Make Bt a Point To Cot the Boot Every Tlme,When You Buy Medicine. Health Is too vnlunblo to bo triflod with. Do not experiment. Got Ilood's Sursapa rilla and you will havo tho best medicine money can buy tho medielae that cures when all others fall. You have every reason to expect it will do for you what it has done for others. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Price $L Hood's Pills aro tho favorite cathartic. Deafness Cannot Be Cared by local application.*, as they cannot reach th diseased portion of tho ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. D afnesnis caused by an n flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets In fl imed you have A rumbling sound or Imper fect hearing. and when it is entirely close*] Deafness l* tho result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroy'd for. ver. Nine cases out of ten arc caused by catarrh, which Is nothing butan in flamed oudition of the mucous surfaces. We will givo One Bunded Dollars for any case of Dearnest (cnusod by catarrh) that cau not bo cured by Hall's Catarrh * ure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Chunky & Co., Toledo. O. Sold by Druggists, Tfic. Hall's Family Pills are the besL Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous m*s after first day's use of I)r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H. KLINE, Ltd.,981 Arch StPhila,Pa Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle After six years' suffering I was cured bv Pl so'S Cure.—MAitv THOMSON, 89# Ohio Ave., Alleghany, Pa., March 19, 18111. A London department store has a real estate department. Doa't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away* To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nervo and vigor, take No-To- Bae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 500 or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York Harrison M. Seal, of Whltcomb, Ind., probably holds the voting record of that State. He voted for Jackson in 1828 and for each Democratic Presi dential candidate since then. Apt to Affect the Nerves. Cold weather is just as apt to affect the nerves us any other part of the body, and neuralgia sets in. St. Jacobs OJJ is just as certain to cure It as it cures all tho gen eral pains and aches of tho body. The Rev. Dr. Withrow, the vener able pastor of the Hark Street Church, Boston, which is commonly known as "Brimstone Corner." lives up to the old traditions of the church. "I do not see," he says, "how a man can be a Christian who rejects the doctrine of eternal punishment." Knocks Coughs and Colds. Dr. Arnold's Cough Killer cures Coughs and Colus.Prevents Consumption. All druggists.'-'Oc The last sister of the eminent I painter Joseph van Lerlns, died a few ' weeks ago at Antwerp, aged 87. She | left to the city all the paintings and sketches of her brother remaining in her possession, besides the sum of $30,- 000, the interest of which is to be de voted to two annual prizes. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25a If G. C. C. fall to euro, druggists refund money. A Use for Liquefied Air. It is reported that a new use has been found for liquefied air, the possi bilities of which have been matters of discussion among scientific men for some time. According to the Mining Reporter, a discovery was made recent ly by which it Is now practical to use liquefied air In underground work, such as mining, driving tunnels aud sinking shafts. It Is said that under proper conditions the liberation of air from the liquid can be effective in generat ing power with which to run drills un der ground, pumps, hoists, etc., while cool air can also be supplied in the deepest mines. The liquid air can al so be used in freezing soft ground, making tunnel cutting less hazardous and tedious. If there Is any reliabil ity In this reported discovery, and its success can be practically demonstrat ed, It will make a new departure in tho lines of work named, and once again make the genius of science the soul of industrial progress. THE DUTY OF MOTHERS. Daughters Should be Carefully Guided In Early Womanhood. What suffering frequently results from a mother's ignorance; or more frequently from a mother's neglect to properly instruct her daughter 1 Tradition says "woman must suffer," and young women aro so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young woman suffers severely she needs treatment and her mother should see that she gets it. Many mothers hesitate to take their daughters to a physician for examina tion; but no mother need hesitate to write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. Pinkham and sccuro the most efficient advice without charge. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass. The following letterfrom Miss Mauie F. JOHNSON, Centralis, Pa., shows what neglect will do, and tells how Mrs. Pinlckam helped her: "My health became so poor that I had to leave school. I was tired all tho time, and had dreadful pains in my side and back. I was also troubled with irregularity of menses. I was very weak, and lost so much flesh that my friends became alarmed. My mother, who is a firm believer in your remedies from experience, thought per haps they might benefit me, and wrote you for advice. I followed the advice you gave, and used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills as you directed, and am now as well as 1 ever was. I have gained flesh and have a good color. I am completely cured oi irregularity." I NEWS AND NOTES! | FOR WOMEN. I *N"3i©teKsKNOi6lolGKNOi©teieiQ(-3^>ieKsiO{Ol3K Newest Nlsrht Robe. The very newest French night robe is of albatross, has angel sleeves and no collar. Its only trimming i 3 a nar row binding of colored satin ribbon around neck, sleeves, etc.. and rows of delicate feather-stitching around the neck and down tho plait in front on either eide of the buttonholes. These pretty robes are in white and pale colore. The sleeves are a re markable feature, being wider than the eleeves of Japanese kimonos and hanging perfectly loose, to tho elbow or to waist, as one prefers. The Art of Harmonizing Colors* This it would seem few people recog nized and now that yellow is tho mode we shall find many woaiiug it who should most carefully avoid it, for it iB Bingularly unbecoming to those it does not suit, developing the worse Bbadows in the face. Nevertheless yellow tulle bows, lisse jabots, yellcw artificial flowers and yellow trimmings to hats and toques are flooding the market. No one can all their life through be faithful to auy particular shade; green is in later life becoming to those who could not wear it in their youth, while pinks and light bines, so uuitablo to a young face, are anything but advis able as the years go on. Peach is a faithful color that cau be worn in mid dle life almost as well as by a girl in her teens. Older women are apt to fall back upon black with a far too faithful persistence; it always wants softening towards tho face, and the introduction of a bright color renders it most becoming. For the moment black would seem to be tho ground work for nearly all colors in material and millinery. Sorrow and Beauty. Observation has disproved for mo the theory that only the women devoid of emotion and feeling can retain n youthful appearance in maturity. I personally know three women who hnve passed through heart-tragedies and cyclones of emotion, and who yet wear tho satin of youth upon their cheeks, albeit their birthdays havo long ceased to bo among tho year's festivals for thorn. They said, like another before them, "My youth and my happiness are gone, why should I throw my beauty after them?" And they straightway began to battle with time and grief. There was scientific massage lor the encroaching lines about the moulh and eyes; there wero enre fully prepared baths for iho complex ion aud vaiying "food tonic" for the wasted pores; there wero outdoor ex ercises unlimited, resting and sleep producing. Strong, great emotions, such as iove and sorrow (and they walk ever hand in hand), may ravage beanty for a season, hut they intensify it eventually if the exterior is well eared for. -Woman's Homo Compan ion. Bravo Nurses at Montauk* Miss Annie Wheeler pay 3 the fol lowing charming tribute to the nurses who wero associated with her at Mon tauk Point: "Too much praise cannot bo given to the trained nnrses at Montauk. They made just as gallant soldiers in the service of our country as those who fought on the battlefield. They are all women who havo their living to make, and by hard work have achieved a position which commands for them §25 a week and a comfort able living. "In the hospital they wore getting a dollar a day, which was almost giv ing their time, and there was hardly one among the whole of them who would not have gladly volunteered her eorvieee free had it been necessary. "I saw not one instance of careless ness or callousness or time-serving, but all the nursc3 wero concientiously devoted to their duty, and considered no hard work or fatigue or loss of rest worthy of tho slightest consideration if they could by any possibility further the interest or comfort of those who were eick and Buffering. Their con scientious devotion to duty was all the more beautiful in that they could look forward to no promotion, or shoulder straps, or public recognition, or hon orable montiou, or any glory except that beautiful light which ehines in one's hoart from a knowledge of duty well done and honors well deserved." —Harper's Bazar. The Country Woman's I.lte. "If we want the lives of our girls and women on the farms to mean more, their lives must, first of all, be uiado easier," writes Edward Bok iu tho Ladies' Home Journal. "There is too piuoh menial work being done on our farms by wives aud daughters which ought to be dono by hired help. If tho women on our farms would form among themselves 'Leisure Guilds,' and deviso way3 and means to have some of their work dono for them, and not do it nil themselves, the initial step would bo taken toward the emancipation and a freedom from isolation of thousands of women. Bee, for example, what can be done iu a town for the improvement of every body in it, and start, if you will, with a publio library. There is a public gallery of prints of tho best paintings; of good photographs—a gallery made as the nucleus for an amateur photo graph club, with Bummer jaunts and an exhibition in the winter. There is a collection to bo made for each a gallery of specimens of all the ropks, and plants, and flowers, and insects of the place—the finest material for pleasant winter evening studies and classes in natural history. There is the organization of a band for musio in the summer evenings on the green, with refreshments served by girls to raise money other object; a , concert or leeturelu .the fall, perhaps. There are reading classes and dramatic clubs to be formed for the winter. There is a woman's club for the study of current events and books; a farm er's club for the men for the discussion of agricultural science and economics; a sewing club for the girls; a manual training club for the boys; a debating eooiety for the boys; a branch of the Chautauqua Circle; a King's Daugh ters' Circle for some speoifio neighbor hood need or purpose; an art exhibi tion of the pictures from the maga zines; a singing-school for a concert during the winter; a neighborhood guild for girls; c guild for men and women for the betterment of good roads and the planting of hedges by the Bide of them; a dinner club for young'men, where each member gives onesdinner to the club during the sea son at his house." Gossip. American women spend §60,000,000 a year on cosmetics. The State Federation of Women's Clubs of Michigan held a three days' conveutiou at Manistee. Mine, de Toro, a wealthy Chilean widow, now past seventy, owns and manages a large estate of over 11,000 acres, and worth moro than a million dollars. Dona Manuela Kosas de Terrero, only daughter of General P.osas, who was dictator of Buenos Ayres from 1835 to 1852, died recently in London at the ago of eighty-one years. The recent Lafayette centennial re calls the fact that Mrs. M. E. Manser, of Newport, Ky., is the only survivor of 200 girls who scattered flowers be fore tbo Frenchman when he visited Cincinnati in 1825. One of the most interesting of European princesses is Princess Mary of Bavaria. She is lineally descended from Henrietta Maria, eighth child of Charles 1., while Qneen Victoria only claims descent from a daughter of James I. There is one Indian woman who is a practising lawyer in the United Slates. She is Miss Laura Sykin's, a half-blood Shawnee woman. She graduated from tho law department of tho Carlisle (Penn.) Indian School, and then went to Oklahoma City, whero she has been admitted to the bar, and is said to bo very popular. She is twenty-eight years old. Lady Laura Eidding, who was a speaker at tho recent English Church Congree=, is tho daughter of tho late Lord Solbourne, and the wife of Bishop Bidding, of Southwell. She is well known in Nottingham, whero she started the Women's League. The League now numbers somo fifty branches and two thousand members, and consists of miners' wives, women factory workers and working women generally. raslilun's Fancies. Dressy coat suits are made of col ored poplins and have lace rovers. Simple hats for street wear are in various Alpiue shapes, and somo have low, square crowns. A costume of taffeta has the entire skirt, waist and sleeves in tucks about half an inch deep and the same dis tance apart. Velvet or cloth appliques upon cloth are the idols of the season, and it is rumored that flounces upon the skirts and capes are to go. A striking gown which brings out the popular chenille and the polka dot effect has big chenille dots on a gown of a pretty pattern of coarse, white net. If you want to have tho latest thing, get a garnet cloth skirt, a black coat, and a red velvet toque in a rich, soft shade, a little lighter than the skirt. Pretty trimmings for edging bows and flounces are made of thin, narrow lute-string ribbon gatliorediu the mid dle. They are especially effective on chiffon frills. The season's skirts, as a rule, will be elaborately trimmed. Satin and velvet libbons will be largely used in ornamenting, and shaped flounces will remain in favor. Favorite ornaments for presentation to bridesmaids by tho groom are pearl brooches, curb chain bracelets set with pearls, blue enamel bow brooches with pearl drops, diamond and emer ald initial pendants, etc. Chenille plays a very conspicuous part iu both hat and dress trimmings this season. It is threaded into lace and mixed with embroidery in silver aud gold threads on velvet and silk, and chenille fringes with satin cov ered drops at the end of each strand are revived again. Striped moires aro in fashion again and inako very offcotive and service able waists, especially those in medium aud dark colors, wkito for cvouing wear tho striped moires in delicate tints combine beautifully with laoo, pas3emeutorio, embroidery or other appropriate garnituro. A Curious Custom Among Savages. Between the mouutainsof India and Persia is a powerful tribe, among whom an extraordinary custom pre vails. Women's rights apparently have received full recognition, for th ladies of the tribe can choose their own husbands. All a single woman has to do when she wishes to change her state is to send a servant to pin a handkerchief to the hat of tlio plan on wliour her fancy lights, and he is obliged to marry her, unless .ho cau show he is too poor to purchase her at | the price her father requires. A Otiecv Monument to n Son. An eccontrio Kansan had' ejected o novel monument to the memory of his roving eon. It is an old-fashioned traveling bag, modeled iu marble; and mounted on a saudstono base. The satohel beats the namo of the dead boy and the words: "Here is where he stopped last" ' (Tien Cold Easily? Are you frequently hoarse? Do you have that annoying tickling in your throat? Would you feel relieved if you could raise something? Does your cough annoy you at night, and do you raise more mucus in the morning? Then you should always keep on hand a bottle of Agere Cherry Perioral f If you have a weak 1 throat you cannot be too A careful. You cannot begin J|| treatment too early. Each M cold makes you more liable to another, and the last IS one is always harder to cure than the one before it. Dr. Ager's cnerrg Peclonl Plaster I protects the lungs from colds. i|| Help at Hand. If you have any complaint whatever and desire the best medical advice you can pos- U3b Bibly obtain, write the doctor freely. You will receive a ■ prompt reply. 0 Address, DR. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass. \"A Perfect Type of the Highest Order of * \ Excellence in Manufacture." / jlaMafote j Gft Breakfast fT(H iy Eli' Absolutely Pure, |► .Costs Less THapOHE CENT a Cup.. / , r Uc sure that you get the Genuine Article, 1. % made at DORCHESTER, MASS. by / WALTER BAKER & co. Ltd. / i ESTABLISHED 1780. • , "I lavc lined your valuable ©ABCA BETS and tind thorn perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have used them for sonic time for indigestion nnd biliousness and am now com pletely cured. Recommend them, to every one. Once tried, you will never be without them in tho family." EDW. A. MAUX, Albany, N. Y. M CATHARTIC a TRADE MARK REGISTERED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Oood. Do Uood, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 2oc, 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Homed? Company, Chicago, Mnnirrnl, Now York. 391 Hn.Tft.RAft Sold and Kitaranteod by alldnu tlU" I U a BAU gists to Cl'B£ Tobacco Habit I 1 for Prom mn Li t ttl. Meadvltle. I n IFarms for Sole 2 Semi stamp, gel full description and price of 40 cheapest farms in Ashtabula Co., (J. Best/ statu iu tho union; best county In tho state. 11. N. HAN CROFT. Jefferson, Ashtabula Co., Ohio. Top Snap |"|| F'SHTACK LE nDnDCVKEV DISCOVERY; .I.e. Ul* I Ui ■ quick relief and euros worst cases. 8.-nd or book of toHtimonials and |() day a' treatment Free. Dr H U QBEEN'B BONA. Atlanta. Oa. TIT ANTED—CAM of bad health that R I P-A N-9 will not benefit Hpnd 6 eta. to llipans Chemical Co.. New York for lu satuules and loou testimonials. niICIIM A TIC M CTKFD—One bottle-roilthre KntUmAJlom relief In 24 houm. Postpaid, SI.OO 1 ■ALEXANDED REMEDY Co.. 246 Greenwich St., N.Y. INVENTION Wanted. Unraented. Ftrst -1 " 1 1 w clues.' ZthtE -U L'way. NY. AGRICULTURAL TOPICS Pruning Currants. Tlio main object of pruning currant bushes is to properly develop every portion of the plant. To obtain this, it is necessary to cut out occasionally the old wood and shorten the most vigorous of the young growth. One half dozen large vigorous shoots will give more and larger fruit than twice that number of weak and immature ones. Value of Concentrating Manure. Concentrating the manure on a small area may appear as a waste, but re sults have always been in favor of so doing. The Massachusetts Board of Agriculture calls attention to the fact that the keeper of a livery stable ap plied the manure from fifteen horses on an acre and a half of land for sev eral years and harvested two and throe orops of hay each year, the aggregate being seven and a half tons each sea son, or more than three times as much as the land would have produced with out snch treatment. Milk and Meat Por Poultry. The impression is more or less general that milk, either pure or skimmed, will take the place of meat in tlio poultry ration. While no one will question the value of milk as a poultry food it should be remembered that it contains but ten per cent, of solids after it is skimmed, a3 against eighty-nine per cent, ot solids in meat, of which four per cent, is mineral matter absolutely essential to egg production. In the consumption of milk iu place of meat the fowl is compelled to drink too much water contained therein in order to obtain the required solids. When milk is fed in connection with meat we have a combination making a most profit able feeding. The milk may be either whole or skimmed, but it should at uo time bo fed when very sour, as it then decomposes. A very small amount of cooked fnt meat is not ob jectionable, but the best is lean m6at with the bone, the latter run through a bone outter. U.o and Co.t of Lam? rinster. Land plaster is Bold very cheaply in places where the rock suitable for grinding it from is abundant. It is there, too, that it appears to do most good, probably in part because the gypsum rock has always enough holes through it to make good drainage. Thore is no use putting plaster on land that is most of the year full of water. Its best effeot is always found on light and dry soils, for one of the properties of plaster is to attract moisture, which such soil usually needs. We have known plaster sold at the mills as low as §2 per ton in winter when most of tho rock grinding is done. Ton or fifteen miles away and iu summer, when farmers want to use it for crops, the prico would jump up to St. 50 and $5 per ton. So those who used much plaster generally went with sleighs during a run of good sleighing, when they would sometimes draw two tons or more on a load. A half bushel of plaster weighs pretty near 100 pounds, so that a good deal can be put in an ordinary sleigh box, and drawn by a smart team when the sleighing was at its best.—American Cultivator. Feeding Cattlo For Market. All who are interested have doubt less noticed tho faot that tho market now furnishes only tho small or medium sized animals. The heavy steer and the fat hog are rarely seen. The mar ket demands the small animals, for consumers have learned that the flesh is more tender and juicy than in largo animals. Heifer beef is taking the place of steer beef, for tho former, equally well fattoued at the same age, is of inuoh better quality. It is a fact worthy of record that the producer fought for along time against this domauTl for young market 6tock, especially in beef. Tlio demand had to be met or no sale, so he swallowed his choler and has now discovered the astounding fact that he can make a pound of meat cheaper and of better quality on the youug animal thau tho older one, and that when tho animal gets beyond a certain weight feeding cannot bo continued profitably. Thus it is certain that tho pre-couceived ideas are beiug daily upsot and ofteu times, as iu this case, forced changes are mode contrary to out better judg ment only.to find later that had they taken place sooner we would have been money in pocket. Keeping Eggs For Winter. I have tried many different methods of packing eggs, but have found that keeping them in brine is more satis factory thau any method of dry pack ing that I have had any experience with. I use jars iu which to keep tho brine, although kegs or any water tight vessels will answer tho purpose. The recipe for making the brino is as follows: To three gallons of water, half a pint of water-slacked lime, of the consistency of thiok cream, and one pint of salt. Stir until both lime and salt are dissolved; theD drop the eggs carefully to prevent cracking, as a cracked egg will soon spoil. TLic eggs must sink gently, not rapidly, and must almost float, but il they float on tho top the brino is too strong and inoro water can bo added. Eggs must be entirely fresh and each day's supply deposited in the brine as soon as gathered. If these directions are followed cgg3 will be fresh in ap pearance and quality after beiug in the brine a year. Of course, a fresh-laid egg is preferable for table uae or cake icing to any packed egg, but tboro are many ways of using eggs iu which a packed egg answers equally a3 well, and there is a time in the life of a hen, when moulting, that she duos not seem to have the interest of the housewife at heart, but is looking after her own comfort. Eggs then becoiuo scarce and high and a'store of packed ones front which to draw is very acceptable. —Rural World. - - • waaaaaa; y I Christmas Gifts for Sensible People. § PRICE, $ 1.87. 8 artd prompt in filling Holiday orders Our 50 x VHjais'of valuable experience is at your disposal. * Jrerhaps you thought of giving a Carpet, seme * Rugs, Lace Curtains or Portieres for a present. X We publish a lithographed catalogue which W shows the actual patterns of these goods in V |j and we also pay freight V I way. l g JULIUS HINES & SON, g D Dopt 30,) RALTItIOKE, NO. 0 o 0000000000000000000 ooooco C- America consumes more eggs than any other nation. No-To-llac for Ftfty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, niahes weak men strong, blood pure. 6Uc, 41. All druggist* Bishop Watson, of Eastern Carolina, is salil to bear so striking a likeness to Lincoln as to be popularly known as the former President's "double." ST. JACOBS 011. euros Rheumatism. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Neuralgia. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Lumbago. ST. JACOBS OIL euros Solution. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Sprains. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Bruises. BT. JACOBS OIL cures Soreness. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Stiffness. ST. JACOBS OIL euros Backache. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Muscular Aciicfl, It is said that the peasant of the south of France spends on food for a family of five an average of twopence a day. Educate Yonr Bowels With Cnsmreti. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c. 26c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refuud money. More Equipments lor Baltimore & Ohio The improvements that have been made on the Baltimore & Ohio Rail road during the past two years have rendered it possible to operate cars of a heavier capacity than have been in use in the past and the Receivers have just ordered from the Schoen Pressed Steel Company of Pittsburg 1.000 steel coal cars of a capacity of 100,000 lbs. each. These cars will be used for the Seaboard titule and are expected to be in service during the early part of 1899. In addition to these cars, the Receiv ers have also ordered from the Pitts burg Locomotive Works 50 more of the Consolidated locomotives with 22x28 inch cylinders. ll ia Sarcasm. Farmer Grout (sourly)— Them city relatives of ourn 'per to believe my name is "Misery." Mrs. Grout- Pshaw! what makes you git off seech a foolish sayin' as that, Lyman? Farmer Grout—lt ain't foolish—it's sarcastic! I jedge they do by the way they seem to think I love company.— Harper's Bazar. A Champion. Mrs. Iraley—"They say your hus band is one of the best golf-players In this town." Mrs. Wanston—"Oh, yes, he Is a thorough master of It. Why, he can actually talk the language In his steps."—Chicago News. iAH AFFAIR & NATION | Vl It has been said of Americans that they il (w are "a nation of dyspeptics" and it is true Prc T that few are entirely free from disorders ¥ \1 of the digestive tract, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, A (p> Stomach and Bowel trouble ,or Constipation.® Y The treatment of these diseases )l A with cathartic medicines too often ag- a> cP gravatcs the trouble. t? 1 THE LOGICAL TREATMENT I sP is the use of a remedy that will build up Y \\ the system, thereby enabling the various li 3D organs to act as Hature intended they should.© T Such a remedy is found in Dr Williams' PinK ¥ \1 Pills for Pale People here is the proof. A In Detroit there me few soldiers more popular nnd efficient than Mnx Vl R. Davics, first sergeant of Co. B. His home is at 416 Third Avenue. For |I \\ four years he was 11 bookkeeper with the wholesale drug house of Forraud, Cfo Williams tz Clark, aud lie says: "I have charged up many thousand vW Tp' orders for Dr. Williams' Pink rills for Pale People, but never knew their Sj Vl worth until I used them for tire cure of chronic dyspepsia. For two years \\ I suffered and doctored for that aggravating trouble but could ouly be \| helped temporarily. "I think dyspepsia is one of the most stubborn of ailments, nnd there Vj u is scarcely n clerk or office ruan but what is more or less a victim. Some Vl VI days I could cat anything, while at other times I would be starving. \! GjD Those distressed pal us woulyl force ine to quit work. I hove tried many Gw Vr treatments aud remedies but.they would help only for a time. A friend Sp \\ induced me to try I)r. Williams' rink Pills for Pale People, and after tak- 11 VI ing n few doses I found much relief and after using several boxes I was \\ QK cured. I know these pills w ill cure dyspepsia of its worst form aad I urn '[Q jf~ pleased to recommend tlicm." — Detroit (Mich.) Journal. ' vP The genuine package Always bears the tub pam. Ji np At all druggists, o) sent postpaid 6b receipt of px.it,so*© T perboCby the Or.Williams Medicine to, Siheriditarty.N v. ¥ "Where Dirt Gathers, Waste Rules." Great Saving Results From the Use of SAPOLIO How London Llrci. There are, according to the latest re turns, at present in London 37,000 peo ple living five in one room; 17,000 peo ple living six in one room; 6,000 people living seven in one room; 1,800 people living eight in one room; 32,000 peo ple living eight in two rooms, and 14,- 000 people living nine in tw 0 rooms. The Triumph of (lie Season. A crop of spruins nud bruises is harvested from outdoor sports. The euro is the crop St. Jucobs Oil delights in a3 the triumph of the season, the one tliut beats the record. Why does pointless conversation al ways bore the quickest? Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. C'uscarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to Danish pimples, hoils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 20c,50c. General Ferdinand P. Earle. owner of the famous Jumel mansion on Washington Heights, New York, has decided to sell the place and move the house. This is where Washington stopped and where Hamilton and Burr met before their duel. To Cur© A Cold In On© Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money If it fails to cure. 35c. The Scotch forefathers of President McKinley spelt the name MacKinley, the first Instance of the present spell ing occurring in the signature of James McKinley in the last century. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality untl simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA Flo SYRUP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the CALI FORNIA FIO SYRUP CO. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty 01 the excellence of its remedy. It i 3 far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CI. LOUISVILLE, K,. NEW YORE, K. T. 1 sore'eyes use" i Thompson's Eye Water CANCFR or Tumors cured or no pay. Write MERRILL INST., Middle' ourne, W. Va. T. N. U. 49 '94 hf „ CUKES WHtHE ALL ELSE FAILS. E y Best Cough fcyrup. Toatca Good. Use ■ E In tima Sold by druggls:-- ff