After the Crip Thousands of people pay Sarsupa rillu quickly restores the appetite, regulates the heart, vitalizes the blood, cures thoso sharp pains, dizziness, heavy head, that tired feeling. Hood's Sarsaparllla lias mar velous power to expel all poisonous disease germs from tho blood, and overcome the extreme weakness whioh is ono of the pecu liar effects of tho grip. Get only Hood's Sarsaparllla America's Greatest Medicine for the grip. Hood's Pills euro all Liver Ills. 25 cento. #loo Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one <lroadcd dis ease that science has been .able to euro In all Itsntages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving tho pa tient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing it/work. Tho proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer Ono Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to euro, bend for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills ure the best. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H.KUNE. Ltd. an Arch Bt.Phila.Pa I could not get along without Pißo'B Cure for Consumption. Itnlwayscures. Mrs.K.C, hioULTON, Need ham, Mab., October 18W. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduccsinllamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle There is a new dummy lung tester •which contains cartridges which ex plode and surprise the blower when he registers a certain figure on the indi cator of his capacity. Delay .flakes It Harder* Mis-stops have made the worst sprains, but it is no mis-stop to use Bt. Jacobs Oil. It makes a euro by strengthening, soothing and conquering tho pain. Every hour's de lay makes it harder to cure. The Church of England is supported by income from investments, endow ment and by voluntary contributions. The total revenue of the church is about $35,000 000. To Cure A Cold in Ono Day. Take Laxative Bromo (Juinino Tablets. AU Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. -00. It is stated that about one in 18 of the population of Paris live on charity, with a tendency toward crime. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to Danish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,-—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. A physician declares that people who sleep with their mouths shut live long est. Cdacate Your Rowels With Cascnretf, Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. Me, 25c. if C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. It usually takes about five years to tan the skin of an elephant. Knocks Coughs and Colds. Dr. Arnold's Cough Killer cures Coughs and Colds. Pro veil U Consumption.All druggists•&>c Thoy're Only Arfoslanß. During; the recent strike of ladies' 'ailors the proprietor of a well-known . .ptown establishment was endeavor ing to explain to an interested cus tomer the difference between the kind of work which is clone in an establish ment like his and that done by the shambling wretches who were fighting for "recognition" and their right to better pay. "You see," ho explained, "men who never see a fine garment on a lady and who have no opportunity to observe and learn what good style is cannot be expected to turn out ar tistic work. They can never hope to become artists; they are simply ar teslans." Led Astray. "Here," shouted the bailiff, "you can't gun here. These are private grounds." "But I thought this was the open season for game," protested the sportsman.—Philadelphia North American. COULD NOT SLEEP )Mrs. Plnkham Hor of All Hor Troubles. Mrs. MADGE BABCOCK, 170 Second St., Grand Rapids, Mich., had ovarian trouble with its attendant aches and pains, now she is well. Hero are her own words: "Your Vegeta- J ble Compound has made rae feel like a new person. mEm Before I bc gan taking it I run down, felttired and sleepy most of the time, bad pains in my side, MraiH terrible headaches v'"' all the time, / I and could not fa * \ sleep well nights. so trouble. Through the advice friend I began the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- J table Compound, and since taking it all troubleshave gone. My monthly ticknessuscd to be so painful, but have not bad tho slightest pain since taking vour medicine. I cannot praise youi Vegetable Compound too much. My husband and friends see such a change In me. I look so much hotter and have tome color in my face." Mrs. Pinkham invites women who are 111 to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for tdvice, which is freely offered. 1 TALES OF PLOCK I AND ALTENTOEE. i Uarlng Feat of Steeple Jack. Newark, N. J., has a Steeple Jack whose daring hereafter will never be questioned. He is Louia Loerk, a young mau whoso early fondness for climbing high buildings led him to adopt steeple climbing as an occupa tion. A short time ago he was roofing and painting the tower of Seton Hall Col lege, South Orange, and gilding the cross which surmounts the tower. He had intended to give the cross its first coat of paint, but a high wind pre vented the execution of a task which was, under the most favorable condi tions, attended by peril. The roof of Seton Hall College is ninety-live feet from the ground. Above it rises the tower, fifty feet higher, and above the tower the cross, whose tip is 152 feet from the ground. As Louis clambered to his high perch the college students from . below watched him. Then one called: "Hi! there! You dare not stand on that cross." If there is one thing on which the young steeple-climber prides himself it is on the fact that he has never taken a dare. The cross-bar of the cross is four feet long. To this Louis climbed, aud, while the young men far below held their breaths, straight ened himself up cautiously until he stood erect, with one foot on each side of the upright and his hands at his sides. From below came a cheer, which died away as the youths real ized that their shouting might cause him to turn his eyes down and thus add to his peril. But Loerk looked straight ahead, across the pretty vil lage of South Orange, to a point where the line of autumn foliage along the crest of the Orangq Moun tain met the blue. "If I'd thought he'd have done it, I wouldn't have hollered," said the youth who had shouted the dare. But Louis was not satisfied with his feat. He was not yet as high as he possibly could get. While the lads below looked up in silent wonder they saw him put one foot on top of the up right, and then the other, and with the skill of a circus performer straighten his body and stand erect, his hands again at his sides, on the topmost pinnacle of all. The least breath of wind might have caused him to fall. For at least a minute he stood straight as an ar row, while to the straining eyes below he seemed to swim in air. Then, with the grace of a bom acrobat, he lowered himself, picked up his brush from its resting place on top of the paint-pot and went on with his work as coolly as though he had only paused to light a cigar. Tiger and Crocodile. Cornhill tells a true tale, which might be called a tigor-and-crooodile story. Ajheel, as the author explains, is a ravine between two hills, very dry in winter and full during the mon soons; and in one, olose to a small river which had overflowed its banks, a native went to bathe. He was in the water up to his neck, when a tiger on tho top of the hill [above set out to stalk him, and finally gave a leap to ward its prey. But the tiger was no mathematician and he had not calculated that, since his victim was much lower than him solf, a leap of the right strength for a horizontal range would carry him far beyond his mark; consequently he fell some eight or ten feet on tho other side of the bather. Now it happened that a hnngry crocodile was at the same time draw ing a bee-line under water toward the native. When the crocodile had al most come upon his prey, he heard a splash just in front, aud thinking this 1 might be a final gambol of the bather, he made a dash, and brought his enor mous jaws down upon the tiger's paw! The bather nearly fainted with fright when ho saw the tiger fall on the water, ami for a few moments he could not understand why the creature did not devour him. Why did he persist in keeping one of his paws under water, heating savagely with the other, and uttering horrible growls? Most mys terious of all, the water begau to turn . red! Then all at once, as the assaults of the tiger became more furious, aud his growls developed into roars, the linge tail of a crocodile reared up out of the water. Then the bather x'eal ized the situation, fled up the hill, and having climbed a tree sat there to watch the outcome of the battle. The obvious intention of the croco dile wasjto pull the tiger under water and drown him, and the tiger, under standing this purpose, tried to frus trate it by heating the snout of the crocodile with his other paw. But the snout was too far down, and he left much of his force ou the surface of the water. His struggles became more aud more feeble, and at length he dis appeared altogether, only an army of hubbies remaining to show where he had been. Under an Avalanche. On April third of last year there was a great snowslide in the Chilkoot Pass. Some two hundred travelers were in the pass, and about half of them were eaaght by the avalanche. The others went to work at once to dig tliem out, but only seven were rescued alive. One of these was Mr. Black, of Pennsylvania, whose experi euce is narrated, largely in his owu words, in the Punxatawney Spirit. The slide occurred at nine o'clock in the morniug, and he remaiued buried until fitfe p'clook in the even | ing. One peculiarity of his situation when covered up with the snow, Mr. Black says, was that he could heap just as well as if he had been in the open air. The groans, prayers, la mentations and curses of those be neath the avalanche were plainly audible. Some prayed fervently, good-by to their near friends, and gave up. Others cursed their fate, and used their last breath to utter profanity. "It seemed to me that I got a breath about once in five minutes. I had little hope of escape, but resolved to live as long as. I could. Tho snow was packed so tightly about me that 1 could not move a fraction of an inch. I thought every time I got a breath ol air that it was ray last one, but I never became unconscious, and it seemed to me that I had been there at least a week when a shovel struck my shoul der, and I heard a voice saying: " 'I have struck a man'' " 'ls he dead or alive?" said an other voice. " 'I don't know,' answered the man with the shovel, and he soon had my head uncovered. When I got a good breath of air, I felt that I' was all right, aud I said: 'There is a woman right in front of me. l)ig her out. I have air now and can wait.' "Then they proceeded to uncover Mrs. Maxson, but she was dead. You cau form sone idea of how solidly the snow was packed," continued Mr. Black, "when I tell you that when they had me all uncovered but leg up to the hip, I could not get out until tho snow was all shoveled awaj from it. I would not go through that experience again for all the gold o* the Klondike." '•A Goo<l Fight." '"What was the moat desperate flghl you can remember, colonel?" The question was addressed to Colonel 1 'Hip" Ford, of the old-time Texas Rangers. The colonel—a very old man with a wealth of snow-white hair and heard—hesitated, for the question asked for quality, not quantity. After much study he told the story of a fight which occurred iu 1851; and Frederick Remington repeats it in his "Crooked Trails." "My lieutenant, Ed. Burleson, was ordered to carry to San Antonio an In dian prisoner we had taken. On his return, while nearing the Nueces River, ho espied two Indians. Taking seven men, he ordered the reßt to con tinue ; along the road. The two in dians proved to be fourteen, and they loharged Burleßon up to the teeth. Dismounting his men, he poured it in to them ironi his Colt's six-shooting ritles. All but two of the Indians were killed or wounded, some of them dy ing so near tho Rangers that they could put their hands on their boots. "Alt hut one of Burleson's men were wounded—himself shot iu the head with an arrow. One man had four 'dogwood switohes' (arrows) in his body, one of which was in his bowels. This man told me that every raised his gnu to fire, the Indians would stick au arrow into him, hut he said he didn't care a cont. One Indian was lying right up close, and while dy ing tried to shoot an arrow, but his strength failed so fast that the arrow barely left the bowstring. "Ono of the Rangers in that fight was a curious fellow. When young ho had been captured by Indians, and bad lived with them so long that he had acquired Indian habits. In that fight he kept jumping around while loading, so as to be a bad target, tho same as au Indian would under the circumstances, and ho told Burleson he wished he had his boots off, so he could get around good." Here tho colonel paused quizzically. "Would you call that a good fight?" he asked. Last ~fa Fierce Wild Cat. The mouuted skin of the biggest, fiercest and most aggressive wildoat ever killed in the Pennsylvania hem lock belt is on exhibition at the Sol ving House, Liberty, Tioga County, and Elmer Krise lost a lot of bis own skin in getting it, to say nothing of the skin his horses lost. Krise was coming from Blossburg, driving Land lord Sell ing's team. The road passes through a wild country. As Krise was iu the wildest part of it, at a spot knowu as Blair's Hill, a wildoat sprang from a tree at the roadside and landed with its hind feet on the back of one of the horses and its fore feet 011 the back of the other horse. The horses reared and pluuged, and the wildcat sank its sharp claws deeper into their flesh and oaught one of the horses iu tho neck with its teeth. The team dashed from the road into the woods, where the wagon stallod them. As they pluuged about iu the brush Krise jumped from the wagon, seized the wildcat by the hind legs, and dragged it from tho horses. Then the savage animal turned upon Krise, who had nothing to defend himself with. In a very few seconds he waß stripped of clothing by the rapid work ing of the wildcat's clawß, and his flesh was lacerated by tho animal's teeth. He fought the fieroe beast as best be could, aud at last succeeded in getting bold of a big stone. By a lucky blow with this ho stunned the wildoat and then beat it to death. In the meantime the horses had freed themselves and the wagon, got back into tho road aud ran away. Krise flung the carcass of the big wildcat over his shoulder and started after them afoot. A mile further along he came up to the team, whioh had been stopped by a woodsman. The horses wero bleeding from deep cuts in their baok where the wildoat had clawed and bitten them. Krise drove on home, ragged and bleeding. The wildcat was flvej feet long and weighed sixty pounds. England's oldest royal postboy, Jonas Miles, is (lead at the age of ninety-three years. He served as postilion for George 111., George IV., William IV. and Victoria. AROUND THE WORLD. ° $3.501 J J ' 2 a"'°o. h r"oi , ld: J J . . Thousands of bareain, like this tabic can be ! found in our general catalogue containing Fur- ' ' < ► niture, Bedding, Crockery, Stoves, Baby Car- 4 k . riages Refrigerator,, Sewing Machines. Mir- .. t?"'. b'? turM Clocks, Silverware, Upholstery ' ' {► Goods, Lamps, etc. We save you from 40 to 4 I . We pnblish a lithographed cata- n I f log tie which shows exact designs nnpun/! i| ►' f Carpets.Hugs. Art S cares, Lace Ih53J( a a Curtains and Portieres in hand- ll II II ll b painted colors. We sew Carpets All 111 4 | free, furnish lining free and prepay i( 11 If V it freight. jl ?I ff 17 " ' i f Remember, we can save YOU Why enrich your local deader when .fl V ' ' you can buy from the mill? Do Nj T?s| O 4 i you think we would advertise our j| a \ catalogues in every corner of the ® / ~ \ f world if they were not worth hav- „ ► A 1 ing. Which do you want? Ad- Solid Oak, . . dress this way, 44c. " " iiJulius Hines&Sonj! O Dept. 305 BALTIMORE, AID* O A Mexican has made a combination Bword and revolver with the cylinder and trigger in the hilt of the sword and the revolver barrel pointing down the sword's blade. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yonr Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag nctic, full of life, nerve and vigor, talto No-To- Bac, the wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 60c or 81. Cure guaran teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. WHAT THE LAW DECIDES. The appropriation for domestic and Irrigation purposes of more water than Is necessary is held, in Hague vs. Ne phi Irrigation Co..(Utah), 41 L. R. A. 311, to leavo the owner of a mill the right to take the excess for manufac turing purposes so far as necessary. A statute prohibiting the deposit of sawdust in the waters of a lake, or in tributaries thereto, is held, in State vs. Griffin (N. H.), 41 L. R. A. 177, to be a proper exercise of the police pow er. With this case is a note on the statutory protection of water used for supplying a municipality. An action against a city for a de fective and dangerous street, made so by a street railway track, is held, in Schaefer vs. Fond du Lao (Wis.), 41 L. R. A. 287, to be not maintainable until all legal remedies have been ex hausted against thb railway company in possession of the track, as well as the owner of the track. The right to build dams to aid the floating of logs is held, in Carlson vs. St. Louis River Dam and Improve ment Company (Minn.), 41 L. R. A. 371, to be subordinate to that of tho riparian owner to have his land free from overflow beyond that caused by the natural condition of the stream. With this case is a note on the right to use a stream for floating logs. Htfliil Kails. Steel rails now figure as the cheap est finished product in wrought iron or steel. A good losson in the finance of modern industry is also afforded by them. To establish a steel rail works an expenditure of $3,000,000 Is required before a single rail can be turned out The steel in made to conform to an ac curate chemical composition—the most accurate in the ordinary range of tech nical operations. iJoYOfl 1 " "warn tpnsfflnpßen? We are sure you do nui. Nobody wants it. But it comes to many thousands every year. Itcomes to those who have had coughs and colds until the throat is raw, and the lining membranes of the lungs are inflamed. Stop your cough when it first appears, and you remove the great danger of future trouble. Afler's i( iCherry I pectoral stops coughs of all kinds. It does so because it is a sooth ing and healing remedy of great power. This makes it the great est preventive to consumption. Put one of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plasters over your lungs A wMm Madfoml Library Froe. For four cents In stamps to pay nost nge. wo will aond you stxteen modloal books. Medical Advloo Froo. Wo bavti tho exclusive services of lornn of tho most eminent physlolans In tho United Btatoa. Unusual oppor tunities and long experience emi nently flt them for Rlvlnt? you medical adrloe. Wrlto freely nil tho partic ulars In your case. You will rocolvo a I I 1 I.owall, Mast). THE MERRY SIDE Of I.IPS. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. 411 That 1A Left to Do—Professional Moth o(lb—Ciiubb and Effect—What He Would Kather—Just the Tiling— Served in * Concentrated Form—Diplo. "Hie, Etc* J an S and an I and aii O and a U with an X at the end, spell Su, And an E and a Y and an E spell I, Pray, what is a speller to do? Then if also an H, an I and a G And H E D spell cide, There's nothing much left for a speller to do But to go and commit Siouxeyesighed. —San Bernardino Tyro. Professional Methods. "Why didn't Alias get engaged to that plumber?" "He would only propose a few words at a time and then go away."— Chicago Record. Cause and Effect. He—"With your beauty you have robbed mo of my repose." She—"l wonder if that is the cause of my drowsiness whenever you call?" —lndianapolis Journal. What He Would Kather. "How often do you waut me to tell you not to make that noise, Johnuie?" I said the father. "I would rather you wouldn't tell mo at all," replied Jack. Just the Thing. "There—l think this new patent of mine will sell." "What is it?" "A patent fender to protect the human heel from baby buggies." The Lost Dinner* r With a willing png dog the small boy is unable to resist temptation. Served In Concentrated Form. New Boarder—"How's the fare here?" Old Boarder "Well, we have chicken every morning." New Boarder—"That's first ratel How is it served?" Old Boarder—"ln the eggs."— Brooklyn Life. Diplomatic. Mrs. Naborly—"So your name is the same as your papa's, Harry?" Harry—"Yes'm." Mrs. Naborly—"How do you know when your mamma calls whom she means?" Harry—"Oh, she always calls me kind of coaxing."—Brooklyn Life. A Powerful Agent. "Talk about the police being in capable," said he; "look how quickly they have broken up that crowd. It is melting like ice before a furnace." "You are mistaken, mv friend," re plied tho man of observation; "there is not a poliooman in sight." "What is it, then?" "Merely an outdoor entertainment of some kind, and one of tho per formers is just going round with the hat."—Tit-Bits. Ills Criticism. "Book, is it?" said the weighing clerk at the postofllce. "And writing in it?" "I should say there was," absently replied the man outside the window. "And it's pretty fine writing, too." "I'll have to charge you letter post age on.it, then." "O, I beg your pardon," said tho man, recollecting himself. "No, there's no writing in it." He was tho author of the book.— Chicago Tribune. Anl£sou.e. TTI v Burglar (appearing unexpectedly)— "Lookin' fer anybody, gent?" Man of the House (on the warpath? —"Ah—why>— er—excuse —me—yef —no—Why, you see, the fact is, thi doctor—er—told me do exercise with Indian clubs;.l—er —.must have gofc ten this pistoltbyi mistake. "—Puck. Aft Effects gjjipl IGrip is & treacherous disease. You think it //CM) IS cured and the slightest cold brings on a [jjV^ Its victims arc always left in a weakened Y3x condition—blood impure and impoverished; iQI nerves shattered. Pneumonia, heart disease w and nervous prostration are often the YZ result. 7/\\ OriWilliams* Pink Pills for Pale People will /jVnr drive every trace of the poisonous derma from [['/)) the system, build up and enrich the blood and strengthen the nerves. A trial will fJ? prove this. Read the evidences \WV When ili© grip last visited this section Herman 11. Eveler, QAjf OfHl 1 \V. Main SU, Jcflurhou, Alo., u w ell-kuown con tractor and builder,was on© of the victims, and he has since I men troubled IfCK\ Willi I lie after-effects of the disease. A year ago his health he- I Will gun to full, and ho was obliged to discontinue work. That be Ifuv "I was troubled with shortness of breath, palpitation of the heart and it general debility. My buck ulso pained me severely. "I tried out) doctor after another und numerous remedies suggested by my friends, but without apparent benefit, uud v*\H began to give up hope. Then 1 saw Dr. Williams' Pink l'llls 11 for rale Peoplo extolled In a St. Louis paper, and after lnves- Iks tlgatlon decided to give them atrial. AtjlX "After using the llr*t box I felt wonderfully relieved and lAw/ll wus satisfied that the pills were putting me on tho road to re- l/V^MI covery. I bought two more boxes and continued taking tliem. ||/Ay/ "After taking fourboxesof Dr. Williams' rink Pills lor Pal® Kl V/Xl People lam restored to good health. I feci liken new man, and n vj/)l having the will und energy of my former days returned. lain VCjWJ capable of transacting my business with Increased ambition. "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are a wonderful lll*—4l medicine and any one suffering from the after-effects of tho llfL II grip will And that these pills are the specific." 11. H. Kvkj.er. 11 yt// Mr. Eveler will gladly answer any Inquiry regarding this If \\~r__ stamp is enclosed.— From Cole Co. Democrat, Jefferson City, Mo. uQTO Look for the full name on the package. At druggists or //SIN direct from the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N-Y* HERE IT IS. The Little Valve Which Has for Hundreds of Years Prevented the Cure of Diseases in the Air Passages. Physician* Witness tlie Dentil of Thousands Annually, Unable to Reach the Diseased Parts on Account of This Ob stacle Created by \alire to Protect the Bron chial Tubes and Uungs. It ifl now acknowledged'by all medical men that this iittl" valve, called the epiglot tis, has effectively prevented the cure of Consumption and alKleep-seated diseases of the respiratory organs for hundreds of years. It is due to its presence at the entrance of the windpipe that all liquid medicines, no matter In what form they are administered or how minutely divided by sprays or atomizers, arc prevented from entering the bronchial tubes or lungs; yet, If It were not for this little valve, liquids and food would enter these passages and cause instant strangulation and death. The epiglottis is always open to permit the passage of air to the lungs, but so constructed that the slightest contraction of tho throat causes it to close over tho opening to the windpipe, and prevent the least drop of moisture from entering tho passages which lead to the lungs. Try to breathe aud swallow at the same time and you will see how perfectly this little valve does its work. Is it any wonder, then, that tho number of persons afflicted with Catarrh. Bronchitis and Consumption have steadily Increased every year, and that the medical profession should have become excited over tho discovery of a dry ulr germicide, the first ever found, that can be car ried to all parts of the head, throat, and lungs in tho air you breathe? No other treat ment or medicine has ever created such a profound interest among the doctors, and this interest Is being Increased hourly by tho wonderful recoveries made under their own eyes. Not nlone among the medical profession has this been felt, but hundreds of thousands of men and women throughout the United States, through free treatments given, and influ enced by the knowledge that their money would he returned in case of failure, have tested this new remedy, been cured, and are to-day recommending "HYOMEI" to all their friends aud acquaintances. There lias been for months NO DOUBT WHATEVER in the minds of medical men us to the efficacy of "HYOMEI" in thotreutment of Asthma, Coughs, Colds, Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness, Bronchitis and Consumption, and fathers and mothers who are acquainted with the honest method used by The It. T. Booth Co. In lutroiuolng "HYOMEI" are not doing right by themselves, or their families, If they do not test this new treatment, which costs nothing if it fails to give relief, und can be tested free in all large cities. "HYOMKI" CITRUS BY INHALATION. It is Nature's own remedy, given through the air you breathe. There is no danger, no risk. Your money is refunded if it fails to reliove. "Hyomei" Inhaler Outfit, *I.OO. Extra Bottles "Ilyomel," 50c. "Hyomoi" Balm, a wonderful healer, 25c. Can be obtained of your druggist, AT OFFICE OB BY MAIL. Pamphlets, consultation and advice free. *3 C I A | K7 C" CT C) f will mail to every person sending us 250. O ■ Gi XJ I La ■ ■ t- ffv ■ in stamps or cash, mentioning THIS PAPER, a complete IIYOMKI Trial Outfit, consisting of an ALUMINUM Inhaler, Wire Dropper, bottle of Ilyomel sufficient to last two weeks, gauge and full directions for using. Wo will also send FREE "The Story of Hyomel" and a SAMPLE HOX of Hyomel Balm, the wonderful anti-septio healer and cure for piles, bruises, burnt, sprains, scalds, chafing, saddle sores, eczema and all surface irritations. Bend at once to MAIN OFFICE ANI) LAllOltATOltlftS of THE R. T. BOOTH CO.. ITHACA,N.Y. THE GLORY OF MAN I Strength, Vitality, Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF-PRESERVATION. # I A Great Medical Treatise on Happy / TUit* f<riFNrPW U ™ ri agoß, tho cause and cure of Ex- I hausteu Vitality, Nervous and Physical j OF # LIFE ft Atr°phy ( wanting), and Yuri €ver cause arising. True Principles of UflU| W TUV(in r Treatment, U7O pp. 12mo, with KNUW IhlbtLr. graving* HEAL THYSELF. Trescrip"™ l " for acute find chronic diseases. Embossed, full Kilt, PRILL ONLY $1 BY MAlLi(sealed). (Newedition, with latest observations of tho author.) Read this CHEAT WORK now and KNOW THYSELF, for know I edge In power, nut Address IhH 1 ealiody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bulflnoh St., Boston, Mass. (Established in IWW.) Ely®* Consulting 1 hysician and Author, Graduate of Harvard Medical College. Class 1804. Surgeon Fifth Massachusetts Regiment Vol. The Most Eminent Specialist In America, who Cures Where ® th r™ v . Consultation in person or by letter, 9to 0 ; Sundays 10 to l Confidential. •a hXi?a nnnir , A^ i 'i t r i ?uT a S arded thH ,5 " ,, l Medal t,,r t,lis (Jrßnti prize Treatise, which **MA, UOOK ™* e VERV MAN, Young. Middle-aged, or Old, Married or Single. the Diagmmtleian, or Know Thyself Manual, a 91-nage pamphlet with testimonials and endorse mivmtm 2 P £ 8 * Pric , e ' BOcenta, but mailed FREE for OCdavs. Send now. It Is a perfect VA DE J! ! n . ( ! of|; , ,vat vall, i R [" v , WEAK ami FAILING tl FN by a Humanitarian aiid Celebrated Medical Author, distinguished throughout this country and Europe. Address as above The press svervwhere highiv endorse the Peabody Medical Institute. Read tlie following, otiikn. Medical Institute has, bepn established in Boston 37 years, and the fame which It hs Attained baa subjected it to a test which only a :v..-ritorious institution could undergo. Ronton Journal. J. be Feabody Medical Institute has many imitators, but uo equals ."-Boston Herald. "Good Wives Grow Fair in the Light of their Works." Especially if They Use _ SAPOLIO fland Postal for Pram'um I,l*t to tli* Dr. Htk trueld Madlcal Corporation, WOT I HOC kit, &. IT sure eyes use \ i nompson stye waier P. N. U. 8 'B9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers