Hare's Some Good Advice. "The family doctor should din it in to the mother's head all of the time, that the health of tho children lies in tho feet. No child should bo allowed to go out into tho snow or rain, or when the walking is wet, without rub bers. When children's rubbers cost only 25 or 30 cents a pair, nobody can plead expense as an excuse. Many a fond mother who has lost a child, weepingly lays it all to the inscrutablo dispensation of Provideuoo, when tho whole trouble was the child had no rubbers." Amcricau Journal of Health. Persian Colors. Persian colors are obtained to a great extent in the softer shades. Whole gowns are made of the material with the shawl effect, and one with a pale blue ground, the figures in soft tones which blend with it, is lovely. A blouse of a delicate shade of silk, with a nar row front of some soft white material, has long lapels and standing collar of Bilk in Persian colors, with a charm ing effect. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Year Life Away, To quit tobacco eastly and forever, be inaf• netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or Si. Cure guaran teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York. The largest organ in the world is in the Cathedral of Seville, Spain. It has 63 pipes and 110 stops. STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, I LUCAB COUNTY. T BS * FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he Is tho senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business In tho City of Toledo, County and !-tate aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the rum of ONE HUNDHED DOL LAR# for each and every caso of CATARRH that cannot be cured bv the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J.CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my I—— i presence, this oth dav of December, I SEAL V A. D. 1880. A. W. GLEAAON, f } Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and act 9 directly on tho blood ami mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggist*. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are tlio best. I have found Piso's Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine.—F. R. Loxz, 1303ticolt fet., Covington, Ivy., Oct. I,IBM. Of about 30 recognized coaling sta tions in the Pacific, Great Britain owns at least 12 and the United States six. Pains and Achas Of Rheumatism Make Countless Thousands Suffer. But this disease iu cured by Hood's Snr enjmrilla, which neutralizes tho acid in tho blood. If you have any symptoms of rheumatism take Hood's Saranparillu at onco uud do not waste time and money on unknown preparations. Tho merit of Hood's Snrsupurilla is unquestioned and its record of cures unequalled. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is Amorica'sGreatost Medicine tor rheumatism Hood's Pills cure alllivi-r Ills. Zocentt. PUDDING MADE OF CEMENT. Qllstatio of Coui;>auy Cook Spoil, Soldiers* Desert. From the London Weekly Telegraph: Borne time ago, writes a volunteer, I spent a week with a garrison battery In a south coast tort. On the last day the sergeants sat down to an excep tionally fine dinner, the crowning glory of which was a largo plum pudding. I had made the pudding two days before, had It boiled, and now, reheated, it made its appearance, amid the welcomo shouts of my brother warriors, and I naturally felt a hit proud of it, for I hadn't been a ship's cook for nothing. "Seems mighty hard," remarked the sergeant major as he vainly tried to stick his fork into it. "Have you boiled us a cannon ball, Browncy?" "Or tho regimental football?" asked another. "Where did you get the flour from?" questioned Sergeant Smith. "Where from?" I retorted. "From store No. 5, of course." "The deuce you did!" roared the quartermaster sergeant. "Then, hang you, you've made the pud ding with Portland cement." And so it proved. That pudding is now pre served in the battery museum. NERVOUS DEPRESSION. [A TALK WITH MRS. PINKIIAM.] A woman with tho blues is a very un comfortable person. She is illogical, unhappy and frequently hysterical. The condition of the mind known as 44 the blues," nearly always, with wo men, results from diseased organs of generation. It is a source of wonder that in this age of advunced medical science, any person should still believe that mere force of will and determination will overcome depressed spirits and nerv ousness in women. These troubles aro indications of disease. Every woman who doesn't under stand her condition should write to Lynn, Mass., to Mrs. Pink'num for her advice. Her advice is thorough com mon sense, and is tho counsel of a learned woman of great experience. Read the story of Mrs. F. S. BENNETT, Westphalia, Kansas, as told in the fol lowing letter: 44 DEAR MRS. PINKHA:.::— I have suf fered for over two years with fulling, enlargement and ulceration of tho womb, and this spring, being in such a weakened condition, caused mc to flow for nearly six months. Some time ago, urged by friends, I wrote to you for advice. After using the treatment which you advised for a short time, that terrible flow stopped. 4i I am now gaining strength and flesh, and have better health than I have had for the past ten years. I wish to say to all distressed, suffer ing women, do not suiter longer, when there is ono so kind and willing to aid you." Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is a woman's remedy for wo man's ills. More than n million wo men have been benefited by it JL* PUZZLE DEPARTMENT. *1 l&aaft&iaeieK ssiQieieieiGieftl Tho solutions to these puzzles will an pear iu a issue. 29.—A Cross Word Enigma. .My first is iu mouse, but not iu rat; My second is iu dog, hut not in cat; My third is in trial, also in treasure; My fourth is iu health, but not in pleasure; My fifth is in ear. but not in mouth; My last is in north, but not in south; My whole is of the greatest worth, For it is tho dearest name on earth. 10.—A Pled Verse. Eth volley wont saw withe thiw pelap slooinb, Dan eth treag slem hoeread Krar dushwos no reith realia mooJs, Thos hugroth thiw delong arthod. —Felgonwoll. 31.—Additions. [Example: To a prefix add fifty-nine and make diffuse. Answer, pro-lix.] 1. To one hundred add a place for baking and an industrious insect, and make a solemn agreement. 2. To a hundred and fifty-one add nothing, and make one of the Muses. 3. To one thousand add nothing and a postscript, and make kitchen utensils. 4. To six add nothing, fifty, a letter from Switzerland and a beverage, and make a flower. 5. To one-tenth of a cent add one and nothing and a letter from Switz erland, and make a great number. 6. To one hundred add half of a year, five hundred and one and five hundred, and make ingenius. 7. To one hundred and four add one and a hundred and a letter from Switzerland, aud make the relations of citizens to the State. 8. To a college graduate add fifty and four, and make a Conservative British politician. 9. To a point of the compass add another point of the compass, one thousand, a letter from Switzerland, eleven, one hundred and nothing, and make an interesting part of our coun try. 10. To five hundred add nothing, and five hundred, and five hundred more, and tho smallest State in the Union, and five hundred, aud two let ters from Geneva, aud make a cele brated writer of hymns. 11. To a letter from Switzerland add nine, and make half a dozen. 12. To fifty-one add eleven, aud 9ix, and a heathen goddess, aud make pertaining to lye. 3?.—Hidden House Furnishings. I took my little brother on au ex cursion just over the mountains, on Friday last, and so far as my enjoy mentwas concerned, I declare the trip to be decidedly a failure. Harold, as soon as we wero seated iu tho ear, pettishly declared there was too much air, then fretted because there was too little room, and then cried because he wasn't able to sit in any seat he pleased. I iiually had to hand him over to Mr. Miuot to manage. When taking a trip, I another time shall know hotter than to take Harold along. AXSWXKS TO rnEVIOUS I'UZZLES. 25.—A Drop Vowel Quotation—Bo ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity. 26.—A Double Acrostic—Primals, John Greenleaf Whittier; linals, "The Goldsmith of America." 1, Jurist; 2, oldish; 3, horologe; 4, nutmeg; 5, Gouzalo; 6, reveal; 7, errand; 8, egress, 9, Nahum; 10, lazuli; 11, erect; 12, afresh; 13, fiasco; 14; Wy clif; 15, Hygeia; 16, infirm; 17, tem ple; 18, talker; 19, Illimani; 20, ex otic; 21, Hamona. 27.—Five Beheadments—H-arbor, s-tray, t-onr, s-late, s-pine. 28.—A Diamond— B ELI BLINK INK K Gibraltar Over-Fortified. That it is possible to fortify a place too much is strikingly shown in the case of Gibraltar. Ever since 1713, when it was cap tured by the English, sappers aud miners and engineers have been hol lowing out fort after fort in the living rock to place batteries in, until to-day the military experts have suddenly awakened to the fact that they have undermined the rock itself with their burrowiugs, and are now trying to think of some plan to strengthen it. So honeycombed, indeed, is it that it is estimated that if a powferful muu of-war could get within range aud get in a few shells the placa would crum ble away like an ant-hill. Whether the idea of ono rather ec centric expert will be put tnto prac tice—namely, coating the whole with steel plates after the manner of au ironclad—is not known; but certain it is that something will havo to be done sooner or later.—Tit-Bits. The Peanut Industry. The laetst thing in the way of trusts is a pedant combine. Very few peo ple realize the extent of the industry. The value of the crop iu between 85, 000,009 and 86,000,000 annually, and about 83,000,000 is invested iu clean ing establishments. Fourof them are located at Norfolk, eight at Hichmond, Petersburg, Danville and other places iu Virginia; threo at Cincinnati, twe at St. Louis and three others iu differ ent parts ot' the Southwest. The largest establishment belongs to Gwaltney & Bunkley, at Smith field, Va., where they haudlo about tiveuty-fivo per cent, of the entire peanut crop of tho "United States. All of the seventeen othei ooncerns have agreed to combine theii interests so as to control the product and increase prices and profits,which, through competition, are now very low. AGRICULTURAL TOPICS Clay Soli For Pears. The best peat orchards are grown on a heavy soil with clay as the sub soil, into which the tap root of tho pear will sink beneath all ordinary fluctuations of temperature in the air above. It is this even temperature that saves pear trees on clay soils to a great extent from the blight which is so frequent where the soil is sandy or gravelly. It is not, of course, an ab solute preventive, but we have always noticed that the pear trees which lived longest and longest continued productive were grown on clay soils. Putting Straw With Cornstulkg. Farmers who are putting into tho barn or stack cornstalks which are too damp to keep well can insure safsty by occasionally throwing a forkful of dry grain straw in the middle of the stack or mow. This will absorb some of the moisture and prevent the stalks from heating to excess. We always likod to have the cornstalks go through enough fermentation to soften them, and if put up whilo there is still some sweet sap in the stalk, they will do it. The cattle eat them more readily, and they are also more nutri tious. In a severe, cold winter, when cornstalks have been repeatedly froz en, all the juices are dried out of them •ud they are very poor feed for any kind of stock. Moigtening ami Soaking Feeds. Soaking grain feeds for cattle and hogs is quite generally recommended and the tests made by numerous ex periment stations seem to support this general opinion. In nearly every case where pigs were experimented with tho animals ate more of the wet food and made larger gains on it. It must be admitted, however, that the addi tional gain was usually due to the larger amount of feed eaten and not to its moist condition. The Kansas station soaked shelled corn for live steers until it began to soften. An other lot of live was fed dry corn. Those given soaked feed ate2B2 bush els, while the others ate 220. The first lot gained 164 pounds more than the others, a difference of §25.50 in favor soaking. Froui this the station Concludes that it pays to soak corn for steers if this can be done for six ceuts : or less. Soaking wheat for pigs is quite generally recommended. Shelter For tho Cattle. One of the prime requisites for handling cattle in any way is shelter; a moderate expendituio in this direc tion saves money. An outlay of SIOO will put up a shed 100 feet long and of sutiicieut width to accommodate 100 cattle on full feed and furnish a dry place for sleeping in muddy weather. It is as much of a mistako to turn Blockers into a stock field to shift for themselves without shelter through out tho winter as to full feed cattle in a lot where there is little or no "wind break," and where snow, slush or mud may be the resting place. A feed lot knee deep in mud retards fattening, makes work harder, loses waste to the hogs, and whon finished, cattle shipped to market from such surroundings their killing qualities are often over looked because of their filthy condi tion. Where Ked Clover Grows. Bed clover grows best upon deep and well-drained calcareous loams. It is not so well adapted to the lighter sandy soils, to heavy compact clays, nor to gumbo prairie soils. Under draiuage and a plentiful supply of rainfall during the season before liow eriug have a marked influence on the yield. F.od clover is the standard hay crop of tho Northern and New England States, and is becoming every year more widely cultivated iu the central prairie region. In the South and in the Pacific Coast and Rocky Mountain States other crops aro more successful, and there red elover is only grown in localities where the soil conditions favor it. The seed is usually sown with grain from March to May or, when in tended for a spring soiliug crop, from the middle of July to the first of Au gust, without a nurse crop. Twenty pounds of seed aro required per acre. The first crop of hay is ready to cut in Juue. The second crop is gener ally considered the best for seed, but the condition which governs seed pro duction is the prevalence and abnu dauce of bumblebees, upon which tho clover blossoms are dependent for fertilization. Tho yield of seed per aore varies from three to nine bushels of sixty pounds.—Farm, Field and Fireside. liaising Asparagus Profitably. There is no summer vegetable crop more profitable than asparagus if *lio •plants have proper care. Tho plot must bo kept in a high state of rich uoss uud cultivation, and much of the important work iu this direction may be done now before winter sets in. The first thing to be done at this time is to cut off tho tops of the plants and clear the bod entirely of weeds, for the weedy asparagus bed is the profit less one. After this is thoroughly done the bed should be covered three inches deep with coarse manure, which will enrich the soil, and, what is more important, keep out the frost. Thus protected during tho winter the plants will bo laying up strength and energy for the spring. In early spring, as soon as the frost is out of tho ground, the coarse man ure should bo removed and all of the lino particles forked carefully in the soil, being careful not to injure the crown of the plant with the tine of tho fork. If the soil is not sufficiently rich, add more fine manure and fork it in all over the bed. This treatment is inexpensive, but will result in heavy erops anu make a decided difference in the size of tho edible shoots. The plan is after the practice of the most successful! asparagus growers of tho country.—Atlanta Journal. ! ST. Cures Rheumatism | J JACOBS ;; EG I t OIL ~ Sciatica „ Sprains ♦ | „ Bruises J t ST. .. Soreness | I JACOBS ;; -g - OIL „ Muscular Actios 1 \ 1 TWENTY-FOUR HOURS To New Orleans or t Jacksonville via the 3ncen & Crescent Limited trains from Cin- I jinnati, 54 hours through to Havana. To 1 Florida -Queen & Crescent Two Fast Veßti ouled trains daily Cincinnati to Jacksonville. Juccn A Crescent Route and Southern R'y. HHJ miles shortest line to Florida and the West Indies. Asheville Only Through Car Line is .ia Queen Ac Crescent Route and Southern R'y from Cincinnati. Cafe and observation cars. Excellent service on superb through trains. Queen Ac Crescent Route from Cin cinnati South. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup forchlldren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflaraina ticn. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle By mixing a harmless powder, sub nitrate of bismuth, with the food, the movements of the stomach may be seen by means of the Roentgen rays. No-To-Uac for Fifty Cento. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure- 50c, sl. All druggist* Lord Kelvin's Reprimand. The eminent English scientist, Lord Kelvin, who for many years has held the chair of natural philosophy at Glasgow University, Is the subject of an amusing story Illustrative of the singular force of habit. As a professor of science, Lord Kelvin can use long words In such formidable array as to paralyze the average layman, but the Glasgow student is made of sterner stuff. During a course of lectures on magnetism, he once defined an ideal magnet as "an Infinitely long. In finitely thin, uniform and uniformly and longitudinally magnetized bar," and the misguided students vocifer ously cheered, which caused the ven erable professor to say: "Silence!" The definition was' made and cheered, with the usual reprimand, frequently during the lectures. Once, near the conclusion, however, the students did not cheer, but Lord Kelvin promptly rapped out "Silence!" as before. To Protect Old Documents. Collectors of old documents, rare en gravings, stamps or other valuable pa pers that ought to be protected from the noxious influences of the air and from moisture can easily preserve them in their original condition by covering them with a 3 per cent solution of col lodion. This solution cau he applied with a soft brush without the slightest danger to the objects thus treated. This proceeding is mainly applicable where delicate colors that are soluble in water are to be preserved In their pristine freshness and beauty. The col lodion covering Is, therefore, most ex cellent for preserving water-color paintings and pastels. i, Bleep Ctigiif ■ We know I of nothing better to tear the I lining of your throat and I lungs. It is better than wet ft feet to cause bronchitis and n pneumonia. Only keep it ■ up long enough and you I will succeed in reducingyour fl weight, lpsing your appetite, I bringing on a slow fever and M malting everything exactly Ea right for the germs of con- i sumption. Stop coughing and you Ba will get well. ■ flip's 1 cnerra | fig cures coughs of every kind. P 3j An ordinary cough disap- SB pears in a single night. The tjß racking coughs of bronchitis T0 are soon completely mas ■ tered. And, if not too far 1 along, the oghs of eon sumption ore completely > cured. Ask your druggist for one of Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plaster. j Jit will aid the action of the Cherry Pectoral. t', Tf ynn "vo nny^ complaint what pvonipt reply Ihnt maybe of great Wj DIL J. WAY Lit, "oWoll, Mass. H Rend postal for Premium List to the Dr. SetU Arnold Hsdical Corporation, Woonsocket, R. I. THCIIM A TIC IUI CTWEW—One bottle-Positive rJntUIYIA IICIII relief in 24 hours. Postpaid, *l.i* • 1 * A lexak deb RxaiiDY Co.. 246 Greenwich St.. ii. Y. ODDS AND ENDS. Russia Is going to abolish the diffi culties of navigation at the mouth of the Volga by cutting a canal directly from the river to the Caspian sea. Work on it began last summer. The oldest house in America Is In St. Augustine, Fla. In 1561 it was built by the monks of the Order of St. Francis and the whole of the solid structure is composed of Coquina, a combination of sea shells and mor tar, which is almost indestructible. When Francis Drake sacked and burned the town this was the only house left in the trail of destruction. It has been purchased by the well known antiquarian, J. W. Henderson, who will make it his winter residence. The way in which the United States is belrg Anglo-Saxonized may be garn ered from the immigration statistics of the last year; Austria-Hungary, 89,797; Belgium, 095; Denmark, 1,946; France, 1,990; Germany, 17,111; Greece, 2,339; Italy, 58,613; Netherlands, 7C7; Norway, 4,938; Portugal, 1,717; Rou mania, 900; Russia (proper), 27,221; Finland, 2,607; Poland, 4,726; Spain, 577; Sweden, 12.395; Switzerland, 1,246; Turkey in Europe, 176; Mexico, 107; Central America, 7; Cuba, 1,877; other West Indies, 247; South America, 39; Turkey in Asia (Arabia and Syria), 4,275; China, 2,071; Japan. 2,230; Ire land, 25,128; England, Wales and Scot land combine to furnish 12.593. THE SKIRT PUZZLES WOMEN. They Cannot Remember Seeing Anything Like It lief ore. There are eo many changing stylea In skirts the average person cau scarce ly keep up with them. The very newest skirt Is bo decidedly new no one can remember to have seen anything like It. Not even old portraits show It or heroines In out-of-date novels. It Is made absolutely without fullness In ei ther hack or front, not even bo much as a wrinkle. The top Is perfectly plain and smooth, fitted to the figure only by a gore on each hip and extending to the knees In front, while the lower part Is a graduated Spanish affair cut on the bias that falls easily In godets to flare at the bottom. It fastens in the front, at the left side usually, but some of them hook or button behind, still without the least sign of a fold or plait. Some of the skirts are elab orately braided In barbarous design, wuu twists and turns and huge clrcies and crossbars, and some are embroid ered or stitched in bias rows and Greek lines. But, however trimmed, the new skirt Is the newest thing Dame Fash lon has produced for a long time. B. & <). Improvements, In accordance with the plans formulated two years ngo hy the Receivers to place the Baltimore .V Ohio railroad in lirst-clnss phy : sical condition, considerable work is being I done on tlio Trans-Ohio divisions. The Im provements are being made with a view to tisipg 70 ton locomotives on all portions of the line, and since July tons or 75 pound and 12.013 tons of 85 pound steel rails nave been laid on the Central Ohio. Lake Erie and Chi cftico divisions. About 17 miles of new side tracks have been constructed, fine telegraph towers orocted, a now freight depot built at Mansfield, Ohio, an interlocking plant in stalled at Plymouth, Ohio, and Ave water stations, to expedite freight trnlUe, con structed. Further improvements of a moro extensive character are being planned, in order to materially increase tlio ton mile haul. The Prince nr.d Princess of Wales will be absent from England from the middle of February to the middle of April. Part of this time will be spent in a visit to the King and Queen of the Greeks. Cornelius Vanderbilt drinks no in toxicating liquor except a little claret with his dinner. Bentity la Bloodl Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. (Jascarete, Candy 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 banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascurets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. An American named Mohun. accom panied by five trained electricians, has just left Brussels to extend the tele graph In the Kongo country from Its present terminus at Stanley Pool to l Stanley Falls, and thence in two dif ferent directions to Lake Tanganyika on the one side and to Redjof on the Nile on the other. The work is to cost about $500,000, and it is expected that it will be completed in 1900. Dr. Soth Arnold's Cough Killer Is a won derful medicine for Weak Lungs. liA Baruows, Deer Grove, 111., March 21, 18U6 Among the Christmas presents re ceived by Secretary Long was a model of the Harvard, made by a student who was ill in the Harvard University Infirmary. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to euro. 25c. Michigan pays a bounty for the heads of dead English sparrows. It lias recently paid out over $2,000 to a crowd of Indiana sharpers who had killed the birds by strewing poisoned wheat about the streets of Indiana cities. The carcasses were shipped to Southern A-Ilclilgan towns and the bounties collected as on birds killed in Michigan. To Curo Constipation ForeTeib Tako Case a rets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 250 If C. C. C. lull to euro, druggists refuuu money Quartermaster Murray of the auxil iary cruiser Yale (now the Paris) was among a party of bluejackets who went aboard the Reina Mecedes a few days after the battle of July 3 in search of relics. The wreck of the Spanish cruiser had already been stripped of nearly everything portable by curiosity seekers, even her figurehei having been sliced up into splinters to serve us mementos; but Murray and others of the Yale's crew feund a box of un used 7-inch shells, which they carried off in triumph. Leipsic University refuses to accept time spent at the University of Frei burg. in Switzerland, in the count for its degrees, on the ground that the teaching there has deteriorated below university standards since the Domini can monks have obtained control. The other German universities are likely to follow the example of Leipsic, and will refuse to recognize the Freiburg de grees as well. General Wheeler has consented to be present at the Utica (N. Y.) soldier's banquet, to be given January 25. He will respond to the toast, "The Na tion's Welcome." The originality of some wags Is all picked UD to the street. Educate Yonr novels With Cttncarota. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c,25c. If C. C. C. fail, dru.; 1:;.-; refund money. Don't think that tact removes diffi culties; It simply goes around them. |o =1 i= H i ' I ' ( E Every farmer's wife knows how necessary it is that W the milk buckets, pans, churns, and other implements of =j M the dairy be perfectly clean and free from taint. A com- | g mon yellow soap that smeils of rosin should never be used 4 H for washing these. Such soaps are made of materials that 3 you would not use for any purpose. Besides, they are 5 £j sticky and the soap will get into the cracks and corners and £j stay there. Ivory Soap is pure, it is well made, and only M sweet, clean materials are used. Then it rinses readily. M IVORY SOAP IS QQ/;„ PER CENT. PURE. P |o| ' Copyright. lees, Vy The Procter ft Quntle Co., Clnrtnnitl. EVERY It Shows the Only Method by Which Diseases of tho Respiratory Grcjans Can 3e Reached and Cured. Fassn.Bc of the to He-it and Dry 'C '' J the Air before en- [(iVtfSKVv •/ terlnjj tlio Bronchi- vj2jKYj\V I in' \ 1/ ml Tubes and Lunge vfrmSgSSP !?j f A* \ . JJ Ensfnrlit^ Senso of smell (1e- Thniiif ""£/ Tube, rtroyed here by cfpH , til W Closed by I rritat. >troug Liquid Med- ) -enJ"n"et- * XU * > - V entertbe Bronchial EPIGLOTTIS. \ Through It alone JHI \\\W\ V r'eaohcJuKrS Vapors stop § TTV " is the only germicide ever found v- Istile enough to impregnate every particle of air breathed, yot leav ing It FREE. IT m moisture, thus ooal ling this powerful germ-destrot -R tt. reach everv part of the air pas sages in the head, throat and lungs, where it {at onre kills the bacilli which cause' Catarrh, Catarrhal Dealueaa, Asthma, Coughs Colds, Bronchi tie, and Consumption. IT CUKES BY INHALATION. The first and only method of treating these diseases ever endorsed bv the medic al profession. '' Hyomei " Inhaler Ontilt, SI.OO. I xtra Bottles "Hyomei," 00c. } * Hyouiei " Buhu, a wonderful h-*aler, 25c. Can be obtained of your druggist, at office, or by mail. Pamphlets, consultation and advico tree. Send for the Story of •• Hyomei." -dulled Fit I.E. P!F£t 3S_ *■ **" *■ " ™aa."™™iu stamps or cash, mentioning this paper, a comploto "Hyomei " Trial Outtit, consisting of an Aluminum Inhaler, Wire Dropper, bottle of Hyomei sufficient to last two weeks, gauze and full direc tions for using. We also send FREE "The Story of Hyomei " and a sample hoi of Hyomei Balm, the wonderful anti-septio healer and cure for piles, bruises, burns, sprains, scalds, chaffing, saddle-sores, eczema and all irritations. Send at once to the MAIN OFFICE AND LABORATORY of THE R. T. BOOTH CO., ITHACA. N. Y. "Well Done Outlives Death." Even Your Memory Ws3l Shine if You Use SAPOLJO "My wife had piinplcn on her fare, but slio has been taking CASCAItETS and they have all disappeared. I hud been troubled with constipation for some time, but after tak ing tho first Cascuret I have had no trouble with this ailment. We cannot speak too high ly of Casearets." Fred Waiitman, B7OH Gorman town Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa. CANDY MS vLJH CATHARTIC I .. .•oir..-;. Ploapnr.t. Palatable. I'oteut. Taste Good. IX> Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Grij e. 10c, 20c, 00c. ... CURE CO?JSTIPAT!OM. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago. Montreal, New Vork. 314 NQ-TQ-BAC giu to'SS ' Children Will Not Die Of croup, whoopinu-fouph and membrane ous croup, if Hoxsio's Croup Cure is useO 50 cents. A. P. Hoxsie, Buffalo, N. Y. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous- T t -s a; i. i ; i>t d,-. >use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise 3rce. Dr.R.H.Ki.TNE, Ltd.,981 Arch St.Phila.Pa Now, Hoys, for some good, hard WORK. I want a few car loads of choice, large Walnut logs, delivered online of R. K. If you are prepared to furnish them, address mo at Barneaville, Ohio. J. H. WATT. DROPS ciihph. Si>nd lor book ot testimonial i and l() days' treatment Free. Dr U H.QREEM B BONB, Atlanta, Oa nEBSIONS?g^ Propecutos Claims. 9 i'.yrb u/cb il war, lSuilJudicat'iuccUUma.atty sfuco ! (VaSTKO— Owe of bad health that I y V U HV l Send Acts. to Uipaii* Ghemlcal I Co.. Newport for lo Baiaulua and luuu testimonial*, P. K U. 2 'U9 *jj
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers