ITour nerves upon rich, red blood and you will aot Le nervous. Blood is made rich and pure by "sarsaparifSa rhs One True Blood Purifier. All drug rists. sl. j Hood's Pills are always reliable. 25 cents Harold Is Annoyed. Harold Frederic is much annoyed by )he betrayal of his Identity with '•George Forth," under which name lie published his clever book, "March Hares." The book has already estab lished Itself as a favorite in London. Mr. Frederic resorted to anonymity ia this case because he did not want to interfere with the sale of his more am bitious book, the novel "Illumination." Society Women Who Collect Fans. One of tho fans which Mrs. Almoric Paget Inherited from her mother, Mrs. Whitney, has gold and Ivory sticks, a lace mount, and Is valued at the trilling sum of SI,OOO. Among enthusiastic col lectors of fans Mrs. Sloanc, Mrs. Wliitelaw Held, Mrs. Cornelius Van derbilt and Mrs. Seward Webb, who own fortunes in these fluttering bau bles. WOMEN WANT TO KNOW. ro WHOM CAN THEY TELL THEIR TROUBLES? A Woman Answers "To Me" Anxious Inquirers Intelligently Answered—Thou sands of Grateful Letters. Women regard it as a blessing that they can talk to a woman who fully understands their every ailment, and thus avoid the cxamina // J/j ories of incom >j®H|p. c * ans * sex knowing by de n ce pi &ecid prompts them to seek Female diseases yield to Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Com pound at once. Inflammation, ulcera tion, falling and displacement of tho womb, ovarian troubles, spinal weak ness and kidney complaints, all have their symptoms, and should be " nipped In the bud." Bearing-down pains, hack ache, headache, nervousness, pains in groins, lassitude, whites, irregularities, dread of impending evil, blues, sleep lessness, faintness, etc. Here is testimony right to the point: " The doctors told me that unless I went to the hospital and had an opera tion performed, I could not live. I had falling, enlargement and ulceration of the womb. "I was in constant misery all the time; my back ached; was always tired. It was impossible 'k for me to walk (jSi? far or stand long \ at a time. a trial. "I took three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and used two packages of Sanative Wash, and I am now almost well. I am stouter and healthier than I have ever been in my life. My friends and neigh bors and the doctors are surprised at my rapid improvement. I have told them all what I have been taking." — MRS. ANNETTA BICKMEIER, liellaire, Belmont Co., O. Why pay the same price for the inferior " just Q BIAS VELVETEEN r&fT SKIRT BINDING by asking and insisting ? IF your deafer WILL NOT supply you we will. Samples shewing labels cr.i materials mailed free. " Heme Drcjsmakhg Made Easy," ? ne > 72 par book by M ss Emmr..%*. Hooer.cf 'he Ladies' Horn Journal. teil3 in pla ir. words how to make dross-.:: home without previous training; mailed for 25c. S. H. & M. Co., P. C. Bo:: 699, N. Y. City. PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHNV.' MORRIS, WASHINGTON,O.O. Lato Principal fc- iniinor TJ. B. Pension Bureau. 3yrs. iu last v._r, loaJjudicatiug claims, atty. tiucc. TELLS irons roirn >. your future husbnnd or wife. Send 10- silver, dateof birth, to Astrologer, box 1772,Boston,.Must; 1 N U 3fS 9(1 WOMAN IN OFFICE IN LONDON. A young woman boa been appointed na registrar of births, marriages and deaths by the guardians of the City of London. Miss Kemrn, the lady in question, has tor some time acted as assistant to her father. WORKING HER WAT. Miss Clara Howard is working her way through the University of Califor nia by selling newspapers. "I believe in work," she says. "X think that any woman does not need to allow any pecuniary obstacles to interfere with it. She can always reach an intellec tual object through manual labor. It is a means to an end, and, besides, it is conducivo to clearness of thought. I believe, also, in simplifying physi cal wants lor the sake of intellectual gratification, and tho demands of the understanding constitute the impera tive." She says that she intends to become a philosopher ; but she would appear to bo a pretty good one al ready. WINNING ALL lIEART3. The young Duchess of Marlborough has made, it is understood, an extreme ly agreeable impression iu England, it is mentioned there that she is rap idly gaining tho affections of her Eng lish relatives and connections, and the people about Bleinheim are delighted willi her. One enthusiast writes: "Were we asked what was the most striking of the sights wo saw at this great palace, with its glad and grand surroundings, we should answer a large painting, a portrait in the first room we entered. The fair face upon tho canvas was that of the present Duchess of Marlborough. The beauteous eyes are almost black, and so expressive. In spite of all the other bunutie3 of Blenheim, they seemed ever the fairest sight; sweetly they linger in memory, inspire the soul, and are a moving in fluence for good. Because this young Duchess has ccmo as a bride, crossed the blue Atlantic, some think she is a stranger to our land ; but this is a mis take. When a tiny child of three she came to England and has voyaged the ocean so otten since that tho flying Hollander,with its phantom vessel and his phantom crew, is not more farail iir with the perils of tho sea. It is pleasant to notice at Blenheim how every one loves her Grace. Marlbor o igh did not conquer his enemies as she has conquered the hearts of her ' people," Another English observer, in com menting on the successful dinner parties lately given by the Duke aud Duchess at their London house, says concerning tho young lady that she "is quiet, natural and very sweet in disposition. She is not exactly pretty, but she has a sweet aud charming face, a clear, rather pale complexion, and dark hair, and deop, clear blue eyes, which olten look quite dark. Sho is very tall and slight and carries herself erect and gracefully. Her voice is pretty, and altogether her Grace is really a great social acquisition."— Boston Transcript. MILADY IS MILKING COWS. Society's latest fad, if we may be- \ lieve report, says milady is milking cows for amusement and charity. At a certain fashionable country neat the hostess, who is much interested in parish work, invented, or rather in augurated, this lad for charitable pur poses, with the result that society has taken it up, aud for the moment the Holateinn and other breeds of cattie are wondering what on earth is the matter. Bazaars may net considerable for tho church, but to see dainty daugh ters of society iu picturesque costume or evening dress sitting on tho lawn milking a gentle eyed cow is so great a novelty overy man for miles around will come and buy a glass of milk for sweet charity's suke, thereby swelling the receipts for milady's pet work. What the cows think of it cannot be recorded. Their expression would ! lead one to suppose they i'eel highly j honored. Milady's tapering fiugers and deft manipulation of their udders : does not lead them to suppose sha is ! not an expert, nor can it bo said she ■ is not. As soon as milady is interest- j ed, languid ami indolent as she may ! seem, whatever is a fad with her will quickly be learned. it was with some trepidation, how ever, that tho milking of cows began, j Every time the co w looked arouud or J switched her tail milady grow fright- j eued aud expected the pail to bo j kicked over. On one or to occasions | this did happen, to the groat amuse ment ot the persons who stood around, j Wo shall hear o innumerable jown ietcs, where the principal feature will | be the milking ot cows by society wo- | men this summer, and many a flirta tion, carried on over the milk pail, ; will later on terminate iu an engage- j rnent iu the conservatory, There t is nothing more bewitching than two rounded arms, bared to the j elbow, two roguish eyes glancing up at you, a Kcnsitivo mouth smiling at you, and then you are lost—it may be milk you are drinking at $5 a glass, but you don't care. Milady sometimes wears a milking costume ot Dresden shepherdess de sign, and then sho is like a picture. Two or three girls whoso houses are adjoining had the cows brought up near the veranda, and while milking them kept up a fire of conversation about the current events in society. [ Another time six society women do voted a morning to the "art" of milk ing. Six cows were led 011 tho lawn, aud six men, who were experts,taught their mistress how to milk. What a sight for the bystander! In dainty muslin gowns, largo picture hats, the milkmaid of society cuts a dash, as she does in everything.— New York Herald. GOSSIP. The whole of Princess Maud's trous seau was mado in England. Twenty-six Kansas women have banded together to write a novel. At the present time tha Princess of Wales's holding of pearls cannot be worth less than $50,000. Forty Carthage (Mo.) girls havo started a local fad by having a break fast picnic and wading party. Princess Hclene, the Duchess ot Sparta's baby, is Queen Victoria's twenty-second great-grandchild. A bride in Montreal appeared at the altar with her pet canary fastened to her shoulder by a golden chain. Dur ing the marriage ceremony tho bird broke into song. "I do not belong to any woman's club or organization," says Eila Wheeler Wilcox, "with the single ex* ception of the Daughters of the Amer ican Devolution." Paris dressmakers havo declared themselves in favor of the proportions of the Venus de Milo, and health and beauty ol the artistic kind are prophe sied as tho result of the movement. The eyeglass threatens to come into fashion among a section of very smart and up-to-date London ladies. In Bond street you may see three or four ladies who use a single glass with skill and ease. Dr. Sarah I. Shuey, who has just been elected President of the Board of Health of Oakland, Cal., is the first woman to receivo such an honor in that commonwealth. The office was given to her without the least solici tation on her part. Queen Wilhelmina of Holland has a miuiaturo farm,the produce of which she gives to the poor and to tho hos pitals. tier Swiss chalet is stocked with tho accumulated toys of twelve years or more and here she learned to "keep house" in the most approved Dutch style. Mr. Victoria Woodhill Martin, an American who now edits a London journal, says that the cause of woman suffrage in America is virtually won. Professor Goldwin Smith says tho cause is dead in this country. This seems a case where great minds run in different grooves. Ex-Queen Emma of Samoa is now in Berlin on a visit to the exhibition, accompanied by her husband, who was formally an officer in the German Army. They arc said to bo an ideally happy couplo. Her ex-Majesty has dropped her queenly title aud travels as a simple German frau. New Yorkers may be surprised to read in the London Sketch that the latest new thing in Gotham is a lady's bicycle hat, ot Tyrolcse shape, in straw or light felt, but surmounted by a white quill "risiug from a miuiaturo bicycle wheel, with a rubber tire and natural-looking spokes." The good old fashion of home weav ing threatens to become a lad since the Princess of Wales and her daughters havo turned their attention that way. Woolen homespun, cotton and silks are not only more durable, but more satisfactory from an esthetic point of view, when haudwoven. The Dev. Dr. J. F. Clymer, of the Stato Street M. E. Church, Troy, N. Y., in a recent sermon on tho bicycle, characterized the wheel us "a me chanical embodiment ol the principles of Christianity" aud a "nineteenth century sigh of the emancipation of woman from bondage of eex." A memorial has been addressed to tho Vice-Chaucellor of Cambridge Uni versity bearing tho name ot 181) mem bers of the Senate who favor the con ferring of some title which does not imply membership of the university upon women who, having satisfied tho requirements of tho university, havo already passed or shall hereafter pass a tripos examination. FASHION NOTES. Pale blue has tho preference above ail other colors on warm days. Bicycle gloves open in tho back, thus avoiding any pressure on tho palm. The fashion for ladies' sleeve links gives enterprising jewelers scope for many new design. I Silver candlesticks are quite tho i rage, and those io colonial pattern | continue to please. Belts of white kids, jowcled with I turquoise, give instance of the expense j lavished on this accessory to summer i dress. j Wash your white veil iu warm water | with good soap, pin to tho pillotV un ' til dry and you will havo saved fifty ! cents. If you havo a last year's summer wash-silk gown cover it with organdy and you havo tho latest idea ia cos tuming. Fall will U6her in a velvet seasou. Velvet frocks, velvet coat and velvet skirts will bo worn by all who can possibly afford them. SCIOI7HC AM) INDUSTRIAL. Experiments made at Paris by Dr. Bertillon have proved that kleptomania is easily cured by hypnotic suggestion. A prize of £2O is hereafter to be of ferred semi-annually to the surgical interne of the Boston City Hospital •'who administers ether in the most skillful and humane manner." Various nostrums nro proposed for tlie extermination of the army worm, but the majority oi" them seem to have the knack of destroying the plants themselves, root and branch. Superintendent D. W. Ure.ft?*, of tho gas company of Northampton, Mass., has found by experiment that a refuse from tho gas works known us "spent lime" is very elective in exterminat ing the army worm und similar pests. According to a Singapore paper six ty per cent, of the chid era patieut3 taken to the pauper hospital have been cured by hypodermic injeotions of striouuine, while fifty per cent, were saved in tho general hospital by other treatment. The newest thing in the way of aeronauts is tho proposal of Professor XV. W. McEv/au, of Jackson, Md., to ascent to a height of two miles by means of a rocket. This is not a sui cide scheme, as the professor will pro vide a parachute to assist his descent. Egyptologists are engaged in con sidering a scheme, presumably emana ting from tho Egyptian Government, for tho preparation of a comprehen sive and descriptive catalogue of an tiquities of Egypt in the possession of all the public museums und private collections throughout the world. A case of complete and immediate relief from the effects of ivy poisoning is reported in tho Medical World by Dr. W. L. Shanks. His patient was swollen from head to foot, but in uu hour after bathing in a solution of sodium hyposulphite was attending to business as if nothing had happened. It is said that an Oiiio driver has uu ingenious electric contrivance for shooting speed iuto a tiled horse. It is claimed that this battery was used for the first time in turf history at the recent Akron (Ohio) meeting. There has been some talk about it and some protests against its use on tho ground of cruelty. The Evolution ol' a Tornado.# Usually it is in the afternoon, bo tween the hours of two and live, after a warm and moist day, that the omin ous tornado clouds begin to form. For two hours before the breaking of tho 3torm the sky may have tho peculiar scalloped appearance given it oy tho ball like masses of vapor, or there may bo a warning of only half an hour be fore the clouds become suddenly stirred to violent agitation. A vast commotion is taking place on high; thera seems to be a panic among the clouds. Like great monsters black masses advance heavily but rapidly, sending out diro threats and warnings in jagged lightning flashes. Fleecy clouds beneath them race madly aloag and twist and whirl and scurry this way and that, as if terrorized and un certain where to flee. Tho light grows less and less until houses are dark and men running for shelter seem like black phantoms. Everything is very quiet; the leaves on the trees are stir ring slightly and tremulously, in strange contrast to the vast movement aud excitement overhead. There have been a thousand rapid changes among the hurrying clouds; now a supreme one comes. Off in the southwest, near the horizon, the clouds seem to rush together and drop from the sky in a black mass that sends out a great streamer to the ground. Hailstones and great drops of rain begin to fall, and with Hashes of lightning aud a grinding roar tho thing comes rushing ou. Tall trees in its path shoot sud denly upward; homes collapse, and their roofs and furniture soar aloft un til this demon cloud becomes laden with impediments. But it quickly tires of these toys of its fury; it hurls them violently aside and comes teari ug on as it' wild with insatiable rage and a desire for greater victims. Huge buildings of stone burst as if under mined with dynamite when it reaches them. The water in rivers mounts in a monster wave, and stanch vessels are left capsized anil foundering. The tornado's duration at a given point rarely lasts over ten minutes, and fre quently not over two or three ; at the end of this brief period it has gone raging and roaring on. But they have been long and eventful moments.— DeLuorest's Magazine. An Educated Horse. There'is a horse in Philadelphia whose business is to draw a collection wagon over a postofiioe route in the middle of the city which knows tht location of letter oozes us well as it.- driver, tho postman. There are a number of thoe boxes neur together on Broad street, just below Chestnut too near together for the postman to bother about driving Irom cue to the other. He is saved all trouble ol leading his horse, however, by Ihe in telligence of that animal, which as soon as the postmau alights at the first box walks off to the second and patiently waits there or his master. GtUiei'io*. Galleries are becoming fashionable in England, large tracts ot land :n suitable spots being abandoned to the birds, ou which they may build their nest-. If it is true that gull ' eggs can by coloring aud chemicals bo palm. I olf on tho public for plovers' eggs, ir is possible that the birds may bo pro tected for commercial reasons as a ell. One Melodious House. Henry Giles, farmer of Lytham, England, is the owner of a black Egyp tian gooso which has a voice like a canary bird. Every evcuiu ;• at dnu the goose, twittera uni trills moat, beau tifully. AN HISTORIC STEAMER. It lias Hail a Remarkable Career on the Hudson River. The steamer Drew left Albany on her last trip Saturday uiglit, amid the shriek ing of tugs and steamers. If the noisy demonstration was not so great as that which heralded Its first arrival it is be cause not so many vessels ply the waters of the Hudson at Albany its there did thirty years ago. Then the river front of Albany was lively and bustling. Now but for the tugs of the llonan line, the New York and New burg boats, and the few steamers that carry freight and passengers to nearby points, the waters of the river would bo unvexed by passing craft. It is the day of tlie railroad, but, while wind and water hold, the pleas ure and profit of marine adventure Willi never lose their charm. And so, though we speed the departing Drew, the coining Adirondack is cordially wel comed. If at tlie end of the first quar ter of the twentieth century the boat which comes so gay in hunting and gleaming paint, so endowed with all that makes marine aehltecture of this time wonderful and complete—lf, we say, this boat, then grown eld and ouf of date, is retired with a record as hon orable as that which the Drew takes with it in retirement, its owners will have reason to congratulate them selves. For the Drew's history is one of great distinction and honor. This notable steamer has been com manded by Stephen ,T. Ro-\ now trans ferred to the Adirondack, from the day it went into commission. If its saloons and cable.., could talk what a history they would tell: for. In Its time, the Drew carried as passengers nearly every person of prominence on this side of the Atlantic, and travelers from the old world were bound to have one trip on the Hudson River nignt boats, the fame of which had peuetrat ted wherever travelers go. There was nothing like them in the world—certainly nothing In Europe— which anywhere approached them for space of accommodation, for appoint ments, and for general comfort. The boats on tlie Rhine were small when compared with them, while the channel packets produced hideous nightmaies when contrasted with the luxury of travel on the Hudson. Not even the boats ou the Mississippi, when travel on that river was at Its height, were to he mentioned in the same breath. The Hudson Itiver steamers confessedly led all lines of inland travel until Colonel .Tatnes Fisk, Jr., took charge of the Fall River line of steamers. That marked the beginning of another era In American steamboating, and now the Sound boats In many respects are unapproachable. But the officers of the People's line are resolved that the glory of steamboating on the Hudson shall not be permitted to lodine.- Al bany Journal. Stars mid Distances. In gll the heavens, with the excep tion of passing meteors or meteorites, not one body occupies a position closet to earth than the moon, which is some 240,000 miles away. Very far, of course, side by side with any earthly distances, hut a mere fraction side by side with other astronomical distances. Next to the moon, our nearest occasional neigh bor is Yentts, and then Mars. Both Venus and Mars, however, are often further away from us than the sun, which remains always at somewhere about the same distance, roughly at from 90,000,000 to 93,000,000 miles. This dividing space between sun and earth Is of great importance In think ing about the stars, and It should he clearly impressed upon the mind. Next to the sun in point of nearness come the more distant planets—Jupiter, which is about five times as far from the sun as our earth Is; Saturn, nearly twice as far as Jupiter; Uranus, nearly twice as far as Saturn; and Neptune, learly three times as far as Saturn. All these planets belong to our sun, all are members of his family, all are part of the solar system. The size of the Solar system as a whole, consisting thus of the sun and ills planets, includ ing the earth, may he fairly well grasp ed by any one taking the trouble to mnster two simple fnets. They are these: That our earth is roughly about D2,0O0,0(J0 miles away from tlie sun, and that Neptune, the outermost planet of the solar system, is nearly thirty times as far distant from tlie suu as our earth is.—Chambers' Journal. A man does a fierce job of loving while he is at It, but it doesn't last longer, thau ice cream lu flout of a boy. Do men wiio have cork legs go to bed with them ou? > it Jllot | f Jfe? a line | Cto tell you tlir.t if you want TO i /do your washing easi in t.ho "np ) Cto date'* way, tho Sunlight way, 1 J without rubbing your clothes all to 1 I pieces (and your hands too)you must | lv:; Sunlight | t c is ta sK Soao I l less labor and greater gJr J C comfort, I Ornaraonlal Swallows. A flight of swallows made of the! most glittering brilliants Is one of the 1 newest ornaments with which the sum mer matron delights to adorn herself. Each of tho Ave jeweled birds can be separated and worn either as a brooch or as an ornament for the hair. To those who find the swallow too niodrst j r. device the robin redbreast Is a fash- i louable substitute. The robin in mount- i cd on a branch of leaves and berries. 1 sad has gay. jeweled wings and a breast of enameled Iridescent red. A conceit that Is more odd than beautiful takc3 ' the fortn of a white rabbit, his body I all pearly, bis pink eyes of the balas ruby, and his long ears are pearls with suggestions of pink about, their tips, j Often, byway of further elaboration, the little rabbit is mounted upon hiN i hind legs upon a gold bar, and is gaz ing upon a butterfly glistening with golden beryls and purple amethysts. Britain's Railway C'learlug-Ilousc. The railway clearing-house is one of [ the largest otllces in Britain. It lias a | staff of 1,000 clerks and JSO out-or j door officers. "Penny wlee and pound foolisV are those i who think it economy to uso ckoip soda and rosin vor.iinstead of tho good old Dobbins' Electric Soap; lor sale by all jrrocers since HMS. Try it once. Be sure* buy genuine. The Microscopical Association at a meet- ; in# in Pittsburg upheld and indorsed the practice of vivisection. STATE OF OB to, OITT or TOLEDO, J LUCAS COUNTY, I S,< FRANK L'HENKY makes oath that he it the | lemur imiTner of the tlrtn of K. ,T. T HKNKY & I LO.,uoingbus:iiebs in tlmC.tym Toledo, County I end Slate aforesaid, end ihatßiiiil Arm will pay j thesutu of ONE UUNOHLD DOLLARS fur eucu 1 and every caao o CATARRH tinu cannot ba careu by the USE WALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CIIICNJCT. r\vorn to before mo ami subscribed in my i —' — i presence, this 6tU day or December. ■j SEAL \A. D. 1860. A. W.CI.KASON, Hal I'M Catarrh Core IS taken internally. and : sets directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CIIKNEY fc Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggist*, 75'*. Hub's Family Pill , are tlio best. FlTSstopped free anil permanently cured. No I fits after first day 'S use OI DR. KLINE'S GREAT NKRVKRKSTORBR. Freetrial BOLT .eaiul treat- I ise. Send to Dr. Kliue.UDl Arch St., Phila.. i',i. i I Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gunm.reduces inilammu- : tlon, allays pain; cures wind colic. -Vie a bottle. I cannot spenlc too highly of Mho's Cure for i Consumption.—MßS. FRANK Monus, 21* \V. ISJd St., New York, (Jet. 2tl, M4. ' HG eoacy ' Sometimes quality is sacrificed in the AjLls effort to give big quantity for little money. ' B f No doubt about that. /4-A~Yi But once in a while it isn't. ([YIP For instance, there's" BATTLE AX." /•: -vlv The piece is bigger than you ever saw Vp before for 5 cents. And the quality is, as /.LJla many a man has said, 44 mighty good." There's no guess work in this statement. | h is just a plain fact. You can prove it by investing 5 cents in "BATTLE AX." v p,/ ' i STali HS&SiSnsi FT : " IF siiVEg s !:| J -/a hjr \tf >r ASRMOTGC double ::i price, tin>i u tuls must also double in price, VjTV "a ® ® Aitjr QOh'.i'AHT. a ' ; th. ya. o r - labor. ' i labor doubles in cost and tne prod l.?¥ U * Xr& pu.. . uc * 'ho mine doubles in cost, Aermotor3, Pumps, Spiral \/,y.. 3 iy J,- /nfjg c ; KO ciX^it. Worth Pipe. Fittings, Cylinders. Tanks and Substructure-.-, being tha Nffllo JZv% t'' J Sao .u'iton'io,'•>*.; l >r- product of the mine and labor, must also double in cost and vw ;.vf coir, \tii.:t*r:as '. '.J"fit*,price; therefore, your >i now v.iil buy ns much a nof tho TO# §'•*'!? t- i r ,I y. ■•viii l.ouii, /> •"'••' . ' .une dolls:-' i: silver wins, or if peonle think it will win. gSb Kfj "-i ft* Ktf | jj in favor'of buying now. The ffifl o*s d. y&f Dubuque.J, • \ r .._ '/•--> U v K*J :%* 8 advanceniay come in c. mouth \v3 fio W ? ort ;J > '* M * : n a week. Aon,rotor price will not aiivr.ir e unit r.s id tfc-iri tju dv.-.ncc in i.-.hor at 1n it • fir JH Tr\'*\v. •Y l * ,t,lC ' on ('. .iiCyan-ters are .:o]( bslowanyi'uing evurqcot. il, * "25-yy V.A tv l>r ,a,in.';Doii V'F • "d <••.? r; r ponds r.ro at low as they era bo produced, '.{J 5C P P !<?•.:. N v ;/M' 1 "'•'•'lt f•; sr. . mild facilities. A general rush to c> tr \-!y "MIS 7ssl*°Z y°,k CM,; |l| 11 nnch, may qnicklyexhaoatour jflFa xim.aor ...•• .u,-p, . t•,.> ..van - o<•<-.: • ,ti|* c&a &L-: IFYCU bsfsow i PVPKIV sis li a o abHila I Hfia!j2ftiLkii6i3 B£ J Hi liiiliK I jwiS'fi S U CAW MAKE MORE MONEY IN THE MIDDLE SOUTH. [ -tj rnn n>!4 '' t -noH :.s Jtjncli. 1T( eni ; ll nig Northern farm and pt t' -e ah rcanv nproi for h'l —* money d"\vn h iv. NVe sell Innnv .lanns for ns to S'JOm uero. Mnntv , f yaiir. . ... cm nuuii- No . . ... t.. hot no. .•! . . - , ■ .. • . n hern rortnars arai a 't rn - 11 ' ■' "' 1 wrlte ' ,r and ark all tlio quest ions you v. us: to. Ai 80UTI1L1I.N iIO.AIJ>i:i:!,:.ICS* LAND COMPANY, SomervSUc, Tcnn. Yau Wiil Keallia {li32 " Thay Live Ifecli Who Liva OiOui'iSj'," if Yew Use Gladness Comes With a better understanding of the transient nature of the many pliya* ical ills which vanish before proper ef forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in I the knowledge that GO many forms of I sickness are not due to any actual dis- I ease, but simply to a constipated condl- I tion of the system, which the pleasant ! family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt jly removes. That is why it is the onlv ; remedy with millions of f:on:!ko. undis everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is tho one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organs on which it acts. It is there! Te all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pur chase, that you have the genuine article, which is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all rep* i ut a hie druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, ; and tho system is regular, then laxa tives or other remedies are not needed. I If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful : physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely used and gives most general satisfaction, ME Oram OF SOTBf DIME NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. f Classic*. Letter*, Scicm-e. Law, Civil, .lie/ rbaiiicHl nnd Electrlcitl Eugiueeriiu:. Thorough I'rriiu Hi lory and Commercial Coiir*e*. EccleHiaMti. nl students a* special rates. Rooms Free. Juuiur or Senior Year, (.'olleeiata t Courses. St. l'lDviud'- If all, for boys under 13, I The I (Mill Term will open September St It. 18. (Hi n Sou lies sent iruc on application to Very Rev, A. Alorrlnscy, C. S. C. President# F N U 33 nmilU ! *nl WHISKY habit curea. I at W Lill Iff EHEE. Dr. B. M. WOOI.LEY, Atlunta.Oa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers