Purify Your bloorl with a course of HoodM Mirsapn rilla and he ntrong and viperous whou the rhanpe to warmer weather comes. Hood's SarsapariSla I* tiir h<'-t in fnot t lie ()neTrueßlood Purifier. Hood's Pills with Hood's Sursajftrillii THE f'ATAItKII KE.HEDY That IIUH Made Dr. Hnrtmaii Frtmoim. Thero aro fow towns in the United States to which the fame of Te-ru-na has not spread as an unfailing remedy for catarrh. Those people who have been curod by it, of this insidious and supposedly incurable disease, spread the glad news to their friends. It has been nearly forty years since Po ru-na began to vanquish this dreadful disoaso and all through these years its cures are unnum bered. II is now an undisputed faot that Pe-ru-na will cure catarrh, aud thousands of people are yearly adding their testimony to the truth of this assertion, (treat is the joy of that household, one of whoso members has boou fading slowly before their eyes, when Pa-ru na with its- undeviaiing surety brings back health to the weak body. Dr. Hartman's latest book on catarrhal diseasos is now finished, and will be sent freotoiuiy address for a short time by the Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Company, Columbus, Ohio. JUST try a 10c. box of C'aacnret*, enndy ca thartic, finest liver and bowel regulator made. The proportion of blood to the total boy weight is about one to ten. Nn.To.tSac for Fifty Cent*. Over 400,000 euro I. Why not let Nn-To-Bsc regulate or remove your desire for lobaecr? .Saves money, m ikes health and manhood. Cure guaranteed. 50 cents and sl.l-0, at all druggists. A single microbe can become the parent of 1,000,000,000,000 offspring in 24 hours. Doubt Dispelled. "Sometimes a horrible doubt comes over me and 1 can't believe that you love me more than you did your first wife." "Yet in nil of the four years that we lived together she never wore a waist that hooked up on the shoulder, beeauso she didn't dare to nsk me to fasten It for her." And he was never doubted again.— Cleveland Leader. Feathered Ventriloquists. Ornithologists assert that some birds, especially sparrows, thrushes and rob ins. have vontrlloqulal powers. Hlrds, when surprised in singing, will be si lent, and then give forth a faint song that seems to come from a distance, though the singer may he actually not farther than ten feet away. "SHE DRESSES WELL." BUT HER CLOTHES OFTEN COVER A LIVING DEATH. Tbauty I* the Slirine of Men's Worship, and Women Vie With Knelt Other to Mnke Themselves Attractive. The remark. "Sliedresseselegantly," is a very common one in this age of wealth and progress. Women vie with each other in mak "l emSO iv. CS j at " JO irale diseases to stamp them women to suffer cause man can only work from theory, and at. best only patch up, without removing the cause. Proof is abundant that Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound re moves the cause, gives strength to the weakened organs, vigorous health to the system, and therefore beauty to the face and form. Mrs. IMnkham. Lynn. Mass.. gladly answers, free of charge all letters. Hero is one of the results : " Three months ago. 1 wrote you a letter describing my troubles, which were inflammation of the womb and bladder. I had not seen a well day since the birth of my second child, lb years ago. I had spent hundreds of < hilars for doctors and medicines. "Such pains as I endured. My back ached, my feet and limbs were swollen, anil it was almost impossible for me to stand ; I could not walk any distance. I received your answer to my letter, and followed closely all your advice, and I have been using Lydia E. Pink ham's Compound for three months. Now I can work all day without pain. I have recommended the Compound to many of my friends, and gladly recom mend it to all women in any way afflicted with female troubles."-—LYDIA BATIK, 227 Spring St. . Greensburg Pa PNUS97 Be*t Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I*l In tlrao. Sold by druggists. |*li BH2BQ2tB4EG^Qi OL'R DOMESTIC MACHINERY. One of the things that surprise foreign housekeepers, notably French women, when they come over here is our cumbrous domestio machinery. Particularly are they amazed that it should be such au almott universal oustom to have the family washing done at home. It is bad enough in the dwellings that shelter only one family beneath their roofs, bnt laundry work going on in the little sets of rooms in the apartment houses fairly startles the Parisian chatelaine. That this oustom must be changed sooner or later seems inevitable. So much of cooperative housekeeping couUl bo adoptod with profit to liiin or them who would undertake it and with enormous addition to the comfort and convenience of living. Tho nearest approach to this millennium at tho moment is tho scheme of some of the laundries to take the family wasbiug by the pound. Five cents per pound on all bundles of five pounds or over is charged, a prioe which includes the ironing of certain flat pieces like towels and bed-liaeu. The starched pieces are rotn.rned, starched and dried, uud ready to dampen and irou, and tho other pieces rough-dried. It such a system will pay iu isolated establishments with necessarily limited patronage it deserves a trial ou a wholesale plan.—New York Post. WHITE HOUSE ETIQUETTE. When the President and his wife drive out the President sits ou tho right hand seat aud his wifo ou the left. If there arc others in the carriage, whether ladies or gentlemen, they must sit with their backs to the horses. Whou Mrs. Cleveland was first mar ried she tried the oxperimeut of plac ing her mother opposite the President and herself in the Presidential landau, but the people laughed at it so im moderately uud professsd to think Mrs. Folsom (as she was then), to bo the maid, that it was speedily dropped. When the President's wife drives alone she sits iu the right hand cor "ber—the place of honor. The lady of the White House cannot set foot within those splendid houses iu Washington whoso flugstaffs murk the foreign embassy or legation. She oould not go without tho President, and as au embassy or legation is tech nically a part of the country it repre sents, the President oould not go—so that alio never sees the inside of a diplomatic house as long as she pre sides at tho Executive Mansion. The President dines only at Cabinet houses, and his wife cannot dine any where without him. President Arthur dined with Judges of the Su preme Court nnd with Senators —but as he had no wife the whole system was v. ry much simplified for him. Tho President's wife may, if she chooses, go to luncheons where there are no gentlemen, or to teas, both be ing regarded as strictly informal; but the danger of giving offense by ac cepting ouo invitation and declining another is so great that it is seldom or never risked.—lllustrated American. THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER.^ Tho daughter of tho farmer sits bo fore the lookiug glass, with its tarn ished gilt nnd painted flowers. Her bodice is unhooked. Her hair kisses curves and nooks. She hardly notices tho smell of the kerosene lump, so closely, so proudly and so sorrowfully does she look at herself in the glass. No play netress or model shown in the eheap picture magazines is her equal. Tho farmer's daughter does not suspect this; she knows it. No summer city boarder, in spite of skillfully con trived costume, could rival or ap proach hor iu enchantment of figure. Aud tho girl sits before the looking glass with itstaruished gilt and painted flowers. She thinks of the artist who stopped on the farm last summer. She remem bers his earless manners, his ease with himself and the world, his trinkets, his velveteen jacket, the smell of his pipe, his pajamn3 thrown upou the floor. He never wooed her iu direct speeoh, but Bhe recollects the compli ments of his eyes. The landscape chilled her all the day. The wood pile Binelled of mor tality. Mullein stalks shivered under tho leaden sky. Tho hills watched hor ironienlly. Thera was for her tho treadmill routine of housework. At supper she noticed tho shriveled skin ol her mother, the untidiness of her mother's hair along the nope of the neck. Her mother is not so very old in years; and yet how tired Bhe is! Hor father blow on his tea iu a saucer. He complained of hiß daughter's indifference to the storekeeper's BOU and then he pulled off his boots uud dried his feet in the oven of the kitchen stove. Aud now sho sits with unhooked bodice before the looking glass with its tarnished gilt and painted ttowets. It is not 9 o'clook, aud yet what is there for hor to do but go to bed? And what change or pleasure does sho see approaching her for weeks to come? A whistle calls to her fur down the valley. She starts up and goes to the window. She peers into the night, hoping to see the lights of the express train as it hurries toward the city. A mist enwraps the house. The daughter of the farmer undresses herself slowly anil puts out the light. Of what avail is her sumptuous beauty? Only the looking glass, with its tarn ished gilt and painted flower*, under stands her and appreciates her.— Boston Journal. MELBA'S MARVETJOUS GOWN. The gown whioh Mine. Melba wears in the third act of "La Trwiata"—the ball room scene—cost nearly fifteen thousand dollars. The embroidery is of seed pearls and of small diamonds applied by some wonderful French process, and its construction occupied over a year. The ivory brocaded satin of whioh it is composed was specially woven for it, and is of such body that it resembles a heavy cloth in weight, requiring no lining in either sKirt or bodico. It is of an ox traordinary lustre, proditoing an opalescent effect in certain lights, and, combined with tho fortune ol gems whioh Mmo. Melba will wear with it, will give her the appearance of stand ing in a robe of glimmering light. The trained skirt is a mass of jeweled embroidery. Tho pattern is outlined in a spiral plume, tlio stem composed of small diamonds. The body of tho plume is of spangles in virgin silver beaded with seed pearls. Tho em broidery outlines tho seams of this skirt, interspersed with an applied etching representing the camellia, tho stems and leaves being iu different shales of green. The bodico is made of satin in folds that seam to drape the form. It is without sleeves, being upheld over tho shoulders by chnins of diamonds—three strands to each side. On the left shoulder is a bunch of real camellias fastened with a msg uilioeut diamond elasp. Tho slippers arc made of tho same satin, and are embroidered to match wilh seed pearls and diamonds, the instep being liter ally studded with gems. Mmo. Melba wears nearly one hundred thousand dollars' worth of jewels in this net, and will bo a veritable blaze of light from head to foot. Upon her head will rest a tiara of diamonds and pearls—tho latter beiug the rare pear shaped pearls, beautifully matched and per fect in color. In her hair, which will be rolled in a Grecian knot, a camellia will he fastened by a dagger of pearls and diainouds. Close to her throat will be worn a seven-stranded col larette of pearls, fastened by three diamond olusps. Below this will bo a pendant of pear-shaped pearls and diamonds matching tho tiara, said to have cost fourteen thousand dollars. Tnere are two long necklaces reaching below the waist—a string of diainouds and a rope of pearls. There are live hundred pearls in the string, each one as big as a pea and perfect iu shape. Their color is fainly tinged with rose, and the lustre is superb. This with diamond necklace, fifty thousand dollars. To tho diamond necklace is attached a curiously beau tiful little charm, which Mme. Melba calls her talisman. It was presented to the diva by the Baron do Roths child. It is a little goat, made from ono largo pear), the horns nnd feet being tipped with diamonds.—Ar gonaut. FASHION NOTES. Vinaigrettes of cut-glass and gold set with gems are also very pretty, and a number of salvo boxes iu simitar de signs are to be seen, A dainty accessory to a simply made house gown is n fichu of pink or blue mull with insertions and edgings of yellow Valenciennes laoe. Variety in girdles is welcome, and one of the prettiest and most dressy girdles ou a black gown is of miroir velvet iu geiauium, coral aud similar shades. The novelty puff boxes shown for Christmas are lovely. Tho jar itself is of cut-glass, and the top, which screws ou, is of embossed gold iu whioh turquoises, rubies, etc., arc quaintly set. These are comparatively inex pensive. Since fashion decrees that we must have boleros, variations in design are very {desirable. The slashed bolero of black satin, with black silk cord lacing and small ilat pearl buttons, is now and exceedingly pretty. Hercules braid, with a oornl edging, is being used extensively on the inner edge of walking skirts, instead ol velveteen binding. It is said to wear far Bettor than its predecessor, and bids fair to become very popular, al though it is slightly higher in price fifteen cents a yard. Cloth capes are a trille shorter than those of last season, and are decidedly fuller. The newest, liued with bright plaids or small, vivid-colorod cheeks, with hoods to match, and big shuggle collars, arc decidedly English, and will, therefore, "obtain,"as tho French soy. The newest glove is a real novelty. It is of suede to about three inches above the wrist, whore it is of exquisite lace, with, maybe, tiny colored spangles outlining the luce pattern. At the top the lace has ribbon run through it, ending in a dainty bow. Another .novelty for evening gloves shows little frills of laee running up to the tops, where a ribbou beading aud pretty little bows give a stylish finish. SLEIGH BELLS. With a tingle and a tangle, All the sounds a seeming jangle, And a swinging backward, forward, to and fro; On the frosty morning breaking, Clear their silvery notes outshaking, Tho sleigh bolls are riuglug o'or the snow. How they set tho nerves n-thriiling, Through the heart a joy distilling, Mingling musio with tho beauty of the day; As with slipping and with sliding, Swiftly, softly, smoothly gliding, With a song o'er tho snow wo drift away. —Eliza A. Fletcher, in Outing. PITH AND POINT The stupid dude is improved most when a clever girl gives him a piece of her mind.—Judge. Tommy—"Oh, paw?" Mr. Figg— "Well?" "How can ft solid fact leak out?"—lndianapolis Journal. Brown—"l htiven't a friend in tho world." Jones—"You can make one ; I need five."—Chicago Times-Herald. Poak—"The way of the transgres sor is hard." Joak—"True; but tho trouble is,it's generally hard ou some body else." —Truth. To the strong-minded female you alight give an "atlas of the world," to ihow her how grasping she is when he wants tho earth.—Judge. Landlord—"l'll have to raiso your rent this month." Tenant—"Wish you would. I have been trying to do it all the month."—New York Ledger. She pleaded, expostulated, gesticu lated ; all to no purpose, and then re mained unmoved. She couldn't strike a bargain with the truckman. Puck. "I am hopeful that you will pay mo that $lO boforo the oud of the week, rlmitbson," "That's right, old man. Be hopeful, but don't be sanguine." —Judge. "Leinme see; what is that saying about the great oak growing from the little acorn?" "Oh, that isn't an on'" any more; it is a chestnut."—Cincin nati Enrpurer. Fisher—"Do you believe iu hered ity?" Mann—"Sure. Many a time I aavo noticed that when a mau was rich his son had the same trait." — Cincinnati Inquirer. First Tramp—"The papers all say that work is starting up everywhere." Second Ditto— 'I know; isn't it aw ful? You and I may be drawn into it yet."—Boston Transcript. Hoax—"What! Yo.i buying a bi cycle? I thought you detested them." Toax— "So I do, but I've been run over long enough. Now I'm going to have my revenge."—Spare Moments. "Is there no way to convince you," he pleaded, "that f would do nuythiug in the world to make you happy?" "Yes," she coldly replied ; "get a move on you before I become a total wreck from loss of sleep."—Cleveland Leader. "What do you wish, raadnme?" said tho election officer to Mrs. Ton spot. "You have already voted once to-day. You voted before noon, you know." "Oh, yea, I know that," replied the voteless, "but I want to chaugc tny ballot." —Harper's Bazar. Mistress (reprovingly) —"Bridget, breakfast is very late this .morning. I noticed last night that you had com* pany in tho kitchen, and it was near ly 12 o'clock when you went to bed." Bridget—"Vis, mum; 1 knowed you was awake, fur I heard ye uiovin' around ; an' 1 said to me?elf y'd nade slapo this mornin', an' I wouldn't dis toorb ye wid au early breakfast, mum."—New York Weekly. A Rooster in Court. A peculiar lawsuit was in progress in Esquire Eiler's court yestorday, and lasted all day.fsays a Munice (Ind.) dispatch to the Chicago Chronicle. It was a suit that cost over SIOO, and all that was iuvolved was au old roos ter, and by sight a person would judge that his life would end within a week. The rooster has for some time been in possession of T. Kirby Heinsohn, of the Hotel Kirby, but was owned by Delbert Galliher. A few days ago George Alvy laid claim to it, but as Heinsohn or Galliher would not give it to him he entered a suit of repleviu. Each employed a couple of lawyers and yesterday over seventy-five wit nesses were examined, and tho trial resulted in the rooster remaiuiug in tiie possession of Galliher, aud Aivy had all of the costs to pay, amouutiug to over SIOO. Duriug the trial tho rooster was perchod upon the judge's desk and crowed almost continually from the beginning to the eud of the trial. Since the trial it has been learned that the rooster is one of a breed that has held the reputatiou as being the best lighters in the United States. The chicken was brought from Coviugton by the Heiuingrays. and has many a light during his time. Ho is kept now for breodiug purpoßos only. Making Thrnsrs. The making of phrases has frequent ly been the sole distinction of many n prince. Berhaps tile most remarkable phrase uttered by a modern sovereign was spoken by King Humbert, of Italy, a few years, when cholera was raging in Naples. Ho had been invit ed to a banquet by the municipality of Genoa, aud declined iu the follow ing words: "Men are feastiug at Genoa. Men are dying in Naples. J go to Naples." Well Coddled Miss. A fourteen-montbs-old child of Rend ing, Penn., rejoices in the rntber unique distinction of baring four grent-grandmotbers living. Ouly one of these great-grandmothers wears spectacles, and all live within a short distance of the home of this presum ably well coddled miss. i'hiiudolphin Cress. Love at Thy Door, If at my door Love knock,' I hasten to unlock; For haply, ye tbut part in pain With Love, may meet him not again! 1 Ho bo it May, or winter gray, 1 welcome Love that fares my way. Not in a princely guise Lovo may unveil bis eyes; Haply, a beggar he may kneel, Scourged, and with wounds thy hand ' must heal! I But prince or beggar, Love shall say , I welcome when lie fares inv way. —l\ L. Stanton, in Atlanta Constitution, \ J An Interrupted Dream. Buck to tho home where, as a boy, Life to me was a const ant joy; > I Standing alone in the bright white glow Of the wintry sun on the sparkling snow, I There seem to come through a 111 my haze i Faces and forms of bygone days. - Faces and forms long since forgot, Troop from the past to that hallowed spot; Faces bright with the glow of health, Forma unbent by the race for wealth. While grim and gray with the frosts of life, t Melting thoughts in my heart are rife. Hero it was in the long ago, In the holiday time all white with snow, That, a merry maid with a rougish eye Whispered, "Stay—say not goodby! And as fond memory stirs my heart, I'm wide awake with a sudden start, For here in my lap as I sit aud doze, tier daughter a been tickling her old dad'i | nose! —New York Hun. Grains of Comfort. If fortune doesn't smile ou you, Aud trouble seems to pile on you For all it's worth; \ Don't think that you're tho only wight For whom events don't coino just right 1 Upon this earth- There aro others! If luck has naught to bring to you, * And fate does not a thiug to you, And you uro blue; I Just ponder o'er some other wreck Who stopped a cyclone with his neck- Worse oil than you— There ure others! j If some ouo doesn't como to you To pay a certain sum to you, Don't 11 lo a kick; For you are not the only guy Who gets tho down-to-zero eyo That makes ice thick— There are others! If a maiden fair goos back on you, And woo makes an attack ou you Till you're broke up; ltemember, many a trusting lout lias puffed the pipe till it went out, And then Woke up— There ure others! If sho becomes a "sis." to you, Aud blows a farewell kiss to you, Just hold your ground: Console yourself by thinking that Your voice still penetrates your hat, Ami look nrouud— There are others! —Baltimore Nows. ! Winter Kliymes. The uorlh wind's ripping through tho dark Around the snowy cliff. The plumber's happy as a lark, The plumbing's frozen stiff. The snow flakes through the garden lly On light and airy wing, The sleigh bell 'neath the starry sky Go ding a-ling a-ling. The buckwhoat batter's at the bat With joy our dreams to 1111 When topped with golden liouey that llads from HyUlehis Hill. Whilo quaint fantastic wreath? are hung Upon the dreary yew The rabbit's fondest song is sung Within the spicy stew. Before the wind that wildly walL Tho woodpile melts pell mell, The coal man monkeys with the scales, Not wisely, but too well. In link-icd sweetness long drawn out We see the sausage soar When in our loudest tonus wo shout The slogan: "Shut the door!" The sparrow's piping on the gate For bread his crop to till, And we upon tho bob elate Go llyiug down the hill; And whtm we tumble in tile snow That capers down our neck, There is oue b'oomiug truth wo kuow— Tho winter Is ou deck. Then let the tea screuely steam Our fondest hopes to raise, Aud gild our lotos-eating dream, Beside the logs n-blnzc. To fairy isles in eosta-see We'll sail in Fancy's skiff Whilo all the blizzard loans in gleo To freeze the plumbing stiff. —ll. K. Munkittrick, in Now York Journal. | The House of the Silent Years. The Silent House it standoth wide,— Yea, open is the door: The winds of Fouoo from every sldo Blow round it evermore. Unhewn of axe, unmade of hands, Its walls so broad and still; Like to a sea the pale gray lauds Flow up to tho gray sill. Caudle were vain, and suu but dim, For here tho dark doth cense; Nor ill-ink nor meat is spread for him Who suppcth hero with Peace. Arrows speod not, nor hurtling spear, Nor plague cometh to slay: Viol and rebeo make no cheer, For Hong hath had his day. | Grief shattereth liera his weary cup; | No'watch the hours do keep j That they may call tho rod East up, Or soothe the West to sleep. Fashions, desires, dreams,swarming fears, Fade past the threshold gray; One day is as a thousand years, A thousand years one day. —Lizetto W. Keeso, in the Atlantic. A Big Telescope. , Thegigantrc telescope which has been erected at Treptow, near Berlin, has caused no little stir nmong astronomical experts. The teloseopo lias been bnilt for the GruuewaM Observatory and will be set up there early in the coming year. It is said to be tho larg est instrument of its kind iu the world. A large number of foreign astrono mers huve visited the building where 1 the telescope has been erected, and have displayed considerable interest in tho various parts of its construc tion, aud tliey are all unanimous iu praise of its powerful lenses and the clearness with which tho celestial ob jects aro shown. —Westminster Ga ' Botte. i A Companion in Amotion. j A student at Williamstown Cullegt bad been married a abort time proviona to euterlng the college, and was led to fear that this faet might debar him from enjoying some of the privileges of the Institution. Accordingly, in a great state of perturbation, in* *m1Ih1 to see President. Hopkins. After some eon versatlon the young mnn at last man aged to stammer, with u crimson face, apropos of something entirely irrele vant: "I—l am a married man!" "AH." said President Hopkins, smiling at hitn with great benignity, "so am I." And there the student's trouble ended. The Meaning of If. Very often we give the wrong moaning to n word and thereby make -terious mistakes. For instance, the true and literal ineauing of the word rheumatism is "aches or pains of the muscles, bones and joints of tho human body." It is general and not specific. Also the word relief does net mean cure. Relief may be but a short cessation of pain. Hut when wo say St. Jacobs Oil cures rheumatism promptly and permanently, we mean it con- ; oners pain quickly with no return of it, un- J less tho suffer- r gives cause for a new attack, and then it will cure again. It matters not . whet her it is chronic, aeuteor inflammatory, it will cure. That Is sure, be sure of it. • 100 Reward. 0100. The readers of this paper will lie pleased to learn that there is at lea.*! out dreaded diseasa that science lias been able to cure in all its and that is Catarrh. Halt's Catarrh Dure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall's Catarrh Jure is taken internally, acting directly on Hie bloo.l and mucous sur faces of the svsteai, thereby destroying tie oundation of the disease, anil giving the ; a* rientstrength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing it H work. 'I he proprietors have so much fait'u in its curative powers that f hoy offer One Hundred Dollars for anv case that it fails to cure. Send lor list if test iuiniiiels. Address F. J. CHBNKV & Co., Toledo, O. Holil iiy Dru.'gists. 7k'. Hall's Family Pills are the best. FlTStopped t re-and pi-nnunoiit 1 v nircd. No PI-I after iir.-t day -of Hit. KI.IM.S CHEAT NIHVF. KF.RTORKH. I'IOO? .'trial bottle and treat ise, Send to l>r. Kline, FM Arch St., Phila.. Pa. Mrs. Wiuslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething. ;-.iflensthe gunis,. duces inllaiunui tiou, allays pain; cures wind colic. :V,c a bottle. Ifa ntii tod with son- use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Ky c- water. Druggist* ,-vl I at " r per bottle After phxsicians had given ine up. I was S.tvid h\ Piso's Cure. RALPH KltlEi. Will ianisport. Pa., Xov. IMKI St. Vitus' Dance. One bottle Dr. Fciiner's Spec!tic cures. Circular. Frcdonia. N. V. CASCARBTS stimulate liver, kidneys and bow els. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c. A gentleman residing in T street, N. W... Washington, D. C., asserts that he suffered for many years with dyspepsia, indigestion and biliousness. He tried every known reniedv, consulted many physicians with the hope of getting cured or even relief, but nothing seemed to relieve him. Alter meals he would feel as if a ball o( lead was lodged in his stomach, tired and listless, as though life was scarcely worth living. Finallv he was attracted to the ad of RIPANS TftBULES and concluded to try them. Alter taking the lirst two or three he was surprised to find the relief they gave and soon he felt like a new man. He has never been without Ripans Tabules since, nor has he suffered since. ' REASONS FOR LSING "j j Walter Baker & Co.'sj I &L , Breakfast Cocoa. Z U ,s absolutely pure. $ X 2. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch Process in I | V which chemicals are used. | | (jj ;•; A 3. Because beans of the tlnest quality are used. X 1 B Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired i Z fifi t I't l 'ie exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. | In ; ij Vj 5 ' Becai,se ** is tl,e most economical, costing less than one cent | X fijflt Be sure that you jjet the genuine article made by WAI.TRR I J BAKKR & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established I7HO. j /Qandy cathartic | vabcahotow | 2S* SO DRUGGISTS ; | ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED ttS: J|ilnit hnohlrt Opr. ill. STKRI.INU KEMKnT CO.. Cliir.cn. M'mOr.L f n„ oi-JV "Say Aye 'No' and Ye'll Ne'er be Married." Don't Re fuse All Our Advice to Use SAPOLIO 1 m possible. He— I They sa.v there is a skeleton in the Hnmlltons' closet. She—Bosh! They live in a flat.— Brooklyn Life. WREN bilious or costive, eat A Pasearet. candy cathartic; cure gtiarautee I; 10c.. Ss"c. BUCKINGHAM'S DYE For the Whiskers, Mustache, and Eyebrows. In one preparation. Easy to apply at homo. Colors brown or black. The Gentlemen's favorite, because satisfactory. I! P. MALI, .v CO.. Proprietor*. Xn-linn X. 11. hold by H'.l PrugfiUw. REVOLVER FREE. WATCH FREE 138 other articles. Costrothino. Read our offer * If itilledgoldAl VeM S; I * E*l- idmrd Ten S|NK-ITN worth $' {MS', - * . J-a.T T-T >LT plntMl F 1 I'URT Cut toll-. £"T,L / / ' ' ' \ ' / . ! 1 do/.. I "''.IN lluliuiie, 1 -- Kiivolopf., T U5M' - 1 Ml' / PintlP L.end INI. I'., 1 1, 'i nllowed. Itenieniber. YON only |nty H !•* nn<L lor THE jnr. MI-1 USE M" M TLI LC* named OU• \•• are lire. II yon dim • IN-TON til'i;. I(l..'\\ iii.li Mi. M . LI9UID EXTRACT of SMOK— MULCIRCUIAR. E. KRAUSER BRO. HILTON, PA. ItlfTS 1 Drilling Machines WfiCLL for any depth. I.me ImprnvPiiiPiilß. All Monev Matter*. LOOMIS Sl NYIVIAN, Tiffin, Ohio. OPMM^FDRUNKENNESS W8 E WLTISL 'an-.l in KMottO I*Y., NOI ATHH Cured. DR. J.L. STEPHENS. I^BAKON.OKIO. gfl jPk n HM) for Tour neighbor*'n<hlrefte. Ayil Send |l)c. for < -iitiai anil sninplo tPtaUF KOMAMTi MAC A/.l NL\ MEW \ nrk PN U 0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers