"Better Be Wise Than Rich." Wise people are also rich 'when they know a perfect 1 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. Coltro-" For 42 years I had goitre, or •wellings on my neck, which waa dis couraging and troublesome. Rheumatism also annoyed me. Hood's Sarsaparilla cured me completely and the swelling has entirely disappeard. A lady in Michigan saw my previous testimonial and used Hood's and was entirely cured of the same trouble. She thanked me for recommend ing it." MRS. ANNA SUTHERLAND, 4(X> 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 enn work hard all day; ©at heartily and sleep well. I took it be cause it helped my husband." Mas. i ELIZABETH J. GIFFEI.S, Moose Lake, Minn. J Makes Weak Strong-"! would give $6 a bottle for Hood's Sarsaparilla if I ; could not get it for less. It is the best •pring medicine. It makes the weak strong." ALBERT A. JAONOW, Douglastown, N. Y. Hood's Pills care Jlver ills; non Irritating and j Che only cathartic to take with iiood'a Sarsaparliift. I Arnold MrdicalCorporatir.il, Wionaockei, R. IT CATALOGUES OF THOUSANDS OF PLAYS! PLAYS ! SENT FLTEK SENT FREE ta the WWII. AU kinds gcro i-u.VB, Dialogue*. Mrs. .Urlav'S Wax Works, Fair assr & 1 tthrßl*K'B, UiildetoSoUMtlng Flh>b, "How to Make Up.' _ SAMUEL FRENCH, Wert 22d Street, - New York City. •: Thompson's Eye Water Mr?*. Window's Soothing Syrup lor children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamm** tien, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25ca bottle Ash Wednesday rather appropriately follows St. Valentine's Day this year. Will Get Down To It* It is oortaiuly true that as deeply imbed ded as the sciatio nerve is, St. Jacobs Oil will got down to it and cure it. It is H proof of how penetrating and efficacious are its curative powers. A Woman Fixed Thanksgiving Day. According to the lioslon 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 tints the Worst. "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 malo physician only knows of them theoreti- U mgfmmmm mmmgm cally and scientifically, and finds it hard WWUrVSMN S to cure them. mm a m m% But there is cure for them, certain, rt.%o UmifS practical and mm m mm sympathetic. MM M Mrs. Pinkham S these serious ills of women for a quarter of a century. Failure to secure proper advice should not V excuse the women of to-day, for / the wisest counsel can be had without charge. Write to Mrs. v\ Pinkham for it. Her address J' Among the multitude of wo- , U men helped by Mrs. Pinkham —^' A TtIEaSVYi 1.1 1-t r 1 i fe' - j|9 and by Lydia E. Pinkham's W WH* Ma Vegetable Compound, is MRS. JOSEPH V|l? KING, Sabina, Ohio. She writes: jS® "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —Will you \r kindly allow me the pleasure of ex- KSM 1 gaSlfi pressing my gratitude for the wonder- F'l^M ful relief I have experienced by taking / A^B Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable U )i\ ■ pound. I suffered for n long time BaHl r \ w with falling of the womb, and those V 1 terrible bearing-down pains, and it \] seemed as though my back would never | Stop aching; also had leucorrhcea, dull Hi headaches, could not sleep, was weak Ml and life was a burden to me. I doctored Bj for several years, but it did no good. Ml My husband wanted me to try your If medicine, and I am so thankful that I y did. I have taken four bottles of the Compound and a box of Liver Pills, and I can state that if more ladies woulj 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. Pinkh&m for what her medicine has done for me. It is worth its weight in gold." Feel tike Influence. Gold and heat alike aggravate neuralgia, because the nerves feel the cold and heat sensitively, but nerves are sonsltlvo to , treatment and feel the influence of Bt. ' Jacobs Oil, which cures the ailment | promptly. j 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. Boa't Tobtrco Spit and Smoke loir T.lfe Away. I To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netlc. full of life, nerve and 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 Co., Chicago or New York. Upon their return to this continent Rudyard 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 ■tirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, aatiafaction 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." Have used Dr.Seth Arnold's Cougli Killer for Whooping t'ougliwiih GOOD i esults.-D.i .KEMP, 1375 No. Carey St., Baltimore,MU., July 14,16tf8. In Spain Hebrews are not permitter to erect and maintain hoiises 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 $1,387,- 653 36, or nearly 10 per cent of the whole tax levy. To Cure A Cold In One Day. i Take Laxative Bromo Quinine, Tablets. All 1 Druggists refund money il it fulls to cure. 250 Ostrich fe&thers in their natural 1 state are white or gray, but ere pass j ing into the hands of the milliner for ; use as ornaments they are often dyed |in various colors, and sometimes, if the curl is not as decided as it should be, the shape is improved by mechnic al 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. Tfo-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak Den strong, blood pure. 60c, |l. AU druggists. The Confederate Veterans of Norfolk propose to erect in that city a monu ment to Admiral Franklin Buchanan. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contuln Mercury, as merctfry will surely destroy the sense of 1 smell and completely derang - the whole sys tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phv.si ciuus, us Ine damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hairs Catarrh Cure manufactured by r.J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. 0., contains no mercury. Hnd is taken internally, acting di rectly upon the blood and mucous surtaces 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 760. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills 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 mails." Shivering with Cold. It requires a considerable amount ot philosophy, when oile is shivering with cold, to take comfort from the fact that this is nature's own method of keeping us warm. Shivering is really a form of exercise in which the 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 the 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 warmine himself. MAD BECAUSE OTHER ESCAPED. Actuated by Feeling" That Most of U, Slave Experienced. Two pedestrians stopped at a muddy crossing to avoid disputing the right of way with the driver of a heavily laden beer wagon. At the precise moment when one of the horses brought his big right forefoot down in a puddle of dirty water one of the waiting pedestrians, who was watching, dodged behind the other and escaped a deluge of dark choco late colored slush. The other did not escape it. He was generously bespattered from head to foot. He turned angrily. "What did you do that for?" he do mauded, "Do what?" "Leave me to take your mud. It's a low-down, mean trick! For two cents I'd punch your head!" "Hay, what's ailing yon? Did I throw any of that mud ou you?" "I'm uot any man's mud feuder. I want you to understand, b'gosh!" "Don't you come any nearer. I don't want a niixup with a man as dirty as you are." "Then you want to keep mighty civil, Goshblumed shirk. Suppose I had dodged behind you!" "You'd 100k 1 a thuuderin' sight cleaner that you do now if you had. Y'ou didn't think of it, and I did. That's all that afis you, except that you need scouring." "You'll need a doctor if you say mueli more." "Oh, I guess not. Look here. Did you get a,ny more mud beeauso I jumped behind you?" "I didn't say so, did I?" "Would you have got any less if I stood my ground and got smeared all over myself?" "I don't care a gosh-ding whether I would or uot. I say it was a mean, low-down " "No you don't care whether you would or uot. You're simply kicking up a muss because I didn't get any muddy water thrown on tme, .and you did. That's the sort of a clothespin you are! You're a jealous, small minded, meau-hearted, snarling, en vious, soreheaded, lop-eared hyena of a mail, who'd kick if you were going to heaven in a chariot of fire unless there was a diuing car along. Come on if you want any trouble with me, you dirty faced " Hut at this juncture the crossing policeman interfered. A Shoemaker's Accounts. There was a shoemaker I met not long ago, says a writen in Chambers's Journal, who had a most elaborate method of keeping his "books." Against the wall of his workshop he had a large board erected, which he painted black. Into this board he used to drive hobnails, tacks, brass and steel rivets, and other nails used in his trade, to represent work done. For instance, the soling of a pair of boots would be rejS-eseuted by a small piece of leather tacked ou to the hoard by means of a brasa rivet; but if the boots were hobnailed, then a hobnail was used instead of the brass rivet. A steel rivet indicated a patch on the sole, and a patch on the upper was shown by the addition of a piece of thin leather. New boots were shown drawn in chalk, as were also the hier oglyphics representing the customers' names. Some peculiarity of manner, dress or surroundings was chosen to indi cate whose acoount it was. The par son's account was placed under tho rough drawing of a church; the cur ate, who wore glasses, was represented by a sketch of them; a couple of cir cles, one blank and one with a dot in the center, stood for the postman, who had lost one eye. A beer barrel was the innkeeper's sign; the village pump did duty for tho milkman, while the schoolmaster was personat ed by the drawing of a cane. The old man wns a great wag, but he never had his accounts challenged in spite of their quaiutuess. How the Treaty of Peace Was Sealed. A London paper tells this story of the final signing of the peace treaty: "Every diplomatic instrument bears a seal from which depends a ribbon, and when the seal is about to be affixed to the treaty the commissioners, both of Spain and America, expressed a de sire, tu graceful acknowledgment of the courtesy shown by France, that tho dependent ribbon should be tri colored. Search was forthwith made high and low in the Quai d'Orsay, with the result that in the Foreign Office of the French Republic not a bit of ribbon of tho French colors could be found. At this critical junc ture a brilliant inspiration flashed across one of the beads of the depart ment. 'Go,' ho said to a messenger, 'to M. X , tho confectioner, in the Rue St. Honore, for a pound of choco late cakes, and be sure you ask him to tie them up with a tricolor ribbon.' With that bit of confectioner's ribbon the treaty of peace between Spain and the United States was sealed." Lot* of It There. "You must meet with a great deal of human nature here?" he said as the conductor came along for his fare. "Lots of it," was the laconic reply, as the official received a coin. "Yes, you must see all phases of it. For instance- " "For instance, if a man has a plugged quarter on hand he tries to work it off'on me!" finished the con ducted as he returned the coin. "Bless my soul, but I'm sure I never gave you that!" exclaimed tho passen ger as hejflushedup. "However " "As I know you did " •, "And might think I lied—p-" "Which is everyday human Aature on a street car " "I will take it back nnd give you this nickel. Yes, there must be lots of human nature around here!"— Philadelphia Press. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the CALI FORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Fig.s has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FHANOUCO, CL AOPIBVILI.E. Ky. NEW YORK, ft. Ti. NORTHERN THIRST. Dwellers la the Arotlo Are Greet Drinkers. The dwellers In the Soudan or the Sahara, of course, you would suggest. But you would be quite wrong. It la not the tribes who dwefl In the fiery deserts of the tropics who drink most water In a day. Far from it. They are, as a rule, most temperate in all things. Unlikely as it may seem, it Is just the last people you would ima glne—the dwellers in the frozen north, the Esquimaux—sayß the Philadelphia Record. They seem to have a thirst which Is quite unquenchable, and for that purpose they are constantly melt ing snow and ice over the lamp which, fed by blubber, burns day and night I In every hut. Small wonder that tha soapstone out of which these lamps ara made is to the still uncivilized Esqul ; maux the most valuable of possessions, and that they will make long Journeys to secure pieces large enough to carve lamps out of. The lamp Itself Is shal low, in tho form of a small segment of a circle, and the wick of dry moss, rubbed between the hands with a lit tle fat. It supplies Itself with oil by melting a long thin slip of blubber hung above the flame. Sometimes substitutes for the soapstone lamps are made by the women, by cementing to gether pieces of other stone with a composition of clay, hair and seals' blood, but they are never very satia j factory. Britain'* HomeleM Wanderers. I In Great Britain It has been reck oned that there are about 100,000 ab solutely "homeless wanderers," and that 60,000 of those belong to Lon don. 11l Hangs If it was only health, wa might let it cling. But it is a cough. One cold no sooner passes off before another comes. But it's the same old cough all the time. And it's the same; old story, too. There is first the cola, then the cough, then pneu monia or consumption with the long sickness, and life tremb ling in the balance. [Ayefs Cherry | Pectoral loosens the grasp of yourcough. The congestion of the throat and lungs is removqd; all in flammation is subdued; the parts arc put perfectly at rest and the cough drops away. It |H has no diseased tissues on M which to hang. K Dr. Ayer's 1 Cherry Pectoral 1 Plaster W draws out inflammation of the ■■ lungs. V Adv/ca #>oo, I Remember we hive a Medical Depart- K ment. If you havo any complaint what- ■ ever and denim tho best medical advice I Sou can possibly obtain, write the M octor freely. You will receive a M prompt reply, without cost. , M Address, DR. J. C. AYF.R, M Lowell, Mass. WHEN JOHN'S AWAY. Els pine Is cold upon the shelf. His jolly dog's a lone estray; The house Is quite unlike itself When John's away. We miss his whistle on the stair. We miss the turning of his key, His oheery mandolin's favorite air. His company. And when his oheery letters eome We seem to read between the lines, A wistful yearning for his home Our love divines. Oh! army blue that shines so bright, Ohi army blue that looks so warm. It folds full many a heartache tight, That uniform. —Harper's Weekly. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Choily Chumpleigh—"l'mnotaman with one idea." Miss Coldeal—"No? Why don't you try to get one?"— Life. Hewitt—"l don't see you with that pretty girl as often as I used to." Jew ett—"No, I'm married to her now."— Town Topics. Tho Poet (insinuatingly)—" Don't you think we would make a good couplet?" She (coyly)—"l'm not averse."—Brooklyn Life. "Yon look nice enough to eat," ex claimed the youth. "And so I do," replied the maiden; "three times a day."—Ohio State Journal. Minister—"Do you love truth, my little man?" Tommy (donbtfnlly)—- "Well, I dunno; —I hate awfully to get caught iu a lie!"— Puck. Rev. Barebones—"Where have all the former missionaries gone?" Chief Bogloo (suavely) "They journeyed further into the interior, boss."— Wasp. "I wish I could make both ends meet!" sighed Patty. "I've got a new hat and a new pair of shoes, and then I wouldn't need anything else."—Har per's Bazar. Wife—"They say that conversation is merely the art of talking back." Husband—"l suppose then that you are merely a conversationalist."—De- I troit Free Press. i "Society women do lead such aim ; less lives." "Aimless, do they? Well, I know a society woman who can throw a teacup or a rolling-pin just as accu | rately as a man."—Standard. There was a young fellow named Otto, Who wondered much what ho had got, oh. When the wife of his choice Said iu a sweet voice, "Tho best sauce for ebons is tomotto." —lndianapolis Journal. "A woman's idea of a down-trodden wife is one who," said the Cornfed Philosopher, "does not ask her husband to account for every cent of his own money."—lndianapolis Jour nal. Grandpa—"Don't get scared, Willie; tho tiger is aboubto be fed; that's what makes him jump and roar so." Willie (easily)—"Oh, I ain't afraid of him, grandpa. Papa's the same when hi? meals ain't ready." "I wish I was a warship,"' he said, regretfully, after opening and examin ing his salary envelope. "'Cause why?" they asked, with natural curi osity. "I wouldn't mind being docked, then," he answered. —Chicago Post. Arkansaw Native—"How much for takin' the pictures of my children?" Photographer— "Three dollars a dozen." Native—"Wa'al, I reckon I'll have to wait a spell; I hain't got but 'leven children at present!"— Puck. Mother (suspecting that some of the presents have olready been pawned)— —"And where is that pretty mantel clock?" Daughter—"Well, you see, it was a Frenoh clock, and George could never quite understand it." — Jewelers' Weekly. She wept bitterly. "Ha, Ha!" said he, and turned on his heel. Then he left her. It was not until a more ex perienoed one had told her that the proper weep in the presence of a man is to weep sweetly that she understood her failure.—Cincinnati Enquirer. "I wonder why it is that so many men of talents become sour and dis trustful of their fellow creatures?" mused the young women. "I sup pose," replied Miss Cayenne, "it's be cause they ore constantly subjected to snch emotional extremes. They can never tell whether a caller is an auto graph-colleotor or a bill-collector."— Chicago Chronicle. WISE WORDS. Responsibility walks hand and hand with oapacity aud power.—J. G. Hol land. Absenoe of occupation is not rest; a mind quite vacantia a mind distressed, —Cowper. He is richest who is content with the least, for content is the wealth of nature. —Socrates. He who lives only to benefit himself oonfers on the world a benefit when he dies.—Tertullian. The reflections on a day well spent furnish us with joy more pleasing thnn ten thousand triumphs.—Thomas a Kempis. If we havo need of a strong wilS In order to do good, it is still more necessary for us in order not to do evil.—Mole. There is no impossibility for him who stands prepared to comxner every hazard—the fearful are the failing.— Sarah J. Hale. Rogues are always found out in some way. Whoever is a wolf will act as a wolf; that is the most certain of all things. —Fontaine. Every man stamps his own vn'.ue on himself.—The price we challenge for ourselves is given us. Man is made great or little by his own will.— Schiller. Religion is intended for both worlds, and right living for this is the best preparation for the next. Character is decisive of destiny.—Try on Ed wards. LIN oE< K Torptwi.t Iloat. 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 bn the authority of l.ord Charles Beresfurd, hut 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 foi the Austrian navy and tried on the Thames recently was demonstrated tc be pleasanter than on those of the English navy. No LOOK Walt. 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. JVYake* tho Spot Vanish* A slight rap may cause a bruise, or a •light blow a black one, sore and tender. Bit it is easy to cure iM>ruise by the use of 81. Jacobs Oil, and make the spot vanish and the soreness heul. Ex-Governor Itomoulda Paehes, who died In Oakland, Cal., the other day, was the first native executive of that state. CdncAtA Your Bowels With Caecareta. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. toc,2sc. If C.C.C. fail, druggists refund money. In Hollo there is not a hotel or a pub lic conveyance. But travelers are few. Fits permanently cured. No fit? or nervous ness after first day's use of I)r. Kline's (invtt Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise lree. Dr.K.H.KLINE. Ltd. 9111 Arch St. Phila.Pa fLocomotorAuxi^P&ralysis | I C&n be Corsd. J §) These extreme nervous disorders were )), W tTe&ted with wonderful success by the dis- coverer of Dr. Williams'Pinh PiUs for Pile 1] W People, previous to his discovery being offer- Jj T|> ed to thg public generally. This remeay is ((| \\\ the only known specific in m&ny diseases M w that, until recent yea.rs.were pronounced in-c M curable. Here is tne proof; 1 /// James Croclcet, a sturdy old Scotchman living in Detroit, Mich, at 83 l(f f(C Montcalm St., was cured or Locomotor Ataxia by these pills, l-'or many Yfc years he has been a chief engineer of one of those big passenger palace /J y/J steamers plying upon the great lakes. This is a position of great respon- \l In. tibility and the anxiety causes n great nervous strain. Mr. Crocket says: JA VyA "For fifteen years 1 watched the big engines and boilers without a s'tigle I/rt till accident, and only noticed that I was getting nervous. Suddenly without lUJ (// warning I was taken sick, and was prostrated. I had the best of physi- \v ft cians butyrew gradually worse. At a council of doctors, they said I hud )) sr\ nervous prostratiou, and had destroyed my whole nervous system and //[. 11Jl would never recover. For three years I was unable to move from my bed. ([/ The doctor said 1 had locomotor ataxia, and would never be able to walk ji NNk "The pains and suffering I experienced during those years are almost VS fJJM indescribable. The friends that came to see mc bid me good by<* when [A f/f they left me and I was given up. The doctors said nothing more could lie lj! l( done. My wife kept reading to me, articles about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills f/h SV for l'ale People. We finally decided to try them. The first box gave me l(\I N\l relief. I continued to use them for about two years before I could get strength enough to walk. I ant nearly seventy-five years old and there is if fiT not a man in this city that can kick higher or walk further than lean Jh cN and to-day I owe my present good health to Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills for (([• t)Ji Pale People for they saved my life."— Dttroit Evtning A'tws. w |jj 50 cents St This T>\ooaMialorwc by mail.. )J jK Address the DR.YALLIAM* THOICINE. COMPANY, Schenectady, N.Y_(M THE GLORY OF MAN! Strength, Vitality, Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR. SELF-PRESERVATION. / I A Great Medical Tre.atiso on Happy / TUrS&irAirFwM*rri*K**' the cause and euro of Ex- IML / M liaustod Vitality, Nervous and Physical / OF MUFE. # Debility, Atrophy (wasting), and Vari iTi f ever cause arising. True Principles of Ifuniif TUVon r Ticatnieut, 370 pp lJmo, with RNUif IHlbtLr. gravings. HEAL THYSELF. pmL'wwfv 9 r i i> I 5 v ?. ll ;", l ; ,< l rrs "lptl"ns for ncutenntl chronic diw-mcos. Emhoascd, full K ilc* PRICE ONL\ ft BY MAIL (sealed). (New edition, with latest observations of the author.) Read this GREAT WORK now and KNOW THYSELF, for knowledge Is power. rhi£ n^, 7 Institute, No. 4 Bulflnch St., Boston, Mass. (Established in 1W50.) vim -It! 5 M clt ? n Bn dAuthor, Graduate of Harvard Medical College, Class 1864. Surgeon Eo * im * nt VoL The Most Eminent Specialist In America, who Cures Where &F/vIV x U, i? U ? n A in pprson or by ,ettor 9to 6 ! Sundays 10 to 1. Confidential. I. trl l r S thfl n ° M Medftl for this Grand Prize Treatise, whicj n2225i2? B EYERY MAN, Young, Middle-aged, or Old. Married or Single. menTa rtf K£ TJ ? R KJ° W Thyself MUIIMAI. a 04-page pamphlet with testimonials and endorse SvrurSr -!?5 P S Price. SOoents, hut mailed FREE forOOdavs. Send now. It is a |>erfect VADE n SnH.?A a t ?. ( l of €!??? va, T i or t WKAK and FAILING MEN by a Humanitarian aiul Celebrated JI istingu l ished throughout this country and Europe. Address as above. The press everywhero highly endorse the Peabody Medical Institute. Read the following. MtxliiM Medical Institute has been established in Boston 87 years, and "he fame which It hag •• Thilw/J*# to a test which only a meritorious institution could undergo. Boston Journal. .The Feabudy Medical Institute has many imitators, but no equals. "-Boston Ueratd. 4 * Fool's Haste is Nae Speed," Don't Hurry the Work Unless You Use _ SAPOLIO BAD BLOOD "CASCABETB d ull clt.lmeri for them and are a truly wonderful medicine. I have often wished for a medicine pleasant to take and at last have found It In Cascarets. HI nee tuklnu them, my blood has been purified and my complexion has im- i proved wonderfully and 1 feel much better In every way." Mas. SALLIE E. BELLAaa. Luttrell.Tenn. CATHARTIC xevdoasim> TRAOE MAUN Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste flood. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. : ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Berlin* Remedy Company. Clili.sn, Jlnntr.nl. N-w York. Sl9 R M. P. T '99 b R O P S Y -3 eases. Book •( test imonials and I O dava' treatment, Free. Dr. a. H QUEEN'S BOSS. Box D. Atlanta. ©%• | 40 to 60 per ceut Saved < k ♦ Baying: Here. < ► jwa, $1.75 ;; x r nam . !A $4.00 Bedstead for 01 75 is but one of the i thousands of bargains contained in our general k catalogueof Furniture, Bedding, Stoves, Crock ery, Mirrors, Pictures, Lamps, Refrigerators, I f Upholstery Goods, IJaby Carriages. Sewing t j Machines, Silverware, Clocks, etc. Why buy V these goods from high-priced retailers when ' r you can deal with the manufacturer? 4 ) ▲ Wc publish the finest lithographed catalogue A k Yin this country—it show exact designs of Rugs, " ' W Carpets, Art Squares, Portieres and Lace Cur- < 1 ▲ tains in hand-painted colors. It tells you how < j J to buy at dealers prices. We sew £ Carpets free, turnish lining and I i 1 ▼ for all this business. Why? 6 Our free catalogues will tell you. Biby Carriages! 1 X Address this way, $2.70 to | lJulmsHmes&Son,!: + Dept. 305 RAMIMOUF., MD. ! 1 never wears an overcoat, which he be lieves to be a cause of, rather than a protection ;i.' To Care Constipation Forever. Take Case-arets Candy Cathartic. 10c or2Be. If C. C. C. full to cure, druggists refund money. It is a felony to run a crap game In Tennessee under a new law. I ennnot speak too highly of Piso's Cure for Consumption. Mrs. FHANK Mouus,2IS W.22d St., New York, Oct. 29,189 L #SEEDS\ Salter's Seed* are Warranted to Q 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 10c. Q " r Shr.p.^^B 11 narmla--r leld In< 7 ions hay p'-r acre on d ryl^U 00. 000 bbli.Need I'o Tir ANTED-Caao of bad haalth that R I P*: >■ will not benefit Send 6 eta to Ripans Chcmloal Co.. New\ork for ll) aamulea and luoo testimonials. RHEuMATISM tr.'utmerit, p™Vpaid* i (i^cents. ®"AI.KXAMDKB HKMKDY Co..24otireeuwicli St.. M.Y. 'fcjlM'MgHfc IpJ BOfit C ouKh Syrup. Tani Good. Use ■ tima _ Hoidby druKu j ,-q... I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers