Nerves Depend upon the blood forsuslenanoo. There fore if the blood is impure they are improp erly fed and nervous prostration results. To make puro blood, take Sarsaparilla The One Truo Blood rurifler. $1; 6 for $5. Hood's Piils a"™ / A late official report shows that, con trary to common belief, cases of re ligious mania are rare In tho British Isles. It also discloses the strange fact (that more mental aberration is devel oped among the tribe ol' peddlers than among any other class, physicians and druggists coming next. Melancholia prevails most in Ireland. / "It Is always best to lie on tho right felde," remarked tho st.-up speaker fwhen he heard of the election of the fcnan he had been advocating. Drawn Out. Tho pain of a small burn can be easily cx tincted by placing it near heat, which draws it out. Ono feels tho pain going out as it were, and this illustration explains a broad principle of euro of many tilings. For in lit a nee, in a sprain, sovero or mild, warmth by friction begins a tru-> operation. But, first and foremost, use St. Jacobs Oil. Tho needed warmth and friction eomcs from rub bing it on. Tho skin and injured musclo grow soft and heated and take up tho curative properties of tho remedy, and it is not long l oforo one feels the pain drawn out. Oilier properties nro at work to strengthen and restore, and a positive euro follows like magic. #10!) In I'rlzoft on Oalg and Corn, Last year we offered S2OO for tho biggest yield on oats. 200 bushels Silvor Mi no Oats Won. This year wo offer S2OO moro on oats, SIOO on Silvor King Barloy, a Barley ytolding in 1803116 bushels por acre, and SIOO on Golden Triumph, Yellow Dent Corn, tho coin of your dreams! What's Toosiulo and Hand Vetch and Saea llno and Luthyrus and Giant Spurry and Giant Inenrnato Glover uad lots of suoh things? They'll make you rich if you plant a plenty. Catalogue tolls you. Ir YOU wilt, our THIS OUT AND SEND it Willi 10c. postagoto tho John A. Salzor Sood Co., I,a Crosso, Wis., you will get, tree, 10 grasses and grains, including above oats, barley, corn and thoir mammoth catalogue. Catalogue alone Sc. (A.) sftoM The general belief among doctors is that consump tion itself is very rarely inherited. But the belief is becoming stronger that the tendency to consump tion is very generally transmitted from parent to child. If there has been consumption in the family, each member should take special care to prepare the system against it. Live out doors; keep the body well nour ished ; and treat the first indication of failing health. SccTli £r nulstcrL of Cod-liver Oil, with Hypophosphites, is a fat producing food and nerve tonic. Its use is followed by improved nutrition, richer blood, stronger nerves and a more healthy action of all the organs. It strengthens the power of the body to resist dis ease. If you have in herited a tendency to weak lungs, shake it off. JUST AS GOOD IS NOT SCOTT'S EMULSION. LtHmnt mm FN IJ 4 ! jg Bottlebinding. < You can't judge of the quality of a book by the binding, nor tell the contents by the title. You look for the name V y (mm of the author before you buy the book. The name of o<,.\ JfeL Robert Louis Stevenson (for instance) on the back guar- \ < antees the inside of the book, whatever the outside inay be. fej) O There's a parallel between books and bottles. The / binding, or wrapper, of a bottle is no guide to the quality ||p fgljj. of the medicine the bottle contains. The title on the bot tie is no warrant for confidence in the contents. It all V J;J depends on the author's name. Never mind who made the 0-A bottle. Who made the medicine ? That's the question. #§B Think of this when buying Sarsaparilla. It isn't the s \ binding of the bottle or the name of the medicine that you're to go by. That's only printer's ink and paper I The (111 question is, who made the medicine? What's the author's (MP name ? When you see Ayer's name on a Sarsaparilla bot- flip /St tie, that's enough. The name Ayer guarantees the best, ff \ ■ ami h i-, done --■> for 50 year-, Longfellow', "Hiawatha." The Indian epic of "glawatjia" took the world by surprise, writes Hezekiali Butterworth la an nrtielo "How Lyng fellow Wrote His Best-Knowu Poems la Ladies' Hoajo Journal. Its form and its matter were for a long time mys teries. llow eould a Cambridge liter ary recluse produce such an epic? Cer tain critics claimed that the idea, form and muglc treatment of the poem had been borrowed from a Scandinavian sage, and the implication greatly dis turbed his publishers, and must have caused his sensitive spirit great pain. It partly eclipsed for a time the new star in the literary horizon on which nil eyes were fixed. The criticism was dis armed; the wonder grew; a flxed star had appeared. But the mystery of tho poem is simply solved. Longfellow desired to produce an epic that should be in sympathy with all that was most beautiful and noble in tho vanishing ludinu race. Abraham Lc Fort, an On ondaga chieftain, had furnished School craft, tho historian, much Indian loro and many mystic traditions, with cer tain Indian vocabularies, in which tho musical and unmusical sounds of many words Indicated their meaning. Theso traditions and vocabularies made tho work of tho poet easy. One only needs to road Schoolcraft, to whom tho poet acknowledged his Indebtedness, to see how this monument to tho Indian rnco, their only great literary memorial, was bulldcd. In a Hot Bo* "I <rot into a hot placo once," re marked ex-Sheriff Heuly, of Marin County. "In fact, it was tho hottest place 1 ever got Into in uiy life. When I was running an engine on the narrow gauge road I noticed a leak at the soft plug in the crown sheet of my engine. It kept getting worse, so I decided to plug it. "That night I raked the fire, and, when the lire box cooled off a little, crawled in and examined the leak. I measured tho hole carefully, and, after trying the calipers 011 a rat-tail file, I had concluded that it was Just tho tiling. I would drive it in nnd break it off. "I put the end of the file In the hole, lilt It a crack with the hammer, and, Instead of sticking, If went clear through. The next luluutc boiling hot water was pouring down on mo from the boiler. "Tlio lire box was only about four feet square and the soft plug was right 111 the center over my liend, so I could not got close enough into any of the corners without getting my legs scald ed. I am pretty large, and the door of the fire box was small, hut I had to get out or get scalded. I turned ray back to the hot water, nnd by the time I wiggled out the door I was tho hottest man on tho coast. When I pulled off my clothes I took about eight square Inches of skin with them. Since then I draw the water before I do any plug ging."—San Francisco Post. Tie Expressed His Opinion, One of the most prominent physicians In Washington owns a farm somewhere in New England, and whenever he gets unbearably tired of his fasblonnlilo patients in town be goes there, puts on Ills oldest clotlios, lays In a stock of corn-cob pipes nnd rusticates. One day last summer be was Jogging lazily along a country road 111 a rickety old cart drawn by a borso almost as rick ety. A countryman walking on tho same road asked for a lift and the two fell into conversation. "Who nro you working for?" asked tlie countryman. "Oh, I'm working for Dr. J., down there," answered tlie physician. "What doin'?" "Oh," went on the doctor, "I do ev erything for him. I take care of him, you know. I dress him nnd I feed Idm, nnd I even wash his face nnd put liim to bed. Ido everything he needs done." "How much d'ye get for it?" asked tlie native. "My board aud clothes." "An' you do nil that for lilm—wash him, an' dress him, an' feed him an' ull that?" "Yes." The countryman looked at tlie doetot a moment in silence. Then lio leaned over the wheel nnd spat solemnly. "Well, of all the dern fools I ever see!" was all he said.—Washington Tost. Iffours and Wages. Since fifty years ago there has been here, as well as in England, a great re duction in tho hours of labor. But this was not accomplished for the pleasure of the wage earners; it was accomplish ed because experience proved that af tei QUEEN VICTOIUA'S FOURTH GENERATION. It is hardly possible, says that clever journal—tho Lady's Pictorial—to real ize that Queen Victoria has a great grandchild who is approaching mar riageable age. We hear eo little of tho eldest daughter of tho Empress Frederick, that she seems to bo tho least known member of the royal fam ily, and it is small wonder, therefore, that her daughter has been growing up uuuoticed by tho English people. Yet tho Princess Feodore, of Baxe- Meiningen is Her Majesty's first great grandchild, and may confer upon her illustrious forbear the dignity of great-great-grand motherhood within a year or two. Bho is a pleasant look ing girl, with decided talents for music, aud a3 it'is probable that she will bo botrothed next year, Queen Victoria may yet see a fourth genera tion of her descendants. TRAINED NURSES IN STORES. A new departure 111 the equipment of largo stores has boon enterod on by the introduction of trained nurses to care for sick customers. While in a Third avenue dry goods store yesterday I saw a woman faint and fall to the floor. In a moment tho proprietor and a bright looking woman in a plain gruy dress and white apron were at her side caring for her. The woman was a trainod nurse. "This is something new," said tho proprietor, "and wo wore the first to introduce it iu tho city. Almost every day wo have siok porsou3 to earo for, aud find our trained nurse a valuable adjunct. She know 3 how to bring a fainting woman to her senses and how to euro hysteria. If thoro is serious sickness she can care for the patient until a physician comes.—Now York Herald. HER FIRST BJCYCDE LESSON. A young woman dossribes her first bicycle lesson in a manner which will strike responsive chords in many hearts. "it came my turn," she says, "and I tried to look unconcerned. A young man rolled out a wheel in front of me in a businosslike way, turned a screw, lowered the seat, gave it a final shake to see that it was all right and then motioned to mo to mount. I havo been in a hurricane when our steamer was hovo to off tho coast of Now Zea land, nnd all tho woodwork was washed overboard; I havo boon 111 a railway smash-up, and was handed out of the car through a hole iu the roof; I have sat by the off wiudow of a Btage coach when a wheel slipped over tho side of a precipice; I have been in many strange adventures, but never had I such an noute feeling of peril as whon I sat on tho top of that bicycle, hold ing on for life to tho steering-bar."— Philadelphia Times. SIIE didn't said. A Liverpool lndy had an unpleasant experience recently. She was about to sail by one of the Atlantic liners for New York and she loft ono trunk to be packed tho morning of her start. They called for it about 6a. m. Sho protested, but tho men declared it was her last chance to get it on tho steam er. Tho poor littlo womau was half blind with sleep. She got up and flung tho things into tho trunk—towels, tidies, books, anything that came to hand. Then sho sat on the trunk, got it locked, popped into bod and was fast asleep boforo they got it out of the room. In duo time she awoke with just an hour or so to got her bath aud breakfast and get down to the wharf, und then sho found that sho hadn't a living stitch to hor back but tho nightgown she stood in. Sho went on her knees to tho chamber maid, sho offered any money for an ulster and a veil, sho bogged tho land lord for his mackintosh and a pair cf boots—nuything- anything, and sho arrived at the wharf in time to see tho vessel sail out of tho dock. Her trunks—oh, they got off right enough, but sho herself was left behind. —Lou don Telegraph. Ella Wheeler Wilcox bolievo3 in re incarnation. A training school for waitresses is u new Philadelphia institution. Miss Helen Culver, of Chicago, has presented tho Univorsity of Chicago with .$1,000,030. Mrs. Livermoro has explained that when she culled newspaper reporters a "pestiferous sot" she spoke in a Pick wickian souse. Victoria Morosini-Scliilling, who started tho fashion of eloping with coachmen, is now in St. Joseph's Con vent, in Rutland, Vt. Twenty-one sculptors competed for the statuo of Sarah Siddons to lie erected in Loudon. The model chosen is by a Prenohmnn, Chevalier. Mrs. Anna R. Aspinwall, a million aire reclnso of Pittsburg, Penn., has just diod in Edinburgh. Her prop erty is estimated at $4,000,000. Annie Besaut was a religions en thusiast in her early years and was in clined to become a nun, but compro mised by marrying a clergyman. Girls of sixteen are called "under buds" in fsshionnblo designation, nnd have ocoasioual social relaxations in tho way of a dauoa or a tr.atiuoe thoa tro party, R AV, Clark, of Novatjji, Mo., triod to oiko Mre, Caroliue fjtswitrt pay him 850,000 for declining to marry him, but the jury decided that ho was undamaged. Tho Society of tho Daughters of tho Holland Damos, Descendant of An cient and Honorable Families of tho Stato of New York, has been incorpo rated at Albany. Two contemporary miniatures of Joau of Arc, now m a privfito collec tion at Isenheira, in Alsace, nro said to be portraits of the Maid of Orleans, taken from life. Miss Clara Barton is going to Ar menia hersolf, to bend tho work of tho Bod Cross Society in relieving tho dis tress of the Armenians. Five million dollars are asked for. For several years n woman has driven the stage between Maneelona andßellaire, Mich. She handles the reins as well as any man in that region, and has never been troubled with stage robbers. It is reported that the Home Secre tary of the British Government has consented to reopen tho Maybrick case, and the friends of the unfortunate wo man have high hopes of hor at last gaining her liberty. Mine. Dandet, wife of the French novelist, has a beautiful voice and thinks that this fact has causod tho rtiuior (h it she was an actress boforo her marriage. She has nevor sung out side of her own salon. Tho new woman is very much in ev idence in Marcellus, Mich. Tho Town Council is composed of women, the local barber is a womin, the under taker is a woman and many of tho bus iness houses are run by women. Miss Melvina M. Bennett, a gradu ate of Boston University, has beeu ap pointed to the chair of Public Speak ing and Vocal Interpretation in that iustitution. Miss Bennett is the first woman to gain a professorship in tho university. Girl ushers havo just boon appoint ed iu the Arkansas City (Kan.) Opera House in place of men hitherto em ployed, There are six of them, and they are alleged to havo been chosen from among "tho handsomest young ladies in tho city." Tho Dowager Empress of China has been much atTected by tho Japanese war. Sho used to be a rather loud and violent person, who imagined that tho wholo world was created for hor spo cial benefit, but now sho is quiet and humble and listens to advice from those who formerly dared not address her. Sho shows signs of aging rapidly. Women in Hungary will henceforth bo allowed to enter the Budapest Uni versity and become doctors and apothe caries, or study iu tho philosophical faculty. They must pass the same high school examinations as tho men, however, and for that purpose the Government will provide them with oportuuities to study Latin and Greek. FASIIION NOTES. Ripple basquos, added to tho dross waist, have returned to favor. A smart tailor-made jacket is "The Duchess," which is tight-fitting and has deep velvet collar and culls. Sixteenth century silks have the printed warp, with woven satin dots. The Persian effects are also popular. Ostrich feather boas aud collai'3 aro exceedingly popular; so also aro tho neck ruches of chiffon, not and rib bon. The Frou-Frou collar as worn by Ellen Terry is very dainty iu appear ance and finishes up a costume beauti fully. Lace, both while and cream, is much liked on winter hats, drooping agaiuat tho hair ; it has an extremely elegant effect. Tho Trilby frill marks a new ora in neckwear. It brings up tho high col lar, the stiff ruche aud the tailor-made necklet. A pretty supper dress can be mado of green spangled satin, cut squaro in front. The skirt should be of white beugalino. Au evening fichu, fashioned iu Eliza bethan style, in lavender and white, is ouo of tho new additions to the ball room toilet. Bonded and sequin nets are finding favor for.waist trimmings. They give a brightness to a costume which is well worth striviug for. The following antique and modern laces are in vogue : Tambour, Floren tine Japanese point, Point d'Alenoon, guipures and Valenciennes. A Washington society woman has a new opera cout from Loudon. It is of ecru cloth, lined throughout with pile forget-me-not blue broche, and trimmed with fox, A man tie for the Duchess of Teck is of dovo gray satin brooade, with a design of violets upon it, nuil the col lar nud wiilo rovers nro of sable. Tho full sleeves are caught iu at the wrist. A well-dressed French woman al ways includes among her gowns for every season a shepherd' 3 plaid—black and white, or brown nnd white—and with such a gown these fanoy cloth jackets look very smart. Princess gowns ore coming in both for evening and morning wear, and the bortha under another name, made in velvet, shaped to tho neck, is tho usual low boci'.oo trimming, and flowers iu small bitches figure a good ileal ou the sleeves. A Great Whistle, Warden Sage, of Sing Sing prison. Is liavlng constructed ail immenso and powerful steam whistle to he used to alarm officers and citizens in case of an escape, an uprising in tlio prison or fire. It will also signal tho beginning of work in tho shops in tho morning and the shutting down at night. The whis tle is known as a Fitts patent twelve inch three-barred steam gong, and is the largest in use. It is composed of three cylindrical bells or barrels plac ed one above the other. These barrels are fastened to the steam conductor, which passes through them. The entire whistle is eight feet in height, and, contrary to ordinary whistles, tho bar rels or resonators are inverted. Each barrel lias a different tone, thus produc ing a blended sound, without car-split ting effects. It is asserted that under favorable ntmospherio conditions tho whistle can be heard at a distance of thirty miles. Even under unfavorable circumstances the alarm should bo heard seven to ten miles away. GOULD ONLY EAT PEPTONOID3 HUT PINK I'lr.LS MADE IT POSSIBLE TO EAT ANYTHING. Got Your Digestion Bight and Your Health Will Take Caro of ltsolf. From tin? Star, Washington, D. G. "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills miraculously cured mo of two dlsoasos and liavo otherwise done mo a vatt amount of good," paid Mrs. E. A. Mookor, of No. 207 Third stroet, South cast Washington, D. C., to a Star reporter to-day. "For many years I was a sufferer from muscular rheumatism iu its worst form, and in addition ha I stomach trouble to such an extent that for a long timo I could oat noth ing stronger than boof peptonoids. Tho rheumatism oomraoncodin my back and not only extenclol into my left arm, almost par alyzing it from the shoulder to tho olbow, but a! taokod ray hips and limbs with such vohemonoo that it was impossible for mo to go out on tho stroet without being supported by an attendant. "I was attended by four different phy sicians—not all at one time—of both tho al lopathic and homeopathic schools, ana tnero were times when I was eovoro 1 from my neck to my feet with porous or some other kind of plasters, for I tried evorythiugof the sort that was recommended bv mv friends. "During tlm greater part of this time my husban I an i son wero urging me to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, but I steadily re fused to do so. "About two years or two and a half years ago tho physician who was Ihon alien ling me, and I have had none since, said to mo, •Mrs. Meeker, there is no use for rao to come and see you any more; you have muscular rheumatism, a disease incident to old age, and you cannot bo cured. I will give you some iron for your blood, and wheu this prescription runs out you can get it renewed. If you get much worse you can send for mo. but I will not again call until I am sum moned.' "Ofcourso I was much discouraged, but still I tried a noted massage treatmont thor oughly, but without tho slightest effect. At last mv husband norsuaded me to try tho Pink Pills. "I want to say that when I began taking Ihe Pink Pills it was without tho least faith in their eflleacy for good or belief that they would benefit mo, but simply to please my husband and son by taking something. How ever, I took them as directed by tho makers, and about the end of the month I found to my great surprise that iny stomach was so much better that I bad no longer to subsist on beef peptonoids, but could bogiu to in dulge in more solid food. "8 1 i told my husband that as the Pink Pills wero evidently doing mo good, I would try them forauother month. "I continued to use tlicin as directed and during t Ho socoud month iny eyesight, which had beeu very bad for a long time, began to improve, and it was much more pleasant for metogoon the stroet, though I still had to bo attended ou account of my weak limbs. "How many boxes of tho Pink Pills I took in all I could not begin to toll, as there wore periods when I would slop using them for a week at a time. But from the timo I com menced until I felt I could safely cease tak ing them was about fifteen mouths. "Sometime after my eyesight hognn to grow better, my memory, which had been defective and caused me much trouble for a long time, returned and becamo as good as when as I was many years younger. During the period to which I refer 1 had great diffl sully iu remembering whore I had put any thing, but as I said before, this trouble en tirely disappeared and lias never returned, while my eyesight also continues excellent, "My long continued illness hud reduced my weight from between 130 and 140 pounds to 112 pounds, but while I was takiug tho Pink Pills I gained thirty pounds, and I new Weigh 133 pounds "Some of my frionds freely asserted that my flesh, us they noticed iny increasing weight, was not solid and predicted that I would speedily lose it. Such, however, lias not been the case, although I have not taken any of tho pills since last December. All my rheumatism having by that time disap peared, since which time I have had no re turn of tho dread complaint. I have been told that the disease will visit mo again, but if it does, I slmll again resort to the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. "With my experience with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills 1 have not hesitated to recommend them to others who wore afllicied. My niece, who lives near Ilillsboro, Loudoun County, Va., su doted for a long lime wit it a peculiar disease of the hips and limbs. 1 believed tho medicine which did me so much good would cure her also, and I bought three boxes of tliom and sent to her. Site took them and was cured completely of iter complaint." Dr. Williams' Piuk Pil's contain all tho ole meats necessary to give new lifo and rich ness to the bloo I and restore shattered nerves. They are sold in boxes (nevor iu loose form, by the dozen or hundred) at GO cents a box, orsix boxes for $2.50. aud may bo had of all druggists or diroctly by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Bchenoe lady, N. Y. Catarrh Cannot be Cured With local applications, fti tlioy cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh in a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure It you must take internal remedies, (tail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di rectly on the blood and mucous surface. JI all's Catarrh Cure is not iv quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country fur years, and isa regular prescript ion. It is composed of the best tonics known, com bined with the best blood purillers, acting di rectly on the rnucoTH eurfaccs. The pertect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing ca tarrli. Bond for testimonials, free. F. J. < HENRY At Co., Props., Toledo, O, Sold by Druggists, price 76c. Thoro Is a power that acts within us with out consulting us. Bom© floating soar" tuns fellow and rancid. Dobbins' Floattnjr-Borax Soap does neither. The Borax in it bleaches it with ago, and tho odor Is doll-rbtful. Try it once, uso it always. Order a trial lot of your grocer. Insist on red wrappers. Man spends a good deal of tlmo searching for what he hopes ho won't find. "Hno w*R T1 noxon i A ti Tnncrm" nre a utmnlo and convenient remedy for Bronchial AfTec tlon i nml Coughs, Curry them In your Docket. Pun Is ol two kinds the klml yuu imv [or WW tho klml 80ittWR rise tot. Earliest RatllMtos and Pens. The editor urges mil roadors to grow the earliest vegetables. • They pay. Well, Salter's I Seods aro brod to earliuoss, thoy grow and produce every time. None so early, so flno as Snlzor's. Try his radishes, cabbages, pons, boots, cucumbers, lettuce, corn, etc.! Money in it for you. Halzcr is tho largest grower of vegetables, farm seeds, grasses, clovers, potatoes, etc. IF YOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AND SEND to the John A. Sulzor 800 1 Co., La Crosse Wis. with 10c postage, you will get samplo pack ago of Early Bird Radish (realy in 1G days) and their groat catalog. Catalog alone 5o postage. (A.) Frugality is founded on tho principle that all riches huvo limits. Tho DIONI PI en mini Way Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches and fevers is to use the liquid laxative remedy. Syrup of Figs, whenever tho system needs a gentle, yet effective cleansing. To bo benefited one must get the true remedy manufactured by tho California Fig Syrup Co. only. For suit by all druggists iu 500. and SI bottles. Good actions ennoble us, and wo aro eomo of our own deeds. Every man is a volume if you know how to read him. Fiso's Curo for Consumption roleives tho most obstinnto coughs,—REV. D. IJICHMIELI.KK, Lexington. Mo., Feb. 24,18U4. Everyone IULS originality, but not overyono is able to show it. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflnmn ticn. allay Spain, cures wind colic. 25 c. a bottle A philosopher is a man who is able to ex tract consolation from a cold in tho head. Ir. Kilmer's SWAMP-KOOT rures ell Kidney and Bladder troubles. I'umphlet nnd consultation freo. Laboratory Binghutnpton. N.Y. Who gives a triile mcunly is meaner than the triile. THE LARGESTPIECE OF GOOD TOBACCO g"^ R MLD FOR I Be Sure I | '7 is pure Cocoa, aad not wade by | | the so-called "Dutch Processv; IValtcr Baker & Cols Break- | 3 fast Cocoa is absolutely pure ?io | I chemicals. SALZER'S VEGETABLE SEEDS jffiS&'A NmS?/kou'u V ,h " b °tl for ftU 80i,e Buj c,imc, '' whoHop Ea,t o p Woit, JOHN A. SALZER SEEP CO., l a Crossa, Wla. "Better Work Wisely Than Work Hard." Great Efforts ars Unnesassary in Heuse Cleaning if yon Usa SAPOLIO FITS stopped free BY DR. Kmrs's GREAT , NEIIVK RESTORER. NO lit? after first day's use. Marvelous puree. Treatise and $2.00 trial bot i tie free. Dr. Kline IWI Arctr St.. Phllk'.-, pa. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Issnc Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggist's sell at SBopermtll THR AERMOTOII CO. floes half ths world's windmill business, because it has reduced thS coat at WUul powur to l/ti what It was.• it has mani branch ttUd supplies ltd goods ana repairs ftt ,our door - 11CRU d( *f furbish 4 better article for less iboaef thaa ■hJWlßlllliM others. It makes Putqplnt and Uflarcd, Steel Qalrauleed after* windmlllt. Tilting ymfßflgp and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Buss Saw Frames, stoel Feed Cutters and Ffad VOah Grinders. On application it will name O&a flin of these articles that It will furnlah UfttU Januarr Ist at 1/3 tho usual price. It also makes Tanks and Pumps or all kinds. Send for catalogue, factory • 12(1), Rockwell tad Fillmore Streets. Chlou* 25 Y ,^ s POULTRY YARD @ pp. 51si S'.d. Writ ton and sold "Mra by a farmer and I'oalfry- JB manofßOycareeiperiencr plain, practical SyMexn. l| lh |' V |!'' a r " OI '" *l , ' MCr lbre .glcSinS|/ A Roup yon tn .d not liavc. TB££32£? Priee.!fsf.(M!,nipM).AFief WFJZR POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC -sV%rSlr : tr->3i Gives relief in KITS minutes.* Seed for a FREE trial package, flolcf br Druggists. One fiox sent postpaid 3 SITE'S 1 .25 •**. #U buec.gt.tMA 001 £3 B£ nnd W HISKY habits cured. Book sent UraUsil KIIEE. Dr. H. M. WOOLLEY. ATLAHTA. OA. ETDCC I<\ trial package PI, AG HA I,T. -Safe, mire cure for IL FA IIACLLK. Address FLAG HALT CO.. Savaunah. N. Y. FbnQß9Hfi Morphine Habit Cured iu If II r 3 U HI taw. jaissßß P N U l 3!Mmnp# Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Ueo Pi In time. Sold by druutriets. pfl BSEHaiiaggßßMfli
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers