Catarrh Cured Clood Purified by Hood's Sarsapa rllla and Health Is Good. "I was troubled for a long time with ca tarrh aud a bad feeling la my head. I be gan taking Hood's Snrsaparilla, nnd it did mo a world of good. My sufferings from catarrh are over and my health is good." Mrs. A. A. Libby, Townal, Maine. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Meclicino. SI; six for s•>. Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents. How's This? We offer Ono Hundred Dollr< Reward for any oa eof Catarrh that cannot b: cured by Hall's Catarrh Cue. F. J. CIIENKY Co., P.ops., Toledo, O. We. tho undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney 'Ot the la t 15 years, and believe h-m per fectly fonor.ble in nil business t an actions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion in de by their firm. WEST T HUAX, "Whoiei-ale Druggie s, Toledo, WALDI.VO, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, Ohio. Hall bCetarrh Curelstnken in'ernally, rct lng dir. ctly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of th * system. P.ic , 75c. pe bottle, bold by all D.uggista. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are tho best. A Bright Outlook. Lady—Where is your son today Mrs. Murphy? I hope he isn't ill. Mrs Murphy—Sure, Mike's to be married to merry, ma'am, an' he's gone to bed to day whoile 01 washes his troosaw fox him. —Ally Sloper. To Curo A Cold la Ono Day. Take Laxative Hroino Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 250. William Reed, of Fredericksburg, Va„ has secured from the Chancellors ville battlefield a novel relic of the war of 1861-65. It is an open pocketknife, over the blade of which has grown about three inches of the white oak tree, into the trunk of which the knife wns evidently stuck by a soldier and then forgotten. The three Inches of wood represents the growth of the tree since that time. Five Cents. Everybody knows that Dobbins* Flectrlo Poap Is the best in tho world, and for 33 years It has sold at the highest prico. Its price Is now 6 cents, same as common brown soap. Bars fall size and quality.Order of grocer. Adv In the code and sacred books of the Parsees no provision is made for cap ital punishment, but a culprit is to be beaten with thongs a number of blows, proportioned to his offense, and if he succumbs no one is to blame. Dr. Seth Arnold's Cough Killer has no equal for Colds.-PAUL L. MILLER. Colioes, New Vork, Nov. 17, lbU7. 25c. u bottle. The Japanese newspapers are rejoic ing over the invention by a native genius of a machine for rolling tea. The great cost of the production of tea lies in the labor. Each Individual leaf must be plucked from the plant nnd handled with the fingers several times before it can be sent to market. To Care Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or ISa If G. C. C. full to curo, druggists refund money. South Carolina boasts cotton spindles. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, curo constipation forever. iOc. 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Slintla Trees ltt Cities. Several largo property owners In Chicago have received circulars from tho Tree-Planting association, whoso headquarters are in New York city, urging them to plant trees and thus furnish means of needed shade in hot seasons to come. The appeal Issued asserts that the cooling effects of trees In cities aro recognized both by scien tists and laymen, and calls upon all owners of city property, but especially tenement-house property, to plant 6hade trees in front of their buildings. The association insists that shade from trees can bo obtained In a few years if the right sort of trees aro planted, and It offers to send free to all Inquirers from its office at 64 White street full information as to what trees are most suitable, where to get them and what it costs to have them set out. The fall is the time to plant trees, so that persons who are willing to experiment according to the Tree-Planting association's sugges tions should make their arrangements at once. ' "I DO ?JY OWN WORK-" So Says Mrs. Mary Rockiette of Linden, Now Jersey, in this Letter to Mrs. Pinkham. 14 1 was bothered with a Cow which would be quite annoying at times, and at others would almost stop. i i onsg ivcnme by my taking your medi cine, and have certainly hecn greatly benefited by itsusq "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has indeed been a friend to me. 44 1 am now able to do my own work, thanks to your wonderful medicine. I was as near death I believe as I could be, so weak that my pulse scarcely beat and my heart had almost given out. I could not have stood it one week more, lam sure. I never thought I would be so grateful to any medicine. 44 1 shall use my influence with any one suffering as I did, to have thera use Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Every woman that is puzzled about her condition should secure the sympa thetic advice of a woman who under stands. Write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass.. and tell her your ills. pAI AND GI1 * tr w Jrw www*r ww(rwl: ' Filling tlio Silos. If tlio corn is to bo cat before being filled into silo, it is unloaded on tho fodder-cutter and run through the cut ter, after which the carrier elevates it to the silo windows and delivers it in to the silo. Tho length of cutting practiced differs somewhat with dif ferent farmers, and according to vari ety of corn to bo siloed. Tho general practiced is to cut the corn in one half to one inch lengths; a few cut in two inch lengths. The corn will pack , better in the silo the finer it is cut, and cattle will eat the larger varieties cleaner if cut into inch lengths or less. On the other hand, it is pos sible that fine catting implies larger losses through fermentations in the silo; fine cut silage may, furthermore, not keep as long as silage cut longer after having been taken out of the silo. Thero is, however, not sufficient experimental evidence at hand to es tablish either of these points; the ma jority of farmers filling silos, at any rate, practice cutting corn fine for the silo. Tho carrier should deliver the corn as nearly in tho middle of tho silo as possible; by means of a chute at tached to the carrier the corn may be delivered to any part of the silo do sired, and tho labor of distributing and leveling the corn thus facilitated. If the corn is siloed "ears and all," it is necessary to keep a man or boy in the silo while it is being filled, to level the surface and tramp down tho sides and corners; if left to itself, tho heavier pieces of ears will be thrown farthest away and the light leaves and tops will all come nearest the dis charge; as a result, tho corn will not settlo evenly, and tho feeding value of different layers of silage will differ greatly. To assist in the distribution of the corn it is recommended to hang a pyramidal box in front and below tho top of tho [[carrier; this may be made about three feet squaro at the base and tapering to a point, at which a rope is attached for hanging to raf ters. Tho descending [mass of cut corn will strike the top of the box and be divided so as to distribute to all parts of the silo. Another simple de vise is to place a board vertically, or nearly so, in front of the top of the carrier, against which tho corn will strike.—E. W. Woll's Book on Silage. Preparing llnlter For tlTiirket. In cool weather, if one has custom ers near at hnud, butter made into rolls or pats is acceptable, but many people like it packed in jars. The five pound jars are very popular in small families, and in packing butter in these, make the top look as nice as possible. Use the regular butter paper to cover the upper surface, as it looks better, ex cludes the air bettor and is superior in every way to a cloth. The paper may now be bought by tho thousand sheets and in convenient sizes to fit certain sizes of jars and butter tubs. In shipping butter one must depend entirely upon thoso to whom he ships. Commission men handle largo quanti ties of butter in certain ways. Some prefer their shipments in crate 3 hold ing eight five-pound jars, while othors will not handle the crated butter at all. It is never eoonomy to ship but ter iu jars unless these are crated, as tho freight or express charges are very greatly augmented in the first case. Twenty-five pounds of butter packed tn a tub may be sent for little more than half tho expense of the same amount in jars. It is better if one ships butter regularly iu good quan tities, to buy the tubs in large num bers. In some cases tho outside aud insido of the covers aro rough aud un tidy looking, the covers not fitting as they should at all, but there aro tubs on tho market almost as smooth both outside and in as though made from pressed paper instead of wood. It is always well to lino a butter tub with parchment paper. This is not 10 difficult a matter as it it might seem at first attempt. The paper should first bo wet, and then laid upon a smooth board kopt for this purpose. A wooden roller something like a pastry rolling pin, which is about an inch and a half at one end and tapers down to one inch at the other end, is then used to roll tho paper from the board. This Motion should bo in the direction of right to lelt. A little practice will enable one to do it neatly aud deftly. When the paper is on tho pin, placo in the tub aud unroll it, un rolling it to the left. It will take but a few moments to lino a tub and then tho butter will have no chance to taste of the wood, as it will be apt to do if it is packed directly into the unliued tub. A circle of tho paper should cover tho bottom of tho tub. Neat ness iu all its branches is necessary in all dairying, but some good butter is spoiled by the manner of packing, while butter that is not actually prime often brings a fair prico if put up in a neat looking package.—American Agri culturist. Oat-or-Door Cellars. Every farmer who grows iarge quan tities of potatoes, roots or fruits and expects to store them through the winter should build ono or more out of-door cellars. By this we do not mean the pits in which farmers often store potatoes; but veritable cellars, roofed over and yet banked up so that they will be impervious to frost, and with a double door at the entrance so that at any time the vegetables can bo examined. Such cellars are often lighted with windows on their sunny side, with of courso two window frames and dnplicato glass. It is bettor to fit in these windows while the earthen protection of the cellar is built up, af terwards packing tho soil at tho side of the frames so as to leave no ingress for air. In most cases a small stove is put in so as to furnish heat if there is danger that the temperature will get below the freezing point. If one such out-of-door cellar is built near the house it will bo a great convenience for keeping milk aud for doing such work as churning, and sometimes washing in summer time. Such a cellar needs to bo floored, and ought to have more light than the out of-door cellars used for storing pota toes aud other vegetables. But as it is very unhealthful to hoe over <1 May ing potatoes or over-stored beets, tur nips aud cabbage, these should also be kept in a cellar near enough to the house to be easily roached during storms and wintry weather. By mak ing a number of these out-of-door cel lars, the dwelling may bo set up higher from tho ground and divided off into rooms, one of which should contain the heating apparatus for the wholo house. Furnace heat, if it is economized, as it may be, is far less expensive than it is to heat each room by stoves, which aro themselves set up from the floors, and throw most of what heat they furnish iuto the upper part of the room, or worse still, send it up the chimney. The warm air al ways rises, and a short distance above any large city tho air in extreme cold weather is always several degrees warmer than it is in the open country, where there are fewer chimney tops sending up the heat wasted in build ings below. While it makes easier work to dig into a slight ridge in order to save earthing up against tho out-of-door cellar, it is possible to build one on entirely level ground. But in either case there should be drainago away from the cellar, so that at no time will water remain iu tho bottom or under the floor. Theso cellars will make cool places to work in during hot weather, and may yet be kept dry enough to avoid danger from colds. One of the advantages of providing storage outside -the house for fruit and vegetables is that the cellar, nfter the building is set up on a higher foundation, can be better lighted with windows, aud be made as pleasant to live in as are the usual first floors of houses whose sills rest on the grouud, or on walls by a few inches above it. —Americau Cultivator. Turnips Make Good Mutton. The English farmers, says a writer in Country Gentleman, feed their sheep as do no other nation iu the world. It may be a special possibility of the climate, where the ever-weeping clouds keep the land moist, so that the feed is always succulent, aud which favors tho growth to perfection of the tur nips and the beets, while the grass is proverbially sweet aud always green. It is a strange thing that we on this side of the ocean—at least some of the scientific part of us—will insist that the food has nothing to do with the quality or flavor of the flesh, or other products of any animal; at least this is peremptorily alleged iu regard to butter of cows, aud thi3 is a similar product in any animal to the fat in flesh, and is derived directly from, and is flavored by the food. As the turnipy flavor and odor of the English mutton corns from the feed—aud the milk and butter are also flavored by this root—it must be ad mitted that the succulence of the Eng lish mutton chop is due to the special feeding of the sheep. But whatever may be the oause of this excellence of the English miuton, it is something tor us to study and mako a practical part of our sheep keeping, if we would secure the best results from our work. Root culture is tho very key to success oi English agriculture. The British farmer is apt to call the sheep "the rent payer;" and as the rent is a far larger matter to him than the whole interest on the value of an average American farm, this is saying much of tho wool bearer, and the sweet, tender, juicy mutton sheep. In England the root crop is tho cleaning crop for the land, and by its feeding it is the main enricher of the soil. SVe, here, on this side of the ocean, spend several times as much for commercial fertilizers as tho British farmer does. He is far more interested iu his com post heaps than wo are, and tho sheep is a special manure maker and spreader for him. Thus it is that the turnip? are eaten off tho land by sheep which leave their liberal return on the laud, evenly spread, in exehango for their food. And it is to these turnips that tho mutton owes its excellent qualities, as is so truly and emphatically insisted on by the writer above referred to. In our agriculture the root crop naturally follows the corn. This is an advantage the British farmer does not enjoy, viz., to have two cleaning crops following each other. Now if wo were to make n practice of feeding sheep, for which there is the widost kind of opening, not only for our own steadily increasing market for mutton —aud this would begreatlv stimulated if we were to eat this luscious aud of all meats the most nutritious, as well as satis factory to the appetite—but also for export, we might largely increase the profit of our farms. The South is especially Interested in this matter, for the Southern cli mate is equally fitted for tho culture of roots as is that of England, aud there is abundant land lying idle that calls in tho loudest manner for the owners to make it productive, to en rich it aud help it to serve tho good purpose for which the great Creator made it, and for which He conferred it upon mankind, viz., to subduo it and to replenish it and make it fruit ful; for there the roots grown on the land may be eaten directly from it, in the English way, with ,no expense ol harvesting tho crop. And,the sheepk golden foot, and the sweet tenderness, of its meat made of this succulent, food, will inure to the pleasure and! profit of ourselves and tho eager chasers of this product abroad.—Farm, Field and Fireside. 1 SOMEHOW AND SOMEWHERE ( \ The Palß3 and Aches ol / ( RHEUMATISM ) 1 CREEP IN. I f Right on its track | ) St. Jacobs Oil ( f CREEPS IN. 1 l It Penetrates, Searches, Drives Out. / Save the Baby From strangling with croup, by check ing it at once with Hoxsie's Croup Cure. 50 cts. A. P. Hoxsie, Buffalo, N. Y. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, of Atlanta. Gn., nre the only successful Dropsv Specialists, in the world. See their liberal offer in advcrthe mentin another column of this paper. Piso's Cure is the medicine to break up children's Coughs and Colds.—Mrs. M. Ayer's Pills. They awaken the H drowsy action of the liver; they ■ cure biliousness. B Write to our Dootop, jg We have the exclnsive services of ■ some of the most eminent physicians In B the United States. Write freely nil the E articular# In your case. You will re- Ive a prompt reply, without post. Address, DP.. J. C. AVER, Lowell, Muss, Farms for Sale! Send stamp, get full description and price of 4U cheapest farms in Ashtabula Co., (). Best state in tho union; best county in the State. H. N. BANCROFT, Jefferson, Ashtabula Co., Ohio. lirOdCIAIU JonN w.inonnis, a|Jt:rldlUln| Washington, LLC. E 3yraiu kwt war, ISudjudieating claims, utty since. THE BULL-RING AT HAVANA. No moro Rball reek in Cuba's isle The bull-ring's barbarous court, For wo shall smash tho hideous pils And crush tho hideous sport; And there shall we a diamond lay And bienchors build withal, Ami Cuba's nimblq nine will play The noble game of ball. Tho dying bull shall bleed no more To slake their odious thirst, But death their bosoms will deplore When Duffy dies at first; And grief funereal will incline And bow their doleful heads When old Havana's Baseball Nino Are buried by tho Beds. No more shall slaughter's gory hand Uneluice tho crimson flood, Save when tho righteous cranks demand A treacherous umpire's blood: Nor shall their wild resentment cry, Their fierce displeasure howl, Save when Molony muffs a fly, Or Mullins muffs a foul. The sanguinary mob no moro The plaudit's din shall raise, But Coogan's run that ties the score, The terraced cranks will praise; And Murphy's throw, and lieilly's bunt, And Dooley's triple whack. And McNamara's sliding stunt Will make the welkin crack ! No moro shall carnage rupturo yield, Nor butchery enthrall. When on the reconstructed Hold Tho umpire cries, "Play ball!" But hearts will thrill, and radiant eyes Will glow like festal lamps, When o'er the hills ha pennant flies, And Cuba's nine i re champs —John Ludlo v, in Puck. HUMOROUS. She—Are you food of cauoeing. He—lmineuse. You don't have to take oft' your clothes when you bathe. "Georgie, don't you see that Jane is taking your candy?" "I don't care. It's the kind that aLways makes her sick." The Maid—What makes you tliiuk she hasn't any children? The Matron —She was telling me how to raise mine. „ Why is a horse the most curious feeder in the world? Because ho eats best wheu he has not a bit in his mouth. "I can't understand Claudia?" "Why not?" "She always is so much more intimate with desirable people than they are with her." Barnes Tormer—The true art of acting is to make an audience forget you are an actor. Watts—You seem to do that easily enough. "The doctor," said the young moth er, "says baby ought to have one cow's milk for his daily drink. Now,really, isn't that entirely too much?" "But how can you have tho heart to deprive the poor heathen of their land?" "They would uever learn the diguity of labor if wo didn't." Nadimo Theosophia—Tell me, have you never seen a Vision? Never wel comed some strange Spirit from tho Unseen World. Mrs.Siuclair—Never. But then I entertain so little. Back Seat—Where did you get your ean ings, and when did you have your ears pierced? Front Seat (scornfully) —Talk tandem, please. They were punctured about a month ago. First Criminal—So Bill, the cracks man, is in the toils at last. Second Criminal—Yes, he escaped arrest so many times that he finally got fool hardy and rode his bicycle without a boll. "Now that you have lost your job as surgeon in tho regiment, what do you expect to do?" "Oh, I'm all right. I've opened up a little office just around the comer from a football playing college." Once upon a lime a mau rose polite ly and offered his seat iu a street car to a woman. "Oh, thank you," cried the woman at once. This fable teaches among other things that unconvention ality is infectious, so to speak. "I guess," said Rubberneck Bill, in his most rasping tones, when the waiter handed him a napkin, 4 'J guess I got maimers enough not to wipe my hands on your darn tablecloth, with out you handiu' me that thing." "I am astonished," said the scoffer, "to hear you compare our glorious country to a small boy getting his face washed." "Me?" said the oratorical patriot. "How? When?" "When you said it was impossible for tho na tion to stand still." He—There is something I have wanted to say to you for a long, long time. She (demurely) —Well—don't —don't you think this is as good a time as -as any to say it? He—That mole on the left side of your nose—l know a surgeon who can remove such things without a bit of danger. Tlioy /adjourned sine die that evening. Complexion of Spanish Women. You find in many parts of Spain blue-eyed and fair-haired women, and we have iu Mexico specimens of these hereditary daughters of tho invading Goths, who have brought down to our tim/js, iu their eyes, the memory .of blue summer seas beneath shorclands icebound in tho long winters. And tho fair hair is common, too, and somehow one uever gets over tho feel ing, iu listening to the soft Spanish coining from the lips of a blue-eyed aud light-haired woman, that she has, perhaps, learned it as a foreigner in her early youth. But 110; she is as much a Spaniard as the women whose eyes reveal the descent from tho Moor or the Carthaginian, or as she who has the strong profile of the ltomau conqueror. A fair woman is called in Spanish "una guera," pronounced "oonah gwayrah," or else "una rubia." Both terms are common. Among a race where the dark skin prevails, to bo fair is a mark of beauty,aud one often hears people speaking of some lady iu terms of praise as "la guera." To call a baby "fair" is to capture the heart of the mother. A fair complox ioued man is "uu guero," "oon gway rob." —Correspondence in Ne\y York Buu. j | m 111 fiytTi g Put a piece of Ivory Soap in the dainty | 5 basket mother love prepares for the baby. Pure, | | unscented white soap, like the Ivory, is the 8 2 best for the rose-leaf skin of the new-comer, g 2 Scents too often disguise impurities that would I s injure it. Be wise in time, before the mischief Jj 2 is done. I 2 j Cm The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soap is made, and its purity, J! 2 fit it for many special uses for which other soaps are unsafe and •) Cm unsatisfactory. 2 X •) (• Copyright, 1803, by The Procter k 0 amble Co., Cincinnati. • • • • • .•.o.mm.n m.A.m • ii< "DOW'T BORROW TROUBLE." BUY SAPOLIO 'TIS CHEAPER IN THE EftO. INTERESTING TO WOMEN. Mme. Bergllot Ibsen, daughter of the dramatist, is a musician of no mean order. She will, it is said, perform next year at concerts in Norway. Queen Victoria's Journeys are very serious and carefully arranged under takings, and each person traveling with her is allotted a detlnlto place, In correct procedure; fifteen saloon and other carriages being necessary for the transportation of the court to Scotland, and the annual cost of the queen's visits there amounting to about $25,000. Women are keenly competing with men in art and professional life in America, as is shown by recent statis tics. In the United States there are 4,000 accesses and 115,000 woman vo calists aad instrumentalists; 11,000 are professional artists, 890 Journalists and 2,800 who are engaged in literary work of one kind or another. The number of women who are dramatic authors or theatrical manngers is 600. Mrs. Gladstone's health is not all that her family could desire. There is no cause for alarm, but it Is stated that in the neighborhood of Hawarden castle it is a matter of observation that it has been found necessary to call in the family doctor more fre quently of late. Up to now the ven erable lady has borne ber sorrow with much fortitude, but at her great age It has left an indelible impression up on her. Mrs. Gladstone still takes a keen interest, however, In all the af fairs of Hawarden and devotes much time to her various works of charity. Why isn't the bride well dressed who is well groomed? WHY? Why is it that a free lunch is never free? Why isn't asking u man's name a Question of identity? Why isn't the bride well dressed who is well groomed? Why shouldn't a man be excused for being bigoted against bigotry? Why isn't the bump of caution placed on tho front of a man's head? Why does the average woman pre fer being idealized to being under stood? Why does the man who pats you on the back always turn his own back to be patted? Adnptlblllfy. Mrs. A.—"Didn't you think Mrs. Whipley a very refined woman?" Mrs. D—"She was vulgar to me." "Well, she is adaptable." Belfast's shipbuilding firm has or dered steel ship plates of an Illinois steel company. Beauty la Mood Deep, Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Caacarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keen it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- E unties firom the bodv. 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 gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Mexico has more than 7,000 miles of railroads. Thirty-eight of the railways are subsidized by the Government. Doa't Tobacco Spit and Smofco Y'onr TJfa Array, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nervo and vigor, take No-To- Bao, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or fl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet aud sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York Two-thirds of. Japan's bicycles are American wheels. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, eultrns thegums, reduces influinnm tion. alluys pain, cures wind colic. Jioc a bottlo Another Long-Felt Want. "It's no uee tallcin'," said Mr. Corn i tossel as he knocked the ashes out of i his pipe. "This gover'ment ain't run i right." "What's the matter?" asked the neighbor. "There ain't enough peo ple to do the work. They're tryin' to put too much on to the war depart ; ment. When it yas decided to have a , war the war department applied fur men an' got 'em; it went ahead an' licked the Spaniards an' wound the business up in a few months. War was easy. But if they want to open up an office that won't have anything but busy days an' all kinds of trouble, let 'em make arrangements fur a peaci deDartment." —Cleveland Leader. have bcou troubled a great deal with a torpid liver, whirl* produces constipa tion. I found CASCAItETS to bo all you cluim for them, and secured such relief the first trial, that I purchased another supply and wa3 com pletely cured. I shall only be too glad to rec ommend Cascarcls whenever the opportunity is presented." J. A. SMITH. ifl-JQ Susfluohanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. CANDY S CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Teste Good. Do Good, Never broken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c,600 ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling K f n-ljr Compnß), Chicago, Montreal. New York. 320 NfI.Tn.RAT nnrt gnnrontoed by all drug nu- I u-cnu gists to Tobacco LLabiU Sena Postal for Prem'mn List to the Dr. firth Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonsocket, It. I. --CHILDBIRTH can be made painless, safe, sure and easy by rising MITCNELLA COMPOUND. MRS. T. K. LEE. Carbondale, Ta., writes:-I think 1| is the grandest medicine in the world f r women. I was sick only a very short time, did not have any doctor and Rot along flue. My little girl 17 months old is health v and nigged. 1 wing it* praises wherever I go. My mother also used it and thinks it a splendid medicine. Address: UK, J. U. DYE MED. INST.. Duflulo, N. \ % HEBE IB mm -flfr STOPPED FREE' MP nj Kl \vOa Permanently Cured Bf gl ri TA Insanity Prevented by r- 1 IM u9 Dfl - k.IE'B GREAT ■ fci W SERVE RESTORER Poeltlve cure fOr ell Ken? tu DUeatu, Fit*, Fpltepif, ■ Jher first dy'oee. Treatise and $8 trial bottla H free t" Fit patiauta, they payta* e*prea chargeeonlf PH liuiltuto of Uotlkiue. U3l Arch St.. mall cum. When BoW^nd'i^oniy^we^wllf^il^lng; ,• ~, t. "i it Ir.-Tit i'l'llll;ii>' .i: .i..< 11.1 in-' i,l J;I:IU ul.t-ii rack. HAIIKIKI.t> (l M CO., ivpt. i!l. M.'iltli die, l a. Top Snap |>| HRSg^FISH TACKLE 'B?dV,ii o || i agV'SSS !T| P O |3Q V NKW DISCOVERY; i. \J! IV VJ r O ■ quiokreliof.nd cur.-, went cnaoa. S ml for hook of teathnoniala anil 10 <1 uy tuttmrut Prop. Br H H GREEK 'B BOSS. Atl.nt., 0.. RHEUMATISM ■ 'AhEXaKUEn REMEDY Co., 216 Ureeliwich St., N.Y, WASTED-Caso of bail health that R I PA N a will uot benutlt Senil t ota. to RlpansChemical Co.. oowiork for 10 samutoa and luou testliiiouiajr , r. N. U. 48 '9l Beet Cough byrup. Tastes Good. Uae (J In time. Sold by druggists IS EEKEsiaHazazMg i