Oh, What Splendid Coffs*. Mr. -Goodman, Williams Co., 111., writes: "From one package Nalzer's German Coffee Berry costing i6c 1 grew SOO lb*, of better coffee than I can buy In stores at 30 cents alb." A. C. 6. A package of this coffee and big seed and plqpit catalogue Is sent you by John A. 'Salzer Seed Co., I,a Crosse, Wis., upon receipt of 16 cents stamps and this notice. Conservative Investors Can largely increase their income by placing their accounts In my hands. Twenty years of \\ all street experience, in addition to reliable INSIDE INFORMATION, enables mo to advise you most successfully. Write for particulars, which are interesting to those having money to invest. CHARLES HUGHES. Invest ment Broker, B3 Wall Street, New York City. Dragging Music Into n Play. 1 "I once saw a raft scene lti Hn En glish play," says a noted play actor. "Suddenly oue of the shipwrecked par ty Cflcd out: 'What's that I see float tng toward us on the waves?' 'A grand piano,' shouted another. Then tho piano was hauled up ou to the raft and one of the famishing castaways played a 'Rhapsodle Hongrolsc," by Liszt. That cured me of 'dragging In music by tho bole 1 " Was Nervous Troubled with Her Stomach- Could Not Sleep—Hood's Cured, "About a year ago I was troubled with tny stomach and could not oat. I was nervous and could not sleep at night. I grew very thin. I began taking Hood's Barsaparilla and am now well and strong, and owe It all to Hood's Sarsaparilla." MAIIT I'KTEns, 00 BoutU Union Street, Boohostor, N. Y. ltemember Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the best—in fact the One True lllood Purifier, Hood's Pills euro all liver Ills. 26cent*. Ine Oyster, The sentiment which annually greets the return of the oyster from Its sum mer vacation may not be of an esthetic sort, but certainly It ts ns remote as possible from mercenary considerations of commerce. And yet the oyster not only stands for a great delicacy, but foi a grent Industry that will lu time b vastly greater. It Is shown by Gov ernment statistics, for Instance, that ol the 85,000,000 bushels of oysters con sumed throughout tho world each year 80,000,000 bushels are supplied by tho United States, and that the oyster fish ery excels any other fishery In Impor tance. Add to this that the Industry Is especially important In the States ol New Jersey nnd Maryland—the latter alone producing one-third of the world's crop—and It will be seen that there are speclnl reasons why Philadelphia should be cordial to the oyster, and should greet Its advent with a degree of effusiveness not extended to any other thing In the edible list with the possi ble exception of the Thanksgiving tur key.—Philadelphia Record. RELIEF FROM PAIN. Women Everywhere Express theli Gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham. firs. T. A. WALDEN, Gibson, (la., writes: 44 DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM:—Before tak ing your medicine, life was a burden to me. I never saw a well day. At my monthly period I suffered untold misery, and a great deal of the time I was troubled with a severe pain in my side. Before finishing the first bottle of your Vegetable Compound I could tell it was doing me good. I continued its use, also used the Liver Pills and Sanative Wash, and have been greatly helped. I would like to have, you use my letter for the benefit of others." nrs. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, s5 riulberry St., Lancaster, Ohio, writes: 44 DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—For two years I was troubled with what the local physicians told me was inflamma tion of the womb. Every month I suf fered terribly. I had taken enough medicine from the doctors to cure any one, but obtained relief for a short time only. At last I concluded to write to you in regard to my case, and can say that by following your advice I am now pefectly well." Hrs. W. R. BATES, nansfleld. La., writes: 44 Before writing to you I suffered dreadfully from painful menstrua tion, leucorrlioca and sore feeling in the lower part of the bowels. Now my friends want to know what makes mo look so well. Ido not hesitate one min ute in telling them what has brought about this great change. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound enough. It is the greatest remedy of the age." rtnruiruiiirixuiiuuijuijuirinjinjinniiririiinrirvririnjij; C IUO MKTAKC Thousands have been ft A. ifeC P lIW ItllW I flfVCa cured promptly of UlllSiaffl' ? NEURALGIA^!! 3 By ST. JACOBS Oils. 5 uinjumrinrumnjTJiriJiiinAiinjirinimnjmnJinnjinns PAINT,'SWfILLSCEILiNGSf CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS I m DEQORATIIifi WALLS m GEILIN63 1 grooar or paint dealer and do yonr own leal- UHLUImU sominln'g. D This material is made on soientiflo principles by maohinery and milled §9 in twenty-Tour tints and is superior to any conoootion of Glue and Whit- H ing that can possibly be made by hand. To na MIIHD WITH Conn WATBB. M RPSEWD FOR SAMPLE COLOR CARDS and if you cannot 13 purohaee this material from your local dealers let us know and we will fl put you in the way of obtaining it. . M You Will Realize that "They Live Well Who Live Cleanly," if Yeu Use . SAPOLIO Eye* Not Necessary. Eyas are popularly cousldered to b quite necessary to sight, but this Is an error, If we are to believe Dr. Nagel, a recent German experimenter. Many creatures without eyes can see; at least they can distinguish perfectly well between light and darkness and even between different degrees ol light. This Is the lowest degree of see lug, to be sure, but still It Is really sight, and differing scarcely more from the vision of some lDsects that possess eyes than this does from our own clear sight. Creatures that see without eyes sea by means of their skins. All skins, says Dr. Nagel, are potential eyes; that Is, they are sensitive to light. In animals that have eyes the sensitiveness has been highly localized and greatly In creased—so that man, for Instance, has a retina very sensitive to light, and an expanse of ordinary skin which pos sesses a sensitiveness to light so slight that It is hardly conscious of It. Yet his skin Is sensitive In some degree, as Is proved by the fact that It sunburns —that Is, light may cause a disturb ance In the pigment of the skin Just as It does In that of the eye. In ths eye the disturbance is accompanied by a nervous change, which sends a tele graphic message along the optic nerves, and there are messages, also, but theli tidings Imprint no image on the mind; they simply express discomfort—cry out "sunburn." But In many eyeless creatures the lack of eyes Is In part made up by In creased sensitiveness of the whole skin surface to light. Darwin long ago no ticed that earth worms, although they have no eyes, will suddenly withdraw Into their holes at the approach of a lighted candle. Some creatures seem most sonsltlvo to sudden increase of light: others to sudden diminution. A llomfl-Grown Experience. A man went Into an Icehouse to cool off. An abrupt and Impetuous hired man closed and locked the door and went away. The next day was Sunday and the hired man did not come back, While the man who yearned to cool off waited for the return of the hired man his object was accomplished In n very thorough manner. He cooled off The muffled door gave back bul echoes to his blows, and his voice could find no placo to escape and sound the alarm. When he grew tired of walking and swinging his arm to keep warm the chunks of lee that were piled around hilm did not offer a tempting bed. Hun ger gnawed at his vitals and refused to be satisfied with diet of raw air. Dark ness settled down like a six months' Arctic night, and the only sound which broke the profound stillness was the man who wanted to cool off trying to swear. Tho hired man opened the door on Monday morning, and the man who wanted to cool off crawled out more dead than alive. When his tongue had thawed out he began to abuse the hired man. "Fool!" retorted the hired man, "Fool, you are a lucky dog and do not know It. Don't waste your time In abusing me, your benefactor, but go and write a book of impressions on Alaska." Then the man who wanted to cool off saw that his fortune was made.—Chi cago Record. Land and a Living Are heat anil cheapest In thn New South. Land $3 to $5 an aero. Easy terms. Good schools and churches. No blizzards. No cold waves. New illustrated paper, "Land and a Living," 3 mouths (or 10 cents In stamps. W. C. KINKAH SON. U. P. A., Queen A Crescent ltoute, Cincinnati. A woman who was recently taken to the Taunton lunatic hospital from Brockton remonstrated strongly against removing her stockings preparatory to the bath which all newly admitted pa tients are obliged to take. She whs finally persuaded to do it, and the sin cerity of her objections was made manifest When about S7OO In bills was found In them. To Cora A Oold In Ona Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggist* refund money If It falls to ours. Ke. "The one-eyed plowboy of Pigeon's Roost" is what they call Colonel Chandler, candidate for Governor of Georgia. Birmingham, England, turns out five tons of hairpins every week. Chew Star tobacco—Tho Beat. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. Iron horseshoes have been found dat ing back to the year 481. I use Ptso's Cure for Consumption both in my family and practice.—Dr. O. W. PAT-TJBK SO.N, lnkster, Mich., Nov. A Law. Mrs. Wtnslow'B Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften* the gums, reducing I n flam ac tion. allays pain, oures wind colic. 36c-a botsLx I No. 088. Thistalahly Pol ishedaolld oak 5- Wa-.. t. ■- drawer Cbiffon ier measures f>4 1 Inches &3 Pp U ji Inches deep, v Each drHwer is ' furnished with I H jjfij ~njiu ■ I tbe best locks, |i^—sN $3.39 r L^-;4 r £J" 1 ■ " V kuvs this exact fair , n f piece of furni tails for |B.OO. e (Order now and avoid disappointment.) Drop a postal for our lithographed Carpet Catalogue which shows al I colors withexuet distinctness, if carpet sam ples are wanted, mail us Bc. in stamps. Why pay your local dealer 60 per cent, more than our prices when you can buy of the mill? The great household educa tor—our new l )a^e special catalogue of r urniture. Draperies, Lamps, Stoves, Crockery, Mirrors, Pictures, Uedding, 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 wo pay all postage. Julius Hines&Son BALTIMORE, MD. Please Mention This Paper, FOR DUTY OFF CAPE HATTERAS. Lightship No. GO to Constantly Patrol the Dangerous Diamond Slioals. From the day that tlic pioneers from old England settled Jamestown to the present time Hatteras inlet and Cape Hatteras have been looked upon with guperstitlous horror by seamen . No point on the Atlantic seaboard Is or ever has been as fatal to shipping or the Uvea of the men who go to sea in ships. The natural dangers arising from sunken reefs and treacherous Kinds have been augmented by the fre quency of fierce storms along that por tion of the coast. It has been so cus tomary for vessels to strike heavy weather and heavier seas while pass ing Hatteras that every shipmaster who must sail by It always prepares for a Sad time of It. The authorities have it liven for many years to provide some means by whlc-h the casualties might be reduced. It looks as If they bad anally succeeded. It is the steam light ship, known as No. ill), which will go Into commission off Diamond shoal. Diamond shoal Is the graveyard of the seas of the western continent. More hapless vessels have foundered find bee npomuled to bits on its reefs lliau fill any other reef In tho Atlantic, On the western side. It projects out from Cape Ilntterasseveu miles Into the ocean. Efforts to build stationary lights there have failed. Seventy-five thou sand dollars was dropped Into the sceau In the effort to sink a caisson there which would withstand the force of the seas. The money Is there, but the caisson would not stay sunken. The attempts to build a skeleton house for Ibis dangerous reef have never been deemed practical, and the necessity of putting 111 a lightship was enforced by the floating off of the caisson, llenee the genesis of this lightship. No. O'.l will lie on constant duty at Diamond shoal. She will anchor in still weather and rely on her powerful screw to maintain her position during the gales which sweep her station. She Is equipped with exceptionally power ful engines and screw, set up for this express purpose. She Is a sister td lightship No. OS. now on duty at Fire Island, in New Y'ork harbor. No. 00 will show disappearing lights of 000- candlo power from her two stout masts. A fourteen-lnch chime whistle will sound In foggy weather, and she will also be nrovJded with a large bell. RECKLESS TRICK RIDER. William Shields the Beat Acrobatic Wheelman in This Country. A nmu who prefers to ride on tho handle bars of his bicycle rather than In the saddle and who is happier when suspended over the front wheel of his machine than when properly balanced over the pedals Is something of n de generate among wheelmen, but a de generate whose example Is not likely to be followed too extensively. Tills ec centric rider is William Shields, better known as "Itube." He Is a profession al cyclist and a trick rkler, but be doesn't confine his performances to in door audiences. Shields Is doubtless the best acrobat wheelman lu this country. March 31, 1807, he rode down the steps of ths west front of the eapltol building at Washington, D. O. Dozens have rid den down the east steps, but Shields Is the only wheelman who has success fully made the descent of the west flight, which has seventy-four steps and three landings. He made tho de scent In fifteen seconds and did not touch one of the last sixteen steps. In Cincinnati last July he electrified a crowd of spectators by riding out of a PBEFEBS Tms POGITJOX Otf A -WHEEL.' second-story window on a ladder. The crowd expected to see him dashed senseless, If hot dead, at its foot. He shot down the rungs, however, and landed safel-y In the street. • - Improved IV!lii Ducks of America. The portraits of Fekin clucks shown In the large picture are of the best type now reared at the large duck farms which send immense quantities of ducklings to the best paying Eastern markets. These long, deep-keeled ducks have been much improved by these extensive rearers, as they have learned that the very best bodied ducks, that mature the earliest, are the kind that can make the most money for them. There are few who realize the magnitude of the busiuess carried on by these establishments, operated ex clusively for the production of ducks for the market, and especially for the rearing of early ducklings, several of tliem shipping upward of 10,000 duck lings by midsummer, and some of them producing more than 20,000 in the season. The prices realized for the earliest jluokhngs marketed might seem almost fabulous, but that they are well earned is evident to any one who will visit these farms and Ree the work ancl the great care, as well as ex pense, which these earliest hatched ducklings require. Still the raisers of early ducklings claim that they find the growing of young ducks more pro fitable than young chickens. Ten to twelve thousand ducklings are often yarded on five acres of ground; however, the most successful farm we kuow of has an abundance of acreage 011 which to grow roots and green food for the stock, this being a very important factor for their success ful production. An ample supply of green food for the old breeding stock seems necessary to keep them in good condition for early laying. Last sea son the market opened in spring witli forty-five cents per pound for duck lings. This season it was lower, only thirty-seven, but prices have kept up longer than they did last year, so the season may perhaps prove quite as profitable on the whole product of the year. The cost of rearing young ducks FLOCK OF IMPROVED AMERICAN FEKIN DUCKS. is put at five cents per pound by these large growers and the ducks arc mar keted at about nine to eleven weeks, when they weigh about five pounds. The average prioe of the whole sea son's product is put at about twenty cents per pound in the market. The Pekin ducks in England have been classed after the Aylesburys and Bouens, but in America they have proven by far the most profitable of all when reared on a large scale, arti ficially, for the market.—American Agriculturist. A Hand-Roller. One of tho implements that is found in only a few gardens, and yet often conies very handy when you have it, is a hand-roller. We had an ironhand roller (with adjustable weights) that did good service in rolling our garden patches before sowing soeds, or bofore HOME-MADE GABDEH BOLLEB. working the ground for setting onions and other closely planted stall'. The roller is rather heavy, and for that rea son not, pleasant to handle for a single person. , Two persons will push or roll it along over tho ground much more conveniently. ,We.also used this roller in firming and smoothing the ground after,plotting, peas, b.aatrS, potatoes, corif,~otc:,-but always thought it rather heavy for the purpose. There is no why wo should not .jifte S hghio-made roller, say a scotiou of smooth'log, two feet, (more or less) lo,ng and one fir two feet in diameter. A frame, with bundles, can -eakfly be .made by any one used to liaudling tools';.. Recently I fpund rn Ankericau Agriculturist n suggestion that seems to nis worthy of more thail passing no lice. Saw a section from a round log, 'Md it. Then drive two round hits of ikon rod into the centrojof each end, and, use this roller in plahe of tho wheel in tho wheelbarrow. The special value of {his arrangement is that the whole framework is. already in readi i uess for the roller, and the barrpw can ,he weighted just as luuuli as lnay be desirable for arty, special purpySe. — Farm News, . ' ' '' The Grasey Farm. | Hot grass in the corn!, or grass in the garden, but meadow grass, wood land grass—grass everywhere tLat grass will grow and not interfere witn the crops. Every farm should have it, for every farmer needs it. Nature's own covering for the earth, the verdant grass, is the greatest labor saver on the farm. It is the farmer's best friend. Grass, herbs, rtodts— those thing 3 that flourish with* the least cultivation—should bo put wherever the cultivator is not needed. Every farm animal, including -the poultry, eats grass. It is a crop, that j can be utilized without harvesting, and it can be maintained for years without resecding, by the application of a top dressing of some good fertil izer in the weak spots. Some sections of the pasture will not need it. One of the greatest stock farms in Tenuesseo is carried 011, year after year, with scarcely the turning of a furrow. There are pastures for. the cattlo and pastures for the horses, and care is taken to maintain them. The value of a grass run for fowls is not fully understood by many keepers of poultry. In proportion to her size the hen eats more grass than the cow, ! aa fully one-third of her food may con- ] sist of grass and tender sprouts. And I a hen never looks better, nor lays j more, than when sho has access to u nice grassy run. In some sections, where the country | is thickly settled and fenced up, with j nothing but the lanes and the roadside for the cows to browse over when turned out, a good, well fertilized homo meadow, even though small, would be of great value. Batter have grass in the fence corners and along the streams, and 011 thrown-oul patches of laud than noxious weeds, that by their seeds, which the winds scatter over the fields, cause the farmer additional work and worry. It pays to get grass seed mixtures, such as all seedsmen put up, and seed the odd corners, and so crowd out tli< weeds with something that will add tc tlio value and tlio looks of the farm. —American Agriculturist, The Future of tlio Horse Industry* Many horse breeders are led to be lieve that present low prices will con tinue almost indefinitely, writes O. J. Vine, of Ohio. To imagine that horse raising will never prove remunerative, j or that horsos will never again bring ! good prices, is in my opinion a great ! mistake. The farmer must have his ! horses. The mature horso on the farm to-day need have little fear of his being displaced by machinery. No motor of any kind will give the same satisfaction under all circumstances that a good team will, at an equal cost. 1 Steam has been tried as amotivo power in plowing on a large scale, but it has never corno into general use. Electri city cannot be used on the farm until a perfect storage battery is invented, j Electricity will do very well for pro- ! polling s reet cars on their smooth, I solid tracks, where eaoh successive trip j is made over exactly the same route. I On the farm it would be quite differ ent. Tlio bicycle has undoubtedly taken the place of many horses, but not to the extent generally supposed. Because horses are cheap now, is no reason why they should remain so. Any other branch of the live stock ' market fluctuates with the supply and , demand. Because the horse market I has been away down for several years, is one of the best of reasons for pre dicting an upward turn before long, and horses will then bens high as they are low now. Horses will become scarce as well as other stock. They are certainly scarce in our section now. ; Very few strictly good marketable horses can be found. Farmers .quit breeding years ago. It did not pay; horses could be bought for less money than it cost tou-aise them. The sup ply has been out off at both ends. There are several classes of horses that are bringing good prices now, and will so continue iu spite of steam, eleo- 1 tricity or bicycles. . .The extra heavy , draft horse and the fancy coach or driving horse will continue to be in demand for the next century at least. I The supply of horses that will mature and be marketable iu 1900 is very small indeed. ~ Tho- fnrmer who owns a good brood mare or two can very profitably turn his attention to raising goo 4 horses. Iu order to raise good owes, be.must-breed a finely built, sound mare to an equally well built and sound sire, Constitutional and structural defects are largely heredi tary, iui,l should,bp carefully avoided. Kilcar, in County Donegal," is" sai.ii: to be the oldest village in the world. WORDS 0~ WISDOM. The noblest ciotivo is the public good. -Virgil. Learning makes a tnau fit company for himself.—Young. The true art 01" memory is the art of attention. —Johnson. jj)ne cannot always be a hero, but on-ft can 'always be a man.—Goethe. lie hath riches sufficient who hath enough to be charitable.—Sir Thomas Browne. If a man be endued with a gen erous mind, this is the best kind of nobility.—Plato. You will never find time for any thing. If you want time you must make it.—Charles Buxton. It is not what he has, or even what lie does which expresses the worth ol a man, liut what he is.—Amiel. Beautiful is young enthusiasm; keep it to the end, and be more and more correct in fixing ou the object of it. - Thomas Carlyle. Of all virtues, magnanimity is the rarest; there are a hundred persons of merit tor one who willingly ac knowledges it in another.—Hazlitt. There is a deportment which suits the figure and talents of each person; it is always lost when we quit it to assume that of another. —Rousseau. The one who will ho found in trial capable of great acts of lovo is ever the one who is always doing consid erable small ones.—l'. W. Robertson. Some of tho host lessons wo ever learn wo learn from our mistakes and failures. The error of the past is the wisdom and success of tho fut'tfe. — Tryon Edwards. You must try to be good and amia ble to everybody, autl do not think that Christianity consists in a melan choly and morose life.—Jean Bajitisto Henri Laoordaire. Despair is tho thought of the uuat tainableness of auy good. It works differently in men's minds, sometimes producing uneasiness or pain, somo times rest and indoleney.—Locke. The loftiest souls are those who arc conscious of the universal symphony, and who give their full and willing collaboration to this vast and eompli cated concert which we call civiliza tion.—Amiel's Journal. Education and instruction are the means, the one by use, the other l>y precept, to make our natural facul ties of reason both the better and the sooner to judge rightly between truth and error, good aud 'evil.—Dr. Hooker. Like alone acts upon like. There fore, do not amend by reasoning, but by example. Approach feeling by feeling; do not hope to excite love ex cept by love. Be what you wish oth ers to become. Let yourself, and not your words, preach.—Henri Frederic Amiel. The Kngliali Walnut. Possibly few trees in the old world are more profitable than the English walnut, which thrives in England and all over the northern part of the con tinent of Europe. The wood is es pecially useful for gunstocks and for many articles of furniture, and is found profitable from trees of ten years of ago and upward. There is always a good demand for the nuts, so that there are two distinct lines of profit—by the timber and by the fruit. In our country they thrive in any por tion of tho Eastern States, although as they progress northwardly the tips ol the last year's shoots are destroyed by winter. The living portions push out again, however, and generally bear as abundantly as before. In tho vicinity of Philadelphia there are numerous trees, planted by the early German settlers, which beni every year. Single or isolated trees sometimes fail to bear fruit 011 ac count of the pollen-bearing flower ma turing and scattering pollen before tho nut-bearing llovver is in condition to receive it, and for this reason crops are more assured when a number of trees are planted together. In this way some of the pollen-bearing catkins are conditioned so as to be in bloom before the time that the nut-bearing flowers make their appearauce.— Meehan's Monthly. Laying Railroads Under Difficulties. A Washington correspondent of the Chicago Record says: The prejudice of the Chinese against railroads hat not yet been overcome. Tho latesi mails bring a curious story about the experience of the surveyors who art laying out the line between Pekin and Hankow. The route is very circuitous, iu order to lift tho track above the overflow of the rivers upon the plains, and was decided upon after long study and many difficulties* Imagine the disgust of tho surveyors when, aftei an interval of three or four months, they attempted to go over the line s second time and discovered that every one of the stakes they had driven had been carefully removed and cverj other landmark they had left to indi cgte the rgute had been obliterated Nearly two-thirds of the work had to ho done over again, but it was not at tempted until an edict was issued l>j the Governor of the province prohibit ing the disturbance of any of the sur veyors' marks under penalty of death An Expert (tore, .Bartke, tlie French dramatic author, was remarkable for his selfishness He was so completely wrapped up it the oonseiousness of his otvn import anoe as to bo often strangely iussusibl< of the wants and woes of others Calling upon a friend whose opinion he wished to have regarding his new comedy, he found him dying, but not withstanding, proposed to read hit play. "Consider," said the man, "I hav not more than an hour to Jive." '' "Ay," replied Barthe, "but this wil occupy only half that time." A Vigorous Rattle. From the New Era, Oreensburj, IndL j The following is a straightforward t statement ly a veteran of the late war. No comrade will need further proof than their friend's own words, ns here given. I Hquire John Castor, of Newpoint, Ind., Is the nurrator, and an honest, respected ; citizen he is too. Ho said: "I have been ! troubled with rheumatism in all my joints j ever since I went to the war. *lt was , brought on by my exposure there. It came ®n me gradually, and kept getting worse ontil I was unable to do any work. I tried ' leveral physicians, but they <li.i me no j (food. They said my trouble was rheuma tism resulting iu disease of the he i ct, and ! that there was no cure for it. Neveitho ■ less I had lived and fought the disease for 1 thirty years, and did not intend to die, limply because they said I must, so J I Want to Bteear to That. hunted up some remedies for myself, and finally happened on Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. I asked some of my nolghbors about the mediclue, for it had been used by several persons in the com munity, und they rocommended it very highly. I procured a box. The pills helped me right away, and I continued taking them. I commenced taking them last fall, and finished taking the sixth box a few months ago. I am not bothered with the rheumatism now—the medicine has cured me. I cau most certainly rec ommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People." These pills are not only good for rheu matism, but are valuable for any disease that arises from impoverished, or bad blood. They do NOT act on the bowels. How's This? Weoffer One Hundred Dollnr* Reward for any oa-e of Catarrh that uaunot b cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. . T F. J. Chbnkv & Co., p, ops., Toledo, o. >Ve, the undorsigned, have known F.J. Che ney lor the la-it 16 years, and believe h in no - fectly honorable In nil business t au ncti m and financially able to carry out auy obliga tion m de by their firm. YVHST & THUAX.WhoIo.-a'e Druggis s, Toledo, Waldinq, KlN.vam A- MARVIN, Wholesalo Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in ernally, ct. Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of thf system. Pi 10, 75c. pe bottle, bold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pill# are the beat. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after ttr9t day's use oi' Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. s2trial bottle and treatise free Da. It. H. Kijne. Ltd.. 031 Arch St.. Phi la.. Pa. (C| FOR 14 CEMTS g ' °P* ""f:/7)(fy h joo ran. p, 10; f 8 " Brilliant Flower Needs, li.- Z TTerth $1.09, for 14 eenla. £ 2 jyf El Above 10 pkca. worth SI.VO, \r will (> f®[ great Plant AnSeed _ Cat a]o^ u e X a Bbl.<'*tAlogAlon6c ll^o!] i X X JOHI A. SiLZKR BRRD CO.. LA CROSSR, W.S. S ieseomtOMimeee&adßse!} KLONDIKE GOLD FIELDS OF ALASKA. Now is the proper time for nil people con templating making a trip to Klondike to get Information. Write the undersigned or CALL ON BIG FOUR AGENTS for circulars and advertising matter per taining to Rates, Routes, Sailing of Steam ers, Equipment, Baggage, Supplies, and all detailed information. E. 0. McCormick, Warren ,1. Lynch, Pass. Truffle Mgr. Assist. G. P. A- T. Agt. CINCINNATI, O. ftAMftrn A ° ND Tusw o^ 1 11 11 i¥ I■ r K PERMANENTLY |„n(iUL9l cured fjl without knife, plaster or pain. All forms of IIIjOOI> DHNEANSCS thoroughly eradicated from the pystein. Six weeks lflomr Trrninivnl for §l*o. Book ol In (urination li ce. NATURAL REMEDY CO., WistfisSd, Ucra, LOOK, LADIES. LOOK? TIIK LOIID'H PRAYER written in ink (English or Latin,) in the Cironmfrr. cn.-e of a gold dollar, with vuiir n.-tiue in I alian Script inside the border. l u'cluse unc dollar with order; write plainly un.l vend to It. s.iiKI.LD, (Penman.) 171 DufUrld si.. >. y, PATENTS Watson K.Coleman, Attorney-aM.uw and Soliottoi of l-al.nls. 51,2 F Sr.. N. w., Washington, J>. If. Hljilicst references In all osrts of tljo country. JS£ to'ilY. Cutalo|; - J.4MFS J. H. OBECOIiV ASOX.SIai o:ciiea,l,Yrc. SCSC"" Ladies Wanted. TO TItAVIII- r .1,1 rslu!.lii .a i,,.nsc rcriuancnt posttn-i.. ii.riin.utli an,l all ran.,,,..' I'.W.ZILULEIt & CO., -lib Lci-Übt St.. 1 biljtiieiybbi. PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS, JOHN W MORRIS. WASHINGTON, 0.0, La to Principal Examiner U.V Pcaßion Bureau, by id. ia liwt war, loiubudicatinu claims, u Jty. eiuj-. POTATOESIiI , Wlioiuti a yield r 7tH buihrli p( . r aero. C U r, '* e *-. vllrt elaewp. Onr great Herd lio.k, 1 I > 1 in. FFMPIMP Nl't r tlnK?' l Ais;, l l" l .!, (^v,n ftWUI lib MKn K. L. SHIiLLABAfttILR, 43 k St.i Atlanta. City PN U 8 '9B. Jqgeemz/ In time. Sold by druggists. LG ■agEßasiiiEis^.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers