Spring Medicine A Good Blood Purifier a Neces sity Now J ' ~ Hood's Sarsaparilla Unequarred for Making Rich, Rod Blood The neoessity for taking a good Spring Medlcino to purify tho blood and build up the system la based upon naturul and un avoidable causes. In cold weather there has been less perspiration and impurities have not passed oat of tho system as they should. Food has consistod largely of rich, tatty substances, and there bas beon less opportunity for outdoor exercise. The result is, the blood Is loaded with im purities and theso must be promptly ex pelled or health will bo endangered. Hood's Sarsaparilla is tbo best Spring Medicine because It is the best blood purifier and tonic. It thoroughly purifies the blood and gives vigor and vitality. Hood's s o r a s rm a Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5. Mnnrl'c Pillc nro tho favorite cathar nuuu b rilib tic. All druggiata. 25 cU. About 20,000 letters are addressed to Queen Victoria yearly from her sub jects. Those that are not stamped are not forwarded by the officials. The Queen's letters have precedence of all others, and are forwarded to Windsor by special messenger from the general postofflce. That Settles It. With the bloom and beauty of the | season, Its balmy airs and delightful temperature, we feel like living with new life, and are therefore cften very careless In taking care of ourselves. It is this forgetfulness that lays us liable to attacks of rheumatism, the more liable because we think there is little danger of its coming on, but rheuma tism Is an easy thing to take and some times a hard thing to get rid of unless we take the advice of others and learn that the best way possible is to use St. Jacobs Oil. It has been used so long as a sure cure that this advice is given in good faith from the testimony of thousands. If all the cabs in London were placed in a line there would be a total length of 44 miles. To Caro Constipation Forever. Tako Cascamts Candy Cathartic. 100 or 250. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggibis refund money. In time of war France can put 370 out of every 1,000 of her population in the field; Germany, 310; Russia, 210. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness niter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nervo Restorer. SJitrinl bottle nnd treatise free.Dr.K.H.KLiNE Ltd.,031 Arch St.I J hila.,l\i. Mrs. Winslnw's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soltons the gums, reducing in flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2uc. a bottle. Insanity in Prussia. There lias been a good deal of com ment of late upon the increase of In sanity In England. It seems, from n recent official report, that a similar If not a worse condition of affairs exists in ITussia, where the lAnatic asylums find difficulty in providing accommoda tions for the crowds of applicants for admission. In 1871 the total number of lunatics in Prussia was 55,003, in ISBO it had risen to 00,345, while in 1890 it had gone up to 52.550. It Is interesting to note also that, while tho growth of Insanity Is general, it is more marked among men than among women. Of 100,000 Prussian males It seems 278 are found insane'; but In a like number of women only 243. From figures given In the same return It appears that blind ness is diminishing, while the number of deaf mutes is rather Increasing. Punifthmont for the Ungodly. . The American Bible Society has re ceived from Peru the cheering informa tion that four of the men who have been most active in obstructing evan gelical work have died withen twelve months. The poorer the lawyer~the fewer trials he has. NO WOMAN IS EXEMPT. Regularity is a matter of importance in every woman's life. Much pain is, however, endured in the belief that it is necessary and not- alarming, when in truth it is all wrong and indicates derangement that may cause serious trouble. Excessive monthly pain itself will unsettle the nerves and make women old before their timo. The foundation of woman's health is a perfectly normal and regular per formance of nature's function. Tho statement wo print from Miss GER TRUDE HIKES, of Eldred, Pa., is echoed in every city, town and hamlet in this country. Read what she caj's; 41 DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM: —I feel like a new person since following your ad vice, and think it is my dtity to let tho public know the good your remedies i avc done me- My troubles were puAn v.l menstruation and leucorrhcea, I vas nervous and had spells of being confused. Before using your remedies I never had any faith in patent medi cines. I now wish to say that I never had anything do rac so much good for painful menstruation as Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound; also would say that your Sanative Wash lias cured mo of leucorrhcea. I hope these few words may help suffering women." The present Mrs. Pinkham's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal leled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometime past has had solo charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing vomen during a single year. J All suffering women are invited to wTite freely to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice about their health# PATENTS WatsonE.Coleman, Attorney-at-I-nw and Sulicltol it Patents, 8M F St., N. W., WaahiUßton, D. C. Ulßheat reference! 1 all part, oI the country What a Rune-Cutter Cute. In feeding poultry the greatest economizer is the bone-cutter. It is better than a small hand mill, clover cutter or any other machine of like nature. With it we can cut a pound of green boue in about three; minutes, and we find five to seven ponnds of fresh-cut boue, when mixed with other food, enough for one hundred fowls. In buying meat for chickens, the cheapest we can get here is five cents a pound, and it is cften a third bone, and has to either be cut by hand or cooked to be utilized. In the same market we can get fresh, clean bones, with a good deal of meat adhering to them, at half a cent a pound. So, then, every time we cut a pound of bone we make four and one-half cents as com pared to the price of the cheapest meat. Aud that is not all. We find that one pound of fresh-cut bone equals, in nutritive qualities, five pounds of grain. Another point in the economic line: A bone-cutter will cat vegetables as well as bones, and three times as fast. Any kind of roots can be cut with it. We sometimes mix small pieces of bone and vegetables in the hopper and cut them up togethor. A liner mix ture, with a little bran and cornmeal mixed in, dampened with water, can not be imagined. The hens just can't help laying when fed such stuff; aud yet it is cheap. We cut potato, tur nip and applo peelings up with the bones, and in that way get the best of food at the smallest cost. In working a bone-cutter,'don't at tempt too much. It is only a piece of machinery, after all. Don't lunge against it with all your strength. We have just been running ours for thirty minutes, and are not tired. We avoid flinty bones, selecting ribs, neck bones, back bones and trimmings from beefsteaks, such as the butchers chip off in trimming up steaks. Such bones have a good quality of lean meat stick ing to them and marrow within. The cutter puts them in good shape for even the smallest chickens without any great exertion on the part of the operator. Our bone-cutter will cut hard shin bones, but we do not utilizo them because we can get better and softer bones. The modern bone-cut ter is a cutter, not a grinder. The purpose is to obtain food, not grit, from the fresh, green bones.—H. B. Geer. Feeding Bees Profitable at Times. As the natural bee pasturo (uativo timber) is cut away, tho matter of feeding bees becomes more important, writes W. Z. Hutchinson, of Michigan. As a rule, there are two periods in the year whou it may bo profitable to feed —the spring and full. First comes the matter of stimulative feeding in tho spring. It will not do to recom mend this indiscriminately. In some localities bees can find something to gather almost as soon as it is warm enough for them to fly. Where thero are willows, soft maples, fruit bloom and the like, something that furnishes tho necessary food with scarcely a break until the main harvest of clover opens, there is no necessity for stimu lative feeding. Nature furnishes it. But suppose there is scarcely anything to be gathered until tho white clover opens, tlion the bees will not bo in condition to work. Their numbers will be small, their combs lacking iu both honey and brood, and by the time that they are ready to collect honey the harvest is past. Iu such cases, feeding in the spring is very beneficial, but do not begin it too early, so that brood will bo started, then chilled later. Ouce it is started it should bo continued regularly until the main harvest opens. Another advantage of this spring feeding is that tho coml>3 are filled with food and brood, and when tho white clover comes in it must from necessity go into the sections. A feeder of sufficient capacity to cover tho whole top of the hive is advisable. Have openings at the side for tho bees to come up and go down upon slats of wood placed close together. Let it have a reservoir in the center from which the food can rise up among the slats upon which the bee 3 stand and take their food. "Feeding back" ex tracted honey to secure tho campletiou of unfinished sections is made profita ble by some beekeepers in some local ities, but it is doubtful if tho ordinary beekeeper would make a success of it. If there is an abundant fall llow of honey lasting until frost, fall feeding will not be needed. It is always best to get ail of tbo white honey possible into the sections, whether there is a fall flow or not. If there is nous, then feed. It is a simple matter. Just decide how much a full colony with sufficient stores ought to weigh, weigh all and then feed those that are lacking until they weigh the requisite amount. To judge or decide as to how much a full colony and stores ought to weigh, weigh an empty hive aud enough empty combs to fill tho hive, add about six pounds for the bees and any pollen that there may be in the combs, then allow about twenty five pounds for outdoor wintering nud fifteen for cellar wintering. This is muoh more than will probably he used, but it is well to err on the side of giv ing Aplenty. There is no better o cheaper food thVb;(L syrup of granu lated sugar. Tile consistency does not matter eo much if the feeding is done early, and it ought to be, so that it may be thoroughly ripened and sealed. Poultry Notes. Brooder chicks aro not troubled with gapes and mites. The February and March pullets make next winter's layers. The March-hatched pullol io worth three June-hatched pullets. A little lean raw boef is excellent for chicks—but must be chopped fine. Don't neglect the grit for chicks. Put some iu food at least once every day. Dust tho sitting liens with Persian insect powder twioa during the three weeks. Don't trouble yourself to give brood er chicks a dust box. They do not need it. The cockerels marketed in May will pay the cost of raising pullets to maturity. Do not hurry tli9 chicks from beneath the hen. They need warmth mure than food. If an egg gets broken in nest, re move hen aud wash the remainder in tepid water. The early March pnllet is worth two lato April-hatched pullets, as a general thing. Everybody's hens will begin to lay now. Havo yours supplied you with eggs during the winter? Give the chicks a little green food of somo kind—a small box of lettuce in tho kitchen window will supply them. Don't coop hens up in a little dirty pen, but clean things up and make them comfortable. Use plenty of lit ter and make them scratch. The poor chick is apt to got scant care when other work is pressing on every side, yet it is work that will pay better than other work we may neglect the chicks for. Those who havo superannuated or otherwise unprofitable hens should eat them. They are easily fattened, and when properly cooked ure excellent appetite appeasers. Any poultry raiser who permits his fowls to get their combs frozen i 3 derelicit iu his duty. Keep the chick ens housed whenever tho temperature goes as low as C or 8 degrees below freezing. Now is the timo to make up the breeding pen, if it has been neglected until now. A dozen or fifteen hens is enough for n pen, and only place one cock or cockerel with them. Two will do more fighting than anything else. Don't forget to dust the hen well with insect powder before giving her tho eggs, nud again before she hatches, There is nothiug that will sap the chick's vitality quicker than lice. No use blaming the eggs or the hen when the fault is yours. Lice we always havo with us. It is a great mistake to set eggs from all the fowls. No matter if the hens are all scrubs, there will be afow that are belter tlrnu tho rest—more uniform in size and probably better layers. These should be put in a good-sized pen with the best ccck, aud their eggs set. Vegetables a Fighting Diet. I regret to say that vegetarianism is a fighting diet. Ninety-one per cent, of the world's fighting has been done ou farinaceous food. In Trafalgar Square I found it impossible to run away as fast as tho meat eaters did. Panic is a carnivorous specialty. If tho army were fed on a hardy, healthy, fleshless diet we should hear no more of tho disgust of our colored troops | and of the Afridis and Fuzzywuzzies !at the cowardice of Tommy Atkins. I am myself congenitally timid, but as a vegetarian I can generally concoal my tremors; whereas in my uuregenerate. days, when I ate my fellow-creatures, I was as patent a coward as Peter the Great. The recent spread of fire-eat ing fiction and Jingo war worship—a sort of thing that only interests tho pusillanimous—is due to the spread of meat eating. Compare the.Tip perary peasant of the potatoes-and buttermilk days with the modern gen tleman who gorges himself with murdered cow. The Tipperary man never read bloody-minded novels or cheered patriotic music hall tableans, but ho fought recklessly and wantonly. Your carnivorous gentleman is afraid of everything—inolitding doctors, dogs, disease, death and truth-telling.—G. B. Shaw, in London Vegetarian. Paul Kruegor. Sitting there in his well-known at- I tidude in an upright armchair, smok ing a kuge pipe and expectorating profusely, he thumped upon the table at his sido and bellowed back bis answer, that .aq long as his country was not attacked l>e would attack no one. * * * Certaiqly at tho pres ent day no one like him exists, and perhaps no one of his peculiar,stamp will ever appear ngaln.—South Africa To-day, Yoiinghusbaud. More l*ou*cr Than Men. • The steaih power of the world may be reckoned as equivalent to the strength 0f't,000,000,000 men, which is 'more than twica tho number of workmen existing. "BoMe Fool Ml, I Tho man who talks about "support tag" a wife when sbe la working four teen boars a day, Including Sundays. Tbe man wbo thinks his wife exists for tbe comfort and convenience of bis mother and sisters. The man who provides himself with a family and trusts providence to pro vide the family with a home and some thing to eat. The man who thinks that women are angels. The man wbo thinks that nobody but an angel Is good enough to be his wife. The man who can't remember his wife's birthday. The man who thinks a' woman Is "fixed for the season" If sbe has a new gown. The man who thinks a woman ought to give up a SI,OOO salary and work In his kitchen for her board and a few clothes, and be glad of the chance. The man who labors under the de lusion that his wife's money belongs to him. The man who always leaves his wife at home when he takes his summer vacation. The man who doesn't know what on earth a woman wants with money when she has a bill at the store. The man who thinks a sick wife would feel bcuer If she would "Just get up and stir around." The men who forgets his manners as soon as he crosses his own thresh hold. The man who thinks he can keep house better than his wife does. The man who thinks there Is "no place lljte home"—for grumbling and growling. The man who quotes the Apostle Paul on the "woman question," and who firmly believes that the mantle of tho apostle has fallen on him.—New Zprk Times. It Will Pay. It will pay to carefully read the de scriptive advertisement of Alabastine appearing in this paper, explaining the difference between those goods and kalsomines. Consumers should bear in mind that Alabastine is unlike all the various kalsomines sold on the market under different names. Alabastine stands pre-eminent and alone as a dura ble wall coating, and all consumers in buying should see that the goods are in packages and properly labeled. ITIP ntion iriamonlT. The South African native. It seems, Is not always decorated with the mere trumpery of the trader's wallet or of his own purveyance. It has become an attested fact that excellent diamonds, and diamonds better than that, are possessed by chiefs and hoarded by them, not so much In intelligence of their value as In a firm fctlchlsm. TJ)e stones have come to their hands by the good old-fashioned method of stealing them from the Klmberley mines years ago before the present minute watch against gem thieving was systema tized. Diamond-stealing at present la practically Impossible under the pecu liar methods of Its prevention. Before the rigid examinations of workmen and visitors began to be enforced, native laborers often were under a secret compact with their tribal rulers not to come back from the mines without a good-sized stolen diamond for thel chief's use; hence, a great many su perb gems are in the dark unfathomed caves of a Kalllr headman's establish ment. Within a few years enterpris ing traders have made special expeili-j tlons and palavers for diamonds so hidden, with the result of successful bartering for them. Liquor and gunu have been found useful. In some ln stances the superstition of the chiefil stood in tho way of traders recovering valuable stones; but, on tbe otheif hand, a small company working on this line of acquisition Is credited with havj lng obtained within four months not less than two hundred thousand dol lars' worth of diamonds. One agent succeeded In buying of a chief six fetones of more than two hundred karats each. An American Artist. Most of New York's noted society beauties have been painted by a wo man whose miniatures long ago be came famous, and she was noted ns the most successful and fashlonablo artisl In that Uno that New York possessed. Now this fortunate artist Is In London, where she painted a miniature of the Prince of Wales In the costume that he woro at tho famous ball given by the Duchess of Devonshire. The prlvillege or painting this would have been in It self honor enough for most artists, but in addition the Prince sent the urtlst a diamond heart pin, which represented Persimmon, the Prince's horse, In dia monds, with the jockey's colors done In enamel. After the fact of the presenta tion became public the price of her minatures went up to SI,OOO, and per sons aro wondering If the influence of the Prince ol Wales' patronage will bo strong enough to have the same effect In New York.—Now Ynrlr Sim. Eggs as Cnrrcncy. A $1,200 farm in Tennessee hns been paid for wholly In hens' eggs, the In stallments being remitted dally, some times at the rate of three cents n dozen for tho eggs, delivered In four-dozen lots. _ AL AIIASTIN E IS WHAT? Alabastlne is a durable and natural coat ing for walls and ceilings entirely different from all kalsomine preparations, made ready for use in white or twelve beautiful tints by the simple addition of water (lat est make being adapted to mix with cold water"), put up in dry powder form, in G pound packages, with full directions on •veVy package. WHAT AUK KALSOMIXEST Kalsomines are cheap temporary prep I HSR BEAUTY DAZZLED, ;Mme. Beramlcr, the Most Splendid and Famous of French Women, i The recent eale Izi Paris of a mantel jplece that once adorned the salon ol 1 tlladame Recamler, recalls the memory pf that most remarkable woman. She •was- In her time the most beautiful and (the most famous of European women [and her modesty and ber accomplish hnents enchained the world of France Ito her feet Madame Recamler was born In 1771 pnd at the age of 1G married M. Reen piier. an opulent banker of twice hei age. He had Just acquired the hotel ol M. Necker, situated In the Rue Mom 'Black. He had this property so en 'larged and embellished as to make It a dwelling worthy of her who was to In habit It All the furniture, even to tht last arm chair, was designed and exe cuted expressly for this purpose. Tht Hotel of the Rue Mont Blanc soon be 'came the center of fashion and lntelll genre. Fete succeeded fete. Mme. Re 'camler, radiant as a spring morning received her friends and guests with Incomparable grace. Her salon was a kind of neutral ground where men ol parties met mingled In the same ad miration. There gathered princes, no bles, philosophers, poets, writers, art Ists, musicians, wits and beauties—ali attracted by the lovable woman whos Intelligence was hardly second to hei beauty. This epoch of splendor, however, was not of long duration. M. Recamler, through unfortunate speculations, losi almost the whole of his fortune. Mme tlecamler was obliged to sell her hotel, (her lands, her horses, even her silver [She took a lli le apartment In the Rue masse du I>, apart, where, as In the past, her ad; ..rers crowded around her. Fresh flnanrtal disasters having over taken her husband, Mme. Recamler sought refuge In the Abbaye nux Bols, where her salon became more cele brated than ever. The Abbaye aux Bols was tho home of a religious com munity. During the somber days of the revolution this property had served as a prison. Under the restoration the uuns of the community had made It a refuge for women of the world, who withdrew there to taste of the pleas ures of solitude without at the same time renouncing those of society. The nuns ceded to her the right for life of a magnificent apartment, and there she surrounded herself with objects that recalled her princely existence of other days. The friends of former times flocked to see her and the most noted Parisians defiled through the salons of the Abbaye aux Bols. A writer of this time says of her: "She never held such a place In the world as when she lived In this humble retreat at one end of Paris. It was there that her gentle genius, disengaged from too vehement complications, made Itself more and more felt It may be said that she per fected the art of friendship and caused It to take on new charms. This lovely woman was gracious and captivating even in her old age. The day she com prehended that her beauty was wan ing, because the little chimney sweeps no longer turned to look upon her when she passed, she determined to conse crate the remaining years of her life to the duties of religion and to the culti vation of friendship." She died In 1840. Her life was blame less, but her salon was the scene of In trigues, religious and political, that have come in for severe criticism. Burial Money In China. , A kind of Chinese money which is largely manufactured and sold Is wor thy of mention, although the traveler need not trouble himself with It except ns a curiosity. This Is prepared for tho especial purpose of burning at the graves of deceased relatives as an offer ing to the dead. The denizens of the other world are supposed to require and to be capable of receiving money In this way; but the Chinaman Is far too practical a person to part In such a fashion with the currency of the em pire. Instead he buys for a few "cash" a large supply of silvered and gilded pieces of paper, or of imitation coins blocked out of cardboard. Although these have no purchasing power on earth, they nre supposed to count for much in the transactions of the spirit world. By this practice one Is reminded of an old story of a miser who left Ills belongings to his son on condition that a certain sum of money should be burled In the eollln with him. The son was, however, a chip of the old block, and carried out his fathers wishes by placing In the cofffn a cross ed check for the required amount, as sured that It had little chance of being presented at his banker's.—Chambers Journal. Peaches Once Poison. The peach was originally a poison almond. Its fruity parts were used to poison arrows, and for that purpose were Introduced Into Persia. Trans plantation and cultivation have not only removed its poisonous qualities, but turned It into the delicious fruit we now c"'— A large ..inch evl 'denee of hraius as a paper collar Is o. a shirt. arations manufactured from chalks, cCays, whiting, etc., are stuck on the wall with decaying animal glue. Alabastlne is a ce ment, which goes through a process of sot ting, hardens with age, can be re-coated and re-decorated from timo to time with out having to wash and scrape off its old coats before renewing. MUCH SICKNESS Particularly throat and lung difficulties wrongly attributed to other cfilises, is (the result of unsanitary conditions of wulls and ceilings. Think of having bedrooms cov \forn'Ni Xf r From (he date tit, Delate are, Ohio. Th healthf ulnars of bicyei* riding fer women is still a disputed question between eminent physicians and health reformers. •Used ill moderation it gruel y creates for women a moans of out-door exercise, the bene tit of which all physicians concede. Used to excess. Hire any other pastime, its effect in likely to be dangerous. The experience of Miss Bertha Heed, the seventeen-year-old daughter of Mr. J. R. Reed, 835 Lake St.. Delaware. Ohio, may point a moral for parents who, like Mr. and Mrs. Reed, have experienced some concern for their daughters who are fond of wheel ing. In the fall of '9O Miss Bertha who hud ridden a great deal, began to fall in an alarming manner. She grew steadily paler and thinner, and it appeared she was going Into consumption. Rest and qnist did her A no "vl ci&n found •JKJ l pulse at 104-a \ffl{ fißLr TftllWH Ll very high rate. ■Thinking this / \V> —' * ma ' kuve been I Y' % *JF duetotempo ni\ \ rary nervous ness when be §¥ SKeXUIc. Well TfWr closely, but her pulse continued fljr . at that rate for two weeks, lie 3r was satisfied then, from her high pulse and steadily wasting condition t.but she was suffering from antemia or a blood less condition of the body. She became ex tremely weak, and could not stand tho least noise or excitement. In this condition of affairs they were recommended bv an old friend to get some of that famous blood mediolne Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. They did so, and almost from tho first dose Bertha began to improve. She continued to take the pills and was by means of those pills made entirely well, and more grateful people than her parents cannot be found in the whole State of Ohio. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have proved u boon to womankind. Aoting directly on the blood and nerves, ther restore the req uisite vitality to all parts of the body; creating functional regularity and perfect harmonv throughout the nervous system. The pallor of the cheeks is changed to the delicate blush of health; the eyes brighten; the muscles grow elastic, ambition is created and good health returns. Barcelona, the largest city in Spain, has 520,000 inhabitants; Madrid 507,000. 50-To-Bm for Fifty Cants. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak tnen strong, bloou pure. 60c, ®L idl druggists. It cost $55,000 for coal to take the British cruiser Powerful out to China. M CATHARTIC CURE CONSTIPATION 25c 50c DRUGGISTS M Ask any disinterested mechanical expert OH and he will tell you H =- ARE THE BEST ===== I They are absolutely uniform in quality and finish. You I have the added satisfaction of knowing no one can buy a H Columbia cheaper than you. We sell for one price only— H i the advertised price. H Columbia Hear Ghainless, . $125 Hartford Bicycles, .... SSO ■ Columbia Chain Wheels, . 75 Vedettes S4O and 535 I POPE MFG. CO., HARTFORD, CONN. H Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mail for one 2-cent stamp. Hji FAINTmiWALLS.iCEILINGS OA LCI MO FRESCO TIfJTS ! £22 PECOBATjjjfi WALLS AND CEILINGS p'ci h p|rJgn Trom y o^ | grocer or paint dealer and do your own kal- WBOJSEJS!UI somining. | This material is made on scientific principloa by maobinory and milled in twenty-four tints and is superior to any concoction of Gluo and Whit i iug that can possibly bo made by hand. To HE MIXED wrrii COLD WATER. B®-END FOR SAMPLE COLOR CARDS and if you cannot purchase this material from your local dealers let us know and wo will 5 put you iu the way of obtaining it. | THE JICR lbO CO., NEW BRIGHTON, S. 1., NEW YORK. 11 Better Work Wisely Than Work Hard." Crest Efforts are Unnecessary in Hainecleanins if You Use SAPOLIO ered with layers of molding flour paste to food vermin, with paper to hide them and to absorb the moisture of respiration, and an animal glue culture ground on its face for disease germs; this having strong color* added, like a colored shirt, to hide the dirt; then think of "the nasty practice" of repeating this papering, without remov ing the old, and a number of times, at that, us rnaay do. Then think of a room coated with, pure, porous, pormanent Alabustiue, wliich is retlnted with but little trouble or expense, and is purifying and sweet-smell ing and Alls cracks. Wall paper free Nearly erery" youDg man had the n*j don that something Important Is liable to go on down town at night. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away* To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag* oetic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Uac, the wonder- worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 500 or fl. Cureguaran* ! teed. Booklet and sample free. Addresn Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York. Vultures can not discover a carcasa by the sense of smell. They rely en tirely upon their sight in quest of food. Piso'sCurc for Consumption has no equal na a Cough medicine.—F. M. AuiioTT, IWB >r:ioca St.. Buffalo, N.Y.. May 5). lv.u. WAGON A better Scale tor frciqht paid. les money than has ever been offered. #n M ffl mm SCALES •SBP GREAT CLEARING BALI of *7 and *• models, bout makes, SO.T6 to $lO. ll®-1T approval without a cent payment. Free |m At of wheel to our agents. tor oar ■•W YKTTNR'FFM .ft ritES?!/ niSup" ill. thej lub t. r. nillAI) CYCLE COJIi'ANY, aagei PENSIONS, PATENT 5. CLAIMS. JOHN W. MORRIS, WASHINGTON.O.& .ate Principal Examiner U. 8. Pension Bureau A jrre. in last war, li adjudicating claims, attj. sino^ MEN AND WOMEN WANTED TO TRAVEL for old established houss. Pr uianent position. 840 per month snd nil tenses.i'.W.ZlLULEß A CO.. £lßLocust St..PbUa* A P%| | | m M and Liqnor Habit cured In 11 1 I BJi lO to 20 days. No pay till llrl I 8 YWfl cured. Dr. J. L. Stephen*, VI |VI vl Dept. A, Lebanon, Ohio. PATENTS .t' LiwjuSgS llrltor of Pntentn, 501 F St., Wash* lugton, U. C. Correspondence Solicited PN U 14 '9B. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use fS In time. Sold by druagtsts. (if IBSEHSZAISIENEQI ■ would 1)0 dearer than Alabustine If cost ol removing paper is considered. TO DEALERS. Do not buy a law suit or an injunction with cheap kalsomines, which ure all imi tations uf Alabastino. Dealers assume the risk of a suit for damages by selling an in fringement. Alabastino Company own the right, covered by letters patent, to make and sell wall coatings adapted to be mixed with cold water. Alabastine Co., Grand , llapida. Mich.