Extreme tiroil feeling affliots nearly every body at this season. The hustlors oeaso to push, tho tireless grow weary, tho cnor getio bocomo enervated. You know just what wo mean. Somo men and women endeavor temporarily to ovcrcomo that Peeling by great forco of will. But this Is unsafe, as it pulls powerfully upon tho norvous system, which will not long stand such strain. Too many pooplo "work on their norves," and tho result is soon in un fortunate wrecks marked "nervous pros tration," in overy direction. That tired If* 3 | l3 Ing Is a ponitivo proof of thin, weak, Im pure blood; for if tho blood is rieli, rod, vitalized and vigorous, it imparts lifo and energy to every nerve, organ and tissue of tho body. Tho necessity of taking Hood's flarsapaiilla for that tired feeling is, tlioro foro, apparent to everyone, and tho good it i will do you is equally beyond question, ltomombor that Sarsaparilla Mlw OncTrue Blood Purldor. All drum-lsls. $1 Proiiarcd only by o. I. liooil £ Co., Lowell, Mass. Hood's Pills SS' 10 One of the health-giving ele ments of HIRES Rootbeer is sarsaparilla. It - contains more sarsaparilla than many of the preparations called by that name. HIRES —the best by any test. galh B rhila '. l " l >' h,a - WILLNOT WH'fS "Just as Good" never yet equalled V the - IDV*' • ! 3SAS %>•••• VELVETEEN & SKIRT BINDING. Simply refuse the "just as good " sort. If your dealer will not supply you we will. Samples showing labels and materials mailed free. "Home Dressmaking,'* a new book by Miss Emma M. Hooper, of the Ladles" Home Journal, telling how to put on 8i.13 Velveteen Skirt Bind i igs sent for 2&c., postage paid. 8. H. A Al. Co., P. 6. box 099 N. Y. City. J| S3ADATSJRE- | U. T. J1 MILAN. llaaasvr. "lot 1 U - ,' > l LlVt 01 M 1 *1! I "'as'. Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Hii lit ol' line Ip h 1 Kxiunlnc: U B. l'mistou Buranu. H J.visiulaat war, 15 adjudicating cluiui*, utty sine* Habit Cared in 19 Orlilß or??, a Fp-h&vjk tfiisissi IA QSTMY© '"nCOIN MONKYnnlllnaNffillT. Fi s!L fa ! 3 TON WfllsTl.i:. ark Just out. Hulls at higkt. .Sample, etc.. 5 cents. Superior Wire Mat Co., Weaver Falls, Fit. fi£)!i>£J3 *" a WHISKY habits cored. Book sent UIT I USi! MIRK. Ifr. 11. n. WOOLLBT. ATLANTA. LA. F N U 10 00 C* Si ft n "d bur struggle for Freeilom. Agents v J Bft wanted. B.S.ttcrantun & Co. liar I ford, Ct. Pji Ail over 01 Ij* the house \ you need Pearline. i And more than ever in iI ' % I I 'I I | house-cleaning. Just I S __ So ' 00 ' c 0VC1 " the list of II iI I .Jr I things that you might (J i' ' L\\ ' ' use—soaps and powders ESSES ® anc | fluids and what not. Some of them don't pretend to help you as much as Pearline ; some will injure paint, or surfaces, or fabrics; some are only meant to wash or clean certain things. But with Pearline, you will save time and labor in clean ing anything that pure water won't hurt. Not only can it do no harm, but it saves useless and harmful rubbing. m "Say Aye 'No' and Ye'll Ne'er be Married." Don't Re fuse All Our / (Ivice to Use SAPOLIO A Ghost Btory Exploded. It Is a relief even to those who scorn to believe in the supernatural when n I supposed ghost is clearly proved to bf ! of earthly origin. One of tho most fa* mous murder cases in Australia was ! discovered by the ghost of tho murder ed man sitting 011 a rail of a nam (Aus- j traliau for horscpond) into which liiti body had been thrown. Numberless people saw it, and the crime was duly brought home. Even the skeptical ad mitted that tlds ghost seemed to be au authentic one. Hut some yearn after, a dying man making his confession said that he invented the ghost. 110 wit nessed the crime but was threatened with death if he divulged it as he wish ed to, and tlie only way lie saw out of the Impasse was to affect to see the ghost where the body was found. As Boon as he started the story, such is tho power of nervousness that numerous other people began to see it, until Its fame reached such dimensions that a search was made and the body found, tud the murderers brought to justice. From (iont to float. Even tho festivo goat In this vernal season has his Hold sport on the common with a tin can or tho but of n log. From tho sport of tho gont in tho spring to tho varied sports of tho early and late summer, what a world of ! amusement and what a scene of muscular activity, in all these, ever so helpful, from tho bat in the ball fieid to the oar of tho boat and tho clatter of the turf, there comes in a large amount of penalty iu the shape of seri ous sprains and troublesome bruises, but no nmn is a good athlete, nor does 110 develop well from such exorcises without his full share of both. It is a good thing, therefore, that thero is provided something which, if always Icopt ready, is always ready to cure promptly these sudden and pninful mishaps. St. Jacobs Oil, without question, passes among all sportsmen as tho thing to have, par excellence, iu all kinds of sports. It has gained its best reputation from its best cures of this nature, ami the man who would en joy freely the summer sports would be al most foolish not to keep a bottle about him. J no scotch Hogmanay. If you want to make n Scotchman's blood tingle pronounce, if you can, that outlandish word "Hogmanay." If one fttteintp to chase this philological freak through dictionaries and lexicons the last state of that man is worse than the first. That way madness lies. Hut Hogmanay to the Scotchman is Christ mas and New Year's day rolled into one. It is the "richt guid Willie walight" that turns to revelry the last days of the passing year. After Hog manay Sandy drops back into his grim, Industrious life again. Yule come au Yule's ganc An we line feasted weel, Sao Jack maun to his flail again And Jcannie tao her wheel. —Montreal Star. WOMAN TO WOMAN. Women are being taught by bitter experience that many physicians can not successfully handle their pecu liar ailments known as female diseases. Doctors are willing and anxious to help them, but they ure the wrong sex to work understandingly. When the woman of to-day cx sensation, palpitation, "all gone" feeling and blues, site at onco takes Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, feeling sure of obtaining immediate relief. Should her symptoms be new to her, she writes to a woman, Mrs. Pinkliam, Lynn, Mass., who promptly explains her case, and tells her free how to get well. Indeed, so many women are now appealing to Mrs. Pinkliam for advice, that a scoredf lady secretaries are kept constantly at work answering the great volumo of correspondence which comes in every day. Each letter is answered carefully and accurately, as Mrs. Pink liam fully realizes that a life may de pend upon lier reply, and into many and many a homo lias she shed tho rays of happiness. FROM SAP TO SUGAR. CURIOSITIES OF THE MAPLE SUGAR BUSINESS. Uow the Sap la Obtained and How Manufactured Into Stigur and Syrup —A Profitable Thing for the Farm* era of Vermont State. The Maple Sugar Industry. The process of making maple sugar and syrup is quite interesting to the majority of people of this country. While some maple sugar is made in New Hampshire, northern New York and Massachusetts, the bulk of it is manufactured in Vermont. The sap of the sugar maple begins to run about March 10 usually, and continues three or four weeks according to the weather. Sap will run only when the thermometer registers at least 82 de grees P., and stops flowing as soon as the frost is out of the ground, or directly after the snow is gone. The sugar season comes when the Vermont farmer cannot profitably employ his time otherwise. As soon as the weather is favorable the Vermont farmer gets out his buckets and sets to work tapping his trees as quieky as possible. The ma ple trees are tapped by boring the trunks with a small bit—usually a half-inch bit—about V/ 2 inches deep, and from one to three feet above the ground. Trees are not tapped until they are one foot in diameter. After tapping, a spoilt made of clean maple, . ' TIIE IIANGIXG BUCKETS. lieecli, tin or galvanized iron and fitted with a liangcr for holding the bucket, in driven firmly Into the hole made by the bit. A bucket of tin or wood Is hung upon the spout, and the tap ping process is finished. The buckets are like ordinary water palls, gener ally all alike, and each farmer usually paints all his buckets one color. Only one hole is bored in young trees, but it is not uncommon to lmve ns many as six buckets with two spouts each hung to maples of large size. If the bucket fills with sap in a day the run is a good one, although twice this amount is obtained in exceptionally favorable sap days. What is called a "good sized" sugar orchard will contain from 500 to NOO trees, and in the northern and central parts of Ver mont orchards of 2,000 to 4,000 trees are not uncommon. Whoii the sap begins to run well tho fanner and Ills family must work hard. A man with a large fa tin will employ help outside of his family fre quently, and use two or three pair of orten or horses to make the rounds of the trees with a sled, on which is the large sap tub, into which the sap from the buckets is poured. An or chard of TOO or SOO, or even 1.000 trees, need not require the farmer to hire help if he lias two or three boys in tho family besides himself. From an orchard of 700 trees an ordinary run of sap for two days will enable the farmer to eolleot about 80 barrels. Sometimes 00 barrels of sap can be collected from 700 trees in one day. As soon as the men begin to collect the sap the tires in the big evaporator furnace must be started, and the boil ing of the sap begun as fast as it is brought in, so that none will be wasted by souring, or that the quantity brought from the woods may not so far ex- GATfIERING TIIIS SAP. coed the accommodations at the house, that while waiting to get room for it much will be wasted at the trees. At the time when the sap is running freely the farmer must often keep the tires going and the sap boiling all through the night, and, of course, lie is likely to have to work all day Sun day and Sunday night. It is all-im portant that lie "make liay while the sun shines." When the work is hardest the fun is at its best. Those who have but a small orchard will spare some of the family to help a relative or neighbor through sugaring. The modern evaporator makes it pos sible to do much sugar-making in a short time. ' The evaporator is made of tin, copper or galvanized iron, and is so constructed that the sap flows in at one end, and by means of partitions extending nearly across tho other end. where it is drawn off as syrup. The sap in the pan is kept shallow—about one-half inch in depth—and evaporates very rapidly, llapidity of evaporation is greatly to be desired, not only on the score of economy of time, but because the sooner the sap is con verts into syrup after it runs from the trees, the lighter will be the color and the finer tlie flavor of the syrup ami sugar. The sugar house is a rough little building with a shed half full of well dried cord wood. The room Is mainly TIIIS SUGAR BOUSE. occupied by the boiling apparatus, and with the bunk of the man who has to watch pans of boiling sap day and ! night. One side is taken up by the oven, which is built on a bed of brick, anil consists of two brick walls, about 2 feet apart, 'J I /* feet high and about 12 feet long. A huge old-fashioned brick chimney is at one end, where there is also a sort of square brick furnace to hold a big kettle. 111 tho roof, near the center of the riilge pole, a large slot opens to the sky as an escape for the steam, which rises in heavy volumes from the pans 011 the fire. The sap as it comes from the maple tree is like water, and has barely any more flavor than good water. But it doesn't take much heat to produce flavor. A barrel of good sap will make a gallon of syrup, or eight pounds of sugar. After being reduced to syr up in tho evaporator the product Is allowed to cool and settle, more or loss impurities being precipitated by standing. The syrup is now ready for putting into cans for sale. The size most hi use is a one-gallon can. The proper consistency of syrup is generally conceded to be 11 pounds to the gallon, and tills degree of density Is reached at 210 degrees Fahrenheit. The sap is never made into more than syrup in the evaporator. Then it is poured into a large poreelain-lineil ket tle to be boiled to sugar. If wanted for sugar, the boiling is continued until the thermometer indicates 323 degrees for pa!l sugar, or 238 or 240 degrees for cakes, when the mass is removed from the tire, stirred brisk}' for a short time, and then poured into tin pails or cake molds, as the case limy be, to harden. The cake molds are often a series of parallel partitions 011 a large wooden board, with space in them about 3 inches apart, and just wide enough to admit a knife blade. The molds are dampened with a sponge, then the hot water poured in. Little fancy tins are also used for molds. The farmer illS'wjilif AN OLD-FASHIONED CAMP. pots oiiywhere from 10 to 18 cents a pound for his sugar, and from 7.7 cents to .81 a gallon for his syrup. A sugar maple produces on an average about .'i\{. pounds of sugar during a season. A Bee-Hunt. An Australian savage comes up to an Irishman's idea of human skill, for "he bates the bees.'* A native seldom fails to get honey when he discovers the bee he has been watching for. The following-description of a native's bee hunt is given in Mr. Arthur's "Kan garoo and Kauri:" Warruyallali, the chief of a tribe, went with two little nets to a small pool, tilled his mouth with water, and then lying down, his head hanging over the pool, he remained quint for an hour, apparently looking at Ids own reflec tion in the water. Then the hum of a bee was heard. Buzz-z-z it went over the pool, round the black's head, now on one side, now on the other, and now close to his ear; but not a motion be trayed the bee-hunter. But when the bee, dropping close to the water, gave notice by the change of its tune that it was about to sip, the chief, with a snort, squirted the water from his mouth over the little "buzzer." Before it had time to re cover from the unexpected douche, he seized it. dexterously by the wings. Then lie prepared it for the chase by fastening to it a bunch of wild cot ton with some gum. The bee was let go; it made for the hive, slowly at first on account of its novel burden, which impeded its progress and showed a sign in the air for the chief to follow. Over bramble and brake went the chief, accompanied by the men of ids tribe, and in half an hour halted at the foot of an immense gum-tree, into whose top the bee had gone. The chief mounted quickly, but cut ting notches into the bark with his stone tomahawk. In a short time he brought down a quantity of honey comb, a small piece only of which con tained honey. The Australian bees are stingless. "Scientlsts say. now that handshak ing conveys disease." "Of course; that's the way the grip got started."— Louisville Courier-Journal. Fell Into the Water-Tank. A San Francisco gen tie man was visit ing a building owned by him, says the Post, and went upon the roof to inspect the water tank. Seeing a dead sparrow floating 011 the water, he bent over to take it out, and by some unaccounta ble means lost his balance and fell into the tank, lie thus describes the ad venture: The water came up to my chin, and the top of the tank was three feet above my head. The water was running in constantly, aiul I could see that it was usually a foot higher than at present. Unless I got out soon, or turned of the water, I should be drowned. I shouted for help till I was hoarse, but could make no one hear, and to get out without help was an Impossibility. I held my hand over the pipe where the water ran in, but it was tedious work, and in spite of my best efforts the water continued to rise. Not a drop seemed to be drawn off below. Finally I drew out my pocket knife and went to work to cut a hole in the side of the tank as low down as I could reach, and still keep my head above water. It was slow work cutting through that thick water-soaked pine, and when at last I succeeded I was standing on tiptoe with just my nose out of water, and every blade in my knife broken. I was safe from drowning for a while, for the water soon ran off level with the hole I had made. But even now, If I was to got out of the tank I must have help, so I proceeded to raise a signal. I pulled off my shirt, tore it into strings, tied my lead pencil to my knife and both to the toe of one of my shoes, and then putting 1113' undershirt on the pen cil, waved it slowly and laboriously over the top of the tank. I waved for hours, and still nobody came. Then it occurred to me to (live down i anil stop up the pipe leading from the j tank, and so attract attention. It wasn't half nu hour before people came up to see why the water would not run, and I was helped out after I had been standing in the cold water over six j hours. Sage Takes No Chances. It Is a certainty that not a man alive! will ever get into Russell Sage's office | to throw another bomb at him. His outer room is furnitured like a bank, 1 anil the visitor's card is shoved through a small hole in the high fence—just such a hole as that through which the pa}*- lng teller hands money for an honored clicck. Outside of the fence, against j the white plastered walls, stands a long bench, upon which visitors f?it. Aluminum in the Army, "The aluminum vessels now In use in the French army are found to wear very little. They can be heated over 1 gas and coal, and are not attacked by the food anil wine, etc., as the food does not remain long in the vessels. Flasks in which ordinary water is kept for months show whitish spots near specks of impurities—iron, carbon, etc., and 011 the soldered portions if other metals have been admixed. The vessels are ! made simply by stamping, without sol dering, except at the handles. In salt water, corrosion of the motnl proceeds more quickly than in fresh water; it becomes black, but sulphuric acid care fully applied restores the original brightness.—Popular Science News. ffcart TUmwro Rcllntoil In 30 Muuitrn, Dr. Agnow's Curo for tho Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Diseaso in 3*) mi mites, and speedily ef fects a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Pal pitation, Shortness of lheuth, Smothering pells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Ihseused 11 art. One dose convinces. If your druggist hasn't it in stock, ask him to procure it for you. It will save your life. Tho nnnunl "cnttlo crop" of Now South Wales Is about 400,000. There are people using: Dobbins* Electric Soap to-day who commenced its use in 1305. Would thin bo tl.o caso wero it uot tho purest aiul vwt>t economical soap made. As!c your grocer for it. Look out for imitations. Dobbin*''. Dryden's poems wore extensively road bo fore their author was 17 years of ago. F. J. Clioney Co., Tololo, 0., Props, of Hull's < 'aiiUTh < 'nrc, oiler Sin i reward for any cast* of catarrh that cannot lie cured by taking Rail's Catarrh Cure. Sen I for testimonials, free. Sold by Druggists, 75c. FITS stopped free by Bit. Ki. ink's Great Nekvk Hkstohbh. No tits after first (lay's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise aml $-2.(10 trial lioiilo free. Dr. Kline. 031 Arch 81., Philu., Pa. Mrs. tVinslow's Soothing Syrup for Children I. . I i.iirr, : .1 It'll . I I.l' iciiiii .r< I I'll -rs i nlki m Illa tion, allays pain; cures wimlcolic. 25cubottle. I'i >'a Cure cured me of a Throat and Lung tr Millie of three years' standing.—K. Cady, if intington, Ind., Nov. 12, ISIM. Catarrh and Colds Relieved In 10 to 03 Minutes, One short puff of the breath through tho Blower, supp hwl with each bottle of I)r. Agncw's Catarrhal Powder, diflTusca this Pow der nvtr tho surtueo of iho no*al passages. Painless and delightful to u*<*. It relieve in stantly and permanently cures ('.it n-rli, li.iy Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Ton pilitisand Deafness. If your druggist lui n't it in stock, ask him to procure ii for you# ASK YOUR DEALER FOR L„ DOUGLAS SHOE BES vJok%! HE If you pay 81 to SO for shoes, ex- amino the \V. L. Douglas Shoe, and <3s seo what a good shoe you can buy for E OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS, CONGRESS, BUTTON, /a \ and LACK, mado In all V li Imlß of the bast selected leather l>y skilled work* W \ men. Wo make None genuine unless name and price is stamped on the bottom. f jgjt\ / 4 Ask your dealer for our 85, V fj 81, 8.1.50, 82.50, 82.25 Shoes; /fIM 41 i 82.50, 82 and 81.75 for boys. fisSir a TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. If your dealer / M cannot supply you, send to fac tory, enclosing price and 36 cents to pay carriage. State kind, style | dy width. Our Custom 1 )ept. will fill your order. Send for new lllus- - dated Catalogue to Box li. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass- THE PACE TII.VT KILLS. Fast Work nnil Fust Hating AfaUo Throa Score Years an 1 Tei a llipe Old Ago Tlinso Days. From the Cincinnati Enquirer. Tho American pooplo 1 i v * tOD fast, ent too fast anil driu'c too font. Tills has brought upon many of us a train of norvoui an I stomach disorders that nro very diflloult to mnnng'*. Investigation and ehomica! analy sis to discover such compounds as will help thoso suffering from such i 1 ha; resulted in tho discovery of I)r. Williams' l'.a'c Pills for Pa'o People, which has taken very hi;jh rank us a specific remedy. H. P. Owens, a traveling man thirty years of ago, who b well-known in this community ami generally liked becau3 1 he is a bight, energetic young follow, resides with Ills mother at 33 > Central Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio, He has been a victim of dyspepsia which took the form of continuous constipa tion, and, strangely enough, his mother suf fered from the same trouble. Mr. Owens testified to tho merits of Pink Pills in a most enthusiastic way, ami said to tho Enquirer reporter: •'I am glad to say anything I can for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, because they did me great good and other people ought to know of their virtues as a mo licine in stoinnoh troubles. It was some time ago when 1 felt a heavy feeling in my stomach and I grew very constipated. I did not consult a doc tor, but having hoard of tho Pink l'ills I bought a box of them. In two or throe days the heavylooUng in rnystoinach disappeared and my bowels wore regular. I did not have to use more than a box of them bolore I was \7oll. Since that time 1 have only occasion ally be-n trouble I with constipation and I never got worried because 1 know just what to do. Mother was also troubled with in digestion and the Pink Pills did the same for her they did lor ino—cured her, aidu't they mother?" Whom appealed to Mrs. Owens answered: "That is rignt. I found that it was a great medicine, so easy to take and so quick an 1 lasting in its results." Mr. Owensoontinued: "Ibelievo that those pills are also good for nervousness. Whou 1 had my stomach trouble I was also quite nervous and that disappeared with the dys pepsia. The Pink Pills wore all that is claimed for them. You can make any use of this testimonial that you see fit." 11. P. Owens has occupied several positions of trust in this city, lie was for a time an omployu of tho Commercial' Gazette. He will go 011 tho road in a few days for a prominent business house here. Mrs. Owens is quite in enthusiastic as her son about the Pink l'ills and her host of lady friends can verily her good opinion of this wonderful remedy if they fool disposed to do so at any time. Where the testimony is so general and unanimous as to tho excellencies of Pink Pills us the Enquirer lias found it to be there is certainly goid reason to believe all the good things bald—about tho safe and simple remedy. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Pcoplo contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to tho blood and re store shattered nerves. Thoy may be had of all druggists or direct by mail from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Hehoneo ta ly, N. Y., at 500. pur box, or six boxes for $2.50. f I raj ma BB El Y° u only ftet of other 8 W |pf ....-'jt-x- -f&M good tobaccos 3 £ ozs. B I {or 10 cents - m | ■ i You get of "Battle Ax" H 8 K' ay-jr- sa,ne I" 3 " 1 *' " g g C/ 3 Ufcsfor j i i*; V G ' ' 8 ® ~> f 8 You get over 2 once3 more 01 5 m "Battle Ax" for 10 cents than any 8 § other tobacco of the same grade. ' | These two ounces really cost you ™ g nothing, and the 5 cent piece is nearly ® | as large as you get of other high grades \ for 10 cents. JL 8m— A. Annrlistic nnd comfortable dwelling costs no more flinn n poorb A|lf I \ planned one, |p^-- e . ,T -\"A. And it is cheaper to pay interest on a mortgaged house than to pay rent. /j|\-i BEFOItB IiUILDIXG Look over our latest i.uiidinf / \ design?, just published, In 10 portfolios (see list) some 300 designs In all, Bjjl iTfwjjffSh costing from SSOO to SIO,OOO. Gives large views, floor plans, full descrip al „ li~"| V-;V tlon and dimensions, all about painting, plastering, beating, anil, In fact, every essential aid to the Intending builder. biST. bl/.W or' f.uITFOLIO 11x13 INCHES. "■-■"■■■"' 1 No. 1 contalnu no deign., c.Mns $,".00 to SI,OOO nllfS V't!'™ No. 2 " .50 ' 1,000 to 1,500 KeetioiiM you muy select, 12 x- No. 3 " 30 " " 1.500 to 2,000 nuiple, for £'.!.OOt> house* lend No. 4 " 30 " " 2,000 to 2.500 for \>s. 3 unit 4 f etc., etc. No. 5 " 30 || a poo t0 3500 Hcturmblc if not aattyactory. No. 7 " 30 " " 3.500 to 4.000 Address the N°: a " 30 " J£X W loiooo Co-operative Building Plan Ass'n, Architects, No. 10 " stables and double houses, all cost 3. ' 100 & 108 Fulton St., New York City. low Si iMPfifflT Hi lIITC Crow SlyrlJiiiiu A Valuable Book Covering the Whole Subject. Worth mnny SSI tolcivir. of g,r>. S.nd 10 c,n>s. <iOl)l> VAI.IIOH MONEY nUTPRNKIJ. btaiups taken, llofor to any ltutland bank. - - A. W. I'KItKINM \V CO., Box 1,, Kuflaud, Vta son Virginia Fmsm&mm \g/ ljJ tig $. per acre iipwanb, with buildings, fruits, timbor, wa'or, ot-.; iniat cllina'c in U. 84 good markets, rea variety of c rops, vegetables and fruits; noted for besltbfolnea* future prospects brijjUt. Address i'Vbii dt DellAVliN, ltc ul Eatuio Agcuts, Fcii rsbiua. V*. Gladness Gomes With a better understanding of tho 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 bo many forms of sickness are not duo to any actual dis ease, but simply to a constipated condi tion of the system, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects arc due to the fact, that it Is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organs on which it acts. 11 is therefore all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pur chase, that you have the genuine article, which is manufacturcd by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all rep utable druggists. If in tbo enjoyment of good health, and tho system'is regular, then laxa tives or other remedies arc not needed. If afflicted witli any actual disease, one may be commended to tbo most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have tlio best, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely used and gives most general satisfaction. \A/P" HAVE n° agents. " " but sell <]<rect to theconnuuv J'r nl i-rico. Bblr ~7v riages, 90 styles of Hr /*\ \ neSS,4I styles Hiding sad* -ZTidles. Write for catalogue. V KtKHART x *~k*r'i Carilcgc A Harness Mfg C* W. 11. I'satt. Sacx Elkbait, lad. P N U 19 C~AT CI a?ppi & O aiKIH. cfsTS: Fsi' Skill a(3 B'cod Diseases
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers