tlicy are always willing •o help their white neighbors. At olantations where they are well treated, ind where they find it agreeable to stay, they work for low wages. During the cotton-picking season they really render important aid. This is their favorite work. Their small hands and slender fingers are well adapted for it, and their lithe and agile forms glide through the cotton without hecking or otherwise in juring it. As they pick by weight, and are allowed their own time of work, this leaves them the freedom of action, they prize so highly. They pick very neatly and carefully, attend strictly to the in structions of th'eir employors, and in this, as in all their relations with the whites who treat them kindly, they are uniformly desirous to please. Many of them have professed Chris tianity, aud religious services are held among thein by the Rev. Thomas Ward White, a miuistcr of tho Baptist Church, who has taken great interest in them. It is, however, only a question of a few years when thi9 last remnant of the once powerful Alabama?, who gave the name to a State, will have disappeared from the earth. Each year their number is becoming smaller, and the time is not distant when they will be extinct.—New York Times. The Organism of Man."' In the human body there are 263 bones. The muscles are 500 iu number. The length of tho alimentary canal is about 32 feet. The amouut of blood in an adult averages 31 pounds, or fully one-fifth of the entire weight. The heart is 6 inches in length and 4 inches in diameter, and beats 70 times pei minute, 4200 times per hour, 100,800 per day, 36,792,000 times per year, 2,505,440,000 iu three-score and ten, and at each beat 2} ounces of blood are thrown out of it, 175 ounces per minute, 656 pounds per hour, 7i tous per day. All the blood in the body passes through the heart in three iniuutes. This little organ, by? its . ceaseless industry, pumps each day what is equal to lifting 122 tous oue foot high, or one ton 122 feet high. The lungs will contain about one gallon of air at their usual degree of inflation. We breathe on an average 1203 tixioi per hour, inhale COO gallons of air, or 24,000 per day. The aggregate surface of the air cells of the lungs exceeds 20,000 square iachcs, an area very nearly equal to the floor of a room twelve feet square. The average weight of the brain of an adult male is 3 pounds and 8 ounces, of a female 2 pounds and 4 ounces. The nerves are all connected with it, directly or by the spiu#inarrow. These nerve?, together with their branches and minute ramifications, prob ably exceed 10,000,000 in number, forming a "body guard" outnumbering by far the greatest array ever marshaled. The skin is composed of three layers, and varies from one-fourth to one-eighth of an inch in thickness. The atmos pheric pressure being about 14 pouuds to the square inc\ a person of medium 9ize 13 subjected to a pre39ure of 4 J,OOO pounds. Each square inch of skin con tains 3500 sweatiug tubes, or perspira tory pores, each of which may be likened to a little drain pipe one-fourth of an inch long, making an aggregate length of the entire surface of the body of 201,166 feet, or a tile ditch for draining the body almost 40 mile 3 long. Man is marvclomly male. Wno is eager to in vestigate the curious and wonderful works of Omnipotent Wisdom, let him not wander the wide world around to seek them, but examine himself.—Pop ular Science News. Railed at tho Speaker. • Doctor Hildreth, in his "Mimoirs of the Early Settlors of Ohio," derates a chapter to Abraham Whipple, of Rhode Island. He was born in 17.53, and wa3 one of the first to take a hand in the Revolutionary War. In 1736 ho was elected a representative to the Legislature from tho town of Cranston. The advo c ttes of tho paper-money system were then in power, and had chosen Othniol Gorton, a clumsy old man, for Speaker. Gorton was in tho habit of keeping a large quid of tobacco in one side of his mouth, which pressed out oao of his cheeks. Most of the debaters were on tho opposite side of the hall from that on which Commodore Whipple sat, and the Speaker's face was commoiily turned that way. Once, in the course of the debato, Whipple had cogitated a apooch, which he waited for an opportunity to deliver. At last, out of patience, he rose and called: "Mr. Speaker I" The Speaker, whose face was turned the other way, did not hear him. He raised his voice to its utmost: "Mr. Speaker!" Gorton started, and turning to the Com modore, said: "I hear you." There upon Whipple began: "I wish, Mr. Speaker, you would shift your quid of tobacco from your starboard to your lar board jaw, that it might givo your hea 1 a cant this way, so that you could some times hear something from this side of the house." Tuea he went on with his speech. All Ancient Remedy. M. de Mely, a French grape grower and something of a classical scholar, dis covered that Strain hal described a method of treating diseased vines with petroleum. Ho determined to try it on his phylloxera-smitten vineyard. He met with a success that delighted him, and at a recent meeting of the French Academy of Sciences, he exhibited healthy shoots grown from stocks rendered barren by phylloxera, giving statistics of his exper iments that leave no doubt of the suc cess of the method. It appears that the ancients knew a thing or two.—New Orleans Picayune. An Open Wood Fire.' With all the modern improvements in art and science, we have never found any other means of ventilating a room so nearly perfect as by the old-fashioned, broad, open fireplace. Many a family in tho country, that euv ! es tho faucied su periority of city comforts, lias a very imperfect appreciation of some luxuries which have become almost entirely pe culiar to rural life; and we reckon nu open wood fire as one of the chicfest of these.—New York Ledger. TALK'S CHEAP, There's lots o' quiint ol' sayin's I'venoticad in my day— Bi% truths and solid principles To'd in the shortest way. My father ust to have one. An* this is bow it ran: •'Talk's cheap, ray boy," ho ust to say, "But money buys the lan' " I own the sayin's homely. Undignified and rough; But then it tells jest what you mean, An' tells it brief enough. An' when you git to tbiukin* How short is life's thin span. It's well to rain' "that talk is cheap, But money buys the lan'." 'Twon't do to boast an' b'uster An' brag an' try to bluff: An' don't you git to thinkin' This world "ain't up to tnuT." It is; an* while you'ra blowlu' Your own bazoo, my man, There's some one snearin', "talk fg cliaap, But money buys the lan'." —Chicago News It ?cori. HUMOR OF THE DAY An unostentatious gift—A loan.— Fun. Mistress of the situation—The servant girl.—Life. Consumed with curiosity—Unfamilial viands.—Truth. Gets down to work—The pillow maker.—Truth. A man never finds how dull he is till he tries to live by bis wits.---Life. Carver—"l'm but a hewer of wood." Marine Painter—"And I but a drawer of water." She—"Are these flowers ail nature!" He—"Yes, nil except the price."—Chi cago Inter-Ocean. In a fight between a porcupine an 1 a bull dog recently, the latter was severely outpointed.—Puck. She "Diamonds are like women's hearts—the richest jewels ip creation." He—"And the hardest."—Fuu. Ethel—"How did George like your swau's-dowu boa?" Maude—"He was tickled with it."—Newport News. One of the times when a man begins to cry and sigh that all men are not hon est is when he gets the wrong hat.— Ham's Horn. myself," said the hen, when the eggs on which she had been sitting hatched into goslings.—Truth. "Did you ever go to Bins, the tailor?" "Yes. Got two suits from him. One dress suit. One law suit. Very expen sive raau ."—Waif. It is curious how much faster a street car humps along when you are ruuning after it than when you are riding on it. —Richmond Recorder. "Goodness mc, Jolinny! What art you crying about now?'' '-'Cause Tommy dreamed about eatin' pic last night and I didn't."—lndianapolis Jour nal. "Why did your hired girl leave you?" "She didn't like the extra work." "What extra work did she have to do?" "Collecting her wages," Harper's Weekly. Merchant —"Now here is n piece ot goods that speaks for itself." Uncle Hayseed—"Woli, that wouldn't suit Mandy. She like 3to do her own talk in'. " —lnter-Oceau. Father—"A hundred dollars for a suit of clothes! I never paid that for a suit in my life." Son—"Well, you'll have to begin now, father; here's the bill."—Brooklyn Life. Mrs. Bingo—"Dear, after this you must wear u dress suit down to dinner." Bingo "What for?" Mrs. Bingo "Our new girl has been used to it." Clothier and Furnisher. Hfi—"Do you love me, darling?" She —"Sometimes I think I do; and then again when you have that hideou, baggy new overcoat ou, I doubt the strength of my affection."—Tid-Bits. Trotter—"l hear that Grace Willoug'i by is engaged to a ieal live lord." Bar low—"Well, th'ey claim h9's alive, but I've seen him several times and I'm rather sceptical."-—Vogue. "Now we can fix him in this way," said the lawyer. "Ob, talk is cheap," said the client. "Well, wait till you get through with this and see whether talk is cheap or not."—New York Press. "Don't you find him just as I repre sented him?" Lady (indignantly; "No, sir. You said he was a bird dog, nnd he hasn't sung a note yet, and I've had him two weeks."—Chicago Inter- Ocean. At the Chemistry Exam: "Which is the best-known insulator?" The Candi date (a young student, pale and tbiu, with a bilious complexion aud a savage look about him)—" Poverty, sir!'—Le Monde Illustrc. Mother (putting the boy out of the pantry)—" How many more times will I have to tell you to keep out of the pre serve jar?" Small Boy (sobbing)—"No more, mamma; they're all gone."—De troit Free Press. Sport—"My watch loses something every night and seldom makes it up dur ing the day. What ails it?" Jeweler (reflectively)—" Evidently it is trying to conform to the habits of its owner." Jewelers' Weekly. Prisoner—"Yes, your Worship, I committed the theft "with which I am charged entirely through the instigation of my medical adviser." Magistrate— "You mean to say that in carrying out ail experiment iu hypnotism he sug gested the crime to you?' Prisoner "I don't know about that ; but oue thin" is certain, lie told me to take something before going to bed."—Agenda Priti tcmps. Reports from New Orleans show that the Louisiana sugar crop reached last year 189,500 tons, upon which the bounty will be $7,580,000, as against £0,832,590 paid in bounties last year. SERIOUS FACTS ABOUT BREAD Which Housekeeper* Should Enrnently (,'ou aider. A serious danger menaces the health of the people of this country in tho nu merous alum baking powders that are now being urged upon the public. There is no question as to the detri mental effect of these powders upon the system. Every Board of Health, every physician, will tell you of the uu wholesomcqualitiesthey add to the food Some countries have absolutely prohib ited the sale of bread containing alum. Even small doses of alum, given to children, have produced fatal results, while cases of heartburn, indigestion, griping, constipation, dyspepsia, and various kindred gastric troubles from irritation of the mucous membrane, caused by the continuous use of food prepared with the alum or alum-phos phate powders, are familiar in the practice of etcry physician. It is not possible that any prudent bouse wife,any loving mother, will know ingly use any article of food that will in jure the health of her household, or per haps cause the death of her children. llow shall the dangerous alum pow ders be distinguished? And how shall the danger to health from their use be avoided? Generally, alum powders may be known from the price at which they arc sold, or from the fact that they are accompanied by a gift, are disposed of under some-scheme. The alum pow der costs but a few cents a pound, and is often sold at 20 or 25 cents a pound. If some present is given with it, tho price may be 00,40 or 50 cents a pound. It is impossible to namo all tho alum powders in the market,but any baking powders sold at a low price, or adver tised as costing only half as much as cream of tartar powders, accompanied by a present, or disposed of under any scheme, is of this class, detrimental to health, and to be avoided. But the easy, safe and certain pro tection of our bread, biscuit and cake front ail danger of unwbolesomenoss is in the use of the Hoyal Baking Powder only. This powder is mentioned be cause of the innttmb crable reports in its favor by high medical authorities, by the U. 8. Government, and by the official chemists and Boards of Health, which leave no doubt as to its entire freedom from alum,lime and ammonia, its alsolutc purity and wholesomeness. While its use is thus a safeguard against the poisonous alum powders it is satisfactory at the samo time to know that it makes the whitest, light est, sweetest and most delicious food, which will keep moist and fresh long er, and that can he eaten with immun ity hot or cold, stale or fresh, and also that owing to its greater strength it is more economical than others. These facts should incline consum ers to turn a deaf ear to all importun ities to buy the inferior powder. If a grocer urges the sale of tho cheap, impure, alum brands, it should bo borne in mind that it i 3 because be can make more profit on them. The wise housekeeper will decline in 'all cases to take them. Take no chances through using a doubt* IHi article where so important a matter as the health or life of dear ones is at s/a\'C. . lowa's Wonderful Ice Cure. One of the greatest curiosities in the Mississippi Valley is a natural ico csvo which is located in the bluffs of tho lowa River within les3 than a mile of Decorah, the county seat of Wianesheik County. Tbi3 unique curiosity is indeed a natural icehouse—a cavern in which groat icicles may bs found at any season of tho year, being especially Hue in summer, partic ularly when the weather is hot anil dry outside. The bluff in which tho cave is located is between 200 and 400 feet in height, it being necessary to climb about seventy-five feet up the side of the bluff to reach the mouth of the cave. The entrance is a fissure about ten feet in width and between fifteen and twenty feet in boight, from which a constant current of cold air issues. Thirty feet from the inouth of tho cave tho passage turns to tho left and downwards, towards the river bed. The slope is gradual, however, and the walls and roof aio with in easy reach all the while. After you have reached a spot 100 feet from tho opening you entered it is noticed that the walls and roof are covered with frost. Twenty feet further a thin coating of ice is noticed, which increases in thickness as you go into tho bluff.—St. Louis Re public. THE most religious man In the world puts nothing like Ilcavcn in the. air castles he builds. TIIE man with Icy manners Is very numerous just now. Easily Taken Up Cod Liver Oil as ! t Ijbk appears in Scott's Emulsion is easily a I taken up by the ,-r L I system. In no I [ j J other form can so HjySV-W much fat-food be "75R YATL assimilated with out injury to the Jj jHinfar organs of digestion. Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Uypophos phites has come to be an article of every day use, a prompt and infallible cure for Colds, Coughs, Throat troubles, and a positive builder of flesh. Prepared by Scott A Bowne. N. Y. Ail druggist*. ffcllllllfl Morphine. Habit. Cured In 10 II Vl|||H to 20 dny*. No pay till cured. 111 I "1*1 DR. J. STEPHENS, Lobanon.Ohio. PATENT&SSffiMSi tries. Ten years'experience as examiner In U.S. Pat-Offlce. patent guaranteed or no fee. S. HIM SHEARS, (15 7th St., Washington. I). ST. JACOBS OIL LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, SPRAINS, JL BRUISES, BURNS, SWELLINGS, J> NETJEALGIA. A copy ' th~ "Ofiiria! _Porlfolio of SK'oreVJ?* CHAF ILES'A.'vOttELCR CO., Tgfiffp; "German Syrup" Justice of the Peace, George Wil kinson, of Lowville, Murray Co., Miun., makes a deposition concern ing a severe cold. Listen to it. "In the Spring of 1888, through ex posure I contracted a very severe cold that settled on my lungs. This was accompanied by excessive night sweats. Oue bottle of Boschee's German Syrup broke up the cold, night sweats, and all and left me 1 in a good, healthy condition. I can j give German Syrup my most earnest | commendation." © j Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies Other Chemicals are used in tho preparation of W. BAKER & CO.'S i iMreakfastCocoa |j | \',l which Is absolutely Kj li fI VI pure and soluble. fi.fi I I- F* fJ It ha* more than three timet Bf* IF' ' T t"i length of Cocoa mixed affifciLJl"'" 1 Starch, Arrowroot or nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. Sold hy'Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass. |THE KIND I ■ T6IAT CURES ® |i( ?ng time and a TE It It I- Min i: I'AIN IV MY HEAI) lors fB months, also severe pain in my stomaeh tun-BB Hgjpnsrd to ho caused by Liver Trouble. £5 H\luhl iil'fcr 11 iIEIt t I have been e.nii-ajl p= |m I 1 t walk I lie floor b*enue ..f the* But times n* to he covered almost entirely == g= with seab*. I rend your papers, oml tliougfit [■"sl would try one bottle of i DANA'S P SARSAPAHILLA _ though I had tried ro many different medicines == g| without any help. I hnd hut little faith. Ilefore I=g g| hml tHk. n one hot tle I Mt a ureal denial gM.i'i'i' , A , LT"'iCd'ai'i\ P '''riio < > —- the truth of the almve. P. W. HARRY. j=y jg= Tieonderogn, N. Y. rharr.iaeist. Bl H| Dam Sarsaparllla Co., Belfast, Maine. F?i Spectacles S I'll re It ra '/.III't 11 Pebble Spec! n clew, with hand some rolled gold frames and bows. Your number sent postpaid, only ."Mir. a pair. Worth five times that amount.lf you don't know tho number you need send us your age. Stccl-rlmmed spectacles | D els. OoUlen Aorclfu Co., 57; l and 575 Broadway, Now York. Cures Consumptl on, Coughs, Croup, Horo Tiiroat. Sold by oil Druggists on a Guarantee. Garfield Tea Cores Hick Rosdaohi • . tores Compli Billa. Soiuplo free. OABVIKLHTKA W. 4bthßt.,N.Y. 1 Cures Constipation " Don't Hide Your Light Under a Bushel." That's Just Why wa Talk About SAPOLIO FREE! ffiURRArS CATALOG Theginndent arxl most complete j ('ntuiug of Vehicle*. Iliiriu Kv ai'iljMo.-te t.iKxti ever pi i llsln.i. A regular cyclopedia for j any one who owna u horKP. I WILBER H. MURRAY NTF'fl CO. 139w! VR ONT*BTR EE T. CINCINNATI. 0, with Pastes, Enamels lpM^Durabl* S a?i K the c PoI £ U Br,l,l ® nt - od ° r - I r N v 1J '99 WORNNICHT AND DAY I t or all (rtTKKTgp.) wlp,' Ntw'v or k V'l Ij. °*^ 1981 !Pl?* Illustrated Publications, I? £ E KAMjwIBSS t iH aw ggld.ho, Wwhl.gt.iD ,nd OtDgOD, th. I REE OOVERNMEHT B AND LOW PRICED a oinvo r®"r ß . LANDS aarThs bsst Arrlcultural.Grstlng and Timber Lands now open to settlors. Mailed FREE. Address I All AH. n. LAMBOUX, LmmA U., >. T. SL U., 81. rani, Warn ff 15 UNHAPPY AND. JJ WONT BGI DRIVEN** MOMENAILS . ARE CHEERFUL AND SHARP , > AND THE DIFFERENT SIZES / C-N, ARE VERY ANXIOUS TO / |// y. , L "tADAPT THEMSELVES / / / \ . TO ALL THE USES ,\\'/ I Two t ompnn ton.xjsod in all homos. (Home Nails, „ ... ~ . , Sold by all doaler3. | Homo Tacks. IWJZBSTER'S ; IX TURN A TTONA T, 11 DICTIONARY i j . Ten year, ppont in 1 SoS,(Hk) cxpenileJ. # I A Crand Educator ]' < 1 z r Abreast of tho Times JI J 'jj A Library in Itself . ; t V?f. ■ Involuablo In tho] i sss household, and to thot | j , lAsh your Bookseller to show it toyou. ]! rtibUshed by ] j O.AC.TiI€IIIII AMCO.,BrniKCFiELD,MABs.,\ RA. , rap-send for firo prospectus containing ppcciment [ p®i?e. llltuirntlons, testimonials, etc. r ty 1 jo not buy reprints of ancient editions. ( | -vw-ti wi*wwwtwww%nunv' MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS f™ 1 ™ mm THOMSON'S SLOTTED CLBNCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only n hammer needed to drive nn 1 <■ 'lnch th< in easily and quickly, leaving ihe clutch H 1 'So üb'ly smooth, it qtilrhig no ho e to be made )n he leaiher nor burr for the Rivets. They are alrongr, tonsil and durable. .Millions now In use. All i .euctliH, uniform or assorted, put up In boxes. Ak your denier for ihein, or send 40c. I ! stumps for a box ot lw), assorte I sizes. Mun'td by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., R ALTIIAn, M ASS. r A N l"b E"A L FA MI ™Y "mTd Tc |"n E I For Indigestion. lUllousness. : Headache, t nnstlpatlon, Hod in:'."l'll diM.niiuH of the Stomach* I bj? drugglrts or sent by mail. Box 7 (fl vlalsl, .ftc. rack age <4 boxes), I For frv sninplCH an dress | RIPANH C IIKMICAL CO., New York. AC ENTS ■ w ut sight, iigents making Idg money. 1. A. PA I N'T KB. I'nientee, Tlfnsvilllt', Pa. IJATENTM t PENSIONS !-Sand for Invent JL or's Guide or Hw to Obtain a I'afenf. Sen,] fog Digest of PENSION and HOC NT Y I.AUS. PATRICK O'FAKKEI* WASHINOTON. D. a TTAKMS/TIMBBU s a£ , -I New cntulogue sent free upon application. I Address Niroi, RANBDBM. A Co., Manusaaa, V. ni T Til TO THOMAS p. SIMPSON, WashlngtonT PATLNTo ! mmmmmattaMm Sfi Conitimptivfi and peoplo H GH thnuaMnde. It has not injur- H ■ It is the best cough syrup. "MURRAY"HARNESSSS.9S We Bold more Vehicle* au