Mothers Anxiously watch declining health of their daughters. So many are cut off j by consumption in early years that there is real causo for anxiety. In 1 the early stages, when not beyond j tho reach of medicine, Hood's Sarsa parilla will restore the quality aud quantity of tho blood and thus give j good health. Head the following letter: "It Is but just to writo about my daughter Cora, aged 10. Bbo was com pletely run down, declining, lia.l that tired : feeling, and friends said sho would not live over throe months. She had a bad Cough ind nothing soomod to do hor any good. I happened to road about Hood's Sarsapa rilla aud had hor give it a trial. From the rory first doso sho began to got batter, Iftor taking a few bottles sho was com pletely euro 1 an 1 hor lioalth has boon tho >o3t ovor since." Mas. ADDIE PECK. 15 Railroad Place, Amsterdam, N. Y. "I will say that my mother has not jtatod my caso in as strong words as I ; would havo done. Hood's Sirsaparilla has truly cured mo au.l I am now well." CORv PECK, Amsterdam, N. Y. Bo sure to got Hood's, because Sarsaparilia fstheOneTruoßlood Purifier. A (druggists. SI Vrupared only by C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass. Hood's Pills salaams Remember! You are wasting money when you buy cheap binding instead of the best Remember there is no "just as good "when the merchant urges something else for "Bia3 Velveteen Skirt Binding. Look for 41 S. H. & M.," on the Label, anil take no other. If your dealer will not supply you wc will. Send for samples showing labels and materials, to the S. H. & M. Co.. P. O. Pox 699, New York City- Kaphael, AiißPto, Kiibci'.g, Ttuuto The "LINENE" are the Best and Most FconomW Ml Guitars and Cnfftt worn; they are niadtf of fun cloth, both stiles flniebed alike, ami lxvni< rrveraV bio. one collar i> equal to two ot any olbor J.ind. Iheu tit well, vrnr well awl look well. A box ol "Ten Collars or Fivsl'atrsof Cuffs for Twenty-Firs A Hf.mple CoPar and Pair of Cuffs by mall far Hi Qnta. Name stylo and sire. Address EEVRR9IBLK OOLLAH COMPANY, H VtaaUia Bt.> New York. S? Killur St.. Bortaa, r n u i.i oo "jB IMfllji U. T. HOIIUAI. Saii'iarr. tT It Ol JOI UIUUK! 0 & D GfRMAN D ant & D ELIXIH. for Skin and S£iood Diseases vSuccessfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Exnininet U 8 P-HHIOII Burouu. 3.vielu lust war, luadjudicatingdniuirt, utty ttiuco. Cripplo Croek— 'eMh'tohlHtryof thOßre t Kohl ramp, with our Id : <'• <o\ nuper :l mos. for In stamp*. I llusl ruicl WfHtli. I). liver Colo. jjj® ✓O What's your husband's work? Does lie have to do anything as hard as your // washing and scrubbing? It can't be. / \w Ajk What can a man do that's as hard, for most IIV vV/ l\r" s - - men, as this constant house \\\ -\ drudgery is, for most women? ' If he has any sympathy for j .' you, tell him to get you some \iX /W r Pearline. Sympathy is all ' very well, but it's Pearline, not sympathy, that you want for washing and cleaning. Nothing else that's safe to use will save you so much down right hard work at the wash tub or about the house. It saves money, too —saves the ruinous wear on clothes and paint from needless rubbing. fffljQlß'ftißMlftlß j foI^ALABASTINE^; 9 IT WON'T RUB OFF. \ a 11 I'M if i'-w WnU Panrr i* Insni.ltaiy. KAISCHIIM: IN \ T pi !|1 fwJy. TEMI'ORAHY, KOTH, KUBS OFF AM) SCALES, f t UgpE ALABASTINE ' i ■ For Kale by Faint Dealers Everywhere. \paper 1 s havo £PPF A Tint Card showln* 13 desirable tints, also Alabastlne f Athraeliom. Ha by may recover MILL Souvenir Rock Rent.freo to any one mentioning this paper. A fbut.annotthrive • ALARANTI\F. CO.. tirand Rapid*. Tnlelt. f SQQ mmw FARMS per acre upwards, with buildings, fruits, timber, wator, etc.; boat climate In U. 8.; good market.'', great variety of crops, vegetables and fruits; noted for health fulness; future prospects bright. Address PYJLK fc DcIIAVJbLN, Heal instate Agents, Petersburg, Vu. Popo Lfto's RnyhooJ. | He spent his childhood in the simple surroundings of Carpineto, than which J noue could be simpler, as every one knows who has ever visited an Italian I country gentleman in his home. Early I hours, constant exercise, plain food, and farm interests made a strong man I of him, with plenty of simple common sense. As a boy he was a great walk er and climber, and it is said that he was excessively fond of birding, the ! only form of sport afforded by that j part of Italy, aud practised there in j those times, as it is now, not only with gnus, but by means of nets, it lias often been said that poets and lovers of freedom come more frequent- J ly from the mountains and the sea j shore than from a flat inland region.— i Century. What Neglect May I)o. There are some infirmities that only a surgeon's knife will relievo, and mostly strictly beoause of neglect. A neglected nerve pain may becomo so chronic as to cripple, and this is often the case with Sciatica. If taken iu time, it is easily subdued, like other nerve pains, aud vigor ami health are re stored. Thousands of cases have been treated by the use of St. Jacobs Oil, with the result of a prompt and permanent cure ami restora tion to health of tho afTectod nerve. People cannot bo too careful with their nerves. Thoie is too much to suffer to admit of fool ish neglect, and tho simple thing of gutting a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil aud applying promptly may save years of misery and per haps years of crippled condition. Let t!ii= warning servo to show what can be an 1 what ought to be done without dc(ay in an attack of this disease. FITS stopped free by Dm KLINE'S GREAT NERVE RESTORER. NO fits after first dav'a use. Marvelous cures. Treatiso and £2.00 trial bottle free. I)r. Kline, fffil Arch St., Pldla., Pa. Piso's Cure is a wonderful Cough medicine. —MRS. \V. PICKKKT, Van Sirlen and Blake Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 'Ut. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inllamina tiou, allays pain; cures wind colic. 2Cc a Lottie. MOTHERS MUST GUIDE. Should Watch tho Physical De velopment of Their Daughters. Information They Should Furnish nt the Proper Time—Knowledge by Which Suffering May Do Avoided. Every mother possesses information of vital value to her young daughter. When tho girl's thoughts become sluggish, with headache, dizzi -1 a mystery to herself aud friends, then, her mother should come to her aid. Lydia E. Piukhain's Vegetable Com pound will, at this time, prepare the ! system for the coming change. Sec I that she has it, and Mrs. Pinkham, at , Lynn, Mass., will cheerfully answer any letters where information is do- I sired. Thousands of women owe their i health to her and the Vegetable Com | pound, and mothers are constantly ! applying to her for advice regarding j their daughters. | W W. 13. I'*ATT. Sac. °'tit ktit,'led! '* C * T'TAII HONORS WOMEN. Mrs. Lillian B. Pardee, although a wifo and mother, has found time to distinguish herself in muny ways. Sho has the unique honor to be Secretary ol tho Souatofor the new Stale of Utah. Sho is an ardent suffragist and was nominated for a scat in the Senate, but on tho decision of tho Supreme Court of the State that it was illegal ior women to vote, voluntarily withdrew her name. In recommending her for her present post tho President of tho Senate stated that ho did BO in the con viction that sho was eminently well fitted for tho place, her previous rec ord as Secretary of the County Com mittee having been a brilliant and satisfactory one. A BUSINESS GONE TO WRECK. "One of tho sad things in our busi ness," said an auctioneer, "is to sell oat tho contents of boarding houses. There are a number of women who open up a boarding house without tho the slightest experieneo whatever in the business, and it very frequently happens that they fail. They think that because tbera are a number of other women who make boarding houses a success that they can do so. So they get together tho necessary monoy to make a start, aud in they go. It does not tako long for them to dis cover that there is a seienco in hoop ing boarders of which they are ignor ant. Their boardors find it out also. The result is that they hnvo to give np, aud we are called in to sell them out."—Washington Star. CLUB NAME. Considerable ingenuity is displayed nowadays in coining new names "for women's clubs and societies. Much of it follows the system invented by Lewis Carroll in "Alice in Wonder land," a system of portmanteau words, of which chortle nud galumphing are i the most popular. In Washington they have Wimodaughsis, which looks like an ludian name, but is really coined from tho first syllable of tho four words of wife, mother, daughter and sister. Iu Jersey City is Phil itseipoma, which stands for philoso phy, literature, soienee, poetry, music and art. Brooklyn towers over the rest with Chiropean, which stands for Christianity, honesty, independ ence, resolution, obedience, patriot ism, energy, ambition and newness.— New York Mail and Express. WOMEN LOVE SUGAR. When the restaurant of the Margaret Louisa Home, an institntion patron ized exclusively by women, was iirst opened, its sugar bowls were filled with lump sugar. This was some years ago. Enter tho restaurant to-day ami you will find tho bowls all filled witb soft sugar. Why? Well, tho cause is quite natural, even if it is something of a reflection upon woman and her ethics. It was found necessary tosub stitute the soft sugar becauso tho pa trons stole so much of tho lump. Only two or thres lumps by each individual nt a time, to bo euro, but tho practice was so general and so unremitting, that the linuuces of tho "Home" soon began to feel it sorely. Even now, under the soft sugar regime, it is said t hat the women carry oil a by no means inconsiderable quantity, tying it un iu coixors of their pocket handker chiefs aud evon bringing envelopos for tbo purpose. Eat tho amount hasn't yet equalled that of tbo former dep redations, and, as "a conseqneneo, tho grocer's bills of tho "Home" have been reduced to a normal size.—New York Sun. ONE SECRET OP SECRETS. A chemist who is nearly as learned as tho Modicii in all the subtle secrets of scent, said not long ugo : "I wonder when the world nt large will come to realize that there is very much more in perfumes than meets the nose. I mean scents havo other properties than those of which tho olfactory sense takes cognizance. For example, the smell of roses, thyme, borgamot, clove pinks, some of the honeysuckles, grapes, both blossom and fruit; peach and pium blossoms, are both tonie and prophylactic. They add to the ozono of environment, either by giv ing it off themselves, or liberating it from other elements of tho atmos phere. Contrariwiso, nearly ull tho lily family, tuberoses, ueroli—which is oil of oraugo fiowers —violets and nearly all the artificial perfumes are depressants aud iiritant to the nerves and the mucous membrane. "Musk is to many constitutions slow poison—henoo the danger of cheap perfumes. Musk is tho basis of thorn all. It must be, since it has so great a quality of fixing other odors. A very little of tho scent substance goes a long way, if lixod with musk. Do you know a grain of musk was weighed, then left exposed in a rooni; lor five years. Throughout that time tho odor was almost insufferably strong in the place, yet at the end of it the woight of tho musk had not) diminished a particle. Hut that is! beside the mark. What I set out toi say was: JBewaro of tho Uowor or the substance whose scent gives a sense of) oppression. Nature is a pretty safoi guide, and the smothering is her dan-i ger signal."—New York Journal. j GOSSIP. There are 37,000 women telegraph), operators iu the United States. Tho Princess of Wales has had printed for private distribution some songs which she has composed for tho zither. Princess Helena of England (Prin cess Christian of Sclileswig-Holstein) is writing a book of etiquetto for wo men in good society. Tho Empress of Austria walks twelve raile3 daily iu tho open air. A male attendant accompanies her, reading Homer aloud in Greek. Lady Parry, widow of tho famous Admiral Parry, of Arctio fame, died in London tho other day at the age of eighty-eight. Her husband died in 1855. Chicago society has decided that miniatures are tho correct thing and tho miniature painters are gathering sheckels. Photographs uro so com mon, you know. The academic education of women in Germany las made such progress that it is now proposed to sot aside ouo important university for their chief if not exolusive use. The Senate of Cambridge, England, by a voto of 18G to 171, has rejected tho proposition to appoint a commit tee to consider tho question of con ferring degrees upon women. Sarah Bernhardt's houso in Paris is always kept in order for her by her retinue of servants, and when she re turns 6he finds flowers in all tho vases and things just as she left them. Mr 3. Hinchliff, of Rockford, Ul. has received two patents on improved methods of knitting hosiery and un derwear. Her father has largo knit ting establishments iu Rockford, Lady Eva Quin i 3 tho most noted 6hot among modern ladies; her tiger destroying exploits are renowned in India. This lady has killed six full grown tigers from the frail protection of tho howdah. In Troy, Ala., there is a woman who is a more than ordinarily successful farmer. She is Mr*. Buck Hathaway. Her husband died, leaving hor iu debt. In one year she paid nearly SBOO on her debts, aud now she is ono of the happiest women to bo found. Princess Lotitia, dowager Duchess of Aostu, has hud a $20,000 necklace, a wedding present from King Hum bert, stolen from her. Several per sons belonging to her household iu Turin have been arrested. Tho neck lace has been sold in France. Octave Thauet (Miss Alice French) is a very cultivated Bostonoso kind of a hottse furnisher. Her Arkansas homo is gotten up in a style to provoke the admiration of artists. Fine photo graphs, plaster casts, engravings, are the forms of art she most indulges in. Bavrcs aud Tanagra figurines are especially prominent. Miss Jeunio Hilton, formerly of Kansas City, is said to bo the only active woman gold miner and pro prietor in the Southwest. For several years she has been engaged in prospect ing for gold in the mountains of Arizona aud Now Mexico, and has in vented a number of useful appliances iu mining engineering. She sold her share in an Arizona mine the other day for 835,000 iu cash. FASHION NOTES. Black velvet ribbon in conjunction with white luce is promised great vogue. The Drosden patterns are particu larly suitablo for the Louis XVI. coats and for evening gowns. Checks are to be very fashionable, and somo smart costumes are mado with a short black jacket, the checked shirt black aud white. Black will ngaiu bo worn, but t'uo newest costumes are relieved with colors, nnd all show in the linings aud trimmings that black is not of neces sity mourning. Tho print warps, so popular in silks, and the Persian designs, which are so popular in both wool and silk goods, are brought out in the wash frbrics in charming etleets. Black silks aud black and white are to be worn this season. All black have fancy patterns, and black with white and white with black, which are quite distinct, are at all prices. Brown and white checks are made up to wear with the covert coats, and aud tho colorings are very effective. Novelty goods show cheeks in cheviot effects a bewildering variety. A green cheviot has shades of red und whito alt through it, and, made up with jacket nnd skirt lined through out with silk to match, has an air of style that makes it quite new. India dimities in every variety, fig ured in black, are novel aud effective. Somo of the striped baptistes and organdies have the stripes up and down iu the body und running around the sleeves. Tho embroidered crepons are being mado up for summer gowns, while tho weaves that are no longer fashionable, aud consequently have been marked down iu price, are being eagerly pur chased for house gowns and for spring gowns also. A dark blue 6erge, so dark that it looks almost black, would be far too somber for a spring costume were not I the coat made to wear open iu front and show a full vest of white satin, | while a narrow piece of white pique, i with tiny brass buttons, shows beyond ) the edges of the coat. FOR COUNTRY' 3 SAKE. AN INDIAN FICiiITKII SUFFER { AGON- ItS F.tO DISICA K. He Wan In the llattle With tlio Apacliee When Geronlmo Wan Captured. From the Press, Neio York City. Worn with tho oxposuro of army life on tho frontier, and poisoned by tho continual drinking of alkali water, Joseph Flegauf returned to Philadelphia eight yoars ago, broken down in health and unable to do any work. He had served Ave years with the Ninth United States Infantry in many a desperate flght with the Indians in Arizona and other frontier Btatos and had won an enviable record. In tho florcoconOiot when Ceronimo, the famous chief of tho Apaches, was cap tured, Mr. Flegauf was among the brave soldiers who, forgetful of everything but duty, charged upon tho hostile Indians. Life on tho plains sont to an untimely death many soldiers who were never touched by a redskin's bullet or arrow, and Mr. Flo gnu f came near such n fate as that. Along time before his time was out ho was taken seriously ill, but he stuck to his post until an honorable dischnrgo was Anally given to bun. When ho reached Philadelphia, the Indian fighter was scarcely more than skin and bones, and for three weeks he lay desperate ly 111 in a hospital. He foil dizzy and his stomach folt as ir it had dried up. These symptoms were accompanied by bloody dys entery, which no medicine seemed to relieve. After two years of suffering Mr. Flegauf came to New York aud was treated by sev eral physicians. Those did not agree, some calling his disease catnarh of the stomach, und others chronic diarrhoea. In speaking to a reporter about his Illness Mr. Flogauf said ihn doctors hoi pod him. but. with all the money ho spent for advice and medicine, ho was .ble to work only a small part of tho time. Since moving to his pres ent homo. No. 517 West Forty-second Street, in Now York, about a yoar ago, Mr. Flogauf has boon so ill that his voice and hearing al most loft him. Then all modioinos failed and the sick man had little hope of recovery. At this critical time Dr. Williams' Pink Pills f<~r Palo Peo ple wore recommended to Mr. Flogauf, and. almost as a last hope, ho began taking them. "Tho beneficial effect of tho medicine was felt at once," Mr. Flogauf told the reporter, "and before I had taken a box I began to oat with relish. Three boxes made me so much bettor that I began work and hnvo been ablo to keep at it since, for 11 vo months." I)r. Williams' Piuk Pills for Palo People nro not a patent medicine in tho senso that name implies. They were ilrst compounded as a prescription and used as such in general practice by an ominent physician. 80 groat was their efficacy that it was deemed wise to plaooihem within the reach of all. They are now manufne'.urod by tho I)r. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold in boxes rnever in loose form by the dozen or hundrou, and the public are cau tioned against numerous imitations sold in this shape) at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for f'2.50, and may be had oT all druggists or direot by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company. RATTLESNAKE WINE. It Iu a Favorite Mcdiciuc in tlic West Indies. Benjamiu (Joocli, in his "Medical and Surgical Observations," published in 1771, gives a summary of different an cient therapeutic methods, based 011 the use of unlmul poisons. One of his observations relates to a ease of severe pains, spasms, etc., of long duration. Cloocli says, after speaking of the pa tient's sufferings: "Not to appear in human to so wretched a being, after telling him I could do nothing, I sent him a bottle of rattlesnake wine, to take a glass of frequently. This was in the West Indies drank as the high est cordial. Three nights after tho patient walked in. 'Sir,' said he, 'you cannot be so much amazed as I am, nor half so much pleased; I am come to thank you, and, if not criminal, to worship you.'" Hooch's account of how he learned the virtues of rattle snake wine is as follows "A very wealthy old gentleman in tho West Indies had long been afflicted with leprosy to a high degree, which was deemed incurable by liis physicians. Apparently in a dying state, he mado his will, leaving a large legacy to a female servant, who had lived with him many years. This circumstance being known to the servant, she and her paramour studied and contrived how to make away with him in such a manner as to raise the least suspicion. They put the heads of rattlesnakes into the wine he drank, thinking it would prove an infallible poison; on the con trary, he grew better, ami the crimin als, Imagining the poison was not strong enough, added more snake ve nom, whereby the gentleman was re stored to perfect health. Conscience finally put this servant upon lier knees before her master, confessing her crime. Forgiveness was granted, and the old gentleman gave her a sum of money, ordering her to depart and never see him more." Mamma—Willie, where are those ap ples gone that were In the storeroom! Willie—They are with the gingerbread that was In the cupboard.—Exchange. B*ATI or onto, CITY or TOLEDO, I LUCAS COUNTY. FRANK J. C'IIKHY mates oath that hats ttia soutor partner of the firm of F. ,T. CHKNKY & Co., doing no-in0.,., in tho City of Toledo, County anil NUtc aforesaid, and that said linn widl'uy the sum of O.N'lO HUNDRED DOL ., each and every case of Catarrh that can not be cured by the use of 11 A 1.1.'S CATARRH HFIRK _ FRANK J. CHENEY. aworn to he-ore me and subscribed in my presence, thiuOlh day of December, A. 1). ltiSU. i —, A. W. UMASON. I A r " f Ifulary rub!to, Hall's Catarrh Cure i. taken internally, and acta directly on the blood and mucous surface# of thosystem. homl for testimonials, freo. . . FJ. OftRNKY .fc Co., Toledo, a bold by 7ac. Every year £130,000 Is paid for admissions to tho Grand Opera, Paris. Pr. Kilmer's SWAMP HOOT cures ull Kiduey and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet nnd consultation free. Laboratory,Binghumpton,N. Y. Hopkins county, Ky. is experiencing a notable religious revival. When an article has been sold for PI years, ill spito of Competition nnd cheap imitations, it Tr tut have superior quality. Dobbins' Electric Bonp lias been constantly made und sold since 1803. Auk your grocer fur it. Dost of all. During an eight months' tour Jenny Lind netted £50,000. FUFFEIIBIIH IROH COUGHS, SORB THROAT, etc., should bo constantly supplied with "JJrown'e Bronchial Troche* Avoid imitations. A Baltimore millionaire once *)aid £'2oo to hear Putti sin;;. Gon^cs With a better understanding' of the transient nature of the many phys ical ills which vanish before proper ef forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge that so many forms of 6ickness arc not due to any actual dis ease, but simply to a constipated condi tion of the system, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrupof Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with mill ions of families, and is everywhere esteemed GO highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects arc duo to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organs on which it acts. Jtis therefore all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pur- | chase, f hat you have the genuine article, which is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all rep utable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, then laxa tives or other remedies are not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful physicians, hut if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syrupof Figs stands highest and is most largely used and gives most general satisfaction. : ASK YOUR DEALER FOR W. L. DOUGLAS ®3. SHOE be ¥ol ? n L D the If you pay 8-1 to ®(> tor shoes, ex- gj* amine the \V. L. Douglas .Shoe, and " x? see what a good shoe you can buy for ■ OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS, OCONGRKSS, ItUTTON, i kinds of the best Belected - leather by skilled work- ro pricu is stamped on the' bottom! Ask your dealer for our 8/5, /jfci ¥ S P4, 83./50, B'i.oO. 8*4.3/5 Shoes; (33./ SO, 83 and 81.75 for boys. fiZgSir 1 TAKE HO SUBSTITUTE. If yourdcaler / M cannot supply you, send to fac- ! tory, enclosing price and 36 cents to pay carriage. State kind, style f Jar of toe (cap or plain), size and f jJor width. Our Custom Dept. will till VJpr your order. Send for new llluv bated Catalogue to I Sox It. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass- | H S © "No wonder poor Dinnie's so tired, carrying W all day that great big-piece of M No matter how much you are m W charged for a small piece of other }d S brands, the chew is no better than iff p>| "Battle Ax/' For JO cents you £ get almost twice as much as of M |©| other high grade goods. The 5 0 P cent piece is nearly as large as other © H JO cent pieces of equal quality, A Valuable Book Covering the Whole Subject. Wort!) rnnny $ B_to lovers of flowers .Send 10 con's. (iOOl) VALI !• OK !WONIiV KKTIinNKD. blaiups tukou. Uofer to any ltutland bank. - - A. \V. I'IiKKINS & CO., Hox L, Kuilaud, Vu "fi Fair FaGe May Prove a Foul bargain." Marry a Plain Girl if She Uses BAP 0 L 1 o Mr. William T. C;imo, a grocer doing bu3iuess at 1522 Norrlp St., Philadelphia, recently made the following statement concerning Ripans Tubules: "I bad what the doctors called Nervous Indigestion, 1 from which I suffered day aud night. I tried several doctors, took electrio treatment, patent medioino*, and, in fact, everything that I could hear oT, but nothing done me any good and I made up my mind there was no help for mo, only to grin und bear it, but one day I was passing a drug Btoro and stoppel to look at tho dis play in tho window nud I happened to see a card with 'Ripaus Tabulos* on it and I thought, well, here's another straw for a drowning man, so I'll throw some more money away, so I went in and bought a box, aud, eeemsto me, the first dose took effect. I have boen taking thorn ever since and they have surely worked wonders with mo. When I look back on tho past and thou ou my presout condition, soemsto rael am a now I man. I aui enjoying elegant health uow, and I feel that I owe many thanks to Ripans Tabules. I havo recommended thorn to several of my friends who say they aro wondorful, and 1 must say they are a God send to any one suffering from a disorder of this nature." Ripaaa Tabules nrc solil by dmi? jlsts, or by mall If the prlcj (5U cjiUs a box) In sono to Tho Ulpiitt ' Chemical Comp'tity, No. Spruej St., New Yor<c, Sample vUI, lucmt*. /*** l HORSE OWNER ff I ought to think enough ol Jf. J hi* animal to wish to b If * T""" able to care for it properly I In health and sickness. It ia E money out of bit* pocket II he does not. Toarcompltsb P ae Hundred Pago lb W /iLvWr l' d9tr ated Horse Hook '///'/,%>Sf ji-< ! / Yk\w* I°'*s cent?. It teaches you J !o l )ick out a good Horse, V ir know imp. rfcctions and sw I & uard . against fraud: do * / jSnffl "' 1 " (, „ aße flnd • 'rtttJildm /jffil'ii tell the age by the f'M *" /KWIbM teeth: what to rail the different parts of the aui itil/nhm nia ' : bow to shoe a Horse , Jfmfifc U'M f Properly, etc.. etc. nilll A '' olhcr va)- v- >Utnable information ran be C; XSf&MZll* obtained by reading oar One Hundred Page Illns ! j) p trated Horse Hook, which J] we will forward, post-paid, *' on receipt of price in stamps. Ar.snred'y the Ilorse is 100 good a friend to man to be neglected for want of knowledge which can be procured for only twentv-rtve cents. r.;rik Pmilisiuno tlovn. 131 Leonard Sr.. N.Y.Oltv. VERMONT MAPLE SYRUPKJBIiIE'S'rS ceipt of 81. JAMES A. FAULKNER, ltutlaud, Vt. OPIOiM^SsSg VN U 1 ftDßlitf anfl WHISKY habits cured. Hook sent UslUin FnKK. Dr. B. W. WOOM.KY. ATLANTA. OA. SFNfI fR IJ? D dF' ARr / INE ' Grnvo clt T. HeSoto I OL.iU u) I C0.,1i5., for box of Assorted £ea Shells.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers