Experience And Not Experiments, Should t Your Aim in Buying Medicine. L-?t others oxperlmont; you should be guided by experience. Experiments are uncertain in result; experience is sure. Ex periments may do you harm; experience proves that Hood's Sarsaparilla will do you wonderful good. Thousands gladly tell what Hood's has done for thorn. They want you to know and they urge you to try it. That is what is meant by the vast number of testimonials written in behalf of Hood's Sarsaparilla. They give the re sults of experience and prove that HOOd'S S par""la Is America's Greatest Medicine. Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Get only Hood's. Hood's PiTlSyve. iSF Tlie prettier a girl's spring dress is ♦lie longer It may be known tbat liei father is fussing about It. To Care Constipation Forever. Take Cascurets Candy Cathartic. 10c or SSo. If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggist* refund money- Old Cairo Is changing visibly. The electric tramway to the Pyramids is an accomplished fact, and the eight-mile trip—before so expensive—ls now possi ble for a few pence. Ismail's gfeat causeway will in no way be spoiled, as the rails have been laid right along the side of the avenue, and, Indeed, are scarcely noticeable. Fits permanently cured. No fits or ner.vons ness alter lirst day's use of I)r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 52trial bottle and treatise free Dr. h. li .KLINE Ltd..H3l Arch St.Phila.,Pa. During the sleg of Paris 150,000 of ficial dispatches were carried into the city by the "Pigeon Post." No-To-Rac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blooa pure, hoc, II- All druggist* Thibet anfl Its Inhabitants. The immeuse territory of Thibet is almost completely surrounded by moun tain ranges of appalling magniture, which, especially along the southern, western and northern frontiers, consti tute formidable barriers against in gress. From the Pamir Plateau, in the extreme west—"the world's backbone" —radiate the great natural ramparts which shut out India on the one hand and the Tartar countries of Bokhara and Turkestan on the other. No Asiatic or Western conqueror has ever dared to penetrate this mountain world; and even Genghis Khan, the scourge of Asia, whose ravages extended from Pekin in the East to Moscow iu the West, was obliged, when invading Northern India, to take the circuitous route, via Kashgliar and Afghanistan, instead of crossing Thibet. Secure on their lofty plateau, and practically iso lated from the rest of the world, the people of Thibet have remained undis turbed for ages, and have developed characteristics for which we might vain ly search in any other race on the globe. The Chinese "conquest" has not pro duced the slightest change In their mode of life, or exercised any appre ciable influence upon their peculiar cul ture. OPEN LETTERS FROM Jennio C. Groen and Mr a. Harry Hardy. JENNIE E. GREEN, Denmark, lowa writes to Mrs. Pinkham: "I had been sick at my monthly periods for seven years, and tried almost everything I ever heard of, but without any benefit. Was troubled with backache, headache, pains in the shoulders and dizziness. Through my mother I was induced to try Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound, and it has done me so much good. lam now sound aflH well." Mrs. IIARIIY HARDY, Riverside, lowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham the story of her struggle with serious ovarian trou ble, and the benefit she received from the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. This is her letter; 41 How thankful I am that I took your medicine. I was troubled for two years with inflammation of the womb and ovaries, womb was also very low. I was in constant misery. Iliad heart trouble, was short of breath and could not walk five blocks to save my life. Suffered very much with my back, had headache all the time, was nervous, menstruations were irregular and painful, had a bad discharge and was troubled with bloating. I was a perfect wreck. Had doctored and taken local treatments, but still was no better. I was advised by one of my neighbors to write to you. I have now finished the second bottle of Mrs. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and am better la every way. lam able to do all my own work and can walk nearly a mile without fatigue; something I had not been able to do for over two years. Ycur medicine has doc® me more good than all the doctors " BAD BREATH *' I have Tieen lining CABCABETI and a atnilfl and effective laxative they are sluiply won derful. My dunffbter end I were bothered with sick stomach and our breath was very bad. Alter taking ti few doses of Casearets we Lave Improved wonderfully They are a #reat help iu the family. - ' WILHLLMINA N'At.KL. 11117 Rlitcnbouse St.. Cincinnati. Ohio. M CATHARTIC bum TRAD 2 MARK RSOIftTBMO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Nover Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... ftvrlln? Remedy Cwwpwy, ftilcofo, Montreal. New York. 315 N!l.7f) fBP Sold and guaranteed by all drug- RU" I v"DRU tflsts to C llt£ Tobacco Habit. I GOOD ROADS NOTES. | t^ieie!ei®eieie!®eieie!oioe^®ei®o^ A System of Military Highways. An elaborate system of good high- i ways for Pennsylvania is proposed by ! Arthur Kirk, of Slicrpsburg, Penn. As the constitution of that State says "there shall be no State debt created except for military purpose^" ho pro poses that the State create a complete system of military roads, which shall traverse the State from east to west in parallel lines forty miles apart, and in lilse manner from north to south. These military highways are not to utilize old roads, but are to bo laid out new under the most expert super vision; bo constructed in the best manner; have no grade greater than three per cent., no matter what grad ing may be required, and to be from forty to sixty feet wide. The whole charge of building and maintaining these military highways is to be in the hands of the Secretary of Internal Affairs, who is to have three competent civil engineers as his counsellors. All applicants for posi tions of engineers in charge of the construction of these roads are to be rigidly examined before they can be appointed. The Secretary is to ap point a court to hear all claims and award damages for property taken for the construction of the roads. Before eaoh section of road is completed, the Secretary is to sell at public auction the right to lay and use a double track street railway on it for transporting freight and passengers, for a period of twenty years, and money received from this sourco is to become part of the road-building fund. Before tho end of November in each year, the Secretary i 3 to notify tho State Treasurer how much will be re quired for the following year, which sum shall not exceed $12,000,000. On the first Tuesday of each mouth, the Treasurer shall sell at public auction twenty-year, three per cent. State bonds, to an amount not exceeding $1,000,000 per month, until the sum required by tho Secretary is obtained. Such highways are expected to benefit the people so greatly that they will demand that they be built but twenty miles apart, and then ten, and then five. Mr. Kirk has given the road question much attention both here and abroad. His proposed Military Eoad Law has been printed with full explanations. Statistic. Itegurdlns: Good Itoads. This is the time of the year when the average cyclist begins to look around to find out the condition of the roads. It is only tho enthusiast who has done more or less regular riding daring the winter, but this class is increasing every year. Fred erick J. H. Merrill has issued a good road bulletin for the New York State Museum of the University of the State of New York, which showß that he has made a close study of the good roads problem. The bulletin treats of road-building and good road ma terial, and it also includes maps and illustrations of stretches of good roads. Tho writer shows that this country is in the same condition in regard to roads that Great Britain was at tho beginning of the present cen tury, or, in other words, that we are a hundred years behind England in road-building. Mr. Merrill says that the Komaus showed a better know ledge of road-building three hundred B. C., than the officials of this State do to-day. Ho gives the mileage of the important roads of this State at 123,000 miles. Much money, he says, is spent in rejjairing roads improperly, leaving the highways in worse con dition than they were in before the im provements were made. The maps show the quarries iu the State and the kind of stone to bo secured in each. Tho ideal stone for road-building can be had around the Palisades on the Hudson, Mr. Merrill argues that it is not necessary to destroy the Palisades or blast for this stone, for, he says, there is enough loose material at tho 1 foot of th 3 Palisades to last for road ! building iu this district for some time jto come. Tho writer argues that all j that would bo necessary would be for i the road-builders to get barges, pick it up and briag it over. This particu lar stone is known as "trap-rock," and it can be found in quantities in no other part of tho State. New Road Law Already Popular. Before Governor Black had attached his signature to the Higbee-Armstrong State roads bill, the property owners along two important highways in Monroe County had taken steps to secure tho benefits of that bill when it shall becorno a law. The movement was first started on tho road between Rochester and Brighton, and the property owners on the Kidge road, between Hoosie Hill and Lake j avenue, are a good second, j Both of the thoroughfares men j tioued are importaut ones leading into I this city. The Bidge road, for exam j pie; is a splendid natural highway leading westward from tho Genesee f River to tho Niagara. Its greatest breadth makes it appear like a superb boulevard, and along its entiro length, country cross-roads from the north and south run into it, mnuv of them from important villages. But as it is a great natural ridge of sand, the wagon tracks along this road are, during most of the year, very heavy. An improvement which would give teams and wagons a good, solid drive way would immensely expedite and relieve the largo traffic over tho road. The evidence thus promptly fur nished of the prospective popularity of th 3 proposed law is specially grat ifying to its friends. Something was needed to stimulate property owners ou country highways to adopt meas ures for seaming good roads. This something is furnished in the State and county aid secured under the bill. U.uder the now system there will be a fair prospect ibat tbe money will be intelligently and scientifically applied instead of being practically wasted, as the money and labor in the existing system of working out the tax are. After two or three conspic uous object lessons, such as the Brighton and Bidge road improve ments will be, have been furnished, there will be a rush of applications from rural property owners for road improvements under the new law.— Bochester Democrat and Chronicle. Maryland and Good Itoads. There is simple common sense for the good roads question, says tho Bal timore American. Get good men, and make the money reaon the roads. As things are at present organized—or disorganized—in Maryland, not one dollar in four or five appropriated for roads reaches the work on the roads. This fact is known. It is admitted. It is one of the chief scandals of the State. Now the time has come for the money to be honestly used. There should be new laws, new regulations, new men and new methods. The lack of good roads is keeping down the price of every farm in the State, costing every farmer more to get his products to market, keeping back that progress which would come if we had better highways. It is a simple matter, but we hope tho Legislature will study it and be gin by wise laws that progress toward better things, which will lead Mary laud to tho destiny that belongs to it by right of position and by the ex haustless value of its resources. WorMng of Permissive Law, Permissive road laws will not bring the millennium of good roads upon us with a rush. There is still much opposition to road improvement, and it will tako a good while, and much hard work, to overcome it. If county supervisors are simply given permis sion to indicate what roads they want improved, and their constituents don't want any done, they will not call for any road building in their districts. Under Biich laws, tho only induce ment for a county to build roads that it does not want, is the State's prom ise to bear half the expense. As some one remarked, "this is a good deal like asking a man, into whose intel lect no ray of spiritual light had pierced, if he wouldn't like to be taxed for.his salvation."—Good Beads Bulletin. Preserving Good Roads. The effect of wide tires on roads has been shown clearly on a street in Springfield, Mass., over which heavy quarry wagons are driven. Tho road was formerly badly cat up, but a number of years ago it was given a heavy surface coat of gravel with the understanding that wide tires should bo put on the wagons carrying the quarry stone. This was done, the tires being four to five inches wide, and since that time the street has been in good condition, although little has been done on it. In tho Wrong: I'l nee. It is said that 27,000 tons of water fall every year on each mile of road. This water does its best to run off and join some watercourse, but is general ly so hampered iu its efforts that much of it soaks, directly into the sur face, so that dirt roads become mud, and stone roads are ruined. Proper drainage alone would go far toward improving all our highways. Indian Fails as Shoplifter < A Navajo Indian can hide more bulk within the folds of his blanket than a two-bushel basket could hold, and can successfully hide many stolen articles before our eyes. The settlers along the San Juan and Animas rivers, during the early days, had to put all their stealablo possessions in one cor ner of their places of abode and stand guard when the Navajoe3 were visitors, which was a too frequent occurrence. "Chinny ah-go!" (meaning something to eat) was tho first intimation, gener ally, that an Indian was near (perhaps a hr.lf dozen). They rarely exceeded half a dozen in number, as they, like the American hobo, bad learned that smaller numbers stood a better show to get something to eat. One day in A. B. Lincoln's cabin, on the south bank of the San Juan Biver, three bachelors were partaking of their evening meal, when a Navajo with a glass eye walked in. All tried to watch the Indian's movements, but he had managed to get several articles under his blanket, and would not have been detected had not an accident be fallen him. A hntohet which slipped from one of tho folds in his blanket foil, and the sharp blade cut a long gash in the calf of his leg. The Indian looked to the roof of the cabin as if wondering where the hatchet had fal len from, bnt tho blood spurting from the open gash betrayed him. His blanket was shaken and a butcher knife, miner's candlestick, several can dles and a package of tobacco, all be longing in the cabin, fell ou the earthy floor.—Durango (Col.) Wage Earner. Tactics of Pursued Deer. An Oxford County sportsman who j is much interested in the habits of ! wild game reports seeing three deer chased by dogs in tho deep snow. It was impossible for them to rum fast, and they adopted tactics that were at onee novel and practical. They were running single file. The first thing •that attracted attention as unusual was the action of tho leader, which stopped suddenly, jumped to oils side, and let the other two deer,run by iu the path he had made. Very soop tho new leader jumped out hud let his followers run aliead as lofig' as the leader could stand it to make the path in the deep snow. This was kept up until they went out of sight, and the sportsman had learned something new.—Kennebec (Me.) Journal. WATERFALL Or JUAMACATi-AN. Grandest and Least Unneti of the Scenic "Wonders of Mexico. Not frequently in this advanced age does it transpire that ono of na ture's most marvelous works has !>een allowed to remain unchronicled among the recognized wanders of the earth, and generally unknown to the major ity of the inhabitants of a world it was designed to adorn, yet, sequestered among the verdant hills and vales of Central Mexico, not because of any remoteness or inaccessibility, for it is situated within a day's journey by rail from the capital city of the republic and only a few hours' travel from the fair metropolis, Guadalajara, in the State of Jalisco, but beoause of the tardiness on the part of those who worship at nature's shrine in availing themselves of the allurements of this truly delightful section—this land of manana, of poco tiempo and sweet forgetfulness—all the more sublime because of its unheralded majesty there exists a masterpiece of nature's handiwork, unrivaled in its own pe culiar beauties and environments. It is the great waterfall of Juauacatlan. 'Che immediate approach to the falls is in itself an artist's dream of rural delights. Leaving the railroad at the little station of El Castillo one is con veyed by tramcar for a distance of livs miles through a beautiful circular val ley thousands of acres in area and re sembling in the graceful curves of its surrounding hills and the delicate tints of its labyrinths of wild flowers a mammoth seaehell. At frequent in tervals above the tops of the tall grasses and tropical shrubs glimpses are caught of the broad, winding Rio de Santiago, its waters hastening on to the mad. Having traversed perhaps two thirds of this enchanting landscape one's ear gradually becomes conscious of a low, distant murmur, which steadily increases to a deep rumble aud from that to a mighty roar, and presently the tramcar coine3 to a standstill at the very brink of a bigh precipice, from which is viewed through clouds of vaporous mist the sight of thousands of tons of water plunging over a wall of gray granite in a steady unbroken cataract 300 feet in width for a sheer distance of sixty feet into a seething, eddying vor tsx below. For a time the mind is apt to bs held in rapt contemplation of tlie grand speotacle, then by degrees the senses are awakened to the various characteristics, the exquisite effects and weird vagaries of tho foaming, falling waters. At the extreme fur ther shore a portion of ths rushing flood is turned aside by a spur of granite aud hurled against the face of the confining wall, from which it re bounds in a fine veil-like cascade, while from the top of the precipice on the nearer side long trailing vines droop down aud reach out their ten drils as if in vain efforts t > grasp tha descending torrents. Associated with these fall 3is a strange and beautiful phenomenon. It is the constant presence of myriads of gorgeous butterflies, which flit in and out of the rifts of the great cascade and to and fro through tho clouds of drifting vapor, seemingly attracted and fascinated by the dazzling, buffeting avalanche of foam.—St. Louis Globe- Democrat. A Child's Daily Diet. Mrs. S. T. Rorer, writing on "The Best Food for a Growing Child" in the Ladies' Home Journal, says: "A child must have in its active life at least two-thirds carbonaceous foods and one-third nitrogenous or flesh building foods. For breakfast he may have first a well-baked or steamed ap ple, a little apple sauce, a ripe peach or some grapes, followed by a well cooked cereal with milk, after which a soft-boiled egg, a small bit of broiled white fish, a little broiled sweetbread, a piece of broiled chicken, or he may take simply a bowl of oatmeal or wheat preparation, and a slice of well-toast ed whole wheat bread. "For dinner & clear soup, followed by a red meat, either beef or mutton, broiled, boiled or roasted, or any of the wild meats, with ono starchy vegetable, such as rice, potato or stewed macaroni, and one green vege table simply cooked, such as spinach, cauliflower, asparagus, leltuee, cress, celery, well-cooked cucumber, care fully stewed turnip or well-boiled radish, over which is poured a little cream sauce giving the required fatty matter. Next comes the dessert. Such things as rice pudding, cup custard, caramel custard, mock charlotte, float ing island, rice dumplings and boiled rice and milk, or moulded wheatlet with whipped cream, aud moulded rice with whipped cream maybo used. Water not iced should bo the accom panying beverage. "Supper may consist of bread, thoroughly baked, with either butter or cornmeal mush aud milk, mush bread, bread sticks and chicken broth. Milk is, however, the better liquid food for tho child's night meal. A child who is fed properly, and i 3 well bathed and comfortably clothed, will eat well, sleep well and be happy and good." Bogus Wine In Germany* The falsification of wine, for many years a growing industry in only Ger many, now is to be rnadu a legalized industry as well. The product is to be known under the name of "Kuus twein." The Government is to got a tax of twenty marks for each hecto liter, aud the stuff, properly labeled, is to be sold openly. :•>.> Hone in 0072. Statisticians claim that the earth will not support more thau 5,994,000,- OOt) people. The present population is estimated at 1,497,000,000, the in crease being eight per cent, each dec ade. At that rate the utmost liuii'. •will he reached in the year £97:1. A Cheerful Woman* From the Democrat, Brazil, Ind. Every woman cannot bo beautiful, but* cheerful fuoe often supplies tho deficiency. J But no one can be cheerful and bring joy to i others unless they have perfect health. I Fortunately, science has placed this price- | less boon within tho reach of every woman as the following incident proves:-. Mrs. Amanda Robinson, wife of William \ Robinson, farmer and stockman, near I Howesvilie, Clay County, Ind., is thirty- , two years old and had for several years i been in declining health and despondent, j For three months she was not only unable j to attend to her domestic duties but too feeble to be up und about. To-day she is in good health and able to attend to her ; household atYairs. She relates her ex perience us follows: "I was afflicted with female troubles and was in a delicate state of health. I lost my appetite, grew thin und was greatly depressed. After taking various remedies without being benefited I was induced by a friend to try Dr. Wiiliuras' Pink Pills. "Early in ■ , . < the summer | of 1837 I pro- I cured 11 ve f] boxes of them / _ / I and before fln- 'JQ / ! IsUlng the/ JX ,r* second box I / I began to MK p~ / qj prove and by \ / the time I had / N taken the live < * boxes I was ' able to go about my A Priceless Boon. usual work and stopped taking the pills. "Our daughter Anna, twelve years old, was also afflicted with decline and debility. She lost flesh, seemed to be bloodless i and had no arnoition. She took two boxes I of the pills and they restored her appetite, j aided digestion and brought color to her i cheeks. Bhe is now in the best of health. I I think Dr. Williams* Pink Pills for Pale I PeopJo the best medicine we ever had la our family and recommend them to all needing a romedy for toning up und re building a shattered system. No discovery of modern times has proved such a blessing to women as Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills for Palo People. They restore strength and health to exhausted women when every effort of tho physician proves unavailing. These vogetablo pills are everywhere recognized as a specific for diseases of the blood and nerves. ftTinkc Into Your ftnocn Allen's Foot-Ease,a powder for the feet. It cures painful,swollen.nervous,smarting feet I and instantly takes the sting out of corns I and bunions. It's the greatest comfort dis- J covery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try if to-day. Sold by all drug gists and shoe stores, 25c. Trial package FREE. Address Allen H.Olmsted.Le Hoy.N.Y, Siam has 250,000 square miles, about the area of North and South Dakota, with Minneota added. Beauty la Blood Deep* Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cath&r tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed. 10c* 25c, 50c. One of the oldest and most curious j samples of the locksmith's are is at tached to the door of Temple Church, j Fleet street, London. The key weighs i seven pounds, is 18 inches long, and ; unlike other keys, it was not make for the lock. On the contrary, the lock was made for the key. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet®. All Druggists refund money ff it fails to cure. 35c. The Desert of Sahara is as large as all that portion of the United States ly ing west of the Mississippi. M. L. Thompson & Co.. Druggists, Couders port. Pa., say Hall's Catarrh Cure is the best and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it, 7oj. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reducing in flammation, allays pain, cures wind colie. 25c. u bottle. Portugal has 32,000 square fniles, and is, therefore, a little smaller than the State of Maine. Educate Yonr Ttowela With Cm cm ret*. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 100, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. The Netherlands have 12,000 square miles, being about the combined area of Massachusetts and Connecticut. Both the mcthorl ana 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 i constipation. Syrup of Figs is tho : only remedy of its kind ever pro- } duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in I 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 j cent bottles by all leading drug- j gists. Any reliable druggist who j may not have it on hand will pro- j cure it promptly for any one who j wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK, N.t. BJOJPJ.ES r1 'fibrada, ' atyl te, 'modci■!"itISYCLKKKF.Vor Ineason to advertise them. Send for on*. Hitler agents •ranted. Learn iiow to Lr rn a Bicycle and make money. 11. F. .ILLAD CYL'LL CO.ilA.\ Y. CMnfazo. "Where Grass Is a Curiosity. At tlie London county council meet ing the chairman of the bridge com mittee stated that about fifty vehicles and 500 passengers per hour passed through the Black wall tunnel. lie incidentally remarked that a patheiic point was that children passed through to the south 6ide of the river and car ried back to the east tufts of grass as though they were curiosities. The Cincinnati bootblacks have or ganized a trust—but they don't Don't Tobacco Spit aiid Smoke Toor T.lfc Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Uac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druKgmts, 50c or VI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet aul sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Within the last ten years the number of railway stations in Germany has in creased from 6,376 to 8,893. ST.VITUS' DANCE. SPASMS and all ncrv- ; nns diseases permanently cured by the use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE SI.OO trial bottle and treatise to Dr. ' R. H. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arch Street, Phila., Pa. I could not get along without Piso's Cure for Consumption. It always cures. MRS. E. C. MOULTON, Need ham. Muss., Oct. 32, 'W. SO; ■ THE NEW BE*ATSYHE OLD'aSTHE S3 OLD BEAT THE WOODEN WHEEL. G> TRE raa. 54 pagea. New Music. Britfbt Literatnre.Special I Woman s Department. Great Clubbing Offer. 41.M yearly. sumiilt- rojiy anil premium list, 10c. 'rim DOMINANT, 44 w.tiuihsc.,n.y! Clt*. i - For three years we have been experimenting with, J developing and perfecting Bevel=Gear Chainless Bicycles, Price *125 to a " ol ""- This work has been in the hands of the most expert cycle engineers in the pro fession and we have succeeded in build ing a bicycle that everyone who has ridden admits is a better hill climber than any chain wheel yet made. Columbia Chain Wheels $ 75, Hartfcrds SSO, Vedettes $ 4C, 5 35 POPE fttFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mail for one 2-cent stamp, ; (E|U| IP if UII a offWs. " which represents 18 well known vegetable, llowor ontl llold seeds. and vo offer C~> 4 '* 7 b io B s us Q s ii o Z 6 P c 12" !^£i3S*S 6500. IN CASH FOR THE 1 2 NAMES. Flint letter of each Is giv<'n: name thom Ilka this: Corn, Foot. Ilean.otc.. and rp '"l 1 " " umb rr ® f e *f h - A " oxcej't one are natural size. Fvorv person giving fl names of the seed. win re eel ve a konr Dollar Prise by return mail WewnntTou interested In the BeetSeedn that Grow and moao this educating seed offer to know whether you know fod seel when you see It To enter tho conteat ■end 25 cents (Silver or money order> and we will send vou bv return mall a 50c. cenafloate. good f.irthls | amount of seed to be selected from our catalogue any time within 8 years, also full pnrticulare Club of f>. 11.00. w .i '"'■" i; J f TOU dl>n't know all 18 needs you ought to know Tlx. that gives you aSt prize, besides yoa rn.ui.of uiosoc.ceruar.to. Do.'. ml..thUoff.r. Addrcaj. FAISVIEW SEED PABMS, Bet 3. Kmc Bill. N. *. I PAINTSWALLSCEIUN6S| I MURALO WATER COLOR PAINTS 1 FDR OECOBaTIKG WALLS HHP CEILIHGS Purchase a package of 9 m —■—■■■■■■■ Ewg y R/L LO from 9 j jfl your grocer or paint dealer and do yonr own SLSS dooo- §9 w rating. This material is a HAItD FINISH to be applied with a brush 1| MJ and becomes as hard as Cement. Milled in twenty-four tints and works Bj g equally as well with cold or hot water. JBfiF'SEA'D I'OK SAM ft*EE M Sj CARDS and if you cannot purchase this material from your local deal- 9 j ■ ers let us know and wo will put you in tho way of obtaining it. U ] THE MIKALO CO., XEW BRIGHTON, S. 8.. X'EIV YORK. 9 In a World Where "Cleanliness is Hex! to Godliness," no Praise h Toe Great for 1 SAPOLIO |£ Established 1735. §> I Baker's | I Chocolate, s ~ $£ ? T % celebrated for more £ than a century as a <C delicious, nutritious, *ot 5 W^ and £> beverage, has our 6 well-known •> $3 Yellow Label 08 | jSlWfc on the front of every xs> aw package, and our - sSfl I Mmtl trade-mark,"La Belle v oco^a^ere, "° n i^e £ NONE OTHER GENUINE. % MADE ONLY BY g WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., $ & Dorchester, Mass. niiimim IT PAYS t I know bofnre buying. I'll HUM V w,it " for Circular and Prices. ,n A Make more and better butter. UllUlmU Cf W'K I'AV FREIGHT. J. O. KEARNS. Manufacturer. MAITLAND, PA. ARRIIA £B and Liquor Habit cured lit ' VI IWI Vt Dept. A. Lebouon, Ohio. nA?PIVITB ,MTsnl *• roLEMAV, r#tent PA I EN IS Lr'sss 1^ mg.Sii' i Thompson's Eye Water P N 0 19 '93. p -y^^
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers