Bluebirds, 'the |ha/r>inrjr of sprinir, have already been uoti.ed & New Jersey and Pennsylvania. • Hidden Place*. Why a weasel should hnto a rat is strange, as ho is only an elongated rat himself. Bats and mice love hiddeD places, and a weasel is about the only living thing that can find them out. Aches and pains am like rats and mice. They seek out the hidden places of the human system and gnaw aud ravage the muscles and nerves. St. Jacobs Oil, like a weasel, knows how to go for tllem. It will penetrate to the secret recesses of the pain, and breaks up its habitation and drives it out. ltats and mice shun the corners where a weasel has been, aud pains aud aches once fairly driven out by St. Jacobs Oil are per manently cured aud seldom come buck to ™>r old haunts. There must be palieuce With the treatment; some chronio forms are stubborn and resist, but the great remedy will finally conquer and give heulih and strength to the afflicted parts. WatN bilious or costive, eat a Ca'caret, candy cathartic; cure guaranteed; UX., JGc. tBTATK or OHIO, CITr or YOLIDO, t I.UCAS Cocerrv. 1 M - FnANK J. CPENsr makes n.th that he is the senior partner of tils Arm of V. J. ( -HINST A CO.,doing business in the Cltvof Toledo, Count v and St Ate s foresaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of ONB UUNOKBD DOLLARS for eeco and flvery ewe or CATAHRH that tAnool b eurad by THE use HALL'S CATARRH CURE. _ Frank J. CRINCT. Sworn to before me ami subscribed in my i —' — i pretence, tiiie 6th <ley of December. 4 UK,VI, /■ A. D. 188 G. A. W.(il. KARON. rpTTT 4 Notary Public. Hairs Catarrh Cure m taken internally, ami acts directly ou the blood and mucous surfaces the system. Send for testimonials, five. _, . . _ F. J. CiIKNBT Sc CO., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggist*, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best- John P. Cuddy, n farmer of Baltimore County, Maryland, died on March lotli, in bis Aith year. Mr. Cuddy made the first trip on Peter Cooper's locomotive over the H A <>. on AujjUHt 28tl, IMU. He was also present when Professor Morse sent iho first telegraphic message over the B. & O. wires between Multi more and Washington. Each salmon produces about 20,000,000 NowlowHac for Fifty Cents. Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To-Bar regulate or remove your desire tor tobacco? Saves money, makes health and manhood. Cure guaranteed. 50 cents and tI.OU, at all druggists. Bet toads are sold ut 8 pence apiece iu Paris. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an A. No. 1 Asthma medicine. \V. K.WILLIAM*. Antioch, Ills.. April 11, 189+. CASCARKTS stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c. Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting feet, ami in stantly takes the sting out of corns and bun ions. it's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Kane makes tight-fit. ting or new shoes feet easy. It is a cjrtaii cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, ach ing feet. Try it to- lay. Sold by alt druggist; and shoe store.-. Kv mail for 2v\ in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olm sted, Le Ro>, N. Y. Life and Health Happiness and usefulness depend upon pure blood. Hood's Sarsaparllla mikes pure blood. This is the time to take Hood's Sarsap-irilla. because the blood is now loaded with impu rities wh'ch must be promptly expelled or health will be in danger. Remember, Hood's parilla Is the best—in fact theOneTrue Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggists. sl, six for DSIIM net harmonious'v with Hood S HIIIS Hood'sManaparUla. 1 who opened that o- * S - bottle of HIRES M Root beer? The popping of a IBr cork from a bottle of I Hires is a signal of r good health and sure. A sound the old folks like to hear K —the children can't ft HIRESM Root beer ? Is composed of the ". * very ingredients the JV era tern requires. Aiding v the dlgestfou, soothing the nerves, purifying the blood. A temper a nee drink for temper- The Charm 1° "HIVM Co., Phil*. [ PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHNW. MORRIS,WASHINGTON,O.C. Lota Principal Examiner 0 8. Pension Bureau. Syri. in last war, 15 abjudicating ulauux, atty. gin.;. CI KT RICH quickly: semi for ":<OO Inventions t Wanted ' KDUAII TATE & Gu. 245 U'wuy. N. V. # Pistols and Pestles. *jj| The duelling pistol now occupies its proper place, in the museum of the collector of relics mm of barbarism. The pistol ought to have beside it the pestle that turned out pills like bullets, ||p to be shot like bullets at the target of the fS) /p|\ liver. But the pestle is still in evidence, and will be, probably, until everybody has tested ItfjjSjh the virtue of Ayer's sugar coated pills. They o^%. treat the liver as a friend, not as an enemy. . pin Instead of driving it, they coax it. They are jSi% compounded on the theory that the liver does y' ||||| its work thoroughly and faithfully under (H) obstructing conditions, and if the obstructions fllP are removed, the liver will do its daily duty, ()jßp gsL When your liver wants help, get "the pill /ML Ayer's Cathartic Pills. © THE CUKE OF DIABETES. A Caae Successfully Treated In Madison County, N. Y. Protn the Press, Utica, N. Y. On the recommendation of Mr. William Woodman, of South Hamilton, New York, that Mr. Amos Jaquays, A resident of Colum bus Centre, New* York, be Interviewed re garding his extraordinary recovery from ad vanced kidney trouble, embracing diabetes in its worst form, Mr. Jaquays was visited aud willingly made the accompanying state * ment: ''l am fifty years of ago, and five years ago began to suffer witli pulns iu the hack and weakness Jn the region of the kidneys, aud I had a tremendous flow of urine. Strange to oay, my appetite increased to an extraordin ary degree, but instead of giving me strength my food seemed to make me weaker ana thinner, and I was terribly constipated. My mouth was pasty, I had continuous heart burn and pain across the lower part of my stomach and frequent vomiting. Indeed, all, or nearly all, my functions became impaired, my sight was dim, memory de serted me, and life becutue irksome. 1 con sulted the best medical taleut iu the county, and they all diagnosed my cose as sugar dia betes in its most aggravated form, but gave me no relief whatever. At last 1 was in such a desperate condition that a council of phy sicians was called, hut their good offices did me no good, and I looked forward to death with satisfaction as the only relief 1 could expect. "My old friend, William Woodman, about this tifne came to visit me. aud from him I llr*t heard of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which he declared had cured him of rheumatism, with which he had suffered all his life, and he believed they would do me good, as he had read of a case of diabetes being cured by their use. I believe it was next day after Mr. Woodman's visit that Mr. F. Hyde, of South Hamilton. New York, called on me. and I was told by him that Pink Pills had saved his life aud he advised me by all means to try them. "This settled the quostion, and I at once began a course of home treatment with Dr. Williams' Pink Plils. Within a week the meJieino began to do its work, the constipa tion was relieved, my skin, which bad been dry and hard, assumed its normal feel and appearance, 1 no longer hail that insuffer ably bad taste in my mouth, and though still weak and almost helpless, the pain iu my back and kidneys began to abate and the flow of urine decreased. But I was far from health, and built very few hopes on perman ent cure, though I continued to take the pills constantly for the next year and a half, growing slowly but surely during that time better and betler. Then I began to re luce the daily dose, and kept mending until six mouths ugo, when I discontinued them, and I was entirely cured. "I am still subject to cold, which Is apt to settle in my kidneys, aud always keep Pink Pills by ine, as they bring me round very quickly. In all, I have, I believe, taken ilfty boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and sbalt never be without them as long us I have half a dollar. I have recommended them to all my suffering friends, aud they seem to be good lor anv disorder of the system, as they have never failed to do thfcir work in any case that I know of, and some wore pretty "I certify the above statement to be true in every particular, and if I commanded stronger language, I would use it in praising Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. "AMOS JAQUATS." Mr. Jaquays is a highly respectable and welt-to-do farmer and builder, aud highly connected in Madison County. The proprietors ot Dr. Williams' Pink Pills state that they are not a patent medicine, but a prescriptlou used lor mauy years by un em inent practitioner, who produced the most wonderful results with them, curingall forms of weakness arising from a watery condition of the blood or shattered nerves, two fruitful causes of almost every ill to which flesh is heir. The pills are also a specific for the troubles peculiar to females, such as suppres sions, all forms of weakness, chronic, consti pation. bearing-down pains, etc.. and in the case of men will give speedy relief and effect A permanent cure in all cases arising from mental worry, overwork, or excesses of what • ever nature. They are entirely harmless and can be given to weak and sickly children with the greatest good aud without the slightest danger. Pink Pills are sold by nil dealers, or will be seut postpaid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box, or six boxes for •2.50 tthey are never sold in bulk or by the 100). by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Company. Schenectady. N. Y. Try Grain.O! Try Grain.O'. Ask your grocer to-day to show you a f)Acfc* age of tir&iu-O, the ntn .oed drink that t aket the place of coffee. The children may drink it without iujury as well as th ■ adult. All who try it like it. Grain-O has that rich seul brown of Mo .'ha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the rn ist delicate stomach re ceives it without. du*ti(v*s. One-quarter the price ot coffee. 15 cts. and 25 cts. per package. Sold by nil grocers The Paltimore Chamber of Commerce has decided to charge an inspection fee of cents per UNi bushels for the inspection of grain arriving at Baltimore. This charge heretofore has been 5 cents per 100 bushels. FITS stopped free ami permanent 1--cured. No fits after first-day's use of I)it. KLINE'S CUB AT Nlltv E H ICRTOKKK. Free S: trial hottle aml I rea t ise. Scud to Dr. Kline,93l Arch St., Pliila . Pa. Mrs. NVinslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion. allays pain, cure- wind colic. 25c. a bottle. JUST try a 10c. box of Cascnreta. the finest liver and bowel retru'%ror evar made. Heat Fire-Proof Doors. Numerous experiments to determine the beat lire-resisting materials for the construction of doors have proved that wood covered with tin resists fire better than an iron door. It Is no affair of ours. Hut is if not? Does not the man or woman who fails to speak the needed word at the right moment, to give the Inspiration of sym pathy or of counael. become morally, ( accountable for the failure*? THE HOLLY=SPRIG SPOON tPiIM winter, when it fell at Osceola, fell with amplitude. If you stood on the upper bridge —a high, open bridge— you saw the canal stretching far up and down, a level trench of snow, its whiteness em phasized here and there by a patch of brown earth showing from some underwash in the banks. In one corner of Pro mill pond on the morrow, if the mor row chanced to be a Sunday, in a pool relieved of ice for the occasion and hedged about by a throng of specta tors, there would be a baptism of the latest converts of the winter revivals. In milder seasons the prevailing form of social entertainment was even ing teas, but now there was apt to be a round of rather stately dinner parties. The Indies oarae in carefully treasured black silk gowns, of the richest and stillest material, with wide collars of white; lace, and lace-edged white lawn underßleeves, The men woro coats of biaok broadcloth, no less oarefully kept and no less excellent in quality, and high, stiff collars,swathed in black silk or satin neckerchiefs. The dinner, cookid mainly by the hostess's own hands, was served in two courses, but out of its abundance might easily have furnished forth twelve or fifteen of the daintiness which courses acquire when they are made a particular point of. The company came to table for these dinners with a certain hesitation and awkwardness, and for a little while after they were seated conver sation lagged. First there fell a sharp, expectant silence until the minister, if present, as he usually was, had in voked a blessing. Then, as the host took carving knife and fork in hand and rose from his chair with a certain confidence, every eye and all attention fixed intently on him, and remained so fixed. It was almost doing violence to cus tom when, at a dinner by Mrs. Hamlin Wampler, Mrs. Luther Gears began, in the very height of the carving, to tell a story of the loss of a spoon. She told it in a plaintive tone; how, after a dinner given by herself ten days before, to substantially the present company, when she came to collect her silver, with a view to washing and putting it away with her own hand (as her careful oustom was), she found a spoon missing—one of her holly-sprig spoons. Nobody attended much, for Wamp ler was really doing a very neat job. At the couolußion of Mrs. Gears's reci tal two or three ladies murmured a perfunctory "that was too bad," und Dr. Dudley asked in his blunt way, "What is a holly-sprig spoon?" But be gave no outward sign of listening to Mrs. Gears's explanation that hollv sprig was the design, and that the loss was especially grievous because it oc casioned the first break in a set given her at her marriage by her mother, who had brought it at an early day out from New Jersey, sewn up for safety in her petticont, a gift to her at her marriage from her own mother, Mrs. Gears's grandmother, and to the latter previously at her marriage from her mother, Mrs. Gears's great-grand mother, for whom it had been ex pressly made by a London silversmith ; the onlv set of its design ever seen or heard of. At the words "grand mother" and "great-grandmother" the doctor's head nodded slightly, but his eye, like all other eyes at the table, even Mrs. Gears's, was on Wampler's knife. Wamplei/ shaved away the last bit of breast and raised his instrument for the master stroke through the flank. The guests dipped forward a little further. The knife descended, pierced —then stopped abruptly. Wampler's face grew red. Mrs. Wampler's grew red, too, out of sympathy. "You must have struck a tough tur key, mother," said he. "It's a young turkey," protested Mrs. Wampler, "and it seemed very tender when I was dressing it." "Then you didn't cook it enough," urged Wnmpler. "I had. it in the oven four hours," said Mia. Wampler. The ether ladies averred that if your oven was right lour houis was long enough. By pushing and sawing like an ama teur with a dull blade, Wnmpler finally cut through, and sought to retrieve himself by a special dexterity on the other side. But again the knife, after entering keenly, came to a sudden halt, and had to be driven on by main force. Wampler finally wrenched off the breast bone and resumed his chair. In the course of this office Wnmpler thrust a large spoon deep into the mound of stuffing. There came a rue | tallic click which everybody distinctly heard aud againifixbd eyes-mi the host. Then, on bridging up the spoon, he -tilrued up with the handle of another, a. smaller one, which everybody saw. Since there'could be no concealment, Wampler sought escape from the mis adventure by jocularity, aud saying: "Well, well, you must have ran snort of bread crumbs for your stuffing," drew forth the spoon and held it up in full view. "It's my spoon," cried Mrs. Gears, fairly shrieking, "the one 1 lost—my holly-sprig;" and she stretched out her hand as if to recover it, if need be, by force. "At any rate it's not mine," said Mrs. Wampier. "Oh, it's mine, it's mine ! I should know it anywhere," persisted Mrs. Gears excitedly, aud Wampier handed the spoon over to her. "It must be yours," said Mrs. Wam pier. "I remember the design, and it's not like any of mine. I never saw it, unless at your house, until this moment, and the turkey I dressed and put into the oven with my own hands." The other guests commented a little on the singularity of the incident, and ventured to make a joke or two upon it, then dropped it from tho talk and were studious not to recur to it. One and all departed, however, with it still sufficiently in mind, and more than made themselves amends ulti mately for any self-denial they may have suffered regarding it in the pres ence of their host and Hostess. Very soon the whole town knew the story, and Mrs. Gears's holly-sprig spoon be came celebrated. The next time Mrs. Gears and Mr. and Mrs. Wampier met they barely knew each other; and the next time after that they knew each other not at all. Then it became impossible to in vite them into the same companies, and through the circle of their com mon acquaintance there begau to steal, like a line of spilt oil across a floor, a separation out of sympathy. By the time tho separation became fully de fined, Mrs. Gears's umbrage at the Wamplers had come to positive grounds. She did not scruple to think and to freely say : "We have no direct proof; but it's very singular that the spoon should be found in their possession, and they never of fered any explanation." The difference grew into an open feud. Finally it *wae carried into the church. A document was laid before the session urging it to summon Mr. and Mrs. Wampier to an explanation. Their conduct, the document set forth, in thus far refusing an explanation, was neither brotherly nor Christian; it savored, if not of guilt, at least of self-righteousness and pride, and in either caee they were amenable to the session. There was prolonged argu ment in the session, and some plain speaking and strong feeling. At the vote the lay members divided evenly, and it devolved on tho pastor,the Rev. Cornelius Holt, to decide. He was a man of rare humility, but of a steady sense of justice and an obscinaoy iu following it that no amount of ag gression could outwear. He decided against the petition and in favor of the Wamplers. Thero was moisture in his eyes and a half sob in his voice as he concluded with "Let us pray,"and iu the prayer he offered a brief, fervent prayer for geutle counsels and confiding hearts. He was ohecked several times by his emotion. The other members of the session were deeply touched, and re paired to their homes with pure and exalted feelings and with a mind re solved, every man of them, to do his utmost to keep the congregation in harmony. But, unfortunately, the congrega tion had not come under the spell of the pastor's moving judgment aud prayer, aud divisions of such magni tude eusued that the laymen of the session forgot their good resolutions, and the session itself became a seat of war. Mr. Holt had served in his pres ent pastorate ten years. Ten years' service in no office lessens the number of a man's critics, unless he bo a man of supreme talent; and (that Mr. Holt was not. From bis installation there had been in the congregation a dissat isfied minority, and it had grown, with the passage of time, more num erous and more outspoken. It now found, in his vote against having tho Wamplers before the session, what, unconsciously, it had long been wait ing for—a point of union and onset. Tho pastor's friends, however, were in main stanch, and open opposition only intensified their ardor. The session divided again about evenly; but the oppononts of the pastor were the more cunning faction, and finally persuaded two of his supporters to disregard per sonal preference and join them in vot ing a request to Mr. Holt for his resig nation. With his session thus become prac tically unanimous against him, and a good third of the congregation fiercely urging the session on, tho minister would gladly have yielded up his charge aud fled. But this, it seemed to him, would be moral weakuoss, a clear violation of his duty to the larger fraction who devoutly besought him (o stay- So he refused to comply with the session's request. Appeals fol lowed to higher bodies, and a tedious, complex, exhausting contest, ending in defeat lor the opposing minority, which thereupon withdrew from the church in a body and organized a new society. And this is the origin of what is since known in Osceola as the New church, the church which in recent years has been so marvellously blessed. But it hud a hard struggle in the be ginning. It begau to prosper only after the Rev. Mr. Holliwell took charge. He is a natural pulpit orator, a inau thoroughly abreast with the times. He began by prefacing his ser mons with a familiar talk on current topics, and every three months he preached a sermon exclusively for men, and another exclusively for women, and one for the young people, and by these and other novelties he soon awakened an interest which has con tinued, until now the New church congregation is much the largest aud wealthiest in the town. Then Andrew Jarboe, a rich old bachelor farmer, died and left the church SIO,OOO, and that was a great help to it. lu lifo Andrew had not been a notable sup porter of churches, but Mr. Holt had once rebuked him sharply for failing to supply a due weight of butter, and it is supposed that this had somewhat to do with determining his surprising bequest to the New church. Mr. Holt, after the New church be gan to come up so conspicuously, suf fered a certain decline in the regard of his congregation. The members were still free in expressions of devo tion to him; but it became evident that in their feelings they had a little cooled, and Mr. Holt finally sought another charge. There was a woman known as Gypsy Ann; keen-eyed, dishevelled, shrill voiced, hall-mad creature, held, as her name betokened, iu a certain sus picion and fear, and often a word in the mouths of inert mothers to intim idate wilful children. She dwelt alone in a remote, ramshackle cabiu, living mainly on charity, but earning a little money now and then by helping in the rough work of the kitchens. She had always some special patrons. They changed, however, from time to time, for in her moods she was apt to quarrel with her benefactor. Among the most devoted of them had once been Mrs. Wampier and Mrs. Gears; but on some fancied provocation both were abruptly dismissed from her re gard, as a number of others had been dismissed and neither had had aught to do with her for many years. Of all her dislikes the bitterest hitherto had been of the ohurches. At the name of any particularly honored member, her wont was to cry out, with a wild ges ture: "My hand's a lily beside his black heart." When, therefore, word went abroad that Gypsy Ann had pre sented herself at the "mourner's bench," Osceola quivered with interest through all its members. The high and the low, the full-robed and the ragged were alike excited; and at the next meeting the swift runners after sensations thronged the church. The object and hope of these in truders were of the vaguest, but the entertainment they sought they found. In the confidence that a new life had begun for her, Ann seized the occa sion to renounce her past, item by item, in the presence of the congrega tion. The renunciatiou laoked some what of the humility that usually characterizes such performances ; but aside from this, it proceeded quite prosaically, and would have yielded no particular relish to the curious, but that toward the end she disclosed— altogether incidentally and as a mat ter of no more importance than any other she had touched upon—that she was the demon behind the mystery of the holly-sprig spoon. A distinct mur mur passe.d through the house as Ann related how, in revenge for an injury which she thought had been done her by Mrs. Gears, she stole the spoon, aud then in revenge of another which she thought had been done her by Mrs. Wampier, "tucked it away," as she said, iu Mrs. Wampler's turkey. "Audi mind me to this day," said she, "what a temper I had—the oven was so hot, Mrs. Wampier gone from the kitchen only for a minute, and the spoon such an unhandy shape. But, somehow, Satan let me succeed—as he always lets us, if only we tried hard enough—and little I thought of all the trouble it would make I But, maybe it's doue some good, too. Ou account of it, ye might say, there's two churches now where there was only one before. So perhaps it'll bo some wise forgiven me." The ice in the millpond was thicker last winter than it had been for years, but it cracked again aud again under the weight of the crowd that gathered the next Sunday to see Gypsy Ann baptized. —New York Sun. Don't Contuse Terms, Two very simple legal terms are frequently confused by newspaper writers. These are the words "be queath" aud "devise," as applied to gift by will. The former term prop erly applies to personal property only, tho latter to real estate only. This error is made boldly prominent in the form of testamentary clause printed on the last page of a prominent chari table institution here in New York, as a reminder to the generously disposed ; "I hereby bequeatti and devise uuto tho trustees of the the sum of dollars." "Libel" and "slan der" are also frequently confused The former is written, the lattei spokeu uefumaliou.—New York Mail aud Express. Selting a Horse's Broken Jaw. A Sußquehr*na County (Pennsyl vania) veterinary recently performed an operation ou a horse that is said to be the first of its kind in the history of veterinary surgery. Tho animal's lower jaw had been broken by a kick, and in order io reduce the fracture it was necessary to encase its jaw in pliable copper, in wbicu conditiou it will have to remain for about four weeks, during v,hich time the animal will be fed with a spoon ou grim'/ milk aud eggs.—New York Press. THREE HAPPY WOMEN. Each Relieved of Periodic Pain and Back- JHfcf ache. A Trio of Fervent Letters. before using Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable mined. I suffered untold ag-ony from painful / J IMUI iT* ry ~'" >\ menstruation, backache, pain on top of my li head and ovarian trouble. I concluded to 923 bank St., Cincinnati, O. For years I had suffered with painful men* //£ struation every month. At tlie beginning of /4 menstruation it was impossible for me to stand up / / hHL for more than five minutes, I felt so mis erable. One day a little book of Mrs. Pinkham's was thrown into my , \ v Imv house, and I sat right down and read it. I then got some 4|iP ' of Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Com pound ami Liver Pihs. 1 can lieartily say that to-day I feel like a newwoman; my monthly suffering is a thing of the past. I * / shall alwaj'S praise tlie Vegetable t'ompound for what it has / - done for me. MRS. MARGARET ANDERSON, 303 Lisbon St., Lewiston, Me. Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vegetable Compound lias cured me of painful mnn struation and backache. The pain in my back was dreadful, and the agony I suffered during menstruation nearly drove me wild. Now this is all over, thanks to Mrs. Pink ham's medicine and advice.—Mas. CARRIE V. WILLIAMS, South Mills, N. 0. The great volume of testimony proves conclusively that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound is a safe, sure and almost infallible remedy in cases ot irregularity, suppressed, exeessive or painful monthly periods. 1t *1 1 lii f direct i|)fciMl atten- J7 XV rViJ I n to the Inllowinc re. murkable statements: mend the Moore treatment 1 ju because Hiave tried it, and j>ays I was cured by jjEh£\.V eight yearn ; huve known of othe|fl h^ f n * cured Ifftn BURKKA SPRINGS, ARK. wr '* ,en by the late Rev. W. Ut, to Mrs. w! Fl. Watson. New Albion, N. Y. Restored His Hearing in S Minutes. r.SK Catarrh 111 years. Had intense head- tjF ache, continual roaring **' w i and singlug in ears, took 0 cold easily. My hearing | dffßr)PS Sfe began to tail, and for W three y®* r9 as almost x W tiuually grow worse. A Everything 1 had tried , -jr railed, lu despair I com menced to use Aerial Medication in 1888, aud the effect or the tlrst application was simply wonderful. Tn leas than ttvo minutes my hearing was fully re stored, and has been perfect ever sine, and in a few months was entirely curod of Catarrh. En IIKOWN, Jacksboro. Tenn. "Whereas I was deaf, now I hear." At the age of 89, after hav lag suffered from Catarrhal ' I \ Deafness twenty years, am , truly tnankful to state that 1 1 am entirely cured by Aerial : Medication; my hearing. : which had become so bad that I tyV* vSmBK\ 1 could not hear u watch ti.■ k. JSml or conversation. Is fully re stored. I will verify this Derby Center, Vt. Medicine for 3 Months' Treatment Free To introduce this treatment and prove be yond doubt that Aerial Medication will cure Deafness, Catarrh. Throat and bung Diseases. 1 will, for a short time, send Medicines for three months' treatment free. Address. J. H. Moore. M. D., Dept. K. 7, Cincinnati, 0. JONES SCALE GUARANTEED A ecu racy-Du rabi I ity, LOWEST PRICES. JONES--BINCHAMTON. N. Y. Beat Cough Syrup. Taatea Oued. Cse M T H E S T A N Pamphlet, "Suggestions for Exterior Decoration," Sample Card and Descriptive Trice Met free liv mall. Aebeelue lleeUiia. It.illilliiK Kelt, Strum Parking, Holler Coverings, Firr-Prool Paints, Kan. Aeui'NtuM Non-Coudnotiug and Electrical lnenliitliig .tlnlrriuls. H. W. JOHNS MANUFACTURING CO., 87 Maiden Lane, New York. CHICAGO: 210 A 242 Randolph Ht. PHILADELPHIA: 170 ft 171 North 4th St. BOSTON: 77 A 79 Pearl Sk. ~/g>ANDY CATHARTIC vobcaAtitb.- CUM CONSTIPATION,j 50* DRUGGISTS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED !° """ "" r *?<">'<2" u P<l°n- Cascareti are the Ideal Laxa- ! uvuuiuux uuatuiniLDU h. nettr trip er aripe.lnil cane eaar eateralreialu. Sam. , pie and booklet free. Ad. STKBLISB BEHF.DT CO., Chleago. Montreal. Can.. orNetr Te'k. n^iTALABASTiNEJ ,T WON'T RUB OFF. d i Hlffi! i Wife: ALABASTINE SSr=i A „ —J ; lor Sale by Paint Healers Everywhere. V L ~4;.' 1, ha™ CDCC A Tint Card showing 13 desirable tints, also A lab,-ustine f nthrse liefe.Rahy oiay recover tFILL Souvenir Rr-ek aentfree tetanyonemrntionlng tbiapaper A Tbt:t cannot thrive." iI.ABANTIIiL CO., CI run it Rapids, Hie It. W **--W-W.-w. Wn-w. ■>. s, ww Wa -ta Wa.-ra -<c. sa. -w. "A Fair Face Cannot Atone for an Untidy House." Use SAPOLIO STANDARD OF THE WORLD. *IOO to all silks. ■ POPE MFO. CO., Hartford, Conn. Catalogue free from dealers or by mail for one 2-cent stamp. |w7lMuglas| jDOLLARmSj jSH2i jCI; BEST IN THE WORLD • FOR 14 YEARS this shoe, by merit alone* • has distanced all competitors. > I INDORSED BY OVER 1,000,000 WEARERS • as THE BEST in style, fit and durability of | • any shoe ever offered at SVOO. J IT IS MADE Ilf ALL THE LATEST SHAPES t and STYLES and of every variety of leather. l I OWE DEALER IN A TOWN given exclusive y sale aud advertised in local paper on receipt | •of reasonable order. Write for catalogne to ! | fW. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. P N U 14
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers