HOOD'S CURES •' Fourteen years ago I bad an attack of tho jggT gravel, and since have anl kidneys. I had no appotito and a*e noth ing but gruel. Ilud no more color than a MI a rble UF. A bottles of Mr. 1). W. Jordan. HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA I could oat uitho-st. distress. J have now fully recover d. J fee! trell and atn ereff." D. AI.JOUDAN, Kdmeeton, N. Y. Haod'a Pills cure all Liver Ilia. Ulllouanes* Jauuilloe, Indigestion. Sick Hendaclii). PN U US 'V3 "German Syrup" Regis Feblanc is a French Cana dian store keeper at Notre Dame de Staubridge, Quebec, Can., who was cured of a severe attack ofCongest lon of the Dungs by Boschee's Ger man Syrup. He has sold many a bottle of German Syrup on his per sonal recommendation. If you drop him a line he'll give you the full facts of the case direct, as"he did us, and that Boschee's German Syrup brought him through nicely. It always will. It is a good medicine and thorough in its work. % ss&sa Mooy/OTS/IsPI % ?0- ™ ILL ° T. c Un An agreeable Laxative and NERVE TONIO, Fold by Druggists or sent by mail. 85c., GOo. and SI.OO per package. F.implea free. )Ut A llfl The Favorite TOOTH POWDH fkV Aw lor the Toeth and Breath,26o, UK. SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. SUFFERED EIGHT YEARS I Couldn't Eat or Sleep. Dr. Kilmer A Co:—"1 hod been troubled foi eight yours with stomach and heart difficulties. §ns every-thing I ate hurt liver wore in u terrible Ftutc. Could neither uleep orcnt. I had been treated by the best Chic ago doctors without any benefit what ever. As a lust resort I tried your SWAMP LION r, mill now 1 can cut " r anything, no mutter what. Nothing hurts rue, mid can go to bed and gel a good night's sleep. SW AMP-ROOT cured me. i Any one doubting this statement ran write, I will gladly answer." Mrs. German Miller, Deb. 20th, 1893. Springport, Mich. SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. HAD Torpid Liver Tcr 14 Years. Bifious all tho Time. PKAII SIUS: "I have been troubled with Torpid I.iver for 14 years and gone through many titn<n it lias been hit- Lind of labor. Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-HOOT was BL by Holtbouse, Blackburn Sc J? li'l'.i'/ A¥ut* "akin* "\!nS F after* takhig the SH-< >nd that my heult h was iinprov- * iug and i continued until I had taken 0 tattles. I cuu now cheerfully rccommeudSWAMP HOOT to every one who lias torpid liver, for it has completely cured me." Jan. 10th, Ittfl. F. W. CHRISTIAN en, SWAMP-ROOT, The Greaf Blood Purifier. r At DrugglMtft, 50c. Asl.oo *1 M "Guide to lleulth" Free. Consul* (J Jj ets* tat ion Free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., MWV— w ' Y ' Ilr - Kilmer's Ro OT Parilla I.lvor Pill. -e-iauun-s* AkkT|il£ , IKST | puis, IB route. IIWWMH lam seventy-seven years old. m u ant * have had my age renewed B B at least twenty years by the use fj 3 of Swift's Specific. My foot CT a and le r to my knee was a unnimr sore for two years, and physicians said t could not be cured. After taking fifteen small wt U iS S. there is not a sore on my limbs,and 1 He" V" I ought"" YEARS OLD et all suilerers know u ****** f your wonderful rca;cdy. IRA F. STILTS, Palmer, Kansas City. SWIFT SFCIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Gsu DROPSYH •noticed hopeler*. From first .lose symptoms rapidly dJ"PP"Je ind in ten da-, a. If.vt t-vo-tb.lrds of all sytuptmn^are WORN NIGHT AND-DAY. , Ihdds tho worst rup " KSfELA STIC * eg ), Jp f 11 f XSSSSP^ ** New Pat. linjirovemeiH R V— (twpealed. G. V. Ilou'so Mtg. C FATESTEP.) Co.. 144 Erosdway. N.Y. City. TM'TD 6A U ""FA MI I. V MEDICINE ii >r /"iiri'sSyßis I" l^fll".nl'"!'""' k.ire^Satn.rr ME MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOED BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. Ami Ho Grew Bolder—On Land and 011 Sea —Took His Medicine Money a Friend Indeed, Ktc. 'Just onoe!" he cried, with lover's zest, "Dear Katie, mnv I plant a £iss upon the hand that pressed The hand of the Infanta?" *Yes, George"—she blushed and bowed her head— '"But you must understand. [ also pressed—my lips," she said. "To the Infanta's hand." —Chicago Tribune. TOOK HIS MEDICINE. "I'm a pill," proclaimed the tough. "I'll take you," responded the po licemau, as he gathered him in.— Truth. ON LAND AND ON SEA. He—"On land the dudes make me tired." Hhe—"And at sea tho swells make tno sick." —Bulletin. COLD AND DISTANT. She (in the swell set) "Why is the north pole so cold, do you imagine?" He (not in it) —"Because it is in the upper circle, I fancy."—Detroit Free Press. KEEPS 'EM OFP. Bleeker—"Do you have those rods m your house to protect you from lightning? Uncle Treetop—"No; from light ning-rod agents."—Puck. MONEY A FRIEND INDEED. "What is tho namo of your beet friend?" "Bill." "The other name, please?" "Dollar."—Boston Saturday Ga zette. A BRAVE TASK. Scribbler "Have you read my new novel, 'A Story Without a Hero?' " Carper—"Yes. I think it's mis named, however. Any man who rends it through proves himself a hero."— Tit-Bits. WHAT'S IN A NAME? "How did you cure your boy of his habit of running oft' to swim?" "I happened to speak of swimming ns 'bathing' one night, and he imme diately took an unconquerable aver sion to it." LIBERAL WITH HIMSELF. "Cholly is very independent. He says he will never be owned by any body." "Probably lhat iswhy he feels at lib erty to give himself away so often."— Washington Star. SPLITS THE nEAVENS. "Did you advise Howler to cultivate his voice?" "Yes " "Ob, mercy! What for?" "A rain producing machine."—Chi cago luter-Oceau. LAID IT ON TOO THICK. "Oh, I'm so sorry, Mr. Dillingham, your lady love has thrown you over. What was the trouble?" "Why, you see, I flattered her so much she got too proud to Bpcak to me."—Boston Beacon. "NONE SO BLIND," ETC. "I can't see that tho streets are so very dirty," remarked tho commis sioner. "Neither can I, with these frightful clouds of dust iu my eyes," retorted tho groaning taxpayer.—Puck. A DIPLOMATIC ANSWER. "Can't you settle this bill to-day, Senator?" asked tho tailor of the de linquent legislator. "No, Snip ; it wouldn't bo parlia mentary. I've merely glanced over it, you know, and I can't pass a bill until after its third reading."—Judge. ECONOMY. Laura—"Where did you get that beautiful black sailor?" Flora —"You'll never tell, will you? It is a last summer hat, and I blacked it up with-waterproof shoo polish." Laura—"Well! That is one way of making both ends meet, I must say." —lndianapolis Journal. TIIE RIGHT LINE. "Look at me, ina'am," said the man who was asking for something to eat. "Ain't I the picture of despair?" "I don't know anything about yer bein' a picture," sho answered, glanc ing at the ax, "but unless you're in the wood cut lino you can't get any thing to cat here."—Washington Star. A FOREIGNER'S IMPRESSION. M. Paree—"ls not ze cognomen, 'Town Lots' a very common one in ze America?" William Ann—"Not that I am aware of. Why?" M. Puree—' 'Every place where I go, I see ze headboards where some man of zat name has been buried."—Puck. A WRATHFUL NEIGHBOR. Lady Canvasser —"I have hero a preparation for beautifying tho com plexion, removing sunburn, eradica ting pimples. Tho lady next door sent me. She"— Mrs. Worldover—"Sho did, did she? Well, you go back and seo if you can't sell her something to remove that corn from tho end of her nose that came *rom sticking it into other people's outness." (Door bangs)— Judge. SETTLED HIM. Jicnr," said the city editor, "that you claim to be able to put into in* telligible print any kind of American dialect." "That's what," said the airy new re porter. "I'm glad to hear it. I wish about a column story for Sunday in the dia lect a young woman uses when she is chewing gum and talking at one and the same instant." The story has not yet appeared.— ournal. MERELY ORNAMENTAL. Miss Gushem (in a studio) —"Oh, Mr. Clawed le Rain ! This 'Marriage' of yours is such an exquisite picture! But do tell me why Hymen is always represented carrying a torch?" Clawed le Rain (solemnly)—"lt passes my comprehension, my dear Miss Gushem. It always has since I found out that the torch never throws any light on the subject."— Judge. HER IMPRESSION. "Well, how do you like going to school, Wendeline?" inquired her mother. "The intelligent discipline pleases mo very much, mamma," replied the dear little Boston girl who had just re turned homo after her first day at school, "but the methods are some what crude and the teacher impreses mo as one who has not wholly suc ceeded as yet in the struggle to over come the disadvantages necessarily re sulting from defective early educa tion. " —Chicago Tribune. CLEARLY HER RIGHT. "You have trifled with me, Miss Gripley," said Young Leezer. "You have been warm and cold by turns. You have led me on by your coquettish arts to make a fool and a laughing stock of myself for gods and men. I will stand it no longer. Miss Gripley, permit me to recall the offer I made to you six weeks ago. I have come," he went on, with increasing bitter ness, "to withdraw from the utterly unreliable savings bank of your fasci nations one heart placed there on de posit April 22, 1893." "Hiram," softly replied the young girl, with a look that brought the wretched young man to his knees, "I shall take advantage of the time limit. You will have to let it remain on de posit, dear, sixty days longer."—Chi cago Tribune. fSE WORllii He who foresees never acts. Wise men never attempt anything. Shyness is a sport on tho tree of egotism. Without trampling the cleverest can not get rich. Love is blind, but hatred wears double lenses. The greatest things are done by the greatest fools. The more space a man acquires the less room has he. Men's motives are mercifully hidden by their shirt fronts. Observe moderation in all things— especially iu virtues. Pure love is a phoenix which rises from the ashes of self. Most men are like small dogs—very ferocious behind the fence. When you lose a leg begin at once to practice with a wooden one. The consolation of those whp fail is to depreciate those who succeed. If you cannot become rich remem ber the many miseries of the rich. Dives is never an example, because nobody considers himself really rich. Counting the blessings that remain is like enumerating the teeth left after a fight. A too prosperous and verdant flour ishing of a plant's foliage may interfere with the fruit. Sincerity is not incompatible with reserve, and brutal frankness proclaims its own egotism. A person who demands admiration is disliked in proportion to the admira tion we cannot but concede. What a fine glow we feel in defend ing a slandered enemy; and how fer vently we hope our opinions will have no weight. If every person on earth spoke the truth and nothing but the truth upou one appointed day of each year wo would soou reveit to barbarism. When the nature of a natural honest and serious man has suffered A devia tion through extravagance, into which by some ill chance he hos been led, and having proved the folly of his course he would turn to other ways, marriage is a good thing—for the man. Pets tor a City's Monfgeric. At this period of the year, when people are hurrying out of town, a large number of pets that would be in convenient to carry about are Bent as presents to the Central Park Menagerie. Among these are always a large num ber of small alligators, and for these gifts the larger alligators are most thankful, for if there is a tidbit that one of these saurians love it is a young and tender one of his own family. In tho wild state tho female alligator's chief care is to keep the home of her young ones unknown to the male. Many of those that ore pent to the menagerie are very soon gobbled up, though tho brutes are fed with ample rations of raw meat.—New York Post. "T —" • Ingenious Saw to Cut Stone. French ingenuity has contrived an improved Btone-cntting saw of remark able efficiency—a circular saw having its edge set with black diamonds iu the same way as the straight blade#; but as the strain on the diamond is all iu one direction, the fitting cun be uiuch firwef. ALWAYS SWEEP UNDER THE MAT. h. story Is told of a poor servant girl, Who once was moody and strange, Who asked for admission to the fold of the church, As she had experienced a change. When asked by the pastor a reason to givo Fora step so important as that, She answered —' 'Before, sir, I slighted my work. But now I sweep tinder the mat." There's A world of good sense In this simple reply, And well worth study and thought To those who arc traveling the way that is broad, Not doing the things which they ought. Bo true to yourself; do the best that you can, In business, at law. or the bat. Whatever you do, be faithful an l tru°, And always "sweep under the mat." —Fit* Nigel, in New York Tribune, HUMOR OI"THE DAY. Many a man is sunstruck trying to make hay while the sun shines. When a mftn is generous to n fault, it is never one of his wife's.—Chicago Inter-Ocean. People speak of the face of a note, when it's really the figure that inter ests them.—Sparks. A small boy savs if time is made of days and nights, it must be striped like a circus zebra.—Puck. It is contended that there is nothing in a name, and yet about all one has is in it. —Galveston News. Tho man who strikes for shorter hours is always willing to except tho one allowed for dinner. Puck. Independence is the inclination to mind one's own business, combined with the ability to do so.—Puck. A great deal of repentance nowadays .is done in broadcloth and ashes of roses, instead of sackcloth and ashes. - —Texas Siftings. No girl's musical education is con sidered complete these days until she can sing as if she were having her teeth pulled. —Atchison Globe. A correspondent wants to know if it is "the correct thing to eat shad with a fork only." It would be safer to eat it with a sieve.—Statesman. The chappie of to-day is the old fashioned dude dipped in a little de pravity. He has just brains enough to be a nuisance.—Texas Sittings. She—"How do you suppose the apes crack tho hard shells of the nuts they pick." He—"With a monkey wrench, of course."—American Hebrew. Alas for th story of gloom That chases a chill through the blooJ ; He starts with a wonilerfui boom And concludes with a sickening thud. —Washington Star. The peck of trouble wc hear so much about, if handled properly, could be | easily gotten into a cpiart measure without knocking the bottom out.— Puck. Struckile—"l am beginning to think that one's ancestors are important." Miss Mcßean- "Yes, they come under the head, 'lmportant, if true.'"— Vogue. No matter how finely tho display window of a store may be fitted up, the pretty young lady clerk will always prove a counter-attraction. —Rochester Democrat. You have all seen the little thimble sized after dinner coffee cups, that are so awkward to handle : well, that's the size of most men's cup of joy.—Atchi' | son Globe. Johnny—"Mamma, can't you tell me anew fairy story?" Mrs. Braggs —"I don't know any, Johnny. Maybe your father will tell me some when he comes in to-night."—Bulletin. "Here, mamma, is tho clock-key. Will that do?" "Do for what?' 1 "Why, for you. I heard you saying a while ago that you were all run down."—Rochester Democrat. Little slots for nickels. Open-mouthed but dumb, Gives the jawlous schoolgirl Wads of chewing-gum. Detroit Free Tress. A woman will face a frowning world and cling to the man she loves through the most bitter adversity; but she wouldn't wear a bonnet that was out of fashion to save the Government.— Tit-Bits. Husband—"Can't I help you pack that trunk?" Experienced Wife— "Yes, you can help me immensely by going straight in town to your office and leaving me to pack it as I sec fit." —Somerville Journal. "!• Sir Robert Paul ton a very tiny man, mamma?" inquired little Maud earnestly. "No, my dear, not very. Why do you ask?" "Because fnthei gays he's to sit on your right hand at dinner to-night."—Funny Folks. "Boys," said the teacher, "we musl all work in this world. Did any ol you ever get something for nothing?" "Yes," replied every boy in the room. "What?" asked the tpacher in surprise. "A lickin'," was the reply.—New York Tribune. "You understand, Belly," said th? mistress, "that we are to move out ol this house the first of next montlf?' "Yes'ig," answered Betty. "I'vebeen sweepin' all the dirt into tho registers for the past three weeks. "—Chicago Tribune. Hicks—"Look at Claddings! He has gat listening to Miss Pedalpouuder play that piano for over an hour. I thought you told me that Gaddings wasn't fond of music." Wicks—"He isn't. Bui he's just daft on athletics."—Bostor Transcript. "No, sir," said tho milkman, "I am : oot. going to have tho sin on ray head J of injuring any one by giving impure milk. I have had the water in my • tvell analyzed and it is bad. The weil wants t be denned out, tiic analyst . says, and I'm going to htvn it cleaned I jut, nn 1 don't you forget it,"'—Boston . Courier, How It Feels to Be Ncalppit. The man who can tell more tales ol Indian fighting, bear hunting, and wild life generally than any other man west of tho Ho; kioi, is Carroll JSrou •on, a pioneer of the Selkirk Moun tains in British Columbia. It is forty-two years since he made his way alone from tho hen 1 waters of the Mis souri to those mountains, and ho is now in San Francisco, seeing for the first time in all those years a town ol more than a thousand persons. His face is s arreil from arrow wounds received in Indian fights, and if he lifts his long white hair from the side of his head he shows a great circular scar extending from above his right eye clear around the right side and bai k of his head almost to the left ear. That is where the old man was scalped. "It was in '6ti, with tho Sioux," he explained, "and it was the worst brush I ever had with the Indians. They come upon a camp of nine of us, anil one of them pounced upon me, seized me by the hair, and cut right around my head where you see this scar. Then ho gave a sharp wrench upward with his right hand and laid'the w hole skull bare. I cannot d< scribe tha pniu it gave me, and I don't believe I could have endured any more without simply dying of it. Thero is no other torture man can bo subjected to that will begin to compare with being scalped. "It is a common belief that a man can't live after being s wiped, but I've survived the experience a matter of twenty-two years, and I don't think I'm quite to the end of my journey yet, even if lam 7l) years olil. I knew an other man up there, too, who didn't die under the scalping-kuife. The seal]) was torn completely oil' from the whole top of his hoad, so that it had to be constantly swathed in cotton and olive oil. He lived a year. That man knew what sufiering means, if ever a man did."— Neif York Xaa. The Eiffel Tower. M. Eiffel's metalized monument in the Champ de Mars is snid to have lately been competing with tho famous Leaning Tower of l'isa. Tho rumor was spread diligently lecently that the Nineteenth Cent iry lb b d had been seen to oscil'n'o slightly toward the left or the right, no one bei g able tc specify the particular direction. M. Eiffel and his constructors admit the possibility of a slight deviation of the axis of th< tower, I ut they aro firmly convinced that the iron edifice is as perpend cular as the firm stone foun dation on which it rests. They con lend that even if the tower deviates the Occident would bo of no importance, as it rests not only on a strong basis ol masonry but on a complicated mace ol machinery of steel and enst iron, into which hydraulij pretsos of 800 ti ni power can be introduced for tho pur pose of keeping tho tower in the per pendicular. The engineers a'so avei that the ground i n which the towei rests is no more overweighted than if it bore an ordinary Parisian building ol five stoiics, and that tho resisting power of tho iron of which it is com posed is sufficient to insuie its safety. The tower, ai it now stands, is a thing of wonder if not of beauty, and will certainly bo tho marvel of the ap proaching univ, rial exhibition.— Lon don Dailij_Te!i><jrci)ih. Postponement Inevitable. Miss Gushly (pausing on tho ladder, while the moon modestly hides its fnce b-hind a cloud)--Stop, ,Ja--k! AVe must postpone tho elopement until to morrow. I have forgotten to wiite tc aiy mother. Jack Horrowit— No matter, darling hurry 1 You can seud tho letter bv mail. Miss Gushly—How absurd yon are' It must be left on the dressing-caso oi the romance of the while thing ii spoiled. I alien t m >vc a step.— Judye. Made a Forcible Impression. She (softly)—l shall ucvor forgot this n'glit-- and this ball. He (tenderly)— Tell me—why? She —And tiiat last xva'tz. He—You doliglit me I She —And you I He —You entrance me! Then I liav impressed you? She (more softly than over)— Yes You've about smashed two of my toeß London Tid- Hit*. Tiif following table shows the popn tion and property valuation of tho Ter ritories in the United States, most ol which are at proscnt seeking admissior to Statohood: l'opula- Proportj lion. TAluailou Aianka 49.850 t 25,0^0,001 Arizona K),HA) 7.VKXUW Dnkota 600,00J 161,49 ,"7 Idaho 100,010 21,288,<XX Monana ...140,000 67,00),00( New Mexico 17., i 0) 4H,17,U* Utah 210,00) 4f., :179,0m Wa hington 167.983 84,0;i,18i Wyoming 85.0 0 FcnolH for Glaan. To make pencils for writing on flassj Take beeswax 2 07., mutton suet~3 07.., anil stearic acid 4 oz.; melt all together, and add about 5 07.. of red lead, to which has been mixed a small portion of purified carbonate of potassa; stir all well together, then pour Into hollow glass rods and let cool. That I'nnniiiilly llreezy Journal, The Pittaburs Tir.Ai)EH,furnislie l their readers laal Thursday with a four column account of the marriage of Princes* May and Prince Beorge, givin? in detail tho royal ceremony, 1 description of the bridil troua-eiu, with pen ikstchrs of the possible King and Uneen of England, and the toa-t of (Jueeii A ictoria. The LEADEU is always live, bright and newsy. Dials were spoken of by Isaiah 700 years Before the Christian era, We Cure ltuptnre. Ko matter of liow long standing. Writs for free treatise, testimonials, etc., to S. J. Hollensworth & Co., Owego, Tioga Co., N. Y. Price $1; by mail, $1.15. Onty shout 1,0 0.0 n persons are engaged n agriculture in Brnail. The Kind of Journalism. Editor (to reporter)—l think we'll dispense with your services hereafter. "Why?" "We can't afford to keep a man who makes enemies of tho best people in town. "How have I made enemies?" "See here—in this account of tho i wedding last n : ght you make no refer cnco to the bride being beautiful and, accomplished, and you dismissed tho groom without saving that he is one of I the nr>st popular young men in tho city. That kind of business won't work in this otlice." When Ills Hack Was Turned. Fho —Why don't you sit down? lie—Why—er—tho truth is, your ! papa assaulted me last night. She—Assaulted you? He—Yes, assaulted me. I wouldn't , have minded it so much had it not been for tho cowardly way ho did it. She—What do you mean ? He— He kicked me—when my back was turned. London lias over I,ooft •'haunted" houses. 1 • ■ £* | You want the Best 1 Royal Baking Powder never disappoints; ||j V|j never makes sour, soggy or husky food; pt ilffl never spoils good materials; never leaves |jf lumps of alkali in the biscuit or cake; while !§.' ;VJ all these things do happen with the best of .VA cooks who cling to the old-fashioned *sj methods, or who use other baking powders. y* H if If you want the best* food, Royal !§ Baking- Powder is indispensable. Si I " A Good Tale Will Bear Telling Twice." Use Sapolio! Use SAPOLIO |THE KIND U I I rUELPfI K. WELLS. Ft. Jack sod, N. Y. ■Scrofula and Salt Rheums ■ Of 25 Years Standinar, || ■A BLOOD PURIFIER THAT CURES.- IHIUNA SAKHAPAKII.i.A CO.. *** BR 11 KNTI.km ks :—I h. r.by < rrtify thafl have been =1 Rn sufferer f.ir over *. yeuri with Hcrof-■ j==uln anil Suit ICticiim. Have employed = Physicians ami expended many dollarii ing=i Sg proprietary mnlidnra. blood puritler*. nltrrativ -.H| etc., ssch a have been on the mnrkrt for thS3 t. 2.% year., all of no avail r iM'ncflt.jfi hail Riven up hope that there was any help loiH l"ie. With very little faith I purchased a Imttle of =5 glyonr HAR.S.VI'AItILI.A of my Druggist, which !■ 555 made him guarantee if I whs not benefited he Si ■B"lninld refund the mnnev. I li ft the store think-is BBing 1 should rail and gct'my ntony later. No hopcM S="l any benefit as no im-dlcinc or trentment seemed 51 ■■to reach iny case. I had not taken more than—? 9mi.'-huirnf one bottle when to mv surprise ifl ■ground it was liclpliiu **••. Have taken vvn=== ■ '•ollle. and nm <1 Itl 11. The g-.ulit Huim'n are nit healeil and I feel like aRI ' DANA'S ■ | SARSAPAIULLA ■ ■to all who wish a Illooil Purifier Unit m = (.'ure. Youra very trulv, H|| s= PI(KI,PS 8. WELLS. ■ Ft. Jackson, St. I-awrenee Co., N. Y. sH ftKNTB:—Mr. Wella la well-known in this sec ■ Holland hla ntulemeut la true. —• IS Respectfully, IILA A. SMITH, = gg Nieholvtlle, N. Y. Druggist. jfi| pS Dana Sarsaparilla Co.. Belfast. Maine. ™ fSBf df -.'THIS II Ji/sr\vß smowo ost x k ky mm *WI yfAR TVVICE AS,|- Ktnp o*l IK A: ; any Jimr ■ rwv iv! ...millif■!. LADIES week*'treatment for Leucorrhca tor whites). Din placements, Painful Menstrua lou ami ovarian Disorder*. Sale, sure, mild anil guarantee! \ idiysli-lan ftlwavs nt home. Send f. r . !• eil .r free. IIQMK THEATMEN T CO., Lock llux llls.PittKiuir^.l'a. SOUTHERN FARMS —— time, (i per eat t. Interest; write for drscriptlvo price list. CALDWELL A JUDAII. MEMPHIS, TEX*. I> \ 'ri; \"|V 1 "\ |,|: MA!:u s i: x., 111! i -ton /\ I Ijii I und advice ns to pnten'ahil ty of Invention. Send for Inventor* (tulde.or how to g"t a patent. PATIIU'K O'FARRELL, Wasiiixutoh. D.C. 11(11 ITin IKKII il'' Vol" A 1:1 1 i is| \i j 1 chicken*, my Mr. it AM> IIoni: Mkai. will help von very much. Catalogue tolls ull about it. Seud for It. C. A. JIAUTLK'I 1, Worci.si t it. Mass. 111 ( Y < 1. K* i I ii I- 'i • 2H Inch f'2\ Cushions I're'imuilo ffivi. List and i Cttu. free. KNIGHT CYCLE CO.. Bt. Louis, Mo. GOITRE CURED ■I'NAIHii ' lie Me H lie's "p MARRIAGE PAPER gent* w ant eorri apondcntA tiUNNELS' MONTHLY. 101,L1)0, OIIIQ, The l.adlt*. The pleasant effect aud perfect safety with which ladies may use the California liquid lax ative, Syrup of Figs, under all conditions makes It their favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine article, look for the name of > the California Fig Syrup Co., printed near the bottom of the package. j The weight of a crowd averages from lltf to 150 pounds per square foot. E. A. Rood, Toledo, Ohio, says : " Hall's Ca. favrh Cure cured ray wife of catarrh fifteen yearn ago and she has had no return of It. It's a sure cure." Sol tby Druggists, 7v,c. Japan lias the freest press. Beecbam'H Pills cure indigestion and const*, patiun. Beecham's no others. 25 cts. a box. The average annual product of each Ift' 1 borer in India is estimated at ♦SO. I Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup is i>oiflvely une<i miled. Try it. 25 cent Kat druggists. The Krng-Jorgensen rifie has been adopt* ed by the Government of Turkey. if afflicted with soroeyes use Dr. Isaac Thorap* sou's Lye-water. Druggists soli at 25c per bottle. Canes, particularly of the higher class,are chiefly made in the East End, London. P N u as .1 in ii 111 nm ii il iii uiiml ' ; Delicious Drink.; Jk. lIASILY MADE I : d* JS? oKv sunrtEß ot ; a WINTER Quiet a the Nerves. Aids Digestion. ' Cools the Blood. Prevents Fevr. \ Quenches Thirst. Temperance Drink 4 Put up in rondenacd form, 10. 5.T and 50 cent • bottle*. Aak vour ÜBiH'F.B or UHPUUUtT. To be •tire you get the genuine ahow your dealer thia advertiteinent wnd|l wil! \ gallon*. At whoicMle only by K ; FRANK e:. HOUSH & GO. • 235 Washington St., Boston, Mass. • AGENTS wanted in each town. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS fWITH THOMSON'S SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS.' No tooli required. Only a hammer needed to drl • •nd c inch them easily and quickly, loavnig the clii" b absolutely araooth. Requiring no ho e to be made a the leather nor burr lor tlto Rivets. They are itron; . touuli and durahle. Millions now in use. Ai lengths, uniform or assorted, put up In boxes. AmU vonr ileitler lr llifiu, or send 40c. la •tamps for a box of 100, assorted sixes. Mau'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., n.ILTHIM, MASS. Iflnin nnn acre s ° f land jUUuf UUU for sale by the Saint PxJL - A Duluth Railroad Company iu Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circu lars. They will be sent to you I^REE. Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commiauioner, 8L Paul, Mian. fostnmpdvf* and people H vho have weak lungs or Aath a, shonld use Plso's Core for Consumption. It has enrad 9 sd one? n ft"is not bad'tVuke. H It Is the best ooagh syrnp.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers