Nervous People Are great sufferers and thoy deserve sym pathy rather than censure. Their blood is poor and thin and their nerves are con sequently weak. Such people find relief and cure in Hood's Sarsaparllla because it purifies and enriehes the blood and gives it power to feed, strengthen and sustain the nerves. If you are nervous and can not sleep, take Hood's Karsaparllla and realize its nerve strengthening power. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5 Hood's Pills cure all Uver ills. Scents. "STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, > „ LUCAS COUNTY. T SFL * FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath tlmi, ho is tlie senior partner of the firm of F. .1. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. •County and btate aforesaid, and that sain firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DO la ta ARS for each and every ease of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK .I.CHENEY. Sworn to before mo and subscribed in my i ——l presence, this Oth day of December, \ SEAL - A. D. lHStt. A. \V. G LEA SON, f ) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. _ F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall's Family Pills .*:-e the best. Kver Have a Dog Bother You When riding a wheel, making you wonder fof a few minutes whether or not you are to get a fall and a broken neck ? Wouldn't vou nave given a small farm just then for some means of driving off the beast? A few drops of am monia shot from a Liquid Pistol would do it effectually anil still not permanently injure the animal. Such pistols sent postpaid for fifty cents in stamps by New York I'nlon •Supply Co., 135 Leonard St.. New York City. Every bicyclist at times wishes he had one. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an A No. A>thma medicine. W. H, WILLIAMS, Antioch, Ills., April 11, ism. The flags to be hoisted at one time In signaling at sea never exceed four. It is an interesting arithmetical fact that, with eighteen various colored flags, and never more than four at a time, no fewer than 78,642 signals can toe given. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if It fails to cure. 25c. Although all the old British battle ships had elaborately carved figure heads on their bows, modern vessels are not allowed any such sort of deco rations, by virtue of an order of the Adniirality issued about three years ago. Five Cents. Everybody knows that Dobbins' Electrlo Soap Is the best In the world, and for 33 years It has sold at the highest price. Its price Is now 5 cents, sAme as common brown soap. Bars full size and quallty.Order of grocer. Adv Twice a year the Caspian overflows and strands millions of flsh—sufficient to feed the whole of Central Asia, if advantage could be taken of these im mense resources given by nature. Beauty la Blood Deer* Clean blood means a clean skin. Nc beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar 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. Not A Desirable Tenant. Youug man—l am to he married In about a month and I'm looking for a home. What Is the rent of these flats? Janitor—Hum! Did the girl you In tend to marry ever have a mother? "A mother? Certainly." "A grandmother?" "Of course." "Hem! Let me see. Did that grand mother have a daughter?" "Why, yes." "And did the daughter have a daugh ter?" "Great snakes! Of course." "Very sorry, sir, but I can't rent one of these flue flats to people like that. I'm afraid having children runs in the fftxdly."-—New York Weekly. Old Brattleboro Stamp. The latest Inquiry for the old Brattle boro (Vt.) stamp comes from a Pennsyl vanla university, aud the writer asks the pastmaster if he would kindly send one, two or more, for which he is prom ised live cents apiece. The hist one sold brought about SSOO. If was sold to a former Brattleboro woman, now a real* dent of Chicago. STORIES OF RELIEF. Two Letters to Mr 3. Pinkham. Mrs. JOHN WILLIAMS, Englislitown. N. J., writes: " DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM: —I cannot be gin to tell you how I suffered before taking your remedies. I was so weak that I could hardly walk across the floor without falling. I had womb trouble and such a bearing-down feeling ; also suffered with my back and limbs, pain in womb, inflammation of the bladder, piles and indigestion. Before I had taken one bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I felt a great deal better, and after taking two and one half bottles and half a box of your Liver Pills I was cured. If more would take your medicine they would Dot have to suffer so much." Mrs. JOSEPH PETERSON, 513 East St., Warren, Pa., writes: "DEAB MRS. PINKHAM: —I have suf fered with womb trouble over fifteen years. I had inflammation, enlarge ment and displacement of the womb. I had the backache constantly, also headache, and was so dizzy. I had heart trouble, it seemed as though my heart was in my throat at times chok ing me. I could not walk around and I could not lie down, for then my heart would beat so fast I would feel as though I was smothering. I had to sit up in bed nights in order to breathe. I was so weak I conld not do any thing. " I have now taken several bot tles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and used three pack ages of Sanative Wash, and oen say I am perfectly cured. Ido not think I could have lived long if Mrs. Pink ham's medicine had not helped me." A r REN I'll EXECUTION CRUESOME SCENES ATTEND THE USE OF THE GUILLOTINE, Tim ConJetiined Mutt Allowed Only Twenty Minute* to Prepare For Death an Execution tlie Pluce Looks Like u Shambles—A Morbid Crowd. For the first time since the execu tion of the Anarchist Henry in 1894 the guillotine has just been brought into use in Paris; and unpopular as it may be as a corrective of crime, there can be 110 doubt as to its theatric pos sibilities with the Parisian public. Although the execution was, accord ing to French law, auuounced only to a chosen few, and although it took place in a driving raiu at dawn— which is four o'clock—many thousand people gathered at the Roquette Prison to witness the gruesome sight, aud afterward made merry at the neighboring cafes until far into the morning. If there wero Sunday bull fights in Paris, as there are in the southern cities of France, doubtless no form of amusement would be found more popular or more profitable. From time to time the Paris press prints articles, more or less violent, upon the brutality of what it calls "electrocution" •-a form of carrying out capital punishment which it be lieves to exist everywhere throughout the United States. The French say that to kill a man by electricity is both uncivilized and calculated to afford a horrible spectacle. It would be per haps unprofitable to argue over a matter of racial opinion, but the American who had seen a French guillotining never would recommend the process for adoption in America. The man who was decapitated re cently, relates the New York Sun, was one Carrara, au Italian, who, with the assistance of his wife, murdered a bank messenger last autumn and after ward burned his body. The crime was not nearly so brutal as four or five which occurred in Paris since that time, the perpetrators of which were duly acquitted by complaisant juries. But Carrara was a foreigner; which makes no difference in the eye of the French law, of course, but which, somehow nearly always makesn differ ence in the result of the trial. Carrara is the seventh person out of over two thousand guilty of murder in France in the last four years who had paid the peualty of his crime by losing his head. The others, according to a French statistician, nre serving terms in prison which nverage a little over four years and six months, except thirty or forty, who have not been caught, aud several hundred who were acquitted on trial. Carrara, it is rec ognized by many people whose opinion seems to carry weight, was unfortun ate in his nationality aud in his choice of a lawyer. When a man is sentenced in France he has, of course, the right of ap peal, both to a higher court and to the clemency of the President of the Republic; but when his appeal fails he is executed at onci without more ado. That is why he did not know his fate until twenty minutes before he mounted the guillotine. His case was settled at midnight, aud, within an hour afterward, the twenty-five or thirty officials which French red tapeism prescribes as necessary to oversee the formalities of the execu tion were on their way to the prison where the murderer was confined. Already a guard of cavalry, some mu nicipal guards, and many platoons of police had been ordered out; the chariot conveying the guillotine was rumbling through the deserted streets of the St. Autoiue quarter, and M. Deibler, the venerable "Monsieur de Paris," was speeding toward the same goal iu a cab. Other cabs followed with his many assistants. The condemned man was awakened out of a souud sleep, hustled into his clothes, and then received the notifica tion of his fate iu a very long and very flowery oration from the lips of the duly appointed official. His legs were shackled and his arms tied securely behind his back; then they tried to march him out to the guillotine. The speech, or something, however, had so weakened, him that he could not walk; so. after dosing him with half a litre of rum, he was half carried, half dragged out into the open space iu front of the prison, where She guillotine had already been set up, and where the executioners, sur rounded by the soldiery and the great crowd of curiosity mongers, were pa tiently waiting in the downpouring rain. Then followed a sorry sight. Deib ler, who is seventy-five years old and would have retired at the beginning of the year had he not been desirous of holding on to his $151)0 salary and the rich perquisites of his office, went up to the condemned man and cut off the collar of his shirt so that his neck would be bare. Carrara had not faltered at the sight of the gnillotime, but when he felt the cold steel of the shears on his flesh he begau to struggle and scream, and it took half a dozen men to hold him, pinioned as he was. Finally they picked him up bodily and threw him flat on his stomach on the platform of the machine. It was then seen that his head was not far enough to reach to the lunette, and they pushed him along by the feet, he still kicking and crying out. All this lasted for two or three miuues; it was the final fight which nearly always takes place when n man is beheaded. At last, however, the execntioner's assistants got the condemned man in the right place, and held him there. Deibler stepped to the head of the maohine, touched the lever which re leases the knife, and the 140-pound blade, keeu and ahiuing, fell like a trip-hammer. There was a sickening slash, a second's silence, and then the crowd broke out- into yells. The man's head fell into a basket on one side of the knife, and his body con- I vulsively twisting, collapsed ou tfc* other. Instantly they picked up the body and threw it into another long basket, which was in readiuess. In doing so the headless neck, spouting like a fountain with blood, remained on the edge of the basket, and the execu tioners became red with it. Then they took the head and threw it into the basket with the body. It had been cleanly severed, and, what is said to be very rare, there was no injury to the cliiu. Usually the victim tries to draw back his head at the moment that the knife descends, and in con sequence the chin is crushed in the lunette. After the execution the place was like a shambles; blood was spattered everywhere within a radius of ten feet and a great pool of it collected beneath the guillotine. Deibler and his as sistants looked as if they had just come from a slaughterhouse. During five minutes more another length of red tap j was unwound, and then the body was carried to a medical school iu a black wagon with au escort of police. Thero was the sound of a trumpet and the troops marched awry. The guillotine was packed into a wagon and the executioners and officials got into their cabs. Finally nobody was left but some prison servants cleaning up the blood from the paving stones; so the crowd, meu, women aud chil dren, drenched but not dispirited, thronged to the nearest cafes for break fast and merrymaking. MEDICAL HEROES UNDER FIRE. Daring Adventure* In the Field During tlie Late War in India. When the medical history of the last British war in India is written it will prove interesting reading. There were many difficulties overcome and hardships endured with the usual ele ment of danger. A good instance of this was when General Woodhouse was wounded early in the war. A bullet struck him in the thigh, passed down below the knee, broke into pieces aud lodged. The Roentgen ray apparatus revealed the exact con ditions aud it was determined to ex tract the pieces. Iu the middle of the operation, artificial light being used, the Afridis crawled up aud sud denly blazed into the tent, sending thirteen shots through the canvas. Now that might have been a very dis turbing circumstance aud apt to in terfere with the perfect application of the aseptio form of surgery. Aud what happened? Nothing. The op eration went 011 aud was successfully completed as if there was no Afridi within 100 miles. As usual we had many examples of great personal bravery and devotion to duty in the midst of danger. Sur geon-Captain Bevts arrested hemor rhage under a hot fire, aud Sir Will iam Loekhart, speaking of the inci dent, said that no one better merited the reward of the Victoria Cross than he. He got nothing; but that is an other story. Another medical officer greatly distinguished himself. Sur geon-Lieutenant Hugo. Lieut euaut Ford was dangerously wounded iu the shoulder. The bul let cut the artery aud he was bleeding to death when Surgeon-Lieuteuaut V. Hugo came to his aid. The fire was too hot to permit of lights being used. There was no cover of any sort. It was at the bottom of the cup. Never theless, the surgeon struck a match at the peril of his life and examined the wound. The match went out amid a splutter of bullets which the dust all around, but by its uncer tain light he saw the nature of the iti juiy. The officer had already fainted from loss of blood. The doctor seized the artery and, as no other ligature was forthcoming, he remained under fire for three hours holding a man's life between his finger and thumb. When at length it seemed that the enemy had broken iuto the camp he picked up the still unconscious officer in his arms, and without relaxing his hold bore hint to a place of safety. His arm was for many hours par alyzed from cramp with the effects of the exertion of compressing the ar j tery. A Fatuous Oltl Tree. ! The American Culti rator says that the original Greening apple tree is | still standing ou the farm of Solomon 1 Drowue, at Mount Hygeia, in North ! Foster, R. I. The tree was a very I old one when the farm was sold iu j 1801. The seller informed the pur chaser that it was a pity the old tree j was going into decay, as it produced ' the best fruit of any tree in the I orchard. The purchaser determined ,to see how long he could keep it alive, ami it still survives, after al most another century has been added to its venerable years. But it shows signs of final decay, aud the parent of all the famous Rhode Island Green ings, which has set its grafts ou the orchards of almost all the world, will soon be but a neighborhood memory. It is doubtful if there is a more fa mous apple tree to be found iu all Po mona's groves from end to end of the earth. Producing Aitilirlrtl Diamond*. Moissftu and others who have eu deavored to produced diamonds arti ficially have discovered that it is necessary to employ very high pres sure with the heated carbon in order to induce the latter to crystalize. An Italian, Quiviue Majoraua, announces to the Roman Academy of Sciences a new method of conducting this squeeze. The carbon, having been heated in the electric arc, is suddenly subjected to a compression from gases, generated by explosives, equivalent to 5000 atmospheres. 1 Color of Gold. All refined gold is not alike. Aus tralian gold, for instance, is distinctly redder than that from California. The Ural gold is the reddest found any where. [GRIEVANCES OF THE PHILIPINOS, Why 'the Natives Hate Their Whilom Spanish Masters. Native Philipinos, residing in Mad rid, expressed their grievances in an address to the Spanish people. It contains extracts from the last Philip pine budget for the last administra tive year (189fi-'97), and enumerates the following cryiug complaints. Quoting from the budget it states that the Philippine treasury pays a heavy contribution to the general expenses of the government at Madrid; pays pensions to the Duke de Verngue (our guest during the Columbian exposi tion), and to Marquis of Bedmar; be sides those of the sultans and native chiefs of the islands of Sulu and Min dauaa; it provides for the entire cost of the Spanish consulates at Pekin, Tokyo, Hongkong, Singapore.Saigou, Yokohama, and Melbourne; for the staff and material of the minister of tho colonies, including the purely ornamental council of the Philippines; the expenses of supporting the colony of Fernando Po, in Africa, aud all the pensions and retiring allowances of the civil aud military employes who have served in the Philippines, amounting to the sum of §1,160,000 a year. What a milch cow these islands have been to the Spaniards! What a host of iguoran', idle hidalgos have fattened upon large sums diverted from the unfortunate workers. Aud whnt has Spain done in return? The document from which I translate this states the facts with scathing bluntness: More thau 817,000,000 is the amount consigned iu the Philip pine budget for that year, but not a penny is allowed for public works, highways, bridges, or public build ings, aud only §6OOO for scientific studies, iudispeusnble repairs, rivers aud canals, while the amount set apart for religious purposes and clergy amounts to nearly $1,400,000. This sum does not include the amounts paid lo the clergy for baptisms, mar riages, at:.,which exceeds the govern ment allowances. The magnificent sum of $40,000 is set apart as a sub vention to railway companies.and new projects of railways, but the College for Franciscan Monks, in Spain, and the transportation of priests comes in for $55,000. It seems really as if the world had gone hack three centuries, and as if we were living in the time of bloody Philip 11, after whom these most un fortunate islands were named. Six thousand dollars for all new improve ments, yet the choir of the Manila cathedrni receives $4001), and $60,000 are set apart for the support of the cathedral. Public instruction, in cluding naval, scientific, technical, and art schools must be maintained nt a gross expense of $60,000, and from this pittauce museums, libraries, the observatory, and a special chair iu the University of Madrid must be paid. Add to this the squeezing and pecula tion of every Spanish official from the governor-general down to the lowest algunci!,and it is no wonder that these people, robbed right and left of the fruits of their toil, hate the Spaniard, aud will have no more of Spanish rule.—Manila Correspondence, Balti more Sun. A Colony of Chimney Swallows. Workmen engaged in repairs upon one of the buildiugs of the house of forreetiou discovered a curious con gregation of chimney swallows in a chimney stack near by. The chimney towers sixty feet from the ground,and is live feet square in the clear inside, and serves as a ventilator to the cells throughout the whole building. While the workmen were putting up the scaffold uear by they noticed thou sands of chimney swallows circling iu the air above, and from time to time darting down and out of the wide opening of the top. When they had finished the scaffold and looked down into the chimney, a sight met their eyes perhaps never before seen iu this section of tlie country. From a point about ten feet below the top of the chimney, ami extending from that full twenty feet further down, all four sides of the chimney were lined with thousands of these birds, as many as three and four deep, clinging to the bricks in solid masses, Those next the wall were supporting those on top of them, while vet other thousands of birds, making the sky black, were cir cling around above the chimney, and from time to time darting down into jt, while those from within were flut tering their way into the open air. The birds took no notice whatever of the peering heads of the workmen looking down upon them. One may judge of the number of the birds there when it is considered that they covered at least 400 square feet of sur face oil the inside of the chimney and were from three to four deep. Gen eral Merrick, superintendent, Dr. Peuuybaker, the visiting physiciau, aud scores of others attached to the institution availed themselves of the opportunity to view this strauge or nithological curiosity. The birds, it appears, have been congregating duily for a long time in this particular chim ney, presumably to enjoy the warmth of it.—Philadelphia Record. l>imennimiH. "You must admit that your argu ment was rather thin." "My dear sir," remarked the man who was tillibustering, "in a case like this it is not the thickness of an argument that counts. It's the length.Washington Star. Buck-Fence Amenities*. The Lady in the Suubonnet—Oh, I guess you think whatever you say goes! The Lady in the Curl Papers—lf you hear it, it does. It goes all over the neighborhood- lndiiiapnli Journal. STATISTICS AS TO DUELING. Code ta Most Popular In Germany, tvlth France Next. More duels are fought In Germany thun lu any other country. Most of them are student duels, tvhleh culmi nate In uothing more serious thau slushed cheeks or torn scalps, which look extremely ugly when healed and often cause much trouble to the suf ferer while healing. Of all German university towns Jena and Gottingen ure most devoted to the code. In Got tingen the number of duels averages one a day, year In and year out. With in the space of four-nnd-twenty consec utive hours, several years ago, twelve duels were fought In Gottingen. In Jena the record for one dny In recent times Is twenty-one. Fully 4,0 m) stu dent duels are fought every year In the German empire. In addition to these there arc the more serious duels be tween officers and civilians. Among Germans of mature years the annual number of duels Is about 100. Next to Germany France is most given to the dueling habit. She has every year hundreds of meetings "to satisfy' honor"—that Is, merely to give two men the opportunity to wipe out Insults by crossing swords or tiring pis tols In such away as to preclude the slightest chance of Injury. In the duel statistics these meetings are not reck oned, as they are far less perilous than even the German student duels. Of the serious duels France cau boast fully 1,000 per annum. The majority of those are among army officers. More than half of them result la wounds and nearly 20 per cent, lu serious wounds. Italy has had 2,750 duels In the last ten years. Some 2,;oO of these meet ings were fought wllh swords, 170 with pistols, ninety with rapiers and one with revolvers. In 071 cases the Insult originated In newspaper articles or lu public letters and scores were purely literary quarrels. More than 700 prin cipals were insulted by word of mouth. Polltlcul discussions led to 550 und re ligious discussions to twenty-nine meetings. Quarrels at the gaming table were responsible for 181). A summary shows that as regards numbers the sequence of dueling coun tries is: Germany, France, Italy, Aus tria and Itusshi.—London Mull. HIS NERVE Dot Thin Drummer u Job that Be* loused to Another. "That was a strange experience," ad nltted the traveling man when souio >ne had recalledxthe incident to him. "I'll tell you on the level that It con rerted me to the theory that there Is a lestlny that shapes our end, nud that he fellow who is willing to drift la not mch a chump after all. "As the boys say, I was on my up pers. No one questioned my ability on die roiul. I could sell goods to men who had no real use for them, and rou'U ndmlt that to be the supreme test of a drummer. If I had one forte above another, It was that of selling stoves. I could get rid of a hard-coal burner In a soft-coal district, and 1 could place a consignment of wood stoves In the middle of a prnirie dis trict. "One morning I waked up In the modern Troy of New York, without a cent nml without a Job. To most men the situation would hare been as cold as a polar expedition, hut, as Intimat ed, I'm a fHtallsf. After Jollying the bartender for a patriotic cocktail anil the barber for a shave, I went to the ;ucureat stove factory. Tho clock struck 12 Just as I entered tho place. Before the handsome young man at the desk could say a word I hail told him that' 1 was on time. I think the re mark was the Inspiration of an ex tremity. " 'We'll not stop to discuss terms at this time,' he said. 'You have au hour lu which to catch a train. Here's your •xpense money. It Is a uew route, but t will serve to try you out.' I was tnocked daffy, but I took the money, .'aught the train and sold stoves right ind left. In a week I had a letter !rom the house asking who in the world I was and where I came from. The other fellow, for whom I was mis :nkeu, had shown up nud claimed the lob. But they told me to tire away, tnd they raised my salary. I'm with cm yet."—Detroit Free Press. Bex't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Ton T.lfo Imp, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag oetlo. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To* Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. AM druggists, 200 or VI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet atid sample free. Address Sterling Itemedy Co., Chicago or New York It is unlawful in France for any per son to give solid food to Infants that are under one year old, unless on the prescription of a physician. To Cora Constipation Foravor, Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25a If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. The British parliament reassembles about February 8. 6% GOLD BONDS, Payable semi-annually at the Globe Trust Company, Chicago, 111. hosebonds are a first mortgage upon the entire plant, including buildings, land and other property of an Industrial Company located close to Chicago. . The Company has been established for many years, is well known and doing a and increasing business. ° ° . The oflicers of the Company are men of high reputation, esteemed for their honesty and business ability, fliey have made so great a success of this business that the bonds of this Company are rarely ever offered for sale. A few of these bonds came into our hands during the hard times from parties who had accrueXintereTt S6V years ago. We offer them in issues of SIOO.OO each for $30.00 and t ® e ' n ' eres ' rate these Industrial Bonds are recommended as being n * ' Pint-clew bonds and securities of all kinds bought and sold. KENDALL & WHITLOCK, BANKERS AND BROKERS, 62 Exchange Place. New York. l Men who are always in a hurry, and most men f I are, want a soap for the toilet that will lather quickly and f <g freely in hot or cold water. Other soaps than Ivory jl H may have this quality, but will likely contain alkali, X x which is injurious to the skin. Ivory Soap is made of |j # pure vegetable oils, no alkali; produces a white, foamy * $ lather, that cleanses thoroughly and rinses easily and © | quickly. Money cannot buy a better soap for the toilet. 2 Oopjrktht. <BM. bj Th( PracUr * (Juabla Co., CtßcuuuO. ™. p ( r ' , ;i paß ''.,V il>ra , ry , h , a ? IPepiv l J , a I Whon a fish has lost any of Its scak-s. ir,s2 y The volume has 1 STO pages* in y n^o ° und or nbl ' a3,on ' they are never heavy old German type, and many | * Quaint woodcut illustrations. Edacnte Yoar Bowels With Cascareto. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. No*To-Bac for Fifty Cents. tOc. 2&c- It C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak . . ~~ _ men strong, biood pure. 60c, 11. Ail druggists. There Ih one Christian minister for every 900 of the population in Great The law court records show that the Britain; one in every 114,000 in Japan, defendant wins his case in 47 out of one in 16.1,080 in India, one in 222,000 in every 100 cases tried. Africa, and one in 437,000 in the Chi- nese Empire. Fits nermanently cnred. No fits or nervous ness after first day's useof Nr. Kline's Great Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle ami treatise teething, softens the gums, reduces inflaminifc t'ree. Dr.R.H. Kux E, Ltd.,931 Arch St.Phila,Pa tion, aliays p&iu, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottist PAINT.WALLBCEILINGS CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS'Xf "'Calcimo paint dealer and do your own kalsominlng. This material is made on scientific principles by machinery and milled in twenty-four tint* and is superior to any concoction of Glue ana Whit ing that can possibly be made by hand. To be mixed with Cold Water. - WBEND FOR SAMPLE ( OI OK CARDS and if you cannot purchase this material from your local dealers let us know and we will put you in the way of obtaining It. THE MURAL.O CO., MEW BRICIITOX, S. 1., NEW YORK.. "He that Works Easily Works Successfully. 'Tis Very Easy to Glean House With SAPOLIO Sour Stomach ••After I wai Induced to try (ABCA BETS, I will never be without them In the house. My liver was In a very bad shape, and my head ached and 1 bad stomach trouble. Now. since tak lng Cascarets, 1 feel tine My wife has also used *.hem with beneficial results for sour stomach." Jos Kkbhlixu. 11121 Congress St.. St Louis. Mo. M C/J CATHARTIC TWA DC MABH WIOIBTVRKD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do 3ood, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... terllng Remedy (umpaoy. < hlease. Monlrenl. New York. SIS kin.TH.RAP 80,(1 and guaranteed by all drug- IfU lU DAU gists to CtJllK Tobacco Habit. --PATENTS-- Procured on cash, or easy in*f iilinentM.VOWl.EH & BUUNS. Patent Attorneys. 23? Broadway. N. Y. TY7"ANTED—Case of bad health that R I P-A N-B " will not benefit. Send & eta to Ripans Chemical Co.. New York, for lo samples and luoo testimonials. - > B8 Court St., Rochester, N. Y. f JATIQSAI, tM'HOOI. OF RISI.tKM AND SMORTHAiID. Send for catalogue, mailed free. Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use H In tlrna Bold by druggists. |vfl In a Class Alone- Chainless Jt: J r•unmnq EUeyee: 1.. P. N. U. 34 '93 QOOD AS COLDft'M valuable Formulae: golden opportunity; most valnable secrets known for office, bouse, farm; th6m Circular, ROWLAND, office BATON k Op, 27 Union Square, New York City. FirMCIAM JOIIN ILII3IUII Washington, D.C. Jyrslu last war, 15 abjudicating claims, atty auico. DROPSY cases. Send (or book of testimonial* and IO days' treatment Free. Dr. H B OBBIN'S SOBS. Atlanta. o*.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers