That Tired Feeling Ca a certain Indication of impure and impov erished blood. If your blood oould al ways bo rich and pure, full of the red corpuscles upon which its vitality de pends, you would never be weak, or Hervous 1 Boils, pimples, scrofula, salt rheum, would never trouble you. But our mode of living, shut In all winter in poorly ventilated homes and shops, de pletes the biood and there is loss of appe tite and weakness. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the standard remody for this condition. It purifies, vitalizes and enriches the blood, overcomes that tired feeljpg, builds up the nerves and gives perfect health. Bead this: * Our daughter, Blanche, when four years of age had a humor break out on her hands and face, which our physician pro nounced eczema. If the cold air reached her face or hands they would sttoll up, look almost purplo, and headed blisters would form and break, Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the Public Eye Today. rti© Aormotor oil Steel Feed Cutter Worth ih V!L/ u JZ" h j%' i,"fno7!"/o<' fiow'Zi£.?Hd p£j 4reenea of ten unj!il-ora tin J acquaintances of Ml tender known petMtnally by him to bo reepc-neible and influential mc.t in their localities uho netd and are likely to buy some thing in our lino thio year. Jfter July I, momoy tent in j on thio offer will be returned to render and no attention will be pa/4 to inanities or leltere concerning thie offer. It it literally noes or merer. TU fteU cuttar is tfcliTred t. o. b. utlcTaaVa E RMOTORCO. Chicago. W. L.DOUCLAS $3 SHOEIKb. § CORDOVAN". TIENCH . ENAMELLED CALF. 1-*3SP Fine Calf&Kangaroil *3.P POLICE,3 soLfes. i2S9 2.WORKINGMEN', * • EXTRA FINE* boysSchool Shoes. * LADIES • > w Sis,. MSBBttBEta- DROCKTOH..MASS. Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes nro equally satisfactory They give the bent value for the money. They equal custom shoes In style end fit. Their wearing qualities ere unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,—stamped on rote. Prom $i to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we can. ?~N U 16 " Thedreatest Hedlcnl Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical JJiscovery, OONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Hrs discovered In one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind cf Humor, from the worst Scrofula town to a common pimple. -• He has tried it in over eleven hundred •ases, and never failed except In two cases (both thunder humor). lie baa now In his possession over two hundred certifi cates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Bend postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from the first bottle, end a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When tho lungs are affected It oausei •hooting pains, like needles passing through them ; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it Read tho label. If the itoinach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever neoessary. Eat tho best you can get, and enough of it Dose, ono tablespoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. Densmore Tpyewriter, Edison Phonograph, Second-Hand Typewriters. PITTSBURG TYPEWRITER CO., 445 WOOD STREET, PITTSBURG, YA, PALESM EN HSPii S,Si \ sell <u ►!* tit to .Tery business moo or flrni; lib . l ersl ..Iftry, nionsjr savsnnd for sdverltsms u<l 1 1 expenses; permsnsnt position. Address, wl'h D .ump, KINO MFU. CO.. D 41, Chleao, IU. & CENTS WANTED, Ono enrnod $4,200 inauy over SI,OOO In '9l P.O. 1371. Now York Discharging a watery fluid, and the burning and itohlng would drive her nearly wild. Unless we enoased her little hands she would tear patches of skin from her face and hands. We tried many doctors and many remedies and at lost gave the case up as hopeless. But our daughter Cora tried Hood's Sarsaparilla, to cure a scrof ulous lump nonr the loft breast which causod her much pain and after taking 4 bottles it disappeared. Blanohe, who Is now eleven, had spent seven years of suf fering, so I concluded to give her Hood's Sarsaparilla. She took 6 bottles and her face is smooth and soft as a baby's, the color of a rose petal. Her hands are soft and white, where four months ago they were blue and red and calloused nearly lifco leather. I cannot express my gratitude by pen or mouth. It seems a miraole and our friends are surprised." MRS. ANNA L. CLASH, 401 East Fourth Street, Duluth, Minnesota. Do not use your kindness merely as a bribe.—Chevy. Gentle Annie. Gentle Annlo was tho girl who went forth when tho spring-time camo to gather wild flowers, —daisies along tho hillcidos, and for got her rubbers. She camo back with wet foet, followed by the worst case of neuralgia ehoevor had. Fortunately she was told and had long known that for any kind ralgloaffection Ut. Jacobs Oil is tho most re markable remedy over used. All the year round any one subject to such attacks should not fail to have it in tho house. For all aches and pains which at all times beset us there is nothing to equal it. Nerve pains es pecially aro brought on by sudden changes of temperature, but .the groat romody, ap plied promptly, will surely cure. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is & blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cur# it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh t ure is taken internally, and acts di rectly on tho blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, com bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing ca tarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. Chrnkt fc CO., Props., Toledo, Ok < bold by druggists, price 73c. The Skill aud Knowledge Essential to tho production of tho most perfect and popular laxAtive remedy known have en abled the California Fig Syrup Co.to achieve a great success in tho reputation of its remedy, Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the uni rersal laxative. For 6*le by all druggists. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces influma tion. allays paiu, cures wind colic. 25c. abottc I Not Hick Enough for the Doctor, I but a little out of sorts. RlpansTabulos would serve in your case, it Is well to have them ou Laud tor just such occasions. ' it is estimated that in England one womoi in ovory six cams her own living. Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and consultation free. Laboratory Binghnmpton, N.Y. Ten editors aro membors of the English Parliament. I'iso's Cure for Consumption has saved me many a doctor's bill.—S F. HAMDY, Hopkins Place, Baltimore, Md. December)!, 1894. If afflicted with sorceyesuse Dr. Isaac Thomp bon'b Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle Iu Hawaii Japanese laborers get $ 12.50 a month. | ThC D ° or 0 ' many a woman's childbirth should danger and distress. It is a natural function, and should be performed in a natural way without un due suffering. Nature never intended that women should be tortured in this way. Taken during gestation Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription robs childbirth of its dangers to both mother and child, by preparing the system for delivery, thereby shortening labor, lessening pain and ab breviating the period of confinement. MODEL houses ■■ ■ ■■■ ■■ of ail Styles, sizes and cosL\ 100 I 250 FOR $ I.! F ° R $2. On receipt of St, tve will send, prepaid, beautifully printed on bearyW^Wx I platopsper.tlielntestdcslpns^^Hk • of dhoppell'a Modern Houses, fk photogrnpklo slews, large floor s§uH Rk plans, cost to build, etc. Fully describing and Illustrating 100 Vn. New Huilmho Desiqss of low VvctMl and modcrato cost. Or 250 1 of them for $2. Most help- " N WsvFvful aids ever devised for Intending builders. Address THE CO OPERATIVE BUILDING rr. LN ASSOCIATION, 108 Fulton Street, New York City. TAPE-WORM) EXPELLED WITH HEAD. Suro Curo wltlitn two hours No Inconvmt lences. PRICK W'4.00 PAY AI TlCIt CUIIK. OVAKANI KKJIEUV CO., Dolgevllle, N.Y. PsTrklT<i THAHKMAHKS Ktnmlnutl.m "autl Btlvlee ns to puleiitabllty of nventou. Send tor Inventors Clutde. or how to get it patent. PATItICK O'Karhel. Wasuihutox, I). 0 CRADLE SONG. The maple strews the embers of its loaves O'er the laggard swallows nestled 'neath the leaves, And the moody cricket falters in his cry— Baby-bye! And the lid of night is fulling o'er the sky— Baby-bye! And the lid of night is falling o'er the sky. The rose is lying pallid and the cup Of the frosted calla illy folded up, And the breezes through the garden sob and sigh—Baby-bye! O'er the sleeping blooms of summer whero they lie—Baby-bye! O'er the Sleeping blooms of summor whoro they lie. Yet, baby—oh, my baby—for your sako This heart of mino is ever wide awake. And my love may never droop a drowsy eyo —Baby-bye! Till your own are wet above mo when I die— Baby-bye! Till your own are wet above mo when I die. —James Whitcomb Riley. STOPPING AN" EXECUTION. NE spring somo years ago I was t living in se emall town about thirty north of Lon- IJOD. 1 was where I was living, and for five or six weeks hud scarcely seen anyone to speak to. So engrossed was I with my task that I had no time to read even tho newspapers, and was quite ignorant of what was going on in the world. Tho only relnxalioit I allowed myself was a good brisk walk into tho country every atternoou. With this exception I had hardly stirred from my honse, except to run up to London once or twice for tho purpose of visiting tho clocks and making certain technical investigations concerning them. This I did, as a good portion of tho novel I was working nt was about the life of dock surroundings. It was a little after 8 o'clock one evening iu April that I iinithod the second volume of my work! I put on my hat and coat and started off for au evening stroll. I hnd no sooner stopped into tho street than n hoy ac costed mo with a bundle of papers under his arm tvith tho request: "Buy an ovoning paper, sirV" I bought one, put it iu my pockot and resumed my walk. It was a lino night and I wont some little distance, reaching home a little after half-paßt 9. I had laid down tho newspaper on the table when entering tho room, in tending to read it during supper, but my appetite had got tho better of my craving for intelligence, so it was not uutil I hail lit a pipo and subsided into a cosy armchair by the fire that I unfolded the sheet of printed matter. I opened my paper .leisurely— nay, lazily. I looked at the "leader." Something about a now "Greek loan." That didn't interest mo. I skipped through tho little itom of news nud hurried jottings and summaries pecu liar to our evening papers. Presently my eye was caught with tho following paragraph heading: "Impending Exe cution." There is a morbid fascination for most people in an execution, and, so, yielding to this feeling, I proceeded to read tho paragraph. "Tho murderer of tho unfortunate Jauios lienfrow wiil bo hanged to morrow morning at 8 o'clock. Tho wretched man, whoso name—Charles Fenthurst —is DOW in everybody's mouth, still insists in his plea of in nocence." Here I became deeply interested. Tho name of Fenthurst was most fa miliar to me. I had formed a deep friendship with a man of that name. He was a good fifteen years my senior and hnd died two years previously. I knew he had a son named Charles, a young fellow, who had emigrated to South Africa early in life and who was generally supposed to bo working at the diamond mines. Could this bo the same man? I read on. "It will be remembered that at the trial the strongest circumstantial evi dence was brought to bear upon Fent hurst. Tho murder took place iu a house on tho outskirts of the small town of Cliufold. It was proved that Fenthurt was iu the habit of frequent ing Renfrew's premises, and that ap parently he was expected there on tho evening in question. He was seen neor the place soon after tho crimo was committed, and several other proofs of a strongly condemnatory charaoter were also laid against him. He has persisted from tho first, however, iu maintaining that he was absont from Clinfold at tho very time the murder took plaoe. This was about 7 o'clock iu the evening. At that hour, he says, he was returning lrom London, whore he had been spending part of the day. Only one witness, ho says, could prove this, and that is au individual who traveled with him as far as P— and entered into conversation with him. Advertisements have been insertod in all the papers by Fenthurst's legal ad visers for the purpose of flisoovering the individual in question, but as uo answer has been forthcoming'it is gen erally believed that the whole story is a myth. At any rato, there seoms but small chance ot the alibi being provod at the last moment. Tho murder was committed Fobruary 6. Since his con demnation the murderer has been con fined in Silkminstor jail, whore his ex ecution will take place." Astonishment and dismay confront- Ed me ns I laid the paper down. I was the missing witness they had so vainly sought. I distinctly remembered, early in February, running up to town rather late in the afternoon, spending just half an hour there, and returning by the lirst train I could catch. My landlady didn't even know but that I had been for rather a longer walk than usual. I had enterod into conversa | tion on the return journey with the ' only other occupant of my compart ment, a young man with a small black bag, on which was printed the letters "0. F." I remembered all this dis tinctly. In order to make sure I snatched up my diary and quickly turned to the date of the murder, February 6. Thero was the entry: "Ran up to town in afternoon. In quired couccruing material for chap ter vii. Saw 15— for half hour. Re turned by 0.12 train." The horror of tho situation now flashed upon me. A man's life—the life of my old friend's son—depended upor me. I looked at my watch. It was just 11 o'clock. Hurriedly I dragged on my boots, thinking tho while what I should do. My first impulse was to rush to the telegraph office. Then, with dismay, I remembered that it was shut for tho night after 8 o'clock and that the postmaster took the 8.80 train to tho largo town of F—, about five miles oft", where ho lived, leaving the ollico for the night in the charge of a caretaker and returning by an early train the next morning. It was impossible to telegraph. Then I thought of going to tho police (there were just twojconstables and a sergeant in our little town,) but what could they do more than I? Country police aro proverbial for tho leisurely "rou tine" manner in which they eet about any inquiry and it would never do to trust them. I was in despair. Madly I threw on my hat and rushed ou.t. I ran in a mechanical May to the postoflice. Of course, it was shut, and if I had aroused the caretaker he couldn't have wired. Besides, all our wires M'eut first to F—, anil, as I have said, all communication was shut off after 8 o'clock. Then I started for tho raihvay station. This was about half a mile from tho postoflice and well outside tho toM*n. Aas I hurried along I thought, with freßh dismay, that this would also prove a fruitless erruuil, for tho last traiu to Silkminis ter was tho 8.30 p. m., by M'hich I have meutioucd the postmaster always traveled. Silkminister, I must men tion, M*as nearly 150 miles doMn the line. Should I wait till the morning and telegraph? I remembered that the olfico did not open till 8 o'clock. I had by this time, reached the station. Of course, it was all shut up and all the lights were out, except thoso in tho signal lamps tor tlio night ex presses. It was now past 11.30. NVas there no hope? Yes! At this moment my cyo caught a light in the signal box, about a quar ter of a mile up the line. I could see tho sigualman in his box, tho outline of his tlguro ttandiug out against the light within. I looked at my watch ; the down express from London was almost, duo. I would in alto a rush for that signal box, and compel the occu pant to put the signal against it and stop it. It was a desperate game; but only get that train to stop for an in stant and all would be right. By get ting into it I could reach Silkuiinster in the early morning, and what cared I for any action tho company might take if I saved my friend's sou. If tho signalman refused to put back the lever.- 1 , the strength born of despera tion would enable mo to master him and relax them myself. All this Hashed across me in an instant, and I clambered over tho railings on tho side of the station, and found myself on the line. Even as I reached tho rails a sema phore signal thut was near mo let fall its arm, and tho light changed into a brilliant green. Tho express was sig naled ! Would thero bo time? I dash ed along over the rough ties toward tho signal box. It was very dark, and I stumbled over and over again. I had cleared about half tho distance, when I heard the ominous roar ahead, and in a few seconds could distin guish tho glitter of the engine's head light bearing toward mo. The train was just over a mile from * me, rushing on at express speed. With a groan I ejaculated, "Toolato!" At that instant my eye fell upon a ghastly looking structure by tho side of tho track, looming grimly through the darkness. It resembled a one armed gallows with an arm hanging from it! For a moment I thought it must have been a fearful fancy con jured up by the thought of Fenthurst's dreadful late, but immediately I re membered that this straugo looking apparition was none other than a mail bug suspended from a post—in fact, part of tho apparatus by which a train going at full speed picks up the mails. The express train that was coming had a postal car attached to it. From the sido of the car a strong rope net would bo laid out, catching the bag I saw suspended before me. As a bag would bo deposited from tho train in a somewhat similar man ner, there ought to have been a man on guard. I afterward found ho had left his post and gone to have a chat with his friend in the cheery signal box. A mad and desperate idea took pos session of me. Tho train that was bearing down, and which would reach mo ill one minute, should pick me up with the mails! I grasped the idea of tho thing in a eecoud. if I could hang on to that bag so that it came between mo and the net it would break tho force of tho shock, and the not would receivo mo as well as the bug. Fortunately lam a small man. Tho bag hung just over my head. I jumped at it, seized it, drew myself up parallel with it, held it firmly at j the top, where it hung by a hook, and 1 drew my leers no so as to preseut as small a compass as possible. It did not take me half a minuto to do all this. Then I waited. It was but a few seconds, but it 'seemed hours. I heard the roar of the approaching train. Then the engine dashed past me. I shall never forget tho row of lighted carriages passing about a foot away from me—closer than even that, I suppose—and I hanging and waiting for the crash to come. And it came. There was a dull thud —a whirr and a rush, and all was dark When I came to my senses I was ly ing on tho floor of the postal van. Two men in their shirt sleeves were busily engaged in sorting letters at a rack. I felt bruised and stiff all over, and I found that my left arm was bound in a sling made out of a hand kerchief. "Where are we?" I asked. They turned around. "Oh, you've como to, have you?" said one of them. "Now, perhaps, you'll give an account of yourself. It's precious lucky you're here at all, let me tell you, for if you had been a taller man wo should only have got part of you in the net. As it is, you'vo got your collar bono broken. We'vo tied it up a bit. Now, perhaps, you'll speak out; nnd look here, if we find you've been dodging the police, don't you go thinking you'll give 'em the slip any further. Tho mail van au't a refuge of that sort." I told them tho motive that had promptod mo to take the desperate step I had done. They wouldn't be lieve it at first. Luckily, though, I had put tho evening paper and my diary in my pocket, so I showed them tho paragraph and the entry. They were civil enough then. "Well, sir, wo shall bo in Silkminis ter about three or a little after. I hope you'll bo able to save tho poor beggar. You must excuse our turn ing to work again, and the best thing for you will be to rest yourself." They piled a quantity of empty mail bags on tho floor and made me a rough shake-down. Before ho went to his work again tho other ono said: "What a pity you never thought of . a better way out of tho difficulty than coming in here so sudden like." "There was no other way." "Yes there was, sir." "What was that?" "Why, you should have got the sig nalman to telegraph to Silkminstor; ho could have done it all right." What au idiot I had been, after all! However, I should be in tirno to stop tho execution. A little after 3 wo drew up at Silk miuster station. There was a police man on tho platform, aud I at once told my story to him, tho result being that we drovo around to tho jail anil insisted upon seeing the Govoruor. Of course, ho was deeply interested in what I had to tell him, anil at onco made arrangements to stop tho execu tion. The Home Secretary was com municated with by mcaus of special wire. Fortunately, ho happened to bo in town, after a couple of hours of anxious suspense a reprieve Mas re ceived from him. "Well," said tho Governor, "I don't know which I ought to congratulate most, Mr. Fenthurst or yourself, for you have both had a most narrow escape." Little remains to be told. I soou identified tho coudomued man as tho person whom I had met in tho train. He also turned out to bo tho Sou of my old friend, as 1 had fully expected. After the due formalities ho M-AS dis charge!. Suspicion having strongly attached itself to his name, however, he Mas very miserable, until about a fortnight afterward tho real murderer was discovered and captured. Charles Fenthurst aud myself became fast friends, and although I was fearfully shaken and upset for somo weeks after the adventure. I never regretted the night on which I Mas picked up with tho mails.—Strand Magazine. The Deadly Canily liar. There is an immense amount of non senso uttered in tho guise of scientific advice, aud nothing more thoroughly foolish than the perpetual attacks up on candy and confectionery, says Margherita Arlina Haimn. The argu ments are tho sarno as those employed fifty years ago, when two-thirds of the bonbons of the market were made with terra alba and other abominations. At tho present there is scarcely a pouud of candy in the market that is not pure and wholesome. Good candy in mod eration is heathful aud nutritious Tho desert Arabs of Afrioa use as their chief article of diet tho dried dates, which are so rich in sugar as to be al most candy in themselves, and they aro about the strongest men in tho world. Every child who is heal thy crave! candy, and the cruviug merely repre sents tho food value of the thing de sired. To forbid a little child a feu bonbons now and then does far more harm than to gratify its natural and unobjectionable desire. Caudy in excess is injurious, but uc more so tliau ripo fruit, roast bee', plum pudding, or even mashed pota toes.—Now York Mail and Express. Dressing Wounds Willi Ashes. Recent wounds should bo dressed, says Dr. Pashkoff, with a thin layer o! ashes prepared extempore by in cinerating Home cotton stuff 01 linen. Tho ashes mingling with tho blood form a protecting scurf under which tho lesion heals very rapidly. This simplo and convenient method has been practiced by the Cossack peasantry from time immemorial, and the doctor mentions that in Lis own experieiuo of twenty-eight cases of cuts, stabs, crushes, etc., tweuty-six healed without auy suppuration. Ho also recommends that dirty-looking wounds should bo washed with a i boracic solution before being dressed. ! —New Orleans Picavuno. Jhntterert Cups and Superstition. A friend who often stayed with the Lesseps family says that the count never seemed to lose sight of the edu cation of his children, even In the small est detail. One morning at breakfast a beautiful Dresden teacup was broken. "Ah!" cried the countess, "a disaster! Two more of that set will now bo brok. en. It always happens so." "Are you so superstitious," asked the count, "as to really believe that two more will be broken?" "I know It." "Then let us get It ofT our minds." And, taking two of the cups by the handles, ho dashed them together. The anger nnd dismay of the countess prov ed conclusively that she had not seri ously held to her superstition. It also loosed any hold the absurd idea may have had on the minds of the children. —Kate Field's Washington. Odd I'refcrencee In flows. Manager Frank M. Whitney, of the ' New Castlo Plow Works, makes a curi ous assertion. He says: "Plows are made differently for certain counties i and States. The tendency of a son Is to use the same kind of a plow used by his father. In Lawrence County ; the use of the left-handed plow Is al most the rule, but In Mercer County the right-hand plow Is used, nnd (his unaccountable difference In the kind of plow used extends to other States In the Union. In central and eastern Pennsylvania the .left-handed plow is used, and wherever the Amish German farmers have emigrated from this county the sons are nlmost sure to use tho left-handed plows. Wo would never dream of sending a left-handed plow to Michigan, neither would wo to Ohio. Among German people only left banded plows are used, while the re verse Is the case with people from Mex ico and Italy. I cannot tell why this (s so. but It Is."—Pittsburg Dlsuafch. Woodwork. Hereafter there Is to be no woodwork whatever on German men-of-war. This Is a direct outcome of the battle at l'nlu, In which many of the vessels en gaged were disabled in some degree by the burning of Inferior woodwork. One of Our Faults. One of our greatest faults probably j Is that, without thinking much about j It, you bore people. " —— . - m I - ..I „oi Report- HtffheStot a J.* \ S9S) " Latest • Absolutely Pure WALTER BAKER & GO, > Tlio Largest Manufacturers of Lm pure, high grade COCOAS AND CHOCOLATtS (9M& On tlila Continent, hcvo rocclred HIGHEST AWARDS tm Industrial and Food i f y EXPOSITIONS Bjßin Europe and America. Their delicious BR LAKFA COCOA 1% throluteSy pure and soluble, and cotls lets ttian one cent a cup. SOLD EY QROCEILS EVERYWHERE. WALTEr BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. HI Y *" OR PtKARANT WORK easily eeenred thrmirh "Rl an sarly application for Local Agency 10 sell the DAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS to Farmer! and Dalrvmen. One stylo was t-howu in last number Of this journal. Another will soon ha pictured out. Meanwhile, write for Handsome Illus trated Book Free. DAVIS A KANKJN BLIHI AND j Ml'O. CX)., Sole Manufacturers.SAO W. Lake St .Chicago. HAVE YOU FIVE OR MORE COWS ? If ao R "Haby " Cream Scparßtor will y°u every year. Why continue an inferior system another year at so great a loss? Dairying is now tho /V-Kfr ' x ,'*h ' only profitable feature of Agriculture. Properly con ducted it always pays well, and must pay you. You peed a Separator, and you need tho BEST,-the xs,/Pllr?*Q •'llnby." All styles and capacities. Prices, $75. 11 \a Upward. Send for new 1895 Catalogue. 11 Jj|X THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO., ||\S Branch oßices: Genera! Offices: ELGIN. ILL. 74 COBTLANOT ST.. NEW YORK. 41 Thrift is a Gsod Revenue." Great Saving P.esu'ts From Gleanßinass and SAPOLIO A GREAT COUGH REMEDY. Perhaps you may think that Scott's Emulsion is only useful to fatten babies, to round up the angles and make comely and attractive, lean and angular women, and fill out the hollow cheeks and stop the wasting of the consumptive, and enrich and vitalize the blood of the scrofulous and anaemic persons. It will do all this | —but it will do more. It will cure a Hard, Stubborn Cough ! when the ordinary cough syrups and specifics entirely fail. _ The cough that lingers after the Grip and Pneu monia will be softened and cured by the balsamic heal ing and strengthening influences of this beneficent food-medicine, namely, Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver > Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda. , Refuse substitutes. They arc never as good. Scott & Bowne, New York. All Drugeists. 50c. a<i St. A WAR ECHO. EVERT HONOR A Bis 19 VETERAN DK* SERVES A PENSION. And the Isone Llinb is not the Only Rev ■on for a Government Reward Either. (From Journal, Leioiston, Me.) Samuel R. Jordan hag just given the Jour nal an account of his life, which iu view of his extremoly hard lot for tho past few years will be read with int .trout. "I am 48 yeurs old an 1 have always lived In Now Portland. 1 enlisted in the army In 1862 as a private in Company A, 28th M. Voluntoer3. My army experience injured my health to some extent, although I worked at blacksmithing somo part of the time, whon suddenly, several years ago, I was prostrated with what ablo physicians pronounced Lo comotor Ataxia. At first I could get around somewhat, yet the disease progressed quite rapidly until I had hardly any feeling in my legs and feot, they felt like sticks of wood and I grew so much worse that I could not movo for three years without help, as my neighbors and frien ls could tostlfy. I em ployed several physicians in my vicinity, and elsewhere, and they all told ino that medi cines would not help me, that thoy could do nothing to effect a cure, and that in time I should become entirely helpless. I became discouraged. I was a great care to my wife and friends. Shortly aftor I met an old army : comrade, Mr. All. Parlin, a resident of Mad ison, Maine, and he incidentally mentioned how ho had tried Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for a severe CO3O of rheumatism and a spinal and malarial trouble, that he ha I suffered with consequent of his army life, and been groatly benefited by their use. Jly his earnest rec ommendation I was In lueo l to try tho pills. After taking thorn for a time I began to feel prickly sensations in my legs and a return of strength s ! ■• "il l move them a litti". After a few weeks I beg in to feol a marked im provement in my con lition. I soon was en abled to walk aroun l a littlo with the help of crutches. After taking for some time I can now walk with >ut crutches, my general health is much improved an 1 I have re gained my old-time vigor. I <an walk about and enjoy liTo once more, for which I , feel verv thankful, and this happy result is due to the use of Dr. Williams' rink Pills." | Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo People are not a patent medicine in the sense that name implies. Thoy were first compounded as a prescription and used as such in general practice by nn eminent physician. So great was their efficacy that it was deemed wise to place them within tho reach of all. They are now manufacture 1 by tho Dr. Williams' ; Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., an J j arc sold in boxes (never in loose form by the j dozen or hundred, and tho public are cau tioned against mi.nerous imitations soil io I this shape) at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for j $2.50, and may bo ha i of nil druggists or di | root by mail from Dc. Williams' Medicine Company. o —o SIMPLE, CLEANLY, EFFICIENT. On the Cars, AtfhsTSiea're, Anywhere. IF YOU WOULD BE IH FASHION TAKE A FEW RMpansTabules ALONG WITH YOU WHEREVER "SOU GO. J>&~ Yon can slip them into your pooket, jour catcbel, jour wallet even. To a dyspep tic tlm means neace of mind under many otherwise trying circumstances 0 i TNUI6 •aa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers