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 whole body, preventing colds, fevers, pneumonia and the grip. HOOd'S barilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Price SI. Prepared by C. I. Hood <fe Co., Lowell, Mass. Hood's Pi lis cure Sick Headache. 23c. Catarrh Cannot be Cured With local applications, as they cannot reach the scat of the disease. Catarrh is ;i blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure is 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 best 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. Sold by Druvgists. price, 75c. 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 Yoor ijfe niro,, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. lull of bio, nervo and vigor, take No To Bac, the wonder-worker, that main s weak men strong. All druggists, tOo or i. 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 I.land In tlio 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 CO feet high and 225 feet round, arising from a reef of sand. The rook is basalt and granite, very magnetic. It 13 haunted by sea-birds, and the mackerel of the surrounding seas are very fine. Of course, it was never inhabited, and is very seldom visited, owing to the 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 kleptomaniacked.' "—Bos ton Journal. A LIVING WITNESS Mrs. Hoffman She Wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for Advico, and Is Now WelL DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM:— Before using your Vegetable Compound I was a great sufferer. I have been sick for months, was troubled with severe pain in both sides of abdomen, sore feeling lower part of bow with dizziness, Cur. 1(1 ; & dvlcc. You injg 111 c just what to do. I followed your direc tions, and cannot praise your medicine enough for what it has done for inc. Many thanks to 3*ou for your advice. Lydia E. Pinlcham'3 Vegetable Com pound has cured me, and I will recom mend it to my friends.—Mrs. FLORENCE R. HOFFMAN, 512 Roland St., Canton, O. The condition described b3* Mrs. Hoff man will appeal to many women, 3-ct lots of sick women struggle on with their daily tables disregarding the urgent warnings tint!? overtaken by actual collapse. The present, Mrs. Pinkham's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal leled, for j'cars she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometimes past has had cole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailinsr women during a single year. BETTER THAN BUTTER Butterine in. That is, it is letter than vary nearly all Mutter, ihe best butler that can be pro duced is as good us Butterine. It isn't Metier. It can'v be. And the butter is us good t.uly at the moment it coiues iroiu the churn, it doesn't stay so. Butter and Butterine remain on a parity oulv for a few moments. The butter begins to deterio vute immediately. The Buttertue do. sn't. Why do you not buy Butterine? It's'hecnuHO you ore prejudiced. You have {been told that Butterino is artificial. What does artificial mean ? It means a variety of things according to circumstances. Butterine is urtitlclal. So Ih but ter. Butterine is manufactured by a process. Butter i* manufacture* bv a process. One is just us artificial as the other. The elements of both are produo d by nature. Both come fruu the sutuo animal. And these elements are practically indentlcul. That's why butter can't bo better than Butterino. Pure Klondike gold can't lie any better than pure Cripple Creek gold, uold is gold. Certain elements are the same whether in butter or Butterine— whether lit the milk or the Jut of a cow. The difference between Butterine and the lies; butter is mostly in the process of making. The Butterine process is superior and Is a guarantee of purity. And with nil Its merits Butterine costs less than butter- only 13c. por pound. And ut this low price we will send it to you express prepaid. 10 It) packages in 1 It) prints. :I6 !b packages in :i lb rolls. 40 It) packages (solid). You are enjoying other modern masterpieces of science: why not this wholesome and economical one ? We want you to try it. WILKIN'S ik C 0.. 20H lh Street, N. W., Wimliiiiiiloii, If. (J. I*. O. Box 3(13. TASTES GOOD~CHILDRrNLIKE IT Dt-SETHARNOIDS 111 COUGH KILLER * WHEN CAPT. CHANLEP'S LIFE STORY OF FEW YEARS. BUT BRISTLES WITH EVENTS. An Explorer and Politician—llls Services to Science and Geography—Gallant Conduct During: the War With Spain —On Gen. Wheeler'* Staff. William Astor Chanler, the newly elected member of congress from the Fourteenth district of New York, is one of the most interesting men whom the recent elections have brought con spicuously before the people of the country. Although Mr. Chanler i 3 only 31 years of age he is already well known as an explorer, as a soldier and as a politician. His father was the late J. W. Chanler, three times elected to congress by the votes of the citizens of New York. John Jacob Astor was his great-great-grandfather, and he therefore belongs to one of the most aristocratic and socially impor tant families in America. Young Chanler graduated from Har vard in ISB7, receiving from the uni versity the honorary degree of A. M. WILLI.fM ASTOR CHANLER Wfien be came of age ho undertook a hunting trip to Africa, where he remained for nearly a year. In Sep tember, 1882, he joined Chevalier von Hohnel, a lieutenant in the Austrian navy, and together they set out with their caravan from Zanzibar to pene trate into the Interior of Africa. It was the intention of the young ex plorers to reach Mount Kenia, near Daitcho, which lies a few miles south of the equator in a region almost un- ARTHUR E. STILLWELL. uuown to white men. Eor a long time no news of the daring adventurers reached the outside world, and when rumors did come to the ears of the traders along the coast they only con firmed the fears of Mr. Chanler's friends. It was reported in London that the expedition had stranded at Daltcho. The Geographical Society of London confirmed the report. Grave fears were entertained 'hat Mr. Chan ler would never reach the coast. But In February of the following year, aft er sustaining many hardships and be ing deserted by many of his followers, the explorer succeeded in reaching the coast. The expedition was not without re sults. Much valuable Information was added to the sum of knowledge of the interior of Africa. Mr. Chanler had discovered and mapped a region, hith erto unknown, equal in area to that of Portugal. Mr. Chanler was made a fellow of the Royal Geographical So ciety of England and a member of the Imperial and Royal Institute of Vienna, as a recognition of his services to science and geography. Returning to America he wrote an exceedingly in teresting account of his adventures In a book, which he entitled "Through Jungle and Desert." This was no small achievement for a young man just out of college, but Mr. Chanler did not rest on his laurels. About two years ago he joined Tam many Hall as a Bryan Democrat, • He Invaded politics fvlth the same vigor which had characterized his movement upon Africa and with about parallel results. His friends and his family now believed him lost indeed, but he soon emerged from the strugglo with new trophies in the shape of offices and political preferment. His family and his friends became reconciled to this nev. est departure of a young man who ne-d never have distressed him self w'f-tt anything more important than l fit of his coat or the color of his 'ie. Then the war with Spain becanr- he vital issue of the hour, and Mr. ('h-uiler, like the leaders of his party, ose to the opportunity as a trout to a well-baited hook. He was one of the first to offer his services to the country. As soon as it seemed likely that government would issue a call for troops he sot about recruling a regiment of volunteers which he pro posed to equip and arm at his own ex pense. Nothing daunted when Gov. Black declined to accept his regiment, Mr. Chanler quitted New York with a few friends and went to Tampa, in tending to join the staff of Lecret, the Cuban general. He was delayed long enough to receive a commission from the president, which conferred upon him the duties of assistant adjutant general, with the rank of captain. He was assigned to Gen. Wheeler's staff. Capt. Chanler served through the San tiago campaign, being several times under fire and receiving mention for gallant conduct in action in General Wheeler's dispatches to the war de partment. He was honorably dis charged from tbearmy on Oct. 3. RISE OF A FINANCIER. - A new man has come out of the West into the railroad world, a star of the first magnitude, increasing in bril liancy every day. Ten years ago he was a life insurance solicitor in Chi cago, and a poor one at that. Seven years ago all he knew of a railroad was that it consisted of two tracks on which trains ran. Today he han dles scores of millions of American and European money and controls and operates over 1,200 miles of trunk line railroad, created by himself, and Is adding to It every day. He has linked Kansas City with the Gulf of Mexico by a railroad as near an air lino as it can be, has turned north and reached Omaha on his way to Manitoba, east ward and reached Qulncy en route to Chicago. He has built towns, founded new industries, reclaimed tens of thousands of acres of land to agricul ture, opened mines, established lines of steamers, and Is digging a ship canal seven miles long, wide and deep enough to accommodate the largest vessel afloat. He has been from the beginning a towering figure in the ne gotiations for the Alton road. He has just begun buying railroads in Ohio. He has aroused the railroad world of America and the financial worlds of America and Europe, for he has done all this in less than six years, and liis ambition is to push his lines north, east and west. He is less than 40 years of age, the keenest of financiers, the boldest of projectors. He has rais ed over $00,000,000 in the face of pan ics and every opposition imaginable, and spent it in his own enterprises, and he is said to be by no means rich. He was called a dreamer up to a year or two ago; today he is admitted to be a towering figure, whose plans aim at the diversion of the products of the West toward new outlets to Europe, and the wresting of vast traffic from railroad lines which regard it as theirs by right. This is Arthur E. Stillwell, president pf the Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf railroad, and about fifty of its allied enterprises. How has a man designated as im practicable a few brief years ago made so immense a leap? Railroad people, while freely admit ting he is a factor that must be reckon ed with, say they don't Irtiow. .and let it go at that.' Some of Stillwell's friends say they'don't know, either. Others sair by having propositions to offer that talked for themselves.. Still well himself says by striking the word "can't" cut of his vocabulary. HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. An Interesting Room, If you want a pretty room without expense to yourself, try tho experi ment of decorating your walls with the pictures cut from the newspapers. ; Every day there are interesting scenes from foreign lauds, wonderful ships and beautiful ladies. Cut them out ! carefully and mount on squares of j rough gray paper. Without framing these, tack them upon the walls in irregular designs until nearly tho whole of tho wall is covered. You will he amazed to see how pretty and at tractive your room is. A young lady who decorated her room at a summer resort iu this way was delighted with the results. Her only complaint was that her friends looked at the pictures, instead of visiting with her.—Phila delphia Times. To Make Soup Nourishing. In making soup, the object is to draw all the nutritive qualities of the meat into the water, and to do this the bones must be cracked, so that the marrow will be easily extracted, the meat cut into small pieces, and the whole put into cold water and allowed to heat very slowly. Quick heating would harden the meat and prevent the juioes from freely flowing out. The meat must not he put into water oud washed before it is qut, as even the immersion for so short a time will draw out some of the nutriment. It should instead be carefully wiped with a clean, damp cloth. After cutting the meat into small pieces and cracking the bones, put it into a kettle, and cover it with cold water, letting it stand a little while on the back of the stove, then bring it forward and heat slowly.—Woman's Home Companion. Riclc Room Hints. All women,and particularly mothers, should be familiar with some simple remedies iu case of sudden illness or accidents. Frequently a physician is not to be had when he is most needed, and a trained nurse is a luxury which cannot be afforded. The mau oV wom an who is cool-headed and equal to any emergency is most useful and will oftentimes save a life before a physician can be secured. Iu case of hemorrhages from the lungs get the patient into a sitting posture, or at least bolster him up with three or four pillows. Give small bits of chopped ice frequently, and if it does not nauseate, salt an water can be used. "Two great essentials in the treat ment of hemorrhages," said a well known physician lately, "are perfect quiet and the best of nourishment." Nothing is easier digested or more strengthening than beef juice which is made from the round of beefsteak. Remove every particle of fat and cut the beef into small pieces. Have a spider, very hot, and lay two or three of tho small pieces in it, turning as soon as it is seared over, place this in a meat press, which can be had at any drugstore for $1.50, and press out every particle of juice, heat some meat and repeat this until you have two and a half or three ouuees of juice, season sparingly with salt and warm by placing it in an earthen bowl, set in a pan of boiling water. Stir with a teaspoon to prevent its coagulating, when pleasantly warm, pour into a colored glass tumbler and let the pa tient drink at once, It is not in the least unpleasant to take, and many relish it very much. This should be given several times a day. One nurse prepares it midway between breakfast and dinner, dinner and supper, and just before the patient goes to sleep at night. Next to beef juice comes milk and cream. A patient who can drink free ly of it is nourished better than one who takes a much a larger amount of other food. Eggs either soft or boiled or scrambled, cream toast, creamed or baked potatoes, baked ap ples and plenty of canned and fresh fruit will afford a simple but nourish ing diet. No hot drinks should ever be given a patient suffering with hemorrhages, neither should stimu lants be given. Recipes. Potted Ham and Chicken—Take the meat from the bones of a cold chicken, and to 6very pound allow a quarter of a pound of cooked ham, a quarter of a pound of butter, salt, pepper and cay enne to taste, a little pounded mace and nutmeg; pound the meat in a bowl with the butter and the spice, put into small glass jars, and cover with melted butter half an inch thick. Potato Biscuit—Boil, peel and mash fine one quart of potatoes. Rub them into one quart of sifted flour and one teaspoonful of salt. Work in one tea cup of lard, then add enough sweet milk to make a moderately stiff dough. Roll out to a quarter of au inch thick, cut llfto cakes aud bake iu a quick oven. Sprinkling sugar over tho top is to many palates an improvement. Chocolate Creams—Two cupfnls of white sugar aud one-half cupful of water. Cook over a brisk lire for twenty minutes, then turn it out ou a platter and with a large spoon stir it until cold, when it will cream. Then butter the Angers and work the cream into small balls. Bet a cake of choco late over a steamer until it is melted, and into this dip one at a time the cream balls and then lay on a piece of confectioner's paper to dry. Pink Apple Snow—Pare, core and boil six large apples to a pulp, and press them through t sieve. Sweeten to taste, aud then to every tablespoon ful of apple add a teaspoonful of cur rant jelly. Whisk the whites of six or seven eggs with two heaped table spoonfuls of sugar, aud when frothing add them to the apple mixture,wliisk iug all together until quite light. Pile nigh on a glass dish, and add a cur rant or strawberry jelly garniture, This dish is oiie very suitable for chil dren r.nd invalids. fm f| P 1 * Sum*B CLFR®'* HE-M# When the children get their feet wet and take cold give them a hot foot bath, a bowl of hot drink, a dose or Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and put them to bed. The chances arc they will be all right in the morning. Con tinue the Cherry Pectoral a few days, until all cough ba3 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 made easy and frequently cured by the continued use of Ayer's : : CHERRY : Every doctor knows that wild cherry bark is the best remedy known to medical science for soothing and healing inhumed throats and lungs. Put ano of Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plasters over your /urtgs The Boot Mod/oaf Advico Free I We now have some of tho most emi nent physicians in the United States. Unusual opportunities and long experi ence eminently fit them for glvluij you medical advico. Wrlto freeiy ull the particulars In vour case. Address, Dr. ,1. C. AYER, Lowell, .Mass. J BAD BREATH " I have been using ( ABCARF.TB anl us a mild and effective laxative thoy are simply won derful. My daughter and 1 were bothered with sick stomach and our breath iir very bad. After taking a few doses of C'ascarets we have improved wondor fully. They are a great help lu tho family." WII.HKLMINA NMUCL. 1137 Kitten liouso St., Cincinnati, Ohio. B CATHARTIC TRADE MARK RBOIATJffSD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. &>c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTJPATION. ... Sterling RmixU Company, Chicago. Montreal. Row York. 315 KQ-TO-Bflo pROPSY^ tieatmcnt Free. Dr H II QUEEN'S SONS. Atiants.Os. PATENTS ; Thompson's Eye Water Men and Women Who Work Need not Rive up when attacked with a Revere congestive cold, if Hoxeio's Dlsks are used. They check any cold. 25 cents. The population of the Soudan is numbered at 3,000,000, nearly all whol ly uneducated. Avoid tho Niuilt Air. Avoid the night air when dump and cold, and you will often avoid having neuralgia, but St. Jacobs Oil will cure it,no matter what is the cause und no mutter how long it has continued. The bones ana muscles of tho human body are capable of over 1,200 different movements. Beanty In Dlood Deep, Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cuscaretb, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im liurities from the body. Begin to-day to >anish 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 fasraretn. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. What the Fool Sniff. It was where the motor cars pass in a certain city. An old gentleman alighted, and the conductor told him to look out for the other car. The passenger did not understand him, and turning around, asked: "What did you say?" Just then the 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, *'l wonder what the fool said." French schools are to be established at Khartoum and Fashoda. TWENTY-FOUR HOURS To New Orleans or to Jacksonville via tho Queen Ac Crescent Limited trains from Cin cinnati, 51 hours through to Havana. To Florida-Queen & Crescent Two Fast Vesti huled trains daily Cincinnati to Jacksonville. Queen Ar Crescent Route and Southern R'v. 101# miles shortest line to Florida ami the West Indies. Asheville Only Through Car Line is via Queen & Crescent Route and Southern R'y from Cincinnati. Cafe and observation ears. Excellent service on superb through trains. Queen <& Crescent Route from Cin cinnati South. We think Piso's Cure for Consumption is tho only medicine for Coughs.— J F.XNIE PIN'CK AHD, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1,1834. Vour 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 I catalogue which shows exact designs of Carpets, I Rugs and Draperies in hand-painted colors. We I | sew carpets free,furnish lining free and pay freight. I Our Rig General Catalogue contains everything I for the !. i It con tains many surprising bargains similar to this: Solid O.k Dik, wth rolline top which lock* all driwtn j • utnin<t cslljr. si-obo furntih-l With 3 dr%wrr in | oscri pod*-tal. i*dO inchH lonj, 30ln. d-p, 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 I postage. Which do you want? Or both? Address | this way, JULIUS HINES & SON, Dept. 3or Baltimore, Md. Flfty-Oiie Ilridgt's for 11. & O. R. R. 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 . P >l b i 'g-s between Benwood, 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 on the Lake Erie division. Newark to Sandusky, and the Edge Moor Bridge Company, of Wilmington. Del., 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 wi'.l in place by September. Nearly six thousand t ns of steel will be needed for the struc tures. In China a wife is never seen by her husband before marriage. In this country some wives seldom see their husbands after marriage. Kay 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 shupe 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 j railway and the lands it has opened will be fully represented. To Cure A Cold In One Day. ! Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. Signor Mascagnl is the plaintiff in a a libel suit now in progress before the Trieste (Austria) Court against Slg nor Ciacomelli, who had accused the , composer of ignoring a hotel bill run up at Trieste In ISS6. Found Immediate relief in one bottle of Dr. Seth Arnold's touch Killer Mas. S. W. HATCH, Box 450,\Vollaston, Mass., Aug. 17, 18S&. Tomatoes have been grafted upon potatoes by a French experimenter, whose hybrid plant produces tubers under ground and tomatoes above. To Cure CousMpation Forever. Take Casearets Candy Cathartic. 10c orSno If G. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money The Bank of France is four times as large as the Bank of England. Fit? permanently cured. No llt or nervou?- ress niter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Groat Nerve Restorer. S- trial bottle and treatise lree. DI'.K.H.KLIM; Ltd. 931 Arch St.Phila.Pa Mr?. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teethinu, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion. allays pain, cuies wind colic. liV a bottle Heroes o? the ( 5 W&t with Sp&m toT £ O thousand-;, of them , eac suf. ; 4gSfe^S®3t f <2\ / { fenng from lingering dis- JW\ f (Jj eases induced by life in jflgf \/ '\{ j \ vt poisonous southern camps. I ® \\/ \ *fi 5k the result of changes of xW \lfesJt y climate, or of imperfect li J /p p>l nutTition Caused by im- ! f yf( KjSi'jjS | l-w'' S prcpeT and. badly cooked |%III I fc :! M fix , fo °d. Sleeping on the dTound has doubtless developed I v'&uS^'P' 1 \ rheumatism in hundreds \'M J 1 r\ ® M who *'' predisposed to | *' "Jf 2} V the disease. In such cases r7"*wi'• * li the Boys of' 93 may take 1" ■( ®M' H \ YS) &i 4 lesson from the expevi- [\ 'I I \ V ence of the J X i.V \ g Heroes of the \-J\a t L Civil W&t. ntln f Hundreds of the Boys \ V/ \ I ,_■ h of' 63 have testified to the \Pi \, 1 yf efficacy of DT. Williams*' V-i r /£ Pink Pills foT Pale People Jj 1 r.r in driving out Theumatism and other w A diseases contracted during their days of hardship V and privation in the dTmy. These p.lis are the best fc} v| tonic m the orld. v rif Asa Robinson, of Mt. furling, 111., fan veteran of the Civil war. having ffs\ ' served 111 111' II ! It.::*. . ..HIT Volunteers. !!• n-ii: ' !': • v.: i \ r- O /•? otis farmer's I v mi.l came back broken in health, a victim <•!' set a lie rheu- g> L tnatism. Most of the titne he was unfitted for manual labor of anv kind, \C\ and his sufferings were at nil times intense. He sat - : Nothing wenu-tl c JJ \T to give me permanent relief until three vent* ago. >. hen mv attmiti- n -a IS *4 A called to some of the wonderful cures effected by Dr. Willi it::s' pink Pills C* H for Pale People. I had not taken more than half a box when I indited an ft P) improvement in my condition, and I keep on improving steadily. To them J/ 1 owe my restoration to health. They are a grand remedy. "-rMi, JQ %. drug£,Mv or sent postpaid,on receipt cf price, 50 cts per iS) box, by ih D*-VMW*ms l*\<Sicnc Co., Bo* v, ScV>cncctgdy.rt.v. The Pot Called the Kettle Black Be cause the Housewife Didn't Use SAPOLIO Savet Time and Honey. It is delightful weather to breathe fresh, invigorating air, but take care of lumbago, or else St. Jacobs Oil must take care of it and cure it promptly. It saves time and money, A Beauty of the Arctic. There Is a beautiful bird called the rosy gull, very few specimens of which exist in any museum, and whose entire life is spent in the immediate neigh borhood of the eternal ice that sur rounds the north pole. A paper de scribing these curious birds was read at the recent meeting cf the American Association in Boston by Mr. John Murdoch. They follow the advance of the Ice towards the south as winter comes on, keeping near the loose edge of the floating pack ice, and then re treat with it toward the north when the summer sun begins to rise high upon the Arctic circle. The bird is I 6mall and of a deep rose color, whereas all other gulls are white. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak nteo strong, blood pure. 50c. {l. Ail druygists. Of the 35 churches built by Sir Christopher Wren in London nearly one-half have disappeared. THE EXCELLENCE CF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the c£re and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYBUP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUF 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 CAJLI FORMA FIG SYKUP CO. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty ol 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. 1 n order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, Col. (OUBVIiIiE, Ky. HEW YORK. N. Y. jiisliiFOi! Now. Boys, for some good, hard WORK. I want a IVw car loads ol choice, lanre Walnut log-. delivered on line ol 11. R. 11 you are prepared !► furnish them, address me at Barnesville, Ohio. J. H. WATT. RHEUMATISM 1 'ALEXANDER REMEDY CO.. 246 Greenwich N.Y TT 7- ANTED—OAS of HAD health that R I P-A N-8 will not heneAt bead ft eta. to Ilipans Chemical Co.. Now York for lu saiuolos and loou testiiuunlale. 1. N. U. 3 '99
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers