Good Blood Produoes good health, because It easily ex pels the germs of disease and does not permit them to bo nourishod and developed in the body. As a blood puriflor and health givex Hood's Sarsaparilla lias No Equal. I ' ' i) V". r , J ' -• . .'S Truly Marvellous A Cure Seldom Equalled in Medical History All Othor Treatment Failed— Hood's farsaparilln Cured. "My wife sprained her anklo ten years ago. It apparently got well to all outward appear ance, it being a little largor than the other ankle, but in a few months throe sores broko out ou her knee, her anklo, and foot. Thoy became Largo Running Ulcers and tho doctor could not do anything to help. I then took my wife to the hospital and tho surgeons scraped all the flesh round tho sores, and said they would get well. They almost healed up, lut soon two little specks oame, one on each side of the first sore. The doctors said they would not amount to any thing, but in a few days they turnod out to bo more ulcere, nml in a short time they had eaten into tho original sore aud made a largo wound. The surgeon next decided thau an Operation Must Bo Performed. My wife would not consent to this. I wa.i about discouraged and decided to have her 1 -fOOd ? S Sarsa parilla try a bottln of Hood's ■& * ../\n Barsapurilia libidos I US QS ffiviui; iior this medi- Sp, / cine we bandaged her foot in stooped leaves and roots and con tinued this treatment for five months. At tho end of that time she had taken eleven bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla, tho sores were all healed and she is perfectly well. My wifo is fifty-two years old and is in tho best of health." JosKi'll 0. FUEEBY, Long Beach, California. Postmaster Hoi man of Long Beach, Cal., says ho knows Mr. Freeby to bo a man of his word, and ho be lieves his statement to be strictly truo. flood's I'll Is aro purely vogetablo, and carefully prepared from the best ingredients. -jstr Is RIPANS o TABULES. Tho standard cure prescribed by physicians everywhere for the common every day Ilia -£ llic household. Constipation. Headache, H-artbuniy Disslm*?. . Blllousoesij dyspepsia. ALL DRDOGISTS. Trios 50 cuts per box. By mall without ex ra charge. SUDAN'S CHEMIC AT. COMPANY 10 Spruce at., Now i'vrk. W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOEr!??o H l* B ?^-=. §C O ra D OVA NT, RETJC>>& ENAMELLED CALK. ?3.SP FINE CALF &KAHGAROH S3.S?POUCE,3SOLES. 2 bo*2.WORKINGM En - s *' -EXTRA FINE- ""S --BQYSSCiiOULSHOES. 'LADIES A BE S TP oNSOi A. SEND FOR CATALOGUE W'L-DOUGLAfI* DKOCKTOM.MASS. Over One Million People wear tho W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the bdst value for the money. They cquul custom shoes in style and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices crc uniform,—stamped on cole. From $i to S3 saved over other mr.kcs. If your dealer cannot supply you we can. r N U 13 DAWS 0 REAM /&i¥/w\ S^M?X9.? S [QJ I Successful. Meritorious VX- •v* n • lJ Kree \' / OAVIS &. RANKIN \ Y- '**' - >T/ BL W Fc . CO. J y 840-204 W? Luke St Chicago, 111. si mi,,f.V SH I'OSII'IVU.Y • 110 II J- smaller to suit ehnuelrc PATENTED. Illu*. Cat. g! lit fH'CUrcI.V sealed by o.V. lloußeMfg.Co.744 Broadway,N.Y.Clty HI PE6JC rrHEI) Fever "lorel U Lb sLtlh sssj' r'svii Elwyu, M. D.. Box 105, Clarks Green, lack. Co., Pa. ■ ai By £B C r To Introduce our goods and to B !\9 9V > nCC secure local and general agents B I S II ue will send one ounce Bed Ink and twoouuees Black Ink Fit IIV. prettAld, upon receipt of 00. postage. Ik IN II M Ft*. 9 41, CfcioSgo, Tno necrot or Fagotnation. Tho secret of fascination Is one which i many a woman would sacrifice a good '■ deal to learn. To cultivate a charming | and an attractive manner one must begin at home; and surely a bettor ' school could not bo devised, for tho training Is, In Its way, perfection. Here one Is sure to find each day little rubs which must ho soothed with skillful touch; there Is n constant mlud-frletlou going on among even the most devoted mepibers of the household. It is a pain ful fnct, though none the less true, that one's family acts as a constant counter- Irritant A steady effort to smooth over the rough places, minister to j wounded hearts, and with deft touches erase unpleasant memories lj called ! for, and the woman who obeys tho sum mons Is pretty sure to find herself fully nble to cope In the most ngreeabie fash lon with the outside world. Few wom en, however, realize that a fascination of manner Is not born, but cultivated. It begins to bud In the nursery, devel ops under the skillful training of pains, taking instructors, and blossoms forth Into complete beauty In tho society ol well-bred women. Finer Microscopes Needed. Prof. Sehacfer, President of the sec tion of physiology of tho British Asso ;iatiou, declares that ho discovered that each organic cell In vegetable and nni aial life contains an infinitesimal parti ble which manifests definite and con trolling functions, and which uppears to he, In fact, tho principle of life. lie galls It "the attraction particle," be cause, despite Its Infinite littleness, "it : exerts an extraordinary Influence over the whole coll, which may he many thousand times its size. It initiates and directs those processes which result In tho multiplication of cells. The sup posed fundamental form element called a cell Is usually Invisible to the naked eye. Bearing this fact in mind we can usually get an idea of the extraordinary diameter of the statement of Dr. Schao fer that "110 has discovered the life principle In n particle thousands of 1 times smaller than the cell itself." Af ter magnifying the cell 1,0(10 diameters the central particle, the "attraction par ticle" or the living particle appears un der tlio most powerful microscope mere ly the size of a tine point. Some invent or is needed now with a microscope of higher power thau anything yet known. Itoad Foundations of Cloth. The Massachusetts Highway Com missioners' Board has found in build ing macadamized roads, that, upon loose, saudy soil, much stone Is wasted by being driven Into the sand. In such cases gravel, when accessible, has been placed upon tho sand to a depth of three or four Inches, aud tho stono laid on tills. By so doing the cost Is greatly re duced. There being no gravel at Mar. tha's Vineyard, cheap cotton cloth has been spread upon the suud, and over that the stone. The sand does not work up through tho stono and much less stone is required. Layers of tarred pa, per were tried, but without success, as the stone pressed through them. A Kensington youth, who had been told tlint a certain young lady's father had plenty of dough, proposed to her before he discovered that the old man was a baker.—Philadelphia Itecord. An Incomplete Home, run will over tho furnishings of a house; its furniture, carpets, hangings, pic tures and music, and always forget or no gleot the most important requisite. Some thing there should bo always on tho shelf to provide against sudden casual!ties or at tacks of pain. Suoh come liko a thief in the night; a sprnin, strain, sudden baokftche, tootbaohe or neuralgic attack. There is nothing easier to got than a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, and nothing surer to cure quickly any form of pain. Tho house is incomplete without it. Complete it with a good supply. At tho Bon Marcho (choap market), Furls lest year, 0(12 persons were arrested foi kleptomania. J)r. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles, l'ainphlet and consultation free. Laboratory Hinghumpton, N.Y. It is estimated thut the Grand Falls on the Hamilton river in Labrador have a drop ol 800 feet Call It a Craze. AN ALARMING STATEMENT CONCERNING WOMEN. HOW BAD HABITS ARB FORMED. The New York Tribune says: "The habit of taking ' headache powders ' is increasing to an alarming extent among a great number of wo men throughout the country. These powders as their name indicates, are claimed by the manu facturers to be a positive and speedy cure for any form of headache. In many cases tls-eir chief ingredient is morphine, opium, cocaine or some other equally injurious drug having a tendency to deaden pain. The habit of taking them is easily formed, but almost impossible to shake off. Women usually begin taking them to re lieve a raging headache and sooti resort to the powder to alleviate any little pain or ache they may be subjected to. and finally like the mor phine or opium lirnd.get into thfc habit of taking them regularly, imagining thut they are in pain if they happen to miss their regular dose." In nine cases out of ten, the trouble is in the stomach and liver. Take a simple laxative and liver tonic and remove the offending matter which deranges the stomach and causes the headache. Dr. •Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are composed entirely of the purest, concentrated, vegetable extracts. One Pellet is a dose; sugar-coated, easily swallowed; once used, always in favor. They posi tively cure sick headache and remove the disposition to it. Mr. Iv VARGASON, of Otter Lake, Lapeer Co.. §Mic/i., writes : " I not infrequently have an at tack of the headache. the forenoon. At my dinner I eat my regular meal, and take one or two of Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets imme diately after, and in the course of an hour my headache is cured and no bad effects. I feel better everv way for having taken them— aftf r kinds gold, if for nothing else K. VARGASON. F,SQ. thau to cure headache." HERB AND ROOT DIGGERS. FATHERING NATURE'S REMEDIES FOR THE MEDICINE MAKERS. Wily Many Tennessee Moonshiners Were Changed Into "Dingers"— Sarsaparilla In Wild Prolusion. HUNDREDS of pcoplo nro on gaged in Tennessee, writes a correspondent from Milan, in digging roots and herbs nd gathering leaves, barks, nuts and berries for tho great pharmaceutical laboratories. Thoy are known as the "diggers" of tho State. The men and ivomen engaged in the business know very little about pharmacy or the way Ecienco distils tho secret juices of what they gather, but the business pays them. Nature bid thousands of her secrets in the flora of the South, and tho dis tilled extracts or powdered forms of her roots, barks, leaves aud herbs en ter into many thousands of prepara tions in the big laboratories of tho manufacturing pharmacists. The rank weeds, grasses, 110 wers and shrub bery that grow wild in every county, and that other men crush under their feet aro worth much money to tho diggers, who can never hope to gather a thousandth pnrt of tho plants naturo has provided so lavishly. Tho digger is a pretty shrewd fellow about Datnre. Ho was a weather prophet, a woods man and a natural astronomer from infunoy, and tho encouraging pay of the pharmacists made him a mixture of business man, herb elector and bot anist. Diggers work in every part of tho State, in the lowlands, in the swamps, along tho rivers, in tho big woodf, in the mountains and in tlio outskirts of tho towns and cities. When they ore away from homo on a collecting expedition tlioy nro pro vided with tents—outdoor lifo is typ pionl of tho business—and they wear overalls and heavy shoes, for most oi tho work is in tho dirt. Generally the diggers begin at the head of a small river and move slowly down it until they have gathered thousands of bushels of roots and herbs aud many pounds of bark. They use spades and trowels, and the use of the spade is a science with them. There are squads and companies of tliem in the employ of the laborator ies of New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, and other big cities all the year round. Those who are not con nected with tho laboratories keep well informed about prices, the demands of the pharmacists, ami those articles which can be collected in season. One thing they gather is sarsaparilla, which grows wild in profusion, and is used in great quantities by medicine manu facturers. Alkanot root gives a fine red tinge to oils, fats, wax. terpen tine, spirits and essences, and is also used to color pomade, ointments, hair oils and varnishes. The spirituous so lution stains marblo a deep red, and wax tinged with alkanet and applied to warm marblo leaves a beautiful flesh color. The roots of golden seal, yellow dock, and gold thread aro val uable to the chemist. The stalk of rhubarb makes excellent pies, and its root is used medicinally. The common plants that grow wild and aro used in medicinal preparations are manifold. Blue flag grows by tho brink of rivers, in swamps and meadows; burdock, used in blood modicines; sassafras, fennel, mullein, elderflowers, cotton root, all sorts of berries, buchu leaves, prickly ash, snako root, castor beans, ginseng, horehound, sweet ferns, and mandrako are other herbs gathered. Tho trees drop berries, nuts and seeds, useful for oils and extracts, and thero is always a brisk demand for such things. The seeds of tho cones of the mountain pines arc sold for $2 a pound, and are gathered from the trees. Tho long beau of tho catalpa trco is very valuable for its seed, and a bushel of shelled seed brings as much as SSO. Tho seeds bring big prices in sections where shado trees are scarce, and the demand from Texas ulono takes all that is gathered. The collectors in climbing the trees of tho pine and catalpa oftentimes finds rivals in tho little sqniriels that hasten to pick tho seed out of a cono or bean as soon as it ripens. Canaigre, which grows wild, is a species of dock, valua ble for tho tannic acid contained in it. The diggers know how to treat barks, roots, leaves, berries, anil herbs. Tho outer bark is never used, for they know that nature provides for getting rid of tho bark of trees as tho trunk grows. Barks are preserved by hang ing them in paper bags in the dry and airy part of the herbarium. When gathered, roots are washed to get rid of the dirt and part of the mucous sub stance that would otherwise render them mouldy. The larger ones are cut, split, or poeled. They are spread on sieves or hurdles auil dried in a heat of about 120 degrees in a steam closet eonuected with tho herbarium, care being taken to shako them occa sionally to change tho surfaco exposed to tho air. Thick and juicy roots like rhubarb or briony nro cut in slices and strung up on threads to dry. Squills aro sealed, threaded, and dried in tho hot closet. Leaves nro dried as quick ly as posssible by putting them be tween layers of absorbing paper. Some small plants with roots and leaves entire, aro removed from tho soil with a garden trowel, and after washing aro packed in small boxes al most airtight. It is impossible to re move somo of the larger plants in one piece, and in such cases all tho parts— roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and fruit —are secured. Sometimes the ends cut are scalod with wax until they reach the laboratories. Iu tho her bariums are many rare botanical specimens which have no intrinsic value other than to sell to colleges and scientific institutions. The largest herbarium operated by the diggers is near Hickory Flat Min eral Springs in Henderson County, 'L'enn., and is the headquarters for moro than a hundred men employed in this business, who prospect from there in tents over all tho section be tween tho Tennessee and Mississippi Rivers. In tho mountain regions thero aro largo herbariums, from which col lectors aro sent out nlso. Many hun dreds of men and women aro em ployed in tho business all over tho State, and for a backwoodsman who has studied nature it is tho best-pay ing business bo can engage in. The ordinary diggers receivo from 81 to $3 a day, and men who havo been in the business a loug time and have be come proficient botanists get as much as 812 a day. Tbey aro paid accord ing to their knowledge of common things, and especially of tho market demand may be.—New York Sun. Stranger Than Fiction. Thirty-two years ago Edward Buck, a seaman, sailed from Philadelphia on a steamer bound for Australia, lie left a wifo and a ten-year-old son in tho Quaker City, and when, many months afterward, word came byway of England that the steamer had gone down off tho Australian coast, Mrs. Buck believed her husband was dead. She moved to Camden and a few years later to Trenton, supporting bersolf and child by her labor. When tho son attained manhood ho prospered in business, married and finally set tled in Long Branch. The mother re mained with tho son and did not dis card her widow's weeds. During all these years Edward Buck was alivo and was seeking his wife. Ho had been saved from the wreck and returned to Philadelphia three years later, but could find no traco of his wifo and child. Then ho took to tho sea again and finally landed in California, where ho accumulated a fortune. In 1889 the wanderer determined to return to tho East and devote tho balance of bis lifo to tho search for his missing relatives. He purchased a largo cstato at Rocklaud Lake, N. Y. Filially ho heard that a family named Buck lived at Long Branch. Ho went there and was directed to tho house of his son, Edward Back, Jr. There he found his wife, aud tho joy of the reunion was indescribable. On Tuesday the Bucks went to Rock laud Lake, where the reunited hus band aud wife will spend tho re mainder of thoir days.—Trenton (N. J.) American. Exercise for Dyspepsia. A fruitful eauso of indigestion is eating when ouo is either physically or mentally t'red. At such times one should not take solid food. Driuk instead a glass of hot milk. Nothing is equal to it as a stimulant and seda tive. Tho milk should never bo scalded, but boated quickly, and drank as hot as it can bo comfortably. The process of boating reduces both its svveetne3s an I density, but the effect of its cordial an I stimulating power is felt at once. Some portions of the milk are appropriate I and di gested almost immediately after being taken iuto tho stomach. Many who think they need stimulant when ex hausted by iutiguo will find in a glass of hot milk an equivalent that will bo at once satisfying and revivifying, without any deleterious after effects. It has long been demonstrated that I motion rouud and about a vital orgau | reacts upon it and vitalizes it. Ex ercise is a great aid to digestion, an 1 j special exercises intended to act I directly on tho digestive organs are , recommended as curc3 for dyspepsia. Tho ouo called tho tor3o exercise is very beneficial, and is an invaluable | aid to weak and impaired digestion. ' With the arms hanging lifeless from ! the shoulders—technically called "de composed" or "devitalized" and I keeping the feet firmly on tho floor, twist tho body as far as you can turn it from right to left and vice versa; this stmuliateß voluntary func tions and expels stagnant juices.— Domorcst's Magazine. A Little llig>. Tho popular superstition to the of* feet that dramatic critics aro boiug constantly subjected to glittering bribes from theatrical managers, has but slight foundation. Tho editor al this column could easily name two oi three local critics who h iven't in years received a brown-stone house, or other gow-gaws in the shape of bribes. However, hero is a ne v tale about n brace of ducks forwarded by a mana ger to oue of our best-known and ablest play-tasters. Ho did not know what to do with them; it scorned a foolish fuss to send them back, and yet—. So ho told his editor what had happened, and asked his advice. "How long havo you had them?" asked tho editor. "Eight days," he answered. "Then eat them up quickly, or it will bo wovse than u J caso of bribery; it will bo bribery and dorruptiou."—Philadelphia Life. Better for l)nuns Thau Bants. Some of tho boat builders in New England havo discarded tho use ol aluminum in tho building of shells. At fir3t tho extreme lightness of this metal made it a favorite, but it lias been found that it will corrode and the shell will then be full of pin holes. On tho other hand musical instrument makers aro using aluminum in ths manufacture of drums. Made of thit material they nro not only of ligbl weight but givo out a better tone than tho ordinary article.—Hardware. Artificial Cotton. A process for making artificial cot ton is reported from France. Ij is made from tho wood of pine, spruce or larch, which, having been convert ed by chemicals, first into a pure cel lulose, and thou into a paste, is passed through a perforated plate. The re sult is a thread which can bo woven into a strong fabric—New York Dis patch. r Only On© Ton© In His Voice. > Possibly as ludicrous a thing as ever happened was the experience of my friend, Professor ltoswell Park, of Buf falo, N. Y. A man's life had been saved by the beautiful surgical skill of a sue- j cessful laryngotomy. When health had been retored, my friend proposed to the patient the insertion of an artificial larnyx, so that vocal tones, or true voice, could be added to the whisper that necessarily resulted from the ab sence of the vocal chords. This appar ently highly desirable thing was done, but the tone, of course, was uniform: there was no change of pitch possible to tho mechanical larnyx, and expres- ! siou, modulation, timbre—everything that makes voice pleasant and more than useful was absent. The man could gpeak, convey ideas perfectly, but when ! he tried to give emphasis, nuances, shadings, diverse meanings, and espec ially when he tried to express emotion, anger, or resentment, there was only the monotonous drone and aqueajt of the intolerable machine. Nothing could control the convulsive laughter of tho surgeon and assistants. The poor man's indignation sought outlet in speech, but the very words of wrath were turned to outrageous absurdity by the infernal device. In a spasm of ebullient rage he tore tho mechanism out of his throat, cursed the man who had saved his life, and is probably running and hoarsely whispering Invectives at him still. He never came back.—Dr. George M. Gould's "Meaning and Method of Life." WAS GOULD INSANE 1 FINANCIAL WOKRY AND PHYSICAL EXERTION NOT TJIE GREATEST l>E3Tii:)YEll OF HUMAN LIFE. For Humanity'B Su'te, After Thlrty-nlx Year* of Nerve-Creeping Slavery, ll* Tolls How Ho Was Sot Free. Caldwell, N. J., March 2G. 1895. (SpeolaU —Since cue of our prominent citizens suf fered so terribly from tobacco tremens, liA3 made known his frightful experience in bo half of humanity, tho ladies here arc making tobacco-using husbands' lives miserable with thoir entreat ies to at once quit tobacco. Tho written statement of H. J. Gould is attracting wide-spreal attention. When interviewed to-night he said : " 1 commenced using tobacco at thirteen; I am now forty nine; so, for thirty-six years I chewed, smoked, snuffed una rubbed snuff. In the morning I chewed before I nut my pants on. and for a long tiino I usea two ounces of chewing and eight ounces of smoking a day. Sometimes I bad a chew in both checks and n pipe in my mouth at onoo Ton years ago I quit drinking whiskey. 1 tried to stop to bacco time and again, but could not. My nerves craved nicotine and I fed them till my skin turned a tobacco-brown, cold, sticky perspiration oozed from my skin, and trickled down ray back at the least exer tion or excitement. My nerve vigor and my life was being slowly sapped. I made up my mind that I ha 1 to quit tobacco or die. On October 1 I stopped, and for three days I suffered the tortures of the damned. On the third day I got so bad that my partner accused me of being drunk. 1 said, 'No. I have quit tobacco.' 'For God's sake, man,* ho said, ottering me his tobacco box, 'take a chew; you will go wild;' and I was wild. Tobacco was forced into me and I was taken home dazed. I saw double and my memory was beyond control, but I still knew how to chew and smoke, which I did all day, until toward night, when my system got tobacco soaked again. The next morning I looked and felt as though I had been through a long spell of sickness. I gave up in despair, as I thought that I could not cure myself. Now, for suffering humanity, I'll tell what saved my life. Providence evidently answorod my good wife's pruyers and brought to her at tention In our paper an article which reodi 'Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoko Your Life Away!' "What a sermon and warning In these words! Just what 1 was doing. It told about n guaranteed cure for tho tobacco habit, called No-To-Ba". I sent to Druggist Haslor for A box. Without a grain of faith I spit out my tobacco cud, an 1 put into my mouth a little tablet upon which was stamped No-To-Bao. I know it sounds like a lie when I tell you that I took eight tablets tho first day, seven tho next, Ave tho third day, and all the nerve-creeping feeling, rest lessness and mental depression was gone. It wns too good to be true. It seemed like a dream. That was a month ago. I used one box. It cost me one dollar, and it is worth a thousand. I gained ten pounds in weight and lost all desire for tobacco the first dtiy. I sleep and oat well, and 1 have been bene fited in more ways than I can toll. No, the cure was no exception in my case. I know of ten people right hero in Caldwell who have bought no No-To-Bao from Hosier, and they have been cured. Now that I realize what No-To-Buc has done for me and others, I know why it is that tho makers of this wonderful remedy, tho Sterling llcmedy Company, of New York and Chicago, say: 'We don't claim to cure every case. That's Fraud's talk, a lie, but we do guarantee three boxes to cure the to bacco habit, and in case of failure wo ure perfectly willing to refund money.' I would not give a public indorsement if I were not certain of its reliability. I know it is backed by men worth a million. No-To-Bac has been a God-send to me, and I firmly believe it will cure any case of tobacco using if faith fully tried, a a I there nrs thousands of to bacco slaves who ought to know how easy it is to get free. There's happiness in No-To- Bac forth© prematurely old men, who think as I did that they aro old and worn out, when tobacco is tho thing that destroys their vital ity and manhood." The public should be warned, however, against the purchase of any of tho many imi tations on the market, aw the success of No- To-Ba • Irii brought forth a host of counter feiters and imitators. Tho genuine No-To- Bno is sold under a guarantee t > cure, by all druggists, and every tablet has the word No- To-Bac plainly stamped thereon, and vou ran no phys oal or financial risk iu purchas ing the genuine article. At tho age o! 7!1 Darwin declared that a cigarette rested hiui inoro after hard lobor than all else. n<iw* Ttiis i Wo offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ease of Catarrh that can:i..t bo cured by Hull's Catarrh (Jure. F. J. C'HF.Nrv & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undo: signed, have known F. J. Che ney for 1h ilo tl5 year •, and believe him pcr feell, honorable In ail business transactions an 1 tlnanc ally • 1 • to carry out any obliga t on made by the r ilrm. WKST <<: TITUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WALIUXO, KIN-AN A MAUVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. ITa l's Catarrh Cure Is taken intomally, act- In ; directly upon tho blood an I mucous sur faces of tho system. Testimonials sent frco. Price.76o per bottle, fclol I by all Druggist*. Tho climatic limit to tho cultivation of wheat is not so uiuch tho cold of winter ns the heat of summer. " IFirak Lwigr, "—Dr. Tfunter's famous book, explaining how consnim tion nrFes, in what way it cuii he prevented and the new treat ment by which it is now cu.cd, is advertised in another column. Mrs. Winslow's toothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces iufluma lion, allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc. a bottl " llenltli Insurance." That is almost as necersury as life insur ance. It means reasonable cure and occasion al lv a little medicine not much. A ltipuus Tubule is enough in most case. Karl's Clover Hoot, the great blood purifier gives freshness and clearneas lo the complex ion und cures constipation. *5 eta. OOcts. TN all receipts for cooking -j® ij| X requiring a leavening agent | the ROYAL BAKING I f) POWDER, because it is an st" absolutely pure cream of tartar % powder and of 33 per cent. jfe greater leavening strength than is & other powders, will give the || K best results. It will make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer £j flavor and more wholesome. te I i & ROYAL CAKING POWDER CO., 106 V/ALL ST., NEW-YORK. nosruil 1100 Years A^o, In sixteen months the great (lrnlnnga canal of the City of Mexico will bo opened. The canal Is over thirty miles long, and the tunnel through the moun tain six miles. The total cost will have been $20,000,000, and they have been fooling with the thing oft and on for 800 years. Expenditure and Income. The British Government In India has borrowed and used for railroad pur poses a total of $500,000,000. The rail way receipts, which have doubled in the past ten years, now amount to about $100,000,000 anuunllv OrviS BXJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to tlio taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers nud cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy nud agreeable substances, it 3 many excellent qualities commend it to nil and have mado it tho most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figa i 3 for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on baud will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. L)o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FftANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, nr. NEW YORK, I V Y. PNUI3 'OS "Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examine: U S. Pension Bureau. J tfi,sin 1a.,1 war. 15ii(liuJii aliiu:cliiiuis. iitlv More. Don't be the Axe! j Just keep in mind that the grocer or the peddler lias " an axe to grind" /A when he tells you that he has some y thing "as good as" or "the Z. / S same as" Pearline. There fA A IWW /©s/ can be but one reason—more ml\\ v k\ profit to him by your vse of the substitutes. 'M \\\ /y But how is it with you ? i ft \ What reason can you have |f | for wanting to take the * // / " risk ? Certainly not econ- "— omy —Pearline leads to the greatest economy in every direction—saves the most money, time, clothes and health. If your grocer sends you an imitation, be honest—send it back, ssa JAMES PYLE. N. Y. i^ S a jfh g a tsa " Wethink IWsGUUE I SB gl r-\2 nf. ' a yapj $ § K for CONSUMPTION is the | H I % ■ ouly medicine foroonghs." )| Cures Where All Else Fails. BEST COUCH l Tk - <•■ i < T-. p "Where Dirt Gathers, Waste Ru!es." Great Saving Results From the Use of Hraham's fiarca>m. i Catalani, like most prima donnas, I had a great weakness for showing off I her jewelry. "You seo (lis brooch?" siio would say; "do Emperor of Austria gave me dis. You see dose ear-rings? Do Emperor of Russia gave me (lese. You see dis ring? De Emperor Napo leon gave me dis," and so on. Braliam, tho tenor, in Imitation of this, would say, pointing to his umbrella: "You see (lis? Do Emperor of China gavo jmo dis." Then, pointing to his teeth, "de Emperor of Tuscany gave mo dose." In our adv. tw wmli sgn xve told of our very superior sit steel burl an I power feed cutlet to bsoffoied at Si owsrtii0 wsrtii S4O Last week we told of the process r.f galvanising and its India prnsable preservative qualitlc- Next week we will give you the experience ef two representative business firms of Illinois, one of whom lias sold 400 and the other G'K) Aermotors. Tlis j week foil living • will quote u price on the best pumps made i (lund, wind null and iiiigiotngi loner than was ever before dreaiued of. and the week following that we shall talk to you of steel g.-tlvanimd tanks, with cover*, at the unheard of pi ice cents per aaUon. This is cheaper than weed. They do The Aermotor Company troaU tho public generously. Wiiile state ieglrduluies are passing lawn to becure repairs fr ' i 11 is a FACT THAI IMK A* It • ;:•! tiMPvNY 11a t Kill JHK YEAR Ihs RKKN conrM.LI;I) TO IIAISK ITS PRICKS ON IthPAIRH I IIK At SR MOHK OF ITS CI VI OH I ItS II At K KFF.N OROKKIftU IMitVIOt Af. PARTS TO SIAKI: I I* ( OXk'f.KT K M ACII INKS, I SINCE IN THAT WAY TilK Y COM.O 4 ET A MAtTIINS CHKIPKR THAN HY OSOSRUSQ IT ASUUBLKD. IVspb are not eompnllt.l to buy machinery; they a> e rvm l eIUJ to biio rrftairt. - The Aennotor Compang I buy the repair* and A>lSf2s# assemble a ma -1 ' June at laat than the -yV w ' aeaemhled ma assembled in good ahape, Hie protection of its own reputation, the wbs motor Company has raised the> price of certain repairs just enough to prevent Ihia j in future. Not only has the 111 Aermotor Company always liventhehpatgoodsatthelow- ill est price and refused to tell itpoor article at any price,hut I I it has now KBTAKLISHF.iI TWENTY lilt AM'H HOURS I | I.N VARUM d PART 3 OF ■URIOINTHY IN OttliKlt I | TO HAVE NOT ONLY ITS GtIOISH EASILY ACCESS I- tLB IILK, HIT TO HATE ITS REPAIRS WITHIN FASY KTj BEACII. It expects soon to greatly this In/V number of houses. This la are purchasing machinery. B/Tv\E Accidents will happan, and r wise man will look to it when he is buying an arti cle that ropaira can quick ilf/h \Vi ly he had ut reasonable coat. Our very low prices and high standards rn everything connected with water supply and power production by wind, together with the accessibility of a full line of our goods and repairs, will be appreciated. Asrmotor Co.. CAUage, How Consumption Is Now Cured! Pamplilot fully describing the Treatment sent Fres on nppllcntlou to ROBERT HUNTER, M. D., 117 West loth St,. New York. Raphael, Anc 10. If noma, 1 nsao The " LINEN F." are the Beat and Mont Economi cal Collars uml Cuffs worn; they uro made of hue cloth, both sides finished alike, nud Loin* reversi ble. one collar is equal to two of any other Kind. 'Hutu tit icell, uu-ar well ant look well. A boxot Ten Collars ur Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-Flt# i Cents. A Sample Collar and Pair of Cuffs Ity mall for Big : Couta. Naino stylo uiul bizo. Address REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, n Franklin Bt., Now York. 27 Kilby St., Boston. WAT I QT NEWBLETTKIt of value son! 1 YY ilillj Oli I'HF.K toreadoiH of this paper. I Chits. A. Baldwin A Co., 10 Wall Street, N. Y CLEARINASSS 1 Lcstl/uid. CLE A ULNA ill" li CO., liALI bBLUO. ILL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers