Catarrh Cured Blood Purified by Hood's Sarsapa rilla and Health Is Good. "I was troubled for a lonjc timo with ca tarrh and a bad feeling in my head. I be gan taking Hood's Sursapnrllla, and it did me a world of good. My sufferings from oatarrh are over and my health is good." Mrs. A. A. Libby, Pownal, Maine. Hood's SarsapariNa Is America's Oroatest Medicine. $1; six for $5. Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents. SI DO lie ward. SI 00. The readers of this paper will be pleased to 1 oar n that the re Is at Ipast one dreaded dis ease that science lias been able to cure in all itsf-tages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being 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 Ono Hundred Dollars lor any caao that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best Mrs. "VTinslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle Thunder can be heard nine miles away. To Core Constipation Forever. Tsfco Cascarcta Candy Cathartic. 10c or 23a U G. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money Blind men outnumber blind women fyy two to one. Ednrnte Your Rowels With Cnncnretf. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever tOc.Z&s. IIC. C. C fail, druggists refund money "Wo" Gave Tliom Fits. A email Canadian boy whose loyalty to the British flag has got him Into no end of scrapes with patriotic American youths of equally tender years came up to his father shortly after the bat tle of Manila was fought and, with a woebegone expression, said: * "Say, father, didn't the English • ever lick any other boats without losing a man?" The father was forced to con fess they had not. "Well," said the youngster, "I guess the Americans aren't so bad, after all, are they?" On the fourth of July when young America was celebrating the naval victory at Santiago the youthful upholder of Great Britain wag in the midst of a band of ultra-patriotic boys setting off firecrackers and cheering with the best of them. "Here, boy! What are you cheering for?" asked his father. "Cheering for? Oh, say. father, didn't we give those Spaniards fits!" —New York Commercial Advertiser. Don't I.lke American Flag. Madrid, Sept. 2G. —It is announced here that 10,000 Spaniards residing In the island of Porto Rico have refused to live in the island under the Ameri can flag and have demanded that they be returned to Spain at the expense of the government. The question of the repatriation of the discontented Spaniards has been referred to the state council. THE ILLS OF WOMEN And How Mrs. Pinkham Helps Overcome Them. Mrs. MARY BOLLINGER, 1101 Marianna St., Chicago, 111., to Mrs. Pinkham: 14 1 have been troubled for the past two years with falling of the womb, lcucorrhcea, pains over my body, sick headaches, backache, nervousness and weakness. I tried doctors and various remedies without relief. After taking two bottles of your Vegetable Com pound, the relief I obtained was truly wonderful. I have now taken several more bottles of your famous medicine, and can say that I am entirely cured." Mrs. IIENBY DOIIR, No. 800 Findley St., Cincinnati, Ohio, to Mrs. Pinkham: 44 For a long time I suffered with chronic inflammation of the womb, pain in abdomen and bearing-down feeling. Was very nervous at times, and so weak I was hardly able to do any thing. Was subject to headaches, also troubled with leucorrhoca. After doc toring for many months with different physicians, aud gcttingnorelief, I had given up all hope of being well again when I read of the great good Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Com pound was doing. I decided immedi ately to give it a trial. The result was simply past belief. After taking four bottles of Vegetable Compound and using three packages of Sanative Wash I can say I feel like a new woman, ] deem it my duty to announce the fLct to my fellow sufferers that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable remedies have entirely cured me of all my pains and Buffering. I have her alono to thank for recovery, for which I am grate ful May heaven bless her for the good work alio is doing for our sex." HEADACHE "Both my wife and tnynelfbave been using CASCARETS aud they are the best medicine we have ever had in the house. Last week my wife was frantio with headache for twodayi, she tried noinoof your CASCARETS. and they roliovcd the pain In her head almost Immediately. We both recommend Cascarets." CnAs. STBDBFORD, Pittsburg Safe & Deposit Co., Pittsburg, Fa. till €!# CATHARTIC TRADR MARK REOISTCRSD mff* Pleasant. Pnlatablo. Potent. Taste Good. Ik Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. Sterling KrmrJj Company, Chicago, Mootrool, Row York. Sif Nft.Tn.RAft 80,(1 nn<l CWantoed by all drug nil" IU DAI# gists to CV. 4.Tobacco Habit. Farm Fencing. The problem of keeping the farm properly fenced in the best and cheap est manner is one of the most impor tant that confronts the farmer. If n new fence is built all over the farm at once the cost is very considerable. Besides, when it is rotted down an other new fence would be required. My plan is to build or repair a cer tain amount of fence each year. By so doing, the expense is not burden some. Following out this plan for a series of years we return to the first part repaired, and so on. I have some of the old-fashioned rail fence, and sometimes I build a few panels of new fence at one end of a string, and then take the old rails thus removed to re pair the balauce, making a good aud cheap fence. On a piece of land I bought there was a long string of "worm fence" that was practically worthless. I planted posts nine feet apart, and got sufficient old rails that were sound enough to nail to the posts, making the fence three rails high. I then put on two "wire boards,"making the fence sufficient to turn all stock, with comparatively small expense.—Eli Kirk, in Agriculturist Epitomist. Adulterated Cream. No sooner does an article of food become widely used than a certain class of men begin to devise methods to falsify and adulterate it. The use of cream is spreading rapidly in the cities, and as a consequence methods for giving the cream a false richness are in demand. Fortunately the men who get up these methods of adulter ations are almost invariably profoundly ignorant of the possibilities of chemical analysis, and the crude com pounds which they put upon the market are easily distinguished if enough is used to make the adultera tion profitable. The latest method which has come to our notice is one for falsifying cream, giving it a richness not due to butter fat. The product is called 4 'albuminoid," aud is a mixture of boric acid aud gelatin. This compound when added to cream makes it thicker aud apparently richer, and also, owing to the boric acid, makes it keep longer. Fortunately both these compounds are easily detected by the chemist, and the dairyman who thinks to increase his profits by the use of such a mixture stands a good chauco of incurring a fine that will make a hole in his profits, aud the hole will be of sufficient size to make him think twice before running the risk a second timo. The tendency at the present time is toward pure food products, and, although such compounds as the above appear on the market with great regularity, we notice that in a short timo they disappear.—Hoard's Dairyman. Ground Bone and Oystor Shells. Do not neglect to supply sufficient raw bone, either crashed or in the form of meal. It contains lime, as lo oyster shells, and it contains ani mal matter, which ij of great value. Bone, when burnt, is of comparative ly little value over oystor shells, but when crushed or grouud raw it has a value poculiar to itself. All classes of poultry are extremely fond of it. Care should be taken to have it pure aud sweet. It is good for all classes aud ages of poultry. For young chicks it should be used in the form of meal, mixing a small quantity two or three times a week with their soft feed, say a quart to a bushel of corn meal. For young turkeys it is almost in dispensable to prevent leg!weakness. At about the time of their "shooting the red," when their health becomes established and they grow fast, the development of their frames and legs roquires a more liberal supply of bone material than can be afforded by the the nsual articles of food. It is well to mix a little bone meal with the feed of young turkeys, aud from the time they are four weeks old it may be used freely. When there is trouble" from soft shelled eggs it may be quickly rem edied by a liberal use of raw ground bone and oyster shells. Bone and shells may he fed to fowls from a narrow box nailed to the aide of the coop; we prefer this method, as it is less wasteful than throwing them on the ground. To use hone meal beneficially it is neocssay to mix it with tho soft food. To promote lay ing it is necessary to have it ground coarse.—Farm, Field and Fireside. Large and Small Farms. An observant visitor in hilly, stony New England cannot fail to bo im pressed with the thought that if nearly a3 much labor wore expended upon au acre of the easily worked virgin soil of the fertile Northwest as there is upon the acre in the first-named re gion, yields would be produced that would delight the producers aud as tonish the world. In Now Englund farms are small, and nearly all condi tions are so unfavorable, from our standpoint, that intense methods of farming are absolutely necessary if farm and farmer are to be maintained. Yet the results accomplished under the unfavorable conditions and upon the limited acres make one wish that the methods employed there could be adopted here, wbero they would pro duce so much more abundantly. The "little farm well tilled," even though it be a stony, hilly and comparatively sterile one, there proves to be the most profitable; it might almost be said the only profitable one. How much more profitable, then, would the same kind of a farm, both in size aud tillage, be in a region where natural fertility and facility of cultivation are, as found in the Northwest! This is not a plea for the conversion of large, paid for and successful, because well-tilled, farms into small ones, but it is designed to suggest that it would be far better for the large farm unpaid for and without ineaus or ability for first-class cultivation to be converted into a smaller one out of debt and that cau be well worked. It is also to sug gest that the young farmer must not think that he must have a big farm or none; that lie must either remain an employe all his life or assume a big debt, with all of its risks and bur dens. He can buy a small farm, pay for it, make himself a first-class far mer on it, aud find an independence and a prosperity there that the big farm with the encumbrance of a mort gage upon it and indifferently worked will never realize. —Farm, Stock and Home. II w to Manage I n cubit tor*. Home and Farm is in receipt of an inquiry asking how to manage au in cubator and which is llio best make. As regards the latter question an answer is impossible, there being many that are good. As regards the management, there is much to learn apd much to practice, failure being due for the most part to a neglect on the part of the operator to perform the necessary duties. Mauy people imagine an incubator is entirely automatic, and nothing more than lighting a lamp and filling the egg chamber is necessary. This is indeed a great mistake, as those who have tried running an incu bator will readily agree. There is uo automatic incubator made, all of them requiring close at tention to every detail of nature n3 furnished by the mother hen. The two requisites for hatching are heat and moisture, and these must he fur nished in exact degrees. Great vari ations of either will cause poor hatches or produce weak aud de formed chicks, which invariably die in a short time. Any properly constructed machine will hatch fertile eggs if directions are carefully followed. In the first place, eggs must be from strong, vigorous hens aud prop erly fertilized. The machine should be started at least thirty-six hours before filling the egg chamber. Should it fail to register from 98 to 102 degrees of heat, do not take any chances, but investigate the trouble, and do not risk your eggs until every thing is in working order. When the heat remains at about 100 degrees the egg chamber should b'e fitted with nice, fresh eggs not over six to ten days old, and the incubator closed but carefully watched. Every twelve hours open tho egg chamber aud re move tray for a few minutes—just long enough to give the eggs a little fresh air. A description of one day's duties will suffice for the first two weeks, each day's being identically the same. Aftor fourteen days u moisture pan should he placed in the machine, but care should be exercised that too much moisture he not given. On the eighteenth day the cliioks will begin to pip the shells, after which the incubator should not be touched. Let the chicks remain un til dry, by which time all will be -hatched, provided the heat has been properly maintained during the hatch ing period. When dry take them quickly from the machine and put them in a brood er, which has previously been heated and tested. Let them remain quietly for twenty-four or even thirty-six hours, after which time they will be gin to stir around for something to eat. Watch them, that they do not get chilled or smothered. They should remain in a temperature of at least ninety degrees for the first two days. Any good make of brooder will be so arranged that they will require but little care, at least for the first week. After twenty-four hours put before them a little moistened oatmeal and fine grit, and after another twelve hours give them some sweet milk to drink, being careful that they do not soil themselves. Treat them as near like the mother hen would as it is possible, and there is no reason why a large proportion will not thrive. An incubator, like any piece of machinery, requires some experience, and the first efforts in the running of one are likely to he rather costly. Still, if directions which accompany each machine are followed, and a goodly amount of common senso is exercised, the results obtained are far more satisfactory than those from the hen. The largest existing library is the National Library of Paris, France. It contains four miles of shelves, holding 1,100,000 books. During September in prohibition Topeka the legal liquor sales passed the 7000 limit for the first time in nearly ten years. DEPOPULATION OF FRANCE. Influx of Foreigners Provento tit* De crease Becoming Apparent. The returns of tho census for France, which was taken on March 29, 1897, have now been published nnd compared with the statistics of the previous census, which was takeu six years before, on April 12, 1891. A year ago the number of people in France was 38,225,969, nnil at the 1891 census it was 38,095,150, so that in the six years tho population of France had only increased by 133,819 persons. And even this trilling in crease is more apparent than veal, for it has taken place entirely in the large towns, and is due to the influx of for eigners, such as Belgians and Italians, who are to he found in increasing numbers among the urban populations of France. In only twenty-four depnvlments is there any increase; in sixty-three de partments there is a positive falling off, and this is more especially marked in tho rural communes. Even more than in England does the population flock from the country to tho town, and yet we are always hearing of the perfect nature of the French agrarian laws and of the advantages of small holdings. The fact is, that small holdings tend take L > down the rural population, for i ie subdivision of fields has now got to such a pitch that any family at all often means starva tion to a man and wife. For years past the French popula tion has only beon kept from showing an absolute decrease by the influx of foreign workmen into the great towns, and yet the French nllow the folly of tho colonial party to drag thorn into ridionlous enterprises abroad for the benefit of a few greedy officials nnd functionaries. A nation with a de creasing population cau never hold oolonies, and the French may rest as sured that sooner or later their col onies will go tho way of those pos sessed by the sister nation, Spain. A Discovery in a Menagorle. An amusing incident was witnessed in a certain moungerie the other day. Here and there between the cages a number of the well-known trick mirrors wore placed. An Irishman, niter a critical survey of the monkeys, had wandered away from his better half, and suddenly found himself in front of ono of these mirrors. After ono glance at his distorted reflection he rushed back to his wife, who was still watching the antics of the mon keys. "Come away, wid yer, Bridget," he exclaimed, "Oi'vo found a bigger trate than that—the ugliest baste in the show. He's in a little cage in the corner." Bridget offered no objections. Two or three of the bystanders who had heard Patsy's remark were equally anxious to obtain a peep at the "ugliest baste," and there was quite a proces sion to the "little cage in the corner." Patsy, as the original discoverer, se cured first place and dragged his wife in front of the mirror. To his aston ishment there was more in tho "cage" than he expected. "Bogorra, Bridget!" ho suddenly exclaimed, "there's a pair av 'em!" * Patsy had a lively time of it when some one explained the situation to Bridget.—Weekly Telegraph. Puzzled In Pronunciation. School children are so observant. Especially of their teachers, and more especially when they aro just starting out in school. A little Cleveland girl of six sum mers came home the other day with her mind filled with that new wonder, the schoolroom. "How do you like your teacherV" her mamma asked. "She's a very nice teacher," said the little one, "only it's suoh a pity she doesn't speak so many of her words right. I shouldn't ttink they'd let her teach 'till she learned to say them so people oould understand." "Why, what does sLe soy that's wrong?" "Well, yesterday she was going to say 'Pass from tho room quietly,' and what do you think she did say ? She said 'Pawss,' just like that. 'Pawss from tho room quietly.' I guess no body didn't understand her at first. And, then, this morning we were talk ing about trees, and she said 'brawches' —yes, sir, just like that. She's o nice teacher, but you got to get used to her before you cau under stand her language."— Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Doe's Sense of Smell* It is certainly noteworthy that ot the three senses by which men are able to detect the presence of things at a distance —seeing, hearing and smelling—the two former should lie so mUeh more highly cultivated in practice and so much more scienti fically studied than tho latter, which to many .animals is the most import ant of the three. The dog, as we all know, recognizes friends and enemies, and disfinguishos between those human beings with whom ho conies into contact, very largely by bis sense of smell. The keen scent of hounds is keener that we with our limited exercise of the faculty of smell can easily conceive; nnd few of ns would be flattered if we could realize how strongly we smell to tho nose of our four-footed companion.— London Times. Anecdote of Li Hung Chang. As showing the wonderful adapta bility to circumstances of the great Chinese statesman, it is said that when informed that the Emperor had deprived him of his yellow jacket ho merely smiled and observed: "Very well. Then I shall go to America and buy a red golf coat. Thero aro ways of making one's self conspicuous that this little almond eyed Emperor of ours wots not of,"— Harper's Bazar. A Father's Story. From the Evening Crescent, Applelon, Wis A romarkable ourt* from n disease vrhict has generally wrocked the lives of children, nnd left them In n condition to which death itself would be preferred, has attracted a great amount of attention among the resi dents of the west end of Appleton. The case is that of little Willard Creech, son of Richard I). Creech, a well known employe of onoof the largo paper mills in the Fox River Valley. The lud was attacked by spinal disease and his parents had given op all hope of his ever being well again when, as by a miracle, he,was healed and Is now In s hool us happy as any of his mates. Mr. Creech, the father of the boy, who, resides at 10G2 Second Street, Appleton, Wisconsin, told the toilowiug story; Be Goes to School. •'Our boy was absolutely helpless. His lower limbs wore paralyzed, and when we used electricity he oould not fool it below his hips. Finally we let the doctor go as ho did not seem to help our son and we nearly gave up hope. Finally my mother who lives in Canada wrote advising the use of Dr. Williams' Fink. Pills for Palo Peo ple and I bought some. "This was when our boy had been on the Stretcher for an entire ye:; rand helpless for nine months. In six WE J'CS after taking the pills we noted sign i of vitality in bis legs, nnd In four oiont .s he was able to go to school. "It Is two years since b • took tlio first of the pills and he is at school now just as happy ami well in any • t the other chil dren. It was nothing else In the world that saved the boy than Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo People." . A D. & O. Denial. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad is not going to adopt the Itaub locomo tive for service between New York and Washington as has been stated in an Item which has been going the rounds of the papers for the last month. The Motive Power department of this rail road has looked upon the rumor with considerable amusement, as within the past year and a half the Royal Blue trains have been hauled by the finest, fastest and strongest ten wheel pas senger engines In the world. These locomotives have 78 inch drivers and since they have been in service have proved so eminently satisfactory that nothing better can probably be se cured. It will be remembered that one of these magnificent new locomotives, the 1313, pulled Vice-President-Elect Uobart on March 2nd, 1896, from Phila delphia to Washington In 136 minutes, a distance of 135 miles, and made one five minute stop. They frequently run 85 miles an hour with six and eight ears, so the Baltimore and Ohio Rail road is under no necessity of changing its type of passenger motive power on the Royal Blue Bine, and experiment with a locomotive whose usefulness has yet to be demonstrated. The first theater in the United States was built in Williamsburg, Va., in the year 1752. Don't Tobacco Spit nnil Smoke Tour T.ifc Auay* To quit tobacco easily and forever, bo mag netic. lull of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Uuc, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or fI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or Now York The Duke of Wellington, six months after the Battle of Waterloo, was created a Marshal of France. No-To-Bac for Fifty Centa. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes wean nen strong, blood pure. 50c. sl. All druggists. Thompson, the "father" of English watchmakers, died in 1713, at the age of 73, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. It Is said that he is the only man buried there who began life as a blacksmith. Knocks Coughs And Colds. Dr. Arnold's Cough Killer cures Cotighssnd Colds.Prevents Consumption. All druggists.2sc Nearly a quarter of all cases of In sanity are hereditary. Uncle Allen. "At any rate," remarked Uncle Allen Sparks, It doesn't appear that any epi demic broke out among the army liorses. Let us be Just to Surgeon Huldekoper. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYBUP OF FIGS is duo 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 FIQ SYRUP Co. only, and wc 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 FIG 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 FIO SYRUP CO. with the medi cal profession, and tfce satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty o the excellence of fhs 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 got its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. Col. LOUISVILMC. KI. Nnv voitK. ir.T. Biggest Wedding In History. On the day that Alexander the Great ; was married no fewer than 20,202 per sons in one ceremony were made hus bands and wives. This seems impos- j Bible, but the event really took place, j its historical record tells us. This j monster wedding occurred upon the ; conquest by Alexander the Great of Persia, which was then ruled over by King Darius. Alexander married Sta tira, the daughter of the conquered j kjng, and decreed that 100 of his chief officers should he united to 100 ladies from the noblest Persian and Medean families. In addition to this, he stip ulated that 10,000 of his Greek soldiers should marry 10,000 Asiatic women. When everything was settled a vast pavilion was erected, the pillars of which were GO feet high. One hun dred gorgeous chambers adjoined this for the 100 noble bridegrooms, while for the remaining 10,000 an outer court was inclosed, outside of which tables were spread for the multitude. Each pair had seats, and ranged themselves In a semi-circle round the royal throne. Of course, the priests could not marry this vast number of couples, so Alex ander the Great devised a very simple ceremony. He gave his hand to Sta tira and kissed her—an example that all the bridegrooms followed. Thus ended the ceremony, and that vast number were married. Then followed | the festival, which lasted five days, the grandeur of which has never been equaled since. Fits permanently cured. Noflls or nervous ness alter 11 rat day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. ?2 trial bottle and treatise Iree. Dr.H.II.KLINE. Ltd.,o3! Arch St.Phila,Pa Piso's Cure for Consumption has saved me many a doctor's bill. S. ]•'. HAHDY, Hopkins Place, Baltimore, Md., Dee. 2,1801. In the early days of Rome the ladies of that city wore such heavy earrings that they made the ears sore, ami sometimes tore the lobes. There were doctors whose business was chiefly to heal ears thus injured. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggist* refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. The Shah has in his palace at Teher an a 12-inch globe, upon which the parts of the world are set out in jewels of various colors —England with rubies, India with diamonds, the sea with emeralds, and so on. Beauty Is ISlood 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 ami driving all im- j purities from the body. Begin to-day to | Danish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, 1 and that-sickly bilious complexion by taking j Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Lanseer began his studies of dogs at six. |! PEACE VERSUS I PAS INS We have peace, and those I i who are sorely afflicted with <, S NEURALGIA ' will have peace from pain and 1 a perfect cure by using I ST. JACOBS OIL j, HDNDCV NEW DISCOVERY; U BT ~ ■ quick relief and cures worst cases. Bnri lor book of testimonials nnd I O day*' treatment Free. Dr H H GR£EW 8 80NB. Atlanta. Ga. nuniMATIQM PISHED—One bottle— Positive KHtUIYIAIIoIYI relief in 24 hours. Postpaid, SI.OO ' 1 AI.KXANNR.it Hi MKI.V Co., 'J-tn tin •■■UWl li St.. N.Y. WANTED— Case of bad health that R PPA-S-R will not benefit Semi 6 cts. to Itipans Chemical Co.. New York for lu samuloa and luuu testimonial*. "■MWSSNNThompson's Eye Water HEALTHY MATERNITY. Two Grateful Womon Toll of the Help They Have Reoeived From Mrs. Pinkham. The climax of life force in woman is capable motherhood. The first requisite for a good mother is good health. Health of body means health of the generative organs. t i Read what Mrs. G. A. NONIVAIIAKKB, | I jj RliiiTton, Ohio, says about Lydia E. I'ink- JjL | I I I ham's Vegetable Compound, and how well rig IJ it prepared her for maternity: ■A i "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—I must say a word .f. x v A in praise of your Vegetable Compound. X used three bottles of it when I was preg t]A\* y 'll—lll nant, and labor was not nearly as long V VAT I.;_Lrrrm ns was with my other babies; and (Sf --- - - m Y balj y is so healthy to what the r-- - - others were. I think every woman ft -- \ T X . —----- shou ld use your Compound when preg- Fl!1-1Y MfF nant, it will save them so much suffer lj.3'*- -fl I I nig and misery. 1 cannot say enough Tfoj i f \ /nvf 11111 tn praise of it. If ever I need medicine lA/' / ,\! J \-1 The most successful tonic known to \/M V.'/ i I IV A- me dicine for women approaching ma \|| \\ v,l\ ternity is Lydia E. l'iulcham's Vege- V lhtft<(Wii l \\ ~ / table Compound. It is a safeguard I r 111/ \ \l / \ t° r every woman who uses it, and 11/K \V V / *1 the fullest benefit comes from its I 111 i\ m / \ use w ith Mrs. Pinkham's advice I L 111 |NyV / \ freely offered to all woman. Her 1 y*X _/ V address is Lynn, Mass. | Here is a convincing statement, <oy&fo bearing directly on this subject, 1 from Mrs. E. BISHOP, of 1848 Pacific "DEAR MRS.PINKHAM:—I am a great believer in your Compound. I was almost despairing of ever again being well, as I was a great sufferer, and had been for years. I suffered from womb trouble, and had terrible blind fits. After writing to you I tried your Com pound. The result was astonishing. I have used it and advocated it ever since. In childbirth it is a perfect boon. 1 have often said that 1 should like to have its merits thrown on the sky with a search-light, so that all women would read, and be convinced that there is a remedy for their sufferings," A K!l"!on Women have been Benefited by Mrs. Pinkham's Advice and Medicine You Will Realize that "Thev Live Well Who Live Cleanly," if You Use SAPOLIO ' QOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOO S This Couch, freight paid, $9.75. j I Q v Tli .h.. OOUUII 9 cov.. .rt Willi ih. t.-t ..[.<•(. d ( j : 0 '..1/.."'.n i'w. f X D) von want lo mtiko your house a X homo? If so, write for our general cata- ? X logueof Furniture, Crockery. Mlveiware, <■ X Sowing Machines, Clocks. Mirrors, baby ? X Carriages, Pictures, Bedding, Refrlgerar- (' ; X tori. Stoves, Upholstery Goods, Tin Ware, ,< X Lumps, etc., an 1 it will savo you iiom 40 X lo 01 por cent, ou your purchases. This X olegant book will eurpriso you and noth- X ing will ploase you raoro than the prices, ji X Wo publish an exquisite f X Lithograph catalogue show- X ingozact designs of Carjjets, ( j X Mores in hand p tinted colors, X W sow Carpets froe, furnish P X Carpet Lining free, and pre-ii <' g pay freight, on all I S think we would spend $100.000J u year on our catalogues If Carpets, i ft they wero not wortli having?,--. . ? X Why pay tho retailer's profltsjQfitn wit X when yon can buy of the raHn- wU IU ■ a X ufacturer? Address this way, Per Yard, f h TULIVS BINKS & SON, C g Dept soft BALTIMORE, RIO- ' OOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOCXKX>OOOOO2 ►"A Perfect Type of the Highest Order of * y Excellence in Manufacture." i lweiteißatei&Do:s \ Gjh Breakfast ((jCO3.!; / | Absolutely Pure, . ..Costs less Tflan ONE CENT a eng.. < • j ' Do sure that you get the Genuine Article, 11 % made at DORCHESTER, MASS. by J' \ WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. ; f ESTARLISHRD 1780. < , R T H— can be made painless, safe, sure and easy by using MITCHELL A COMPOUND. MRS. T. K. I.tk. Carb nidalc, Pu.. writes: I think U is the grandest medirino in the wrr'd f r women. 1 was sick only h very short time, did net have any doctor &ml got along line. My little girl 17 m nthi old is healthy and rouged. I sinv its praisei wherever I no. My mother als. used it and thinks if .1 •-11 ei.'Sbl nMiicinr. DK. J. 11. DYE WED. INST., iJuflulo, N. Y Farms for Sale! Send stump, get full description and pricv of 40 cheapest farms in Ash tabula Co., O. Dost state in tho union; best county in the state. ii. N. G \NC GOl r. Jeflerson, Ashtabula Co., Ohio. -PATENTS— Procured on cash, or easy lnsiulinriitM.VOWLl£B& DUltNti. Patent Attorneys, 237 Dread way. N. Y. Top Snap j FISH TACKL.E ' iVoubi" |u| ||^ Br;li SQ ' E || II WB IPOWELL 4 CLEMENT CO. Loader VL '*4* 3 \lZty lis jioinst..ciM IVNATL GIVEN AWAY —Two Acres of Land at Lancas ter, 0., to a company which will construct its plant upon the land nnd sink a well for gas. It. P. Shealey, 018 Fst, N. \V ,Washington,D.GL P. N. U. 45 '93
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers