USE YOUR REASON And Profit by tho Experience of Othei People. There are thousands of people who have been oured of nervous trouble, scrofula sores, rheumatism, dyspepsia, catarrh and other diseases by purifying their blood with Hood's Sarsapariila. This great medicine will do tho same good work for you if you will give it the opportunity. It will tone up your system, crente an ap petite and give sweet, refreshing sleep. llAflfl'c Dllle are L tl J" only pi 1U to t*ke HO Oil S I IIIS With Hood's Sursaparillu. *IOO Reward. 8100. The reader* of thie paper will l>e pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh (Jure is the only positive euro now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beiuir a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of tho system, thereby destroy ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in iJts curative iiowers that tbey offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure, bend for list of testimonials. Address F. .1. Chkney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 76c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The Baltimore Sr.n is authority for the statement that probably the oldest station agent in the country in point of service is .Tames A. Onry, tile Postmaster General of the United States. He was appointed agent at Alberton, Howard county, Sid., on the B. & O. Railroad, some 4-1 years ago, and his name still appears on the pay-rolls of the company. The two next oldest B. & (). agents are said to he Capt. Charles \V. Harvey, at Ellicott City, Md., and John W. Howscrat Relay. They have each been in tho service '.U years. The B. A- O. has also, in actual ser vice, a passenger conductor, Capt. Harry Green, who has run trains between Baltimore and Cumberland for 47 years. I f afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eyo-wttter.Druggißtssell at-sc.per bottle. PASSING OF THE MUSTANG. Wild Horsen Are No Longer of Any Value. The wild horse of Texas has become one of the greatest nuisances within the border of the Lone Star State. Not satisfied with its own freedom the wild horse lias adopted the tactics of the Apache and of the Sioux and stam pedes its brethren. Novelists have taught us to believe that the wild mus tang is emblematic of freedom pure and noble. The Texas ranchman re gards him as an emissary of the evil one, for he brings to his ranch despair and loss. For the last decade the droves of horses that run in Texas have been steadily increasing in number and strength. Years ago it was worth while to catch these animals to sell. Nowadays it is hard work to sell a mustang for use even as a cow pony. Formerly it was the case that there ■was no horse for the stockman, the cattle-grower, like the Texas pony which had run wild for the first four or five years of its life. Lean and sinewy as an Arab with the endurance of an Indian and a capacity for steady speed that can only be likened to a locomotive he was a treasure. Well seasoned, a cow pony could be ridden 100 miles in a single day and come out of the encounter with fatigue with fly ing colors. The wild horse, however—that same animal which the 10-cent novelist de scribes as the "fiery untamed steed"— believes the sweets of freedom are so very sweet that all his bretbern lu txindage should share them. With this in mind therefore he swoops down up on the inclosure of the ranchman, in duces the cow ponies to brave the ter rors of jumping a barbwire fence and takes chances on clearing the sides ol the corral. The result is that the stock man, unless one of the riders stops ou guard, is likely to wake up in The morn ing and find his herd stampeded. If it is the round-up the first thing the wranglers know a thunder of hoofs comes from the prairie, a shrill neigh ing, which the herd answers in equally shrill notes. The hoof beats sound nearer and nearer, the herd grows more nnd more excited and uneasy, until finally the wild mustangs dash in uud mingle with the cow ponies and in a moment more all are off for some place, no one knows where. The wranglers, or herders, will be fortu nate, indeed, if they can control their own animals nnd avoid being forced to Join in the stampede. Nelson's Famous Order. Captain Alfred T. Mahan contributes to the Century an article on "Nelson at Trafalgar." Concerning Nelson's fa mous order, Captain Mahan says: Aft er returning to the deck, Nelson asked Blackwood whether he did not think another signal was needed. The cap tain replied that he thought every one understood perfectly what was expect ed of hiui. After musing a while, Nel son said, "Suppose we telegraph that 'Nelson expects every man to do his duty.'" The officer to whom the re mark was made suggested whether it would not read better, "England ex pects." In the fleet, or, for the matter of that, to the country, the change sig nified little, for no two names were ever more closely identified than those of England and Nelson; but the latter welcomed it eagerly, and at 11:30 the signal which has achieved world-wide celebrity flew from the Victory's mast head, and was received with a shout throughout the fleet. Vegetable Sicilian \ HAIRRENEWER does for the hair just what its ] name says it does—it renews it. j Fading, falling, thin locks /J jfeag are stimulated to look fresh (jggf; jjSKI and new by its use; nature does the rest. Dragging Newly Plowed Land. "When land is plowed for winter grain after midsummer it needs all the moisture that the soil has when plowed, 1 and a good deal more, to make a good 3eed bed. The turning of the furrow exposes a much larger surface to the air, besides making a hollow beneath, which also helps to dry out the soil above it. Early in spring, when the land is cold, this large exposure to the air, which is then warmer than the 4 soil, may be beneficial. Even then we never wanted to let the furrow lie more than one or two days without putting in the harrow to break up! clods formed by the plow, and which, if they dried in that state, could not , bo made into a good seed bed that sea ; son. But in late summer if it is neces sary to plow, the rough furrow should i be dragged over as quickly as possible. It will press the furrow down, causing weeds and stubble to begin to rot. The roller also is a help to this. But it is bet ter to run the smoothing harrow over the rolled surface, so as to roughen it. The compactness of the soil brings moisture to the surface, and the rough ened surface makes a mulch which prevents too rapid evaporation. Spring Grain Among Whent. i To the Middle State farmer -who grows winter wheat the scattering j spring grain which grows among wheat l isa nuisance. Hence he usually plows or harrows his spring grain ] stubble as soon as possible after the ; crop is harvested, so as to have the grains germinate early and be de stroyed by subsequent cultivation. But the far Western farmer who grows wheat looks on the matter very differ ; ently. The danger to his crop is that winter blizzards will blow all the soil away from his wheat. TUo spring grain makes a larger leaf than does the wheat. If it occupies the soil, it pro tects the wheat plant beside it, and as the spring grain is killed by winter freezing, it does not prevent, but rather aids, the later growth of the | winter grain. Thus it often happens 5 that Western farmers sow spring grain with their wheat as a protection to it from winter blizzards. This would never be done by Eastern farmers,who 1 would find the spring grain au injury | to the winter grain in fall, and no ben efit whatever to its ability to with ! stand the rigors of winter.—Boston I Cultivator. Picking:, Sorting and Storing Apples. ] My fruit, says G. T. Powell, of New I York, is always picked in baskets, ! never in bags, put into piles, and if for foreign shipment, carefully as sorted into two grades and barreled immediately. Sweating is not neces sary. When not shipped to home or I foreign markets, the fruit is put into bushel boxes and drawn to a storage i room, where the boxes are piled up, and there held until ready to be sold. ! This cellar or storeroom is kept cool ' by opening doors aud windows at ] night and closing them as much as I possible during the day, thus shutting in the cool air. These boxes should be made tight, so that when piled the ] fruit is well confined from the air, j same as in a barrel. When ready to sell, the fruit is assorted into No. 1 and No. 2 grades, throwing out any wormy or scabby apples. If the fruit is to be held for some time, the air can be brought down to thirty-four de grees when freezing weather begins by shutting in the cold air of freezing nights. If there are no facilities for holding apples on the farm and they are put in cold storage in the city, they should • be assorted and packed in the orchard and shipped at once, to save expense in handling. There should be sorters enough to keep up with the pickers where fruit is shipped from the orchard, so that every day's picking may be secured from the air and placed in barrels. When picking in the boxes for home storage, no sorting is neces sary until the apples are sold, except that all apples showing any rot should be thrown out. If apples have to be held in barrels for a time, do not head too tight, but before shipping open head, or rather the bottom, of the bar rel, put in another layer, to make fruit 1 thoroughly tight, and then ship them. j Tricksters at Agricultural Fairs. Wherever large numbers of people gather, persons are usually found who make a living by deceiving the public. They have schemes and tricks innumer able that appear to be easy and simple; but in reality they are quite difficult aud in some cases impossible to suc cessfully perform. They have wheels and machines that are doctored to turn as the proprietor may wish to make 1 them. They have cocoanut-headed j negro dodgers to arouse tho brutality lin men and boys. They have tented shows which are disgusting in coarse ness and vulgarity. Among the throngs at agricultural i fairs these leeches are out of place.' They contribute nothing helpful or good. They do no' add to the attrac tion of the fair. They do not bring desirable patrons. They do not swell i the gate receipts. J They are not patronized by intelli gent patrons of the fair. They are not wanted by honest farmers. They are | shunned with fear by thoughtful par- I ents. Because of their presence, even, the fair is not patronized by many of j our best citizens' families. I The harm accomnlished bv these self-invited fakirs would doubtless sur prise us, were it possible to gather and trace back to their door all the results of their work. They distract the thought, they divert the attention,they destroy the interest in the real work of the fair. The competitive exhibitions, the meritorious displays, the awarding of prizes are all robbed of the undi vided interest that belongs to them. The morals of the country suffer ser iously, we believe, from actions and words that,without warning,are sprung upon inquisitive audiencos in the tent shows. We are glad to see that a strong effort is being put forth this season to keep these objectionable features out of the grounds, and the attitude of man agers is encouraging.—Farm, Field aud Fireside. Money in Turkeys. As far as my observations go, writes R. W. Davidson, of New Jersey, there is more money in turkeys than in chick ens. Many people believe that tur keys are delicate and hard to raise. This is true as they are usually bred and yet turkeys are not difficult to raise if they are properly managed. The causes of the great mortality in tur keys are in breeding, dampness, lice and improper food. Inbreeding is the greatest evil. This degenerates the stock and then the lice usually put a stop to all furthor development. These two evils are worse than dampness or improper feed. Never breed from an inferior or undeveloped gobbler and never breed from the same gobbler more than one year unless the same breeding hens are also retained for an other season. Young hens, if hatched early, will begin to lay earlier aud lay more eggs than old ones, yet the old ones make the best breeders. Tur keys are profitable until four or five years old. Do not inbreod, even for n single season. It is far better to ex pend a few dollars for a new gobbler unless, as I remarked above, the same breeders are retained for another sea son. If hen turkeys are not allowed to sit, they will lay from thirty to sixty eggs in a season. If one becomes broody, shut her up for three or four days and in a week she will be laying again. In summer making growth is the groat object. Turkeys are sup posed to gather their own living from the fields, yet the same rule holds good with turkeys as with chickens. If we want good size and to have them to come home to roost, we must feed them at home every night. Give a liberal supper of corn and wheat, mostly wheat until November. Also a light breakfast if possible. Pure-bred turkeys are the best- if not inbred— yet if it is considered too costly to maintain a pure-bred flock, buy a well developed pure-bred gobbler every year. The additional expense will be little compared with the results. When November comes feed tho turkeys in tended for market liberally with corn. Remember that this brings a good prico for tho corn and a plump turkey will sell for more than a poor one. The more food the growing turkeys con sume, the more they will weigh when r.ady for market. A good rule is to give a light meal in the morning and all they will eat at night, after they are three months old. They will thus get half their living on the range. Some writers have said that the heavy breeds, such as the Bronze, are not desirable for the general market, being too heavy to sell well. This is wholly incorrect. It should be borne in mind that turkeys are sold while yet young. The Bronze will weigh from two to five pounds more than any other breed at the same ago and with equal care. The largest toms should be sent off at Thanksgiving nnd Christmas, when large birds are in demand, and the hens held for other markets, when medium sized sell the best. Got all the turkeys off before or during the holidays, as the market is always best then. It is best to raise large, quick growing turkeys, as they require no more time or feed than smaller ones. A Forgotten Capital. One year before the Mayflower set sail from Southampton the Virginians assembled for the first time in their House of Burgesses at Williamsburg, the first froo elective body that came together in the new world to make laws for self-government. There is no more interesting colon inl relic in the forgotten capital than the "Powder Horn," an octagonal maga zine erected in 1715 under the rule of Governor Spottswood. Tho "Powdor Horn" contains portraits of Cnptniu John Smith and Pocahontas, a massive fragment of stone chiselled with the name of Walter Raleigh and dozens of colonial relics. Coal in Australia. Thoy have just been celebrating the centennial of the discovery of coal in Australia. It was in 1797 that coal was found near Mount. Keira, in Illa warra, and at the Hunter River. Up to 1817 tho output of the lattor fields was unimportant, nnd in that year 49,732 tons were raised, whjlp in 1895 the amount was about tliree aud three quarter million tons, valued at XI,- 095,327. Black coal of commercial value may be said at present, as far as prolitablo working is concerned, to be confined to Now South Wales, Queens land and New Zealand. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. | Preparing Tomato Figs, r Tomato figs are both economical and tasty. Select the small yellow toma toes; scald, peel and weigh. Allow three pounds of sugar to six of toma toes. Put a layer of tomatoes on the bottom of your preserving-kettle, then a layer of sugar, and stand them over a moderate fire. Cook very gently un til the sugar has penetrated the toma toes. Lift them carefully, one at a time, and spread on a large meat plat ter. Dry inj the hot sun, sprinkle them several times with granulated sugar. When dry pack them in jars, with a layer of sugar between the lay ers of tomatoes. Cover with glass while drying.—Mrs. S. T. Borer, iD Ladies' Home Journal. Tomato Soup. For this soup use one-half of a can of tomatoes, or one pint of fresh stewed tomatoes. If you use the canned goods, don't leave the other half in the can; pour it in a china bowl, and, if con venient, cook it a little before you put it away. It will keep in a cool place two or three days. It is said that people are poisoned by using canned goods, only because the article is al lowed to remain in the can after it has been opened. But about the soup— one-half can of tomatoes, one pint of water, a small onion chopped, a bay leaf and a sprig of parsley boiled to gether for fifteen minutes. Press through a fine colander, return to the kettle and add a teaspoonful of salt, two of sugar and a shako of pepper. Bub together one tablespoonful of but ter and one of flour, and stir into the soup wlion it boils; stir until it thick ens. Serve with squares of toasted bread. An lilcnl Moat Plo. This is a meat pie fit for the gods, and was a favorite of Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher: Boil half a dozen me dium-sized, mealy potatoes, mash very smooth, then pour on them half a cup of rich, sweet milk, salt and mix in flour to make a dough that will roll nicely. 801 l a half-inch-thick layer for the baking dish, butter and put in. Cut your nice juicy steak or raw beef into inch square pieces, and line the dish. Over this Blice thinly one or two raw potatoes, and if you like, one small finely minced onion. Salt, pep per and lard with a tablespoonful of good sweet butter. Add a teacup of water, sprinkle a little flour over the top, and put on the upper crust, making it at least an inch thick. Bake an hour and a half. Of course you must watch the oven carefully to keep the crust from burning. A griddle on the bottom of the oven, and a pan of water on the grate, will add materially. A thick brown paper over the dish will be added protection. The oven should be a little slow. Roast Goose. Select a goose not over eiglit months old. Clean aud cleanse thoroughly; lot lie in salted water some hours. This should be done on the day be fore, snd the bird put on ice, if possi ble, over night. There aro two ways of making the stuffing. No. 1: Mix two cups hot mashed potato with one and one-lialf of bread crumbs, three level teaspoons salt, one teaspoon sage, one chopped onion and tablespoon chopped pork. No. 2: Three pints bread crumbs, six ounces) butter, one teafqaoon each of sage, black pepper and salt. In either case till, sow up and put to roast. As the superabun dance of oil is the main objection to a gooso (and the llesh is not flavored without it), all loose fat should bo re moved when dressing, and sliced salt pork laid over the breast, which draws out the surplus oil. Baste with salt and water, dredgo with Hour, turn over, cook entirely done, which will take about three hours. Serve on a bed of water cresses. Make giblet sauce. Household Hints. Sick headache will sometimes yield to a cup of strong clear coffee that has the juioo of half a lemon iu it. If the crackers have got stale, put them iu a baking tin and stand iu the oven till thoy brown slightly, and they will be fresh as ever. Never use the cores of quinces in making jelly. Parings may be used, but the quinoes should be treated to a good washing before peeling. Powdered soapstone and salt make an everlasting lining for woru-out stove fire-boxes. Take equal parts of the salt and soapstone and wet to a thick paste with water, and spread on, then let it dry. When a dose of unpleasant medicine is necessary, particularly with chil dren, its disagreeable taste may be al most wholly concealed if a peppermint candy is taken just before the medi cine. This is a better plan than tak ing something after the dose. In packing away white furs or robes or children's white cloaks do not for get to scatter pieces of white wax among them. It will help to keep them from turning yellow. A nice way is to roll them in pieoes of cotton or linen, make very dark with bluing, boforo putting thorn into their boxes. It takes housekeepers a long time to learn that asbestos plates such as you can get for five cents aro the nicest thing in the world to put under the tin in which you are cooking oatmeal, rice, milk, or any of tlioso other things that burn so easily. They cannot burn, unless they boil dry, if you use tho plate under thorn. A room situated so that it does not get any direct sunlight, but only re flected light, may be made more cheer ful if the walls are covered with a paper that lias a background of some delicate yollow shade. The painted woodwork should be a creamy tint, aud with yellow India silk or muslin draperies at the windows, one can al most imagine one's self in a room with a southern exposure. THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. Hl* I.ovo Grew Cold—Tit For Tat—A Very Cross Examination—Well Invented- Tile Time Wan 12.15—Quick Learner' —(Jotting Around Confession, Ktc., Etc. In happier days her lover wooed And vowed and pleaded, sighed and sued; And now she vows that he shall see That alto can sue as well as he. —Puck. A Very Cross Examination. Counsel —"Now answer the ques tion, and don't get angry—" Witness—"Why shouldn't I, when you are a cross examiner?"— Judy. Tit For Tat. Bacon—"My cook failed to cook the roast last night for dinner." Egbert—"And what did you do?" "I bad to roast the cook."—Yonkers Statesman. A Gentle Hint. Miss Wheeler—"Yes; this i 3 my new seventy-live dollar wheel. Bicycles aro lower, you know." Miss Prim—"So I've heard. 'Pears to mo, bicycle skirts ought to be lower, too."—Puck. His Advantage. "I never like to quarrel with my husband." "Of course not." "He can always think of meaner things to say than I can."—Columbus (Ohio) State Journal. The Time Was 12.15. Returned Traveler (in the amateur play)—"lt seems as if it were only yes terday when last I gazed upon these old familiar scenes." The Audience (in unison) —"lt was." —Detroit Free Press. Well Invested. Herdso—"Did you ever bribo a policeman?" Sedso—"Yes." Herdso—"How?" Sedso—"Gave $1 to advise the cook to stay."—Up-To-Date. Getting Around Confession. Counsel—"What is your age, madam?" Witness—"l only know from what I've been told, and you just told me that hearsay evidonco was not valid iu court."—Fliegende Blaetter. Wonderful. "This country must be increasing its population very fast." "What makes yon think so?" "Why, I understand that now there are as many people as there are differ ent makes of wheels."—Life. Quick Learners. Mr. Hiland—"l see that many Klon dike miners have got enough and are returning." Mr. Halket—"Enough gold?" Mr. Hiland—"No: enough experi ence."— Pittsburg Chronicle Tele graph. A J>oggd Confession. "I'm surprised to find tlintyou keep a dog, Tomkins! Why, you can barely keep your wife! "What on earth do you feed him on?" "Well, I gives 'im cat's meat. And when I can't afford that, why, 'e 'as to 'ave wot we 'ave."—Punch. Quakers ia France. They were speaking of a recent slight earthquake in tho south of France. "Did you tremble?" a bystander asked one of the ladies. "Oh, yes, I trembled, but the earth trembled worse than I did."—Le Monde Comiqtie. Alt rum KUlbile. "By next spring," said the wild eyed inventor, "I shall bo rich beyond the imaginings of paresis. lam going to Klondike " "So are a lot of other people." "T'hnt is where my fine work comes in. I have almost perfected a process tor making gold edible."—lndianapolis Journal. His Interview. Young Congressman—"Well, my clear, what do you think? I had thu honor of being interviewed this morn ing on the leading topics of the day." His Wife—"lndeed! What did you say?" Young Congressman—"l really can't tell until I Hee the morning paper."— Bichmond Dispatch. A Reason. "Why were you discharged from yonr last place?" asked the merchant of the applicant for a situation. "I was discharged for good behavior, sir." "Wasn't that a singular reason for a discharge?" "Well, you see, good behavior took nine months oft' my sentence."—Life_ A Glittering; Prospectus. "Yes," said the Northern investor to the Georgia real estate agent, "your terms at §!1 an acre are very reason able. Is there any gold on the land?" The agent looked around as if to as sure himself that no one was listening, then he leaned over aud whispered in tho investor's ear: "It's mostly gold!" Atlanta Con stitution. Quick Conversion. Small Boy—"What'll I do with this money bank?" Mamma—"Put it away, of course. It has a dollar in it that your aqnt gave you and some change your pa aud I put in." "Not now. There isn't any money in it now. I spent it." "Spent it? What did you do that for?" "Why, the minister preached so hard against honrdin' up riches, that I got converted and spent what I had." .—New York Weekly. Indignant. "lie merely kissed my hand. I could not speak for indignation." "Yes." "He must have thought me deaf and dumb." But oven in such a contingency, was it to be assumed that the hand was to perform all of th? multiplex functions that usually devolve upon the lips 7 Detroit Journal. One of the largest electric light plants in the world Is being made In New York for Southern Brazil, 15,000 lights. The erecting and repair shops of the B. & O. at Mt. Clare in the city >f Baltimore, which arc the oldest shops in the United States, have been completely modernized. The locomotive erecting shop has been re hniltand is supplied with two ">O-ton electric cranes which lift the heaviest locomotives and move them to any point as though they weighed hut a ton. The com pressed air ap pliances are of the latest pattern and the cost of making the improvements will he saved in two years, as the new machinery accelerates the work, at less expense than in times gone by. NEGLECTJS SUICIDE. Plain Words From Mrs. Pinlsham, Corroborated by Mrs. Charles Dunmore, That Ought to Bring- Suffering- Women to Thoir Senses. If you were drowning and friendly hands shoved a plank to you, and you refused it, you would be committiric suicide! Yet that is precisely what women are doing if they go about their homes almost dead with misery, yet refuse to grasp the kindly hand held out to them! i t is suicidal to go day after day with that dull, con ,stant pain in the region of the womb and that V Q Jy\ bloating heat and tenderness of the abdomen, r / <zr which make the weight of your clothes an -(u— ~ a^ intolerable burden to you. It is not J" —"7/l natural to suffer so in merely emptying the XiV -f'jl bladder. Does not that special form of suf- Zf]}. Bering fell you that there is inflammation i s inflammation of the womb! *— Commence the use of Lydfa E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Thousands of women in this condition have been'cured by it. Keep your bowels open with Mrs. Pinkham's Liver Pills, and if you want further advice, write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., stat ing freely all your symptoms—she stands ready and willing to give you the very best advice. She has given the helping hand to thousands suffering just like yourself, many of whom lived miles away from a physi cian. Her marvelous Vegetable Compound has cured many thousands of women. It can be found at uny^^ggSWa^^^ MRS. CIIARI.ES DUNMORE, 102 Fremont St., Winter Hill, Somcrville, Mass., says: "I was in pain day and night; my doctor did not 89cm to help me. I could not seem to find any relief until I took Lydia E. vETf&f/r' ham's Vegetable Compound. I had inflammation of the womb, a bearing-down pain, and the whites very badly. The pain was so intense that I could not sleep at V night. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for eight > N months, and am now all right. Before that I took morphine pills for my pain; that was a great mistake, for the relief was only momentary and the effect vile. I am so thankful to be relieved of my sufferings, for the pains I had were some thing terrible. I am, indeed, very grateful for the good Mrs. Pinkham's remc dies have done me." r'> ■■ >~w > **4^^ — I — l !>_■ >' — GET THIS GEXt'INE AWTICLE! I ! Walter Baker & Co.'s !, II Breakfast COCOA j| I ||mJir*' Pure, Delicious, [\utritious. I ' \ fWsw( C° sts Less than ONE CENT a ctip. ' ' 1 1 mm! jijmwi be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark. , , Walter Baker & Co. Limited, / ' 1 (Established 1780.) Dorchester, Mass. A I Trade-Mark. I < "**' 4* if ■ I w g— — 1 in mmmmaamrmammmm mganmamw )u*xiub?t"M Get ©ot YOHP Columbia and take a ten-mile run. Then take a .cold bath and a good rub down. It will do you lots of good and it won't hurt your Columbia a bit. 1897 Colum STANDARD OF THE WORLD. Scientific experimenting for 20 // XeY years has made Columbias un //? KB m7\ equalled, unapproached. £>Tr I / 1 I They are worth every ' I r J cent cf the P rice alikel V WIIT j Hartford Bicycles, /i-tr > //.',■ >t ..i: '1 n >s. ' / POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. If Columbias arc not represented in your vicinity, let us know. BOTHMMBWWrrfflTfff lw ' i 'WW r Wf TWIW' ! w ■''tt I'M 111 >ifi 111 WflfflHl mm Full information (in plain wrapper) mailed fret. NEW $20.00 " chine. It is simple ami TYPEWRITER SON, 401 Penn Uldir.. Pitts burg, Pa. Agents wanted in Western Penna. $1.50 PER DAY 5o plain and sewing at home. sl.oh clay. No humbug: two months work guaranteed: stump envelope for pa rtioulars AY 11d uy &11 ull on Dep.C Phlla.Fu TO KLONDIKE Send 'Si cts for hook on Alaska. Tlie Ntaiulurd Co., Mound City, Mo. SHREWD INVENTORS! ; ! Patent Agencies advertising prizes, medals, "No patent no pay." ete. We do a regular patent bus iness. Lou/ees. No eimre l'r udviee. Higliest references. Write us. WATSON I'.. COLEMAN, bollcitor of Tatents, !•'. St., Washington, D. c. To Save Time is to Lengthen Life. Do You Value Life? Then Use SAPOLIO Thoinns deff>reon. The story that Thomas Jefferson was a descendant of Pocahontas, though often repeated, Is not credited by hla most reliable biographers. It probably j arose from the fact that the Randolph, Boiling, Fleming and other Influential families of Virginia, with some ot whom the Jefferson family was allied by marriage, were descended from Thomas llolfe, the son of Pocahontas. There Is n Class of People Who nro injured by the use of coffee. Tie ceutly there has been placed in all the grocery stores a new prenuration called tirain-O.made of pure grains, tnut takes the place of coffee. The most delicate stomach receives it without distress, and but few can tell it from coffee. It does uot cost over one-quarter as much. Children may drink It with great benefit. 15 cts. and SO cts. per package. Try it. Aak for Umiu-O. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness niter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise freo L)IT. R. U. KI.INK. Ltd.. Kil Arch SL.,Pliila..Pa. I cannot speak too highly of Piso's Pure for i KIM M. Mo mis, -io W.-M St., New York, Oct. ;{O, IStH. KLONDYKE IS ALL RIGHT. But why pay f< a shar- for atoch with nothing but "talk" to hack it, and I.OOJ miles from homer J will sell you dividend paying Colorado Gold Mini Stock lor 15 cent-, a thatc. in certificates from ioa shares up. Other stock in proportion ( Address. Broker r.EN A. BLOCK. Denver. Colo. Member Slock Exchange. Suite 2 >6-7 Sym;s Building, C|O f n tQC ran he inude working for us. vl fc 1U vOO Parties preferred who can give DEI? U/CtY their whole time to the btisiuees. I Cli WCCIA Span* hours, though, inay Tie prof itably employed, liood openings for town and city work as well as country di-triots. J.E.GIFFORD, 11 and Main Streets. Richmond, V*' CANCERSSIis^ VIRGINIA 1 1 : - TADMC 5 ' kg Virginia Farmer, bend pV. foe rnnltlOi 14 iuos. sub .Farmer Co..Emporia,Va, P N u S'J "97.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers