Shoe Cabinet.. Tho furulture-makers are showing a beautiful article of mahogany and K" las which reminds One of the cabinets r brle-a-brac, but It Is more substan tial and Its legs are shorter. It Is fHailo to hold a woman's shoos and to Stand across the corner of her dress- Ing-ropm. One Easter bride has such A cabinet well filled, aud It Is an Im portant feature of tho trousseau. Her Cabinet has three plate-glass shelves and a drawer which holds the polish and small articles for repairs. On the top shelf Is a row of slippers for even ing wear. The next shelf holds the pat ent leather ties, the cloth top boots |Wlth big buttons and the stout little tolf ones for street wear. On the bot tom shelf Is rather a motley group cycle shoes, riding boots, tenuis shoes, tan shoes, hunting boots and soft In dian moccasins of tiger skin, beaver trimmed. How Insect. Multiply. Tho power of reproduction In Insects is one of the most wonderful pnrts of their economy. On behendlng a slug a now head, with all Its complex ap purtenances, will grow again; so will the claws of a lobster. The end of a (worm spilt produces two perfect heads, anil If cut Into three pieces the middle produces a perfect liesd and tall. That Bxtromo tlrod fooling afflicts nearly every body at this season. The hustlers ceaso to push, tho tireless grow weary, tho ener getio becomo enervated. You know Just What we mean. Some men and women endeavor temporarily to ovoroomo that Tired Fooling by great force of will. But thin Is unsafo, as it pulls powerfully upon tho nervous system, whioh will not long stand euoh strain. Too many people "work on thoir nerves," and the result is seen In un fortunate wrcolts marked "nervous pros tration/' In overy di root ion. That tired ifcpHvS 3 Ing is a positive proof of thin, weak, lm puro blood; for if tho blood is rich, red, vitalized and vigorous, it Imparts lifo and energy to every nerve, organ and tissue of tho body. Tho nccosalty of taking Hood's Bursaporllla for that tired fooling is, there fore, apparent to everyone, and the good it ■will do you is equally beyond question. Remember that Hood's Sarsaparilla I tlio OnoTrno Blood 1 'nrlller. All drngghts. f 1 Prepared only by 0. I Uood * Co., Lowell, Man. Hood's Pills? one rate! Mr. Charles Austin Bates, the fa mous advertising writer, makes a specialty of modical advertisement* He has studied medicine and has a habit of analyzing the ingrodtonts of every medicine about which ho Is naked to write, refusing to write advertisements for medicines wliioh he ounnot indorso. Ho says of Rlptuis Tubules: "I had the formula and went through it from the ground up. I found that every one of the Ingredients was put in for some special purposo, and was good for tho purposo intended. I have as much confidence in Illpnns Tabalos as I hftvo in anything I over wrote about. I take ttaom myself when I have eaten a little too much or feol nausea or symptoms of headache coming on, and I find them quicker to act than any modioluo I evor took. I know some people who think thoy can't possibly get along without them. My wife went to call one day on some friends she ha J kuown always. She found they swore bv HI pans Tabulos. They did not know that she knew anything about them or that I had written anything for them. By the way, If you swallow them properly, you don't taste anything in the mouth. Swallow them quickly and you are all right. You can feol their action In the stomuoh almost Immediately; a very pleasant sensation." T RIJMUIS Tabule* are <M BY druggist*. or by mall If tho prloo (50 cents a box) Is Font to The Rlpani Chemical Company, No. 10 Spruce nt., New York. Sample vial, 10 eeuU. WEI I Dri " !n £ Ma * s fVCLL lor any depth. I.n# Improvement*. All Moner .linker*, LOOMIS A NYMAN, Tiffin, Ohio. For Skin and Blood Disoases r N u M oo rupture s&ssjjm jgsi^gs ■ 1 HPND to 8. J. BHEUM AN, Ilernia Bpecialist, NOB. I amis Ann Ht., New York, for his moat intereating book of l ull inl'urination. Trice by mail, 15 eta. ADIIRIi WHISKY ImMt I. Hoo'c hnt UrIURV FREK. Dr. 11. M. WOOM.EV, Atlanta, GO. Lan Im Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use J*| E in time. Sold by druggist*. *| |i KuDbor scraps. Cast-off rubber shoes are now a mar ketable commodity and many country peddlers add considerably to theii gains by collecting them. They arc usually taken In exchange for tin ward or cheap trinkets. No cash changes hands In these transactions. When the peddler returns to his starting point he turns over his collections to tho village merchant for more tinware, with perhaps a little cash, and goes out over a new route. The peddler may be in business on his own account or in the employment of the village trader, but In either case the latter baa a chance to make a profit on the col lections of scrap, which are shipped from time to time to a city dealer, Tho latter will offer his rubber stock whenever It reaches good proportions to a rubber reclaiming mill. When old shoes first became a merchantable ni tlcle the price paid for them was 1 cent a pound, while tho quotations have since averaged 5 cents per pound for months at a time. The trade 'n rubber scrap Is now most thoroughly organized in the West and Northwest, In tlje Southern States, where little snow falls, the consumption of rub ber shoes is not sufficient to form a basis of trade' in old shoes. Of the rubber scrap Imported the largest shard comes from Russia. The Imported scrap is not so desirable, however, ad what Is gathered at home. In spits of the good consumption of rubber foot wear In New England there are u dealers In scrap there In a position ol commanding importance. This Is due in part to tho existence of nearby fac tories, which buy directly from the smaller dealers. In tho West the priu dpal center of the trade is Chicago. One Correct Answer. An amusing lltle story was told a good many years ago in connection With Gov. Mattox, of Vermont. At one time ho was chairman of the committee appointed to examine candidates for ad mission to the bar of Caledonia County. He reported that one of the candi dates was, In his opinion, unqualified, having answered correctly but one of the questions put to him. "Only one? Well, what was that?" asked the presiding Judge. "I asked him what a freehold estate is," replied Mattox. "Important question," said the Judge. "And what was his reply?" "He made It without the least hesita tion," said tho Chairman, with a twin kle in his eye. "Of course that fact Ic in his favor." "Well, wliat did he say?" asked tl> Judge, with some Impatience. "He sahl," returned the Clinlrinan, "that he didn't know." Heart Disease Relieved In SO Minn tear Dr. Agnew's Curo for the iieurt gives perfcxu relief in nil cases of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in .10 minutes, and speedily ef fects a cure. It Is a peerless remedy for Pal pitation. Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Disens.'d Heart. One dose convinces. It your druggist hasn't it in stock, ask him to procure it for you. It will save your life. lain entirely cured of hemorrhage) of lungt by I MHO'S Cure for Consumption.— LOUlSA LINO A.MAN, Bethany, Mo., Jan. H, '(j4. FITS stopped free by T)iu K(.INK'S GRF.AI NEIIVK IlKSToitKit. No fits after first day't use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, 031 Arch St., Philu., Pa. Wo will give ?100 reward for anv caso of ca tarrh that cannot bo cured with Hall's Catarrh Curo. Taken internally. F. J. Chknky & Co., Props., Toledo* O. Catarrh Mid Colds Rollevod la 19 to S Minutes. One short puff of the breath through the Blower, supp led with eacli bottle of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this Pow der over the surface of Ihe nasal passages Painless and delightful to use. It relieves ilk stunt ly and permanently cures Cat rrh, lliq Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Ton* sflitis aud Deafness. If your druggist hasn't it in stock, ask him to procure it for you. BACKACHE. A Very Significant Indication of Organic Derangement. The back, " the mainspring of wo man's organism," quickly calls atten tion to trouble by aching. It tells with other symptoms, such as nervous ache, paius in weight in low l 8 ' table Compound for twenty years has been the one and only effective remedy in such cas&. It speedily removes the cause and effectually restores the organs to a healthy aud normal condi tion. Mrs. Pinkham cheerfully answers aU letters from ailing women who require advice, without charge. Thou sands of cases like thisare recorded. I 44 1 have taken one-half dozen bottles i of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com | pound, aud it has relieved me from all pain. I cannot tell you the agony I endured for years; pains in my buck (Oh, the backache was dreadful!) aud bearing-down pains in the abdomen extending down into my limbs; head ache and nausea, and very painful menstruations. I had grown very thin, a mere shadow of my former self. Now I am without a single pain and am gaining in flesh rapidly."— MATTlE GLENN, 1561 Dudley St., Cincinnati, A quarter spent in HIRES Rootbeer does you dollars' worth of good. lUde onlf bj Tbt Cbtrlci K Hire* Co.. Philadelphia. A 100. paokag* makes & lalloot. Bold amy where. OPIUMSSivEtHS WHERE'S MOTHER? Bursting In from school or play, This Is what tho children say; Trooping, crowding, big and small On the threshold, In the hall- Joining in tho constant cry, Ever as tho days go by, "Whore's mother?" From tho weary bod of pain This same question oomes again; From the boy with sparkling eyes Bearing homo his earliest prize; From the bronzed and bearded son, Perils past and honors won; "Where's raothor?" Burdon with a lonely task, jj Ono day wo may vainly ask { For tho comfort of hor face, \ For the rost of hor ombraco; Lot us lovo her whilo wo may, Well for us that wo can say "Whore's mother?" Mother with untiring hands At tho post of duty stands, Vatlent, seoking not hor own, j Anxious for the good alone Of tho children as they cry, Ever as tho days go by, "Where's mother?" —J. 11. Eastwood, in the Quiver. ON A GATE POST, MBROSE NET tloaonlias what ho IffMwWWllf ' s 0 valn- i alj '° manuscript. J so, doubtless,beeauso PKSBMV I'Wkv I records a part of his life - Ono ll night recently, V \ 1 w ' ll ' o d was at his house, ho brought out menu- WP rK-TSEIS I did not ask permission, yot I do not fool that I violate his confidence by giving, as nearly ns I cuu romomber, the contents of tho paper which ho treasuros with such affections: Tho prospect was not cheerful,l was riding u horso across a country whoso loneliness was as deep as a sigh which bespeaks tho long absenco of some oue. Night was coming on and a storm was gathering its forces. A frightoned owl flitted past me, screaming in my face. Tho time of year was when na ture hesitates whether to ooutinuo winter or bogin spring. My horso al most shook mo otf when ho stoppod and shiverod. The "wl soreamod in my faeo again. Dead leavos, for a mo ment would whirlod beforo mo, aud then fall, scattered aud torn "as though they had, by au augry hand, been swept from their long, damp rest, only to bo mookod. "What a dreary, dreary placo it is!" I mueod. "I feel as though something terrible is going to happen. The air, just be fore the great ugitatiou wliioh must come, seems quivering in its desire to boar tho souud of murdor,murder I As I live yonder is a light. Is it possiblo that I shall receive shelter?" Urgiug my horse forward, I Boon rcaohod a small house,near the summit of a desolato peak, orerlooking the Arkansaw Itivor. fjilismouutcd near the door—there was no fence around tho houso. My horse looked appoal ingly at mo and without asking per mission from any one within, I led tho auiinal to a stablo close at hand, took off and bridle. As I returning, tho storm burst upon tho river. When I approaehod tho door, I heard a wail. 1 knocked and heard the wail coming slowly toward rao. Tho door was openod by a girl scarce ly more than twelve years old. Hor faco was tho picture of despair, She said nothing, but pointed to a bed, upon which laid an old man, gasping for breath. Approaching him, I saw that ho had but a few moments to livo. The girl knelt beside the old man. He tried to put his hnnd upon her head. Failing, ho lookodat mo and I assisted him. Ho tried to speak, but conld not. Tho girlsobbod frantically. The rain ponrod down and tho storm shook the house. "Ho will never gotwelll" sho oriod. "My grandpa will die." Yes, her grandpa would die. His lifo had already passed away. Tho hand lying on her hend was growing cold, bhe looked at him and shrieked. What a night wo spent in that house. Tho storm howled and the rain fell until nearly daylight. The girl, who I say was intelligent, with an im pressive face, said thut her name was Munetto Loggeinon, and that since her earliest recollection she had lived with the old man, who had spont most of his time, since sho had began to talk, in teaching her. "I have no relatives," she said, in answer to a question. "Any friends?" "No friends." "Yon have neighbors?" "None. Tho nearest house is nearly eight miles away." I know not what to do. Surely tho situation was serious. Early at morn ing we buried the old man in the yard. As best I could, I made a coffin of a trough which I found in tho stable. After tho burial I went on and found enough corn for my horse. I left Munetto at the grave, on which sho had, sobbing bitterly, thrown herself. "Where are you going, little girl?" I asked when 1 returned, still finding her on the gr >ve. • "How can I go anywhere?" she asked. "X have no friends, I told yon." "You cannot remain hero." "I cannot go away." "I will not loavo you here. Yon mußt go with me. My mother has no little girl. She will receive you." Still lying on tho grave, and with out looking up, she replied : "1 will RO and work for my board." "You will not have to work. Whan I tell my mother of the oircumstancos undor whioh I found you, she will Hake you in her arms, c- , your clothes. It is timo wo were leaving hore. Sec, tho sun is Bhining beautifully. It iB a new day for you." Without roplying, she arose and turned toward me. Hor faoe, ovon aside from her grief, was so sad, and her oyos wore a look of suoh tender ! appeal that ovon though sho had had ' relatives I would have thought it my duty to take her homo with mo. Sho went Into tho houso and soon returned with a small bundle. "I haven't much to take," sho said. "Grandpa and I wero very poor, nnd you see, having inheiritod his poverty, I am pooror than ever." I was not surprised to hear her mako suoh a remark, for I had disoovored that sho had nover associated with ; ohildren, and was consequently wise of her age. | "You shall havo some nice dresses after a while," I replied. "Pretty rod ones?" The child was asserting itself. "YOB, and blue ones." Sho wopt anew as wo mounted the horso—she seated behind me. As long as wo wore within sight of the houso sho said nothing, but when wo had desoended into tlio thiok woods, sho said: "I won't cry any more if I oan holp it." "Your grandfather must havo been good to you?" "Yes, but he made me read many books that wero very dull—groat law books. I don't like them. His eyes for many years have been so bad that I had to do all his reading for him. Ho wrote a book full of awful curious things and murders, but one day when ho found mo reading it he took it away from mo and burnod it up. It must huve been bad, aud be must havo been sorry that ho wrote it." Tho day passed rather ploasantly, with the exception of tho influenco of the night before, whioh naturally euough sho could not dispolaud which I could not keep from arising occa sionally. Wo sat on a log aud ate dinnor, and Munotto's romarks guvo me additional insight into hor closo habit of observation. When ovoniug came we stopped at a farm houso, whero the sad story of tho littlo girl awoke suoh sympathy that tho kind hearted houso wife begged mo to al low the ohild to remain with her. "It is n question that she must do oide," I rejoined. " What do you say, Munotto?" "I am surprised that you should ask me such a question," she replied, ap proaching tho chair whoro I sat and taking my hand. "Would it not bo ungrateful in mo to desortyouso soon, or to over desert you?" •Mho's got more seuso than an old woman right now," said tho host, ad dressing his wife. "Our twenty-oigbt year-old daughter that married lust mouth ain't a patchin' to this girl." "W'y, Jcsperson," said his wife, in mild censure, "Margaret ain't twenty eight years old." "She's mighty nigh it." "An' beside that," continued tho woman, "sho nover had no chance." "Didn't go to school three mouths outen nearly every year, oh? AVhat show doos a gal want, I'd liko to know? This little creetur, I warrant you, never has been to sohool." "Oy, yes, sir. My wholo lifo has beon a school. Tho old houso whero I usod to live contains many books. If you want them yon may go there and get them. I shall nover go after them. I could never read them again." "Well, blomo my buttons if I don't mosy up that way. I ain't muoh of a scholar, hut I reckon I oau worry through with a lot of thorn." My mother wolcoinod Munotte, and when I related the sad story of how I found hor tho sympathetic woman took tho child in her arms and kissed hor. A few clayß afterward, whon I returned homo after a short absence, sho Hashed upon mo in a gay red dross. Sho was more of a child than I had ever seou her—mure so than I had thought it possiblo for her to become. My motlior was delighted to 800 hor innocent pranks, and I, for tho first time, kissed tho ohild. "You havo kissed me at last," she said. "Is it kecauso I look bottor in this dross?" "It is because you look more liko a child. Before you reminded mo so much of a woman." "Do not womeu like to bo kissed?" I laughed and my mother, shaking her head—l can see her gray hair now —said: "Ah, Ambrose, our young girl has a very old head." We sent Munotto to school. The teacher, a man who had tho reputa tion of being profound, mot me one day and said: ' 'Munette is the most romarkablo child I ever saw. Sho has read so many books and makes mo such wise observations that I am constantly sur prised. To tell you tho truth, I can not advance her. Not that lam not intellectually able—but—er—because I do not think at her ago it would be safe. Therefore I would advise yon to tako her from school. I kuow the offeot that too much learning has on youth. I kuow how narrowly I os caped." Whon I spoko to Munetto sho said: "That school is o very dull place. It is a constant hum of arithmetic. I don't like to cipher, as tho children call it. Fraotions mako my head ache and miscellaneous examples make me sick. Let me study at homo." I took her from school. She was a devoted student, but was never so ab sorbed that she was oblivions to the littlo attentions which a woman of my mother's age prizes so highly. Munette grow rapidly and I was pleased to sea that sho was daily becoming moro graceful. The war came on. How natural it is in writing a story, to say, "The war came on but this is not a story, and nothing oan be rporo natural than truth—although it is said to be stranger tban fiction. Therefore, when | I say that the war came on, X intend j that the declaration should have its full meaning. I loft homo full of pride. I was captain. My mother prayed; but Muuetto did not soom to be very much affected. "Good bye," | she said. "War is one of tho incidents of civilization, as well as a featuro of barbarity. I know that you will do [ your duty, and that you will not for got the little girl whom you once saw j sobbing under tho hand of a dying i man. When you return, I shall be [ old enough to kiss you." I looked at her in astonishment. Merriment sparkled in hor oyos. "You don't like to kiss children, it seems." "Munette, you are strango. I onoe said that I did not kiss you because you lookod like a woman." "Oh, yes, that is true. I thought that you did not want to kiss me be oause I was so small. There, now, captain don't swell up liko a toad." I turned away. Sho called mo whon I was about a hundred yards away and said: "Whon you pass tho big gate, look on the right hand post." I did so and found the words, "I love you." I did not receive but ono letter from Munette, and that might just as well have been writtou by a professor of geology, for its four pages were de votod to a description of a lot of pob bles she had found in a oave. I roturnod homo ragged and ill. Mu nette was delighted to see mo. She was so peouliar, though, that I could not tell whether or not sho still loved me. It seemed that she did not, for whenever I attempted to remind her of it, she changed the subject. Like all truo lovers, I felt that without her my lifo would bo a blank. I spoke to my mother concerning my trouble. "She is a very strange girl, but I always found hor frank, except when I asked her if sho loved you, and sho replied that tho hawks had carried off three of tho dominicker hen's chick ens." One day, in passing tho gate, I wrote on the post the following: "Will you marry mo?" Two days afterward I visited tho place and found the word "yes." AVithout further communication, ex copt to appoint tliß time by "post," wo wero married. I did not find hor disposition to be peouliar, only in the intensity of her love for me. "Why did you treat mo so?" I ono day askod her. "I'ho dominicker has a great deal of trouble with hor chickens," sho re plied. Shortly afterward, when she ! thought that I was not looking, she threw baok her head aud laughed. Tidal Bell Buoys. Tho forco of tho tides as distin guished from that of tho swelling waves is to be utilized to keep in agi tation bell buoys in harbors, under a patent just granted. "A current actu ated bell buoy" is what tho inventor calls it. The action from the force of the current is wholly automatic. Tho lloat upon which tho superstructure and boll aro mounted cuts and shifts lrom side to side. A ball is confined in a tubo under tho boll at its mouth, aud having freo passage as tho lloat lists it strikes tho bell with groat forco. Tho bell will ring equally well by tho action of tho son. Tho feature that is most novel is that tho bell is at its best when the sea is smoothest. Just so long as there is motion in tho water, whethor tidal or current, it is sutlioient to ring tho boll. This feature will bo most appreciated by masters and pilots for the reason that as a rule a thick fog is accompanied by a deathlike still ness. It is then that the skipper anx iously feols his way, listening for some familiar guiding sound. Ho ha 3 no hope o! hearing a boll that is alouo actuated by tho sea, but tho tide is al ways with him, either at ebb or flow, and tho tidal bell buoy is sure to bo faithfully at work, pealing it warning notioe. —Now York Journal. Wanted —An Heir. Ono ol the most curious casoß down for hearing in the Court of Chancery is tho final settlement of the disputed will of tho celebrated prima donua, Mmo. Titiens, whose death occured in 1877, nearly twenty years ago. Mine. Titiens was born in 1810 at Hamburg. She made her first appearance on tho stage at tho early age of fifteen. Sho was nover married, and at her death hor immense fortuno was left to a rela tive, who, however, disappeared throe yoars before her death, and has never sinco been hoard of. Tho missing rela tive, Peter Titjen, was in 1873 resid ing in Cardiff, and shortly after that time ho intimated his intention of go ing to South America, but whether he ever did so cauuot bo traced. For neaily twenty year 3 the next relatives have endeavored to obtain the wealth on tho presumption that he is dead, and has left no heirs, and last venr an order was granted that, after proper advertising, if ho or his heirs failed to appear it should be assumed ho was dead.—Galignani Messenger. Slate lor Houses. Slate is too much overlooked as a material for inside decoration. It ex ists in many different shades. It is easy and inexpensive to quarry, and by far the easiest stone to shapo into plei s ng forms. These qualities render it 111) cheapest of uurabio materials for interior purposes, aud the wonder is that so little of it is in common use. If largo dealers would establish depots of standard goods inado up for com bination in house building in such forms as would be available to nrobi teots, its use would be iudefiuitely ox tended. Hardly a cottage of any pre tensions would bo built where it would not take a prominent part. If such depots wero established, house build ers would be enabled to see it, and appreciate its beauty aud cheapness. As it is, hardly one in five hundred I knows anything of either.—Stone. Tiiousands or people would nppreol ate sympathy and help who never uuU for It. and never get it. Take Cure or Your Watch. The mechanism ot the human body re minds one very much of the mechanical con- Btruction of a flno watch, the wheels, cogs and screws answering to the muscles, and the delicate springs are what may be likened to the nerves. One cannot move without the other, and yet the action of each is sepa rate and distiuct. H< it is with the nerves and muscles of the human body. The ailments of Iho muscles are distinct from the ailments of the nerves, and, like the mechanism of a watch, if exposed to sudden change of hoat aud cold, they get out of order and for the time are useless. Especially is this so at this Benson of the year, when* from exposure, negligence or want of cure, the nerves ure attacked and neuralgia in its worst form sets In. But like oil to the works of a watch so 13 St. Jacobs Oil to the nerves thus deranged. It is acknowledged by thousands to be the best and most perinuuent cure for this most dreuded disease; hence it is well to look after the human watoh as well as the one in the pocket. 2 The Blue and the Gray. 2 f Both men and women are apt to feel a little |Bj) f\ blue, when the gray hairs begin to show. It's /||n & a very natural feeling. In the normal condition (p®) of things gray hairs belong to advanced age. ||p They have no business whitening the head of SK V 7 man or woman, who has not begun to go ■9 down the slope of life. As a matter of fact, xpi. the hair turns gray regardless of age, or of J8? f|jP life's seasons ; sometimes it is whitened by fHf sickness, but more often from lack of care. |py| When the hair fades or turns gray there's no '< '( y need to resort to hair dyes. The normal color ' of the hair is restored and retained by the use of IMfj) i 4 Ayer's Hair Vigor. @ w Ayer's Curebook, "a slory of cures told by the cured." 100 l >n l es, ' ree * J* C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. |J" ''' "• I H i t The umpire now decides that /§ h" BATTLE AX" is not only .j p decidedly bigger in size than any .1 t other 5 cent piece of tobacco, but the ') t- quality is the finest he ever saw, and 0 £ the flavor delicious. You will never ■) £ know just how good it is until *J I: y° u tr y it. o I'-A ACA-A AIA AA'.A~*,A OAVAAA.VAIA | Breakfast Goou | 4,. Made by Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., 1$ Dorchester, Mass., is "a perfect 'f 1 4> type of the highest order of excel- 'i| lence in manufacture." It costs less X i> than one cent a cup. •'> 800 VIRGINIA FARMS \y l ,<>r a(<re upwards, with building!), fruits, timber, water, et Wat china . B"o<l markets, great variety of crops vogetablea and fruits; noted for hol future prospeota bright. Addreas F\L,IC Ac DeIIAVKN, Heal Krtnte Aciim, Pmrmh r*. \ "Use the Means and Heaven will Give you the Blessing. 1 Never Neglect a Useful Article Like SAPOLIO .. 1 At Worthlngton, Minn., a cyclone de molished 20 buildings, but seriously hurt no one. When Nature Needs assistance it may bo best to render H promptly, but one should remember to ase even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs, manufactured bf the California Fig Syrup Company. Americans entering Mexico must be revao clnnted. More diseases sro produced by using brown soap than by anything else. Why run such tar riblo risks when you know that Dobbin H' Floating- Borax Soap is absolutely pure f Your grooer has it or will gut it for you. In rod wrappers only. There were 22 deaths from cholera in Alex anderton Monday. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing SyrupforChildren teething, softens the gums,reduces In flam ma* tiou, allays pain; cures wind colic. 26c a bottle. If afflicted with sore eyes uso Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Kyo-water. Druggist's soli at 260p0r bottle
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers