Sharp Pains Darting from one point to another, stiff and swollen joints, inflammation, intense suf fering, are characteristics of rheumutism. All these painful symptoms are cured by Hood's Bnrsnparilla which purities the blood nnd neutralizes the ncid which Is the cause of rheumatism. Why continue to suffer when you may bo relieved by Hood's Sarsaparilla America's Greatest Medicine. P-rice sl. Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25cents. The barbers in Cuba make you get up and wash your own face after a shave, as they did jn this country 50 years ago. Doa't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour I.lfe Away* To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or fI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New Yorfc At Charlotte, N. C., R. M. Oates, who operates a hosiery factory, is to put In a spinning plant to make his own yarn. There Is more Catarrh In this section of th country than all other diseases put together, And until the last few years was supposed to incurable. For a great many years doctors J (renounced it a local disease ami prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it In curable. Science has proven catarrh to bo a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the onlv constitutional cure on the market. It in taken interually lu doses from 10 drops to a tea spoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It fails to cure. Bernl for circulars and testi monials. Address F. J. G'HBNEY& Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists 75c. < Hall's Family Pills are the boat. We have not been without Plso's Cure for Consumption for 20 years.— Ll/.ZIK FEKRKL, Capip St., llarribburg, Pa., May 4, 1894. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. Do not begin a long journey until some breakfast has been eaten. After taking a warm drink do not go im mediately out Into the cold and do not drink anything hot immediately as you come In out of the cald. To soften nails, rub the following preparation well Into thom each night and sleep In gloves: Lanoline, one ounce; vaseline, half-ounce; olive oil, ten drops. The hands should alwaya be washed In warm water and the nails polished with a leather. The upper part of the arms of a wo man should be large, full and well rounded. The forearm should not lie too flat. A dimple at the elbow la very desirable. Correctness of form Is not tho most necessary thing for a good arm. The owner should also possess the power of expression and here la a word of advice —the slowest movements are always the prettiest. People are most likely to catch cold In the back than they are generally aware of and If neglected may prove a serious matter. The back, especially between the shoulders, should always bo kept well covered and never lean with your back against anything that la cold. Never sit with your back In a direct draught and when warming It by the Are do not continue to keep the back exposed to the heat after it has become comfortably warm. To do so Is debilitating. The woman who wishes to retain the beauty of her face should forego the use of the smelling bottle. Stand In front of a mirror and Inhale the pun gent odor from a smelling bottle and notice the number of lines which form about the eyes, nose and mouth. Each snlfT taken from the bottle causes the same screwing up of the face and each time the unbecoming lines deepen. Re member, also, that It la an unpleasant experience which has called up these wrinkles. Those caused by laughing and talking are bad enough, but wrink les formed by the use of smelling salts gives an absolutely undesirable expression. lie Kneir It- The Gtooa Man —Do you know that there are breakers ahead of you? The Wicked One—Ye —hlc—yes. I s'pose my—hlc—wife and her mother'U break my—hie—head when I git home. TUMOR EXPELLED Unqualified Success cf Lyc.la EJ Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. / Mrs. ELIZABETH WIIEELOCK, Magno lia. lowa, in the following letter de scribes her recovery from a very criti cal condition: M DEAR MRS. PINKHAM.—I have been taking your Vegetable Compound, and ad sou den to myself. Was troubled with spells, also palpitation of the neart and that bearing-down feel ing, aqd could not be on my feet much. 44 1 was growing worse all the time, until I took your medicine. 44 After taking three boxes of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Lozenges, the tumor passed from me. 44 My health has been better ever since, can now walk quite a distance and am troubled no more with palpita tion of the heart or bloating. I rec ommend your medicine to all sufferers from female troubles." It is hardly reasonable to suppose that any one can doubt the efficiency of Mrs. Pinkham's methods and medi* cine in the face of the tremendous vol* ume of testimony. | COMPARATIVE DANCERS. . Soldi.rs Not tlio Only One. Who Ar. In Peril. I The two girls on a Pennsylvania | train from Washington to Philadelphia [ had in the course of the first hour be come acquainted, and in the next they were quite as confidential as if they had known each other for years, such is the beautiful simplicity of girl nature. "Oh, yss," said the grav-cyed one, blushing prettily, "I have several friends with the army in Cuba. Have you?" "No, I have not," responded the blue-eyed ono. "I have some ac quaintanees, but I should scarcely call them friends." "Oh, I dou't mean that," exclaimed the gray eyes, without knowing ex actly what she did mean. "With what command is ho?" in quired the blue eyes, smiling in rather a superior manner. "Oh, you tease," twittered the gray eyes, "but, of course, you know, any how, and I might as well tell you. He is the nioest fellow you ever saw, nnd I want you should meet him some time. He is at Santiago now, and has been down there since the troops first landed. It was simply awful when ho first went down there to that horrid fighting. Every day we sat waiting for the news that might tell he was shot or something dreadful had hap pened to him. You didu't have auy one down there, and you can have uo conception of the perfectly awful strniu it is to wait for news from the front when some loved one is there," and the soft gray eyes grew moist at the , memory. The bine eyes took upon themselves I the look only blue eyes can take. I "Oh, I don't know," said their pos sessor, "I have a friend who plays j foot ball."—Washington S*r. MICE IN THE PUMPKIN, , Tit© Boss Product of tho State of Maine Was Spoiled by Thom. Aided by the rich output from an I active waterspout, George Archer was able to produce the biggest pumpkiu grown in Maine this season. At the fairs whore it was exhibited re cently it was awarded §27 in cash prizes, and Mr. Archer carried home blue ribbons enough to start a mil linery store. Everybody who saw the pumpkin wanted some of the seed, but Archer, feeling that his native town demanded his loyalty, refused to sell, telling the would-be purchasers j that he had agreed to donate the pumpkin, seed and all, to the village church, which would hold a pumpkin pie Hociable, at which time the seeds would he sold to the highest bidder, the proceeds to go the minister. The sociable was held iu November, i More thau 400 persons attended, some ot them coming from Kennebec County in order to bid on the pumpkin seed. When the meeting had been called to order and the minister had offered prayer Mr. Archer started to carve the pumpkin with a big stick knife. Ho opened it with two strokes, aud as he laid the hemispheres down upon a table a nest of lively mice scampered away among the audience, causing the women to leap on top of tho pews and making an animated scene for several minutes. The mice had not only spoiled the pumpkin for purposes of pie, bnt they had eaten up all of the precious pumpkin seed, for which the owner had been offered 850 cash. Archer was bitterly disappointed. So were all those in the audience. The Blesain* of Laughter. Some one has said that "a sense o' | the ludicrous and the faculty of laugh ter are the most useful parts of our nature. Laughter is essentially a so cial, a sympathetic aud a contagious power. Some nations, particularly the Orientals, are said never to laugh; but all European nations havo been great laughers, and the ludicrous has played an important part even iu their his tory. Hy means of laughter, absolute I monarchs have been controlled, and even Demos, himself, has been made to-laugh at his own follies till he was almost shamed into good sense. Quack eries, hypocrisies and affectations of all kinds havo been exposed and sup pressed, and the reformation was pro moted by the united efforts of reason nnd ridicule. The sense of the ludi crous and of the pathetic have their sources not far from each other iu the highest part of our nature. A good laugh, periodically administered, would excite those sympathetic feelings aud genial dispositions, which are most needed for regenerating our moral system. Then men, whom wo have sent homo laughing, would have ex perienced an hour's pleasure without fear of mißgiviug at the time and with out remorse or reaction afterwards."— Detroit Free Press. "Ship Surrounded by Whales." Whales, dolphins with their rain bow colors when dying, the famous bird, the nlbatross, porpoises nnd other members of the great family of the deep are incidental to the neigh borhood of Capo Horn. Whales are still plenty, aud interesting stories are told of them by the old-style shiver-my-timbers captain who has rounded the Cape a hall dozen times nnd likes to tell of it. One of this sort on his first vovago in thoso seas awakened his sleeping crew with this command: "Avast there, stop that snoring, you land lubbers!" This being repeated at intervals, and the men wide awake, they de clared they had not snored aud began an investigation with lanterns. This was their report to the captain: "Ship surrounded by whales, all snoring."—Chicago Times-Herald. London Charltlei. The income of the principal charita ble institutions having their head quarters in London amounts to over $35,000,000 per annum. Do You WUh to Sin* Well ? Then use Hoxsie's Disks for ever* form of cough, cold, hoarseness or sore throat. They clear and beautify the voice. 25 cts. Fits permanently cured. No fit* or nervous nees niter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial hott.le and treatise free. I)r.R.H.KLINE. Ltd..03l Arch St.Phila,Pa J. F. Edwards, of Denton. Tex., has received an order from Japan for 250 bales of cotton.. This will be the first direct shipment bf cotton from Denton County. To Cur© A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund inouey If it fails to ours. 25c. The fact that bicycles are taxed in France makes It easy to collect statis tics as to cycling in that country. The returns for 1807 show that there were then 408,869 wheels in France as com pared with 203.000 in 1594. The income derived from the bicycle tax in 1897 amounted to about SBIO,OOO. Dr. Seth Arnold's Couch Killer brat modi, cine ever tried for Cold!.- L. " H AMMOND" A coldeu bu, Newburgh, N*. Y., Nov, 2tt. 18U7. It is estimated that Australia raises about 125,000,000 sheep per year, and last year exported to England wool to the value of $123,000,000. Lieutenant von Schellendorf. a Ger man colonist in Africa, believes that he has succeeded in training the zebra. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Caacarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the bodv. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Professor Schwab, of Yale, says that the learned professions absorb 62 per cent of the college graduates nowa days, whereas they formerly absorbed 92 per cent. On the other hand, busi ness pursuits now take 31 per cent against 6 per cent in the old days. Five Cents. Everybody knows that Dobbins* Eloctrlo Boap is the best in tho world, and for 33 yean It has sold at the highest price. Its price If now 6 cents, same as common brown eoapw Bars full size and quail ty.Order of grocer. Ada Dentists in Germany are using false teeth made of paper instead of porce lain or mineral composition. These paper teeth are said to be very satis factory, as they do not break or chip, are not sensitive to heat or cold, or to the action of the moisture of the mouth and are very cheap. educate Yonr Dowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c,25c. If C. C. C. fall, druggists refund mouay. The Dexter (Me.) Penobscot Woolen Company's plant Is running till 9 P. M... and can't produce enough cloth to fill orders. hkAAA^B^AAA^^ DM ever ; | See a Snow : ; storm in : ; summer? j We never did; but we have ( seen the clothing at this time > . of the year so covered with | dandruff that it looked as if it ( had been out in a regular snow- ► 4 storm. | No need of this snowstorm. ( As the summer sun would ' < melt the falling snow so will } ; /Iyer's : Hair i Vigor I ' melt these flakes of dandruff in | the scalp. It goes further than I . this: it prevents their formation. | 1 It has still other properties: ' ( it will restore color to gray hair I ' in just ten times out of every . ' ten cases. ' | And it does even more: it i feeds and nourishes the roots . < of the hair. Thin hair becomes ' i thick hair; and short hair be- , " comes long hair. ' We have a book on the Hair ' | and Scalp. It is yours, for the > J asking. I ' If you do not obtain all the henefltn ' A you expected from the use of the Vigor, I "write the doctor about it. Probably * ' there Is some difficulty with your gen- , 4 era! system which may bo easily re- I movmf. Address. | DK. J. C. AVER, Lowell, Mass. i pyyvfWF? y CONSTIPATION "1 have gouo 11 dnye at a time without a movement of tho bowels', not bolim nl-lo to move thorn excopt by uulug hot water injections. Chronic constipation for seven years placed mo in this terrible condition; during that time I did ev ery tblng I heard of but uover found any relief; such was my case until 1 begun using CASCA RETri. I now have from one to tbreo passages a day, aud If t was rich I would give fciuu.uo for each movement; it is such a relief. " AYLMEII L. HUNT, ITISU Russell St.. Detroit, Mich. fOJ CATHARTIC uvdcaicto TKADf MARK Pleasant, PoUstablc. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Slckdn, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 200, GOo. ... CURE CONBTIPATION. ... ftUrllag Comptar, Chicago, Hoatraal, lew Tack. IS A QUEER OLD WORLD. If virtue would allure like sin How easily might goodness win. If right went laughing by like wrong The devil would lose half his throng. If day sought pleasure like the night Dawn need not blush to face the light. But virtue seems so cold and proud That merry sin attracts the crowd. And right has such a solemn air Men follow wroug, the debonair. And care so eats the daytime up At night they seize mad folly's cup, Ami drink forgetfulness 'till dawn And so the queer old world goes on. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox, In the Criterion. PITH AND POINT. "I asked the tramp why ho never took a bath." "What did he say?" "Said he was too proud to beg for soap."—Chicago Record. Mrs. Newed—"Was I nervous, dear, during the ceremony?" Her Friend —"Well, a trifle :it first, darling, but not after William bus said 'yes ' " Tit-Bits. He—"He that courts and runs away, will live to court another day." She "But he that courts and does not wed, may find himself in court in stead. "-Tit-Bits. The Old Frieud— -"I don't believe you realize the dignity of your posi tion." Tho New Millionaire—"Don't have to. I've a butler hired for that." —Cincinnati Enquirer. Her Mother—"l am surprised at Charles squandering so much* money on a phonograph." The Wife—"l am not. He always did like to hear him self talk."—Harlem Life. She—"Do you remember thai thirty years ago you proposed to meaud that I refusod you?" He—"O, yes! That's one of tho most treasured recollections of my youth."—Der Floh. "Mandy, have you brought that young man to his knees yet?" "With the style of trousers they wear nowa days? What are you thinking of, auntio?"—Chicago Tribune. Hioks—"Just saw Hogloy. Had been to the doctor's. Doctor tells him he is looking himself again." Wicks —"ls he ready as bad as that? Poor fellow!" Boston Transcript. "What is the brink of war, pa?" "The brink of war? Well, it is the feeling which seems to exist all the time between Bridget and your mother."—Detroit Free Press. "I see it is becoming a fatl to have your wedding cinematographed." "But a feller doesn't have to have his courtship cinomatogruphod, thank heaven!"—lndianapolis Journal. I know n boy—a horrid boy— Who does his family annoy. He has a box—a horrid box— Aud creeps up sly as any fox, And with a click, aud horrid laugh. He shouts, "I've got your photograph." "Yea," said tho fat mau with tho frayed clothes of flue texture, "I went into that deal with $10,000." "How did you come out?" asked the other man. "Alouo."—Cincinnati En quirer. "The only objection I have against the young man, my dear child, iij that he has no noble ambition—no high or i worthy object in life." "Why, papa, Low can you say that? He wants me!" —Chicago Tribune. "Mamma, when you're away from home an' want to go bock awfully that's beiu' homesick, ain't it?" "Yes, dear." "What is it when a feller's sick of stayin' at home an' wants to go fishin'?"—Chicago Tribune. There was a young fellow called Tait, Who dined with a girl at 8.8, But I cannot relate What that fellow culled Tute And his tete-a-tete ate at 8.8. —London Truth. Drufman—"l have been hoarding ten years." Raymeu—"Then you non't know what it is to have a home." Drufman—"Oh, yes, I do. It was when I had a home that I didn't know what it was to have one."—Roxbury Gazette. Bride's Father (to his prospective son-in-law, a young lawyer)—"l am not going to givo my daughter a cash dowry, but I have some doubtful claims for SIO,OOO that I will make over to you, aud you cau sue on theui."— Fliegeude Blaetter. Coal In the Philippines. Admiral Dewey has submitted to tho Navy Department, at Washiugton, by mail a detailed report iu regard to some of the extensive mineral re sources of tho Philippine Islands. The report gives special attention to coal. The Admiral says that coal iu largo quantities is to bo found in Luzon and adjacent islands and that it is of good quality. He represents that the coal mines are not fur removed from the seacoast in some places, aud that by a minimum investment of capital the product of the mines cau be brought to the ocean. Admiral Dewey ex presses no opinion in his report in re gard to the purpose of working the coal mines, hut the inference is that naval coaling stations in the Philip pines could bo kept supplied iu tho future with a large quantity of good fuel without incurring the necessity of bringing it loug distances in col lion;. —New York Sun. A Town Killed by Love. The most unique settlement in tho United States is the town of Common wealth, Ga. There is no need for money at Commonwealth, for every thing goes into the .common fund, and every man shares exactly alike. Thero are no rioh poople iu Commonwealth, and no poor people. All work for 0110 another, and tho law and creed of the community is "Love." If a person wishes to build a bouse the lumber is furnished from tho mill operated by the members of the eettlomnot. If vegetables are wanted the common garden supplies tho need. The settle ment is run 011 the co-operation plan. "Love thy neighbor as thyself" ie a law that is strictly observed.—Junior Tidings. OUR UNCROWNED RULERS. Give the children roasted apples to eat frequently and as many oranges as they want. How long should a child remain In a bath? This must, of course, depend upon circumstances; the time must be varied according to the age of the child. For the first four or five weeks of an infant's life it should not be kept in beyond three or four minutes, and the duration must be gradually prolonged ae the child grows older un til It extends to a quarter of an hour, a period which may bo allowed after It has attained the age of 3 years. When the baby pokes an inquiring finger Into the Are or tumbles against a hot steam radiator a quick way to relieve his shrieks is to cover the burned surface with baking powder till a preparation of equal parts of Unseed oil and lime water can be ap plied and covered with soft cloths. If the burn is slight covering with the white of an egg or pure lard will re lieve the agony. Burns caused by lime or lye or an alkali of any sort should be treated by vinegar or lemon juice; ourns caused by acid should be treated with water and moist earth. There are households in which the children are scarcely permitted to speak above their breath. This Is not at all right. In the home there should oe freedom of speech. Children should be encouraged to express, in a modest way, their opinions before their par ents and to come to them for advice and counsel In all their difficulties and dilemmas. If this course is pursued they will not be likely to take any serious steps in after life without either consulting the old folk at home or ap plying the homo standard of propriety to whatever enterprise they may have In view. ODDS AND ENDS. A cycling firm in Cologne has patent ed a new bicycle bell, in which Is con cealed a kind of revolver, which is to serve the double purpose of frighten ing away vicious dogs and cheeky tramps. By merely pressing a button attached to the side of the bell ten cartridges can be flred off in succession, these giving such a loud report that obnoxious persons and animals would not think twice of beating a hasty re treat. Machines for treating coffee, used In Brazil, are made In the United States, but require Improvements In view of local conditions. Thus the coffeo driers are very unsatisfactory, "and the inventor of a thoroughly ef fective drier would reap a fortune In Brazil. Driers as now made use too high a temperature, and the product Is not uniform. It seems the solution of the problem would lie In the use of comparatively low temperatures and of an exhausting pump. A student of Spanish annals has add ed an interesting chapter to the his tory of prices by revealing from the archives of the Escurial what It cost to discover the new world. The sti pends of the discoverers, at all events, did not amount to much. The pay of Bn able seaman was only, It seems, 10 francs a month, while a captain drew only 80 francs, or about 3 guineas, a month. As for Christopher Columhus himself, his earnings were at the rate of 1,600 francs, or $320, per annum. Even In Spain salaries have risen since those days. Foot Foe Not Expelled from College. William H. Browne writes the fol lowing letter to the Baltimore News: "I see a paragraph going the rounds of the papers to the effect that it is re markable that Edgar A. Poe should b honored by a bust erected in the uni versity from which he was expelled, it has been shown again and again that Poe was never expelled from the Uni versity of Virginia. Mr. J. H. Ingram, the author of a well-known life of the poet, wrote to Mr. William Werten baker, secretary of the faculty, to in quire about Poe's conduct and stand ing, and that gentleman, who was librarian during Poe's residence and knew him well, replied, not from mem ory only, but after searching tho rec ords, that 'at no time did he fall undei the censure of the faculty." Mr. Wood bury, another biographer, says thai during Poe's residence 'he did not come under the notice of the faculty, which Is stated to have been at thai time unusually watchful and strict.' " Advice Is about the only thing the average man will. give freely without money and without price. To Car* Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 23a If IX C. C. fall to care, druggists refund money The town of Tezintlan, Mexico, has been lighted with acetylene gas. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, nllays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle The French river Woolen Mills, at Mechanicsville, Conn., are running day and night to complete a government contract. No-To-Uao for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco bahit. cure, makes wealt men strong, blood pure. 50c. 21. Ail druggists. There isn't a house in Santiago with a glass window, but the windows have inside shutters, besides heavy iron bars outside. PENETRATE,LOOK OUT FOR AN ATTACK OF SCIATICA. BUT OEEP A3 THE BCIATIO NERVE 18 ST. JACOBS OIL WILL PENETRATE AND QUIET ITS RACKING PAIN. 9Sr9-^ •^'•^'999-9-9-W99999 9'999999999999•■' ?'?^v : ? : ?'.*^ | j'~BL. Mi i*i m xnl 5 .■. ~ < t 1 I Irffl E: jps^sOft is I I Mfl n { nI I J | I If you have a carpet that looks dingy and I % you wish to restore it to its original freshness, | | make a stiff lather of Ivory Soap and warm * | water and scrub it, width by width, with the § SB lather. Wipe with a clean damp sponge. Do j$ | not apply more water than necessary. i ® © The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soap is made, and its purity, ® % fit it for many special uses for which other soaps are unsafe and w X unsatisfactory {£ © & ft Copyright 1005. by The Procter * nunbU Co , ClnclnnMl. B# OVER-WROUGHT NERVES OF WOMEN. Extracts From Letters Received by Mrs. Pinkham. ••I am so nervous and wretched." "I feel as if I should flv." How family these expressions are. Little things annoy you and make you irritable. You can't sleep, you are unable to lift ordinary burdens, and L are subject to dizziness. W. bearing-down sensation helps to make yo* nfjj§j&jQL You have backache and pains low down * n ie P a hi in top of head* later on Such a condition points unerringly to "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM: —WiII you kindly allow me the pleasure of expressing my gratitude for the wonderful relief I have experienced by taking jour Vegc table Compound. 1 suffered for & long time with nervous prostration, back ache, headache, loss of appetite, a heavy bearing-down feeling, also burning pains in the groins. I could not sleep, was tired all the time, had no ambition. Life was a burden to me. The pains I suffered at times of menstruation were something dreadful. I thought there was no cure for it. I saw your advertise ment in the paper, and my husband advised me to try jour medicine. I took five bottles, and now I am well and happy. Y'our medicine saved my life.* A Million Women Have Been Benefited by Mrs. Pinkham's Advice and Medicine "Knowledge is Folly Unless Put to Use." You Know SAPOLIO? THEN USE IT. R.-n IT s' If r 1 • I • • e I i S. Mi Arnold Medical Corporation, Wuonsockel, 11. I. El Fl F IT Piidu" rie P 1 jffi B 1 B® •©lHoiaoj.arkiKMiiAHH 111 H k J** 1 '* 1 * rt e ra ""^n.| r, nan"e *\rs mall mini. Whan sold Mini mnnay; wo wtU rantl rlntt; f< w ran toll It from genuine will nt ben-tit bund ,-ts. to liipans <:||miiilca| Co.. Now York for 10 Hamulus and luUu testimonials, nUFIIMATIQM Cf'llED—One bottle—PoaltlTs Kn t U 111 A 110 m relief in 24 hours. Post paid. $1 .OS ■•Alexander Remedy C 0.,246 Greenwich St., N'.Y. AGENTS WANTED :;:RI:RTE at once. HOWARD BROS., Buffalo, N. Y. One that will brlnp a pleasant monthly reminder of the giver is u subscription to the NEW AND IMPROVED Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly Now 80 cts.; $3 a Year. Edited by Mrs. FRANK LESLIE. EACH MONTH : j SnMrVol^Kkh 9 fuustratfoiM, CONTRIBUTORS: W D. Howella, Clara Bar ton. Itrrt Hart. . Walter Camp. Frank R. Stockton, Margaret K. Sangster, Julia C. K. Dorr, Joaquin Miller. Edgar luwcett, F.g-rhm Castle, lonise Chandler Moulton, and other iamous and popular IU2 B9 H Beautiful Art Plate, "A Yard of IT HJ . Pansles" or " A Yard of Pup H Rh Sj ■ P irs " : a,so superb Nov 3 Hlam Bn and Xmas Nos. GIVEN FREE with a si-oo year's subscriptfot from January issue—fourteen numbers in all Either art plate GIVEN FREE with a 3-mcuths trial subscription for 25 cents. COMPLETE Story of the SINKING OF THE " MFRRIMAC * an l'the i.apture and Imprisonment oliheCren at Santiago, by OSBORN W. DEIGN AN, U. S. Noy late helmsman of the Merrimac, in thejanuar; Number. Fully Illustrated. Subscript Now. Editions Limited. FRANK LESLIE PUBLISHING HOUSE. Dbp't B. 145 Fifth Avenue, N.H Mention this paper tchcn ordering. ~~ P. A u. co 'Oi