"Better Be Wise Than Rich." Wise people are also rich when they know a perfect remedy for all annoying dis eases of the blood, kidneys, liver and bowels. It is Hood's Sarsaparilla, which is perfect in its action. It so regulates the entire sys tem as to bring vigorous health. It never disappoints. Goitre-" For 42 years I had goitre, or swellings on ray neck, which was dis couraging and troublesome. Rheumatism also annoyed me. Hood's Sarsaparilla cured me completely and the swelling has entirely disapi>eard. A lady in Michigan saw iny previous testimonial and used Hood's and was entirely cured of the same trouble. She thanked me for recommend ing it." MRS. ANNA SUTHERLAND, 406 Lovel Street, Kalamazoo, Mich. Poor Health " Had poor health for years, pains in shoulders, back and hips, with constant headache, nervousness and no appetite. Used Hood's Sarsuparilla, gained strength and can work hard all day; eat heartily and sleep well. I took it be cause it helped ray husband." MRS. ELIZABETH J. (iirrsLS, Moose Lake, Minn. Makes Weak Strong "I would Rive $5 a bottle for Hood's sarsaparilla if I ■could not get it for less. It is the best spring medicine. It makes the weak strong." ALBERT A. JAUNOW, Doug las town, N. Y. llood'a I*lll* cur* liver ill*, mm irritating and fie "lily oatti.nTU' to lake with IL.uU S.u ri I la. |g|g|g|ggi P*d fotl for Premium Lint to the l>r. S* Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonsoeket. R. X. CATALOGUE* OF THOUSANDS OF IijAYa S PIjAYS J SENT Fit EE SENT Fit EE f rm-Tkh for TUdSJnc *1125 Flayx Juat IMIMHI. CbararlM, Heritor*. Children'* I'lavit, I*l ays, I)|U>KUM, Mrs. Jurlay'a Wit* Works, Fafrr WarK, Paiior Scenery, Plays for Mnlo Characiati only. Tableau* Vtvanu, Make {,' UntarlaU, Amateur's (>uiJs to UuLte to Plays, "How to Hake Up.' SA.IHIKL FUFNCII, 5I Went 22 l Sura i, - New York Uity. :Thompson's Eye Water Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup forchihlrnn teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pHln. cures wind colic. 25c a bottle Ash Wednesday rather appropriately follows St. Valentine's Day this year. Will filet Down To It* It Is certainly true that as deeply imbed ded as the sciatic nerve Is, St. Jacobs Oil will got down to it and cure it. It is a proof of how penetrating and efficacious arc Its curative powers. A Woman Fixed Thanksgiving Duy. According to the Boston Transcript, it was a woman who was the means of having a definite day in the year set apart for the national observance of Thanksgiving. Mrs. Sarah Josepha Hale, a Boston woman, and editor of the first woman's magazine published in this country, worked for twenty years to accomplish this end. Time did not daunt her courage, but rather in creased her insistence. She wrote to governors of states and to presidents of the United States. At last Presi dent Lincoln adopted her suggestion in 1864, when there was reason to re joice over the success of the North in restoring the union. He Ueti the Wont. "Eleanor, when we are married, will you love me well enough to cook for me?** "Yes, dear Henry; but you will have to hire somebody else to do my cooking."—Detroit Free Press. THE ills of women conspire against domestic harmony. Some derangement of the generative organs is the main cause of most of the unhappiness in the household. The husband can't understand these troubles. The male ■ physician only knows of them theoreti m mm*** cally and scientifically, and finds it hard wVUIwlfHw to cure them. mI ■ .I a m __ But there is cure for them, certain, rt.UULIAH practical and mm m mm sympathetic. BfeacSaS^ili^lM m m m %9 Mrs. Pinkham these serious ills of women for a - quarter of a century. Failure to secure proper advice should not Jr excuse the women of to-day, for / the wisest counsel can be had B without charge. Write to Mrs. |jro~AX\i y\ -^%VI /J Pinkham for it. Her address Among the multitude of wo- irMli miVnVi men helped by Mrs. Pinkham LI l-tf/J iJmt and by Lydia E. Pinkham's | . '/ff'sWl |H Vegetable Compound, is MRS. JOSEPH KING, Sabina, Ohio. She writes: "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —Will you kindly allow me the pleasure of ex- Ml \ SjBH pressing my gratitude for the wonder- / (VEE ful relief I have experienced by taking HH / \^Sj Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- y\U\M pound. I suffered for a long time (/' \ ■ with falling of the womb, and those Y1 terrible bearing-down pains, and it \l seemed as though my back would never V Stop aching; also had leucorrhuea, dull 1 headaches, could not sleep, was weak Hi i and life was a burden to me. I doctored By 1 for several years, but it did no good. H j My husband wanted me to try your IE/ s medicine, and I am so thankful that I W J did. I have taken four bottles of the F Compound and a box of Liver Pills, and I can state that if more ladies would only give your medicine a fair trial they would bless the day they saw your advertise ment. My heart is full of gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham for what her medicine has done for me. It is worth its weight in gold." feel tbe Influence* Cold and heat alike aggravate neuralgia, because the nerves feel the oold and heat sensitively, but nerves are sensitive to treatment and feel the influence of St. Jacobs Oil, which cures the ailment promptly. Ex-Senator Call, of Florida, is still a familiar figure in Washington, and, after the old custom, carries all of his papers In his high hat. ©oat Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour T.lfc Away* Tc quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or tl. Cure guaran teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York. Upon their return to this continent Hudyard Kipling and his family will probably spend the rest of the winter in Mexico, with John Hays Hammond. Beauty la 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. The word "Sirdar," which has been so frequently used since the exploits of Lord Kitchener, is a contraction of the Arabic words "Sayer ed Dar." • Ilave used Dr.Seth Arnold's Cough Killer for Whooping Cough with good results.-D.C.KEMP, 1376 No. Curey St., Baltimore, Aid., July 14,1898. In Spain Hebrews are not permltter to erect and maintain houses of wor ship. They have no civil rights, and exist in the kingdom only as aliens. Twenty tax bills in Boston for 1898 bring into the City Treasury $1,367,- 653 36, or nearly 10 per cent of the whole tax levy. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggist* refund money if it fulls to cure. £>o* I Ostrich feathers In their natural state are white or gray, but ere pass ! Ing Into the hands of the milliner for use as ornaments they are often dyed in various colors, and sometimes, if j the curl is not as decided as it should he, the shape is improved by mechnic ul treatment. An ostrich will furnish, it is said, S4O to SSO worth of feathers every year of different qualities. The prices vary from $7 to S2OO per pound. Wo-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak Ben strong, blood pure. 50c, 11. All druggists. The Confederate Veterans of Norfolk propose to erect in that city a monu ment to Admiral Franklin Buchanan. lie ware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contalu Mercury, as mercury will purely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange tho whole sys tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should nevor be used except on prescriptions from reputable physi cians, as the dumnge they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. 0., contains no mercury, and is taken Internally, acting di rectly upon the blood and mucou9 surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken Internally and Is made in Toledo, Ohio, by K. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. by druggists; price 750. per bottle. Hall's Family i'ills are the best. Egbert Davidson, a prominent cit izen of Mecklenburg county, North Carolina, is on trial In the Federal Court on a unique charge. A mail carrier had been stealing his melons. He had stopped the carrier in the road and whipped him. The carrier missed the mail connection, and Dav idson is being tried for "delaying the malls." Shivering with Cold. It requires a considerable amount of philosophy, when one is shivering with cold, to take comfort from the fact that this Is nature's own method of keeping us warm. Shivering is really i a form of exercise In which tho mus cles Instead of doing their ordinary ! work under the control of the will are | made to execute involuntarily a series ' of slight but rapid contractions. This has tho same effect as any other kind of muscular work in making the fires of the body burn more rapidly and throw out a greater heat. The unpleas antness of the process is meant, no doubt, as a hint to the owner of the body to take more effective means of warming himself | AGRICULTURAL. | Tomatoes In Peat and Ashes. At the recent horticultural exhibit to Hartford, Conn., some excellent tomatoes were shown by tbe New Haven Experiment Station, which had been grown in a soil of coal ashes and peat. This rather unpromising mix tare proved especially suited to green house conditions, where plenty of heat and moisture are supplied. Tomatoes were finer thus grown than those in the same exhibit grown in ordinary soil. The object in using this mixture is to discourage the growth of the miuute worms which cause root galls aud weaken the tomato plauts. Improving a Spring. It is very commonly the case that the spring in use upon the farm is lit tle short of a mudhole, especially if it is a spring to which cattle have ac cess. Neatness as well as hygienio con siderations calls for so improving the spring that the water cannot be de- A WALL FOB THE SPRIKO. filed nor become the home of a variety of animal life. Let the spring be cleaned out care fully; then let either a square or cir cular wall of brick or stone be laid up in cement, a pipe beiug inserted for outlet, as shown. A closely fitting cover completes the improvement. By this plan a supply of water can be accumulated for stock by simply clos ing the outlet until the tank becomes full. Otherwise the stock might have to wait a long time in turn for n chance to drink. A walled and cov ered spring will also be found much cooler in hot weather than the one that exists in a natural state. Experiments With Fruit. One of the great needs of modern horticulture is to produce seedless fruits, such as currants, raspberries, grapes, apples, and even cherries, and thornless raspberry vines, gooseberry bushes, blackberries and so on. Through years of careful seleotion we have already accomplished much in this direction. It is possible that in the future we will succeed in doing way with most of the seeds, pits and thorns of many of our standard fruits. There are seedless currants and grapes and oranges produced now, and they are either the result of accident or oareful oulture and seleotion. These few successes indicate what may be accomplished in this line. The point of interest to horticultur ists, no matter how poor one is, is that very interesting experiments can be carried on as a Bide issue to the regular commercial orcharding. One oould devote a few sqnare rods of soil to this work, and year after year, by selecting for oultnre the plants that produce the frnits with the smallest and least number of seeds or thorns, whichever the case may be, we might succeed in helping along a mighty movement. Undoubtedly the trend of horticulture is to improve fruits in all ways possible, and one way is to eliminate disagreeable seeds and thorns. Accidentally one might in time produce a seedless or thornless variety of fruit that would make his fortune. But that is only incidental to the main object. It should be one's willing gift to posterity and humanity to experiment a little each year to produce thornless blackberry and raspberry vines and gooseberry bushes, and Beedless grapes, currants and similar fruits. We have many suoh seedless fruits now, but, as a rule, the quality of the fruit is in ferior. We need good quality of fruits along with seedless ones.—S. W. Chambers, in American Culti vator. Home Seed Tenting. Every year there ie more or less loss from poor seed. In seed buying, as in other things, it is important that the seedsmen be reliable. This fact settled, buy a small quantity of the various varieties to be used later and test the powers of germination. Take a shallow tin pan, those known by the general name of "dripping pans" will answer the purpose, then have a num ber of stiff wires long enough to lay over the pan crosswise. A strip of cotton flannel eight inches wide is then laid on the wires and then pressed down between eaoh two, forming pockets about two inches deep. After the pockets are made of eqbal depth sew oloth to the wire to prevent ■lipping. In testing, naturally the greater number of seeds used the more oom plete will be the test; but take fifty seeds, for example, or less of large seeds like beans, peas, squash, eto. Sow the seeds selected in the various pockets, oue variety in a pocket, mark ing on the outside of the pan opposite the pocket the variety, name and date |of sowing. Water should then be I placed in the pan so that the bottom of the pockets are kept wet atalltimee but oare should be taken not to use water enough to cause the seed to float. After the seeds are put in the several pockets, the wires are drawn together, thus closing the tops of the pockets, and the pan should be kept in a room where the temperature is from sixty to seventy degrees. Keep the seeds in the pockets for a length of time suf ficient for all of them to germinate that will do so, for many of them, even of the same variety, will sprout sooner than others. The proper percentage to germinate differs with the varieties. Peas and beans should germinate ninety-five per cent, while if fifty per cent, of the seeds of celery germinate, it will be a fair showing. By this method combined, as suggested with the selection of a reliable seedman, farmers ought at all times to be rea sonably sura of their seed.—Atlanta Journal. The Salting of Butter. In Denmark, as soon as the butter milk has been removed the butter is weighed, in order to calculate amount of salt required, and the salt is worked in at this time, usually on the butter worker. Sometimes it is all incorporated at one working, but in many cases it is preferred to add it in two workings, says the Dublin Far mers' Gazette. The amount of salt used is not uniform. It was adapted to the taste of the market where it is expected to be sold, but it varies be tween four and five per cent, of the weight of the butter. The salt is worked into the butter with the least pos sible amount of haudling, and it is then laid aside for some time before the next working takes place. In sum mer it is put in butter coolers, which are a sort of ice box. In winter it is either laid in large rolls in the butter trough or on a table provided for the purpose. It lies here for a couple of hours in the cold season, but when the weather is warm it is allowed to remain for eight or ten hours, or until the cool of the following morning, be fore it receives the final working. The object is not only to cool the butter, and thus allow it to beoome firmer, but also to allow the salt to dissolve and penetrate the whole mass. When the butter has attained the proper de gree of firmness, it is again put through the worker, and a considerable portion of the brine formed from the salt is worked out. The amount of working it can stand differs much in individual cases. Care is taken, however, that it is not the least bit overworked, so as to becomo greasy and sticky. This working may be repeated a couple of times, or it may be packed for ship ment at once; it is common, however, to give it more working au hour two latter. The main point is not to work it until it has become [decidedly firm, and then to work only in the extent it uan bear without injuring the grain, and yet remove as inuoh as possible of the brine which has formed from the dissolving salt. It is worthy of notice that although four per cent, of salt may be added, with proper working about half of this is removed in the form of brine. A Homemade Potato Sprayer. The sprayer illustrated herewith is inexpensive and easily made. First, a heavy iron rod about 1} inohes thick and 6} feet long must be procured for DEVICE FOB BPRAYINO POTATOES. an axle. This may be taken from an old grain drill, or elsewhere, and adapted to the present use. For wheels, take those of the hay-rake, as a high wheel makes the flow stronger. The shafts should be about eight feet long. They are bolted to the axle, five feet apart, and fastened securely, that the rod may not turn. Two pieces of wood, three by three inohes and three and one-half feet long, are bolted aoross the shafts twelve or fifteen inohes apart, one of them being placed a trifle back of the axle, and the other farther in front of it. The singletree is at tached to n third crosspiece farther forward. Two more pieces, two by six inches and two feet long, are bolted edgewise across the 3x3-inoh piece, two feet apart These pieces are hol lowed out at the top so that a barrel will rest on them securely. Two stop cocks are inserted into the barrel op posite the bung, and two pieces of hose six feet long, terminating in a line spray nozzle, attached to them. The bunghole is turned upward and a funnel used in filling it. The horse walks between two rows of potatoes, the man following and holding a nozzle in each hand above the row, on either side. When turning at the end of a row, the hose may be laid across the barrel to stop the flow. The pressure of the liquid in the barrel, if well ele vated, is sufficient to produce a steady flow, and the jolting cf the machine will keep the paris green in solution. With a sprayer of this kind one per son can easily spray ten acres of pota toes in a day. Progress ID the Yukon Region. By the courtesy of Captain Starnes, the Nugget representative was shown through the clean, airy and warm jail. The cleanly appearance of the prison ers, even to the five condemned, is most oommendable. - Hardly is the new jail completed when every cell and passage is occupied by Dawson's grow ing criminal element, and an addition of 24x80 feet is to be built on the end at onoe.—Klondike Nugget. A SSOO RAT'S NEST. Xhr Government Will Nntv Restore It to tlie Discoverer. An interesting story about five United States Treasury notes that were found by John Veeley, a carpen ter, more than thirty years ago in an old box car in Louisville, Ky., was revived when a bill for his relief, which has been pending in Congress for years, and which had already passed the Senate, passed the House. It thus becomes a law, and Veeley will get good American dollars to the amount of 8500, and interest, in the way of a gift from Uncle Sam. The bill was called up by Representative Zenor, of Indiana. ~ It was first intro- I duced in the Senate during the Fifty first Congress on April 25,1890, and referred to the Committee on Claims. 1 Senator Turpie seourred its passage in the upper house May 17, 1897. It is in tho reports of the Committee on Claims that the story of the Treas- I ury notes is told. According to these reports John Veeley was, on Septem ber 29, 18G8, employed in Louisville, Ky., as a carpenter, by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, and while tearing out the end of an old box car which was under repair, he found five United States Treasury notes, payable to bearer, of §IOO each. The notes were somewhat mutilated and appeared to have formed part of a rat's nest, but there appears to have been no ditfioulty in determining their character, their denomination and date, and the issue and series to which each belonged. Veeley took the notes to the Louisville Custom House, and they were forwarded to the Treasury Depart meut for redemp tion, but the Depar ment refused to redeem them, and, with the approval of the Secretary, they were returned to him in February, 1869. He then sold them to one Julius Welbnan, a broker, for S3OO. In March, 1869, Wellman sent them again to the Treasury Department, and the matter was referred to the First Controller, who decided that they should neither be redeemed nor returned to Wellman. Wellman then made a demand upon Veeley for the return of the purchase money, and it is alleged that an officer was sent to intimidate him and force a settlement. Veeley had in the mean time disposed of the S3OO, and, being dependent on his daily labor, it was not easy to re fund the money, but he at length did so by installments, and whatever rights were acquired by the original finding Were revived in him by the repayment. Veeley subsequently renewed his efforts to secure payment from the Treasury Department, but tho request was denied, and the notes still re mained in the hands of the Treas urer. Senator Turpie's bill, as amended by the Senate Committee on Claims, directs the Secretary of the Treasury to pay Veeley the value of tho five Treasury notes found by Veeley. This bill was favorably reported by the committee on March 31, 1897, and was passed on May 17, 1897. It was introduced in the House three days later, and final action was taken. Man Not Always a Flesh-Eating Animal. Primitive man originally subsisted on a diet consisting purely of fruits and roots; but though fructivorous by instinct and by reason of the con formation of his digestive organs and dental system, in which respect he is nenrly allied to the apes, whioh are all fruit-eating animals in their natural state, h* soon became omnivorous from necessity, and his stomach readily adapted itself to every kind of food. If the Darwinian theory be accepted and the desoent of man from simian ancestors be granted, we havo further argument in support of the fact that flesh-eating was the outcome of civil ization and climatio necessity rather than of natural oraviug. Exposed at the epoch of the great extension of the glaoiers, whioh at one time covered all our xnouatains, to the hardships of an inclement climate, man required something more nourishing and heat supplying than the vegetable diet whioh sufficed for him in a higher temperature; and in tho palaeolithic age we find him not only destroying animal life, but provided with and utilizing the means of cooking the victims of his rough-hewn knife and spear.—Medical Record. How a Gold Field Waft Discovered. A novel way of discovering a gold field was recounted by the Hon. E. H. Wittenoom, Agent General for West ern Australia, in his lecture at a meeting of the Royal Colonial In stitute, held at the Whitehall rooms last night, under the presidency of the Earl of Onslow. In 1888 the Mallina gold field was discovered by a lad in this wise: The boy, in picking up a stone to throw at a crow, observed a speck of gold in it, and reported it to the nearest resident magistrate. The magistrate was so excited at the news that he telegraphed to the then Gov ernor, and stated that a lad picked up a stone to throw at a orow, in his ex citement omitting to say, "and saw gold in it," So the Governor wired back these words, "What happened to the crow?"— London Telegraph. A Giant Fan. Garswood, England, has a ventilat ing engine that can {dispose of 500,000 oubio feet of air a minute by means of a monster fan. The fan is thirty feet in diameter and nine feet wide across the vanes, or paddles. It is driven by ropes from a twenty-four-foot flywheel, and roars like a locomotive whirling through a tunnel. The fan is usett to; ventilating a colliery, or coal mine, and it is said to be the largest appli ance of its kind in the world. A man walking day and night with out resting would take 428 days to to journey round the world. Life on Torpedo lloat. So injurious is life on a torpedo boat that a year's continuous service will mentally and physically incapacitate a ; man. This assertion is made On the i authority of Lord Charles Beresford. | but that the strain on any one serving on these craft is very great is shown by the fact that to one month's service the British naval regulations allow one week off. Austria is endeavoring tc mitigate the hardship of service on these boats, and life on one built for the Austrian navy and tried on thf Thames recently was demonstrated ti be pleasanter than on those of to* English navy. No I.one Wait. Molly—Would you marry a rich man if he was old enough to be your fa ther? Dolly—No, indeed! I wouldn't think of marrying him unless he was old enough to bo my grandfather.— New York Journal. Illakofl ihe Spot Vanish. A slight rap may cause a bruise, or a •light blow a black one, sore and tender. Bat it is easy to cure a bruise by the use of St. Jacobs Oil, and muko the spot vanish and the soreness heal. Ex-Governor Homoulda Paches, who ed to the public generally. This remeay is (W \\\ the only known specific in m&ny diseases )), PRI, ; E - Mcenta, but mailed FREE for 00 days. Send now. It is a perfect VADE U E F Vfl ! l,e FOR WEAK and FAILING MEN by a Humanitarian and Celebrated Medical Author, distinguished throughout this country and Europe. Address as übovo. The press ® R. RO °W E THE I ' EA J >OD 7 Medical Institute. Read the following. 1 1 1 I Institute has been established in Boston 37 years, and the fame which it has i. !I 1 il f • i a * } . wllic , h only ft meritorious institution could undergo nosun Journal. iuo icabudy Medical Institute has many imitators, but 110 equals. "-Huston Utrald. ** Fool's Haste is Nae Speed." Don't Hurry the Work Unless You Use _ BAD BLOOD "CASCABETS do ull claimed for them and are a truly wonderful medicine. I have often wished for a medicine pleasant to take ami at last have found It in Cuscarots. Since taking them, my blood baa been purified and my complexion has Im proved wonderfully and 1 feel much better in every way." Mils. Sai.lik hi. Skllarb. LutlruLl.Toun. CATHARTIC Vooccm TRADE MAAH ttmtw Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company. Chleag*, Montreal, Sew Tork. 319 Mn.TH.RAP Sold and Huarantoed by all drug* IIU- I U-DAw gists to CIJRE Tobacco llablt V. N. U. 7 '99 DROPQY NEW DISCOVERY: gives ■-* ■ O I quiekreliaf and care, wont cenoe. Book vV taaumonialn and 10 dn va' treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEK 8 80NB Box D. Atlanta. Ga + 40 to 60 per cent Saved < > \ Baying: Here. < ► 1 t WJf. „ $1.75 ' I friuH rnmmflm For this White Enam-' ' L jjn^H || Bedstead. { > $ A<4 00 Bedstead for 81.75 is but one of the * 1 A thousands of bargains contained in our general 4 | T catalogue of Furniture, Bedding, Stoves, Crock- V cry, Mirrors, Pictures, Lamps, Refrigerators, 1 1 i A Upholstery Goods, Baby Carriages. Sewing A k I T Machines, Silverware, Clocks, etc. Why buy i v these goods frr-m high-priced retailers when 1 f j you can deal with the manufacturer? 4 \ tWe publish the finest lithographed catalogue A in this country —it show exact designs of Bugs, Carpets, Art Squares, Portieres and I.ace Cur- i t i tains in hand-painted colors. It tells you how A k to buy at dealers prices. We sew *w. . Carpets free, furnish lining and prepay freight. 4 | ▲ South Africa. There is a cause A I ▼ for all this business. Why? m Our free catalogues will tell you. Baby Carriages! 1 X Address this way, $2.70 to SSO. ♦Julius Hines&SoDj | Dept. 305 BALTIMORE, MB. <> Adrian Iselin, Jr., the financier, never wears an overcoat, which he be lieves to be a cause of. rather than a protection against, colds. To Cure Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Cutidy Cathartic. 10c or Kc. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund mouoy. It is a felony to run a crap game in Tennessee under a new law. I cannot apeak too highly of Piso's fare for , Consumption. M rs. FKANK M011D5,215 >N .32d i St., New York, Oct. 29,1894. #SEEDS\. I Saltor'i Seeds ait Warranted to Prodnw. J AByaMoiitilhg |3 l 0 DOLL ARS WORTH FOR I 00. El In.rml.—*ncllim 7 lom ha* per sera on dr \ l'otatoj^^^^y WANTED-Case Of bad liealth that RIPAIf'B will not benefit. Send ft eta to Itipan* Chemioel Co.. New York for lu aamulua and luoo twstlmouiiua. RHEUMATISM * '{ *!;' " 1 Ai.kxamdbb lUmkdi Co.. 34# Greenwich St.. N. Y.