Warm Blood Coursing through the veins, feeds, nour ishes and sustains all the organs, nerves, muscles and tissues of the body. Hood's Barsaparilla makes warm, rich, pure blood. It is the best medicine you can take in winter. It tones, Invigorates, strengthens and fortifies the wholo body, preventing eolds, fevers, pneumonia and tho grip. HOOd'S barilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Price SI. Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. Hood's Pills cure Sick Headacho. 25c. Catarrh Cannot he Cured With local applications nsthcy cannot reach the scat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order tenure it you must, take internal remedies. Hall's Ca tarrh (.lire i * taken internally, and acts di rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the bust tonics known, combined with the-best blood puri fiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect, combination of the two ingredi ents is what produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co.. props., Toledo, O. Fold by Dhi ■••gists, price, Tfic. Hall's Family Pills are the best. At a rough estimate there are 15.- 000,000 pairs of gloves imported into this country each year. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yonr Life Anny. 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 Strong. AU druggists, COc or tl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Blind people are more numerous in Spain than in any other country. Lake Superior is larger than Scot land. The Smallest Island In the World. Rockall is, perhaps, the smallest Island In the world. It Is situated In the Atlantic over 300 miles west of Scotland, and Is a mere rock about 60 feet high and 225 feet round, arising from a reef of sand. The rock is basalt and granite, very magnetic. It l s haunted by sea-birds, and the mackerel of the surrounding seas are very line. Of course, it was never Inhabited, and is very seldom visited, owing to th difficulty of landing on it. Not So Common. "That elopement in high life was so romantic. They stole out —" "No, no; you mustn't say that; they belong to the best society. You should say, 'They kleptomauiacked.' " —Boa. ton Journal. A LIVING WITNESS Mrs. Hoffman Describos How Sho Wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for Advice, and Is Now WelL DEAR MRS. PIXKIIAM: —Before using* your Vegetable Compound 1 was a great sufferer. I have been sick for months, was troubled with severe pain in both sides of abdomen, sore feeling Wraf jB | could not sleep. replied tell inff just what to do. I followed your direc tions, and cannot praise your medicine enough for what it has done for me. Many thanks to you for your advice. Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Com pound has cured mo, and I will recom mend it to my friends. —Mrs. FLORENCE R. HOFFMAN, 512 Roland St., Canton, O. The condition described by Mrs. Hoff man will appeal to many women, yet lots of sick women struggle on with their daily tasks disregarding tho urgent warnings unty overtaken by actual collapse. The present Mrs. Pinkliam's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal leled, for years sho worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometimes past has had Eole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailintr women during a single year. BETTER THAN BUTTER Butterine ls. That Is, it is better than very nearly all butter. Jho lest butter that can IK* pro duced is as good us Butterine. It isn't letter. It can' be. Ami the butter is as good only at the moment it ramies from the churn. It doesn't stay o. Butter and Bntterine remain on a parity only for a few moments. The butter begins to deterio'- rate immediately. The Bntterine doesn't. Whv (to yon not buy Bntterine? It's because you arc prejudiced. You have|heen told that Bntterine is artificial. What does artificial mean? It means a variety of things according to circumstances. Butterine In artificial. So is but ter. Bntterine is manufactured by a process. Butter is manufactured by a process. One is just a.- artificial an the other. "The elements of both are produe d by nature. Both come from tho same animal. And those elements are practically indenticnl. That's whv hotter can't be better than Butterine. Pore Klondike gi'ld uun't 1 any better than pure Cripple Creek gold, uold is gold. Certain elements are tlie same whether 111 butter or Butterine— whether iu the milk or the fat of a cow. The difference lietween Butterine and the best butter is mostly in the process of making. The Butterine process is superior and is a guarantee of Ami with all its merits Butterine costs less than butter— only lfic. per pound. And at this low price we will send it to you express prepaid. Id lb packages in 1 tti prints. 86 lb packages in 8 lb rolls. 40 lb packages (solid). You are enjoying other modern masterpieces of icience; why not this wholesome aud economical one ? Wc want you to try it. WILKINS & CO., 208 Dlh Street, N. W \\ iisbiiitflou, I>. (J. P. O. llo* JUo. <|f| K COUGH KILLER I CURES WHEN /^-n| OTHERS FAIL ALU DR U C C.I&T r. | TALES OF PLUCK f AND ADVENTDRE. | (.*) A Case of Frantic Heroism. We sometimes hear thrilling ac counts of men being bitten in the jun gle far from such elaborate assistance, and of chopping off the injured limb with a sword in frantic heroism; but one at least of such incidents is authentic within the writer's knowl edge. The Eastern Bengal Railway runs due north from Calcutta, aud after a couple of junctious reaches Darjeeling, on the Himalayas. Near Calcutta the stations are pretty close together, but after forty miles or so, they are more apart. At these places coal sheds are erected near the line in case the supply runs short ou the journey. One dark aud dismal night, when tho wind was Lo vling aud tho rain just turning to a drizzle after a terrific tropical downpour, the eugine-1 driver of a train—who, by tho way, was au Euglishman, as in fact they mostly are on Indian railways—was ho'lpiug the stoker to shovel some coal from tho shed to the tender, when suddbuly he felt a sharp paiu oil his finger. On a light being brought, a huge cobra was revealed coiled up ou top of tho coals, with its head erect and hood expanded. Driven to that refuge from the rain, it had launched forth at the driver wheu he had reached for tho coal. What was he to do iu that howliug wilderness? There 1 was no time to lose; a few seconds ' more, and the poison would mount up beyond his reach. He thought of cutting off the arm—but with what? He had no instrument. True, he might lay it on the line and ask tho stoker to drive the train over it. But what if the arm still dangled by a line of flesh, thin, but, yet enough to com municate the poison? Aud how to stop the subsequent flow of blood? These thoughts flashed through his mind faster than it takes to write thom. Suddenly, clenching his teeth in frantic determination, he jumped on to the eugine, flung the furuaco open, aud thrust his arm into the fire. There, like a modern Scievola, he held it till it was burnt down to the elbow; then he faiuted. Tho stoker took the train to the next sta tion, whore the injured mau was troated temporarily, and afterwards brought down to Calcutta, where he finally recovered. Doc and Goat Help to Kill o Bear. There is a bear skin hanging on the Sheffer barn, near Mill Rift, Piko County, Tenu., and thereby hangs the tale of a heroic dog and an invincible goat. For the sake of unity it must also be recorded that the veuerable Mrs. Sheffor aud au axe were in at Bruin's death. Mrs. Sheffer was liaugiug out the clothes. She had her mouth aud her apron full of clothespins, aud was put ting a freshly boiled shirt ou the clothesline behind tho house, when she saw a dark shadow on a sheet near by, aud a warm breath blew upon her check. She turned and saw a bear balancing himself on his hind legs. She uttered a pierciug shriek, and the bear dropped to all fours and started in pursuit. Mrs. Shetfer reached the bouse and closed the door behind her. Around the corner of the house came "Dick," the brindfe bulldog,and from the rear sped "Bill," the goat. That bear felt a violent blow. He turned to avenge t'uo indignity. Sharp teeth fastened in his throat and a dog swung to and fro like a pendulum. The bear brushed his paws down the dog's sides uud shook him off. Then he saw before him a white and black object, which lowered its head. There was a collisiou, and the bear, dazed, put a paw feebly to his head. Canine teeth seized him by the left hind leg. The bear swung about and lauded a blow on the dog's head. He exposed au expanse of neck at the same timo, and upon this weak point foil a blow from hard horns and harder head. Mrs. Sheffor from a window saw a wild, fierce fray. There was the goat backing and charging with the pre cision of a battleship in action. The dog, with his head covered with crirn. son marks of the fight aud with his sides badly scarred, fought like a canine devil. The bear was in the actof crumpling up the dog as patrons of a dairy restaurant dispose of Japanese nap kins, when he received a consignment of initial velocity in his side. He let go of the dog and pursued the goat, while the dog attacked from the side. i Mrs. Sheffer then decided to join in the battle. The bear was badly winded. The dog was minus an eye and the goat's whiskers flowed crim son to the ground. Two hundred pounds of panting aud exhausted bear were trying to recover for another round. Mrs. Sheffer made n detour to the woodshed, and picked up an axe. Dog and goat got out of range and the polished steel fe!l upon the head of that bruised aud heart-broken bear. That was the end of him. Saved by Ilia Horse. George Howard, nineteen years of age, who has been employed on the farm of George Leut, about a mile outside P.ochester, N. Y., on the Buf falo road, is at the Homoeopathic Hos pital suffering from injuries inflicted on him by a hog. That young Howard is not a subject for the Coroner in stead of the hospital surgeon is due to the fact that a horse, which has been a great favorite at Howard an( j is attached to the boy, kicked the en raged hog away as the brute was about to fasten his teeth in the boy's throat. The horse has always been looked upon by Farmer Lent as a remarkably intelligent member of the equiue fam ily, but now he is considered a won der, and had the farmer not himself witnessed the act of the horse he would never have believed that an animal could display such intelligence. The hog which made the attack on Howard was a large and particularly ugly brute. He broke out of his pen in the afternoon and made a rush for tlie barn. The door was open and young Howard, who had just placed his favorite horse back into his stall after a careful grooming, was just start ing to go out the door when tho en raged hog entered with a rush. The brute made a savage attack on the boy, and, fastening his teeth into the calf of the leg, tore and lacerated the flesh. Howard fell back into tli9 stall and close to the feet of tho horse he had just groomed. The hog was springing at the throat of his nrostrate victim when the horse raised his hind feet aud gave the hog a kick which sent him ten feet and caused him to squeal with pain. Mr. Lent, who had been attracted by the screams of the boy, was just entering the barn door as he saw the horse kick the hog oil* tho prostrate body of the boy. It was found that Howard had a bad wound in the leg, and, as the attend ance of a physician was necessary, Mr. Lent hitched up the faithful horse and took the injured boy to the hos pital. Saved by a Jack-KnlO. The recent loss of the French steamer La Bourgogue leads the New York Press to print a strange and ex citing story about the loss of an other steamer of the same line, the Ville do Havre, about twenty-five years ago. On the afternoon before the tragedy, it appears, a New York lawyer, Mr. Witthaus, and another passenger were leaning against the taffrail under the flagstaff at the stern. The second man called Mr. Wittliaus's attention to a life-buoy, so stiff and hard with coats of paint that, the pas senger said, it could not be got free without a knife. Mr. Witthaus attempted to move it, but fouud it glued hard aud fast. His friend took out his knife and began idly sticking it into the soft pine of the flagstaff, till the talk was interrupted by the dinner-gong. Early the next morniDg, while the passengers were still asleep, the col lision occurred, and in the panic that followed, Mr. Witthaus did what he could to get the women aud children into the life-boats. From the first he regarded himself as doomed, for there were not nearly boats enough for the passengers, and it was evident that the ship would float only a few minutes. Several women he fouud places for at once, only to see the boat overturned as soon as it was launched, and all go down, one of the women with her two little children in her arms. Horrified aud sickened by the sight, he went back to the stern of the ship, which was higher out of the water than the bow, to await until he, too, should go clown, and stood leaning again on tlie taffrail. As he did so, in a Hash ho recollected the conversa tion of tho afternoon before, and looked over tho rail. There still hung tho life-buoy, stifl and immovable, and the instinct of self-preservation sprang to life once more. A knife to free the buoy, and he might be saved, but he hud none with him, and to find one was impossi ble with the ship liable te go down at auy secoud. At the same moment his eye caught sight of the flagstaff, aud there, where his friend had evidently forgotten it the afternoou before, stuck the knife. With tho haste of life and death, Mr. Witthaus pulled it out, aud began to saw away at tho buoy. He freed it, and threw himself oil' the deck into the sea just in time to get beyond the vortex that cauio as the great ship went down, sucking hundreds of the victims with it. Mr. Witthaus floated for some time, and was at last picked up by a small boat that was waiting about for chance survivors, and was brought back to New York to tell of one of the most awful catastrophes that ever happened at sea. Circumventing Shell. Most thrilling is the story of Major William Dutiield 8011, surgeon of the Seventy-first Begimeut, of a battle field scene during the fight of July 1, as told in Leslie's Weekly The Ma jor says: "I had just begun to exam ine a poor fellow's wounds when I saw a shell coming toward us high over head. I thought it must surely pass beyond, but it struck a tall tree and ricocheted to the ground, exploding at the very spot where wo were standing. As f saw the daugor I gave the wounded man a sharp push forward, throwing him to ground, and then cast mysell on the ground, also in a forward di rection, as I knew that the fragments of the shell would be driven backward by the momentum. "The explosion came not ten feet from where we were lying, and both of us were buried in the dirt hurled violently over us. There was n hole in the ground where the shell struck big enough to set a barrel in,but neither the soldier nor X got any hurt. The others about thought this quite a mira cle, and came running up,thinking to find us dead. All these details I re member with the utmost distinctness," Reclaiming Land In North Germany. Works are in progress for reclaim ing land among tho islands on the coast of the North Sen, belonging to the Frisian group. The work is under the supervision of the Prussian Gov ernment, aud involves the execution of works similar to those carried on by the neighboring kingdom of the Netherlands. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL A scientific writer says that night ii the time wlricli nature utilizes for the growth of plants and animals; children, too, grow more rapidly during the night. In the daytime, the system is kept busy disposing of the waste con sequent on activity, but while asleep tho system is free to extend its opera tions beyond the mere replacing of worn-out particles; hence the rapid growth. This is why invalids need so much rest and sleep. in making concrete, burnt clay has recently been substituted for the granite chips ordinarily employed, aud the results of the experiments have been a surprising success. The burnt clay has been successfully used for ballast, and this material was employed with the cement. As a result of thor ough tests it was proven that the com bination would be durable for any of the ordinary uses for which concrete is employed. Spiders' lines, which have long been employed in telescopes and levels for the measurement or making of dis tances, are now utilized in making strong cords for military balloons. At the professional schools of Ckalais- Meudon, France, spiders are bred and trained for tho purpose of furnishing tho lines. A dozen spiders are grouped before a reel which withdraws the delicate thread, and each insect is re leased when it has yielded twenty to forty yards of line. Each fibre is of a pinkish hue, and is washed to remove the sticky matter on its surface. Eight of these are next combined into a thread, which is lighter aud stronger than silk. Tho discovery of methods producing very low temperatures has stimulated research into the properties of sub stances when in such a condition. In the case of metals, their resistivity lias been found to decrease considerably with a lowered temperature, and more recently experiments have been tried to determine the value of their specific heat under a like circumstance. The method of mixtures has been used and the metal cooled by immersion in liquid air. The results show that the specific heat diminishes with the tem perature, and some experimenters be lieve that near the absolute zero the value of the specific heat of all ma terials would be tho same, a very small quantity, and probably zero. A fabric has recently beeu invented j in Germany, by Dr. Ford. Linnenboru, which when used for underclothing | will keep the skiu cool und obviate excessive perspiration. The new fabric is so woven that the surface which is in contact with tho skin is linen, while the wool fibre forms the outside of the material. The iinen threads are first well dried and then steeped in a solution of parafine and benzine, it having been found that yarn so made does not absorb perspira tion. The wool undergoes treatment in a bath of water, spirits of sal am moniac, soap and soda, and then is immersed in spirits of sal ammoniac and benzine. These threads are woven together, one side boiug en* tirely linen, while tho other is wool, and garments of such compositiou are said to bo both comfortable aud hygienic. An interesting paper was presented lately before a Copenhagen scientific society by Professor La Cour on wind as a motivo power. With regard to the best construction of a windmill, he pointed out the fallacy of the opinion commonly entertained that the greatest effect is obtained from horizontally moving winds. As to the construction of the wings, notwithstanding the at tention given by practical mathema ticians to this point, all their careful calculations are declared to have led to no positive results. Their physical suppositions were erroneous, holding, as they did, to the idea that the oflect upon the mill depended upon the pressure of the wind when it strikes tho wings. The fact is admitted that the absolutely best shape for wings has not yet been ascertained. But the most important practical point in the paper is the solution of tho prob lem how best to neutralize tho incon veniences caused by the irregularity of the wind. Professor La Cour has for this purpose constructed an original instrument, a regulator, by means ot which a windmill can very well be used for working a dynamo. Falconry Fushlonabla. Falconry, once the fashionable sport of tho aristocracy in England, is again becoming popular, and the demand for the birds necessary for this sport is greater just now than it has been dur ing the last two centuries. It is a pastime which cannot be followed by many, but probably this exolusiveness is ono of the chief characteristics com mending it to tho ladies and gentle men who for some time have been cul tivating it in a quiet and retiring man ner. Those who indulge in it declare the exercise to be most fascinating, and wonder that the wealthy classes fond of field sports over allowed it to die out. In the old days gentlemen frequently gave g.">000 for a pair of hawks, and, although such prices are hardly likely to be repeated, the birds are steadily rising in the market. Tho principal field of supply is North Bra bant, and in one week last month no fewer than twenty-four peregrines wero captured there by meaus of de ooy pigeons.—Loudon Telegraph. AgPaper Without Type. The recent strike of typographers in Antwerp, Belgium, suggested to tho Pqtit;Bleu tho possibility of publish ing a newspaper without a single printed letter, and, therefore, without the aid of printers. At the end of the week it published a supplement, tho pages of which were simply photo graphs of typewritten "copy." P '**!> ft ■ S&si*& Cupsfor CoSds When tho children jet their feet wet and tako cold give them a hot foot bath, a bowl of hot drink, a dote of Ayer's Cheriy Pectoral, and put them to bed. The chances are they will be all right in the morning. Con tinue the Cherry Pectoral n few days, until all cough has dis appeared. Old coughs arc also cured; we mean the coughs of bron chitis, weak throats and irritable lungs. Even the hard coughs of consumption are always I made easy and frequently cured H by the continued use of fl ► Aii(f\ < ► * < Pectoral' Every doctor knows that wild cherry bark is the best remedy known to medical science for soothing and healing inflamed throats and lungs. Put ono of Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plasters over your lungs Tho Bout Modloml Advlos Frost Wo now have tome of th moat oral* nent physicians In the United States. Unusual opportunities and long experi ence eminently fit them for giving you inedloiil advice. Write freely all the particulars In vour case. Address, Dr. J. C. AVER, Lowell, Mass. ■ dy Cowyy, fkltty., Montreal. Row York. 311 wo-TO-Bflc D R O PSYS^iSffiS CttBPH. Rend or book of testimonials ai.4 IO diya> tie.itment I'frr. P r H H OKEtW B 80NB. Atlanta. Q*. PATENTS ' H.,Thompson's Eye Water Men aiul Women Who Work Need not give up when attacked with a severe congestive cold, if Hoxsio's DIRKS 3ro used. They check any cold. 25 cents. The population of tho Soudan is numbered at 3,000,000, nearly all whol ly uneducated. Avoid t lie Night Air. Avoid the night air when dump and cold, und you will often avoid having neuralgia, hut St. Jacobs Oil will cure it.no mutter what is the cause aud no matter how long It has continued. The bones and muscles of the human body are capable of over 1,200 different movements. Beauty IN Blood derp, Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body, licgin 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. The rivers in Northern Russia were frozen this year before the end of Oc tober. Educate Tonr Bowels With Cuscnratft. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 20c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund uiouoy. What the Fool fluid. It was where the motor cars pass In a certain city. An old gentleman alighted, and tho conductor told him to look out for tho other car. Tho passenger did not understand him, and turning around, asked: "What did you say?" Just then tho motor struck him and knocked him without serious dam age toward the curb on the opposite side from which he wanted to go. As he got up, he was heard to mutter, "I wonder what the fool said." French schools arc to be established at Khartoum and Fashoda. TWENTY-FOUR HOURS To Now Orleans or to .Tacksonville via tho Queen & Crescent Limited trains from Cin cinnati, fit hours through to Havana. To Florida-Queen & Crescent Two Fast Vesti huleii trains daily Cincinnati to .Tacksonville. Queen it Crescent. Route and Southern R'y* I'M* miles shortest line to Florida anil the West Indies. Asheville - Only Through Car Line is via Queen & Crescent Route and Southern R'y from Cincinnati. Cafe and observation cars. Excellent service on superb through trains. Queen & Crescent Route from Cin cinnati South. , . Wo think Piso's Cure for CdnsuAtptlon is the only medicine for Coughs.—J EHHIK PIKCK AHD, Springfield, Els., Oct. L. IBH. [miEMilMl'mEFlTSl Your business Is to get as much as possible for your hard-earned dollars.- Our business is to sell direct to consumers and save them from the large prices of the retailers. We publish a lithographed catalogue which shows exact designs of Carpets, Rugs and Draperies in hand-painted colors. We | sew carpets free,furnish lining free and pay freight. Our Big General Catalogue contains everything for the house and Furniture for all uses. It con tains many surprising bargains similar to this: Sol'd Ok Dk, w'th ro'llue top which loclt* oil drawers j iit. >m t dir. •.nnl n b* furnUh.d with 3 drwer in each pi'd• uL It i LO men-. lon *, :M in. d ep. Nt d hns 2 .lidtnir arm*. AH h chU p-Uhed. SpreUl l -'ce, $10.95. Do you think we would spend a million dollars annually advertising our catalogues if they were not worth having? They are free—we pay all postage. Which do you want? Or both? Address this way, JULIUS HIS'ES & SON, Dept. 300 Baltimore, Itlel. FJfty-Onp Bridges fori). & O. 11. It. One of the largest bridge contracts that has been awarded in many years has been let by the Receivers of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. In or der to place the lines west of the Ohio river in proper shape to handle the heavy freight equipment that is being used east of the river, the Receivers found it necessary to rebuild 51 bridges between Ben wood, W. V.. and Chica go. That the structures might be rap idly pushed to completion it was de cided to divide the work among three companies. The Youngstown Bridge Company, of Youngstown, will erect 31 bridges on the Central Ohio division between the Ohio river and Newark, Ohio; The Pencoyd Bridge Works was awarded the 11 bridges en the Bake Erie division. Newark to Sandusky, and the Edge Moor Bridge Company, of Wilmington, Bel., will erect the 9 bridges needed on the Chicago division. | The total cost of these bridges is in the neighborhood of $300,000, and it is expected that all will he in place by September. Nearly six thousand tons of steel will be needed for the struc tures. In China a wife is never seen by her husband before marringe. In this country some wives seldom see their husbands after marriage. Knay Work. Too much exercise leaves one a prey to soreness and stiffness, but it Is easy work for St. Jacobs Oil to get the muscles back into proper shape and cure the distress. Siberia, which has heretofore made no extensive display at any world's fair, will have a large exhibit at the Paris Exposition in ' 1900. The new railway and the lands it has opened will be fully represented. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Hromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. l&c. Signor Mascagni is the plaintiff in a i a libel suit now in progress before the ' Trieste (Austria) Court against Sig ' nor Giacomelli, who had accused the composer of ignoring a hotel bill run up at Trieste in 1886. Found immediate relief in one bottle of Dr. fleth Arnold's Couch Killer M its. S. \\". HATCH,Box 450,Wollttaton, Mass., Aug. 17,1898. Tomatoes have been grafted upon potatoes by a French experimenter, whose hybrid plant produces tubers under ground and tomatoes above. To Cnro Constipation Forever. Take Ctvu'arets Candy Cathartic. 10e or 250 If C. C. v.'. fall to cure, druggists refund money The Bank of France is four times as large as the Bank of England. Fits permanently cured. No I Its or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Bestorer. S2 trial bottle and treatise tree. Dr.H.II. KLINE, Ltd. 931 Arch bt.PJiila.l'a Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children ! teething, softens tlie gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cuieswiud colic. 25ca bottle I Heroes of the f c j War with Sp&iri raT £ thousands of them, &Te suf- ' // feting From lingering div jUrS f fg eases induced by life in uV \y ' j£_j \ ta poisonous southern camps. MS* \X{ \ •& R the result of changes of Jy /p gl nutrition caused by im- nW( JBfjJ V propeT and badly cooked ! i |, "! La (Gj foo d.. Sleeping on the ground ! \ l'a has Uoubtfess developed I ' \ rheumatism in hundreds ''/K / S V W *-•/ C-1 who weTe predisposed to | | ! /5 V the disease. In such cases rfSvi U ■ V the Boys of'9B may take ' \ *vf ? \f \S) a lesson 'rom the etperi* |[ [\ [ \ § Heroes of the g-_ f\j f k Civil War, \J* H f Hundreds of the Boys \ tJ I 1 A kJi oF'63 have testified to the \/t7 \ I */ efficacy of Dr. Williams'' /jy'j V.l P fC Pink Pills for Pale People JII 1 iZvs P.* w in driving out malaTia, / ft yj' es Theumatism and other J] diseases contracted during their days of hardsh.p 5\ * nd PTivation in the ATmy. These pills are the best /3 \\ tonic in the v*orl