What You Get When You Buy Medicine la a Mat tor of Croat Importance. Do yon get that which, has the power to eradicate from your blood all poisonous taints and thus remove the cause of dis ease? Do you buy HOOD'S Barsaparilla wid only Hood's ? If you do, you may take It with tho utmost confidence that it will do you good. Kemember Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine" $1; six for $5. Hood's Pills cure biliousness, indigestion. W. J. Mercer, dry goods editor of the New York Journal of Commerce and Commercial Bulletin, recently de livered, at the rooms of the Merchants' Association, New York city, an address on "Cotton Industry in the South." At the present time there are 500,000 spin dles in the South running on that class of goods known more particularly as Fall River goods. The South main tains that its progress so far in the direction of fine goods is only an earn est of what it is able to do in the fu ture. I foun ! nowhere in the South spinning flnei than 60s. nor weaving finer than 40s yarn. Taking the whole South, which X visited, the average week will not be less than 68 hours. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathartic clean your blood and keop it cloan, by stirring up tho lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body, begin to day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cas carets, beauty for 10 cents. All druggists, eutlsfaction guaranteed. 10c, 20c, 25c, 50c. This is an off-year with the sea ser pent along the New England coast. The competition of Spanish war ships has driven him out of business. To Core a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it f allb to cure. 26c. There could not possibly be a whiter city than Cadiz, unless it were built of snow. As yqju near the coast you see In front of you a white mass which ap pears to be floating upon the water. The first thought for a foreigner is that he is in sight of an Iceberg. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 26c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. In Florida a wine is made from to matoes, which is superior to Orange wine. A. M. Priest, Druggist, Shelbyville. Ind., says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure gives tho best of satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials, as it cures every one who takes it." Drug gists sell it, 75c. ST. VITUS' DANCE, SPASMS and all nerv ous diseases permanently cured by the use of Dr. Kline's Great Nervo Restorer. Send for FREE 81.00 trial bottle and troatise to I)r. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Phila., Pa. Some Hindoos wear mustaches and bez..xis, but all wear whiskers, which are shaved off at once when an adult relation dies. The shaving off of whiskers Is thus a sign of mourning. Clergyman'! Experiment A laudable attempt on the pact of a Nottlng Hill clergyman to practically the working class portion of his flock the combined benefits of religion and a tankard of beer has, we regret to hear, proved unsuccessful. The Rev. Prebendary Denison started, for the social pleasure of his congrega tion, a club, where the reverend gen tleman or his curate went, after dis pensing theological pabulum In th€ church, and served the members with beer and other corporeal refreshments. Tho Idea was to keep them away from public houses and to afford them hem tst recreation with a reasonable amount of tipple. By the rules no man could be served with Hquor more than three times In the course of a night. But the clergyman was unaware of the degree If not of original sin at least of bibulous Ingenuity among the rougher classes ol Notting Hill. They evaded the rule by clubbing together their twopencea and treating each other, so that in the courso of tho evening a member was able to obtain half a dozen, or even more, drinks, instead of three. The re sult was sometimes unpleasant, and the Prebendary has therefore reluct antly determined to give up the experi ment.—London Telegraph. AN OPERATION AVOIDED. Mrss. Rosa Gaum Writes to Mrs. Pinkharn About it. Sho Says: DEAR MRS. PIXKUAM:—I take pleas ure in writing you a few lines to in form you of the good your Vegetable Compound has dono mc. I cannot thank you enough fpr what your medi cine has done for me; it has, indeed, helped mc wonderfully. >rQ For years I was trou bled with an ovarian tumor, jj& N \ \ each year grow- y \ A ing worse, un- I VI \W til at last I ijfy to consult with Mu a physician. I JUL be done for me but to go under an operation. In speaking with a friend of mine about it, she recommended Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound, say ing sho knew it would cure mc. I then 6cnt for your medicine, and after tak ing three bottles of it, the tumor dis appeared. Oh! you do not know how much good your medicine has done me. I shall recommend it to all suffer ing women.—Mrs. ROSA GAUM, 720 Wall St., Los Angeles, Cal. The great and unvarying success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound in relieving every derangement of tho female organs, demonstrates it to be tho modern safeguard of wo man's happiness and bodily strength. More than a million women have been benefited by it. Every .woman who needs advice about her health is invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. 1 l'lttaburo, Pa. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. To Prepare a Salmon Salad. Take one can salmcn, small quan tity of celery cut up fine, a little salt, yolk of a liard-boiled egg, mixed with one teaspoonful of dry mustard, a sufficient quantity of vinegar which, when mixed with the egg and mus tard, will cover tho salmon. Chop up the white of the egg and mix with the salad. A Lemon Pie That Wins Approval. A recipe for lemon pie that never fails of approval calls for one teacup of sugar, one tablespoonfnl (scant) of butter, two eggs, juice and grated rind of one lemon, one teacupful of boiling water, one tablespoonful of cornstarch dissolved in cold water. Stir the cornstarch into the hot water, add the butter and sugar, and cok until clear, taking care that it does not scorch. Remove to edge of the range, add the well-beaten yolks of the ei gs and the lemon, and pat in shell of paste, al ready baked. Whip the whites stiff, adding two tahlcspoonfuls of sugar and a few drops of lemon juice, spread over the pie and brown iu a slow oven. Making the Uravy. To prepare gravy stir into the grease left after frying half a dozen chops an even tablespoonful of Hour. If no extra grease has been used to cook tbe chops, that which has been tried out of them will absorb this amount of flour. Add about a cup of boiling Water and stir until all tbe brown bits in the pan are taken up. Season the gravy with half ateaspoou ful of salt and a little pepper; add half a cup more of water, and let the gravy simmer for five minutes. When it is poured out the pan can be easily washed with hot soapsuds. The materials which mado it hard to wash before are used in the gravy. When the gravy is cold any grease that may not have been absorbed will rise to the top and can be removed. If the gravy is needed at once the fat can be skinimed off, though this is not so easy to do. Not only is it difficult to take off enough of .the fat, but in tho process a utensil is unnecessarily soiled, aud time must be used in wash ing it. Chocolate Cream Layer Cake. One>cup sugar and a tablespoonful of butter stirred to a cream; two eggs, well beaten; one-half cup of sweet milk and one aud a half cups of flour sifted with one teaspoonful of baking powder. Bake in two layers in jelly tins. For the filling, boil three fourths of a cup of milk with a half tablespoonful of butter, ' alf a cup ol Bugar, two tablespooafuls of grated chocolate and a tablespoonfnl of corn starch, wet with a little cold water. Stir and boil a few minutes, take from the fire and add to it one beaten egg and a tablespoonful of extract of va nilla. Let cool, then spread over one layer of the cake and put the other on top. Dust the top layer thickly with powdered sugar, or cover with a chocolate glaze made by boiling one pound of sugar and a half pint of water with a quarter pound of grated chocolate till it threads between the fingers. Take from the fire and stir till a thin skin forms on top, then use at once. Set the cake in a cool oven for a few minutes. This glaze is nice to use when you are making several cakes. Tloasehold Hints. An excellent way to serve eggs is hard-boiled, with mayonnaise or cream sauce. For removing from the hands stains made bj paling fruits and vegetables use oxalic acid. It is alleged that ink stains on white goods may bo effectually removed by washing first in strong brine and thou wetting the spot in lemon juice. Black silk may be freshened, it is said, by washing it in salted water. Tho salt is alleged to keep the silk from stiffening when it is ironed. For hard pudding sauce rub together two ounces of butter, four of flour aud the juice of half a lemon until thor oughly mixed, whereupon keep cold till wanted for use. Boiling water ought never to be poured over tea-trays, japanned goods and tbe like, in that it cracks the var nish. Wush, rather, with warm water, a soft sponge and a very little soap. Sweet oil is good for taking out marks made by hot things. To clarify vinegar, pour into a bot tle of it half a teacupful of fresh, sweet milk and let the whole stand for tweu ty-four hours. As the sediment will settle to the bottom with the curdled milk, the clear liquor may then he poured off into another bottle. Something that makes an appetizing dish "on the side" for breakfast is made from two eggs beaten with two tablespoonfnls of milk. Fry like a pfincake (it will make four); spread with butter and dust with salt and pepper and roll liko an omelet. When you propose to polish win dows, mirrows, etc., with whiting, the best way to use it is to put it in mus lin bags. Dampen the glass, rub with the bag of whiting ami polish with newspaper. This is the most economi cal as well as the most convenient way. When glass globes have become dull and grimy soak them iu hot water to which you have added a little sal soda. Then take them into another dish of hot water in which you have put a a tablespoonful of household ammonia and scrub the inside with a stiff brush. Rinse and wipe. Paris Has a Eat Plague. Paris is suffering from a plague of rats living in the sewers and iu the cellars of the Palais Royal and Hallos Centrales. Le Gattfqis suggests tfaat the sewers be divided into sections and let to sporting men for ratting con tests. DESERTING IS AN ART. ENLISTED MEN CO ABOUT IT WITH CREAT CIRCUMSPECTION. fa JTo Navy nn Intending Deserter Is Al ways Spotted by His Shipmates—A Sol dier Who Took French Leave in Unique Way—Aided by ISumbout Men, When a bluejacket or marine Una decided to desert, he says very little about it, even to his intimate friends among his shipmates, but, for some mysterious reason that has never been satisfactorily explained, and probably never will be, the word is nearly al ways passed around among the men forward that So-aud-So is about to go over the side. Occasionally the same news will get aft to the wardroom, but officers have discovered the futility of bothering their heads about intending Jleserters. The intending deserter al ways waits until he attains the tirst class on the conduct class list of his ship, which permits him to draw all of the money due him except a month's pay, that is always carried on tho pay muster's books for all hands. Mean time ho makes his preparations for the jump. He usually goes in light marching order. Such articles of his kit as mustering suits, pea coats, etc., that are of any value he sells for al most nothing to his shipmates or gives away. The things he can use, as, for example, underwear, he does up in a small package, together with whnt few family photographs, letters, and trink ets he may possess and wish to keep, and gives the bundle to the kumbout man, who stocks a dinghy with to bacco, soap, brushes, and such small articles, and sells them at exorbitant prices to men forward on warships. Tho bumboat man, often an ex-blue jacket or marino himself, is always on the side of the mau who purposes jumping ship, and he takes good care of the intending deserter's bundle un til the man claims it ashore. The bumboat man also undertakes to look around ashore for a cheap outfit of clothes, shoes, and hat for the man who is about to leave the navy with out waiting for hi 3 discharge. He makes a small commission on the out fit. "Monthly money" day comes around, and the inteudiug deserter draws all the money he hns earned, except the month's pay retained. Then comes the day upon which he is entitled to go ashore. He goes and simply forgets to come back. The of ficer of his division reports him ab sent without leave for ten days—and every time he does so there is a gen eral grin alone the lines of men for ward assembled at quarters—and then he is marked on the ship's log as a de serter. The chief master-of-nrms,who has probably known all about it since the day of the deserter's departure, goes through the form of looking through the wire locker of the mau who has gone, and of course finds nothing except, perhaps, an old cap ribbon, a worn forage cop, or a soiled watch mark or rating badge. If the deserter gives himself up he may have to serve from one to three years at the naval prison at Mare Island or at Bos ton, but he is not hunted. Marines who desert from navy yards, however, are carefully sought for by the civil authorities of the town contiguous to the yard. I A soldier in the army goes about the business of desertion with great care, complaisance and circumspection. A soldier does not often have much money when he makes his escape, for his pay is small, and the money-con suming canteen is never far from the quarters. As often as not he will leave all of the truck in his chest behind,for there is nobody answering to the char acter of the bumboat man to help him in getting away. He will always wait for pay day,so as to have a few dollars for immediate expenses. Then he quietly walks to the railroad station and puts ns many miles between him self and the post he has quit as his money will carry him. By tho lime he has reached the station his bunkies have (swooped down upon his chest and looted it of everything of value, for tho deseiter has told them of his iutention to go aud has left explicit directions as to tho distribution of his gear. He does not hand it around be fore going, because by doing so he might excite the suspicion of the first sergeant, who generally has a keen eye in such matters. A few years ago there was a oorporal who deserted from Port Wiugato in heavy marching order —blanket, haver sack, knapsack, overcoat, suit of un derwear, pair of socks, towel, comb and brush, loggings, campaign hat and cartridge belt, tin cup and plate, and rifle—but he was unique. Not mauy years ago a recruit nt David's Island (now Fort Sloeum), N. Y., received word that his mother was dying in a little town in New Jersey. Ho showed tho captain of his company the letter aud asked for leave of ab sence long enough to go to his moth er's bedside. Tho captain, who feared that the telegram was bogus, declined to let the recruit go. The recruit appealed to the commanding ing officer, who refused to lot him go on the same ground. So, iu the mid dle of winter, the recruit swam tho heavy tide that runs between David's Island and New Eochelle and made his way to tho bedside of his mother iu time to closo her eyes. She had hardly died before a squad of soldiers from David's Island came to the house after the deserter. Tho recruit emptied two charges of buckshot into the squad, fortunately killing none of them, but ho was taken. The young man's punishment was light. Dlseaso Spreiul by Worms. The earthworm, glorified by Dar win, is now accused of playing.consid erable part in the spread of disease. Pasteur fouud germs of charbon near the surface of soil in which sheep that had died from that disease had been j buried several years previously. SECRET LANGUAGE. Fho Jargon Thnt Children Make Up to Convey Their Momentous Secrets. Oscar Chrismau has a novel article !n the Century on "The Secret Lan guage of Childhood," in the course of which he gives many whimsical ex amples. Mr. Chrismau says; The secret-language period is a thing of child nature. There are three dis tinct periods in language-learning by the child. The first is the acquiring of the mother-tongue. The second period comes shortly after the time of beginning to learn the mother-tongne, aqd is a language made np by the children who, perhaps, find them selves unable to master the mother tongue. Very few children have a complete language of this kind, but nil children have a few words of snch. Then comes the secret-language pe riod. Although in a very few cases the learning of secret languages began about the sixth year, and in some in stances the period ran till after tho eighteenth year, yet the vast majority of cases are covered by the period be tween tho oighth and the fiftoeuth year, while thegrentestuse is between the tenth and the thirteenth year. There are many reasons why chil dren learn and use these languagos. One lady confesses that she originated a language, and introduced it into a mysterious set of ten, in order to write notes in school; and she truly adds that had their teachers discovered the key, they would have learned many truths. It can never be known whether these languages originated in the very first cases with children. The nam£s would in many instances imply that children had to do with them, as they show things familiar to the child and loved by him. So in the secret lan guages, we find animals playing an im portant part in the naming. The hog, dog, goose, pigeon, pig, fly, cat and other animals, are attached to these languages. The child in the old-fash ioned school, where all sat together, hearing the (to him) senseless and un known Latin, would naturally attach the name to his language, and tlius give birth to Hog Latin, Goose Latin, etc. Seeing or hearing a language, one letter may strike the child's fancy, as as in one or the letter h is "hash," and so Hash language is the result. In another "bub" (b) finds the funny spot in child nature, and so Bub talk comes forth. The child in former days, so frequently hearing of the a-b-c's, would, upon the construction of an al phabet language, at once recur to such, and so name this the A-Bub-Ciu-I)ud language. Capturing Deserters. Until about six years ago tho mili tary authorities paid SOU for the ap prehension of a deserter. As a result of this system there arose in the im mediate vicinity of large military posts a class of men known in the army vernaoular a3 "hounds," clothed with tho rights of special officers, who made a business of apprehending army deserters for the SOO reward. These men very rarely failed to gather in their prey, even if they very often succeeded in doing so only at the price of broken heads or worse injuries. Those that took up their stands near posts where desertions were unusually common on account of the nndesirability of tho soldiering made a lot of money at this business. They gained not only the hatrod of the enlisted men, but of the officers as well, for upon every deserter brought in a general court-martial had to be held, and the men with the shoulder straps, who are almost a unit in de spising general court-martial duty, found thnt they were compelled to be almost constantly arrayed in their full-dress clothes as members of courts, and were loaded down with work besides, for tho disposition of a deserter's case by general court-mar tial involves a tremendous amount of clerical labor. It was with these con siderations in view that tho War De partment reduced the blood money for the capture of deserters to $lO, the present figure. The Young Prince Likes American Pics As there is a certain contingent of people always interested in tastes and doings of royalty, it will be interest ing to them to learn that the young Prince of Belgium has done us the honor to compliment our American pies. This will, of course, put a pre mium on pies in tho minds of many, and it is probable pies hereafter will figure in many stylish mentis. This evidence of good taste on the part of the Prince indicates that he is pos sessed of good, wholesome ideas as to what he oats, but good as our pies are, lie ought to be warned against eating too much of thom, for ho might be come awaro before leaving the coun try that indigestion is one of the prev alent ailments of Americans. There aro some lovers of pies in New England who go so far as to eat them at breakfast, but of course the gentle men escorting tho young Prince will prohibit any indulgence of that kind, and the Prince really should only in dulge his preferred taste at his noon meal.—Trenton (N. J.) American. A Denver Lawyer's Oftcr.ee. A leading lawyer has just been de barred from practicing in the Federal courts for applying gross epithets to one of the judges in a brief. Ho ex presses surprise over the fact that his language has been resented, as he only referred to the judge incidentally as "a calloused, cool, judicial liar; the tool of corporations." Mammoth Turkeys. In the Missouri exhibit at the Omaha Exhibition there is to be o pair of turkeys weighing eighty-two pounds. The owner says that this weight beats th.'record of the United States or Canada. The gobbler weighs fifty pounds and the hen thirty-two. T'jey were raised Sear Columbia, 210. "Your* Truly." The habits of people lm signing let ters are recelrlng some attention, and Interesting conclusions are drawn from a study of tho different ways writers subscribe themselves. The curt "Yours" and "Yours truly" are found not only In business letters, but In per sonal notes as well, for there arc plenty of correspondents who don't believe In gush, and who think that "Yours truly" or "sincerely" means about all they wish to convey. Opposed to these sen sible and essentially practical persons Is that class of writers made up usual ly of young and enthusiastic Individ uals, as a rule of the gentle sex, who throw words about as carelessly on pa per as they do In conversation. The use of the word love by such people Is a distressing sign of emotional weak ness, or carelessness, or of Insincerity, and possibly arises from the same Im pulse that prompts women to kiss each other Indiscriminately. One Boston girl, who Is quoted by the Journal, has taken her own stand In the matter, and at the risk of being considered "cold" and "thoroughly Boston" she sticks to It. In her childhood she was taught to sign "affectionately yours" to her far away greataunts and second cousins, some of whom she had never seen, but all of whom she tried to like, because of the claims of kindred, and the word "affectionately" came to mean to her nothing at all except polite and neces sary Action. So she signs "affection ately" to people she Is supposed to be conventionally fond of, and when she says anything more she means it. She thoroughly approves of "Cordially yours," and this, by the way, is seen more and more frequently now In notes between acquaintances who are en distinctly friendly or eordliW terms. After all, "Your friend," when it can be used truthfully, Is a simple and satis factory way of ending friendly letters. Some people have the habit of not pre facing their names with any Bet form of words at the end of letters. They stop when they get through, and write their signatures without any frllla.— Worcester (Mass.) Gazette. Expensive Mirth. 'Cheery words cost nothing " -- "That's where you are way off. 1 (aid two cheery words yesterday and cost me $17." "How did that happen?" 1 "Well, I slapped a big man on th back, and said, 'Hello, Fatty!' " "That was all right." "No, It wasn't; he turned out to be a man I didn't know, so we knocked each other down and got Into court."— Boston Journal A New York paper says that "the ex pectation that electricity would destroy the demand for horses has not yet been realized." Why, of course not; It Is im possible to eat an electric battery. Platonic love is a sort or prologue t the real thing. ITnw Relief Cams. From Cole County Democrat, Jejfereon City, Mo. When la grlppevlsited this section, about seven years ago. Herman H. Evelor, ot 811 W. Main St., Jefferson, Mo., wus one of the victims, and has slneo been troubled with the after-effects of tho dlsense. Ho is a well-known contractor and builder, a busi ness requiring much mental and physical work. A year ago his health began to full alnrmlugly, and that he lives to-day Is al most a mirucle. Ho says: "I was troubled with shortness of breath palpitation ot tho heart and a general dei bility. My back alao pained me severely "I tried one doctor after another and numerous remedies suggested by my friends, but without apparent benefit, and I I ,—(1 began to'give Jl Then L l°rw 1 ■ —| L— I I)r. Williams' /- / Tink Pills for V iLr Palo P e °pi6 \ V/ yfITX o yja r a P°r. an <1 / iTvVcfm after invest!- -J/ I— Ration, do. ■■ elded to Rive IDR tho first A Contractor's Difficulty, box I felt irondorfully relieved and was satisfied that the pills were putting mo on tho road to recovery. I bought two more boxes and continued tubing thom. "After taking four boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo People I am rostorod to food health and feel like a new man. am now cnpablo of transacting my business with increased ambition. "Dr. Williams' Pink' Pills for Pale Teople are a wonderful medicine and uoyono that is afflicted with shortness of breath, pal pitation of the heart, nervous prostration and general debility, will And that these pills are tho specific. HERMAN 11. EVEI.ER." Subscribed and sworn to before ine, a Notary Public, this 24th day of May, 1897. ADAM POCTSZOXO, Notary Public. Mr. Evoler will l.ladly answer any in quiry regarding this if stamp is enclosed. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure people troubled with tho after-effects of the grippe because they act directly on the impure blood. They are also a specific for chronic erysipelas, catarrh, rheumatism and all discuses duo to impure or impov erished blood. Most spiders have eight eyes, al though some species have only six. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Ca sea rets Candy Cathartic. 10c or&lo. If C. C'.C.fail toenre, druggists refund money. He Tiptoes Now. "What a quiet man your husband Is. Mrs. Rizley, and it's surprising, too. Before he was married he was oue of the noisiest young men I ever knew. How did you break him of It?" "I didn't break him of it. The baby did it. It didn't take him long to learn the value of silence after little AJlrad Thrilling, lie—That must be a very Interestlns book you are reading. She—Oh, It's awfully exciting! The heroine changes her gown six times In the tirst chapter. A Boston prisoner, arrested for drun kenness was summarily discharged when he said that he was the father of twenty-four children. And he had been gone an hour before the court remem bered that the prisoner had testified that lie was 30 years old. On Dangerous Ground. Dick—l am convinced now that the funny men are right when they say a woman can't understand a Joke. Tom—Why, what's happened? Dick—l called on Mrs. Dartlelgh— that sprightly little widow, you know last night and just in a Joking way pro posed to her. Topi—Yes? Dick—Well, It looks now as if I will have to furnish a very elaborate dia gram to get her to see through it.— Cleveland Leader. Don't Tobacco Bpit and Bmoko Your Life Away To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weuk men strong. All druggist*. Wo or sl. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Addrc-s Sterling Remedy Co„ Chicago or New York. Artificial- legs and arms were in use In Egypt as early as B. C. 700. They were made by the priests, who were the physicians of that early time. j j 7 Among people where the practice of economy is a •> A necessity, the buying of soap is an important yearly item. § r. The grocer who has an eye to larger profits, may not •> r suggest Ivory Soap. He will recommend nothing else •) <• if he is conscientious. Ivory Soap is a pure soap, all c. through. That makes it the most economical and best. ® r. A perfect soap for the toilet and laundry. g S IT FLOATS. , I A WORD OF WARNING.—There are many white soaps, each represented to be" just (• •* good as the * Ivorythey ARE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and 2 (• remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for" Ivory " Soap and Insist upon getting It | go jHeed to Lose a Day of Delightful Spring Riding. ' We can fill all orders at once from stock. We are sure we can please you in quality and price with a Hartford or Vedette. Machines and Prices Guaranteed. I Pop® Nifg. So., Hartford, Cosia, I PAINT WALLS CEILINGS I CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS \ | FOR REOORATIIIG WALLS AND CEILINGS *££?£?"J Ca ICi mO { fl paint ciealer and do your own kttlsomlidng. This material is m:ub -Q sdieutlAu principles by I Eg lng tLat can possibly be\uade by iiiixid IVIIVI Cold Water." GlU ° WhU " If ■ BirsGMl FOII MAUI'LE CO' OR CARDS and if yon cannot purchase this material ■ ■ from your local dealers let us kuow and we will put you in the way of ob:ainiug It. H What Brings Release From Dirt and Grease 7 Why Don't You Know ? SAPOLIO "After t wj Induced to Cry CASP.I- It FT?©. I will never bo without them In t bo bouao. My liter was in u very bad sbapo- and i:.y bead acMd und I bad ntamaob trouble Now. since tab lau Cascarots. 1 fool tlno. My wife has also used ••beui with honeflclal results for pour stcmueb." Jos. Kukulinq. MBI Congress St.. bt. Louis, Mo. CANDY 5 CATHARTIC TRADE MARK RIOtSTCRED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Joed. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c. 600. ../•CURE CONSTIPATION. „ k . ti'rllnK Rfrjprfy t'otr.;iua (hlenffo. Monlrrnl. Xm York. 118 Un.Tn.SAO Bo,<l an<l guaranteed by oil drug. Tl4#* Q u wAm gluts to CT'JttJE Tobacco Habit. A hunting-horn at a sale In London fetched 6,300 guineas. It is an ordinary cow's horn beautifully enameled, tho subjects depicted being hunting scenes. It is about 350 years old. Xo-To-lloc for Fifty Cent*. Guaranteed tobncr.ohabit cute makes weak men strong, blood pure. BOc. sl. All druggist* The United Hebrew Charities of New York spent last year $130,000 in benevo lent work. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, £2 trial bottle and treatise tree Dr.R.H. KLINE Ltd..031 ArcliSt.Phil;u,Pa. Bent free, Klondike Map From Gold Commission's ottleinl stirrer. Ad dreaa Gardner & Co„ Colorado Springs. Coif* Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup forchildren teething, softens the gums, reducing in flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. For Whooping Cough, Plso's Cure I* a me ceasful remedy.— M.P. DIKTEB, 071 kroop Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y„ Nov. 14. IBLM. WIBOM S®r " C,OHT ""• AtMrcu," ottere ' l ' Q (ft H 8 THEDOHINiHT^L'Tn^XKi'JSSS tr*n. A paces. New Mu-.|e. Brigli' I.ii. rutnre St-#.>ftai Tj?h-!j . *u 111 nlc copy nud premium lir. iil. 41H DOMINANT. 44 H . 20lbSt.. N. V. CkSl iiensiomw.&K?sk B® Successfully Prosecutes Claims. 9 Jyrsiulaat wur, iiaiyuiUeaUug claims, atty nuic SpunmiHFii Best Ojugh Syrup. Good. UaeV*f
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers