Pimples Are the danger signals of impure blood. They show that the vital blood Is in bad condition, that health is in danger of wreck. Clear the track by taking Hood's Barsaparilla and the blood will be made pure, complexion fair and healthy, and life's journey pleasant and successful. Hood's parilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $3. Hood's Pills cure indirection, biliousness. Ever Have u Dog Bother You When riding a wheel, making jrou wonder for a few minutes whether or not you are to get-a fall and a broken neck ? Wouldn't you have given n 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 stamps by New York Union Supply Co., D o Leonard St.. New York City. Every bicyclist at times wishes ho had one We think Piso's Cure for Consumption is tho only medicine for Coughs.—J KM MB PINCKAKD, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1, 18U4. It is said that in some of the farm ing districts of China pigs are har nessed to small wagons and made to draw them. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 5Uc,81. All druggist* A new sunbonnet, a sort of poke headgear, has been designed and tried on a thousand camels. Out of these animals, which have marched all the way from Assiout, only one animal died from the effects of the sun. and that was a camel which had lost its hat. Five Cents. Everybody knows that Dobbins' Electric Boap is the best in the world, and for 03 years It has sold at the highest price. Its price is now 5 cents, same as common brown soap. Bars full size and quality.Order of grocer. Adv According to oculists, poor window glass is responsible for eye strain, on account of the faulty refraction. The silkworm is liable to over one hundred diseases. Den't Tobaeco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Awty. 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, 50c or fl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York EUGENIE AT COMPIEGNE. Rarely Beautiful and Fascinating Woman In Iler Prime. Much has been eald and written about this beautiful and fascinating woman, but, however great the praises bestowed, they have never, to my mind, been exaggerated, says the Corn hill Magazine. It would be •jsslble, no doubt, to find more perfectly fault leas features, even more beautiful eye 3 and complexion, but I have never seen the woman who united so many per fections. The creamy luster of the skin, the expression of those tender and sympathetic eyes, the radiant Bmlle, the glorious mass of quite gold en hair, the slope of the graceful shoul ders, all these charms, enhanced by a toilet as exquisite as Parisian taste could conceive, united to make a per fection that seemed to eclipse and ut terly to destroy the beauty of every other woman present, although there were many celebrities of all nations present who weTe famed, and Justly famed, for the gifts that Venus had be stowed upon them. But yet the em press was not Just now what the French call en beaute, for the event ao deeply interesting to France, so im portant to the imperial pair concerned, was not very far distant, and great •care was needed, although the imperial lady herself somewhat pooh-poohed many extra precautions; at any rate, she never allowed herself to show or professed to feel any unusual fatigue. Only Case on Record. Through all his passionate pleadings she sat absolutely unmoved. It was the first instance ever noted where a woman sat thus who had secured pos session of a piazza rocker—Cincinnati Enquirer. REGAINED HEALTH. " Gratifying Letters to Mrs. Pink ham From Happy Women. "I Owe You My Life.* Mrs. E. WOOLHISF.R, Mills, Neb., writes; "DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM:—I owe my life to your Vegetable Compound. The doctors said 1 had consumption and nothing could be done for me. My menstruation had stopped and tlicy said my blood was turning to water. I had several doctors. They all said I could not live. I began the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it helped mc right away; menses returned and I have gained in weight. I have better health than I have had for years. It is wonderful what your Com pound has done for me." "I Feci Like a New Person.'* Mrs. GEO. LEACII, 1009 Belle St., Alton, 111., writes? 14 Before I began to take your Vege table Compound I was a great sufferer from womb trouble. Menses would ap pear two and three times in a month, causing me to be so weak I could not stand. I could neither sleep nor eat, and looked so badly my friends hardly knew me. 44 1 took doctor's medicine but did not derive much benefit from it. My drug gist gave me one of your little books, and after reading it I decided to try L3*dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. I feel like a new person. I would not give your Compound for all the doctors' medicine in the world. I can not praise it enough." THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. My Steed—Catching Cold—An Alternative —Strategy—Her Complaint—Children's Ways—More Than Likely—Knd of a Romance-The Cheerful Presence, lite. He never cares for food at all, But likes a little grease; The hallway i 3 his fav'rito stall- He stahles there in pence. He'd run a week, I rather thlulr, And never feel a pain; He'd neither ent, nor sleep a wluk— But—l can't stand the strain. Ho only has one dread complaint, But that one makes me weep; A carpet-tack will make liirn faint, A flabby, punctured heap! If "Dick" lived now ho would not cry, "My kingdom for a horse!" Elso folks would say. "The ancient guy He means a 'bike,' of course!" —L. A. \V. Bulletin. An Alternative. "If we appear together so often there's sure to bo trouble." Jack—"l say—or —let's disappear togother."—Brooklyn Life. Her Complaint. "You shouldu't get crosn over a lit tle thing like that, my dear." "Well, you never do anything woreo for me to get cross about."—Life. Eml of a Romance. "I wish I had never met her?" "Why?" "I asked her to write to me, and here's a letter of forty pages."—New York World. Catching Cold. Jones—"Which travels the fastest, heat or cold?" Lones—"Heat, of course. You can not catch heat, Lmt you can catch cold."—New York Journal. Children's Wny,. Ethel—"My mamma's going to bo married again." Flossie—"ls she? I wouldn't allow my mamma to; if she did I'd tell my papa."—Westminster Review. Strategy. "When I get off a joke I never smile." "What is your reason?" "If nobody sees tho point I cau prove an alibi."—Chicago Record. More Than Likely. "Edith, when you accepted me I walked on air." "Well, is that where you got your idea that we could get married aud live on air?"— Detroit Free Press. Tim Cheerful Presence. "I can't understand how some peo ple always have a good time wherever tHey go." "That's easy enough; they take it along with them."—Chicago Record. A New Piny. Modern Dramatist—"l've got an other order for a new play." Wife—"Did the manager furnish you with a plot?" "Yes—er—tliut is, he showed mo all the scenery ho lmd." Other Yonrs, Other Titles. "Daughter, who is this Mr. Eugene Wadsworth Carrington that is calling on you so often?" "Why, papa, he's the boy we used to call 'Buster' when lie lived next door."—Chicago Record. A Pleasure Trip. First Doctor—"l've got to maire a trip out of town to-morrow." Second Doctor—"Business or pleas ure?" "Both. I'm going to operate on a wealthy patient."—Life. 11 l-Nstuml Iteinark. "I never saw snch atown as yours," declared the governor. "Every un married man there is trying to enlist." "Don't blame 'em," responded tlie bachelor representative from the place in question; "the girls there have organized a cooking club." tier Chilly Manner. "Ahl" ho cried, "yesterday you welcomed me warmly. To-day you receive me coldly. What is the causa of this sudden change?" "Don't you rend the papers?" she calmly replied. "My father has just inherited a cool million."—Chicago Nows. What Ho Would Like. Employer (meeting clerk on tho grand-stand)—" See here, Jenkins! You told me you would like to get off this afternoon uud go to your mother in-law's funeral." Clerk—"Y-yes, sir. I would like to do that first rale; only she isn'l dead."—Judge. A Matter of Word*. "What a pushing fellow that young Migley isl Six years ago he was a waiter in a cheap restaurant. To-day ho hup a government job that pays him §7OOO a year." "Pushing, did you say. You've got the wrong word. Pulling is what you mean."—Chicago News. Making It Itiglit. Wife—"By the way, Clive, I had n letter from my banker while you were away. He said I had overdrawn my account." Husband—"Yes, dear; and what did you do?" Wife—"l told him not to be so rude again and sent him a check for the amount."—London Punch. A Gentle Hint. "If I were only a man," she said, "we could " "Possibly we could," he said, "but the chances are we wouldn't. If you were a man I wouldn't be here. I'd be saying nice things to somebody who wasn't a man." Sometimes it is worth while to think if such facts as these.—Chicago Post. AGRICULTURAL TOPICS Stack All Fodders. Loss from exposure to sun and rain, of corn stover, teosinte, etc., can be largely prevented by staokiug the fod~ ders in long narrow stacks and then begin feeding from one end. By this method the amount of fodder exposed to the weather is reduced to a mini mum. To Renovate an Apple Orchard. Put in three times as many sheep as cau live on the pasturage and feed wheat bran. They scatter this added fertility all over the orchard and thus feed it and they do well themselves. They eat every apple that falls, worms and all, keep the grass eaten within half inch of the surface and as a result the sod is constantly growing better and the orchard improving. To pre vent their harming the bark, rub with hard soap three feet from the ground. Th Flavor of Eggs, It has been thoroughly established that the flavor of eggs depends much on the food the hens have. It has been found that if they are near a slaughter yard aud eat large quantities of raw meat, the yolk is of a dark color and strong ilavor. If large quautilies of milk are fed, the yolk is pale and the egg watery and insipid to the taste. When allowed to eat much fish the taste is oily in flavor. Any diet fed exclusively is easily detected in the flavor of the egg. A mixed diet gives the most satisfactory results. Selecting Corn Seed. The yield of corn is dependent in no small degree on tlie quality of the seed, TvhieU slionld be selected before the corn is cut, having regard to tho size and character of the stalk as well as to the ripeness and type of the ear. When the season is especially favor able for thoroughly maturing the ears, ouough seed to last at least two years should be gathered, completely dried out before the frost, aud stored iu a warm, dry place. A differeuce of eleven per ceut. in the yield of dry matter on two adjacent acres was noted in favor of the crop grown from well ripened seed over the yield from seed grown in a wet, cold season.—Michi gan Experiment Station. Root Suffocation. It is difficult to get people to under stand that trees cau die from drowning just as animals can. Trees feed pri marily by the roots, but there must bo a certain amount of oxygen in the soil to enable them to make use of the food. Standing water prevouts the ac tion of life-giving oxygen. A Bos ton correspondent refers to two large horse chestnuts which were moved last spring with the greatest skill, but they died. Iu the fall ail examination was made and the holes were found to bo full of water within one foot of tho surface of the ground. The holes were really flower-pots without the necessary holes in the bottom to allow the water to escape. There can be no better lesson in gardening than to be con tinually rememberig why it is neces sary to have a hole in a flower-pot. —• Meehan's Monthly. A Protection For Tree*. Almost all farmers and orchardists have, at one time or another, realized tho needs of something to protect trees from tho ravages of insects. There are many sorts of tree destroyers that crawl up the tree trunks, and if they cau be beaded off, little damage can bo done. A suggestion has been offered that tree protectors be made of iron or ♦ile. These are constructed in two sections and provided with grooves to hold either a band of wire or a wide, flat hoop of metal, which, when tight ly drawn will hold the halves firmly together. The tops of these protec tors should be trough-shaped aud into this trough kerosene, tar or other prep arations offensive to these marauders may be placed. The guards can re main around the trees during the sea son when insect depredations are most to bo dreaded, then put away for safe keeping until tho following year. It is believed by those who have made some very simple experiments in this direction, that iron guards cau be fur nished at a cost that will not bo op pressive to farmers when their advan tages are taken into account. Specially Farming. The one trouble with farmers who are not iuclined to think that mixed farming pays, and who drift into specialty farming, is that they fail to go about it in the right way. Specialty farming does not mean the growing of a single crop, nor yet the special growing of a half dozen or more crops on a small scale, but rather tho ex penditure of one's full time, thought and mouey on several crops in the same line. To make specialty farm ing profitable one must first ascertain what the soil and himself are best fitted for, and having determined that, push the enterprise year after year through good and bad seasons. If poultry keeping is decided on as tho enterprise producing the best re sults, work all brunches of it, egg production and raising broilers, roasters and capons, but do not make the mistake of trying at the same time to become a breeder of fancy stock. If tho farm scorns best suited for raising fruit and your inclinations are strong in that direction, plan for suc cessive crops beginning with straw berries and ending with late orchard fruits. The same with grains and vegetables. Dairying and fruit grow ing do not go well together, neither do trucking or poultry raising. Go into specialty farming on the plan tho dry goods merchant stocks his store. He has goods for all seasons in his line, but ho does not handle flour and pork or liny and grain with his dry goods. Specialty farming on the lines indicated invariably pays a profit one year with another. A REFORMED GIANT. Once He Eight Feet Tell end Wlrhed; Now He le Shorter and Freachee. The Rev. Charles Kestersou was born in Hancock County, Tennessee, seventy-three years ago. His father was one of the early pioneers, and his mother was a member of the tribe of the famous Malungeons, who compose nearly the entire population of Han cock County now. The Rev. Mr. Kesterson is no or dinary man. He is one of the tallest men in Tennessee, perhaps in America. His height is seven feet eight inches, though he claims that when in tho prime of manhood he was over eight feet tall. His weight is 300 pounds. Years ngo, when Hancock County was not so thickly populated as it is now with men of education, and when lawlessness was at its height, the Rev. Mr. Kestersou was the terror of that part of the country. Brought tip moro than 100 miles from a city of any note ho never heard the whistle of a loco niolivo or saw tho iron monsters till a year or so ago, when he went to Kuox ville, Teun. The Rev. Mr. Kestersou, it is claimed by many of his neigh bors, has killed at least seven men. Tho old preacher denies this; he ac knowledges tho errors of his youth, but says that he never has killed that many. As to the number of men that have bit the dust ut his hand ho i 3 silent. About thirty years ago he joinod the Baptist Church and began preaching. Until he reformed he ran a moonshiuo still ;>n Walker's Ridge, and woo be tide the revenue officer that dared molest him. In fact, it is said that no revenue officer ever bothered him much, he was so well known, and they knew his deadly aim. Now, however, since his conversion, a change has come over him. He does everything that ho can to break up lawlessness, and is "death" on tho moonshiners. When not preaching in the different school-houses he farms. He works hard, though getting along in years, gives his money to the poor and needy, and lives a happy life. Though old in years, ho would not be taken for a man over fifty. He is an inveterate chewer and smoker. For seventy three years this old man has lived in "single blessedness." CURIOUS FACTS. An English penny changes hands 125,000 times in the course of life. The death rate of tho world is about sixty-seven a minute, and the birth rate seventy a minute. A regularly organized system of relieving poverty has been in vogue in China for more than 2000 years. It is said that in some of the farm ing districts of China pigs are har nessed to small wagons and made to draw them. Two volcanoes in Iceland were not long eince advertised for sale in a Copenhagen paper. Tho price asked was about $7500. Food is served in a London (Eng land) restaurant on electrically heated plates, so that the guests can eat leisurely and have the viands warm. A Kansas man is the owner of a floral freak iu the shape of a geranium plant that is more thau twelve feet high. It grew nine feet in one season. The oldest sailing craft in the world is the so-called Clokstad ship, a Viking vessel, which was discovered in a sepulchral mound on the shores of Christiania fjord. It is a thousand years old. No thistles grew in Australia till a Scotsman plautod some seeds out of love for his country. It was a very natural but foolish deed, as now tha thistle has multiplied into millions, and gives a great deal of trouble. A process has been discovered by which sails for vessels of all kinds can be mado out of paper pulp, and it is claimed that they serve quite as well as canvas, and are very much cheaper. They swell and flap in the wind like tho genuine, old-fashioned article, and are supposed to be uutearable. A Queer Business. Count Eocco Dianovitck baa made the getting into prison the chief busi ness of his life for thirty-four of the forty-seven years he has lived, for the purpose of gathering information for a book he is anxious to write on the subject. At thirteen he left his homo and went iuto Prussia, where he was arrested for trespassing and sent to prison for three months, working at chair making. From that time to this ho has never been free from the de sire to continue his prison explora tions. From thirteen till he was twenty ho was in and out of more thau twenty prisons in Belgium, Prussia, Poland and Kussia. His first experi ence of gaol life in England was in Liverpool, which was one of the worst he was ever in, filled with drunken sailors from all over the world. He stayed there six days, when he paid his fine and got out, the first time ho fuiled to serve his sentence. Theu lie went to Ireland, France, Spain,"ltaly, Greece and Turkey, then to Egypt, where tho gaols are the worst in tho world except Australia; next to India and Japan, and then to America, where he remained for more than a year, spending most of his time iu gaols and penitentiaries.—Tit-Bits. Bismarck's Bravery. Bismarck's first medal was from tbo Pomeranian Laiultag for having saved a life at the risk of his own. His groom was throwu by tbo stumbling of his horse into a river's swift cur rent, and was about drowning when Bismarck jumped iu to save him. The man, in an insanity of fright, pinioned his rescuer in his arms. Bismarck, seeing he could uot loosen the death grip above water, dived, thus- forcing him to release his hold. Then, seiz ing the now helpless fellow with one arm and shimming with the other, he took him safely to the bank. | BLUFFED JHE J3AD MAN. [ An Episode or Cauip Life at Tampa Which Showed a Civilian'. Pluck. At Tampa, while the troops were gathering to go to the West Indies, some very rough men were assembled from all parts of the country. Among them was a desperado belongig to a volunteer regiment from the West. The man yearned to terrify the na tives with an exhibition of what he would have them regard as genuine wild Western manners. He obtained leave ot absence one evening, and with a thirty-eight-calibre regulation revolver swung at his belt, started iu ou the principal street of tho town to give his exhibition. He went into a drug store which was filled with young volunteers from Eastern States, who, having a pros peot of remaining a few weeks in camp, were buying brushes, oombs, soap, tooth-powder aud other articles which they had been unable to trans port iu their railroad journey. The ruffian proceeded to make himself a3 disagreeable as possible. "If there's anything thatl hate,"ho said, "it's a private soldier that sets out to be a dude." No one paid attention, and be then addressed himself to one of the men. "Now I suppose," he said, "that you think you're mighty fiue, with your curly hair and your necktie?" The volunteer became angry, and two or three of his fellows stepped forward. An affray was imminent, and an affray between armed men would be a serious thing. The store was in charge of a young clerk of eighteen or twenty years. From be hind the counter, he or dered the dis turber to leave the st re. The man immediately grew furio is. "Hey!" he shoute I, "Do you know, there, who yo t'ro talkin' to? Why, I'm Ponoho Jim, from New Mexico, an' I'm a bad man, aud I don't stand no—" He had made a motion toward the big revolver iu his belt when tlie young fellow stepped from behind the counter. He had on a thin summer sack-coat, with side pookets. Both his hands were in these pockets, and they seemed to be holding there some articles which looked through the cloth like the muzzles of Derringers. These were pointed straight at the desperado. "Put up your hands, "said the clerk. The man hesitated. "Put them up, I say!" the clerk re peated, taking a step nearer. Slowly the ruffian raised his hands, until they were well up in the air. "Now some of you take that pistol out of the holster," he said to the volunteers. Two of them obeyed birn, and tho pistol was laid down on tho counter. "Now you tell me your regiment and company, and tho name of your captain," snid the clerk to the desper ado. He obeyed. "That's all right," said the clerk, "Now get right ont 'of here, this in stant—keep your hands up, I say!— and I'll seud your revolver to your captain. Get out, now!" The man obeyed, and when he was out of the door, the drug clerk took his hands out of his pockets. There was nothing in them. He had been thrusting his thumbs forward iu such away as to make them look, under the cloth of the pockets, like the muz zles of revolvers. He had been play ing a game of pure "bluff" with the ruffian, but having cooluess aud cour age, while the other had simply bru tality, he had easily won. Joy or Finding IIIourII No Cownrd. George Redpath, a sergeant in the rough riders, whose home is just across the Kansas line in Oklahoma, writes as follows from Santiago: "After that first day's battle was over I was the happiest man on the soil of Cuba. I don't mind telling you that I had half a notion that I was a coward. I had taken the place of sergeant aud I knew it would bo awful if I ran away. I didn't think I would run away, but I did have a sneaking notion that I might show the white feather some way. Wheu the bullets first bogan to come whizz-z-z, wbizz-z-z, plunk, I tell you my heart went up into my throat, but I grit my teeth, gave a yell and oharged right along with the vest of tho boys. The scare was over in a minute, and I believe I can go into the next battle and joke like some of tho boys did in this one, for I know now that I have nerveenough to stay." —Kansas City Journal. Insanll.v Increasing In England. Insanity is still ou the increase in England and Wales. The returns for last year show an advance of 2G97 iu the numbev of officially-known luna< tics as oompared with 1896, the iu crease in 1896 over 1895 having been 2919. The total number of officially known luuatios at the beginning of 1893 was 101,972. While in 1859 the total of officially-known lunatics was 5V3.7G2, which meant that the number per million of the population was 1867, iu 1898 the aggregate total of officially-known lunatics had increased to 101,972, or a number per million of the population of 3218. Adulterated Butters. An English expert has ascertained that tho reputed Normandy aud Brit tany butters have been found to con tain as much as forty per cent, of mar garine. It has been ascertained, iu the time of two years, that of imports of butter in England, ton per cent, of the Dutch, nineteen per cent, of the German, five of the Norwegian, two of the Danish, aud seven of tho Russian were adulterated. The trumpet uppn which Trumpeter Major Joy,of the Seventeenth Lancers, sounded the order for the charg i of the light brigade at Balaklava, with Joy's four medals, was sold at auction i in London recently far 81000. I The bath can be made an exhilarating s pleasure by the use of Ivory Soap. It cleanses j| the pores of all impurities, leaving the skin & soft, smooth, ruddy and healthy. Ivory Soap is a made of pure, vegetable oils. The lather forms § readily and abundantly. |g IT FLOATS. 1 CopyrlfM. IMW. br Th Procter ft Oom bU Co . Ciaeiautt. wt The Czarina's Health. From St. Petersburg come poor ac counts of the health of the Empress of Russia. Very little is said about it, as the Tsar greatly objects to all ref erences to the subject; but, as a mat tor of fact, there has been cause for some anxiety about the empress for some time past. She has never been very robust, and the attack of meas les from which she suffered early in the winter has left her painfully weak. An English visitor, writing from Rus sia, says. "The Tsaritza looks so fra gile that it seems scarcely possible that she can be the mother of the two exceedingly fat babies to whom she is so passionately devoted." Danto In Chinese. At a recent lecture delivered in Nuhl hausen, Germany, a missionary named Eichler read extracts from a Chinese book of the eleventh century which present* some striking points of re semblance to Dante's "Inferno." Beauty Is Blood Deep* Clean blood means a clean skin. No 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, Hegin 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. When the snake sheds his skin, which occurs frequently as often as every four or five weeks the skin of the eye comes off with the rest. Translu cent in most parts, the skin over the snake's eye is perfectly transparent. To Care Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candv Cathartic. 10c or 25a If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. A traveler can Journey round the world in 50 days. PAINT WALLS 'CEILINGS 1 MURALO WATER COLOR PAINTS 8 FOR DECOR ATING WALLS AND CEILINGS SSSfSSKSgSf MUR ALO I paint dealer and do j our own decornting. This material in a lIAR|> FINISH to lo applied H with a brush and becomes us hard as Cement. Milled in twenty-four tints and works equally as H well with cold or hot water. B m-SENII FOR SAMPLE COLOR CARDS and If you cannot purchase this material ■ from your local dealers let us know and we will put yon iu tlie way of obtaining it. H THE WIBALO CO., NEW BltltiHTOX, S, 1., M.W YORK. I "IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUC-~ CEED," TRY SAPOLIO Lazy Liver *•1 have been troubled a great deal with a torpid liver, which produces constipa tion. I found CASGARETS to be all you claim forthein. and secured such relief the first trial, that I purchased another supply and was com pletely cured. I shall only be too glad to rec ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity Is presented." j. A SMITH. 2920 Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia. Pa. CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REGISTERED Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. S2O NO-Tfl-BAR 8 5 )1<l by all drug- ID iu Dhii gists to CIiKE Tobacco llablt. Fiension^^k.?^ Prosecutes Cairns. 3yraiula3t war, 15adjudicatingclaims, atty siuue. P. ST U. 36 '9l Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use M In time. Sold by druggists. IN Just a Suggestion. A Frenchman applied to a local offi cial for a passport to visit Klatterwlngi schen, In Switzerland. The fellow, whq was not a fellow of any geographical society, struggled In vain with th spelling of the place's name. Then, I unwilling to confess this difficulty, ha blandly added: "Wouldn't you as liel visit some other town?"— Judy. How'. Thl. ? WeofterOne Hundred Doll 1r- Reward for any ea-:e of Catarrh that cannot bj cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O. \\ o, the undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney lor the lu-t 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion m ile by their firm. West & Tuuax,Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Oh o. Waldino, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, Ohio. Halls Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Price, 76c. per bottle. Sold by all Diuggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills aro the bent. Mrs. Wlnslow*sSoothing Syrup forchildren teething, sol tens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, ulinya pain, oures wind colic. 2jc.a bottle. The carrier pigeon was in use by the State Department of the Ottoman Em pire as early as the fourteenth cen tury. Edncnte Vonr Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. iOc, 25c. If C. C- C. fail, druggists refund monej. Valuable discoveries of amber have been made in British Columbia, which, it is claimed, will be able to supply the pipemakers of the world with amber for 100 years. To Cor© A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. Mr. L. H. Pray, of North Conway, N. H., has a United States note for the sum of S3O which was issued May 10, 1775. and the printing and signatures are all legible. I 3MITCHELLA COMPOUND Of ■ Makes < 111 l.DIil RTII safe, sure and easy. 8o why suffer untold pain and torture (Indorsed by leading physicians. Thousands of testimonials). Kent prepaid on receipt of price. gI.M). Write us and we will send you FItEE our book.'* iilni\ Tid ing* lo Mother*. LADY AGENTS WANTED. Those now at work for us are making good pay. DR. j. ||. DYE MEDICAL INSTITUTE, Dei 1 BurrALi n v. F B a ! a B w "eme restorer ■ PotltlT. cur. for .11 ATertou. Difoitt, Fit,. VpU*ps y. GOOD AS COLD T:7\ "Zi Valuable Formula.-: golden opportunity: monk , valuable secrets known for offlVe, m * ■££?% * n s e I hn m. Circular, Ho ALAND officii ®ATON A CO., 27 Union Square, New York City --PATENTS-- Procured on cash, or easy iiiMaiiiirniN.VOWLEH * BUIiNK. Latent Attorneys, 937 Broadway. N. Y. The Bust BOOK T% Uotislj illustrated price $2), fr*e toanybody sonrtintf two annual subscriptions at $1 each to the Overland Monthly, KAN FRANCISCO. Sample Overland. 4c. D R O PSYS!S^ ; .IS esses. Send -or book of testimonials and I O treatment Free. Dr H H OREfN'I BOKB. Atlanta. Ga Tl7 ANTED—Case of bad health that BIP-AN-S will not benefit Send 6 ots. to Ripaus Chemical Co.. NawYork, for lo samples and KM) tsatlinouialt.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers