Scrofula Swellings | Health Was Very Poor But Hood's Sarsaparllla Has Cured Her. "ify daughter had scrofula swellings on lior neck and her health was very poor. Bhe did not obtain lasting benefit from medicines until she began taking Hood's Bkreaparllla. Three bottles of tliis modi- Olno entirely oured her and she lias never been troubled with scrofula since I have Srfcafc faith in Hood's Sarsaparllla." Mrs. , D, Effner, Ruth, N. Y. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for 85. Hood's Pills cure all liver ills. 25 cents Try Allen's Foot-Case, A powder to be shaken into the shoes. At this season your feet feel swollen, ner ▼ous and hot, and get tired easily. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try k Allen's Foot-Ease. It cools the feet and makes walking ea9y. Cures swollen and sweating feet, blisters and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and fives rest and comfort. 10,000 testimonials, ry It to-day. Sold by all druggists and Bhoe stores for 25c. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ; nose after first day's ÜBe of Dr. Kline's Great 1 Nerve Restorer. 82 trial bottle and treatise free Dr.R.H. KLINE Ltd.,931 Arch St.Phila.,Pa Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reducing in flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. _____________ Government'# uia Gold Business. Sard times can be pretty well est!- faMfted by the amount of gold Jewelry, odd plate and trinkets, gays Director of tile Mint Preston, presented to tbo gov ifeliment mints. During the period of (Wfctreme depression the amount of met- Mi purchased by the government reach- Si high figures, but In the past year U as dwindled considerably. At the ap proach of the holiday season the Jew elry sent to the mluts to be Bold In greases In large proportion compared to Hie quantity sold in the dull season. Boon after New Year there Is usually a I heavy Installment at the assay offices tnd mints. jf Wtthln the past week a pair of gold bracelets, which cost SSO, were sent to {he mint bureau here to be sold for the ~ COld In them. Their owner said he (ould not keep them, as he required the tnoney, and asked Director Prestou to 'dispose of them at whatever value they might bring. The bracelets, on being melted down, were shown to contain sl7 worth of pure metal. From 1873 down to last year the . amount of money paid out by the gov ernment for old gold, plate end Jewelry has steadily Increased. The high water mark was reached In 1801, when the government paid out for plato and Jewelry $1,035,710. The Philadelphia mint melts nine-tenths of the plate and Jewelry presented to the government. Payment Is generally made In gold When the Jewelry Is of that metal.— Chicago Inter Ocean. * Boarding House Keeper—now sorry | feel for those poor Klondike miners k this cold weather! Boarder—Madam, there Is no need of going so far to placo your sympathy. You seem to forget that I occupy ouc of your hall rooms. — Judge. "I DO MY OWN WORK." So Says Mrs. Mary Rochiette of Linden, New Jersey, in this Letter to Mrs. Pinkham. 44 1 was bothered with a flow which Would be quite annoying at times, and at others would almost stop. 44 1 used prescript ions given me by my taking your medi cine, and have certainly been greatly benefited by its USQ 44 Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vegetable Com pound has indeed been a friend to me. 44 1 ain now able to do my own work, thanks to your wonderful medicine. I was as near death I believe as I could be, so weak that ray pulse scarcely beat and my heart had almost given out. I could not have stood it one week more, lam sure. I never thought I would be so grateful to any medicine. 44 1 shall use my influence with any one suffering as I did, to have them use Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound." Every woman that is puzzled about her condition should secure the sympa thetic advice of a woman who under stands. Write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn. Mass.. and tell her your ills. Lazy Liver "I have been troubled a great deal with a torpid liver, which produces constipa tion. I found CASCARETS to be all you claim for them, and secured such relief the iirst trial, that I purchased another supply and was com pletely cured. I shall only be too glud to rec ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity Is presented." J. A SMITH. 2920 Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa M CATHARTIC j* bOCMO TRADE MARK SfOIftTSRCO Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. IK Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. lCc, 25c. 50c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling lleuedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, !fow York. 120 NO-TO-BAO S2S, HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. To Clean Tapestry ana Cretonne. Clean tapestry with warm bran, rub bing it on with a piece of new flannel. Clean cretonne with warm flour, using a piece of new flannel on the hand. When clean, brush off the flour with a cloth brush. Another method is to apply a thick paste of fuller's earth and water. Let it lie for five minutes and then brush off. Apropos of Greasy Soups. Strange as it may seem, observes Table Talk, women who claim to be good cooks still serve greasy soups, abominations to eye, palate and stomach. A remedy for this is the "soup digester," a kettle with a faucet near the bottom by which the clear liquid may be drawn off without the fat. Without the convenience of this uten sil, grandmother's "good old way" is always available—to let the soup stand over night, when the grease can be easily removed in a solid cake. Moral: Greasy soups are without ex cnse and in evidence of carelessness or ignorance 1 How to Clean Glass. For the annual work of the spring cleaning there is nothing more im portant to have properly done than the washing and polishing of the win dows. While bright weather is re garded as necessary in most branches of home cleaning, a dull, cloudy day should be selected for the windows, as experienced housekeepers say the cleaning cannot be satisfactorily done when the sun is shining on the glass. When ready to begin, the windows should be well wiped with a soft, dry cloth to free them from dust and smoke, then quickly washed with warm water to which a little powdered borax is added, and dried. To polish the glass: After cleaning, a small muslin bag should be filled with whiting, to which a little borax is added, and the windows freely dusted with'it, then rubbed off, and polished witlTold newspapers. Windows Ikes treated will be clean and bright, and will keep clean a long time.—Eliza B. Parker. New House Things. [ Japanese screens were never so popular. The black ones embroidered in gold are most appropriate for the dining room or library, while for the parlor very handsome ones of white I satin embroidered in colored silk are shown, the frame of a simple black and gold brocade. Simpler ones with frames made of a thin band of plain wood hinged ready for use come at very reasonable prices. These can be enameled or stained at home, and then mounted with panelß of Roman satin, burlap, denim or embroidered ! linen. j Milady's dressing table, with its in numerable solid silver furnishings and trinkets, is the chief ornament in her room these days. The old-fash : ioned mahogany tables of our great i grandmother's day, with the addition of severely plain brass handles and key plates are the most desirable. Failing this, muslin and dimity toilet ; toilet tables are always dainty and ; sweet and can be made by a girl her- I Belf. Besides, they can be freshened by laundering. I The small ornamental windows with broad sill between two rooms lend themselves well to decorative j effects. A sash curtain is indispensa ; ble. Striped madras in flower effects i or delicate yellow India silk are pret ty effects for these. A silk scarf draped gracefully over a gilt rod is uncommon and effective. A jardiniere with small plant pt on the sill is good. A figure in plaster, brass candlestick or a Moorish lamp are other suggestions that look well. An other artistic addition to these small places is to hang over the top of them a small plaque, together with a half dozen peacock feathers loosely and carelessly grouped. llcclpeg. Beef Omelet.—Four pounds of raw beef, chopped [fine; six well-beaten ' eggs, five or six soda crackers, rolled j fine; a little butter and suet, pepper, j salt and sage; make into two loaves, ' roll in cracker crumbs and bake about an hour; slice when cold.} Sweet Breakfast Muffins.—Sift two teaspoonfuls of baking powder with j one quart of flour; add one cup of sugar; rub into the flour a piece of butter the size of an egg, then stir in one pint of milk. Beat to a smooth batter, and bake in gem pans. Bacon Fraze.—Beat four eggs into a batter with one-half teacupful cream and teaspoouful flour; fry some thin slices of bacon and dip them in it; lay the bacon in a frying pan with heated lard, pour the batter over it, and when both side 3 are well browned lay on a heated dish and serve hot. A good breakfast relish. Potato Soup.—Boil three potatoes in salted water until tender. Scald one pint of milk, with one tablespoon ful ehopped onion. Drain and mash the potatoes, add the hot milk and rub through a sieve. Melt half a [table spoonful of flour, half a teaspoonful of salt and a little pepper. Pour into the hot soup and cook ten minutes. Baked Cauliflower.—Boil uncovered until tender, but not until it breaks; split down the middle with a sharp knifo; lay the out sides down in bak ing dish and pour over and around it a large cupful of drawn butter. Sift fine bread crumbs on top and set in the oven until it begins to brown. Serve in the baking dish, with vinegar ar cut lemon. Cornmeal I*liffs.—Heat one quart of milk in double boiler; stir in eight tablespoons Indian meal, four table spoons granulated sugar, a tea- Bpoon grated nutmeg. Heat and stir until thickened and smooth. When cool, stir into it six beaten eggs whipped light, pour into buttered cups, bake half an hour in moderate aven, serve hot with lemon sauce. AGRICULTURAL TOPICS. Pnlut to Kepel Borers, All kinds of insects are attracted to the plants which are appropriate foi .their food, or where their eggs should be laid, by the sense of smell. Any strongly smelling coating over trees which will disguise its natural odor will protect them from attack. White paint has such a distinct odor, -and is so permanent that it is perhaps the best coating to apply to tree trunks. But a still cheaper substitute may be found in common whitewash, into which some carbolic acid diluted has been mixed. This also holdsthepecu liar smell of carbolic acid all through the season. Eradicating Currant Worms. The currant worm is a slow traveler, and seldom leaves the clump of bushes where it was born and bred, even when it gets into the moth stage. Where they ore once eradicated on a farm some years of exemption may be hoped for, even when the pest is plentiful a few miles away. Still, the use of hellebore every spring, just as soon as the currant leaves appear, and renew ing it after every rain, is advisable. It is far better to head off the intruder before the damage is done, than to wait until currant bushes are stripped bare. In the latter case probably some of the worms have gone into the pnpa stage before the poison is ap plied, and will be on hand another spring. Growing Stocky Tomato Plant.. Whether few or many tomatoes are fo be planted, we believe the cheapest and best way for all who do not own a hothouse is to buy the plants from a seedman rather than grow the supply for themselves. Eveu if a thousand are needed, the seedsman can furnish them for less than this number can be grown by some one who builds a hot bed to provide this number. In the hotbed the plants are sure t-o be crowded, and unless they are trans planted two or three times they will grow up tall and slim, with few roots. The seedsman who grows plants by the million can afford to transplant at least once, and do this under such conditions that the second planting will make hardly any cheek to growth when the plants are set out on the open ground.—Boston Cultivator. 'Manuring Bean Ground. It is a common mistake to suppose that beans do best on poor laud and do not need any manure. Old farmers often say, "the land was too rich," and therefore the beans ran all to vines without producing much grain." Bat this is the best indication that tho land was not rich enough. Beans re quire phosphate of lime and potash. Many black, mncky soils are supposed from tbeir color to be very rich. But such soils often have a great lack of lime and potash. In fact, an excess of loam means that at some time it has been covered with water, and its min eral fertility has mostly been washed out. Or it may be that the soil is even now wet, and the bean crop is very impatient of too much moisture, which causes many rusts both of the leaves, pods and beans. Weeds Indicating Soil. , Much about the character of soil may be told by experienced farmers if they can see the kinds of weeds that grow upon it. There are[many weeds that are never found on very poor soil, and others that will perhaps grow but will not amount to much unless tho soil is very rich. The pigweed arnd purslane, which is often called chick weed, is very abundant in old gardens, and always shows the presenoo of a largo amount of available nitrogen. So rich are these weeds in nitrogenous nutrition that they are aften pulled up and fed to pigs, which will eat them in [preference to grass, as they are more nutritious. The common rag weed grows in all kinds of soils. But if the land is poor, it will blossom and seed at a few finches from the gouud, while in rich soil it grows a foot and a half to two feet high. The mullein in pastures usually marks the running out of grass, and probably that the land is poor. Controlling Rot of Plmu an<l Cherry. Professor N. S. Piatt, of Connecti cut, writes: There is great complaint each year about cherries and plums rotting on the tree. There is no doubt good cause for the complaint, as sometimes nearly all the crop is spoiled by it. Few people seem to know how to save them. I have had great loss with cherries rotting, yet 1 do not fear the rot nearly so much as I do the black aphis that I have found unmanageable and the [cause of the death of more cherry trees than all other causes put together. My treat ment for cherries is to spray with sal photo of copper, one pound to twenty five gallons of water, once just before the buds open and once with bordeaux when the cherries are one-third or one-half grown, then pick the cherries a day or two before they are fully ripe. If the weather is not persistent ly bad this will bo successful, at least it has been with mo for several years. As to plums, I havo never sprayed the Japanese varieties except in a small way as a test, bat have de pended on picking off the decayod fruit by hand, lhey might be sprayed with bordeaux or sulphate of copper mixture while dormant, which would kill spores of rot then existing on the bark, but I have found the foliage of the Japanese varieties uniformly too sensitive to admit of spraying with bordeaux while in leaf. The Euro pean varieties, however, seem to like the bordeaux. . They should be sprayed at least twice with it, the first time when the new growth is three to five inches long nud tho sec ond when the frnit is half grown. Ap plied at this time it will not show when fruit is ripe. A Chinaman eata twice as much meat aa a Japanese. A BALLADE OF LOVE AND THE TIDES Over the sea my sweetheart sails, Swept hither and you by the varied gales Over the sea rnv sweetheart rides, Tru sting her all to the changeful tides Oh, danger and death bo blind to herl Oh, waters and winds, be kind to herl Bring all good things destined to her As over the sea she sails. Over life's sea my sweetheart rides, And ever my [spirit with her abides. Over life's sea my sweetheart sails, And never my prayer for her safety fails. May sorrow and shame bo blind to herl May all good things be kind to her! And gladness be oyer destined to hyr, As over life's sea she rides. Over the seas my sweetheart sails, And God's love tempers the varied gales. Over the sea my sweetheart rides, God's finger restrains the changeful tides. Since the heavenly love is not blind to her Must all good things be kind to her, And gladness bo ever destined to hor, As over the sens she sails. —Ethel Maudo Colson. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Some men are alive simply because it is against the law to kill tlxem. Atchison Globe. A dangerous counterfeit two-dollar certificate is afloat. Spend every two dollar bill the minute you get it. — West Union Gazette. She—"Why don't you talk moro when we're out together?" He—"l'm too polite to interrupt you, my dear." —Detroit Free Press. Charley—"Why are you gazing so intently at Miss Ancient Golddust?" Jack—"l'm trying to make up my mind between her and Klondike. Judge. Sunday-school Teacher—"Who Is it that sees everything we do and Ihears everything we say?" Tommy Slimp kins—"Our hired girl."—Norristown Herald. "The streets aro overrun with bi cycles." "Well, that would be all right if the people on tho streets were not run over with thorn."—Philadel phia Bulletin. Lord St. Agnant—"l say, old man, deuced queer people iu this country." Lord Nozoo—"Yes;neveU let y'know when they're going to tell a jo£e, y' know."—Pack. Tom- -"Yon say you have got money enough to get married aud live com fortably?" Jack—"No; I said I had got money enough to get married or live comfortably."—Puck. Algy (fervently)— "I love her, Clarence, although I am well aware that she has got a past." Clarence— "But are you well aware that she has got a-past forty?"— Judge. Doctor—"Well, it's ten to one you won't see me to-morrow." Patient "What! Any d-dauger, doctor?" Doc tor —"Oh, no. Those are merely my office hours."—Harjier's Bazar. Why pay a dollar to a fortune teller to learn the future when the experi ence of others shows that you will have a little joy, a great deal of trouble, and die old aud poor?—Atehisou Globe. Old Lady—"Didn't I tell you never to come here again?" Tramp—"l hope you will pardon me, madam, but it's the fault of my secretary. He has neglected to strike your name from my visiting list."—Tit-Bits. Diggs—"Blank, the banker, diefc this morning." Biggs—"That so? Of whom did lie die?" Diggs—"You mean 'of what did he die,' I sup pose?" Biggs —"No; who was bis physician?"--Chicago News. Mother—"l'm afraid Mr. Crisscross is not serious in bis intentions." Daughter—"Ho is awfully bashful, you know; but he is offering himself piecemeal. Last night, he wanted me to take his arm."—Tit-Bits. Sunday-school Teacher—"Johnny, what does it mean where it tells us to 'honor our father aud mother that oar days may ho long,' etc.?" Johnny— "lt means wo must get up when they call us in the morning."—Puck. "No, Herbert, I am sorry, but I am jure we could not bo happy together. You know I always want my own way in everything." But, my dear girl, you could go on wanting it after we were married."—Boston Globe. "Pessimism," said thoSage, "isbut a matter of temperament. One pessi mist I knew was always saddest on pay-day, because ho realized that there would bo nothing more coming to him for a week."—Cincinnati Enquirer. , Bobby—"Don't you know that folks Can't get married after they aro dead, Mr. Littlepate?" Mr. Littlepate— "Why, of course I do." Bobby— "Then what aro you dying to getuinr ried for, as Sister Jane says you aro?" —Judge. "Marin, it does seem to me that b26.75 is a tremendous price to pay for a hat to wear just one Sunday." "John, a man who cau't toll a hat from n bonnet is no judge of what a suitable price is. Y'our ignorance mortifies tne."—Chicago Tribuue. "This coffee, my dear," said Kick !es, "reminds me of what mother used to make." "Does it really?" ex claimed his wife, a pleased look com ing into her face. "Yes; and she used to make about the worst coffee I ever drauk."—Boston Traveler. "Squibbs i 3 a great editor, isn' he?" "I should say so; ho is so no customed to speak and think of him self as 'we' that, when ho wautod to ride home from tho office tie other day, ho absent-mindedly sent the printers' devil nfter bis tandem."— Bicycling World. The Ideal Paste. Those who keep Bcrap-books mul wish to preservo their peace of mm(l from the spoiling of their flour paste should add a small quantity of salt and a half teaspooufnl of crude oil of cloves or sassafras to the flour and water while boiling. A very hand some but expensive adhesives is the | fresh white of an egg. Mostjmuoilagr.s turn dark in timo and discolor the thickest paper. Development of the Transvaal. In 1892 the main trunk lino from Capo Town was pushed forward from Its then northern terminus to Johannes burg. The distance from Capo Town to Johannesburg by rail Is 1,013 miles. In 1891 tlie road was completed from Delagoa Bay, a port In Portuguese terf rltury on the southeast coast of Africa, to Johannesburg—a distance of 371 miles. The third road reached Joham nesburg a year later, from Durban, a port In the British colony of Natal, die tant 483 miles. From 23,000 ounces of gold In 1887, the annual output has risen to 3,000,000 ounces In 1897, giving the Transvaal the second jilace in the world's gold production. There Is no doubt that the present output of the country will rap idly increase; and probably within a few years, notwithstanding the Increas ed output of other countries, the Transvaal Will rank first as a gold pro ducer. The town of Johannesburg may be taken as a good index of the wonder ful expansion of the gold-ruining indus try of the district. From a few huts ID ISSO, It has developed Into a town un excelled, If Indeed equaled, la tlie Im posing character of Its buildings by any of the enterprising mining towns ID Western America. Indeed, Johannes burg has but little of the aspect of an American mining camp. In its general appearance It reminds an American more of Spokane or Salt Lake City.— John Hays Hammond, lu the Engineer tner Magazine. Tea St $l4B per Pound. One hundred and forty-three dollars ft pound Is what Ceylon tea of a cer tain kind brought at auction In London some time ago. This Is stated, says the Buffalo Courier, on the authority of J. H. Gralro, of the Ceylon Import ing Company, who says planters of Ceylon were as much surprised as you or I or the next person ut such fabu lous price. Owing to certain peculiari ties a pound of that tea probably repre sents, approximately, one hundred and forty-three dollars' worth of labor; but the figure It fetched is so extraordinary as to give the tea or the sale absolutely no commercial value whatever. This Is particularly so because this ten has no appreciably finer flavor. It is named "the golden tips." The leaves, when only twenty-four hours old, are picked from the top only of tea bushes. They ftro very small, not half as big as your finger nail, and extra expert pickers aro required to gather them. It can be imagined that three hundred or four hundred people on the plantation must pick over several acres of bushes to get enough green oue-day-old tea leaves to make a pound of tea when dried. Or dinary tea is from leaves which are ten days old, aud consequently very much larger. Women In ItiifUness. Frovi the Free Press, Detroit, Mich. A prominent husinoas man recently ox prossod the opinion that thorols one thing that will prevent women from completely filling man's place in tho business world thoy can't be dependod upon bocauso they are slok too often. This Is refuted by Mrs. O. IV. Mansfield, a business woman of 58 Farrar St., Dotrolt, Mloh., who says: "A complication of female ailments Icopt mo awake nights and wore mo out. I could fet no relief from medleiuo and bopo was slipping away from me. A young lady iu m V n m o P .,? y ? avo box of Dr. Williams' Pink 1 ills for Palo People. I took them and was able to rest at night for tho first time in months. I bought more audtook them aud they cured me as they also cured several other people to my knowledge, I think that If you should ask auy of tho drug & ro lf' who aro 1116 best buyers of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills they would say the young women. Those pills certainly build up tho nervous systoin uud many a youug woman owes her life to them. "As a business woman I am pleased to recommend 1 them as me than any P in it VuL credit 1 for ~I my general good health to-day." Suddenly Prostrated. No discovery of modern times lias dono so much to ouable women to take their proper place lu life by safe-guarding their health as Dr. Williams' Pink I'ills for Palo Teoplo. Acting directly ou the blood aud nerves, Invigorating the body, regulating the functions, thoy restore tho strength ami health to the exhausted woman when every effort of tho physician proves una vailing. For the growing girl thoy are of tho greutost benefit, for the mother indispensa ble, for every woman invaluable. For paralysis, locomotor ataxia, and other diseases long supposed incurable, these pills have proved their efllcacy iii thousands of eases, American buyers of Mexican woods go to London to make their purchases instead of Mexico. The woods are shipped to London and then back to the United States, for the reason that London is the exchange market of the world. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve aud vigor, take Nu-To- Bac, the wonder-wol-ker. that maker weak men strong. All druggists, fjOc or SI. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Scientists say that butter Is the most nutritious of all articles of diet, with bacon a good second. Kflueato Your Howe!* With Casrarots. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever l(Je, 2fic. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. In Japan nearly every house has two to four carpet looms run by children. They work 12 hours a day, and their wages are about two cents. The New York Ledger is now suc cessfully sold by blight boys and girls, who thus earn many valuable prem iums. Two cents profit 011 each copy sold. No money required in advance. Send name and address for complete outfit, including Premium List, to Robert Ronner's Sons, Ledger Build ing, 160 William St., N. Y. City. ST. VITUS' DANCE, SPASMS and all nerv ous diseases permanently cured by the uso of Dr. Kline's Greet Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE SI.OO trial bottle and treatise to l)r. R. 11. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arch street. Phila.. Pa. 1 Ci 1 tvr* Ma ft '* vvc 1 /r 1 , I WilfS:' J I The "Ivory" is a favorite shaving soap because it makes a profuse rich lather, which softens the beard to be removed and leaves the skin unharmed. It costs about one-fifth as much as the so-called shaving soaps and many who have used it for this pur pose for years, will not have any other. The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soap is made, fit it for many special uses for which other soaps are unsafe or unsatisfactory. A WORD OF WARNING —There are many white soaps, each represented to be "Just as good as the 'lvory';" they ARE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon gettiDg it Mayor Quincy, of Boston, objects to the ringing of bells at sunrise on the morning of holidays, and vetoed an or dinance providing for the public dis turbance at sunrise, noon and sunset of such days. The veto was over ridden. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it falls to cure. 85c. The Russian production of pig iron in 1897 amounted to 113,500.000 poods, or a little less than 2,000,000 tons. The existence of the South Russian iron ore industry is threatened. Experts state that after 15 or 20 years the de posits now known will be exhausted. No-To-Ilac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, sl. All druggists. Signals used by ships at sea date from 1605. They were invented by the Duke of York, afterward James 11. J. S. Parker, Fredonia, N. Y„ savs: "Shall not call on you for the SIOO reward, for I be lieve Hall's Catarrh Cum will cure any ease of catarrh. Was very bad." Write him for particulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c. |gf|j "BIG FOUR ROUTE" CINCINNATI, ST. LOUIS, NEW YORK, & BOSTON THE BEST ROUTE BETWEEN Cincinnati and Chicago, St. Louis, Toledo and Detroit ELEGANT DINING CARS M.E. IN GALLS, E. O. McOORMICK, WAn-,rN .J, LYUCH,^ VORK^ I '.I * W *SHINOTOV sta.o u CAIRO LOUISVILLE ® 7y PABdrW/UIS. GEIM&I MURALO WATER COLOR PAINTS I FOB DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS £M URA LO I paint dealer and do your own derating. This material is'a HARD FINISH to le applied B with a brush and becomes us hard aa Cement. Milled in twenty-four tints and works equally us R well wit b cold or hot water. K HTSEXIT FOR KA.TII'I.B CO! OR CAKIIS anil if yon rannot pnrrhAsn Ibis m.lcrial ■ from your local dealers let us know and we will put you in 1 In. way of obtaining it. ■ Tr. MI II VLQ CO., XEff IIRMJIITOV, s. 1.. XKW YORK. | To Save Time is to Lengthen Life. Do You Value Life? Then Use _SAPOLIO • *2|| Tbo Combined Experi- *3R ence of 21 Years. v|| i fl jjrl Chainless Bicycles, ! jjjfcjSß Columbia ChainWheels,s7s SR Vedette Bicycles, S4O & 35 j : ' T'Fwk >UMUfAc.' ÜBiNC c 6. ) The presentation of the freedom of a city or borough in England is now a mere compliment, which does not con fer any substantial or exceptional privileges. * Heuuty is Itlood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathartic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities Irom the body. Begin to day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cask i carets,-beauty for 10 cents. All druggists, satisfaction guaranteed. 10c, 20c, 25c, 50c. Professor Ghoost says that if we reckon the average depth of the ocean at three miles there would be a layer of salt 200 feet thick in their basins should the water of all suddenly evap orate. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or3sc. If C. O. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. In Italy there are more theaters in proportion to its population than in any other country. Piso's Cure cured mo of a Throat and Lung trouble of three years' standing.—E. C'ADY, Huntington, Ind., Nov. 12.1394. "JONES HE PATS THE FREIGHT." Wf Farm and Wagon WB&PSCALES. Ciitsd SutMSUiJarJ. All Sizes and All Kinds. Not made by a trust or controlled by a combination. tos Free Hook and Price List, address JONLB Or BIXGUISITON, UlßlUujui.au, JS. v. W. ▲, Virginia Land Cheap Easy Terms-,KTv.•$ TIEDOMIN4HT^^^*rsWeI!S "!*'% '•!• 1 .>i™.rnre>lwJS I*r?S n ' orea .' Offer, il *9 4'llii D() lllNANT|'i"\V.!io| , bauN"Y: CIU. I|ENSIONw"hK°„?n." Jyiaiulu&t war, l&uiUudicutujg claims, atty aincc. P N O 21 'VS.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers