Catarrh In the Head Is an Inflammation of the mucous mem brane lining the nasal passages. It is caused by a cold or succession of colds, combined with Impure blood. Catarrh is cured by Hood's Sarsaparllla, which eradicates from the blood all scrofulous taints, rebuilds the delicate tissues and builds up the system. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. SI; six for $5 Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents. The height of buildings in London is prohibited from being greater than the width of the abutting street. It's Your Own Fault. llow long have you had lame back? It's your own fault. St. Jacobs Oil would have cured it promptly, and will cure it now.no matter how long it has remained neglected. The vicar of Gorleston, England, in n recent sermon, stated that he be lieved in a future life for animals, and that he would far rather meet them in heaven than he would some human be ings of his acquaintance. This doc trine proved too strong for his congre gation, most of whom rose and left the church. Dr. Seth Arnold's Cough Killer is the best medicine in use for La Grippe.-A. 11. Mo- CAULEY, Uattle Crock, Mich., fc?ept. 2a, 1808. The attempt to transport fresh beef from San Francisco to Manila has not been very successful. The awful heat on shipboard affected the cold storage, ri d decaying meat fed the sharks on each expedition along most of the way. Something like 200,000 pounds of fresh beef was thrown overboard on four of the expeditions, it is said. Beanty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Ho beauty without it. Cascarets, Cdfidy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all iin put'ties from the body. Begin to-day to Danish pimples, boils, blotehes, blackheads, aii i that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 500- Under William 111. a tax was laid on burials. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c 0r250 If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money Bullets of stone were used as late as 1514. STATE OP OHIO, CITY OP TOLEDO, [ LUCAS COUNTY. F FH * FRZ' IT T J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the tirm of F. J. CHENEY SC Co., d>ing business in the City of Toledo, Count and Ftit3 aforesaid, and that said firm w.ll pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS f..r each and every caso of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J.CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my ( —- * I presence, this oth day of December, SEAL V A. D. LBSO. A. W. GLEABON, I -re ) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and nets directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Drucrgist 3 .7so. Hall's Family Pills are tho best. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness alter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H. KLINE, Ltd..tt!l Arch SUPhila.l'a Didu't Keep It. "Well, Mr. Slickers," said the doctor to a patient he had not scon the day before, "how are you getting along?" "Nearly starving to death." "Why, didn't you have tho oysters?" "No, I couldn't get them the way you said, and I was afraid It would be dangerous to eat them any other way." "Why, that's odd. Couldn't you get stewed oysters easy? I told you you could eat stewed oysters with Impunity." "That's Just It. I could get the stewed oysters easy enough, but I sent to all the restaurants In the neighborhood for the Impunity, and tho blamed fool 3 said they never had such a thing on the bill of fare."—New York World. ISlrrh Canoe, for the Orient. Bangor manufacturers are sending canoes of birch and canvas to Pales tine, Japan, India and China. One recently sent to India was to the order of a British officer, and the cost of transportation was more than $75. A canoe just ordered is intended for a trip up the river Jordan. AN OPERATION AVOIDED. Mrs. Rosa Gaum Writes to Mrs. Pinkham About it. She Says: DEAR MRS. PXNKHAIK:— -I take pleas ure in writing you a few lines to in form 3 T OU of the good your Vegetable Compound has done me. I cannot thank you enough for what your medi cine has done for me; it has. indeed, helped me wonderfully. m# For years I was trou bled with an ovarian tumor, \ each year grow ing worse, un- I yi \y 9 til at last I o j| KL was compelled 7 jLr to consult with tU be done for me but to go under an operation. In speaking with a friend of mine about it, she recommended Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vegetable Compound, say ing she knew it would cure me. I then sent for your medicine, and after tak ing three bottles of it, the tumor dis appeared. Ohl you do not know how much good your medicine has done me. I shall recommend it to all suffer ing women. —Mrs. ROSA GAUM, 720 Wall St., Los Angeles, Cal. The great and unvarying success of Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vegetable Com pound in relieving every derangement of the female organs, demonstrates it to be the modern safeguard of wo man's happiness and bodily strength. More than a million women have been benefited by it. Every woman who needs advice about her health is Invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. 1 TALES OF FLECK 1 AND ADVENTURE. § lli>iOiOiei©te->3i|©i©isief©l©(©(oK>:Ql€ViO!e^G.'3iOKsk^ ISO 3 -Preacher anil Fantlier. A venerable presiding elder of the Methodist Church, Be v. Frank A. Hardin, now of the Rockford (111.) district, began his ministerial career at the age of sixteen as a "junior preacher" in Indiana, when the region that he served was for tho most part an unbroken wilderness. He spent most of his time on horseback, and us?d his saddle-bags at night for pil lows. j.,. ;. r •. On one occasion, the story of which was told by Bev. Mr. Hardin at a re cent conference, the boy-preacher found the settlement of Millersville in a high state of excitement over the ravages of a great panther amongst tho live stock. At a wayside cabin Hardin was warned not to go on, as the panther had been seen on the load, and it was necessary for him to travel at night in order to meet an appointment for the next day. But the servant of the church had no notion of being turned from his duty by tho presence of a wild beast in the woods. Moreover, he had no fear, for the moon was shining aud his "elaybank" mare was a spirited animal. The trail led through a dense piece of woods known as the Sugar Flats. Hardin had not gone far into them before ths forest of maples, then in full leaf, quite shut out the moon. '•'A good place this to meet tho panther," tho boy-preacher said to himself. Almost at that moment his mare seemed to drop to the earth, or to crouch close to the ground. He knew well enough that she had seen some thing that he had not, and that that something was highly dangerous to them both. He knew that her next move would be a jump, and on tho instant he pre pared himself for a possible parting of the saddle-girth by gripping the mare's mane. He had no sooner done this, and leaned as far forward as the horn of the saddle would permit, than the mare made a leap, and went bounding along the dark trail like lightning. At the very instant in which she leaped Hardin heard the most terrible scream that ever smote his ears. It eeeined to eome from directly over his head; and in less than one second after the screech and the leap of his mare,, Hardin heard a heavy body strike the ground in the very spot where tho mare had been standing while she crouched preparatory to the spring. She had plunged forward just in time to avoid the claws of the panther, which had dropped from the tree at horse and rider. Now the mare was flying through tho woods to escape possiblo pursuit. Probably Hardin could not have held her if ho had triod—and ho did not try. He had all he could do to cling to her back on the uneven ground, with tree-branches brushing hi in. Not until she had reached 11 largo open space on the crest of a ridge did the mare slacken her pace. Thou she stopped and drew a deep, shivering sigh, as if to say, "That was a narrow escape for both of us!" The mare wont on now at an easy trot, as if she had put the whole epi sode behind her. The young preacher could not say as much, for the terrible scream of the animal haunted hint for weeks. His destination was the cabin of a doctor. When he reached there and told his story, the doctor said: "Nonsense! You must have heard on owl." Hardin knew better, but ho made no reply. Ho was not surprised when, a little later, the doctor took liiina3ide and said: "That was undoubtedly the big panther that you encountered, butyon know, I o'teu have to ride at night through the sugar fiats, and my wife would be in constant terror if she knew there was a panther thore." In a few days two young boys went into tht- same woods in quest of wild turkeys. Reoonnoitering a brusli keap, they saw under it a huge ani mal, watching them exactly as a cat watches a mouse when preparing to spring. One of the boys took aim at the creature's head, losing 110 time in do ing it, and fired. The panther gave one kick and died in his lair. The lads pulled him out and ran for home, aud brought their father and neigh bors. The panther turnei out to be one of tho largest ever killed in In diana. Attacked by a Venezuelan Tl|*er. "To try to hunt the pautker-tigcr of Venezuela," writes a correspondent of the New York Sun, "as tho lowland jagnar is knuted with tiger lioanus, is next to useless. In tho rough, rocky country in which he mnkos his home he will travel away at a speed which leaves tho hunters kopelossly behind, and it is rarely that tho dogs can eome up with them. If they do, it means some dogs killed, with the panther usually gone beforo tho hunters can arrivo 011 the scene. Some times the ranchmen trap cr poison the panther tiger to stop his ravages among their slock, u thing, despite his cun ning, not so difficult to do, owing to his ravenousuess. "An Englishman named Tm-übull, who had a ranch east of Meriila, being bothered by a panther-tiger which killed his stock, thought that he would hunt him after tho method often em ployed in India with tigers and leop ards. Taking with him two of his herders and a goat, lie went at night fall to a woodland whioh the creatute was accustomed to visit. There he lied the goat to a stake and took his position behind a blind, fifty yards away, to wait for the tiger to come for the goat. The ranchmen he scut a littlo ilistanco back with instructions to await his summons. "Surely enough, the tiger eamo, but after reconnoitring the ground unseen, as was shown by his tracks next day, instead of tackling the goat, he made a circuit and pouuced upon one of the hunters lying on the ground behind his blind. A heavy overcoat that he wore, the season being winter, when tho nights are cold in the mountains,saved the hunter for the moment from tho tiger's teeth and claws, and his shouts brought the ranchmen to the rescue, the/ attacked the tiger pluckily with their machetes. The beast was loath to give up hts pre/. Ho drove the ranchmen back twice, returning to the Englishman each time and standing guard abovo him, with his for'epaws 6u his body. At last one of the ranch men threw a lasso over tho tiger's neck aud jerked it tight. Tho animal charged him at once, but the men got a turn of tho rope round a small tree, and both pulling hard together, drew the tiger's head clo3e to the trunk. Theu, as the tiger snapped at the rope with his teeth, one of the ranchmen severed his spine with his machete. The Englishman was badly shaken up by tho unexpected outcome of his hunting scheme, but was not much in jured otherwise. Ho finished the bea3t, whioh now, of course, was helpless, with a shot in the head, aud he always claimed tho glory of killing him. Hut it was never heard that ho tried East ludiaa hunting method* ngaiu with Venezuelan pathor-tigers." A Lrave Deed. Few readers are aware that our warships carry boiler makers, who are often called upon to perform peril ous repairs, and, in cases of emergency, these men go inside of the boiler or furnace, which but a few minutes be fore had been filled with boiling water or red hot coal. There is no task too dangerous for these meu to do. One of them undoubtedly saved, the Cas tino from destruction in the harbor of San Juan. Tho Castine went into action under full speed. The furnaces were heated to the highest degree, forced draught being used. Without warniug, a fierce hissing noise was heard inside one of the furnaoos. A socket bolt in a back connection at tho farthest interior extremity of the fur nace had become loose, springing a leak. The steam was pouring in upon the lire, threatening iu a few minutes to put it out and stop tho progress of the vessel, if it did not cause a terrific explosion. All in the boiler room know that, unless this hole was stopped, disaster wa3 at hand. One of tho boiler makers, named Huntley, ordered the forced draught turned off and the fires banked. Taking a plank, ho threw it into the furnace on tkn top of the wet, blaok cool with which the fire had been banked and then climbed far back to the place where the steam was rushing from the loosened socket. For three minutes he remained inside the furnace. His friends drew him out of the door, tho forced draught was turned on.audiu a few minutes the ship was proceeding on her way as though nothing had happened. Iu view of such deeds as this, there is littlo wonder that the engineering corps in our navy is re ceiving the highest praise on every side.—Scientific American. Fxcltitig llyeiui Hunt. A thrilling hyena hunt is reported from Verviers, Belgium. Toward miduight two hyenas, recently bought from tho Zoological Gardens, at Brus sels, managed to esoape from the traveling menagerie of M. Camillas, which had been exhibited during tha week al Verviers. When the news Bpread through tha town thero was intense excitement and alarm. Camillas, aided by his negro manager, Edward Wilson,at once went in pursuit of the beasts, and a few of the citizens volunteered to accompany thein. Ons of the nuimals was found crouching near a large monument iu the publio square. Wilson at once seized tho animal by tho throat. Tho negro is very powerful, au.l his grasp was like a vice. The rest of ths party holpj I hi u put the auimal iu a cage. Then they started in pursuit of its mato. In three hours the second hy ona was loca'el iu the Bois do Dar denelles ou the outskirts of the city, one of the dogs with the party having discovered the beast. Hero again the negro Wilson astouuded tho onlookers by his courage and his strength. He choke 1 the hyena into insensibility, and the burgers of Verviers wore once more willing to go to their slumbers. A Ilero at ICI Caney- Captain A. H. Lee, B. A., British Military Attache, with Shatter's army iu Cuba, writes as follows iu Scrib ner's Magazine: CIO3O iu front of me a slight a i l boyish lieutenant com pelled my attention by his persistent and reckless gallautry. Whenever a man was hit he would das'i to his as sistance regardless of tho fire that this exposure invariably drew. Suddenly he sprang to his feat, gazing intently into tho Village, but what ho saw we never knew, for he was instantly shot through tho heart and fell over back ward, clutching at the air. I followed Vile meu who carried him to the road and asked them his name. "Second Lieutenant Wausboro, sir, of the Seventh Infantry, and you will uever seo his better. He fought like a littlo tiger." A few convulsive gasps aud tho poor boy was dead, ami as we laid him iu a shady spot by the side of the road, tho sergeant drew a handker chief over his face aud said: "Good by, Lieuleuaut, you wore a brave lit tlo officer, and you died liko a true soldier." Who would wish a better end? In the towns of Chile most shops are open till miduight, and during the hot afternoons, when everybody takes a siesta, they are locked up. A MuRMUR FROM MUDVILLE. There's boon the dingdest earthquato la what's called our social status; All the gals wo called "our ownest" now they sca'cely will look at us! Wo have plenty faith in beauty, but wo have no place to pia it, For the gals make no concealment of the fact that wo ain't in it Bince them voluatoers came home From Santlagol TLrough the spring and through the sum merdays, weseurcely need to mention, Wet >ok these gals to picnics, and we showed 'em much attention, And thoy cheerfully attended ev'ry danco held In their honor. But tberg's something seems to whisper to us each, "Oh! you're a goner!" Since them volunteers came home From Santiago! Of course we don't belittle all tho yarn? them lads are tollin', llow they stormed the hills of Cuba with the [Spaniards round them vellin'; But what hurts us is to notice Sal and Jane and Sue and others And a huggin' them, doggone itl just tho same as they were brothers Since them volunteers came home From Santiago! Course, our motives they f" honest, and you mustn't misconstrue Let them lighters have tho glory, let them have all that is due 'em But it does seem kind of meenisb, and it makes our voices husky When we think the gals that loved us hard should throw us down McClUsky, Since them volunteers came homo From Suntiago! —Baltimore American. HUMOR OF THE DAY. N. Peck—"My wile hasn't spoken a cross word to me for two weeks." Betserliaws—"When is she coming back?" "How well you look, Dibbs! Wkt.. did you get back?" "Get back? It was my wife vh > went away."—Chi cago Record. Professor—"What happens to gold when it is exposed to the air?" Stu dent (after long reflection) —"It's stolen."—Tit-Bits. She—"You never see my husband laugh at his own jokes." He—"No; but you can't blame him for that."— Yonkers Statesman. "Ma, is there any pie left it the pantry?" "There is one piece, but you can't have it." "Ma, I've had it." —Cleveland Plain Dealer, Bowles—"Did you climb the Alps while you were abroad?" Cupps— "No. Just rau up a bill, that was all."—lndianapolis Sentinel. "Do you have to treat your maid as if she were a member of the family?" "Mercy, no! We have to be very kind and polite to her."—Tid-Bits. "To snuff a candle out accidentally is a sign of marriage." "Yes, and to turn down a lamp intentionally is a sigu of courtship."—Chicago Record. It's the maid with ton diplomas And the quite superior carriage Who's not smart enough to capture One certifleate of marriage. —Life. "Don't you think a nice tramp gives one a good appetite?" "Well, I can't say that I think tramps are nice; but I never saw oue without the appe tite." R. E. Morse—"Oh, you got a jewel when you married me!" Mrs. R. E. Morse—"Did I? Well, I'm sure I never got one afterwards!"— Jewelers' Weekly. Barnes Tormer—"l moved the audi ence to tear 3 in my death scene." Knight Stands—"Yes, they knew you weren't really dead."—Philadelphia Inquirer. Tho man who persistently takes 110 thought for to-morrow will awake some morning and find it is yesterday, and ho won't be able to get over it.—West Union Gazette. "The fight was all over in a min ute," Raid the witness. "W'y, it was all done as quick as a ole married man kissin' his wife good-bye."—lndian apolis Journal. Old Lady—"Where will the next car take me, sir?" Conductor—"lt is likely to take you most anywhere if you staud there in the middle of the track."—Boston Courier. Proprietor (to editor) —"Well, the first number of our new paper looks well, but here is one thing I don't like." "What?" "Why, this com munication signed 'Au Old Sub scriber.' " —Tit-Bits. Mrs. Vauderbeek—"This dress cost me many sleepless nights." Mrs. Dyer—"How was that?" Mrs. Vau derbeek—"l had 1o wait until Henry was asleep before I could go through his pockets."—Town Topics. Bilkins—"Who was it wrote 'Ac lions speak louder thau words?'" Harper—"l don't know, but I'll bet the thought occurred to him while he was trying to sneak upstairs at 3 o'clock iu the morning."—Chicago Daily News. Tlie Coming llutt lesliip. Tho achievement of the Oregon dur ing the recent war has demonstrated the fact that upon our battleships and cruisers we must rely for our'offensive and defensive conduct on the high seas. The Oregon and Brooklyn havt proven themselves ideal defenders. The little converted yacht the Glou cester made short work of the Furoi and Pluton, which ranked amoug the very best of the destroyers. There was a great hue and cry about torpedo boats, destroyers and rams when the war began and everybody was on the qui vivo to know just exactly what was likely to happen when this flotilla got in line of battle. But for some reason or other they cam. to grief quite early in the action, and tho smaller craft steamed about among thorn with as little fear for them as they had respect for tho power that owned them. That thoy came to grief and struok a heavy blow at tho future of such craft will bo the verdict of J*story. I Where vijj, s pen is no exposure to wind, sun, or too hot or cold air. $ jc Blankets that have been improperly washed are hard J £ and coarse to the touch, when washed properly with £ J Ivory Soap they feel soft, warm and fleecy. f 9. k IVORY SOAP IS PER CENT. PURE. £ I ft Copyrijht, IS9O. by Th ProcUr * Gttnllt Co., ClDciacttL Night-blindness is a curious affection ' of the eye in which the patient sees very well (luring the clay, but becomes j blind as night approaches. It is mostly met with in warm climates, and usu ally gives way to mild climates. The Heat Time. No autumn or winter Is so good but may i be bad for rheumatism. The worst time 1 for it is the best time to buy and use St. j Jacobs Oil to cure it, because it cures promptly. The wood sawyers of Atlanta, Ga., 200 in number, have formed a trust ' and have raised the price of sawing stove wood from 75 cents to $1 per day. Every member of the organization is a blind man or a cripple. Educate Your Uowels With Cuscaretit. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10c, 26c. IX C. C. C fail, druggists relund money The American soft felt hat is nil the [ rage in the leading Australian col- I onles. SSOO in CASH PRIZES EVERY WORKER REWARDED! THE LEDGER MONTHLY THE LEDGER MONTHLY is the marvel of the ago for beauty and low price. With its Artistic Lithographic Colored Covers, Superb Pictorial Illustrations, Serial and Short Stories by Leading Writers of the World, und Special Departments of Dec orative Art, Embroidery, Home Employment for Women, and, in fact, every Depart ment of home improvement which adds to the economy and charm of homo life, bo it indoors or outdoors, tho LEDGER MONTHLY is beyond quo3tion, and, according to CRITICISMS OF THE PRESS OF THE WHOLE UNITED STATES, the most wonderful production for Its price. Simply to see n cony of the LEDGER MONTHLY is to lie firmly convinced that no such costly periodical has ever been olTorcd to Lhtf public for so little money. Your sample copy will prove this to you. Send 50 cents 'or a year's subscription, or a 2-cent stamp for a sample copy. In addition to our SSOO Cash Prizes, divided among thirty-one cash prize winners, valuable premiums, or commissions in cash, are given to parties sending Yearly subscriptions. Send for Sample Copies and Outfit for Club-raisers and Agents. Address ROBERT BONNER'S SONS, No. 104 Ledger Building, N. V. City. ISfrmiFolfies 8 CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS | FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGSSM-V^&^Calclmo MB paint ile.lar anil do yoiir own kalnomininff. This material la mad un i=!eiitlfln principle, by H machinery and milled in twenty-four tlutH and is superior to any concoction of Glue and Whit gi Lag that can possibly be made by band. To be mixed with Cold Water. ■ - SEND FOR SAMPLE COI Oil CARDS and if you cannot purchase thia material ■ from your local dealer# let u-j know and we will put you In the wey of obtaining it. |_THgJLTtALO CO., MEW BRIOHTON, S. 1., MEW YORK. ' THE CLEANER 'TIS, THE COSIER 'TIS.' WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT SAPOLIO Sour Stomach "After I was Induced to try CASTA- R ETi, I will never bo witbout them tn tbo bouse. My liver was In a very bad sbapo. and my head ached and I bad stomach trouble. Now. since tak- In* Cascarets. I feel One. My wife has also used \honi with beneficial results for sour stomach." JOB- KayiiLiNQ. uei Congress 8t„ Bt. Louis, Mo. CATHARTIC TRAD! MARK REOlftTlftrO „Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do 9ood, Never Bicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c. 25c. 500. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... [t.rlteg n.w.rty onpany, ept. CI M oitilvllle. ftp.' F. N. U. 46 '93 Farms for Seilo! , Send stamp, prot f till description nnd price 0? 40 cheapest farms In Ashtabula Co., >. ■Hest stnto. in the union; best county in the .state. 11. N. MAN CROFT, Jefferson, Aslitubuln Co., Ohio. The Age. Tommy—Paw, is an age any definite period of time? Mr. Figg—lf It be a woman's age, it is mighty uncertain —Ex. To Cure A Cold In One Day. • Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All \ Druggists refund money if it tail** to cure. 25c. i The Broad street station in Philadel phia has an arch of iron and glass with a span of 301 feet. Building still goes on merrily in Ber j lin, although there are 20,000 vacant | houses. Don't Tobacco Spit aud SmoLe Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. lull of life, nervo und vigor, take No-To- Due, 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 New York j It costs about SI,OOO to build an elec tric cab of the kind now in use in | Paris. SASY CHILDBIRTH MITCHELLA COMPOUND '"®MKB. L. W. MOURE, Parkorsburß, I'a., writes:— I cannot thank you enough for the goodlt did me. Was sick but very short time; IIIU CI CII but little; had a tine, fnt, healthy girl-bahv. She never was slclt n day. I had a most speedy recovery. 1 recommend tt to alt expectant mothers. Full particulars free; write. OK. J. 11. DYK MED. INSTITUTE. BUFFALO, N Y. Top Snap |"|l II in FISH TACKLE -PATENTS" Procured on cash, or easy 1 11M a I ni cuts. VOW LKN A LUUNa. Patent Attorneys. 237 Broadway. N. Y. IIENSIONSKTO F SuccessfuM Prosecutea Claims. 3yrainlut war, 15 aiyudlcallug claims, utty eiuuo. D RO PSYSSR^; ciihes. Send or book of testimonials and I O ditva' _ I,l ' 111 1 ' CC. Dr 11 H GREEN'S SONS. Atlanta. Ga. RHEUM ATISMSCrAM^M'S ALEXANDER REMEDY CO., 216 Urorawieii St., N.Y. IV A ' -Cam n f bft.l lifnltb Hint n iT-A S'-a WIU II." h.u.,11t 5..1..1 t„ Vo.. NowVork lor lusmnulesand luuo testimonials.