Doctor* Think of Wearing Bob* bars. Here's the firßt law of health— Keep your feet dry. We all know it. We all know that pneumonia and con sumption always start with a cold, and that the shortest cut to a cold is a pair ot 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. Dr. 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 hero 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 invito colds, bronchiftl trouble, catarrh and pneumonia. It is astonishing how people neglect their feet. Rubbers are fifty cents. You can save a lot of money on 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 tifty-cent pair of rubbers would not only save doctor bills and medicine bills, but often life itself. Don't try to save on rttbbers; it's the most expensive economy in the world, especially just now when everybody is getting the grip. The Vervain Plant. The plant known as vervain, which (s 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 bo only when the stomach is in a healthy condition. liood's Sarsaparilla so tones and strengthens the stomach that it digests food easily and naturally and then all dyspeptic troubles vanish. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Modicine. Price sl. Hood's Pills cure Liver Ills. .25cents. Don't substitute black tea for green because tho purchaser is color blind. No-To-Bao for Fifty Cent*. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men.strong, biooU pure. 50c.i1. All drtttfyisls "Let It Pain." A photograph of the czarina nursing her baby 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 of the interior, who was equally perplexed and decided to consult with the czar. "The best thing I can do." said the Russian em peror, "is to show this to the czarina and let her decide." In a few minutes, according to the story, the czar re turned and said, with a smile, to the minister of the interior: "Her lm-1 •grial majesty finds nothing In the pic -re 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?" Hattie—"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 OF PAIN. Menstruation, the balance wheel of woman's life, is also tho banc of exist ence to many because it means a time of great suffering. While no woman is entirely free from periodical pain, it does not seem to have thorough fe male regula- Iv' \l[ &lV' * '/J! I tor known to I \ ' >ft medical sci ence. It relieves the condition that pro duces so much discomfort and robs men struation of its terrors. Here is proof: DEAR MRS. PINKHAM: —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. I have taken three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound, one of Blood Purifier, two boxes of Liver Pills, and to-day lam 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 you are suffering in this way, write as Miss Miles did to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for the advice which she offers free of charge to all women. V DI:SETHARNOLDS<£K| COUGH KILLER || WHEN /jjjNnl W/ OTHERS FA I L \ V L W ALU DRUG 61 ST S ™__ l Producing Good Grapes. A French agricultural journal gives the method by which a vine grower of Touraine is said to produce magnifi cent grapes. He dissolves two kilo grams of sulphate of iron in 100 liters of water and sprinkles it on the leaves and bunches of the vines. The first application is made when the grapes are about one-third their full size, the second about a month later and the third about twenty days before they are cut. It is asserted that corre sponding results are obtained with pears, apples and cherries. The method is inexpensive and the journal quoted recommends a trial, though it does not guarantee the success of the treatment in all cases. Ventilating Poultry ITonses. Chicken "cranks" in a great many cases aro generally very enthusiastic over the matter of ventilating the houses in which poultry are kept, and many are the schemes practiced in or der to accomplish this end. Ventila tion is an excellent thing, though I be lieve that on the majority of farms, and especially at this season of the year, a little more attention should be paid in trying to determine how not to ventilate. And this not only ap plies to the poultry house but also to the barns. Give this matter your time from now on till spring, for with ont a doubt there has been far more birds killed by the over-ventilation than by under-ventilatiou. During the colder months it is almost impos sible to have a chicken house too warm, and all the fresh air the birds will need is more than likely to find its way into the house in some shape or manner.—Weekly Witness. Harvesting Panuiipft. The parsnip is usually grown on very rich ground, and when much manure lias been used it often has a rank taste when gathered early. It is much better to let the parsnips stay in the ground until the soil around it has frozen once or twice. It may be gathered after the first thaw and housed, wheu it will be found that the rank flavor from the manure has passed away, and the parsuip will be tender and sweet. Some people leave the parsnip in the gyound all winter. It does not hurt it to freeze while in ground, provided it is thawed in con tact with the soil. The greater dan ger in leaving parsnips out all winter is that they will be forgotten in spring until the warm weather bas started the shoots for seed bearing. Then the parsnip becomes poisonous. But if dug as soon in spring ss the ground is thawed, the parsnips -?IL1 be better than if dug in the fall and wintered in a cellar. A Wagon Washing Device. On many farms it is possible to wasli the carriages and farm wagons by backing them into a stream or shallow river. The conveniences of the location are usually offset by the FOR WASHING THE WAGONS. inconveniences—mud, and the wetting of clothes. The cut shows a plank walk, set on posts on the edge of the stream, into which the wagon can l>o backed, when it can be washed with great comfort. A slat platform, suuk into tho walk, will keep the wheels from the mud of the bottom.—Orange Judd Farmer. Watering Iforae*. In watering, as in feeding horses, a man must study the individuality of his animal. With few exceptions, in my opinion, says a writer in Farming, a horse should have water in sufficient quantities to satisfy his thirst when ever ho is thirsty. Theoretically speaking, a horse should first be given drink, then bay, and lastly oats. Tho capacity of his stomach is limited, and if fed oats, then hay, and then watered, some of the oats may be forced out of the stomach (especially if he is a heavy feeder) before they have been suffi ciently acted upon by the digestive juices, and consequently will pass off in the faeces only partially digested. A horse should always be given a drink before a meal. It requires a little training to get him to drink be fore breakfast, especially in cold weather, but in such weather he is uot liable to drink much even after his meals. In all cases, except when lie has been a long time without water and is very warm, he should be allowed all be will drink before the mid-day and evening meals, and also u drink after he has finished his meal. Where it is at all possible he should have water between bis meals, es pecially in warm weather Keeping ffthimge During Winter. It is agreed by most poultrymen that cabbage is one of the best green foods for poultry during the winter, but it is usually hard to keep heads in good condition for more than a few weeks after winter sets in. Here is a plan worth trying. It has been suc cessfully used for several seasons in sections where the winter is peculiar ly trying owing to lack of snow to furnish partial protection. The cab bages are pulled up by the roots and carted to a part of the farm where the ground is sloping. A It so happens where the plau was tried that the ground was near a' cluster of trees. but a locality near by buildings woull! give the same protection. A shallow trench is dug, say two feet deep, and. filled a foot deep with leaves. On this bed of leaves the cabbages are set roots up, close together. Leaves are then heaped over them in large quan tities and held in place with brush. The trenches are made in beds with deep furrows between them to carry off the water, the furrow being made with the slope of the land so that the water will not run against the side of the beds. The cabbages will freeze, but will keep in perfect condition and may be easily taken out as wanted and after being thawed out may be chopped up for use on the table or for the poultry. By this plan green food may be had until late in the spring.— Atlanta Journal. Blanching Celery. The old plan of blanching or bleach ing celery with earth is objectionable from the fact that wherever the soil comes in contact with the celery stalks it invariably causes rust. The use of boards is all right, but wheu a con siderable quantity of celery is grown it is quite an effort to handle these boards, to say nothing of the expense. The accompanying cut shows a plan .I ) I ! LU-U ■ ippi A HANDY BLEACHING DEVICE. for using tarred roofing paper, which is nailed to light frames with a heavier stake at either end long enough that they may be driven into the ground from six to eight inches. The out shows plainly how to construct euoli a frame with the strips at the top to hold it in position. If the paper used is tliiu or lightweight an extra coat of tar may bo given each season before use. Make the sections of a conveni ent size to handle easily and that they may be stored when not in use at the expense of the smallest floor space. These frames have been tried l>y ex perienced celery growers and pro nounced not only cheaper than boards, but more easily handled and quite as effective.—Atlanta Journal. Covering Ensilage. Professor Robertson in his annual report says: In tilling a silo particular pains should be taken to spread the ensilage evenly over the surface; other wise the leaves and lighter parts may lie in one place, and the stalks and ears in another. The onsi'age at the sides and corners of the silo should be trodden down as compactly as possi ble. Theu immediately after the silo is filled it should be covered with a layer of four or six iuches of cut straw, and that by about eighteen inches or two feet of any kind of rough straw. In tho feeding out of the ensilage, it is not a good plan to expose a large surface in the silo at one time. "Where practicable, only as much of the sur face of the ensilage should be uncov-. ered as will cause a depth of about six inches to be removed from it by feed ing every day. A half or one-quarter of the ensilage may be uncovered at one time, and it may be cut down with a hay knife, leaving a perpendicular face, which will mold very slightly. Where too large a surface of ensilage is exposed to the air it becomes offen sive to the smell and gives rise to the growth of molds. These sometimes contaminato the stable and spread the belief that the feeding of ensilage im parts a flavor to the milk. Such flavors get into tho milk through the atmos phere, and not through tho feeding of the cow. Use* of tlie Soli. In the first place it is au immense workshop in which chemical and bio logical changes are constantly going on. The minute soil particles or rock fragments are continually being dis solved and made ready for hungry plant roots. The soil is the home of a vast army of living creatures. We never see them. They are too small. They are the lowest form of life—sim ple, one-celled plants, in the shape of spheres or ovals, or short rods. How small are these creatures of the earth? In transverse diameter one twenty-tivo thousandth of an inch is a common measurement. Increase the bight of the ordinary man one thousand times and his head would be over a mile j above the earth, yet one of these little f creatures under the same magnifica- I tion would have plenty of room to dance up and down in the film of water between two plates of glass pressed firmly together. From 100 to 250 of tlieiix placed side by side would make the thickness of an ordinary sheet of naper. These little fellows are qon tiuually at work causing decay of vegetable matter in the soil, and thus making plant food. They are among the farmer's best friends. Second, the soil is a great storehouse-of water. If we always had plenty of moisture in our soils we would have good crops. The soil acts as a large sponge to ab sorb water and hold it for the use of crops. Third, the soil is a home for plants. It affords a place in which they may live and grow.—Americah Agriculturist. ARE YOU SORE I AND STIFF From hard work or outdoor { exercise ? I ;! ST, JACOBS OIL | Will cure after a few appli- s cations, and make the J muscles limber and strong. SIOO Howard. SIOO. Tlio readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only- positive cure now known to the medical lruteruity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's C'atnrrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the arstem, thereby destroy ing the foundation t.r the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. Chknf.y & Co., Toledo, C. Sold by Druggists, Hall's Family Pills are the best. In Turkey the Sultan is by tradition bound to dye his hair and beard. Ednrnte Tonr Bowels *7lth Cascarata. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 26c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund mouejr. WHAT THE LAW 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. R. A. 175, to be 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 138, are held, in Noble vs. Seattle (Wash.), 40 L. R. A. 822, 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 Dettman vs. Cowley (Wash.) 40 L. R. 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 to the station, attempts to cross the main line, 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 no variation except two inches in height or twenty pounds in weight. Hncsymt eau Ache ? I; Are your nerves weak? ► y Can't you sleep well? Fain 4 4 In your back? Lack energy? ► ► > Appetite poor? Digestion ,4 bad? Boils or pimples? , '4 These are sure signs of y , poisoning. 4 4 From what poisons? ► ► From poisons that are al- 4 4 ways found in constipated ' ► . bowels. .4 If the contents of the j *4 bowels are not removed from y. I the body each day, as nature 4 4 intended, these poisonous ► y substances are sure to be 4 4 absorbed into the blood, al- ► ways causing suffering and 4 frequently causing severe disease. . . There is a common sense 4 4 cure. ► rMR'Sj , They daily insure an easy 4 ► and natural movement of 4 the bowels. , ► You will find thatthe use of 4 S li Ayer's arsapariila: : *4 with the pills will hasten ► recovery. It cleanses the 4 4 blood from all impurities and y ► is a great tonic to the nerves. 4 , Writ* thm Doctor. % J Our Medical Department has one a a 4 of the most omlnent physicians In " . P the United States. Tell the doctor 4 4 Just how you are suffering. Too k. ► will receive the best medical advice J . without cost. Address, ~ i DR. J. C. AVER. ► ► Lowell, Mass. 4 Farms for Sale! Send stamp, get full description and price of 40 qheapeat farms in Ashtabula Co., O. Best statu in tho union; best county in the btate. 11. N. BANCROFT. Jefferson, Ashtabula Co., Ohio. PROFITABLE EMPLOYMENT can .he secured as agents for popular mat a zine, securing subscriptions. Position per manent. Aloud wages to tallies of tact and busi ness qualifications. Send for lettor of informa tion STODDARD, ttu *>*arl St.. New York Oily THE AMERICAN HERDER. By Iron paths and fresher trails. Through inlies of corn and grass, On rugged slopes, In pleasant vales, A. thousand herds I pass. A myriad pounding hoofs have made Dull thunder on the plain, And enttlo from these pastures fade Only to come again. As in late twilight, through the snow, I ride across the range. My thought slips to the long ago, O'erleaping chance and change; And down the broadening track of man, O'er hill, through desert sands, From the far place where he began To these new Western lands, X see the herders and their herds Along the dim trail curled; A tether-llue that links and girds The pastures of the world. Nicholson, in New York Sun. PITH AND POINT. "What are you worrying about now?" "I belong to the 'Don't Worry Club,' and can't pay my dues."—Truth. Jim—"What would you do if you were sent to jail?" Tim—"Catch "the measles and break out."—Detroit Free Press. "Did you have any sort of a show, Tom,when you weuttoask her father?" "Oh, yes; the door."—Philadelphia Bulletin. Irate Father—"Did I not tell you never to set your foot again on my threshold?" Suitor—"l didn't. I stepped over it." Judge—"Weren't you afraid to strike the darky on the head?" Pris oner—"No, sir; I had on brass knuckles." —Truth. Mrs. Weddcash—"You ' uow I made you what you are!" Weddcash— "That's right, woman; g" oat over your work!"— Cincinnati Eaij.iirer. "Is there an unpleasn it odor in the dead letter office?" "No, not very. It's a wonder, too, with such nu evi dent conglomeration of bad sense." "I think my old overcoat will do till Christmas." "Yes, and after Christ mas you won't get one because it will he so near spring."—Chicago Record. Now happy days brood o'er the land When man enjoys himself. Canned pumpkin in the pantry and Lawn-mowers on the shelf. —Chicago Record. "No," she declared, "I will never marry for love or money." "Ah," he returned, "you are looking for some foreigner with a title!" —Cleveland Leader. "There's a load off my mind," said the Italian lady, as sho deposited the seven bushels of coal that she had picked up along the railroad tracks.— Chicago News. Her Father—"Weil, do you suppose tte'U be willing to work for a living?" His Girl—"How cau he, papa? He has promised to do uothing but think of me all the time."—Standard. "I have invented something very nseful." "What is it?" "An alarm olock letter-box which rings when a man goes by with u lettor in his pocket to mail for his wife."—Chicago Record. "A woman's idea of a down-trodden wifo is one who," said the Cornfed Philosopher, "does not ask her hus band to account for every cent of his own money."—lndianapolis Journal. "Riches," remarked Li Hung Chang's private secretary, "have wings." "That's true," was the an swer, "but I don't propose to let 'em get out of the coop."—Washington Star. The Doctor—"lt's easy to tell just what a man's worth as soon as he opens his mouth." The Patient—"l suppose that is why you always look at a rnan'q tongue the first thing."—Yonkers Statesman. Mrs. Gotrox—"Mabel, dear, are you sure Mr. Woodby loves you for your self alone?" Mabel—"Yes, I'm sure he does, mamma. He is always so restless when you are in the room."— Chicago News. Abe Furst—"There's no use talk ing, it's always best to begin at the bottom of the ladder." Charley Tib bies—"Yea, that's all right, unless you happen to be escaping from a fire." — Cincinnati Enquirer. A Culinary Failure. She had just come from Castle Gar den. It took only half a look to telf that she originally came from the Emerald Isle, and was absolutely ig norant of the wonderful things there are to be seen in America, says the Chicago Journal. Although sho was green, she looked as if sho might learn, and a woman on Michigan avenue engaged her as maid of all work within a short time after her arrival in Chicago. There were many minor mishaps, which were overlooked, and Mrs. Mc- Phorsou was beginning to feel encour aged over the prospects of having a a good girl in the course of time. One day she had a watermelon sent up. It was duly delivered at the kitchen door. Not long before dinner Nora came to the door of the sitting room. "Mis' McPherson," she said, "I've been a-cookiug that big aig, an' a cooking' it, an' sure I can't do naw thin' with it. Won't you be afther comin' out in the kitchen an' lookin' at it?" Not Exactly. "You belong to what they call the employing class, do you?" asked the party with large voice. "Yes, sir," responded the party with the double chin. "And you have a large number oX people in your employ, I suppose?" "Yes." "Some of them minors, too, of course?" "Yes." "That's what I thought. I'll bet a hundred dollars you run a sweat shop!" "Well, hardly. I run an ioe houße."—Chicago Tribune. ( > From Factory to Fireside. 4 j| Would we spend | !>a million dollars! yearly advertising| {IOUR Catalogues e J| if tliey were not! 11worth haying? I ♦ Our genera! Catalogue contrrns Furni- X ture, Crock' iy, Stoves Clocks, Sewing ▼ A Machines. Silver ware. Upholstery Goods, A ♦ Mirrors, Lamps, Pictures Bedding, iiaby X Carriages, Refrigerators, Tin wure, etc.. v A at prices that have surprised the entire A civilised worid. Y i ♦ We publish a 16-color Lithographed Cat- ▲ alogue of Carpets, Rugs, Portieres and Y I f Lace Curtains showing the actual pat- • | ▲ terns in hand-painted colors. Wo pre- A i T pay freight on these goods, sew Carpets Y 1 ♦ free and furnish (free) Carpet Lining. G ♦ Here you can buy at the same prices V | A that dealers pay. A million and u half ▲ Y others have written for our Free Cata- Y ' W logues. • ♦ Do you want thorn? Addresu this way: ♦ , tJuliusHines&Soni J Dept. nor. BALTIMORE, MD. | The monkey wrench gets its name from its inventor, Thomas Monkey of Bordentown. N. J. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascaretf, Candy Cathartic. 10c or 23c lIQC.G. fail to cure, druggists refund money Gerinun courts have Just decided 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 : newspaper. To Cure \ Cold In One llay. Take Laxative Bronao Quinine Tablets. All 1 Druggists refund money if It fails to cure. 2oc. Oberammcrgau is making ready to ! perform the Passion play in 1900, ' though the consent of the Bavarian | Government has not yet been obtained. Most of the parts will be taken prob- | ably by the persons who acted them in j 1890. The managers count on a very large attendance from visitors to the Paris Exhibition. Dr.Seth Arnold's Cough Killer invaluable as a Cough remedy. Effect magical.— LIZZIK J. JUNK, 448 West 25th St., N. Y., Deo. 11, 1807. London's County Council has decided j 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 i agreement or by compulsion," the | property of the eight companies that j are now providing the water. Beauty In Blood Deep, Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascareta, C'undy 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 j banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cuscarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Chestnuts dried and ground into i flour are made into bread and used for I food by the mountain peasantry of France. Fits permanently cured. No flt.s or nervous ness niter flrßt day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H.KuNE. Ltd.,931 Arch St Phi la. Pa DYSPEPSIA "For six yearn I wan a victim ofily#- fiepala in its worst form. 1 could eat nothing >ut milk toast, and at times my stomach would not retain and digest even that Last March I began taking CASCARET.S and since then 1 have steadily improved, until I am as well as I ever was in my life." DAVID H. MUKPHT. Newark, o. M J CATHARTIC TRADE MARK RKOI6TERED Pleasant. Palutnble. Potent. Taste Good. Do j good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c, 500. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... 1 Sterling Kerned; Company. < h!enrn, Mnntrenl. New York. 311 HO-TO-BAC uUM to^iuK^TTboow^abiu'" |T Established 1780. Jg j ! Baker's I & i ! Chocolate, 1 g ——= % fLajS. celebrated for more tC> than a century as a : delicious, nutritious, , £ an flesh-forming . £ beverage, has our <0 well-known Yellow Label "O £x U BxIAM on the front of every > nh Wx>xl package, and our & US l Mx'iirl trade-mark,"La Belle <3 1 j Chocolatiere,"on the £ NONB OTHER GENUINE. <? A MADE ONLY BY <3 g WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., § § Dorchester, Mass. 2 £& &*3 & sc2r& Q s & DROPSY NEW DIBCOVERY; Riva | cnnen. Ht-nd 'or book of tentituoniaU ai.4 IO ilnya' treatment Free. Pr-H.H.QBKEW'a SONS. Atlanta. On. Ty-ANTED-CMS of bad health that R I P-A W-8 I will not benefit Send Seta, to ItipannChemical ' Co.. New York for 10 samulea and 1000 testimonial®. "One Year Borrows Another Year's Fool." You Didn't Use SAPOLIO Last Year. Perhaps You Will Not This Year. Do Not DUly Dally With troop. But use Hoxsle's Croup Cure at one* and prevent membraneous croup. No opium to stupefy, no Ipecac to nau seate.. 50 cts. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the glims, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle T can recommend I'iso's Core for Consump tion to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D. Tovr* SEND. Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4,1594. It takes 37 specially constructed and equipped steamers to keep the sub marine cables of the world in repair. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tonr I.ife Anay. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. lull of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men j strong. All druggists, 50c or fl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address I Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New Yorfc I Nearly all of the new freight c-qulp- I ment, ordered by Receivers Co wen and j Murray of the Baltimore & Ohio Rail- I road during the past few months, will I be delivered by January irth. | The orders consisted of 3,000 stand** I ard box cars, from the Michigan Pen i insular Car Company; 1,000 box and j 1,000 gondolas from the Pullman Com pany; 2,000 box cars from the Missouri Car and Foundry Company; 1,000 steel I coal cars of 100,000 pounds capacity I from the Sehoen Company, and live 50 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. THE EXCELLENCE Of SYRUP Or FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only, and we wish 10 impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup 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 liaß given to millions of families, makes i the name of the Company a guaranty oi the excellence of its remedy. It is 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. I n order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of , the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, Cat LOUISVILLE, KX. NEW YORK. W.FW One that will bring a pleasant monthly reminder ot the giver is a subscription to the j NEW AND IMPROVED Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly Now 80 cts.; $J a Year. Edited by Mrs. FRANK LESLIE. ; EACH MONTH: { 1 CONTRIBUTORS: W D. Howells, Clara Bar ton, I'.ret Hart<\ Walter Camp, Frank R. Stockton, j Margaret K. Sangster, Julia C. R. DOIT, Joaquin Miller. Edgar Fawrett, F.g'-rton Castle," Louise Chandler Moulton, and other famous and popular 0® S" E?" Beautiful Art Plate, "A Yard ot hRFF I BI !■ fen and Xmas Nos. GIVEN FREE with a vear'a subscription from January issue fourteen numbers in all. Either art plate GIVEN FREE with a ? months trial subscription for 25 cents. I COMPLETE Story of the SINKING OFTIIE " MERRICAC " | and the Capture and Imprisonment ot the Crew 1 at Santiago, by OSBORN W. DEIGNAN, li. S. Navy. late helmsman of the M.-rrimac , in the January I Number. Fully Illustrated. Subscribe New. Editions tnnited. FRANK LESLIE PUBLISHING HOUSE. DKP'T B. 145 Fifth Avenue, N.V, M-vfion this paper when ordering. AGENTS WANTED Genteel hnslnen, pays | *4ueeaod.toni:o. HOWAKCUROB™BuffSo.'I? 1 ?. DMFIIMATKM ' rRKO-°n. Oottl.-Porttlr, KnCUmMllom relief In 24 hours, host paid, 91Jt " 'ALEXANDER REMEDY Co.. 246 Greenwich St., N.Y. j PATENTS ".o'. c r u b : Thompson's Eye Water P. N. U. 51 *94 ! Best Couu'h Syrup. Tastea Good. Uee ■ in time. Sold by druttßiatA g EsuaascaaaEsai \ ■
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