That Pimple ®n Your Face is There to Warn You of Impure Blood. Painful consequences may follow a neg lect of this warning. Take Hood's Sursa parillu and it will purify your blood, cure ?.ll humors und eruptions, and mnko you eel better in every way. It will warm, nourish, strengthen and invigorate your whole body and prevent serious illness. Hood's Sarsaparilla Ib America's Greatest Medicine. Price, sl. Hood's Pills cure all Liver ills. So cents. Baltimore unci Ohio. From time to time articles appear in various papers about the so-called "Hill control" of Baltimore & Ohio, to gether with exhaustive details of va rious struggles which are supposed to be in progress between Mr. Hill and other people in the Baltimore & Ohio board. The plain facts of the matter are. first that Mr. Hill dees not con trol Baltimore & Ohio, nor has he at any time expressed any desire or taken any steps in that direction; and second, that there has at no time been any differences of opinion between Mr. Hill and the Baltimore & Ohio people with rcgurd to a selection of general manager, the selection of Mr. Under wood being satisfactory to everbody. wood being satisfactory to everybody. Hill was Invited to interest himself in Baltimore & Ohio, on the theory that he could be of great service to the property as an adviser, and to this end he, with some of his friends, purchased a substantial interest in the preferred stock of the company. This interest is nowhere near a controlling interest, but is still very large. It may be said without fear of contradiction, that there is entire harmony in Baltimore & Ohio circles from top to bottom. St. Petersburg has the largest bronze •tatue in existence —that of Peter the Great, which weighs 1,000 tons. Beauty Is Blood Oeep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Ko beauty without it. Caacarets, Candy Cathar* tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im< S unties from the bodv. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by tuking Casca rets,— beauty for ten cents. All drug giats, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 2jc, dUc. All the Pope's private fortune is in vested in British securities. How's This T We offer One Hundred Dollirs Reward for ( 2 f Catarrh that cannot be cured by uall h Catarrh Cure. F.J. Chunky & Co., Props., Toledo, O. >V e, the undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney lor thela-t. 16 years, and believe him per fectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion in do by tlieir lirin. Olw Tkuax. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Walimno. Kinnan <fc Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, not ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of th sy stem. Pile, 75c. pe- bottle. Sold by „ al , l ,PU?ffK i, } ts * Testimonials free. Hull's 1 ainily I'ills are the be t. Iloxsle's Croup Cure Acts dirootly on the delicate tissues of the throat and prevents the formation of the white membrane as in diphtheria. 50 cents. In Great Britain 15 people in every 1,000 keep a carriage; in 1830 the pro portion was only 5. Twenty-six thousand men are em ployed at Jdie Krupp gun works. Educate Vonr Bowels With Citsrareta. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 40c, 'Jjc. It C. C. C. tail, druggists refund money. Saved Ills Time, "I've come to see your husband In the interest ot the Knights of Labor, Mrs. Reagan," said a bland, elderly man, as the mistress of the Reagan household answered his ring. "He ain't to home," said Mrs. Reagan, with arms akimbo; "but I can promise you one thing, sorr, anfl that Is, you'll get niver a night o' labor out av Tim Reagan, and It's no use tryln'l Sure and he'd knock off work in the day time, If It wasn't for me keepln" at him till I'm that wore out there's no stren'th lift In me!" A Palpable Defect. Unci© SilaB —"I tell you, we'v© got the grandest and moat glorious govern ment on the face of the earth. You can rail against It purty easy, but i defy you to produce a single defect in the hull system." Uncle Hiram— "Look here, SI, we've got twenty office hunters for every office, an' the popu lation growin' at a fearful rate!"— New York Sun. RELIEF FROM PAIN. women Everywhere Expresothoit Gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham. firs. T. A. WALDEN, Gibson, Ga., writes: "DEAR Mas. I'inkhaii:— Before tak ing your medicine, life was a burden to me. I never saw a well day. At my monthly period I suffered untold misery, and a great deal of the time I was troubled with a severe pain in my side. Before finishing the first bottle of your Vegetable Compound I could tell it was doing me good. I continued its use, also used tho Liver Fills and Sanative Wash, And have been greatly helped. I "X'ould like to havo you use my letter for the benefit of others." Drs. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, gig hulberry St., Lancaster, Ohio, writes: " DEAR MRS. PINK HAM: —For two years I was troubled with what the local physicians told mo was inflamma tion of the womb. Every month I suf fered terribly. I had taken enough medicine from the doctors to cure any one, but obtained relief for a short time only. At last I concluded to write to you In regard to my case, and can say that by following your advice I am now pefectly well." rirs. W. R. DATES, ilansfield, La., writes : " Before writing to you I suffered dreadfully from painful menstrua tion, leucorrhoea and sore feeling in the lower partof the bowels. Now my friends want to know what mates me took so well. Ido not hesitate one min ute in telling them what has brought about this great change. I cannot praiso Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound enough. It is the greatest remedy of the age." CENTURY OF EXPANSION OUR COUNTRY'S GROWTH FROM 1798 TO 1898. It Represents Physical and Moral Ad vancement Without Parallel in the Annals of the World—From Popula tion of 5,000,000 to One of 85,000,000. A comparison of the territorial area and the national influence of the United States with those of 1798 will show the vast material and moral ad vance which this country has made in 100 years. Iu the Historical books 1798 does not figure with any prom inence, but in reality it is an impor tant landmark in tho country's expan sion. It was just a hundred years ago that the provisions of the treaty of peace with England in 1783 "were fully and finally carried out. For fif teen years after that date the United States, in its endeavors to secure the boundaries guaranteed in that agree ment, was obstructed by two nations. England and Spain. The British held possession of posts at Oswego, Ni agara, Detroit and other places in United States territory on the north ern frontier, until Jay's treaty, which, among other things, provided for their evacuation, went into operation in 179G, and even then the work of abandonment was carried on with a slowness which was exceedingly ex asperating to the people of the United States. With Lpain, however, tlie United States had much more trouble iu secur ing its treaty rights under the agree ment of 1783 than it had with Eng land. Then, as now, Spain was slow in grasping the justice of any demand by any other nation, and in that par ticular crisis the situation .for this country was rendered doubly embar rassing by the fact that Spain was still one of the great powers of tho earth, while the United States was only au insignificant spot on the map and had no rights which any of the great nations felt bound to respect. Spain con tended that the Florida region which she gained from England during the war of the American Revolution, and wliioh extended west to tho Missis sippi, went as l'ar north as the mouth of the Yazoo, about the parallel of thirty-two degrees north latitude, which would make the southerly line of the United States on the Missis sippi end at that point. Both England and the United States, on the other hand, insisted that this country's southern boundary went down to latitude thirty-one degrees. At last the protests and threats of the United States and Spain's dangers in Napoleonic wars then under way com pelled the latter to accede to the American demands. Spain did this in the treaty of San Lorenzo in 1793, which was ratified by the Senate in 1796, but 1798 arrived before the Spanish Hag went down in Natohez, tho most important town in the terri tory in dispute, and the Stars and Stripes went up. Then fifteen years after the treaty of independence and just a hundred years ago, the title of the United States to all its territory between the Atlantic and the Missis sippi and from the Great Lakes to the Florida line was definitely confirmed. America's situation in 18'J8, ma terially ami morally, makes a striking contrast with that of 1798. On the (lay when Gnyoso's forces lowered their flag in Natchez and sailed down to New Orleans, the person who stepped below the southerly line of Georgia, into the lower end of what is now the State of Mississippi, or who crossed the Mississippi River, would bo in a foreign laud. We were surrounded on three sides by power ful nations. England was north of us as now, and Spain was south and west of us, as she held Florida, which com prised the present State of that name and a strip westward along the south erly line of what are now the States of Alabama and Mississippi to the Mis sissippi River, and she had all the region west of the river. The popu lation of the country was abouts,oUo,- 000. The Louisiana cession and all the other annexations were still in the dis tance. Nobody could have foreseen at thnt time that the narrow strip of populated area east of the Alle glianies, with the scarcely less di minutive stretoh of wilderness be tween those mountains and the Mis sissippi, would ever reach the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific. Muoh less could anybody have foreseen then that this country would annex all of Rus sian America, absorb all the islands of value in the Gulf of Mexico, and ac quire possessions scattered through the Pacific extending almost to the continent of Asia. The growth of America from an area of 827,000 square miles and a population of 5,- 000,000 in 1798 to an area of 3,800,- 000 square miles and a population of 85,000,000 in 1898, attended as it has been by a rise from a position in which its enmity had no menace for even the feeblest of foreign States to one in which its friendship iB sought by the most powerful nations of the earth, represents a physical and moral advancement without parallel in the annals of the world. The President's Letters. The President of the United States receives an average of 1700 letters a day. One-half of them ask favors of oue kind or another. The other half offer advice on every subject under the sun, or express their approval or disap proval of executive acts and policy. Just now the question of expansion suggests the topic for most of the let ters, and ninety-eight per cent, of them approve it. fAncient Linen Cloth. The cloth of the old Egyptians was so good that, though it has been used for thousands of years as wrappings for mummies, the Arabs of to-day can wear it. It is all of linen, the auoient Egyptians considering wool unclean. INDIAN WITCHCRAFT IN ALASKA, Th Government Trying; to Stamp Out the Practices of the Medicine Men. The United States Court of Alaska, acting under instructions from Wash ington, is endeavoring to stamp out witchcraft, as practiced by the Indian tribes on the southeastern coast of the Territory. A number of Indians are at Juneau under arrbst, and theii cases are being considered by the Grand Jury that is now in session. These Indians are very superstitious, even more so than those of the inte rior. If the medicine man is unable to effect a cure in any case he pro nounces the patient bewitched. The relatives of the sick Indian will accuse some of the tribe of being the "witch devil." The accused is confined until the fate of the patient is decided. In every case he is put to death if the sick man dies. The number of In dians killed as "witch devils" in creased during the past year, and Governor Brady gave it prominence in his report. Judge Johnson, in charging the Grand Jury, said: "You will be called upon to investigate a number of of fenses peculiar to this Territory grow ing out of the belief in witchcraft pre valent among the native people. Many of the cruel murders among them may readily be traced to this belief, and it is your duty not to ignore, but to make patient inquiry and return true bills where the evidence so warrants, for tl\,e protection of these people. The stamp of the law's disapproval of all such practices must be emphatic." WISE WORDS. Culture will convert tares into wheat. Fierce storms may mean a quick voyage. Weak-minded men are apt to be ob stinate. A good conscience is the best armor against calumny. Happiness is in enjoyment rather than in possession. True education never induces con tempt of the ignorant. The man who has injured you will be the last to forgive you. When we despair, not only our com pass, but our ship, is gone. The body is the temple, the heart ir the altar, love is the incense. A crack in a wall maybe very small but you can see a great deal through it. It is not the man who is painting the house who is doing the greatest work. Money may buy horns for a donkey, but it cannot hide his brogue wheu ho speaks.—Barn's Horn. Added Terror to War. Beports have been published of ex periments with the Canet quick-tiring Held gun, which is to bo the new weapon of tho Frennh artillery and concerning which until quite recently the greatest secrecy was maintained. Judging from these reports, the effec tiveness of tho guu must be truly won derful. Twenty-two shots per minute were fired at one official trial, and two hundred dummy soldiers placed at a distance of two and one-half miles by way of a target were bowled down in one minute and three-quarters. Simul taneously ordnance officers in England, putting a new (icld piece made for the British army through a test, were de lighted by the almost incredible ac curacy of tho weapon. First u shot was fired without particular aim, and a teleßcope, having been focusod on the point of impact of the shell, was fixed in that position. Eaoh succeed ing shell fired from the guu—and they were many—exploded within the field of the object glass of the telescope. Such are the pleasant diversions of na tions which have officially accepted in vitations to the Czar's pencejcongress —and the most advanced nations at that.—Philadelphia Becord. Stuff the Regulars Are Made Of. A volunteer who took part in the Santiago campaign relates the follow ing incident as having occurred ou July 1 at San Juan Hill: One of our men who was killed that day was Private Brown. He was shot just as we reached the barbed-wire fence, but survived several hours iu an unconscious state. He was a col lege lad from Cornell and a general favorite. Four of our men started to carry him up the incline to the creßt of the hill. He was heavy and it was slow, hazardous work. To the left of our line were some men from the Six teenth Ivegulnr Infantry. When the order came to retire one of the men, Private Morris, a musician, saw our men struggling up the incline with poor Brown. He did not know them or Brown. They were not of his regi ment. But he stopped in that leaden hailstorm and helped. And, first of all, he had our men put Brown down while he wet his lips with water from his canteen. That was the stuff the regulars were made of. Tim Endurance of Africans. Two cases notably illustrative of the Afrioan native's power of endurance are reported from the British Central Africa Protectorate. Iu each instance a man was dragged from his canoe by a crocodile, and had au arm bitted al most to a pulp. The men had to be taken long distances overland. On reaching Zombu each had the injured limb amputated and quickly recov ered. Dr. Douglas Gray, acting chief medical officer there, remarks further, in his report, upon the growing con fidence of the native in the European medicos. Beports of cures—more es pecially in relation to surgery--spread rapidly amongst the natives, and the one old cure—a fibre band tied round a limb above the seat of disease—is, he says, fast losing its reputation.— London NeWsl" fsPRMNS 1 0 BAD A A WORSE \ A WORST \ \ Can lie promptly cured without delay '< or trifling by the Q X good 0 1 better q <? BEST d 0 remedy for pain, n | ST. JACOBS Oil. | H. IT. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., tiro Ihe only successful Dronsy Specialists in the rvorld. See their liberal offer in advertise ment in another column ol' this paper. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forc.hildren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2oc a bottle I believe Piso> Cure for Consumption saved my boy's lire last summer.—Mrs. Aljlik Duto t-iuss, Le Hoy, Mich., Oct. 20,1804, Ireland possesses the most equable climate of any European country. No-To-llae for Fifty Cente. anarnntood tobacro habit cure. mnlies won* men strong, blood pure atlc. it. Ail druggists. Famous Do* Actor* Of all the illustrious dogs which ever trod the boards, the most famous Is Dragon, the property of Capt. Mont didier In the French army. This gen tleman was murdered in the Forest of Bundy by his friend, Lieut. Macalra, of the same regiment. After the crime Dragon showed such a strange aver sion to Macalre that suspicion was aroused against him. In the end ho confessed his crime, and his accom plice, Landry, in trying to escape, wa3 seized by the faithful animal and bit ten to death. This story has held the English stage, on and off, since ths year of Waterloo, and It Is only three decades since two "stars" named Lamb and Emmett, played In it with their (rained dog Carlo at the Marylebone Theater, London. This animal was also the principal performer In a ca nine drama named "Poor Dog Tray." Eighty years ago there was a theater at Peckham, where a youth named John Baldwin Buckstone made his debut as the Injured captain. There Is a vener able theatrical legend which deals with a piece called "The Caravan Driver and His Dog." One evening the leading tragedian was taken 111, and the prompter rushed oft to the manager to Inform him that the play must be changed. "How you alarmed me," said that worthy man, ordering a glass ol strong brandy and water to steady his nerves; "the tragedian unwell! I was afraid It was the dog."—New York Times. TWhat does it do? It causes the oil glands in the skin to become more active, making the hair soft and glossy, precisely as nature intended. It cleanses the scalp from dandruff and thus removes one of the great causes of baldness. It makes a better circu lation in the scalp and stops the hair from coming our. It Preventsit Cures Baldness lAyer's Hair Vigor will surely make hair grow on bald heads, provided only there is any life remain ing in the hair bulbs. It restores color to gray or white hair. It does not do this in a moment, as will a hair dye; but in a short time the gray color of age gradually disap pears and the darker color of youth takes its place. Would you like a copy lof our book on the Hair and Scalp? It is free. If you do not obtain all the benefit* you expected from the use of the Vigor write the Doctor about It. Address, Dlt. ,1. C. AYER. Lowell, Mass. jf usainwi-wu.ii Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonaoeket, It. IT DROPQY NEW DISCOVERT; lTe* ■ quiokreliel and cures worst cueee. Send 'or book of testimonials ar.-i I() day** treatment Free. Pr-H II orkln'b 80N8 Atlanta. Oa. 3ym in 11, il \. „r. IT. Ht t v ,lnc,\, fIWN E RS 'lcflMlltrd.wnrthlUM ri.Ur .rt ■ inncno .turka „|<l boiulu C.n Unci a in.rkrt WfOT„ m ,bj£i rw.lliK C.A. W., I\ O. Rut N. \ . Seud dfscrintiou of what you have. IRON GRAVEYARDS IN VENEZUELA Proponali Aiked in This Country to Kuild One That Will Hold 25.000 Untile*. i The iron manufacturers of Pennsyl vania have been asked through the medium of the National Association of Manufacturers to submit proposals to the Government of Venezuela for an iron graveyard in which to reinter 25,- 000 bodies. The proposal is novel with iron industries of this Stute, al though tlflere are a few iron cemeteries in Southern cities. | The graveyards, particular.y in Ca racas, heretofore have been built of ; stone, but these have proved unsatis } factory. They were not waterproof. They could not be made so; at least the skill of the average Venezuelan failed in this direction. When the Venezuelans came to look into the wonders on display in the Manufac turers' Association's sample warehouse at Caracas they decided that American ingenuity would solve the problem of the proper care of the dead. The water persisted in percolating through the rock barriers. These were as costly as they were insufficient. The Venezuelans have become tired of building stone graveyards. They have been erected at great expense of marble and granite, and it is believed that iron will answer every purpose. But it must be inad? waterproof, and Mr. Nagle, of the Manufacturers' As sociation, eays he has no doubt that Pennsylvania mechanics could furrish a structure that would auswer every purpose. Dl<l I>r. <lollll*oll Eat Horne? Dr. Johnson in h's journal men tions the interesting l.ict that he had on a certain day had "palfrey for dinner." Now thrse three words have caused not a little trouble to the critics, and for this reasou, that they know not what palfrey really is. It has been suggested that palfrey is a clerical error made by the doctor him self for pastry. But the doctor wrote so legibly, aud there is so much dif ference between the words palfrey and pastry that this position is not at all tenable. Palfrey is defined in John son's celebrated dictionary as "a small horse lit for ladies," and some have thought that the doctor (whose feats as a trencherman were notorious) may have brokeu a record ou the day in question, and disposed of a small horse. All these and other conjectures are wrong, aud we will proceed to give the correct explanation. The word palfrey (sometimes pam frey by the interchange of 1 and m) is Btill in use among the rustiis of Scot laud and the North of Ireland, and means young cabbages when they lirst come to table in the spring. Such cabbages have not begun to "close," or become solid in the centre. They are generally spoken of as "early painfrey," aud are considered a luxury. Dr. Johnsou probably picked up the word from his friend Boswell, or from some other Scotch acquaint ance.—Notes aud Queries. A Great Game Season. From nearly every section of the country come reports that game of all kinds has not been so plentiful for years as this season, and the large quantity of game that has already found its way to the city markets is prima facie evidence of the truth of I these reports. And what has made game so abundant? First, the seasou has been especially favorable; second better game laws prevail in nearly all of the States than in years gone by; third, the sportsmen of the country have been taught to respect the close seasons better than heretofore, and last, though by no means least, the game laws are being more strictly en forced, and those who ordinarily would pay little attention to the laws have been made to respect them. If these conditions continue to prevail, game will continue to increase, until it will bo plentiful everywhere and the sportsman will have good shooting without traveling hundreds of miles and spending large sums of money to gratify his desire for a little pleasant recreation with dog aud gun in forest and field. There is really no good reason why there should not be game enough for all if the men who hunt will only be moderate in their dematidß upon the supply and the laws are re spected aud thoroughly enforced everywhere.—American Field. Kquine Faster.. Down at Nevada they are trying te determine how long a horse can live without food. A horse belonging to Ed. Letton was by mistake left iu a box stall at the fair grounds four weeks and lived. This was consid ered the limit, until last week Dr. Worth came in with the following story: "In 18(58 I was living on the St. Clair and Hickory County line. On July 22 of that year a horse I had staked out with a lariat rope got away. He went into the woods aud the rope fastened him to a hickory grub, where he remained with only eight feet of rope to play upon until August 27, just five weeks and one day, with nothing to eat except what hickory limbs he could reach, aud no wator except what rained in a hole which the horse had pawed in the ground.— Kansas City Journal. The Farce of Habit. "I guess there's somsthingthe mat ter with my boy," said the father of one of the Tenth Battalion boys yester day. "He got home about 11 o'clock Wednesday night and went to bed about midnight, and half an hour later when I went up to his room he was curled up on the floor. He had just pulled the clothes oil the bed and crawled into them. 1 asked him about it and he said ho never wanted to sleep ou a bed again. Said he had a bed iu San Francisco, but it was too soft for comfort."—Albany Argus. Friendship is a strong and habitual inclination in two persons to promote the good and happiness of each other. IVORY SOAP PASTC >ln fifteen minutes' time, with only a cake of Ivory ® Soap and water, you can make in your own kitchen, A a better cleansing paste than you can buy. V Ivory Soap Paste will take spots from clothing; and will clean carpets, rugs, kid gloves, slippers, patent, enamel, russet leather and canvas shoes, leather belts, painted wood-work and furniture. The special value of Ivory Soap in this form arises from the fact that it can be used with a damp sponge or cloth to cleanse many articles that cannot be washed because they will not stand the free application of water. DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING.—To one pint of boiling water odd one and one-half ounces of Ivory Soap cut Into shavings, boil five minutes after the Soap is thoroughly dissolved. Remove from the fire, and cool in con venient dishes (not tin.) It will keep well in an air-tight glass jar. W! Ovpmsbt, 1897, by The Procter k Gambia Co., Cincinnati. & THE "GLORY OF MAN! Strength, Vitality, Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR. SELF-PRESERVATION. f y I A Great Medical Treatise on Happy / TUp fcrlFMrpß^- a,vtm " CB ' " l 0 cause and euro of i.x- jvjsL / c W"'' haustod Vitality, Nervous and Physical / f)P '■if / IFF B Debility, Atrophy (wasting), and Vaii- WJOSJBI / f fflf cocele, also on AI.I. DISEASES AND A%l\ '' har /■IMIII ■ * ' I WEAKNESSES OF MAN Jrom what rr-iiri.vM,/, True Principles of AShimk VUftUfTUWori r Treatment. 370 pp. ll'mo, with UNUW IHTbtLr. gravings. HEAL THISELF. ¥TOT?wFrwr'v 8 Prescriptions for acute and chronic diseases. Embossed, full Kilt, li e '-J , < . N '.' wlltln ". with latest observations of the author.) Head this QUE AT WORK now and KNOW THYSELF, for knowledge Is power. ro,iA!'v. J. St ? / Medical Institute, No. -1 BulflncllSt., Boston. Mass. (Established In ISOO.) Chief Consulting Physician and Author, Graduate of Hiirvnr.l Medical College, Class 18U-I. Surgeon nil l'S?° otn 1, r' m - nt VoL Th ? M , ost Specialist la America, ivho Cures Hhera 0 Kf. TS"!S? tl ? n . in l"r rs " n or ''y letter, oto (1; Sundays 10 to 1. Confidential. is tru V A BOOK FOR EVKNV sVtM a ? arded &?,S OLD M t dal fnr thi " orand p '' izo Treatise, which , EVERY MAN, Young. Middle-aired, or Old, Married or Single. m*ntiof Ju i> ? r *s? W thyself Manual, a 04-page pamphlet with testimonials and endorse "'e Press. Price, 60 cents, but mailed FREE for 00 da vs. Send now. It is a perfect VADE 1 ,snc U a?A a ,a d h°l g Z"? m "£. j°r WF.lKand FAIUXO A/B.V by a Humanitarian aU celebnaed !iil l uif f™ throughout this country and Europe. Address as above. Tlie press every where highly endorse the Peabody Medical Institute. Read the following. ~ The 1 eabo, y Medical Institute lias been established in Boston 37 years, and the faino which it lias attained has subjected it to a test which only a meritorious instuutlon T,,i "a o" I™at The reuboUu Medical Institute has many imitators, hut no equals. "-Inwlon Uerald. "Well Bred, Soon Wed." Girls Who Use SAPOLIO Are Quickly SWiarried." Life In the LoTnnf. The Oriental official chuckled glee fully. The iron boot had been placed on the foot of the victim, and the royal minions were screwing it tighter and tighter to force a confession from his lips. "Aha!" merrily laughed the official. "Dost thee not feel almost persuaded to confess that thou wert in a conspiracy to poison the waters of the Golden Horn, with the contents of the vial which my faithful officers found in thy pocket? By the beard of the prophet! Screw tighter, men, for he seems to be enjoying the whole af fair!" "Why, you doddering old fos sil!" cheerfully replied the victim, "that vial had com cure in it; and as for your old fashioned iron boot here, why, let me tell you that I lived in America, when the styles of shoes changed from broad tos to pointed. Screw away! You bring to my mem ory a hundred society dances in New York." —New York Journal. Don't Tobacco Spit and Bmoke Yomr Lift Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve und vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 60c or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York. According to a correspondent of a London paper there is as much whip ping in the girls' schools as in the boys' schools, but the girls make no fuss about it. Says the correspondent: "They know they deserve their pun ishment. so they take it with a good grace, dry their eyes and smooth their curls and don't let anyone know, not even their parents, that they have had a taste of the rod." To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Hromo (Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure, wo, O the 38 Sultans who have ruled the Ottoman empire since the conquest of Constantinople by the Turks 34 have died violent deaths. Dr. Seth Arnold's Cough Killer knocks Colds.— JOHN DAHOANELU 444 Fargo Ave., Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 17, 18U8. 23c. a bottle. It is not generally known that clip pings from masculine heads of hair are used for making strainers through which syrups are clarified. T® Care Conn 11 put ion Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 250 If Q. C. C. 101 l to cure, druggists refund money Frogs and toads are gifted with a remarkably acute sense of hearing. TWENTY- FOUR HOURS To New Orleans or to Jacksonville via the Queen & Crescent Limited trains from Cin cinnati. 54 hours through to Havana. To Florida- Queen <Xr Crescent Twr Fast Vesti huled trains daily Cincinnati to Jacksonville. Queen & Crescent Route and Southern R'y. 100 miles shortest line to Florida and t.he West Indies. AsheVille- Only Through Car Line is via Queen A* Crescent Route and Southern R'y from Cincinnati. Cafe and observation cars'. Excellent, service on superb*'through trains. Queen Sr Crescent Route from Cin cinnati South. "I have been using CASCARETS for Insomnia, with which 1 hove been afflicted for over twenty years, and I can say that Cascarets have given me more relief than any other reme dy 1 have ever tried. I shall certainly recom mend them to my friends JIB being all they are represented.'' Taoa CILLAUD, Elgin, lIL M CATHARTIC TRADE MARK RIOISTTRED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 26c'. SOo. ... CURE CON ST 9 PAT I ON. ... Stirling Itemcdy fuapuny, <h Irani, Montrrul, New Tork. 31S NO-TQ-RAFI and guaranteed drug ■ " BMl# gists to • 1 RK Tobacco Habit. I9IMOMMHMOMOMM99MI |C\ FOR 14 CENTS | ® Waw ' B^ to J 1 ~kg -13 * ° 100 • • J Pkg. Karljr Rig Cabbage, 100 # V.. Jtgfll 1 " X * " Early DinueMlnion, °* IS® j A 3 " Brilliant Flower Seeds, ljo I ! •sseueeeeoeeswe! V 5&4& STUFFED FHJEE n kit 'v® Permaaauily Cured ® 'rtk Insanity Prevented by ■ IE DR. KLINE'S GREAT . IB EL W HERVE RESTORER , PonltlTfl cure tor all Nmrtoua Fit*. after flm dty'a oe. TrtatiiM and $8 trialiiottlf free to Hi pattanu, th.y payiuacKprtaa .il.argraonV fflslis lite d oil Now, Boys, for some good, hartl WORK. 1 want a lew car loads of choice, large Walnut logs, delivered on line of R. It ir v o u nr© prepared t,<> furnish them, address mo at J. H. WATT. RHEUMATISM AI.EHKI.II! Rl.llit MutUwuwiVh SM.'.n'.v: W "l "•J 1 h,Mth * will not benefit Send 6 eta. to Rlpana Chemical Co.. MlwVork for lu atmpjas and 1000 testlmuulala. P. N. U. 4 '99 ♦pNfBSWPfi H Boat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers