Health Isimpossible without purc.healthyblood. Puri fied and vitalized blood results from taking Sarsaparilla The best—in fact Ihe One True Blood Purifier. Hood's Pi lis 'or the liver and bowels. 26c. A Pumice Stone Barrier. A floating barrier of pumice stone, nineteen miles long, over a thousand yards wide and fifteen feet deep, clos ing a seaport to all vessels as effectual ly as a boom could do, It not being the sort of thing one Is likely to forget. And yet that was one of the results of the Krakatoa eruption, the port being Tedok Retoung In Sunda straits. Form ed In n few hours, It would almost seem to be the supreme effort of nature In the pumice-making line, were It not that such Immense quantities are found at the bottom of the sea. A queer place for pumice stone; but pumice when pro duced Is really heavy; It Is only the air cavities in it that makes It light, and as It floats It becomes water-logged, and down It goes. Most of tbo pumice we use In Europe comes from the Ll parl Islands, north of Sicily, "the home of Vulcan," whence Vulcano as the name of one of them, and our "vol cano" as descriptive of the natural fea ture of which It Is the type. Here are the pumlee quarries—at Monte Chirica and Its craters Monte Pelata and For gla Vecehia—where over a thousand men are at work In the narrow tunnels and galleries, lighted by clay lamps of antique form. The whole hillside is perforated with groups of these tun nels, which number between 200 and 800, and are so narrow that the men can hardly pass each other in them. And just as coal Is found In beds alter nated with sandstone and shale, so ths pumice Is In layers between harder lavas aad ashes.—Leisure Hour. A Despotic Postmistress. She was postmistress of Penzance, Cornwall, and ruled her office with u hand of steel. She had two rules which admitted of no exception—she never gave change, and she would not open the office window when "Box Closed" or "Mail not Sorted" was placarded. The sport-loving gentry often tried to break through her cast-iron rules. Two such attempts Mr. P.aines, sometime Inspector general of her majesty's mails, chronicles In his book, "On the Track of the Mall-Coach;" A traveler wagered that he would break through the blockade of "Box Closed." He knocked BO persistently at the little window, that at last It was opened far enough for him to thrust In a bundle of letters. He thought for a moment that he had won; but he didn't know the postmistress, who flung Ills letters Into the street. Then a colonel undertook to undei* mine the postmistress's position on the glving-of-change question. Present ing himself at the window, he tendered a liulf-crown. request lug to lie supplied with a shilling's worth of postage stamps. "1 give no change." said the lady. "Oh, very well!" replied the colonel. He withdrew for a minute or two, and then returned with a hag of sixty pennies. Tapping gently at the win dow. he suavely Bald, "A penny stamp, If you please, madam." She fixed him with the glittering eye of triumph, took the penny, gave the stamp, and shut the window. A min ute later there was a second knock, and a second request, "A penny postnge stamp, if you please, madam!" At the thirtieth penny the postmistress sur rendered and agreed to give change. A Mean Mnn. "He Is the meanest man living," said Mrs. Newlywed to a lady friend. "In what sense is he mean?" "When Jack and I were on our bridal tour he was sitting right opposite to us In the enr, and whenever we came to a long tunnel he lit a cigar."—Texas Bifter. CAN'T HELP TELLING. No village so small. No city so large. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, names known for all that is truthful, all that is reliable, are attached to the most thankful letters. They come to Lydia E. Pinkham, and tell the one story of physical salvation gained through the aid of her Vegeta ble Compound. The horrors horn of displacement or ulceration of the womb: Backache, bearing-down, dizziness, fear of coining calamity, distrust of best friends. All, all—sorrows and sufferings of the past. The famed "Vegetable Compound" bearing the illustrious name, Pinkham, has brought tliom out of the valley of suffering to that of happiness and usefulness. P N U 37 90 m Heat ( ouffh Bjrup. Tastes Good. Use W| 2 In time. Sold by drugglsta. Rl 11 eaBEBBBBaEESgi THE TRYST. At nigbt beneath the silver stars, The gleaming stars, the dreaming stars, She waits beside the pasture bars Till down the path I pass, O; And all the whispers of the airs, The shifting airs, the drifting airs. Are freighted with the angels' prayers To guard my little lass, O. Her eyes are like a summer sea, A heaving sea, a grieving sea. And, ah, their light is all for mo, And all for me her love, O: As waiting there amid the gloom, The darkeninggloom. the hearkening gloom, She breaths the evening's faint perfume That broods the fields above, O. Ob, Margery, my little love, My nearest love, my dearest love, Soft-eyed and gentle as a dove, Across the fields she trips, O; And, ah, the all-enthralling charm, The captured charm, the raptured charm, To feel her hand upon my arm And touch her dewy lips, O. Beside the bars with shiniug eyes. With youthful eyes, with truthful eyes, The listening vastness of the skies Bends low to see us meet, O; Till up the Inne she goes from me, She starts from me, she parts from mo, And all the grasses bow to see And kiss her passing feet, O. —Quy Wet more Carryl, in Truth. ZULEIKA'S WOOING. AN EN3LISH COLONEL'S STORI. T is a good few ; \ years ago sinco one jfe April found mo I quartered at Peaha wur, in India. Out on the frontier, as most of you kuow, our extreme out posts are Michui, Abnzai and Shub kudr, three as —" dreary spots as a man could ever hope to 6ee. They have not, as I dare say you know, a single redeeming feature being soli tary mud buildings which hold the police aud native troops who are sup posed to overawe the tribesmen, and which, except the commandant and the doctor, don't offer many attrac tions in the way of society. You know what frontier Fervice in the old days was like. Forays by the trades men, and punitive expeditions by the Sirkar, carried to such on extent that we almost realized the idea of "Brnnksome Tower," in the "Lay of the Last Minstrel," and "drank the red wine through the helmet barred." You know the sort of life—rows with the tribesmen eternally spring ing up and dying down again in indi vidual localities, whilo as a matter of fact there was always troublo at one or more places along the frontier. At the time I am speaking of, the post of commandcnt of the irontier forts was not in much quest. I don't know that the authorities nt Simla were much troubled by eager appli cants ; in fact I think the general at Peshawur usually detailed some uu lueky major from the Staff Corps and sent him nolens volens to hold Ihe fort as long OH ho could with decency be made to stay. There was trouble brewing that April, and in Peshawur wo all knew it. How it come about we none of us cared much, but the man before the then incumbent had gone home sick, and the commandant pro tern, was reported to bo in daily fear of his life. Well, unpleasant as it was, it was scarcely a surprise, when, one morn ing the assistant adjutnnt general rode up to my bungalow in great ex - citement, and told me I was to out at once aud assume command of the fortß. "You're to lose no time," he said. "Poor So-and-so" (mentioning the late commandant) "was shot last night by some scoundrel, and the general wants you to try and find out who did it. The police are making inquiries, but you know what that means. By the wav, he wants to see you before you go." A soldier never has much time to make his arrangements, and that very evening I rode out to the forts,having receivo I a long lecture from the gen eral on that confounded word "tact" which, as we find in the service, is always on everybody's lips, aud not understood by one man in a hundred who uses it. Well, I must get on with my story, or vo shall be in trie Thames before I come to the point of it. I never thought much about tact, but I al ways believed that a well-born nutive is us much a gentleman as an English duke, and will behave to you just as you treat him. I soou discovered my unfortunate predecossor had tried to ride rough-shod over the tribesmen, and had made his hand felt in every corner of his command. A Pathan is as vengeful as a Corsicau of good fam ily, aud will carry his feuds as far as a self-rcspectiug American desperado. There are always ready with knife or ciHo to exact vengeance from any enemy, and near Peshawur will ofteu murder the wrong man, if they can't find the right. An Englishman who is accustomed to living in a law-abiding country )s no match for them, and so my predecessor found to his cost. They shot him as he was smoking his pipe after dinner one night, on his own veranda in view of the guard. Of course I never found his murderer— I never expected I should—but I did find that my own system of treatment paid better than his, aud before very long I had, as the politicians would have expressed it, "established excel lent relations with the surrounding tribesmen." There was a very simple way of testing this. A fow hundred yards from the gate of the fort a former commandant had made for himself a garden, sunk a well, and planted trees. Hero moßt of the vegetables used by the garrison were grown. The Path ans broke down the walls, cat the water courses and stole the vegetables. But I started a different system; I was civil to tho neighboring Kahns and sent them baskets of vegetables, and before very long I found my pro duce grew in plenty, and more, on the fine summer evenings, after tho heat of the day, when I went across to the garden and sat under the trees and smoked my pipe, one or other of the Khans would drop in for a chat, and in a short time I reckoned many friends among the supposed irreclaim able blackguards who owned tho fron tier Tillages. Among them all there was none with whom I got on bettor than a grand old fellow named Mahomed Aslim Khan, chief of a village near the fort. He was a thorough gentle man, had served in his younger days under the Sikh generals, and was as proud of his home and his scars as any honorable man need be. Many were the pleasant evenings we spent together, for, as I have said, European society was limited, and a fine old fel low like that a perfect godsend to a lonely man. Well, for a time all went merry as a marriage bell, till one unlucky day a case arose regarding a theft of cattle from old Aslim Khan's village. The thief was caught red-handed aud tried by a native magistrate, and condemned ohieliy on the Khan's evidence. Af ter the trial, I met the old gentleman casually and exchanged a fow sentences with him. Not five minutes later I heard a shot. Alarmed by tho cries, I ran in the direction, and to my hor ror found my old friend weltering in his blood. Inquiry soon showed that tho assassin was the thief condemned that day. Ho had escaped from cus tody, armed himself somehow, and befo:e finally taking himself off had shot his accuser. We always kept a portion of tho cavalry escort in readiness lor emer gencies, and in less time than it takes me to toll you, the assassin was being followed by a mounted party. My horse was soou saddled, aud I, too, tried to follow, but unsuccessfully, as they were too for ahead, and I had to sit at home and wait for news. It was late in the afternoon when my search party returned, unsuccess ful. They had ridden after the mur derer, and, being slightly better mounted, wore rapidly gaining on him, when the way was barred by a broad, broken nullah, beyond which lay a village. The assassin knew the ground, his pursuers did not. The advantage enabled him to get clean across the nullah, while the cavalry were looking for a road for their horses. He rode boldly into the vil lage, from which, unluckily, all the meu happened to be absent, and find ing an elderly woman muuohing a chupatti, snatched it from her hand, ate u portion, and proclaimed that he had eaten of their salt, and olaimed sanctuary. You know tho Pathans. By the time my party got across the nullah he was securely hidden, and while they were haggling, a second searoh party arrived from Michni under commund of a Euro pean officer. Had the natives been left to themselves they would prob ably have seoured their man, but the offieer, in wholesome dread of tho authorities' orders re garding frontier complications, said he must withdraw, as they were out of British territory, and sent both parties home. Personally, I think I Hhould have risked a wigging, as the Pathans were little like to object to the capture of a British subject who hail murdered ouo of themselves. But my subaltern ruled differently. Of course we were disappointed, but one or two Khans who were with me bade me bo of good cheer; the murderer would bo caught. I said I hoped so. Next day a fine young Pathan, who was a sowar in the cavalry detaobment at the fort, came to me and asked for long leave to visit hishome. Igrauted it without hesitation, but that night,as I rode past tho spot near my garden where his relatives had buried the body of poor Mahomed Aslim Kbau, 1 saw that a lamp was burning on the new-made grave, and fiower3 were strewn upon it; and happening to meet one of the Khans, I was told that whore publio punishment had failed, private vengeance would step in. The young sowar, Afsul by name, had taken up the vendetta, aud Aslim's murder would assuredly bo avenged. It was six weeks later when, ono evoning, my servant brought mo news that Afsul, the sowar, would like to be admitted to my august presence. I readily granted tho permission, and in he oame. Ho was a great swell. His llowing, white garments were new and spotless, his hair carefully dressed, aud his face clean shaved, except his mustache. I asked him what brought him to see me, and a smile ef pride lit up his lace as ho replied, with muny curses ou tho dead scoundrel, that ABlim'i murderer had met his deserts, and that he himself had slain him. Bhocked as I was, I asked for particulars. Ho told me how with in finite patience he had tracked the as- Bnssin from village to villago as ho fled from tho vengeance which was, ho knew full well, sure to follow. How ho had assumed disguise, aud traveled hard, ofteu hungry aud thirsty, through the valleyH, till at last, ouo evening at suuset he had overtaken his enemy. He had found him in n quiet spot kneeling, with his face to ward Mecca, hesido the shriuo of some forgotten saint, going punctiliously through thoso devotions which no pious Mussulman, however blood stained his hands may bo, ever neglects. He described how ho stood watching him paying his last devo tions on earth, his own finger on tho trigger of his carbine, and how, as he finished his devotions, he rose and folded up the shawl he had used as a carpet. This was A foul's opportunity. Calling upon tho assassin to turn, he covered him with the carbine, and re viling him in all the exprossive terms of Pathan abuse, he then and there, as the sun disappeared in tho west, shot his enemy like a dog. You know how hard it often is to fit our English notions of justice on to native customs. Personally, I should have liked to let the boy, for he was little more, go scot free. But the commandant of the frontier forts dared not do so, and to Afsul's sur prise I ordered him into custody. I did so with great regret. After he was soeurely looked up I sent for tho Tehsildar and asked if he was safe. I think the man guessed my anxiety, for he 6aid gravely, as an Oriental will, even when he is making a joke: "Sahib, that young man is as safe as we can make him, but our prison is a very bad one. Men escape." "But Afsul won't?" I asked, eag erly. "These things, my lord," he an swered, "are in tho hands of Provi denoe. We must wait and see." Next morning tho Tehsildar was early at my honso. As he spoke I could not help thinking that the suspicion of a smile was lin gering round his fat face. "My lord," he said, joining his hands and bowing to tho ground, "a miracle has happened. In the night that young man broke his bonds and escaped. I fear wo shall not seo him again." I need not tell you how I held an in quiry and censured all concerned. I do not think they minded muoh. None of them seemed to think I was in earn est. However, thero was no help for it—Afsul had vanished. That night I rode away toward old Aslim Khan's village. As I approached it I hoard sounds of merriment, and presently there issued from the village a gay procession. First came a group of horsemen all gayly attired, and pre ceded by drums and horns—among them was one I thought I kuew—then followed a closed litter, and then a lot of men driving buffaloes and carrying distaffs, cooking-pots, and a large na tive bod, painted in gaudy colore. As they saw me the musicians beat louder than ever, and 1 thought the horseman waved his hand. I determined to in quire. An old graybeard volunteered information. "Your lordship," he said, "prob ably knew tho latw Mahomed Aslim Khan, who is new wjth the prophet in I'uradise. He had a lovely daughter, Zaleika, who loved a youug man, Af sul by namo. 'The chief did not favor the match, for he was rioh and the young man was poor. Well, the chief was slain, and Afsul undertook to avengo him. Now the beautiful Zu leika is his by conquest. Yonder Af sul rides, this is his bride, these are the marriage gifts. They are going Afsul's home in a distant village." I turned my horse's head home more or less contented, though I pon dered, too, over the strangeness of frontier customs. That was tho only excitoment while I was commandant. Well, lads, that's my yarn. Make the best of it. If we don't turn in, it will be daylight be fore we get to bed. Good-night.— Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly. A Crack Shot. "Out our way we are apt to think that an Eastern mau cannot shoot a pistol," said 11. T. Jeukiuson, of Choyenne, at the Metropolitan, "but I had one experience at Laramie that coneineed me this idea is incorrect. A finely dressed young man stepped into a saloon to get a drink, where n lot of cowboys were haying a good time. The Bight of the 'tenderfoot' was the signal fcr some fun, and half a-dozen pistols were drawn just to scare the man from the States. The stranger wore a silk hat, and the ery went up, 'shoot the tile.' The man turned with his glass at his lips and without a tremor drew a pistol from his coat pocket. By tho time tho drink was swallowed six pistols lay on the floor; he had shot every one of them out of their owners' hands. They crowded around him, and the tender foot was not allowed to pay for any thing that night."—Washington Star. Horned Toads Are Useful. "The ugliest and yet most usoful things in California are horned toads," said A. L. Mason, ot Los Angeles, ut the Shorebam. "They are by no means pleasant to look at, and the In dians formerly held them in sacred veneration. The people of California do not regard them very highly, and they are killed whenever found by many who imagine that they are ven omous, which is not tho ease. The Hawaiian?, however, know their value, and President Dole has written to dif-' ferent sections of California to arrange j for having several thousand sent to Hawaii for the purposo of destroying certain insects. Careful investigation has shown that they are exeeedinly valuable for this purpose, and there is now a good deal of talk about preserv ing them morecarofully in California." Washington Star. New Use lor Class. Somebody has been experimenting, and finds that glass is a substitute for marble and granite in cemetery work. Glass gravestones arc inexpensive, ex tremely durablo and almost without serious objection of any kind. They are not porous, therefore will absorb no diseaso germs or unpleasant odors. Tho elements have practically no ef fect on thorn, and it is said that in scriptions placed on tkom will be everlastingly enduring, and after a couplo of oeuturies will be as fresh and bright as on the day they were set up. This idea was dovoloped by watching tho wear of tho glass in tho port holes of steamers. This resists the heaviest shocks of tho waves, and is more durable than any other known substance that can he used for this purposo. Italian Advealurei In Abyssinia. ' Comparable In many respects to our j Indian fighting, the disastrous earn- I paign in Abyßslnhi has not merely i taught the Italians n hard lesson, but lias supplied them with a fund of stories of Individual bravery which [ will prove bracing to the national val or, though the main result of the cam paign Is crushing to the national pride. [ Men engaged In desperate conflict with tho North American Indians are known to save one charge In their rifles or revolvers tc be used on themselves nt the last extremity—to save them j from Indian torture. It Is estimated J that hundreds of Italians died by their j own hands in the buttle of Adowa and during the terrible days which followed it for the same reason. General Arlmondi Is known to have j committed suicide In the presence of i his remaining men; but this was rather i from chagrin and grief than from fear | of torture at tie hands of the enemy. Sometimes the Italian officers were too ready to hasten their fate, and In I some Instances they estimated too un favorably the character of their enemy. ! Captain Ademolk and Lieutenant Me- | narlnl, after being both badly wound ed, fell Into the hands of the Ab.vssln lßn chief, Sebat. They expected to be put to death, but through the Interven tion of the chief they were given drink and set at liberty. Soon, however, they were surround ed by another band of about a dozen natives. By this time the two officers had been Joined by an Itnllan corporal, who had his rifle. Giving themselves up for lost, the two officers were about to shoot themselves. "Don't be such fools!" said the cor poral. Ho led the way to a rock, and the throe white men leaned their backs against It. Then the corporal proceed ed to bring down three or four of the Abyssinia ns to skillfully that the rest took to flight. Captain, lieutenant and corporal all succeeded lu reaching a place of safety. The name of the corporal Is not pre served by the Italian papers which nar rate this adventure, though he seems more worthy of fame than many men of higher rank. Hogs that Swim, It Is generally believed that hogS cannot swim, but Capt. Alfred Piatt of Burlington, N. J., says his can. Capt. Piatt owns a farm on Burlington Island. Several days ago he was looking over his stock, when he became aware that some of his hogs were missing. He began n search for the fugitives, and going down on the beach he was sur prised to llud a dozen of them swim ming around In the water. He tried In various ways to coax then to shore, but in vain. After having stayed In the water ns long ns they cared to they slowly made their way back to their sty without so much as a glance at their owner. A few days later there were some little pigs born, und before they were twenty-four hours old they were taken for n swim by tbelr parents, who had become so fond of the sport that they visited the beach dally.—New York Herald. Every summer we wish we were ns cold-blooded ns people say we nre. " Uncle Hilly Hubbell of Itatli. N. V. From the Advocate, Bath, JV. Y. undents of Bath, N. Y., hnvo taken a great fancy of late to Lake Salubrin, which lies just outside the village, and during tho past two years a score of new cottages have ! gone up on its shores. Choice locations are becoming scarce and the early settlers are , careful now to keep what dooryard they have left. Your correspondent visited the Lakereoentlv and dropped in to see "Uncle Billy" Hubbcll in his comfortable cottage under the pines. Mr. Hubbell established himself at the Lake before the boom com menced, aud has one of the prettiest locu tions there. Mr. Hubbell said that this was the first spring in twenty years in which he hail been free from his old enemy, sciatic rheumatism. He thought he had contracted this disease while running ns express messenger on the Erie and other railroads between 1849 and 1859. although he did not feel its acute symptoms until some fifteen years laler. Mr. Hubbell is now the second oldest expressman in the United States and recalls many inter esting reminiscences of these early days. In 1876 he went to the Western frontier, and has suffered from sciatic rheumatism ever since. Speaking of the many efforts he had made to get relief from this painful ailment, he said that while in New Mexico ho visited the Las Vegas and llamas springs, and later he tried those at Manitou, Col., and Little Bock, Ark. Coming east ho tried the White Sulphur Spring, Ohio, St. Catherine, Can., ami Clifton and Avon, in New York, but without being able to get the slightest relief. As he advanced in age. his trouble became more painful. "Why," lie exclaimed, point ing to the farm house of William Burleson, about six hundred feet distant, "1 would yell so when those twinges caught me that they could hear me down thero." William H. Hallo k, owner of ITnllock's bank, lu Bath, is a nephew of Mr. Hubbell, and last winter he insisted that "Uncle Bil ly" should try Tiuk Bills for Pale People for bis rheumatism. Mr. Hubbell is free to say that he bad no faith hi the pills whatever, and only tried them because of the insist ence of Mr. llailock. He had already tried "more than a million remedies" before ho came to Pink Pills aud as none had rendered him the slightest benefit, he wns pretty well d'scouraged. However, to please Mr." iIi\i- lock, he got a box of Pink Pills. Since the* (some three or four months), Mr. Hubbell bus not felt a single truce ot rheumatism, and is now on his fourth box of the pills, lie cannot explain how this marvelous relief was effected, but feels sure it was the pills which did it, and is now as < nthusiastic in their endorsement us was his nephew, Mr. Hallock. Mr. Hubbell now comes into Btuh almost every day, and says ho could ride a bicycle if he only had some one to help him on and off. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 32d day of May, 1896. W. P. Fisn, Notary Puhlio. Dr. Williams 1 Pink Pills for Palo People Are now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all forms of weakness arising from a watery condition of the blood or shattered nerves. The pills are sold by all dealers, or will be K'-ut post paid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, by addressing I)r. Williams 1 Medicine Company, Schenec tady. N.Y. Heart Disease Relieved In SO IftnatM. Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes, and speedily ef fects a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Pal pitation, Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells, Pain in Loft Side uiul ail symptoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces. If your druggist hasn't it in stocks ask him to procure it lor jou. It will save vmir lit*. A. Advertised. j New Yorker—But you advertised that you hud running water on both floors. I Jayhawker—So we did, stranger; an' 'twas a foot deep in the collar, but we hain't had no rain naow go La' on a week to-morrow.—Exchange. Blodds—Here's a rather clever little book, "Don'ts for Club Men." Slobbs— It Isn't the don'ts that worry me; it's the dues.—Philadelphia Record. How's This? Wo offer Ons Hundred Dollars Reward for any cm of Catarrh that cannot be cured bv Mall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CntNKY & Co., Props., Toledo, O. | We, toe undersigned, have known F. J. Che ney for the last 15 yearn, and believe him per j X honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion made by their firm. Troax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Wilding, Rinnan ft Marvin, Wholesale i Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. | Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system, i'rice, 75c. per beetle. fciolU bv all Druggists. Testimonials free. Mall's Family Pills are the best. Ostarvfe and Coldfc ReTUved la II to •• Minutes. One short pnff of the breath through the Blower, supplied with each l>ottle of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this Povr- | t der over the surface of the miaul imssages. Painless and delightful to u-e. it relievos in stantly and permanently cures Catirrh, Hay Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Ton si lit is and Deafness. If your druirgist hasn't it in stock, ask him to procure ii for you. A herring weighing six or seven ounces is provided with about 510.000 eggs. All who use Dobbins' Electric Soap praise It as the leaf, cheapest and moat economical family soap made; but if you will try it once it will tell a still stronger tale of its merits iUel/. Ilea— try it. Your grocer will supply you. The first church on the site of St. Paul's, London, was built in 010. FlTSstopped free and permanentlycured. No fits after first day's use of I)h. Kurd's Great N krvk Restorer. Free i ria I hot tie and treu t - ise. Send to Dr. Kline. Itfl Arch St., Phila.. Pa. I use Piso's Cure for Consumption both in my family and practice.—Dr. G. \V. Patter son, Jnkster, Mich.. Nov. o, 1894. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing SyrupforChildren teething, softens the gums.reduees inflamma tion, allays pain; cures wind colic. 25c a, bottle. Sword*fish as food is nfLnitely superior t salmon. There are soaps and soaps but only one Sunlight Soap which is the sonp of soaps and washes clothes with less labor and great er comfort. Makes homes brighter Makes hearts lighter ///■''-, Lever Bros.. Ltd., mtep. llmlH.i. A ITarripon Stp . N. T. jjjj "It Bridges You Over." 70 ®j "Battle Ax" bridges a man over $ ® many a tight place when his pocket- V? ft book is lean, A 5 - cent piece of ®j "Battle Ax" will last about as long as J6 Q a 10-cent piece of other good tobaccos. S2, ft This thing of getting double value for ft; ® your money is a great help. Try it and K| 1 |jj save ; Don't Pui Off Till Tfl-saorrow the Duties of To-day. 1 ' Boy a Cake of ___SAPOLIO Comes 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 sickness are not due 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, aniia everywhere esteemed so highly by all I who value good health. lis beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organs on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pui\ chase, that 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 arc not needed. 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. Nothing so Clean, wk* so Durable, so Economical, dCLf BIAS VELVETEEN SKIRT BINDINGS. You have to pay the same price for the "just as good." Why net insist on having what you want—S. H. & M. If your dealer WILL NOT supply yon we will. San'ples mailed free. " Heme Dressmaking Made Easy, ' anew 72 page book bv Miss Emma M. Hooper, cf the Ladies hone lournai. tells in pla'n words Vow to make dresses at home without previous training: mailed for 25c. S h. &. M. Co., P.O. box 699, N.Y. City. flounced hopele-r From first dose vmptotn-r" .idly disappear, • r.d in ten days at lc.i-t two-third* ci ad svmptoins areremoved. BOOK of testimonials ni nnrat nlm.s cures cent FREE. TE* DAYS Tar:AT*fKt UISKISKIB FREEby mail OIL Hill. tiIUU-N J- BOSS. MoUIW, AOmnU. Mk PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W MORRIS, WSHINGTON,D.C, Late Principal Examiner U 8. Pension Lureaa. :i > lurt war. I. u.i,ui.:ca,iu e - laiu.., atty. aloe*. N I 3V HIICIIU Mn <> WHISKY hHi.it cured, book sent UriUßl hike. Dr. RM. \V> u h i• v. At UniH.Oa.