Pain in the Side Could Not Do Hard Work Until Hood's Sarsaparilla Cured. "I had a sovero pain in my left side and could not dp any hard work. My husband fot mo a bottle of Hood's Barsaparilla nnd begnn taking it and soon 1 was able to do my work. I was also troubled with sorotula soro throat, but Hood's Sarsaparilla has eured this." Mas. EVMA I'sprm North Hudson, N. Y. Remember Hood's parilla h the best—ln fact the One True blood Purifier Hood's Pills cure aick headache, Zoo. saner cut in a SEnu. • Dr. William B. Fletcher has a grim souTWdr of the work of a famous sur. geon, the Baron Larrey, whom Napo leon remembered In his will with a gift of 100,000 francs, and the tribute "to Larrey, my surgeon, the most vlr toons man I have ever known." p The relic Is the upper part of the Will, tho valvarltim, and shows asa m cut extending from the Junction ol the occipital and parietal bonos for KVSrd to the orbital ridge on the right side. j "I well knew the man whose skull this was," said the doctor, turning the jcalvarium in his hand. "lie was a German—l have forgotten his name end lived In this city many years, dy leg about 1875, at the age of 80 years He took care of horses for Dr. I'arvlu and myself along about 18(55, and also Sawed wood to earn his living, j "He was taken care of by the Catho lic sisters here in a hospital during the (last yoars of his life, and as he had saved his earnings, small though they Wpre, he left -them a small farm ID Kansas at his-deatli. | "He was a German In the French army, and received this , terrible cut ifroui a Russian saber, as he told me, (during the retreat from Moscow ID 1812. He told me that Baron Larrey bperated on him. He was about 17 years old at the time, and though his life was saved, he was partially par ojyzed on one side ever after, and (dragged one foot until the day of his ideath. I "Here is where Baron Larrey, 83 years ago, trephined the skull and lift ed up the depressed bone to relieve the (bnaln. The orifice and the saber cut through the skull both closed up with a membrane like a dram head."—ln dianapolis News. A LIVING WITNESS. Mrs. Hoffman Describes How She Wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for Advice, and Is Now WelL DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—Before NEMG your Vegetable Compound I was a great sufferer. I have been sick for months, was troubled with severe pain in both sides of abdomen, sore feeling in lower part of bow also suffered I could not sleep. ing n.y Jn e me i ust - what to do. I followed your direc tions, and cannot praise your medicine enough for what it has done for me. Many thanks to you for your advice. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has cured me, and I will recom mend it to my friends.—Mrs. FLORENCE E. HOFFMAN, 512 Koland St., Canton, O. The condition described by Mrs. Hoff man will appeal to many women, yet lots of sick women struggle on with their daily tasks disregarding the urgent warnings until overtaken by actual collapse. The present Mrs. Finkham's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal leled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometimes past has had sole charge of tho correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women during a single vear. StlMp jMd* Warranted to D LI °IO DOLLARS WORTH FOR 10c. M of rare farm Hog mjM ygL recelp P of bui 100. H.M. "* Ji 11M ' • i <*l° al alone, 60. AiiiArn AND tumor ■ ■OIUIZhK PERMANENTLY I.nliULll cured without knife, plaster or pain. All form, of BLOOD DIMEANKS thoroughly eradicated from the pyetein. Six weeks Home Treatment for $lO. Rook of Information free. NATURAL REMEDY CO., Westfield, Mais. rpkl ALLL A For Poultry, half cant of LLMIMR I 1 Netting. Alflofarm,yard, R R Ml I I I II II cemetery fences Freight • LL" W 111 V paid. Catalogue free. CL.L.SIIELL.ABEKGKK. 48 F. St.. Atlanta.GA. Mffc.MEN WANTED. TO THAT EL. for old estaldjabed house rruianent position. §4O per month and all expends W.ZIEQLKK A CO.. 240 Locust St.. Philadelphia. tSwC i Thompson's Eyt Water PNC 7 'a Jlsemsf "BIG BEN." Great Bell Cracked, Broken Up, Recast, untl Then Cracked Again. "Biff Bon," so called after Sir Benja min Hall, who was the first commis sioner of works, when the order for the clock was given, was cast in 185G at Norton, near Stockton-on-Tees. From the North of England this enormous bell, weighing sixteen tons, was conveyed to London by sea, where It had, on a small scale, almost as ad venturous a passage as the Egyptian obelisk which now graces the Thames embankment. Once or twice during t he voyage, Indeed, It was feared that it would send the vessel bearing It to the bottom of the ocean. Not very long after the clock had been placed in a temporary position at Westminster— on Oct. 24, 1857—and while It was be ing rung, as was customary for a short time at 1 o'clock on Saturdays, It was "noticed that It had a cracked, uncer tain sound. On a minute examination with a lighted candle a crack was discovered to extend from the rim about half way up the side. The catastrophe to an in strument wmcn cost rallied the question as to. who was to pay for re casting It. The founders repudiated responsibility, declaring that too heavy a clapper (It weighing 12 cwt.) had been used. The authorities, however, placed on record that It was "porous, unliomo geneous, unsound, and a defective cast ing." Be that as It may, "Big Ben" was broken up and recast at a cost of £7OO. Its weight was 13 tons 10 cwt. 3 qr. 15 lbs., Its diameter 0 feet, and its height outside 7 feet G Inches. It was rung for the first time on Nov. 18, 1858. Alas! In less than a year after this the new bell ceased to strike the hours, having become more seriously cracked than Its predecessor. The crack, which was inside, was three inches In extent. For about three years afterward the hours were struck on the largest of tho. quarter bells. The experiment was then tried of turning the great bell round so as to present a fresh place for the hammer, or clapper, to strike on. With a light hammer this experiment proved so far satisfactory that during the thirty-eight yoars that have elapsed the fissure does not seem to have in creased; and It is possible when the wind Is favorable to distinctly licar It In most of the suburbs booming out the uildnlglit hour.—London Mail. The First Polar Explorer. The hardy mariners who were the pioneers in polar discovery achieved wonders, considering that tlicy had everything to learn about methods of arctic work and their vessels and equipment were very inadequate. One of the greatest of all arctic voyagers, says Harper's Weekly, was the man who commanded the first true polar ex pedition, William Barutz. lie sailed from Holland in 1554 on the little fish ing smack Mercurlous. and the object of his voyage shows how ignorant the merchants and seamen of those days were as to the navigability of arctic seas. Barcntz pushed Into the unknown for tho purpose of sailing around the north end of Nova Zambia, and find ing a northeast passage to China; and so for a month lie skirted the wall of Ice that barred his way, seeking in ev ery direction for a lane by which he might travel through the pack, putting his vessel about eighty-one times, and traveling back and forth along the ice edge for seventeen hundred miles. The highest north he attained (luring this careful examination of the ice edge was Gl4 statute miles south of the highest point reached by Nans en or 874 miles from the pole. A Beautiful Girl's Affliction. From the Republican, Versailles, Tn f. The Tuckers of Versailles, Ind., 11 !co all fond parents, are completely Wrapped up in their children. Their daughter Lucy, in particular, has given them much concern. Bho Is flftoon, and from a strong, heatthy girl, tlirno years ago, had becomo weak and kept falling off in flesh, until she became a mere skeleton. She seemed to have no life at nil. Her Mood became Impure and finally she became tho victim of nervous prostra tion. Doctors did not help her. Most of the time she was confined to bed, was very nervous and irritable, and seoinod ou tho verge of Bt. Vitus' dance. "One morning," said Mrs. Tucker, "tho doctor told usto give her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, which he brought with him. He said he was treating a similar case with these pills and they were curing the patient. We began giving the pills and tho next day could see u change for the better. Discussed Their Daughter*s Case for Flours The doctor como and was surprised to see I such an improvement. He told us to koep giving her the medicine. We gave heron* pill after each meal until eight boxes had been used whonshewas well. Hho has not been sick since, and we have no fear of the old trouble returning. We think the cure almost miraculous." FRANK TUCKER, MRS. FRANK TUCKER. Subscribed and sworn to before mo this 28th day of April, 1897. HCQH JOHNSON, Justice of the Peace. Theso pills are wonderfully effective In the treatment of ull diseases arising from impure blood, or shattered nerve force. They are adapted to young or old, and may be had ut any drug store. ConnervatiTe Investors ' Can largely increase their income by placing their accounts in my hands. Twenty years of Wall street experience, in addition to reliable INSIDE INFORMATION, enables me to advise you most successfully. Write for particulars, which are interesting to those having money to invest. CHARLES HUGHES, Invest ment Broker, tW Wall Street, New York C'lty. Mrs. Window's Soothing Srrnp forohfidren teething, oftena the gums,reducing i anamina tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 36c.a bottl*. FIELDS OF ADVENT [JEE. THRILLING INCIDENTS AND DARINC DEEDS ON LAND AND SEA. Diana of tho Sierras—A Ninetecn-Yoar- Old California Girl Who Goon Hunt ing Wildcats Alone—A Woman's Fierce Battle With Wolves In tho Northwest. Miss Cornie Chittendon is only nineteen years of age, but mora game lias fallen before her unerring rifle during the past six years than can be placed to the credit of many niulo hunters in the neighborhood of her home at Cammings, Cat. Game has been especially plentiful around that section of the country lately, and Miss Chittendon has taken the full advan tage of the fact. During the past six years no less than forty-five fat deer have fallen to her gun, fifteen of these having been killed by her during the past year. Miss Chittendon possesses the keen est instincts of a sportswoman. Since babyhood she has beeu accustomed to live an outdoor, self-reliant life. Her parents, with whom she had been brought up,' own a sheep ranch of some four hundred acres, part of it having been pretty rough country, and over this and the surrounding forests and hills Miss Chittendon has been accustomed to roam at will almost since she was first nblo to toddlo. Her education would have beeu incomplete had she not beeu thoroughly trained in the use of firearms. When quite a little girl she was taught how to handle a gun, and very soon became so expert in its use that she could hit a bird on the wing three times out of five. When she reached the age of twelvo Miss Chittendon began to look for bigger game than that w lich passed ou the wing over her father's ranch, and very soon her rifle was heard speaking in tho surround ing country, where gathered the deer, coons, foxes, wildcats, and even fiercer game. The mere killing of a deer and c irrying home its antlers as a trophy did not long satisfy Miss Chittendon's ambitious soul, so one day she de cided to astonish the folk at home by taking back with her an abundant supply of deer meat for the domestic larder. The first deer she shot that day she proceeded to dress after a novel fashion originated by herself. Tying a rope to the horns of the deer, a noble animal with a fine eight-pronged set of antlers, she threw the rope over the branch of a tree, fastened tho end to the pommel of her saddle, and whipped up the horse, thus pulling the deer into position for dressing. In this way she was able to dress the deer with ease and take it proudly home on tho horse's back. Since then she has gone out alone on hunting trips, anil has always dressed the gamo she killed and brought it back with her ready for cooking. Last winter Miss Chittendon devel oped a fancy for hunting wild animals and trapping wild animals and coons, which abound in the forest around her father's ranch. She lias had many en counters with fierce wild hogs, which, single handed and alone, she has at tacked aud killed with hor gun, a weapon she handles with the ease acquired by most women only after half a lifetime of practice. Her fath er's ranch is hung around with the an tlers of deer and tho tasks of wild ani mals, while the floors are covered with the furs of foxes, bears and wildcats that have fallen before the deadly aim of this modern Diana. All the accom plishments of a past mistress in for estry aro hers. She knows the mean ing of all the signs that guide a trained hunter that is following tho trail of game, and can track a wildcat or a fox with the unerring instinct of an Indian. On one occasion she followed for five hours the trail of a wildcat that had been prowling around her lather's ranch and doing great damage to the live stock. Following the trail up hill, down dale and through woods for several miles, she at last came upon the wildcat crouching in tho boughs of an enormous tree. Being unable, on acoountofthe intervening branches, to get a fair shot at the animal, Miss Chittendon's first bullet clipped a twig and weut wide of the mark. The wildcat spraugat Miss Chittendon, but before it could reach her she hud loaded again and met its rush with a ball fairly between the eyes. She treasures the skiu of this animal as one of her most highly valued tro phies. A battle With Waive. Last autumn, says the Youth's Com panion,a German settlor in the wilder ness not far from the headwaters of tho Mississippi Biver, Otto Gewehrseu by aame, como into tho land office at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, to "prove up" his claim. He also brought with him three wolf-scalps, and demanded the bounty on them. "Did yon kill these?" he was asked. "No," said the German,"my voman kill him mit an axe." He showed the plnces ia the skins if here they had been lacerated by many blows with a sharp implement, anil told how the skins came to his hand. Gewehrsen had a wife and children, and also a flock of sheep. Wolves had formerly troubled him a good deal, for his claim is in a wild part of Itasca County. In September last he left his eldest boy, twelve years old, accom panied by an old sheep-dog, to guard the sheep in a piece of grassy wood land near the house. The boy was armed with an old gun loaded with buckshot. The father, in going nway from home on a necessary errand, ap prehended no trouble, for the wolves had not been Been all summer, and he imagined they had at last left the neighborhood. The boy seems to have had no fear of trouble either, for while the sheep were quietly grazing, he wandered away from them a little distance, look ing for something to shoot. Tho do 3 stayed with the sheep. Before long the boy heard a great commotion and fierce yelping in th< direction of the glade where the sheep were left, aud presently saw the sheep coming running in terror through th< woods toward him. He hurried on toward the place from which the noisi came, and there found the old dog in deadly struggle with three full-growi wolves. A fourth wolf was engaged in tearing the body of a sheep ho had killed. The boy fired at the wolf which wai tearing the sheep, and it ran limping away. However, the shot, and th< cries of the wounded wolf, brought the three other wolves upon him; the] left the half-dead dog, and flew at thi boy. Tho youngster, having no othei charge in his gun, climbed a tree wit! agility and presence of mind. Then he began to yell for help. The bou'st was within no great distance, and th boy's mother heard the shouts. Then were other sounds which spoke to hei of wild animals; and seizing an axe, she ran as fast as she could to th place. She reached the tree. Whether 01 not the boy was safe in it did not ap pear to have entered her thoughts; sh< saw simply that ho was threatened bj the wild beasts, and without any de liberation she attacked them. Thoj turned npon her and fought hard. But a woman struggling in defence oi her children is no mean antagonist under any circumstances, and this woman had a formidable weapon in o sharp axe. Her greatest danger was that the wolves were three in number, and attacked her from all sides. She was too quick for them, how ever, and in a few moments she had laid them nil out on the ground, dead. Then she helped the boy down out ol the tree, and got him into a place ol undoubted snfcty. Then, like the thrifty German woman that she was, she proceeded to skin the wolves while they were warm and skinnable, in or der that there should be no doubt about getting the bounty that the State pays for the destruction of such wild animals. Fell P.pfor an "L" Engine. "Harlem express!" yelled the ticket chopper. "First stop Fifty-ninth street!" The crowd on the Cortlnndt street statiouof the Ninth avenue "L" surged toward the edge of tho platform. It was 0 o'clock, and there wc"e many passengers for the express. So sud den was this concerned movement that one man was pushed off the platform and fell headlong to the track. The express engine came howling along, lior lights half obscured in a cloud of white steam. Those on the station platform shouted and waved their arras. Then, as the engine rum bled up along the platform, they turned their face away and bowed their heads. One woman tore off her lint and stood crushing it in her hands, her features working convulsively. Iu tho cab of the locomotive the en gine driver had heard the shouts and divined that something was wrong. He put on the brakes hard, and the station vibrated with tho jarring of locked wheels over tho rails. But it was too late. Not until the engine had passed by more than its own length the spot where the man had fallen did it come to a standstill. Such of the crowd as could nerve thomselves to look upon red horror peered down at the wheels, while the stoker and gateman prepared to climb down to the track. Before they could do so, however, a head popped out be tween the locomotive and the platform of tho first car, and tho missing man clambered into the glare of the station lights. "Narrow squeak, that!" he said, ns he punched out the dents in his hat. "I had just, room and just time to crawl in under the platform and make myself as small as I could." "What's your name?" demanded the conductor, bent on making a re port. "Oh, never mind ray name," re plied the stranger. "The joke's on me and not ou Uncle Bussell thi3 time." "First stop Fifty-ninth street!" yelled the ticket chopper.—New York Journal. l'renence of Mind Under "Water. A marvellous experience happened to Matthew Dolan, of Jeffersonville, Ind. Dolan was coming down the river on a tow pushed by the steamer Sam Clark, anil in the darkness fell o'ff. He is a vigorous swimmer and diver, and knew his safety depended on holding his breath. Before he could rise, the tow, an eighth of a mile long, was over him, and he, feeling tho bottoms of the boats, knew he must dive. To come up a moment too soon meant death by the steamer's wheel. Feeling his way until the prow of the boat struck him, ho re mained under water by a superhuman effort. Then he rose and swam to Six Mile Island, whence he was rescued by a skill'. He says that he had no idoa of drowning, and thought of nothing but how to get out of his pre dicafuent. They Didn't Beard Him. "Why, ho!" exclaimed the stranger at the Zoo; "would you beard the lion iu his den?" "Nay," said the keeper, fingering his shears with a grimace. "On tho contrary, we nre merely going to trim his whiskers." And, uncanny as the surroundings were, there echoed, from wall to wall, a wild shriek of animal laughter. How tlio Urnln Acta. Although the brain is perpetually aptiye, the wholo of it is never active at one time, fhe two hemispheres or halves do not operate simultaneously, but alternate in action—now it is the ona-half. then Ahe other. 1 NATIONAL HIGHWAY. THE PROPOSITION TO BUILD A ROAD ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Postal Savings Hank System Suggested n. Means of Kevcnile—By This Metliod Other Great National Thoroughfares Could Bo Built—Vast l oad Available. Much has been written and said of ibe proposed great road across the sontinent, that was suggested some time ago by General Lelioy Stone, of the Highway Commission of the De partment ot tho Interior, and which ais arguments showed could be built praotically out of its own benefits. The great good to the country at large that would be derived from such highway cannot bo overestimated, is the proposed plan would briqg it through the principal commercial cen tres of the country. It would not ofily lie a universal boon to cyclists, but farmers and others within miles of its course would profit from its existence. In 18G1 tho British Government es tablished a postal savings bank sys tem, and since that time many coun tries have done the same, and theii efforts have been crowned with success In this direction. It has been proposed that the TTni- Sed States Government inaugurate a system of postal savings depositories throughout the country, and a ques tion has arisen in connection therewith as to what use tho Government could put the money. Of courso there are many persons who are opposed to the plan, and a claim has been set up that Uncle Sam tvonld not have the means by which all tho money that would flow into his coffers from mysterious hiding places and other unique sources, could be put into circulation so as to be of ben efit to the people. Sterling Elliott, of Boston, one of the best known authorities on highway improvements and nn unfailing worker In the cause of good roads in general, and who was at ono time President of the League of American Wheelmen, lias a suggestion that is well worth consideration all who believe that a graud thoroughfure neross the foremost country of the new world would be an achievement of which tho Government and the people would have good cause to feol proud. Mr. Elliott suggests that no better use could be made of the money to be derived from the establishment of a postal savings system than by devoting it to the cause of furthering highway improvements. The postal savings deposits would furnish a vast fund which would en able the Government to make the necessary advances, and which could be repaid in payments running from ten to twenty years, or such length ol time as would best suit tho conveni ence of those to whom tho money was advanced, and tho Government. Not only this, but other great high ways of National importance could be constructed on n similar basis, and the benefits to tho country at large would be such as to assume great impor tance. A good bicycle, with decent use, will last six seasons or more, and a pair of road (ires of fair weight may be rid den from GOOO to 10,000 miles on or diuury roads. An English authority states that a pair of tires in ono in stance was known to run 25,000 miles and still be fit for use. This same rule applies to wagon tires, but, unfortu nately, in the outlying districts, par ticularly in the South and West, good roads are at a premium. The cost to farmers in carrying produce to the markets in the larger commercial cen tres is consequently increased tenfold. With ono grand thoroughfare con necting the Atlantic with the Pacific Ocean, the saving in wear and tear on vehicles, not to mention the saving in live stock, would be enormous. Re mote places mauy miles from this great route could be reaohed, for those liv ing along'such roads would be en couraged to keep them in repair, and when once on the continental road it would be an easy matter to reach com mercial centres. The saving in freight alone would be enormous, nnd hereto fore unheard of possibilities for the use of bicycle would be developed. —New York Herald. To a Strange Band. Frequently the ships that come from Europe bring little children to friends or relatives in this country, tagged as express packages would be tagged. Only the other day five little children arrived in New York. One little girl of five years oame from Russia. Bhe wore a shawl over her head and carried a handkerchief full of playthings. Her father was in this country trying to make a home for her and her mother, but her mother died in Russia, and the little girl was sent to her father here. Her name was Itke. Another one was nine years old, whose name is Ilona, came with a little sister ot seven from Russiun Poland; aud the little girl of nine years, the officers ot the steamship said, was a little mother to her sister all the way over. Two moro little sisters named Freda and Ganua oame from Austria. Both wore tags about their necks with tho names and address of their rolativos in thi3 country to whom they were coming. When Ono Fainttt. Remember that fainting proceeds from a disturbance of tbo circulation, by means of which tho blood is drawn suddenly from tbo head. The first thing to do is L> lower ih- minting person to the floor in such a position that the head is lowo thai. rest of the body. Loosen the clothing a ross the chest and at tho throat Bathe the face and temples itb col 1 water in which a little cologne water r aro matic vinegar has been estri. and use smelling salts. It is a (erious mis take to prop up the head with pillows or administer alcoholio Sti ulanta,— New York World. No. 088. I M , r „ This highly PoT- I IshedaolM ottkC | jeryneasures 54 I furnished with $3.39 >l%^ bUVB th j ß f eTßC j i ~~ tails for $6.00. (Order now and arold disappointment.) Drop a postal for our lithographed Carpet Catalogue which shows all colors with exact distinctness. J f carpet sam ples are wanted, mall us 6c. in stamps. Why pay your local dealer 60 per cent, more than our prices when you enn buy of the mill? The great household educa tor-ournew 112 page special catalogue of Furniture, Draperies, Lamps, Stoves, Crockery, Mirrors. Pictures, Bedding, Refrigerators, Baby Carriages is also yours for the asking. Again we ask, why enrich your local dealer when you can buy of the maker? Both cata logues cost you nothing, and we pay all postage. Julius tiines&Son BALTIMORE, MD. Please Mention 11: is Paper, Taste for Apples. The superabundance of the apple crop last year has had one good result for the future of the orchardtst. It ren dered apples so cheap that the con sumption was greater than ever before. A taste of this kind, onco stimulated, generally continues; consequently the demand will be larger In seasons to come than It has been hitherto. This year apples have been in Philadelphia markets the whole year through. Last year's supply of late varieties, such as the Baldwin, had scarcely disappeared before the Russian variety, Tetoffsky, came In from Virginia. These, of course, will be followed by better kinds.—Melian's Monthly. Sea Water. On a bright, sunny day visitors are often puzzled at the numerous colors visible on the surface of the sea. There will, perhaps, be some four or five streaks of green, blue, yellow, black and so forth, making the water appeal as though It were painted In color stripes of mathematical precision. To the initiated these several stripes have their meaning. They are nearly all produced by the character of the ocean bed, and, as a rule, are only seen t close Droxlmitr to land "Lucky" Pigs. The favorite badge just now of the smart Englishwoman is a tiny "lucky" pig of bog oak. made in Ireland and worrf upon her neck chain. To bring real luck these pigs must be Irish, but they can be bought in the London shops. All Figured Out. *l'es," said the young man with the square chin; "I am going to Klondike, or thereabouts. I may get richer than I am here, and If I die I won't die any deader than I would if I stayed ut home."—l udiana polis Journul. Sweden Makes Butter. During last year over 23,500 tons of butter were exported from Sweden, nearly all of which went to Britain. The question Is being agitated as to what earthly use the letter "q" Is in our language, so long as we have the letter "k." But then, men are apt to stick to many a thing after it has be come a dead letter, merely from force of habit. Re warn of Ointment* for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy tbe sense of smell and completely iltirangolhewliolo system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on proscriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten told to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's t 'atarrh Cure he sure to get the genuine. It is taken internally, and is miwlo in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. ( heney A Co. Testimonials free. s*T"Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Land and a Living Are best and cheapest in the Now South, hand 8:1 to $5 an acre. Easy terms. Good schools and churches. No blizzards. No cold waves. New illustrated paper, "Land and a Living." 3 months for 1U cents in stamps. W. ('. KIHKAR SON, G. 1. A., Queen & Crescent Uouto, Cincinnati, A post-mortem examination of a cow which died near Sheerness, England, showed that a lady's hairpin, six inch es in length, was embedded in the ani mal's heart. To Care A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 86c. It is claimed by some that the best pictures ever taken by the camera are the daguerreotypes which ushered in the art of sun-portraiture. There are more clocks made in Amer ica than in any other country. Chew Star Tobacco—The Best. Kinoke Sledge Cigarettes. The Pope can speak English, German, Italian and French perfectly. Fita permanently cured. No fits or nervous ncss after first day's use oi' I)r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. s2trial bottle and treatise freo Dr. R. H. KLINX. Ltd.. U3l Arch BL.Phlla..l , a. ITe.TT. Barrty Hnrnr*. Prlof, f 16.00 Wno Send for Urge. fmo !• odßSurrof PHr. tth i A. good n* Kit. to, M 5. CnUlogue of nil oar rtjlu. .bid. .pron ELKHART c ■""* ISD NINSEM ura. to. W. S. I-HATT, aw T . ILKJIABT. LIB. " East, West, Home is Best," if Kept Clean With SAPOLIO dnco Wasted. I Modern man i* gradually waking nJ I to tho fact that he can utilize everj* ; thing. Coal Is not only a source o# I heat and light, but a storehouse ol colors, tastes, medicines, perfumes an 6 ! explosives. From 140 pounds of ga : tar in a ton of coal over 2,000 district j shades of aniline dyes are made. i The same substance furnishes ; nine, antlpyrlnc. atrophine, morphine i and a host of other drugs. | Of perfumes there can be obtained hellotropine. clove, queen of the mead* ! ows, cinnamon and bitter almonds* I] camphor and wlntergrecn. It gives to us bellite and plcrite, tws I powerful explosives, nnd supplies flav- I oriug extracts which cannot be told | from currant, raspberry, pepper and vanilla. Scientists also from the cotl tai benzine and naphtha and the photog rapher gets from IV. his hydroquinoiM and Ukonogcn. It gives forth paraffin, pitch and cre osote, material for artificial paving) saccharin, which is 300 times sweetei than sugar; lampblack, material fof red Inks, oils, varnish, rosin and a great supply of ammonia. Knocked Ont. It knocks out All calculations of attending to business in the right way for a day when we wake up in the morning sore and stifL The disappointment lies in going to bed aU right and waking up all wrong. There is a short and sure way out of it. Go to bed after a good rub with St. Jacobs Oil nnd you wake up all right; soreness and stiffness all gone. So sure is this that men much ex posed in changeful weather keep a bottle of it on the mantel for use at night to make sure of going to work in good fix. Salzer's Grasses and Clovers Are warranted. They produce! "We arc the largest growers in America. I.owest prices. Seed Potato s only $1.53 per barrel. Big farm seed catalogue with clover and grain samples (worth SIO.OO to get a start) sent you by the John A. Salzet. Seed Co., I.a Crosse, Wis., upon receipt of 10c postage. A. C. 5. For Whooping Cough, Pico's Cure Is a suc cessful remedy. -M.P. DIETER. OTThroopAva* Brooklyn, N. v., Nov. 14. 1894. OKO BNIOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrnp of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL LOUISVILLE. Rr. NEW YORK, N.T. £ Established 1780. 5? i Baker's I ===== ! Chocolate, I € <§ celebrated for more & £> titan a century as a delicious, nutritious, flesh-forming € beverage, has our & we N"k nown 5 H Yellow Label $ £> MADE ONLY BY A WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., g J Dorchester, Mass.