Warm Weather (s quickly overcome by the toning and blood enriching qualities oi Hood's Sarsaparilla. This greut medi cine cures that tired feeling almost as quickly as the sun dispels the morning mist. It also cures pimples, boils, salt 'heum, scrofula and all other troubles originating in bad, impure blood. HOOd'S S parMI C America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six forss. Hood's Pills cure biliousness, indigestion. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness alter first day's use of l)r. Kline's Great Nerve Kest.on r. trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.RH.Ku XK. 8td.,931 Arch St.Phila.Pa Mrs. Winsloxv's Soothing Syrup for children teething, sot tens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 2oc.a bottle. The Bank of England contains silver ingots which have lain in its vaults since 10U6. Beauty Is Dlood Deep. dean 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- Eurities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Ca sea rets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug fists, satisfaction guaranteed, lUc, 25c, 50c. The largest enclosure for deer is said to be the Royal Park in Copenhagen, of 4,200 acres. No-To-Bao for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, (1. All druggist* Marketing Early Potato-a. To those who are unfamiliar with po tato growing, the high prices which early potatoes command might seem to make it an object to dig a large part of the crop and market It while the price Is up. But there are several drawbacks In marketing potatoes early. The weather Is hot, and while the skins of potatoes are tender, they will rub oil their jackets If handled freely, and the potatoes are then almost sure to rot Hence they are never sent far or in large quantities. In digging potatoes early there is great waste, as only a few of the largest are of marketable size, and those that will sell would grow still larger if left a few days longer in the lilll. How Uluch fle'fl Be Missed. "Henrietta," said Mr. MeeUln, "do fou think you'll miss me?" She looked at hlia In surprise and lueried: "When ?" "When I have gone to wnr." "Mr. Meekton," she answered, "I five had reason for resenting a great many things, but I nm willing to own that If Spanish marksmanship Is such that you are missed In the war as often is I will miss you at home there won't be risks for you whatever!" Origin of Goldfish. Goldfish are of Chinese origin. Tliej (were originally found In a large lake near Mount Tslentslng, and were brought to Europe In the seventeenth century. The first lfi France came al a present to Mine. De Pompadour. Warship of Vast Cost. The new British battleship Implaca ble Is to cost over $5,000,000, the largest turn ever 6pent In the building of a man-of-war. The armor plates alone •will cost $750,000 and the guns nearly as much. ME EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the CALI FORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, C.L LOUISVILLE, KJ. NEW YOKE. N. Y. . UNIVERSITY of NOTRE DAME NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. CIRHKICH, Let tern. Science, Law, Civil, o clutnical ami Electrical Engineering. Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Course*. EcelcFinptical students at special rates. Booms Free, Junior or Senior Year, Collegiate Courses. St. Edwards Hall, for boys under 15). The 108 th Term will open September 6tli, 18118. Catalogue sent Free on application to REV. A. MOKKISSEY, C. S. C., President. FALL DuESS GOODS Australian Fleece- The lightest, warmest fab ric known for <lrest.es, wrappers, shirt-waists, etc.* 87 inches wide; la** eta. per yard. Exprepsags prepaid. Send six cents in stamps to the Textile Novelty Co., 7 8 Rim St., New York, for samples ol tin ir entire liua. If you are unable to find these goods in y ur retail store we wt" mpplv you from our mill direct. Feeding Millet. Millet, both hay and grain, is a fat tening food, and when fed to either Horses or cows wheat bran or mid- Slings should formTa part of the ra tion. This is especially necessary with cows; otherwise the millet will serve to fatten rather than to increase the flow of milk. If only the hay is fed the ration should be only about half feed and the meal made up with clover hay. In feeding the millet hay to horses the objection that it has a bad effect on the kidneys may be removed by cutting up the hay, wetting it with warm water and mixing two quarts of wheat middlings and a tablespoouful of linseed meal with the hay. This makes a nutritious feed and one that will leave no bad effect on the horses. The same mixture may be fed to cows with advantage. A Permanent Strawberry lied. On many farms the strawberry bed has been allowed to run wild aud form a complete sod. As a rule, it is best to plow under sucb a bed aud make a new one, but sometimes this is the only available spot for the pur pose and with proper management no crop of berries need be lost. At any time after tbe bearing season is over and before the ground freezes in the fall, secure a good one-horse break plow that will turn a narrow furrow, eight inches being sufficient. Have the cutter well sharpened and then set stakes where you want youl' rows of strawberries, aud plow the ground between the l-ows, throwing the earth away from the rows. Be careful to keep your furrows straight aud plow to within about three inches of the stakes. Now begin on the opposite side and do the same and a block of strawberry plants six inches wide will be left standing for each row. liesl For ItlllklnK Con s. It is, we think, a fault of some of ! the best breeds of milkers that they i cannot be easily dried off, even when j they approach the time for dropping | their calf. An interval of at least a month, and six weeks is still better, should be left to the cow, ill which she should have an entire rest. Milk is not good for food for varying periods before parturition, depending much on the age and condition of the cow aud the kind of food she receives and digests. A cow thin in flesh may re quire eight or even ten weeks' rest lie fore beginning milking again. While we believe that young heifers after their first calf should be kept in milk until within a month or six weeks be fore the next calf is due, it is rather to get them into the habit of long milking than because the small amount they give will be worth the \ extra feed aud labor required to se cure it. Unless to supply milk for household use in winter there is little advantage in milking the cows that calved in the spring longer than January of the fol lowing year. From eight to twelve weeks with comparatively little grain feed will leave the cow in better con dition for next year than will crowd ing her stomach with grain, so as to force milk production until near the lime her next calf is due to be dropped. This last will possibly in crease the milk flow when the cow springs her bag for the coming calf, aud thus cause garget, which is an evil that the best milkers are always most likely to suffer from. Until near the time of parturition the cow should bo fed enough grain to make her gain iu flesh. But for two weeks beforo she calves this grain feed should be withheld, lost it stimulate the milk flow too much. After tho calf is a week old, and tho danger of inflammation has past, tho grain feed ing may be resumed, taking care not to give grain feed in such quantities as to futten the cow rather than in crease her milk flow.—American Cul tivator. Protect the Tonrts. That the toad is beneficial to the farmer and particularly to the gar dener is admitted by everyone who has observed its habits. Additional facts have been secured by recent ob servations at the Massachusetts Ex periment Station which show eleven per cent, of the toad's food is com posed of insects and spiders bene ficial or indirectly helpful to man, and eighty per cent of insects and other animals directly injurious to culti vated crops or in other ways obnox ious to man. The toad feeds on worms, snails, sow bugs, common greenhouse pests, and the many legged worms which damnge green house and garden plots. It feeds to some extent on grasshoppers and crickets and destroys large numbers of ants. It consumes a considerable number of May beetles, rose chafers, click beetles or adults of the wire worm and potato beetles. To all agriculturists the toad ren ders conspicuous ssrtioo, but garden ers aud greenhouse owners may make this animal of especial value. Every gardener should aim to keep a colony of toads among his growing crops and the practice of collecting and trans ferring them to the gardens is a com men bible one. While the sense of lo calilv is strong in the toad and it will often return over considerable dis tances to its original haunts, yet it may bo induced to remain in new quarters if there is a sufficient food •apply. Many farmers provide toads with artificial shelters made by dig ging Rhailow holes in the ground and partially covering them with a bit of board or flat stone. In such places toads will often remain for many days, sallying forth at night to seek food. The enemies of the toad are hawks, owls, and, worst of all, small boys, who stone and kill many of them. Dr. C. F. Hodge states that he found 200 dead or wounded toads in a single day on the shores of a small pond on the grounds of Clark University. The loud cry of the toad at spawning time readily betrays its presence, and small boys, and sometimes those of a larger growth, gravitate toward the pools as naturally as do the toads themselves There have been excel lent laws enacted to protect insectiv orous birds. Why should there not be as stringent legislation against the destruction of toads? —American Agri culturist. Farm and Garden Notes. Corn fed hens do not produce the best chicks. A dozen hens will do well on the oidinary waste of n family of six per sons. A swill barrel will not be damaged if cleansed and scalded once in a while. Ducts will work for hours to gather ! grain that has been dropped into a trough of water and they like it best when fed that way. In ordinary farm work it is not neces sary to have shoes on the horses. Oc casionally there may lie one that needs shoes but the exception only proves the rule. From weak stock expect frail chicks, and they will die from slight causes. Only when the breeding stock is in a vigorous condition can wo have strong j and quick growers. | To utilize all food products to the | best advantage, the by-products, as | well as the others, require a variety of feeders. Even on a small farm it often pays to have a few of all kinds of animals. On high priced land summer feed ing of grain, especially to milch cows, is ofteu good economy, The acre age of grass required is much re duced. The extra food will show in butter, too. There is uo disinfectant and deodor izer as good as sunlight and air. Keep the barns and stables as light as pos sible, and the stock will be much more comfortable and healthy than if kept in semi-darkness. It is useless to ntteinpt to keep well animals in a healthy condition where they are compelled to eat and sleep with the sick ones. Quarantine regu lations are absolutely necessary for the successful handling of herds when disease once finds lodgment among them. If a fruit orchard of any kind needs fertilizing, and you do not know what food constituents the soil most needs, you can venture to spread raw bone meal and potash liberally; whether you want the carbonate, sulphate or muriate, you will find it iu uuleached wood ashes. Keep the sod away from the baso of young trees for a space of about twelve inches all around. A mulch of some grass clippings from the lawu, placed where the sod is taken up, helps to keep in the moisture. Coal-ashes heaped about the baso of fruit-trees is quite beneficial. The Knife tliu Malay's Weapon. Tho Philippine native, like all the kindred Malay races, cauuot do any lighting, as a rule, exeept at close quarters, slashing with his heavy" knife. The weapon is much the same, be it called machete, or bolo, or kam pilin, or parang, or kreese; the plan of action is the same—to rush in un : expcctelly anil hack about swiftly,) without'tlio slightest attempt at solfi preservation. It is a form of lighting known to British ti oops iu the Houdaij and to American troops in the Indian-] infested woods, and it takes a lot ofj stopping. Quickness of eye and hand! can only be acquired by long aud lnirdj practice, and these poor Spaniards do not get that, or, at least, not until thq time when tlioy ought to be using theso accomplishments. The rifle butts should be all fully occupied; they are deserted. The Spaniard is a proud, plucky, high-mettled, loug euduriug, tenacious, desperate, heroic, hopeless incompetent. The Mauser rifle, too, in hard work is found to be a mistake. It has a case of iivo cartridges, which liavo to be all used before any others can be inserted. That is to say, if a soldier has occasion to tiro three cartridges he must go on and waste the other two or else leave himself to meet a possi ble sudden rush with only two rounds in his rifle. Nine times out of teu he prefers to be ready with a full charge, and so his ammunition is wasted. Moreover, it is an unhandy weapon to work in a hurry. Perhaps it may be the fault of the men, or their misfor tune, in being uudrilled, but they are very often knifed while in the act of reloading hheir riflev —New York Times. The American colony in Paris, France, decorates the tomb of Lafay ette each Memorial Dav. TIIE MERRY SIDE 01 LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. Silenced—A Twofold Indiscretion—Mis apprehension—The Mountain to Ma* hornet—llis Command of Language—* Oratory—-A Baseless Appeal, Etc., Etc. The kicker was ready his feelings to t ell Concerning his various woes, For his dinner was cold, and ill-tasting as well, And his bed was too hard for lapose. But hiseyo ch meed to light on the paper that night Which told of the Inds far away And the life that they led in the thick of the fight, And then he had nothing to say. And the mercury roso to the top of the glass In the air that was heavy and still; And he had to deduct when his money he'd pass A share for the government till. Existence seemed only a merciless moil, With little to bid him be gay; With only new promise of 'trouble and toll- But the kicker had nothiug to say. —Washington Star. A Twofold Indiscretion. Benhatn—"J ma-.le the mistake of my life when I married you." Mrs. Benhatn—"You made the mistake of both our lives."—Town ToiDics. Ills Command of Language. She—"An editor has to have great command of language, does he not?" He—"Oh, yes. He frequently or. ders four or live thousand words."— —lndianapolis Journal. The Mountain to Maliomt. Guest—"What a cbeap lot of china she uses?" Other Guest—"Yes; she's determ ined to make the servants pay for all they break."—Detroit Journal. A Baseless Appeal. Mr. Meeker—"But, Philipena, yon don't go the right way to work with me. You should appeal to the good and nolile in me." Mrs. Meeker—"You wish me, then, to be silent."—Life. Misapprehension. Miss Bookleigh—"Did you ever read hew iu the war of 1812 the press gang went about?" Miss Gayleigh—"No, dear; but how lovely it must havo been to live iu those days."—New York Wor:d. Oratory. "And is Bockford so much of an or ator?" "Man, ho could describe a board ing house dried beef supper iu such language that your mouth would water with desire."—Cincinnati En quirer. The Wnv to Will Ilcr. Auctioneer—"Our man out there in the crowd bids up a dollar on this an tique bureau, but the womeu don't seem to get interested." Mauager of Bale—"Tell the idiot to hid up a quarter of a cent."—Detroit Journal. Not Under False Colors. Would-be Purchaser (to boy left for the moment in charge of stand) — "Say, sonny; what are you selling or anges for to-day?" Boy—"Why, oranges, o' course. Do you s'pose I'm sellin' 'em fer kok ernuts?"—Puck. Too Hasty. Coal Dealer (anxiously)—" Hold on! That load hasn't been weighed. It looks to me rather large for a ton." Driver—"'Tain't intended for a ton. It's two tons." Dealer—"Beg pardon. Go ahead." —New York Weekly. A Speaking Likeness. "Amie, dear," said her dnloet toned rival, "ihese latest photo graphs of yours make me think of Tom. They're just like him." "Why, you old darling! Where's the resemblance?" "They flatter you so." On Duty. Inquiring Person—"What time did the hotel catch fire?" Fireman— "Midnight." Inquiring Person—"Everybody get out safe?" Fireman—"All except the night watchman. They conldn' .wake him up in time."—Tit-Bits. Full. "I feel like a store with a bargain sale," groaned Tommy, as ho ap proached from the direction of the pantry, the immediate surroundings of his mouth being a suspicious dark red. "What's the matter, my dear?" "Jain inside."—Detroit Free Press. The Snapshot Again. Miriam—"Did you lake the picture of the young mau on the mantel?" Mildred—"Yes." Miriahfc—"Friend of yours, I sup pose?" Mildred—"Well, lie was before I took the picture."—Youkers States man. Tile Groat Use For Cento. Cnwker— "My wife always bays two stamps at a time so that she can get a cent change out of the nickel." C'umao—"What does she want with the cent?" Cnwker—"She saves them ail until she has live, and then she pays her street car tare witli them." —Atlanta Journal. . ■"* Up-to-Date. The Park Commissioner was order ing a statue. "I suppose," said the sculptor, "that you want the warrior mounted?" "Yes, yes, of course," replied the spokesman. "Ho ought to be mounted, unquestionably; but just now you'd better confine your work to tho figure of the man, and we'll tell .you later whether to put it on a horse or a bicycle." RS OISE S CT L TC H PI CONSUMERS. p| PI ■ J3.95 fe fty v' : 1 esk, made £? font., sawed oak or Pi , dflk'* flnisned in Our mammoth general catalogue, the great household educator is mail- Ss tree on request. Our Clothing earn- pSa logue and Cl..th samples is also mail- EE| ed tree. Expressa&e paid on all Clothing. hP* Owing to an cverpro- CARPETS pjs duction at our Ilalti- KILUi'CEU. CLf more mills, we are of- vc = r E£| fering many specials '== i £l> this month. Our Car ps| pet. catalogue in hand- gSSt JgrC painted colors is yours PS? for the asking. Thi3 go month we sew Carpets, PB Eg furnish wadded lining ISVJiCNa fes ter free, and pav freight pi on all $9 Carpet pur- L&tfn' y\ teT chases and over. Ad-F.y >£ A x - J drees (exactly as below) ' pi; |lt| Dept. BALTIMORE, MI), fe A PLOT FOB A NOVEL. One Offered Ready-Made for the Dot perate Literator. A novelist In Boston—do not laugh, there are novelists In Boston, yes, and actually living here—said to us the other day, "If I could only And a plot!" Here Is a plot for him free of charge, and the story is a true one: In 1739 a lady—a real lady—came Into Birmingham, England, with a handsome equipage, and desired the landlord of the inn to get her a hus band, being determined to marry some body or other before she left the town. The man bowed, and supposed her la dyship to be in a facetious humor, but being made sensible how much she was In earnest, he went out in search of a man that would marry a fine lady without asking questions. After many repulse# from poor fellows who were not desperate enough for such a ven ture, he met with an excise man, who said ho "could not be in a worse condi tion than lie was," and accordingly went with the innkeeper and made a tender of himself, which was all he had to bestow on the lady, who imme diately went with him to onejsvho gave them a license and made them man and wife, on which the bride gave her spouse £2OO, and without more delay left the town and the bridegroom to find out who she was or unriddle this strange adventure. Soon after she was gone two gentlemen came into the j town in full pursuit of her; they had traced her so far upon the road, and, finding the inn where she had put up, they examined Into all the particulars of her conduct, and on hearing she was married gave up their pursuit and turn ed back. Truly a noble dame, one worthy of a full length portrait in the gallery con structed by Thomas Hardy. Why did this noble dame offer her- Belf to the first comer? And why were the respectable males of the town so backward? There was no hint of scan dal. Who were the pursuers? Did she Wish by one sudden marriage to escape one deliberately contrived and repug nant? Was the excise man a petty .fellow In spite of his abject condition? Did she ever see him again? Did she (ever regret that she had not braved the world and lived with him? Per haps the memory of her apparition haunted him; perhaps it roused him to doughty deeds. It's n pity that Mr. Hardy has not accounted for her action and her fate with his grim irony.—Bos ton Journal. Ever Have a Dog Bother You When riding a wheel, making you wonder for it few minutes whetheror not you are to get a fall and a broken neck V Wouldn't, you have 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 and still not permanently injure the animal. Such pistols sent postpaid for fifty cents in stamp* by New York t'nion Supply Co., 1:15 Leonard St.. New York City. Every bicyclist at times wishes he had one. The bicycle craze has decreased the consumption of cigars in America by about 1.000,000 a day. The decrease since the craze set in has actually been 700,000,000 a year. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smolo Tour I.lfe 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 weak men strong. All druggists, GOc or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling lieinody Co., Chicago or New York The Chinese have devoted themselves for nearly 4,000 years to the artificial propagation of fishes, shellfishes, fowls, pearls and sponges. To Care Const I pat ton Forever, Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 2Se If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money A huge sundial made entirely of plants and flowers adorns the South Park, Chicago. The standard which casts the shadow is also decked with flowers, and is made to resemble a gi gantic ear of corn. 6% COLD BOrJDS, Payable semi-annually at the Globe Trust Company, Chicaeo. 111. property of an Ind lit trial close I )o'eilicli-o Ibuilllin - Sl lantl and ofh " b "° •/ J™* J* *®H known and doing a iarge and We i feo'Tch 'ridu'oo s amongThrTbest """' " "l!*"*' r "'° "' e I"***" Bond, are recommended as being 5/ eamA| , _ trM-flan* bond* and nccnriticx of nil hinds bought and told. KbNDALL & WHITLOCK. BANKERS AND BROKERS C 2 Exchange Place. New York. XVTirrr- I~in?rr. Are Clumsy, ' r The countries where the loug finger nail Is most affected are Slam, Assam, Cochin China and China. The ap jkovcd length varies from three or four to twenty-three inches. A Siamese ex quisite permits the nails on his fingers to' grow to such nn extent that his hands are practically useless. The ar istocrats who affect these nails can not write, dress themselves or even feed themselves. | The Siamese hold the long finger nail | In the same reverence we hold the i family tree. Many of them never have their nails cut from the day of their birth. On the first linger the nail is of ; moderate length—three or four inches j —while on the other fingers the nails grow occasionally to two feet. The | thumb nail, which is also allowed to j grow long, after reaching a certain I length curves around like a corkscrew. ! In both China and Slain the owners J of long nails wear metal cases over j them to preserve them, made of gold jor silver, and jeweled. While long ! nails are not regarded as singular in ! China, they are rarely met with except on fanatics and pedantic scholars. Among the fakirs In Ilindoostan a peculiar custom is that of holding the hand tightly clenched and in one posi tion so long that nt last the nails grow through the palm, emerging at the back of the hand and growing thence almost to the wrist. When the wasted muscles refuse to support the arm any longer It is bound in position with cords. In Nubia the long nail Is regarded as Indicative of good breeding. The aris tocrats constantly subject their finger tips to cedar wood lire to insure a good growth. The inhabitants of the Marquesas telands are among the most expert tat tooers on enrth, and not even the crown it the head, the fingers and the toes ire exempt from the needle. The bands are ornamented with utmost tare, all the fingers having their own pattern, so the hand would look as though Incased in a tight-fitting glove were It not for the linger nails of enor mous length which complete the hand adornment of the wealthier natives. Washing Milk Vessels. All through the warm weather, par ticular care is needed to cleanse ves sels that have contained milk. If any particle of milk Is left in the crevices or corners of vessels, It will sour and affect any milk that is afterward add ed. Many people In cleaning mills from vessels wash them first with scalding hot water. This is a mistake. The hot water only coagulates the albumen, causing it to stick more closely to the sides of the vessel. If It be of tin, tlio souring of the milk soon eats through the coating of tin, anil causes rust on the iron beneath it. What we call tin Is merely Iron with a very thin tin coat ing. No such vessel Is fit for long use, ns the tin will wear through, aud all the more quickly If the coagulated al bumen, made by hot water and milk, requires hard rubbing to remove It. The right way to clean milk vessels Is to rinse them well with cold water, and then scald them, to destroy any germs that the cold water may have left. #IOO Reward. SIOO. Thm renders of this paper will he pleased to learn that, there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh heimr a constitu tional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the pa tient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, l'\ J. CHENEY fc Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The embroidered coat worn by a French Academician costs 500f., the white cloth waistcoat L'of. and the striped trousers lOf. The plumed hat and box are down for 19f., and the sword, with scabbard, for 4'Jf. Total, To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money H it fails to cute. £io. Nearly all lions are "left-handed." A famous explorer says that when one desires to strike a forcible blow the animal almost always uses the left paw. Edncato Yonr Dowels Willi Cascarets. Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 100, Lsc. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. The ancient Mexicans used wooden sword.-, in war that they might not kill their enemies. Piso'sCure for Consumption lias no equnl as a COUKII nu'diiim-.—F. M. AH BUTT, 983 Jscneca .St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9. 1894. Do Yea Know That There is Science in Neatness ? Be Wise and Use COULD NOT SLEEP. MT3. Pinkham Relieved Hor of All Her Troubles. Mrfl. MADGE BABCOCK, 17G Second St., Grand Rapids, Mich., had ovarian trouble with its attendant and pains, now she is well. Here it all trouhlcshave pone. My monthly sickness used to be so painful, but have not had the slightest pain since talcing your medicine. I cannot praise your Vegetable Compound too much. My husband and friends sec such a change in me. I look so much better and have some color in my face." Mrs. Pinkham invites women who are ill to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice, which is freely offered. •'Both my wife and myselfliavc been using; CASCAKETS and tbcv are the best medicine we have ever had In the house. Last week nay wifo was frantic with headache for two days, she tried some of your CASCAKETS, and they relieved the pain in her head almost immediately. We both recommendCuscaret3." CHAS. STEDBFORD. Pittsburg Safe & Deposit Co . Pittsburg, Pa. CANDV CAY HAP NIC TRADE MARK REO'STERCD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tnsto Good. Do Good, Never si. ken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. Sic. 500. ... CUR£ CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Hum-.ty < ..input, v. Chicago, Montreal, New York. 317 ! IfflltMßlA ' Maai qiAiNircs rjjmwmi MAKES [ STANDARD \ PmMIRI&M CHAIN 1 PS 1 ©MACHINES. I• ! IIS i HARTFORDS E I J K| if Next Best. f I i w J / 9 th " r M- 01 * 11 "-ir. \\ /' / Low Prices, { J H Cat a.og m: Free. |i ISIANDAKDOFTHE WORLD! POPE MEG CO. HARTFORD. CONN/ ART CATALOGUE OP COLUMBIA BICYCLES BY MAIL I ADDRESS FOR ONE TWO CENT STAMPI C°OD AS GOLDK'M ai lable Formulas; golden opportuni".; m *>g valuable seoiets known 1. r office. noun**, iuri" Circular, 1U) I.AM), of J LA ION AGO., 27 Union Square, New York Cr T T*7 ANTED—Case of bad health that R PP-A-M'R *> will not beiteiU Send 6 < ts. to Ripans Chemical Co . New York, for lo samples aud luoo tostliuouial. P. N. U. ;;3 'US '►."vvy;;! uT 1 ': Thompson's Eye Water
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers