What Tasmania Exports. Tasmania exports hops, fruit in great Quantities and iron, tin and calcua. A litllle Thing. "It is a little thing to spunk a phraso of common comfort which by daily uso has al most lost Its sense, yot on tho ear of him who thinks to dio unmournod it will tall like choicest inu3!c." It is a simple thing to suf fer ordinary pain ; but when if comes by day and night with neuralgia's cruel hurt, there's nothing better to euro it than Bt. Jacobs Oil, which, p net rating to every part that aches, least the paia und leaves n perfect cure be hind it. It a u little thing to do, but tho cora lort of relief from such distress will mako one feel the happier hours of life. Tamor'.uino was an expert chess player. Bewnro of Ointment* for Catnrrh That Contnlu Mercury* as mercury will surely destroy the sonso of smell and completely derange tho whole system when entering it through tho mucous surfaces. Sueh articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable pliy*ifcians as tho dauuigo they will do is ten fold to the good you ran possibly dorlvo from them. Hall's Catarrh rnro manufactured by F. J. Cheny & Co., Toledo, O.* contains no mercury, and is taken internally, noting directly upon the blood an I mucous surfaces of tho system. In buying Hull s < 'at irrh ('lire bo sure to get the genuine. It is taken internally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Chenoy&Co. To timonialsfroo. ry~Sold by Druggists, price 76c. per bottle. Rubber was little used except for erasing until 1820, 300 years after its discovery. An Important Difference. To make it apparent to thousands, who think thomselvos ill, that they are not affected with any disease, but that tho system simply needs cleansing, is to bring comfort home to their hearts, as a costive condition is easily cured by using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Apples aontuin a larger percontago of phos phorus tbnu any othor of our fruits. Dr. Kilmer's Swamt-Hoot cures nil Kidney and Bladder troubles, l'amphlet and consultation free. Riughaiupton, N.Y. The raw silk from Kansas cocoons is said to bo the best in the world. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflama tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle It is said that tobacco seed will tetnin its vitality for ten years. I r or Whooping Cough' IMso's Cure is a suc cessful romody.—M. Diktkk, 07 Tbroop Avo., UiooUlyn, N. Y. November 11.1HU1. Karl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier, gives freshness ond clearness to tho complex ion and euros constipation. 25cts. 50 cts. sl. Korenns wear paper coats. If afflicted with sore eyes uso Dr. Isaac Thomp ten £ Lye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle Hattis Wej|_and Happy Used to Suffer From Impure Elood and Eruptions UattUf Dancer Lawrence Station, N. J. "Hood's 8 irsipirili i cure! my obild of Impure blood an I eruptions on the heal. Bho would scratch her head so that it would blood. Tho sores spread bobini her oara, and tho poor child sulToro 1 terribly. I doo torod her tho best I know how but tho sores ; did not get rny better. But thanks to nood's Bursaparillu und Hood's Olive Olnt- Hood's s #* Cures mi nt, she is now well as any or tho children. Bho is as largo and healthy as any child flvo years old. Tills is all the medicine wo take, lor I do not think there is any better." Geouqk Dancer, Lawrence Station, N. J. Hood'G Pill? Kasy to buy, enay to Urßßao take, easy in effect. SJSo. r N u 8 W. L. Douglas S3 SHOE™ 5 !®,. 3. CORDOVAN 1 . Jar j,, rmicHatNAKELLtocAtr. /BSML FItECAULKAMSMA > POLICE,3 SOLES. WOUKINCttEfA 1 V>-f- .EXTRA riNE- n! BQYS'SCKQOISHOEa —DROCKTOICMASfI* Over One Million People wear tho W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our ahoca ere equally satisfactory They glvo th© bent value lor the money* They equal cuetcm oboes In stylo and fit* Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. Tho prices aro uniform,—stamped on solfe. From $i to .* j saved over other makes* If your dealer cannot supply you we can* Consumption was formerly pronounced incurable. Now it is not. In all of the early stages of the disease Scott's Emußsioira will effect a euro quicker than any other ~ * known specific. Scott's Bmulsion pro motes making of healthy lung-tissue, relieves inflammation, overcomes tho cxeosu ive waste of tho disease and givos vital For Oonghs, Golds, Weak Lungs, Sore Throat, Bronohitis, Oonsumption, Sorofula, Autßmia, Loss of Flesh and Wasting Diseases of Ghildron, jSSfcJjssjSfc* Buy only the genuino with our trade- T.. MARK. mark on salmon-colored wrapper. Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE. Boott A Bowne, N. Y. All Drugglst9. SO cents and SI. AN ALPENA MIRACLE. MKS. JAS. IT. TODD, OF LONG R IFID3, DISCARDS ll Kit CRUTCHES. In an Interview with a Reporter She Re view* Her Experience and Tells the Real Cause o* tho Miracle. (From l*ic Argus, Alpena, Mich.) Wo havo long known Mrs. Jag. M. Tjd.l, of Long Itapids, Alpena Co., Mich. Bho has boon a sad cripple. Many of hor friends know tho story of hor recovory; for tho bone* flt of tho3o who do not wo publish it to-day. Eight yoars ago sho was taken with ner vous prostration, and in a few months with muscular and inflammatory rheumatism. It aftoctod hor hourt, then hor hea I. Hor foet bocamo so swollen sho could wear nothing on thorn, hor hand) woro drawn all out of ahapo. He; oyoj wore swollen shut moro than half tho tinn, hor knoo joint) terribly swollen and for elgutoen months sho had to bo hold up to bo drosso I. Ono limb became ontiroly helpless, and 1110 skin was so dry and crackod that it would blood. During these oight years slio hal boon treated by a scoro of physicians, and has also spent much time at Anu Arbor undor best medical advico. AH said hor trouble was brought on by hard work and that medicine would not cure, and that rast was tho only thing which would oaso hor. After going to livo with hor daugh ter sho bocamo entirely helpless and could uot oven raise her arms to cover herself al night. Tho interesting part of tho story fol lows in hor own words: "I was urged to try Dr. Williams' Fink Fills for Palo Pooplo and at last did so. iu threo days aftor I commenced taking rink Fills I ooulcl sit up ana dress myself, and a f ter using them six wooks I wont homo and commenced working. I continued taking tho pills, until now I begin to forgot tny crutches, and can go up and down stops without aid. lam truly a living wonder, walking out of doors without assistance. "Now, if I can say anything to induce those who have suffered as I have, to try Fink Fills, I shall gladly do so. If othci like sufferers will try Fink Pills according to directions, they will havo reason to thank God for oreating men who art) able to con quer that terrible disoaso, rheumatism. 1 have in my own neighborhood recommended Fink Fills for the aftor effects of la grippe, and weak women with impuro blood, and with good results." Mrs. Todd is very strong in hor faith In tho curative powers of Fink Fills, and pays they have brought a poor, helpless cripple bank to do hor own milkng, churning, washing, sew ing, knitting and in fact about all of hei household duties, thanks to Dr. Williams' Fink Fills. Dr. Williams' Fink Fills contain all tho olo ments necessary to glvo now Hfcand richness to tho blood and restore shattered nerves. They aro for sale by all druggists, or may bo had by mall from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Bcbenoctody, N. Y., for 600. per box. or six boxes for #2.50. nncKwimuH xnpioinacj. A Portland man, who has just ro turned from a hunting trip in the foi ests of Northern Maine, vouches to the Portland, Mo., Argus for the entire truth of tho following story, as ho had it direct fromjthe sheriff. A man who lives in Mount Katahdin reign went into the office of a justice of the peace a few days since, and in quired about the penalty for hunting deer with dogs, and very particularly as to whether one-half tho tine did not go to the informer. Tho justice consulted the game laws, and assured him that it did. "Very Well," said the man, I want to complain of myself and settle." The justice could not back out, and so gave the transgressor "a clean bill of health," upon payment of one-half of the penalty. It seems that the man got wind of the fact that a game warden had got the "drop" on him on his deer poach ings with his dogs, and was only wait ing an opportunity to arrest him. Hence his shrewd bit of diulomacv. Dupliolty. "So you think she is two faced?" "Certainly. I havo seen her when her own showed through."—Detroit Tribune. Tl© Htunriiml remedy for all stomach ami livor complaints is ltipans I übultui. One tubule give) relief, but In severe cases one should be luken ufter each meal until the tiouble ha* disappeared. Tho Faciflo Mills at Lawrence. Mass., are the largest print works In tho United States. WALTER BAIER & CO. The Largest Manufacturers c.f UP. PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES /1 this Continent, have received highest awards 111 Industrial and Food M JM EXPOSITIONS 1, Ipln Europe and America. Their delicious vSSitim COCO*, fi'XoluWlJ pur and auluble, ond costi leu than ona cent a cup. 80LD CY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTCr BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. 15 for teachers, students mid Busy I'oojM.l'ostnl brink* Samples. THE PATHFINDER, WaHhlugtm. 1). i: CDURAGE. * Wo gffeot with quickening pulao the story MThat shrouds a warrior's name in glory ; Wo thrill to learn, from lays heroic, How patriots perished ; flnoly stoic. Yet loftier courage means the giving Far loss to dying than to living. It moans, with truth's divlno assurance, To arm the soul in stem onduranco j It means with grip no stross can sever To clutch tho sword of high endeavor And wage, in patience and persistence, This bloodless battlo called ex'.stonce. —E Jgar Fawcott, in Youth's Companion. WOLF SOLANfiE. fTICK in hand, onr bags slung over our shoulders, wo threo had been walking all the afternoon in the beautiful forest of Tronsays, which covers half tho Saint-Arnand district and half the Nevors district. The end of our tramp for tho day l( was tho village of Ureay, uoar the a bank of the Cher, ffiljj a little place hud m, died up in an arm of that valley which divides the forest in two. There we dined with an old friend of mine, a doctor, whoso small connection was scattered over flvo or six neighboring parishes. Dinner ovor, we seated our selves in tho open, in front of the house, and meditatively sinokod our cherry wood pipes. The shadows wero gathering upon tho tall treetopsall around us with the Blownoss of a Juno evening; hero and there a cloud of swallows was to bo seen; from a little stoeplo, just visi blo abovo tho roofs of the houses, rang out tho 9 o'clock angelus, in slow, measured tones, an interval of silence between each stroke; and in tho dis tance could bo hoard tho barking of the farm dogs us they called to and answered each other. A youngish woman, dressed in a skirt of red material, with a white bodice, came out of a house close by and went toward the river; she was carrying a baby in long clothes on her left arm, and holding with lior right hand tho chubby fist of a little boy, who in turn was grasping tho hand of a younger brother. When sho roncliod the bank of tho River Cher tho young mother sat down on a big stone, while tho two boys quickly undressed and tumbled into tho water, where they threw water over one another with shouts of laughter. "There's a picture which would have a tromemlous success iu the Salon," said one of my companions, who was an artist. "See how tho light falls upon her! And what a splendid poso ! How well the red skin shows up on the dark background 1" "Are you looking at Wolf-Solango, young gentlemen?" asked a voice be hind us. It was our host, who had boon de tained insido by the arrival of a patient, and who now rejoined us. Of course, we asked him who Wolf-Solango was, and how sho came by such a strange name, and, in reply, ho told us tho following story : "Wolf-Solange, whose proper name is Solange Grillet, maiden name Tour nier, was tho prettiest girl all around Tronsays ten years ago. Hard work in tho fields and material cares have loft their mark upon her, but sho is still pretty for a woman of thirty, as you can see. "At the time the adventuro hap pened whioh earned for her tho nick name of Wolf-Solango she was still single. Her parouts wero tenants of the small farm of liciu-du-Bois, about eight or niuo milos from here, near Lurcey-Lovy. Although poor, sho had no lack of suitors, even among the well-to-do young men of tho neigh borhood ; but the only ono sho en couraged was a certaiu Laurent Gril let, to whom sho had taken a fancy when she was a mero girl and they used to tend sheep together. "Laurent Grillet was a foundling ; his fortune consisted of his strong arm only. Solauge's parents, not seeing tho advisability of marrying their daughter t(f a man just as poor as they were, especially when tho had sevoral much bettor chances, forbade Solange to meet her lover; but tho paronts'in junction was unheeded, and as thoy lived in tho same village and tho for est was close by, tho opportunities of meeting wero numerous aud easy. When tho Tourniers discovered that tho lovers still saw each othor. and perceived that neither soit words nor blows had any effect upon Solange, they came to a weighty decision; they would send her out to service at Ur aay, on the model farm of M. Roger Duflos, our Deputy. "Perhaps you think that this stop put a stop to the lovers' mooting? If so, you aro quito mistaken. Tho only difference was that they had to seo each othor at night. As soon as it was quito dark the young peoplo slipped away from the respective farms on which they worked, and, taking a short cut to save timo and to avoid the high road, met in tho forest un known to any one. "It was in 1879. Tho summer aud autumn passed in this way, then onmo tho winter—and a terrible winter it was! The Gher was full of pieces of floating ice, and finally it frozo right over; tho high troos of Tronsays bont under tho weight of the snow; the for est was deserted, tho roads having be come almost impassable; and we saw what hod not been seen for many a year—wolves! "Yes, young gentlemen, wolves. They prowled about tho ontlying forms of Lurcey-Lovy and Ursay, alarming tho good people who lived on those farms, and were even seen in tho streets of Saint-Bonnot-le-Desert, an ont-of-tho-way littlo place close to tho forest. Wolf hunts were organ ized to kill them, and fifty francs were paid for a wolf's hoad. I myself saw three—two full grown ones and a young ouo—on tho opposito bank of tho Cher one morning whon I was on my way to Saint-Amand in my cart. "But neither the hard winter nor the wolves provonted Laurent and So lango from meoting at night in tho forest; in spite of all dangers they con tinued their nightly expedition. Every evening Laurent loft Lurcoy-Levy, his gun under his arm, and walked through tho snow-covered forest with a blithe, fearless step; Solango, on her side, slippod away from Ursay at 9 o'clock ; and they met at a glade called 'Tho Walk,'about a milo and a half from hero. "On Christmas ovening they met as usual, but just as Laurent reached tho glade ho slipped upon tho frozen ground, and foli in such an awkward way as to broak his right log and sprain his right wrist. Solango tried to lift him up, but was unable to do so; sho could only drag him to a young elm tree and set him up with his baok against the trunk. " '3top there, my poor Laurent,' sho said, wrapping her cloak around him, 'and I will run to tho doctor at Ursay; ho will como and fotoh you in his cart.' "Sho started off on her way to tho village, and had turned the bond in tho road, when sho hoard tho report of a gun and u cry for help. Sho ran back to her lover, whom sho found ghastly pa'o with pain and fear, one liana convulsively clutching his gun, which was lying on tho ground. " 'What is tho matter, Laurent door?' sho asked, anxiously. ' Was it you who lir.ed ?' " 'Zee,'ho replied. 'Soon after you had loft mo I noticed a strong smoll, and when I looked up I saw au animal with glaring rod eyes, and as big as a groat dog. I believe it was a wolf.' "'Did you fire at it?' "'No; X couldn't lift tho gun, yon know, on acoouut of my arm. I pulled the trigger as it rested on tho ground to frighten tho brute, and you soo he is gone.' '"Will it como back?' asked So lango after a moment's reflection. '"I nm suro it will 1' answered tho young mau. 'You'll have to stop here with me, Solange; if you don't tho beast will eat me.' "'Very well, dear,'said Solango, 'l'll stop with you. Let mo have your gun.' "Sho took up the weapon, shook out tho discharged cartridge and put in a fresh one, and they both waited anxiouslv. "Two hour 3, perhaps more, passod. 'The moon, still invisible, had rison above the horizon, for tho sky reflect ed a confused light, which becamo brightor each minute. Laurent was fovorisk---ho shivered and groaned; Solango benumbed with eold, standing up with her back against tho tree, be gan to get drowsy. "All at onco a kind of whine or howl, liko that of a dog chained up at night, mado her jump. In the setni darkness sho saw two fiery eyes; it was tho wolf. "Laurent tried to get up aud tako tho gun, but the pain was too great, and ho fell back again into a sitting position with a groan. "'Make ready, Solnngo,' ho cried; 'aim straight between tho eyea, and don't (Ire too soon.' "Solange raised the weapon to her shoulder, took aim and fired; but the kick of tho gun mndo her miss the nnitnal. Nevertheless, seared by tho report, it ilod along tho road, and was quickly out of Bight. A littlo while afterward thoy heard it howling in tho distance, and it was answered by others. Tho moon now emerged from be hind tho trees and lighted up tho wholo of tho forest, and a terrifying sight met tho eyes of tho lovers. Within gunshot wero fivo wolves, seated on thoir hindquarters, lilco dogs, across the path, wh le another, bolder than its fellows, was slowly making its way toward Laurent and Solange. '"Listen to what X tell you, So lange,' said Laurent. "Tako" aim at the one which is coming toward us; if yoiicau minago to knock him ovor, tho others will eat him, aud wo shall have a rest while thoy are doing it.' "Tho wolf continued to advance slowly; thoy could see its red eyeballs, its bones Bhowing through its dull, ragged-looking ooat---so thin was it through hunger—and its open mouth with tho tongue hanging out. " 'Rest the butt of the gun well in tho hollow of you shoulder,'said Lau rent. 'Now lot him have it!' "Bang! Tho wolf gavo a jump in tho air and fell dead without a sound; tho others rushed away as hard as thoy could and disappoarod in the brushwood. " 'Bun to tho wolf, quick, Solange I' exclaimed her lover. 'Drag it as far up tho road as you can; thero is no danger, tho othors won't como back yet.' "She. ran to the dead wolf but ho called her back when tho had gone a few steps. " 'We ought to cut off tho hoad, you know, so as to get tho reward.' " 'Have you got a kuifa?' she askod. " 'Yes, hero in my belt.' "It was a hunting-knife, with a short handle and a wido blado. She took it and, running to whero tho animal lay, sho cut off its head and dragged tho carcass by one foot over tho slippory ground as far away as sho could, and returned to Laurent with tho head. "What Laurent had forseon took plaoo. Tho wolves frightened at first by tho death of thoir companion, enmo back—all five of thom—when they smelt blood. By tho light of tho moon tho two young people saw the group of wolves struggling, fighting and rolling over one another in thoir efforts to get a full share of tho prey, of whioh they devoured every scrap. "Laurent began to suffer terrible from his broken leg. Solaugo, whoso nerves woro giving way under the strain, was vainly endeavoring to strugglo against fatiguo and drowsi ness ; twice tho gun nearly fell from her hands. "Having finished their meal, the wolves bognn to come near to tho young people. The girl fired once, twioe, at random in their midst, but her frozen fingers trembled, and tho bullets went wide of the mark. At the roport of tho gun tho brutos scur ried away along the road for some short distance, where they stopped for a fow miuutos, an l then came back. "Lauront and Solnngo know that it was all over with thorn then, and that they must perish. Tho girl let the gun fall to tho gronnd, but not for an instant did she think of abandoning her wounded lover and saving horself by flight. She lay down upon the frozen ground by his Gido and drow ono end of her cloak, which sho had wrapped him in, over her own be numbod limbs, and putting her arms round him, she laid her head against his cheek; thus, outwardly frozen by the cold and inwardly burning with fever, they both waited for death. "Strange fancies took possession of their disordered minds as they lay half unconscious; it was once again summer time, and they were wander ing through the forest decked with summer verdure, enjoying the lovely June evening; then tho trees aud hedges became suddenly bare, aud tho forest covered with snow, upon which stood out clearly a mass of moving forms with blazing eyos and gaping months—a mass which grow larger every minuto, and drew nearer to them to devour them. "But, fortunately, neither Laurent nor Solango were destined to die in that awful maunor. I'rovidenco-—I believo in I'rovidenco, my boys— ordained 011 that very morning I was returning through the forest in my cart from Saint-Bonnet-le-Desort, whero I had boon to attend a very urgent case. I was driving, while my servant, holding a loaded gun ready in his hand, was on tho lookout for wolves. No doubt the bells on my horse frightened the brutos, for we did not 6ee a single one. When wo reached tho tree, at tho foot of which tho lovers were lying, my horse shied, and so drew my attention to them; I jumped out, and, aided by my man, lifted tho poor tilings, unconscious and stiff with cold, into the cart, covered them with everything wo had in tho way of rugs, and mndo my way as quickly as possiblo to Ursay. I did not forgot to take tho wolf's head with me. "It was about 7 o'elook, and tho day was breaking when wo reached the village. Wo were met by a large party, consisting of tho men employed on the farm of M. Roger Duflos, and abont half the people of tho village, who, uneasy at tho disappearance of Solnuge, wero going in searoh of her. And it was in that largo kitchon whero yon havo just dined that Luuront and Solange, restored to consciousness, and seated in front of a iteming boeoh wood fire, told us what they had passod through (luring that dreadful night." "Well, dpetor, I suppose they got marriod after that?" we asked. "Of course," replied the doctor. "Tho will of Providence is at tiinos so clearly shown in tho courao of evonts that it docs not roquire any gift of second sight to perceive it. After the adventure of tho wolves, the parents of Solange consented to her marriage with Laurent Grillet. Tho wedding took place in tho spring, and the fifty franos reward which thoy reeoivod for tho wolds head paid for the bride's dress." Wo all remained silent. It was now quite dark, tho twinkling stars were refloated in the dcop, blue water of the Cher, and the thick mas 3 cf trees stood out like mountains upon tho horizon. Wo saw Wolf-Solango dress her two boys and come toward us 011 he way back to her home, the child asleep in her arms and tho others walking by her side as before. As sho passed up sho smiled at tho doctor, who smiled in return, and wished her a cheery "Good evening, Solange!"—Prom tho French. The Effects of Cold on Life. Somo very interesting experiments liavo lately been carried out by M. Pictot, tho well-known French chemist, with tho object of trying the offeot of extreme cold on life. A dog placed in a copper roooiver kopt at ti temperature of sixty to seventy de grees C. below tho frcozing point of water bcoamo warmer by half a de gree in the course of tho first ten minutes, and after an hour and a half was found to bo only ouo degree colder than it had been at first. A littlo Inter, howover, naturo scorns to have given up the struggle, for it suddenly died. Insects rcsistod a temperaturo of twenty-eight degrees 0. below zero, but not thirty-fivo de grees. Myrinpods lived down to fifty degrees, and snails to 130 degrees be low zero. Tho eggs of birds lost their vitality at two to threo degrcos below zero, and those of ants at zero. Infusoria diod at niuety dogreos, but at 213 degrees below zero baoteria still romnined virulent. —London Ex change,. Peculiar Snow. When people at Elva, Ky., arose the other morning they found tho ground covered with two inches of whito snow, and this covered with a yellow-tinted stuff that would turn water inky hlaok. There is no explanation of tho phenomenon, and an aualysis has been undertaken.—New York Mer cury. Do You Wlsfi the Finest Bread and Cake? It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is the purest and strongest of all the baking powders. The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweet est, most delicious food. The strongest baking pow der makes the lightest food. That baking powder which is both purest and strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome food. Why should not every housekeeper avail herself of the baking powder which will give her the best food with the least trouble ? Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome. Certain protection from alum baking powders can be had by declining to accept any substitute for the Royal, which is absolutely pure. Tho Hair. Tho root bulb of every luilr has fiva or six small white filaments, whlolj are to tho bulb what the roots of an onion are to that vegetable, the means of collecting anil bringing It to tho oroiier nourishment. Tho sea-cypress, a kind of coral, sometimes has 0,000 to 10,000 uulmals on a Hlnele branch. We don't see what fun there can bo In kissing a gill out skating when her nose Is cold. THE ONWARD HARCH of Consumption 19 Ht .°PP et * B h°it by Dr. ical Discovery. If jou haven't waited there's complete re covery and cure. Although by many believed to be incur evidence of hundreds of living witnesses to J -* ,e act iat * n a i' sumption is a curable disease. Not every (T* v* - - case, but a large per cent age of cases , and we believe, fully OH "*** - * per cent, are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease lias progressed so far as to induce repeated bleedings from the lungs, severe lingering cough with copious expectoration (including tubercu lar matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakness. Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases reported to us as cured by "Golden Med ical Discovery " were genuine cases of that dread and fatal disease ? You need not take our word for it. They have, in nearly every instance, been so pronounced by the best and most experienced home physicians, who have no interest whatever in mis representing them, and who were often strongly prejudiced and advised against a trial of "Golden Medical Discovery," but who have been forced to confess that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal malady, all other medicines with which they are acquainted. Nasty cod liver oil and its filthy "emulsions" and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these cases and had either utterly failed to bene fit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the hypophos pliites had also been faithfully tried in vain. The photographs of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrji and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of 160 pages which will be mailed to you, on re ceipt of address and six cents in stamps. You can then write those cured and learn their expcricijpc. AddressWoßi.n's DISPEN SARY M IODIC Al. ASSOCIATION, Buffalo. N. Y. S^msems^ Best Cough by r up. Tastes Good. Use P8 In time. Bold by druußlpis W3 BEECHAM'S FILLS (Vegetable) What They Are For Biliousness indigestion sallow skin dyspepsia bad taste in the mouth pimples sick headache foul breath torpid liver bilious headache loss of appetite depression of spirits when these conditions arc caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things for everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half tlw sickness in the world, especially of women; and it car. all be prevented. Go by the book, free at your drug gist's, or write B. F. Allen Co., 365 Canal Street, Nev. York. Pills, 10c. and 25c. a box. Annual sales more than 6,000,c00 bo::cs. "East, West, Home is Best," if Kepi Ofsan With BAPOLIO Pumping Ilot Water. Water at temperature cannot bo raised any considerable distance by suction, as the vapor discharged from the water so heated follows the reced ing pistons of the pump and resists the entrance of the water; consequently, to pump hot water always place the sup ply above the pump, so that it will bo supplied from a head. The Greatest fledical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF RGXBURY, MASS., Has discovorod In ono of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind cl Humor, from tbo worst Scrofulu down to a common pimple. lie has tried it in over eleven hundred ensos, and never failed except In twocasoe (both thunder humor). He has now In his possession over two hundred certifi cates of its value, ail within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A beneP.t is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect euro is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When tho lungs aro affected it causes shooting [tains, like needles passing through them ; tho same with tho Liver or Bowols. This is caused by the duots boiug stopped, and always disappears In a week after taking it itead tho luboL If the stomach 19 foul or bilious It will cause squeamish feelings at first No chango of diet evor necessary. Eat the best you can got, and enough of it Doso, one tablespoonful in water ut bed time. Bold by ull Druggists. 00 { LITTLE f ! PAINS i V MAKE P 1 SERIOUS 0 t ILLNESS ? If not attenclod to in time. When HEADACHE, DIZZINESS and othar symptoms tell of functional distur bance in tho systom, the prompt use o! O O tRIPANSt | TABULES | % Will prevent much suffering. This grand remedy cures DY3P£P;IA, CONSTIPATION, BILIOUSNESS, AND KINDRED AILMENTS. iWWeTreWF?! c o PNUB 'OS