INCURABLE DISEASES. THE LIST DECREASES AS THE KNOWL EDGE OF SCIENCE INCREASES. Story of n Man Who WUM Given Up to l>lo by Seven Physicians—He Fol lows the Ad vice of u Friend and is Now a Well Man —A Wonderful Story. From the Leader, Morrircille , A T . Y. "Yonder is a man." said the farmer to a reporter, "who is the talk of this commu nity." "Ho is Mr. William Woodman, of South Hamilton, Madison Co., N. Y.," a well-to do farmer, who is well known and stands high for honesty and thrift in this neigh borhood. On the following day the newspaper man called on Mr. Woodman in his comfortable, old-fashioned farm house. "I have had serious thoughts of writing r.n account for the newspapers mvself,'' said Mr. Woodman, "but as I am not ac customed to such work, I have never at tempted it. Sit down and I will toll you all about it. "I am flfty-nino years old. I contracted rheumatism when only fourteen years of age, thon a severe cold from over exertion and from becoming over heated. My rather was a farmer and insisted that the only way to make mo strong was to do plenty of hard work. When, however, ho saw mo helpless in bed for six long months without being able to move except with help, he changed his mind, and forever after believed that children should not be made to do men's work. My growth was stopped by suffer ing, and I do not think 1 am an inch taller than that day, forty-llvo years ago. Dur ing tho forty* years ensuing after my mis fortune, I was attended by seven doctors. I received temporary relief at times, from new forms of treatment, but always re lapsed into a worse and more aggravated condition. Tho conclusion of nil those gentlemen was that I was incurnblo, and all they could do was to ease my condition. After I grew to manhood I married and have been blessed with a family. My dear wife has had all tho drudgery of nursing and waiting upon me, and tho burden has been indeed liard to bear. "Without hope from physicians I began to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which was highly recommended by my friends. 1 took them and within one week began to feel better than I lmd since I was first afflicted. I took these pills according to directions, and wlipn tho box was nearly gone I went 6ver to Brook field to an old friend who was in tho drug business, named Dr. Auro lius Fitch, who likewise was a great suffer er from rheumatism. 'Die doctor and I or dered several boxes of Pink Pills in part nership, he from that time keeping them onsnle. Well, I continued to take them according to directions for the next three years and steadily improved, gaining flesh and strength, until two years ago I was able to discontinue them, and now am as able bodied a man of my years us you will find. 1* ought to tell you that after 1 or dered the first box of pills the physician who was then attending me came in* aud i told him what I was doing. He said I was very foolish, that they would surely injure me, and it was his duty to tell me no. I tola the doctor that 1 might as well die as to drag out a miserable existence, and so, notwithstanding his warnings, continued to take the pills. Thank God tin* doctor was not able to dissuade mo. for'to them I now ascribe all the comfort and happiness I have in this world. I have recommended thorn to hundreds of poopte since I was cured, and in every case they have been effective, not only in rheumatism but in numerous other disorders, especially im poverishment of tho blood, heart trouble and kidney disease. "I certify the above statement to bo true, and if necessary will swear to the same be fore a Notury Public." WILLIAM WOODMAN. When Mr. Woodman had signed and de livered the above paper to the reporter, he Buid: "If I wore you I would go ami call 011 Mr. Amos Jaquays, at Columbus Centre, to whom I recommended Dr. Williams' Pink Tills for aggravated kidney disease. He is now in perfect health. 1 have no doubt he will be glad to testify to the efficacy of tho remedy that cured him." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give now life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They arc for sale by all druggists, or may be hail by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., for COo. per box, or six boxes for $2.50. Fast Freight Runs. The B. and O. S. W. has boon mak ing records on quick despatch freight within the past week or two. Two trains, one weighing 732 and the oth er 7114 tons, ran from Cincinnati to Par kersburg, 200 miles in 8 hours and 3 minutes and 8 hours and 4 minutes re spectively. The run from St. Louis to Cincinnati 240 miles, was made in 16 hours. Considering that some of the grades exceeded one per cent., the per formance ranks with the best on rec ord and demonstrates that the track and motive power of the B. and O. S. W. must be in good condition. Tlow's This? We offer One Hundred Dollar < Reward for any ea-e of Catarrh that cannot bj cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHUNKY & Co., P ops., Toledo, 0.- We, tho undersigned, havn known F.J. (.'ho ney lor the hv-t 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion m-'de by their firm. WEST & THUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WALDINO. KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur laees of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hull's Family Pills are the best. Try Gralii-O! Try G ruln-<H Ask your grocer to-day to show you a pack age of Grain-O, the now food drink that takes tho place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it like It. (Jrain-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from puro grains, and tho mostdclicate stomach re ceives it without distress. One-quarter the price of coffee. 15 cts. and 25 cts. per package. Sold by ull grocers. ||§i 0 The Blue and the Gray, q ||j| Both men and women are apt to feel a littlo f-i j) blue, when the gray hairs begin to show. It's M\ a very natural feeling. In the normal condition |3|| of things gray hairs belong to advanfced age. (Si IThey havo no business whitening the head of /. \ man or woman, who has not begun to go down the slope of life. As a matter of fact, the hair turns gray regardless of ago, or of life's seasons ; sometimes it is whitened by yly sickness, but more often from lack of care, CA When the hair fades or turns gray there's no Jjf need to resort to hair dyes. The normal color \||| of the hair is restored and retained by the use of Ayer's Hair Vigor. ® Curcbook, "® story of told by tlit cured." Smart Young Sailors. "Tho lxjj's rospcndeil with surprising quickness ajul good order. This is the second life they have saved this win ter." These were the concluding words of a statement made by Commander Field of the schoolship St. Mary's at a meeting of the Board of Education of j New York city, a few months ago. re j gardlng a rescue made by the boys of ' his ship. | On the night of the 23d of February, after the boys on the St. Mary's had | turned in, the cry was raised on the ! wharf at tin? foot of which the ship | lies, in New York, that a man had j fallen overboard in the North Kiver. I The boys turned out, lowered a boat, ' and in a moment were off to the rescue. | Just as the man rose for the last time they pulled him in. and in an insensible condition he was taken to the hospital, | whore he revived. i The next moment would have been the man's last, and the least delay on the part of the handy boys would lmve been fatal to lilm. But if they had been capable of delays they would not have I been good sailors, and they made no delays and did 110 bungling. The school-ship 011 which these boys acted so bravely and promptly this time, and have acted as promptly and effectually before, is, though command ed by an officer of the l.'nited States navy, a part of the public school sys tem of New York city. The hoys are just such as go to the public schools in the most crowded parts of the metropo lis. They .are good material for the mak ing of prompt, quick, ready and intelli gent sailors, and—for much the some , causes as those which make them good sailors—for the making of good citizens as well.—Youth's ComDauion. Screened from Heat and Light. The bottom of the deep sea is, in deed, entirely screened l'rom the warmth and light of the sun by tlie in tervening mass of water. On land we often experience that the intervention of clouds, which are simply steam or divided masses of water, results in gloom and a fall of temperature. This effect is infinitely more intense at the bottom of tlie ocean, between which and the sun there is interposed, not only for a day or two, a layer of cloud, . Mil. for ever, a volume of water often j several miles thick. Even at fifteen fathoms from the surface the light is I much subdued, producing more the up ! pea.rance of pule moonlight than of sun light, and experiments made with very sensitive photographic plates in the clear water of the Lake of Geneva have | shown that sunlight does not penetrate to ft greater depth there than 155 fathoms. In the ocean and in the trop ics, where sunshine is most intense, 110 light penetrates beyond a depth of 200 fathoms. Below this all is dark, j The sun's heat, like its light, is also j nit off from the ocean depths in the same manner. A cousin of the writer j found that in the bay of Bengal there is 11 fall of temperature amounting to about 1 degree Fahrenheit for every ten fathoms from the surface t,liat the thermometer sinks. At 200 fathoms he ; has found that the thermometer stands all the year round at f>r> degrees Fahr ! enhelt; and at 2,000 fathoms it con stantly registers about 35 degrees Fahrenheit, or close upon freezing point. It is curious to note that as we rise In the air, in ballooning or 011 1 mountain slopes, the temperature falls j as we rise, and the same occurs as we live into the depths of the ocean. But in mines the lieat increases as we de scend. (Chambers' Joupai Unworthy Books. A healthy body undoubtedly eon duces to a healthy condition of the mind, but it does not produce intellect ual activity. The only way to accom plish intellectual results is to work the mind. Hard work of any kind is nevei ; easy—it may be satisfying and exhilar ating, but not easy. When you really work your brain you know it; even to concentrate your attention to begin a task is a serious effort. Many wise ' workers say that when you have ; learned the power of concentration you have solved the problem of effective in tellectual work. That is. the first stum bling-block that the person who does not habitually rend books, even foi recreation, encounters. It is so difficult to pin your attention to the printed page, for you think of things nearer at hand with which you are familiar. But a sensational novel raptures the uneasy attention sooner than more thoughtful books; therefore, people of Untrained minds are the greatest devourers of un worthy books.—Ladles' Home Journal. People make themselves very miser nble by telling "jokes" 011 each other. JACKETS AND BASQUES. SEASONABLE AND STYLISH DESICNS FOR WOMEN. A Neatly Finished Fton Jacket of lllaek Kerge For Wear as Part of a Cycling Costume—Ladles' ltasqtio With Two Under-Arm Gores—Fashions in lluir. Black serge, says May Manton, is the material selected for this Eton jacket that is neatly finished with ma chine stitching, narrow silk cording UADIES' ETON JACKET. and small buttons affording appro priate decoration. It is worn over a taffeta silk waist of brilliant hue which affords the touch of brightness so es sential to a cycling costume. The fronts are adjusted to the figure by single-bust darts that are held to posi tion by means of cords and buttons. Above the closing the fronts are re versed in lapels that meet the rolling collar in even notches. The jacket, of LADIES' DASOUE WITII TWO UNDER-ARM GORES. becoming length, reaches to tlio top of the deep girdle, except nt the front where it extends in pretty elongated tubs. The seamless back is slashed at the centre and decorated with cord and buttons. The sleeves are two seamed, having tho moderate fulness of the upper portion arranged in gath ers. They are slashed at the wrists I revealing the sleeve benenth. This : style of Eton is particularly jaunty, being a decided innovation from the several plain styles. Cloth, serge, | cheviot and canvas are among the suit- I able (materials; the colors most se j lected being green, brown and blue in all its various shades. ! To make this jacket for a lady in the medium size will require two and one fourth yards of forty-four-inch ma terial. Ladies' Basque. Tho basque shown, in the largo illustration is an ideal model for ladies of generous figure, according to May Manton. Tho pattern provides for an extra under-arm gore, which has the desired effect of decreasing the ap parent size of the waist while the soft fulness at each side of the vest front detracts from the prominence of tho bust. The graceful fulness of the front and the seamless back are dis posed over glove-fitted linings that close in centre-front. The seamless V-shaped vest portion is sewed per , maneutly to the right-front and is hooked over the full edge of the left. The side-fronts have gathers at tho shoulder edges, the lower edges being I disposed in overlapping plaits which, with the pointed outlines, give a grace ful effect to the waist, The back fits smoothly across tho shoulders, the fulness at the lower edge being laid in overlapping plaits that are firmly tacked down below the waist line. If the seamless back is not desired , the basque can be made to show the seams as seen in back view of engrav ing. A close standing band completes , the neck with a frill of lace above. The sleeves i*ro mousouetaire, tho soft fulness being caused by gathers on the outer edge of sleeves. Short, full puff's caught up in butterfly effect drape the shoulders, and the wrists are uniquely slashed over a deep ruffle of lace. As represented, figitred barege was employed in making; nar row black satin ribbon affording the decoration. The mode is applicable, however, to all manner of weaves and textures including silk, peau-de-soie, canvas weaves, organdieß, etc. To make this basque for a lady in the medium size will require three and one-fourth yards of forty-four-inch material. Next Season's Sl<lo Combs. Tho new side combs for next sea son's wear come in sets of three and four. The most stylish are hinged to gether. In sets of four, one comb goes above tho knot, one below the knot, and one on either side. In sets of three, as a rule, the middle comb is to be used above the knot, and is the least bit higher and more ornate than tho two side combs. Where tho four are hinged together, the tendency seems to bo to have them all alike, differing only in length and curve. Tho manufacturers assert that tho teeth of the combs are coarser than last season, but if such is really the case it is not perceptible to the casual observer. The ornamentation of these combs as a rule is quite simple. The plainer ones, when ornamented with narrow bands of silver or gold, have only simple designs cut into these bands. Except 011 those pieces to bo worn above the knot, there is 110 fili gree work. And jewels, when used, are sunk in tho band, not raised above, as for the last few seasons. Amethysts, it is said, will bo the popular stones, and only a few dia monds are shown, to ho worn in very black hair. Amethysts come in set tings of silver and gold, in polished and French gray finish and in polished and rose-finished silver gilt. Fashions For tho IValr. If it is the perfection of art, says the New York Sun, to conceal art, the hairdressers nre in this sort of decep tion in advance of their competitors in ministering to the needs of women. Wavy, soft pompadour fronts are deft ly arranged under a few stray locks of your own liair, and all sorts of artis tically-made coils, putts, toupees and short curls are mingled with your tresses so cunningly that your best friend never suspects their existence. Large, loose waves are just as desir able in summer as in winter, and tho extreme high pompadour has lost none of its popularity. Tho simple little knot, with a coil around it arranged high on the head, is a pretty way of dressing the hah.* with the pompadour front, or this same knot may bo ar ranged lower, with a softer twist. Evening coiffures arc completed by J J ' DESIGNS IN COIFFUItES. 1" tho addition of some ornament, an aigrette, a loop and bow of spangled tulle, a little wreath of small roses, with a floral aigrette in the centre or one or two real roses, which are quite the prettiest of all. Sleeves Growing Sinnller. Sleeves are growing smaller, and the indications are that women will need 110 help next winter in putting on their coats. Probably they will accept it, however. Newest modes from Paris show sleeves, in some in stances, arm-tight. Usually a miti gating frill appears at the shoulder, but some brave or foolish women are ready to adopt the close sleeve with out a scrap of shoulder fullness. It is to bo lipped that fashion will not posi tively order the tight sleeve without a ruble, because it is unbecoming to those whose figures are not perfect. | OUTFIT A PROSPECTOR NEEDS. . Estimato ly Veteran Miner of tho Clothes ami Food Keiiulrcd In Alaska. Thomas Cook, who has been a miner for nineteen years and is among those who eame down 011 the Excelsior after making a lucky strike on the Klon dike, prepared at the request of tho Examiner, the following approximate estimate of the requirements of a Yukon miner for one year. These figures are 011 the side of conservatism, as they are based on his own experi ence, and he admits that he is rather below than above tho average. The prices quoted, except in tho case of ! such articles as mocassins, mittens and tho "Parkee." which are obtain able in Alaska or the Yukon country of the Northwest, are about current rates in San Francisco. If these sup plies were purchased at Dawson the prices would be from three to four times as much. Mr. Cook warns any man against the folly of going to the mines without at least as good a stock as is enumerated here. His advice is "Get plenty of staples and get the best clothes obtainable of the kind named." SUri'LIES. 500 pounds flour £'l2 50 100 " oatmeal GOO 100 " beans 285 I 24 " coffee, at 30 cents 7 20 21 " tea, at 50 cents 12 00 100 " bacon, at 14 cents 14 00 100 " dried potatoes, at 5 cents 500 50 " dried vegetables, at 5 cents 2 50 j 100 " dried fruits, at G cents... GOO 1 25 " (2 cases) condensed milk 250 5 " baking powder 250 5 " salt and pepper 100 50 " canned butter, at 25 cents 12 50 30 " lard, at 10 cents 3 00 25 " rice, at 5 cent.. 1 25 20 " tools 15 00 50 " stove and cooking uten sils 10 00 2 " matches and miscellany. 150 1310 pounds. Total supplies £llO 80 OUTFIT. Three suits woolen underclothes £l2 00 Three woolen overshirts 0 00 Two pairs overalls 2 00 Six pairs woolen stockings G 00 Two pairs blankets 1G 00 One fox-skin robe 50 00 One reindeer "parkee," covering head and reaching to the knees.. 12 00 j Three Paris caribou mittens GOO Two fur caps 8 00 Two pairs rubber boots 7 00 Three pairs mocassins <>oo One pair "muckluoks" 5 00 One woolen "Mackinaw," a sort of woolen sweater 10 00 Two sweaters (extra thick) 8 00 Weight, 120 pounds. Total outllt. £157 00 1310 pounds of supplies 11G 80 Grand total, 1430 pounds. . .. £273 80 Mr. Cook drew attention to the fact that the miner should follow the biblical instruction and put money in bis purse. Many small articles will be needed at Dawson City, and if tho prospector goes byway of .Juneau there are guides to pay and a sled and dogs to hire. Some of the clothes will last longer than a year, but the quan- ; tity lit for service at the end of that time will be very limited.—San Fran cisco Examiner. How to Drink Water. A physician writing in the Sanitar ian thinks that the nvearge person does not know how to drink water. Then he proceeds to give tho follow ing advice: Tho effects produced by tho drink ing of water vary with the manner in which it is drunk. If, for instance, a pint of cold water be swallowed at a largo draught, or if it be taken in two portion with a short interval between, certain definite effects follow—effects which differ from those which would have resulted from the same quantity taken by sipping. Sipping is a powerful stimulant to the circulation—a thing which ordin ary drinking iB not. During the act of sipping the action of the nerve which slows the beat 3 of the heart is abolished, and as a consequence that organ con tracts much more rapidly, the pulse beats more quickly, and the eircula- ! tion in various parts of tho body is in creased. In addition to this we also find that tho pressure under which the bile is secreted is raised by the sipping of fluid. Novel Cooking Method. In Bosnia one of the Austrian bat* j teries had to go into action just as din- j nor time eame on, and the artillery men, resolved not to lose a meal, cut their meat into small trips, placed it on tho breech of their guns and cooked it by the heat of the metal. They found it delicious, and voted the bif stek a la cutasse de cannon infinitely superior to beefsteaks cooked under the pommel of tho saddle, Tartar fashion. Hnril to Pronounce. Hottentot is hard to pronounce, if j the graphic description of Dr. Aurel Schnlz does it no injustice: "I can safely liken the language to the click ing of a multitude of different rusty old gun lock simultaneously set in in motion. It is simply appalling to hear the fatty click gut tkoot, tick, lick, mktchuk gtkowktok gtu-gkti gkkij, accompanied by mauy gur glings." Fetters Won't flold Him. A prisoner? who recently escaped from tho Concord (N. H.) House of Correction Bent back to tho City Mar shal the twelve-pound steel collar from one of his legs, broken in pieces, evi dently with a hammer. Tho pieces o) tho collar were neatly wrapped up and packed in a box, evidently made by the prisoner. He had escaped from the same institution a number of limes before. How to Kcmove a Tight King. Take a long thread of silk and put one end under the ring and draw it through several inches, holding it with the thumb in tho palm of the hand, j Then wind the long end of the silk tightly around the linger down to the nail. Take hold of the short end of the silk, and holding it toward the lin ger end, unwind it, and the silk press ing against it will withdraw it. Pioneering. It is quite the custom to speak of the whites who were the tirst to go among the Indian tribes of the West :is "pio neers of civilization." The "civiliza tion" was not always of a perfectly civ il order. The officials and traders of the old Hudson Bay Company used to claim credit for this rough pioneering. If we may judge from the records of the company, their work was thorough iu its way, but the way was a hard one. Some entries in the account-books of the company, made more than a liuw drod years ago, will show how the civ ilizing was being done. "Dee. ill, 17U5. Served out a quart of rum per man; the evening spent in in nocent mirth and jollity. "Jan. 1, 170(5. All the Indians drunk about the place; great trouble In keep lug order." Two entries of an earlier date, and from a station still farther north, show what were the amenities of intercourse between the "civilizeu' and savage races when questions of right and jus tice were in the way of settlement. The first eutry reads: "The Company's cook, a lad of 1(5, having been carried off by the Esqui maux. three out of a party of six pass ing Esquimaux were seized as hostages uutil the return of the boy." Five years later another brief entry shows how this transaction was finally closed: "Had a row with the three Esqui maux detained. They were shot, and their ears pickled in rum and sent on to their tribe, to show them what had happened." A Moor's Madness. Si Mohammed ben Moussa, the giant Moor, sent as the chief of the Moroc can Mission to Queen Victoria's Jubi lee, never reached London, having gone mad in Paris on his way there, and i then having been sent home. His mad- i liess took a very queer form. He thought lie was Montjarref, the chief outrider who precedes the President of the French Republic on state occa sions, and insisted on being dressed In livery, with riding breeches and high boots. The Bayonet. The bayonet was first made in Bay onne, in France; hence its name, and it was first used by the French army iu 1(571. It was successfully employed by them during the reign of William 111. in an attack on the British Twenty-fifth Regiment of Foot. It afterward lie- j came generally recognized as an India- | pensflble military weapon, and has been used on both sides in nearly all the great battles of Europe and America for the last 150 years. C.irls should disabuse their minds of j the idea that their husbands will lick i any man who speaks disagreeably to them. Fits permanently cured. No fllsor nervous ness after first day's us.- of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve I(estover. S3 trial bottle and treatise free Dm. It. 11. lvi.is k. Ltd.. ail Arch St.,Phila.,Pa. I believe Piso's Cure for Consumption saved mv boy's life last summer. Mi s. Allie Doug lass. Lo ltoy, Mich., Oct. 30, lM. ftAUfll UJJCURED AT HOME; *eni tump r„ r tjANuKlt k Dr.J.B. HARRIS &CO.. w """pike Building, CluctuuuU, Ohio. 1 M k | are all as near perfection in i adjustment and finish when they leave i the Columbia works as human ingenuity J can make them, and are ready to be rid- \ den on the longest journey or put to the J J 1897 Columbia Bicycles J STANDARD OF THE WORLD. ftT *5, TO ALL ALIKE. 4 Hartfords, Pattern Z. . . 4B i Hartfords, Pattern I, . . AO i $ FQPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn, 4 m II Columbias arc not properly represented in your vicinity, let us know, m iilioloßCW By J. Hamilton Ayere, A. M., H. D. ry This is a most Valuable Book for w illiL the Household, teaching as it does afflQ rJ ujjf /[ the easily-distinguished Symptoms ,x A/i different Diseases, the Causes, EggM (tjTm--. My and Means of Preventing such Dis- YyT eases, and the Simplest Remedied • v - jf/ - which will alloviate or cure. JSPi E-W 598 PACES, i** JSJ PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED. The Book is writteu in plain everv -1 P*^ iff *1 Ml technical terms which render most n/r-^' v • - wTtrSS Doctor Books so valueless to the generality of readers. This Book is intended to be of Service in the ' gj/ K V Family, and is so worded as to be HI/ readily understood by all. Only ' " 60 CTS. POST-PAID. " Before and After Taking." (The low price only being made possible by the immense edition printed). Not only does this Book contain so much Information Relative to Diseases, but very properly gives a Complete Analysis of everything pertaining to Courtship, Marriage and the Production and Rearing of Healthy Families; together with Valuable Recipes and Pre scriptions, Explanations of Botanical Practice, Correct use of Ordinary Herbs. New Edition, Revised and Enlarged with Complete Index. With this Book in the house there is no excuse for not knowing \Vhat to do in an emergency. Don't wait until you have illness in vour family before vou order, but sen l at once for this valuable volume. ONLY (10 CENTS POST-PAID. Send postal notes or postage stamps of any denomination not larger than 0 cents. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Leonard Street, N. Y. City. When Hamlet Exclaimed: " Aye, There's the Rub I" Gould He Have Referred to SAPOLIO AN OPEN LETTER From Miss Sachner, of Columbus, 0., to Ailing Women. To all women who are ill:—It af fords me great pleasure to tell you of the benefit 1 have derived from talc ing Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable : Compound. I can hardly lind words to express my gratitude for the boon given to suffering women in that ex •'dy Before taking the sicians and gradually grew worse. About a year ago I was advised by a friend to try Mrs. Pinkham's Sanative Wash and Vegetable Compound, which I did. After using three bottles of the Vegetable Compound and one pack age of Sanative Wash, I ain now enjoy ing better health than I ever did, and attribute the same to your wonderful remedies. I cannot find words to ex press what a Godsend they have been to me. Whenever I begin to feel nervous and ill, I know I have a never-failing pliy j sician at hand. It would afford me j pleasure to know that my words had directed some suffering sister to health and strength through those most ex cellent remedies.—Miss May Sacuxer, 348Vj E. Rich St., Columbus, O. DFA Q n BHRA ARDS ran b utefl with- H8 H B ftl Sa ut t>,flr kQow ledg* by Cwt W H vff Anti-Jag ttaa miuvelona B | ■ H Km euro for tha drink habit. | 9 W fl B |1 Write Renova Chemical e. , Co., 6S Broadway, K. Y. E ull information (in plain wrapper) mailed tit. DELAWARE CROWN N SCARLET CLOVER I New crop; price, $3.50 per bushel. Sacked f. o. I. ' 'frees, plants mid vines. Catalogue FREE , SHOWN SEED CO.,Wyoming,Del. INVENTORS J - II Patent Agencies D advertising " No patent no pay." Prises, uiedals, great riches, etc. We do a regular patent bueinaas. i.vir jee*, Advice tree. Highest refereueea. Write u. WATSON K. ( (U.KMAN, Solici tors oi patents, IHI2 i . Street, Washington, D.C. PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHNW. MORRIS, WASHINGTON, 0. C. Late Principal Examiner V. 8. Pension Bureau. 3yra. la lust war, 15 adjudicating claims, siucu M' ii an t xwlmeTrwamcd^oTruNTnTTlaMn) agencies to sell guaranteed Colorado Cold Mine Rill I I inuc Stock. Reasonable commissions. For informs mILLIUNo tion> address, BEN A. BLOCK. Memhei A YEAR Agents everywhere to push household neces sity; sells at sight; send dime for samples and details. Krider Co., 2339 N. Carlisle St., Pbila. P N U 3(5 "97.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers