Wh..t Doctors Think of W<*ariug Rub bers. Here's the first law of health— Kee%> your feet dry. We all know it. We all know that pneumonia und con sumption always start with a cold, und that the shortest cut tp a cold is a pair ct wet feet. But it's so impor tant a matter that we can't be remind ed too often, especially when the re minder carries the weight of authority. I)r. Wendell C. Phillips, one of the most distinguished physicians in New- York, was recently giving a lecture on "Colds, and How to Prevent Them." It was a rainy night, and he began: "How many persons here wore rub bers to-night ? Hands up. "Not half of you. Now, that is what I thought. Every one of you should have rubbers on a night like this. To go without them is to iuvite colds, bronchial trouble, catarrh aud pneuraouia. It is astonishing how people neglect their feet. Rubbers are fifty cents. You can save a lot ot money 011 the investment—perhaps a ten days' doctor bill, to say nothing of medicine." The doctor might have made it still stronger and said that a fifty-cent pair of rubbers would uot only save doctor bills and medicine bills, but often life itseli. Don't try to suvo on rubbers; it's the most expensive economy in the world, especially just now when everybody is gettiug the grip. Tlie Vervain Plant. The plant known as vervain, which Is not distinguished for its beauty, and which grows now-a-days utterly disre garded, was so sacred to the Druids that they only gathered it for their divinations when the great dog-star arose, in order that neither sun nor moon should see the deed. _Good Digestion Waits on appetite, or it should do so, but this can be only when the stomach is in a healthy condition. Hood's Sarsaparilla so tones and strengthens the stomach that it digests food easily and naturally and thou ull dyspeptic troubles vanish. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Price Si. Hood's Pills cure Liver His. ,25cellts. Don't substitute black tea tor green because the purchaser is color blind. No-To-Itac for Fifty Coots. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes wcait men otroog, blood pure 6Uc. 41. Alldrugt'sts "Let It Pass." A photograph of the czarina nursing her bahy recently appeared in an Eng lish newspaper, and when it reached the Russian censor the latter was a much puzzled official. He consulted with the minister ot the interior, who was equally perplexed and decided to consult with the czar. "The nest thing I can do," said the Russian em peror, "is to show this to the czarina and let her decide." In a tew according to the story, the czar re turned and said, with a smile, to the minister of the interior: "Her im perial majesty flr.ds nothing in the pic ture contrary to law. Let it pass." Perfectly Wonderful. Hattie—"Then we went to Scotland. It's perfectly wonderful the way they talk the dialect." Uncle George— "Why, wonderful?" Ilattie—"l should think they'd forget now and then and drop into English. I often do when I'm reciting Burns or playing golf."— Boston Transcript. PERIODS OIi 1 PAIN. Menstruation, the balance wheel of woman's life, i , al io the banc of exist ence to many because it means a time of great suffering. While no woman is entirely free from periodical pain, it docs notscem toliavo male regula- / tor known to | \!1? >/f ' medical sei- 1 " ence. 11 relieves the condition that pro duces so much discomfort and robs men struation of its terrors. Hero is proof: DEAR Mns. PI.NKIIAM: —How can 1 thank you enough for what you have done for me ? When I wrote to you I was suffering untold pain at time of menstruation; was nervous, had head ache all the time, no appetite, that tired feeling, and did not care for anything. 1 have taken three bottles of Lydia E. Binlthnm's Vegetable Compound, one of Blood Purifier, two boxes of Liver Pills, and to-day I ain a well person. I would like to have those who suffer know that I am one of the many who have been cured of female complaints by your wonderful medicine and advice. —Miss JENNIE R. MILES. Leon, Wia If yon are suffering in this way, write as Miss Miles did to Sirs. Pinkliam at Lynn, Mass., for the advice which she offers freo of charge to all women. Sprrt Postal for I'rom'nm List to the Dr. Beth tSaoltl Medical Corporation, Wocffaocket, It I. f AGRIGDLTORAL. I ®ee€€€6e€€€6 & Protection ot Fruit Trees From Mice. Farmers care very little for the d ep ilations of lield mico upon their grains, but these small rodents some- I limes do great injury to youug fruit | trees in winter. They seldom gnaw i the thick bark of older trees, but cases I are on record in which a young orchard j has been entirely destroyed when planted near a meadov,- or level field I frequented by theso little marauders. Coarse wrapping paper or a few layers of newspaper, dipped in kerosene and tied about the base of a tree, also a few pieces laid over the nearest roots, will repel the mice, and at the same time prevent tho ravages of boring beetles. Field mice, like their cousins, tho house mico, are easily trapped. A box rat-trap set near their nests and baited with corn will often catch half a dozen at once. Feed Cookers. Every farm on which stock is kepi should have an appliance of some kind for cooking the food given cattle and poultry. Not only is tho warm morn ing mash good for poultry, but cows will bo much benefited by a daily warm mash. Hogs and lambs that aro be ing "finished off" for market will take on flesh less expensively if a warm mash is part of the ration. There are Beveral feed cookers on tho market, all of them good aud profitable to use where many cows or hens are kept. For a few cows, hens or hogs a small mason's stovo of cast iron and an iron kettle will answer tho purpose. Tho stove may he set up in a shed or out buildiug aud be operated at small ex pense, including its cost. There is no donbt but that the use of the eooker will save food, besides adding much to tho comfort and health of stock. Propagating Rosea. Almost every one who cares for flowers at all loves roses. But per haps every ono does not know how easily they may be propagated. Let us plan for a bed of ever-blooming roses uext summer. Begin by dig ging tho soil to a depth of fifteen or eighteen inohes in a sunny, well drained spot. Work iti a quantity of well-rotted manure—that from the cow stable preferable. Cut or break a branoh five or six inches long from the rose, choosing wood grown in tho early part of the season, which is now ripened. Plant three or four inches deep, pressing tho soil firmly about tho cutting. Invert a glass fruit jar over each one, burying the top of the jar deeply enough to keep it steady. Tho cracked jars which every house keeper has loft over from the canning time will answer for this purpose. This plauting may he done anytime in November or even in December, if the earth is not frozen. When the first warm days come in spring lift tho jars off and begin to harden the plants, being careful to replace them at night if there is danger of frost. Very probably there will be, even in April, times when it will ho best to keep them covered both day and night. The uncovering may be de ferred until settled warm weather. In this case it will ho necessary to shade the plants from the midday sun for a time. Plants thus started aro on their own roots, anil do not need to he dis turbed by transplanting. It is sur prising how much bloom they will give, even tho first summer. By ex changing cuttings with friends one Love u good collection of !•-- "vnetißn. Endeavor to obtain varieties wbieli. while hardy, will flower at intervals uuriug tlie summer and fall. There are many snob. I hope iu the future to give a | list of the best of this class, j I have suggested placing the cut- I tings in a bed rather than scattering them on the lawn, because with this arrangement they can moro easily be given the cultivation which is es'sen tiul to the best success.—New York Tribune. Tho Now Cattlo I>l|>. The efficacy of the new cattle dip, one of the most importaut discoveries of the Agricultural Department, lies in its certain destruction of tho ticks. Experts have been working on this lino for years without producing washes that would kill tho ticks and not injure cattle. Several solutions have been tried that exterminated the tick, hut in each instance tho cattle were rendered unmarketable or suf fered injury from which they did not recover. Dr. Norgaard, oi the Bureau of Animal Industry, an expert of about eight years' standing in tho Depart pnrtment of Agriculture, who was assigned to tho study of cattle dips, has discovered one composed of eighty-six pounds of sulphur dissolved <by heat in 1000 gallons of extra dyna mo oil which has proved efficacious and promises to revolutionize the cat tle business. Two careful experi ments have been made, 500 cattle be ing shipped in each instance to Bock ford, 111. On tho first trial some of the auitnals died from overcrowding iu the cars, aud in the second several were lost through fever, hut in both shipments the cattlo were delivered tree of ticks. In preparing them for shipment they are driven through a vat containing it sufficient quantity of the dip to immerse them, being kept in the wash about a minute. The female tick is as large as a dime, and is the cause of tho Texas fever. When it is removed the Southern cattle may bo introduced with impunity into the grazing lauds of the North. Infected cattle breed diseuse by the tick fall ing to the ground and multiplying. Tho young ticks cling to the blades tf grass and weeds and.-burrow into We Northern cattle as thfiy pass, causing an irritation that produces the fatal Texas fever. Practical Sheep nusbandrv. See to the sheep's feet and clip the overgrown hoofs. The solo is to be trimmed smoothly to avoid the irritat ing effect of sand or gravel ou it. Be ou the lookout for the first indi cations of the parasites which worry the ilock. Tho first sign of failing condition is tho warning to be hgeded. Boot rot iii a flock immediately con victs tho shepherd of neglect and in lliets the fine for this delinquency. Wt cannot escape this penalty lor this neglect. The short supply of Western lambs for feeding is due to two causes, viz.: an unusually short lamb crop iu most of the range States and Territories, and u disposition nmcug ranchmen to hold the ewo lambs to increase their flocks. We hear much of the profit of poul try, bat while a hen is making a dol lar, a sheep will make two on the same allowance of feed. The ileece will piy all ilto cost of the sheep, leaving tho lamb clear profit, and 100 per cent, of it. A surplus of feed and fodder should bo secured for the flock on the range. Duo provision should bo made for shelter probably to be needed. It is better to be Bure of this tbau sorry for neglecting it. No than a shepherd needs to keep his l bend level. He must not get too elated liy present good fortnne, or become de pressed by-aud-by by a possible change. It is estimated that there are fifty per cent, more ewe lambs in the range country this year tbau male lambs, a fact that may bo traceable to tho larger use of young rams aud ram lambs tbau were formerly used on range flocli3. It this be true, the theory of French experimenters, that young sires get more ewe lambs tbau ram lambs, is pretty well attested by American experience on a broader scale. The teudenoy of ranchmen to feed their own lumbs and wethers at home on the produce of irrigated farms sheds a new light on the feed ing situation. So Btrong, indeed, is the present tendency in this direc tion that within two or three years the bulk of the maio lamb crop will be fed where raised, and Eastern feeders will be compelled to look elsewhere for the million of lambs they are ac customed to feed aunually east of the Missouri Biver. As there is no else where from which to obtain these lambs in large supply, there i:: but solution of this most serious problem, and that is for the feeders and their farmer neighbors to raise the lambs themselves. "American Sheep Breeder. Turkeys ami Ducks on the Farm. Turkeys can be made quite profit able on the farm in connection with chicken raising. I have found the Bronze to be the best variety; they are of a large sizo and very hardy. I keep one gobbler aud four beus, set the first clutch of eggs uuder cbickeu liens and two turkey bens; when they batch give all to tho turkey beus. For the first few weeks I feed four gr five times a day on bard boiled eggs, milk curds, light bread crumbs, lettueo leaves and ouion tops cut up flue. 1 put the turkeys in a largo coop with a yard made of wire netting, keep tlieui shut up ill wet weather aud oi mornings until tho dew is off, and see that they avo free from lice. After they are six weeks old they will become more hardy n: d do not re quire such closo attention. I always give tiieui a generous feed in the even j ing to insure their returning homo al | night. They should average at least SI each when marketed in the fall. A mistake many make is to bold their fowls for the Thanksgiving and Christ mas markets; (hose aro always over stocked and it is liiueli betier to send between times iu order to obtain bet ter prices. Money can also bo made by raising ducks for the early markets. We like tho Pekin best. While not absolutely necessary to have running water they do much better for me with a brook, creek or pond to swim in. Five ducks to a drako are enough, Tho ducks will lay over 2UO eggs iu a season. It is beat to set the eggs un der chicken bens as ducks make the poorest of mothers. Wo feed them all kinds of scraps from tho table and garden, besides wheat bran, corn meal, cooked vegetables and a little corn once u day a lew weeks boforo market. The best time to market is at ten weeks old. The feathers are also quite an iten of profit. I give my fowls a feed of chopped onions once a week, also every week or two feed Veuilian red; this will prevent cholera and other diseases and greatly increase tho egg produc tion. I hove cured fowls with the cholera, with this remedy, whey everything else failed. I keep my young chickens and tur keys in yards made of wire netting, until several weeks old; iu this way they keep healthier aud grow faster than when allowed free rgnge aud to mingle with the older fowls. Young ducks aud geeso must be kept away from water to swim until thoy are at least a month old; give them an abundance of drinking water iu vessels that they cannot get 'into with their bodies. I hope my experience will be a help to oilier farmers' wives who are trying to raise poultry by tho' old slipshod methods I once followed. -I- have found that to bo successful we must first bavo good stock, then give -them the care and attention farmers givo theip otber stogk, and we will be re paid many fold ior our extra work and attention.—A Virginian, in Farm, Field and Fireside. J ARE YOU J 1 SORE ( AND 1 STIFF From hard work or outdoor I i, exercise ? I ST. JACOBS OIL | Will cure after a few appli- \ I cations, and make the j muscles limber and strong. fit 100 Reward. JfslOO. Tho readers of this p:\por will be pleased to learn that, there is a;; l. Ast one dreaded dis ease that, science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is ( itarrb. HalIV Catarrh Cure is tin- only positive cure now known to tho medical lratornity. Catarrh beint* a con stitutional disease, icouires a constitutional Continent. Hall's Catairh Cure is taken inter nally. acting dtreetly the blood and mu cous surfaces ol tbe s\ • tern, thereby destroy ing the foundation ( f the disease, and giving the patient strengtn : . building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have fco much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars lor any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Add less. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, U Sold by Druggists, me. Hall's Family Pilh are tbo best. In Turkey the Sultan Is by tradition bound to dye his hair and board. Educate Yonr Boiye'.a \7ith Cnucftrets. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever 10c, £Dc. It C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. WHAT THE LAV/ DECIDES. An unrestricted guaranty of pay ment indorsed on a negotiable instru ment is held, in Commercial bank vs. Cheshire Provident Institute (Kas.), 41 L. It. A. 175, to he negotiable and it is also held that it passes with the title to the instrument. The "heirs" who are entitled to a right of action for the death of a per son under 2 Hill's (Wash.) code, sec tion 13S, are held, in Noble vs. Seattle (Wash.), 40 L. R. A. 522, to include the widow and children only, and not to include the parents of the deceased. A statute reducing the lien or charge Df a judgment against the estate or person of a judgment debtor and pro hibiting the renewal thereof for more than one year after the act takes effect is held. In Bettman vs. Cowley (Wash.) 40 L. It. A. 815, to be an unconstitu tional impairment of the obligation of contracts so far as it applies to those made before the statute was passed. A person holding a mileage ticket, who, with intent to board a train standing on a siding near a station, without going 10 the station, attempts to cross the main lino, is held, in Southern Railroad company vs. Smith (C. C. App. sth C.), 40 L. R. A. 746, to be not a passenger to whom the carrier owes extraordinary care or diligence, but only one of the general public entitled to ordinary care, if he has done nothing to notify any of the of ficers or agents of the carrier that he is a prospective passenger. Japs Look Much Alike. The Japanese are curiously alike physically. Recent measurements tak en of an infantry regiment showed 110 variation except two inches in height or twenty pounds in weight. ;|p^B¥w| M Arc your nerves weak? S-j Can't you sleep well? Bain I < vj in your back? Lack energy? p*J M Appetite poor? Digestion j baa? Boils or pimples? rj M These are sure signs of tLs i 1 poisoning. 4 From what poisons? From poisons that are til- .< 4 ■ftays found in constipated rl bowels. , ] If the contents cf the [J < bowels are not removed from Ljj kj the body each day, as nature intended, these poisonou3 1-1 i substances are sure to be 4 V absorbed into the blood, al- P.l ►,/ ways causing suffering and frequently causing severe % disease. 4 There is a common sense -a • cure. J PJ They daily insure an easy I kl end natural movement of jr, M You will find thatthe use cf ►j Sapsapamia ;< d with the pills will hasten , ' M recovery. It cleanses ths blood from all impurities and rj is a great tonic to the nerves. ! L | Write tlw Sector, r , A Onr Medical Department has one L L ot the most eminent physicians in r . r 1 the United States. Tell tho doctor 1 just how you uro suffering. Yon L V j will receive the best medical advico r J A without cost. Address. I" k i| DR. J. O. AYER. I, ► 1 Lowell, Mass, I dfea r/Sa Farms for Sale! Send stamp, get full description and pricj of cheapest l'artns in Ashtabula Co., O. best statu in tho union; best countv in tin state. il. N. liANCKHt'T. Jefferson, AKhtaUula 00., Ohio. PROFITABLE EMPLOYMENT can be secured as apents for povu'ar ma- u zine, securing subscriptions. Position per manent. fch ed Wages- td ladies of tact and busi ness qualifications. ' Send for letter of informa tion. vr'IODDARD. fifio Ptnrl St., Keiv' York chy SAW THE BIRTH OF AN ISLAND. Cradled In the Indian Ocean and Rocked Like the Giant's Causeway. The British steamer Breconshiro which has jnst arrived at Philadelphia from Java with a cargo of sugar,brings r remarkable tale of a phenomenon witnessed while the vessel was but two weeks out of port and in the southern part of tho Indian Ocean. According to the story, which is told in a manner so graphic and so free from exaggeration as to leavo little doubt regarding its genuineness, tho the Captain and crew saw thrown up by a mighty upheaval of the sub terranean strata of tho oceau's bed a curious islaud of basaltic formation and which came into existence almost in tho twinkling of an eye. In the part of tho .Indian Ocean in which the phenomenon was seen there havo for years been manifested phenomena suggestivo of enormous internal disturbances beyond tho solution of the average navigator. There is a portion of this enormous body of water which continually steams with a baleful sulphur-impreg nated vapor of such iuteusity aud volume as to cause this part of the ocean to bo studiously avoided by all mariners. The Breconshiro, how ever, was caught by tho fringe of a mousoou aud hurried thereby far to the southeast of the usual beaten track pursued by tho homoward-bound lleet. On September 15 there was notice! by tho man on the lookout, just after eight bells, I o'clock, a cloud looming up directly ahead and presenting a most menacing front in tho pathway of tho advancing craft. As far as tho eyo could seo to the westward the en tiro horizon was encompassed by this wall of steam, into which the Captain did not care to venture until the sun should rise in the morning and he could count on at least fourteen hours of daylight. The steamer, accordingly, hove to during the few remaining hours of tho waning afternoon. The sceno at this time was inde scribably weird. The sea, in its super natural calm, showed a snrfaco so im movable and glassy that the shadowy outline of the vessel was clearly traced 011 its bosom by the declining HUU, whioh gleamed like tho month of a furnace directly ahead, while extend ing around to all points of tho com pass, excopt to tho south, was the mysterious wall of vapor rising por pondicuhirly from tho sea. Shortly after 10 o'clock, wheu the moon had risen and shed an erratic lustre over the deep, a tremendous booming sound, apparently about three miles to the southward, ap prised the frighteued crew that more marvels were about to occur. At the same moment, borne upon the bosom of an immense wave, the Breconshire mounted vertically to a point at least twenty feet above her former posi tion on the ocean bed and, to tbo accompaniment of an immense up heaval of water, an island appeared to leeward where all previously had been but the sea aud sky. The snddeness of tlie event almost deprived tbo crew of their senses, but tlioy bad little time to commoutou the phenomenon, being obliged to look to tbo safety of the vessel. It was rnauy anxious moments before that safety was assured, but apparently, as though nature had exhausted herself, tho sen in a few moments rotnrnod to its wonted tranquility, the erstwhile loom ing olouds of vapor disappeared like magic, and the fall moon shed bright paths of silvery radiance across the quiet bosom of tho deep. When day dawned a clear view was afforded of the island, and its volcanic origin was clearly established. It consisted of vertical columns of hard mineral arranged with wonderful gedinetrioal exactitude, resembling very strongly the pictures of the famous Giant's Causeway. It was found to bo only a small island, pos sibly not more than one-quarter of a mile in circumference, and nbitsliigh est point did not have a greatewalti tude than 100 feet. In all probability tho new island had been in formation for many years below tho surface, and only by an upheaval of extraordinary intensity did it emerge above tbe sur face. CURIOUS FACTS. There has never been an Irish Pope. A hairless adult rat, of a brownish color, is a marvel in a museum at Ply mouth, England. The gravo of an unmarried womau in Turkey is oftou iudicatod by a rose carved in stone. At the Strozzi Palace, in Borne, there is a book made of raarblo, tho leaves being of marvelous thinness. 111 Logere, France, there arc herds of goats aud cows which seldom drink. Vet they produce the milk from which Jloquefort chee3o is made. In Chinese cities streets are never bniit straight, from a superstitious fear that processions of evil spirits might otherwise entov tho city aud re main. A remarkable feature of India is tbo number of its deserted capitals. There are uo less than three old JJel his, all clo3o to each other, aud south of the present city, 4 German trial for swindling with forged autographs of Martin Luther brought out tho fact that tho ink used by Luther 350 years ago is so good that copies can still ba tukon from it. The British Musoum contains tho oldest specimen of pure glass which boars any dalo. This is u iittlo lion's bead, having on it tho uamo of an Egyptian king ol the eleventh dyu asty. It is believed in Norway that wolves are frightened away by telegraph lines. On one occasion a village voted money to help in tbe construction of a lino passing near them for this reason ' alone. 4 From Factory to Fireside. 4 | Would we spesitf ♦ | a million dollars 4 I yearly advertising 4 OUR Catalogues | if tlaey were saot| worth having? | Our general Catalogue contains Furni- ▲ ! ture, Crockery, Stove-, Clocks, Sewing ▼ j % Machines. Silverware. Upholstery Goods, a X Mirrors, Lamps, Picture*, Bedding, Baby X w Carriages, Refrigerators, Tinware, etc.. V 4 at pnce3 that have surprised the entire A I X civilized world. X ; X Wo publish a 10-color Lithographed Cat- A y alogue of Carpets, HUBS, Portieres and T f Lace Curtains showing the actual pat- $ 4 terns in hand-painted colors. We pre- A f pay freight on these goods, sew Carpets Y ft free aud furnish (free) Carpet Lining. # 4 Here you can buy at the same prices ▼ k that dealers pay. A million and a half A f others have written for our Free Cata- T . 0 logues. C ; 4 Do you want them? Address this way: ▼ [Julius Nines &Sonj 1 Dept. no a BALTIMORE, MD. A The monkey wrench gets its name from its inventor, Thomas Monkey of j Bordentown, N. J. To Curo Constipation Forever. Take Cascavets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 23c IS C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money j German courts have just dec.tied that the place where a newspaper editor shall be tried for libel must be the place where the publication office of the newspaper is situated, and not any place where the newspaper may chance to be sold. The point was de cided by the refusal of a Berlin court to assume jurisdiction in the case of an alleged libel printed in a Breslau j newspaper. To Cure \ Cold in One Pay. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if It fails to cure. 25c. Oberammergau is making ready to i perform the Passion play in 1900. though the consent of the Bavarian | Government has not yet been obtained. I Most of the parts will be taken prob ably by the persons who acted them in ] IS9O. The managers count on a very large attendance from visitors to the Paris Exhibition. Dr.Hcth Arnold's Cough Killer invaluable as n Cough remedy. Effect magical.—Lizzik J. Jt.NK, 448 West 25th fciL, N. Y.. Dec. 11, 1897. London's County Council has decided on the municipal control of the water supply of the metropolitan district and will try to get a bill through Parlia ment to enable it to purchase, "by agreement or by compulsion," the property of the eight companies that are now providing the \vater. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No j beauty without it. Caacarets, Candy Cathar- j tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by ; stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the bod v. Begin to-day to I banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, | and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c,25c.,5Uc. Chestnuts dried and ground into flour are made into bread and used for food by the mountain peasantry of France. Fits permanently cured. Xo fii nr nervous ress after fust clnv's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle am! treatise lite. Dr.K.II.Ki.iNF, Ltd..KH Arch St. Phi la. Pa 44 For year# I was s* victim of dys pepsia in its worst form, i could eat nothing but milk toast, and at times my stomach would not retain and diurst even that. Last Man h l began taking CASCAKHTS and since then 1 have steadily improved, until 1 am as v.-ell as I ever was in my life." DAVID 11. Muiirnv. Newark, u. | CANDY pT CAT I-1 A a T Pleasant. Pnlatahle. Potent. Taste Good. Do Coovl, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, l'sc, 500. ... CURE CONSTIPATSON. ... fUtrilnt Bawdy Company. Ihlmoo. Montrral. Nr York. 311 Rlft-Tfi-flAfi! Sn,<l and cu-rnntoed by all drug rU C v Wdl gists tu CUIC ft Tobacco Habit. Established 17S0. jjj ! Baker's 1 ,d. ' I Chocolate, 1 t> I celebrated for more & ' than a century a3 a delicious, nutritious, an d flesh-forming j fo beverage, has our & well-known j £> ffl Yellow Label <? ! SI on the front of every | §SB ; I' jj|\l package, and our < £ Ana j trade-mark,"l.nßelle ! & Hfli Chocolatiere,"onthe I £ ba . k> . & NONE OTHER GENUINE. 5 5 MADE ONLY BY q j g WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., g Dorchester, Mass. c 5 C 3<3 tS *3t& $ iS i?- <5 tS tl tS >553 D RO PSYSSSS CUIMW. R'lirl 'or book of tostimoniuN HI. 1 |() <|„v|p treatm* nt 1-rcc. Dr H H PREEN S BONB, Atlanta.On. TIfANTF.P Case of had health that RTT* , A , N , fI V> will not benefit Hend 5 ,-ts. to Rip , Chemical Co.. Now York for lu humulos and luuo teatiuiouiula "Ons Year Borrows Anoihsr Year'stfo]." YotdS i'i t's3 Last Year. Perhaps Yaa Will Hot Titis Year. j I>o Not Dilly Dally With Croup, But use Hoxsle's Croup Cure at once and prevent membraneous croup. No j opium to stupefy, no ipecac to nau ! seate.. 50 cts. | Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forrhildron | teething, softens the gums, redne.esinllamtna ! tion, allays pain, c ures wind colic. 25c a bottle ! T can recommend Piso's Cure for Con turn p i lion to sufferers from Asthma.- K. D. Tovvx j SEND. Ft. Howard. Wis., May 4,1891. J It takes 37 specially constructed and j equipped steamers to keep the sub ; marine cables of the world in repair. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour T.ife Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag aetic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To* Bau, the wonderworker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or ?I. Cureguarun i toed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New Yorlfr Nearly all of the new freight equip ment, ordered by Receivers Co wen and Murray of the Baltimore & Ohio Ra:l --j road during the past few months, will be delivered by January 15th. j The orders consisted of 3.009 stand- I ard box cars, from the Michigan Pen- I insular Car Company; 1,000 box and i 1,000 gondolas from the Pullman Com pany; 2,000 box cars from the Missouri | Car and Foundry Company; 1,000 steel ! coal cars of 100,000 pounds capacity j from the Schoen Company, and "0 , foot modern mail cars from the Pull man Company. Each of these cars is equipped with | the Westinghouse air brake and M. C. . B. automatic couplers. sli y THE EXCELLENCE Or SYRUP OF FIGS Ib due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is I manufactured by scientific processes t known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP i Co. only, and wc wish to impress upon i all the importance of purchasing the j true and original remedy. As the genuine Sj T rup 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 FIG SYRUP CO. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes i the name of the Company a guaranty j of the excellence of its remedy. It is i 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 tc get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAX FKANUIBCO, Col. LOZTIE7II.3.E, Ky. HEW YOHX, N. V. HoKchyjjt %. Gft' M V, jmm i One th:if will brine: r plcasar.t monthly reminder ot the giver is a subscription to the NEW AND IMPROVED Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly Now SO cts.; sii a Year. Edited by Mrs. FRAMit LESLIE. EACH MONTH: { muV^Uon,. CONTRIBUTORS: W D. Howell?, Clara Bar ton, Bret Harte. Walter Camp, Frank R. Stockton, Margaret I-'.. Sane-t-T, lulia R. Dorr, Lmouin Miller. Edgar Fawn-tt, Egerton Castle,' Louise Chandler Moulton, and other famous and popular writers. Fjra CTEB RBEi Beautiful Art Plate, "A Yard ot L. R., Pansies" or "A Yard of Pup. llan'i x'liias X oiv'eN FBEE with a fi.t.o vi :tr\. eubpcriptioii from January L..110 - Out all. Kitljor art plan: CJ!VI-IN FREE with a tonomha COMPLETE Story ol the SINKINO OF THE "KERRIMAC and the Capture antl lmpr! •■nmnent vl ilir L'rrn at Santiago, by OSBRRN . DEItiNAN, U. S. Na.y late belmriiian of the ./.■ .. i 1; tliejat:uary Number. Fully Illustrated. Subscribe ,V r.Mimt limit*!. j FRANK LESLIE PUBLISHING HOUSE, Dcr'r B. Ids Fifth Avenue, N.V. jk G WANTED huMn..., pay, I "UUO. ..slVv' <''nEn-One bottle-Pn.lt|y, ;. I til A I I.Mil leLeflnvl horn Pe.:l, #,. j ALEXAKneaIUMaux Co.. # utwnwiA Thompson's Eye Wafer P. N. U. 51 '9i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers