"Durability is Better Than Shozu.' p The wealth of the multi millionaires is not equal to good health. Riches without health are a curse, and yet the rich, the middle classes and the poor alike have, in Hood's Sarsaparilla, a valuable as sistant in getting and main taining perfect health. It never disappoints. Scrofula-" Three years ago our son, now eleven, had a serious case of scrofula and erysipelas with dreadful sores, discharg ing and itching constantly. He could not walk. Several physicians did not help for sixteen months. Three months' treatment with Hood's Sarsaparilla made him per fectly well. We are glad to tell others of it." MRS. DAVID LAIRD, Ottawa, Kansas. Nausea " Vomiting spells, dizziness and prostration troubled me for years. Had neuralgia, grew weak and could not sleep. My age was against me, but Hood's Sarsaparilla cured me thoroughly. My weight increased from 125 to 143 pounds. I am the mother of nine children. Never felt so well and strong since I was murried as I do now." Mas. M. A. WATERS, 1529 33d St., Washington, L). C. Eczema-" We had to tie tho hands of our two year old son on account of eczema on face and limbs. No medicine even helped until we used Hood's Sarsaparilla, which soon cured." MRS. A. VAN WYCK, 123 Montgomery Street, Patcrson, N. J. Hood'a l*llls cure livr 111 w; non-irritating and the only cathurlic to take with Mood's Sarsaparilla. Strong as a Steel ICuinrod. If you want to feel your spine is a pipe stem ready to snap, just get lumbago. If you want to feel as strong as a steel ram rod, use St. Jacobs Oil; it lias mugic. The fastest flowing river in the world Is the Sutlej, in British India, with a descent of 12,000 feet in 180 miles. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yonr Mfe Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be maf netlc. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. At a Methodist school In China there ore 50 girls picked out of some river or pond, where they had been thrown by parents to drown. Missing Coins. It is estimated that there are 199,- 900,000 old-style copper pennies some where. Nobody knows what has be come of them, says the Philadelphia Press, except that once in a while a single specimen turns up in change. A tew years ago 4,500,000 bronze two cent pieces were set afloat. Three millions of them are still outstanding, but are never seen. A million of three cent silver pieces are scattered over the United States, but it is very sel dom that one comes across any of them. Of the 800,000 half-cent pieces, not one has been returned to the gov ernment for coinage or is held,by tho treasury. Her Opinion. "People ought not to take children to the theater," said the bachelor. "Not if they can possibly avoid it," answered the young mother. "The noise on the stage does keep the poor little things awake so."—Washington Star. [LETTER TO MRS. riNKIIAM no. 46,970] "I had female com plaints so bad that it caused me to have hysterical fits; have had as many as nine in one day. "Five bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured me and it has been a year since I had an attack. firs. Edna Jackson, Pearl, La. If Mrs. Plnkham's Compound will cure such severe cases as this surely it niUßt be a great medicine—is there any sufferer foolish enough not to give it a trial ? Biliousness "Iliavo used your valuable CASCA RETS and find them perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have used them for some time for indigestion and biliouspess und am now com pletely cured. Recommend them, to every one. Once trlod, you will never bo without them In the family." EDW. A. MAKE, Albany, N. Y. CANDY M M CATHARTIC TODCWIETO TRADE MANX MOirno Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 2&c, fiOo. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Moatreal, How York. 3*l MIKTQ-BAC KM HE? Toba^'Habltf" WHEN "SOMETIME" COMES. When "Sometime" come--*, then we shall taste the joys for which wo long; Tho shadows will bo sunbeams then, and every sigh a song; The fond, fair hopes we hold so dear, and in our breasts eutomb, Shall all come back to life again, and fill cur hearts with bloom. The weary wastes of desert sand shall blossom as the rose, And every brook shall breathe a song to every breeze that blows; Our hungry souls, that now exist on just Love's raengre erumbs, Bhall then sit down to princely feasts of bliss, when "Sometime" comes. When "Sometime" oomes, the rare, round year shall be a glad, sweet June, And every note our tongues shall try will be In perfect tune; Our paths shall lead to gardens fair, thiough blossom-scented dells, Imparadlsed by songs of birds and chimes of fairy bells. The thornless roses, all day long, with ; dewdrops will be wot, And joy shall not come tangled in tho meshes of Regret; But time shall glide as gently as tho wild bee softly hums Its drowsy croon from honeyed flower to llowor, when "Sometime" comes. When "Sometime" comes, then all of life will be a dream of truth. And we shall bnthe our brows again beside the springs of youth, Aud sing the same sweet song 9 we sung in those glad summers when Wo played in careless joy, nor know tho weary ways of men. And all the friends wo hold so dear—tho ones who loved U3so— Will nil come back to greet us from tho Land of Long Ago; Tho girls with dolls and dishes, the boys with flags and drums— We'll all bo glad together, when that golden "Sometime" cotnes. —Nixon Waterman. OOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOCg 1M PRESERVED PRINCESS § o o o An Amusing Allegory. g £ BY 3ITRA HAMILTON. g ooooooooooococooooocooocoS ✓ILICIA, the Prin /J cens, was staying i*\ at the palace of her Q <SV I uncle, the King of Pn I ''v-l IX lDan y. ' m ' she had ({[A Mjiljj j] not been there very dnrT 5® ' ou " before she ufej made herself gen erally disliked, cSftjagi-y'- Her behavior was so rude and her temper so ungovernable that nobody could manage her when she was an noyed. She ordered all the court of ficials about in such a dictatorial man ner that occasionally they resented it exceedingly and refused to do her bid ding, and then she indulged in such paroxysms of rage because she had been thwarted that the most serious consequences would be feared. One afternoon, about a mouth after the commencement of her visit, the king was sitting moodily upon his throne, when the lord chamberlain ad vanced and craved permission to ad dress him. "What is it?" asked the king, tes tilly. He did not wish to be disturbed, for he felt convinced that he was to hear a fresh grievance concerning his niece, and his surmise proved to be correct, "Your majesty," replied tho old man, bowing humbly, "it is about the Princess Alicia that I have come to speak." "Well?" said the king, nervously. "What has happened now?" Suddenly loud screams rang through the loom. Tho doors were flung open aud the enraged princess rushed for ward. In one hand sho bore a large handful of hair which she had torn from the bend of au unfortunate at tendant, aud in the other she brand ished the broken leg of n chnir. "Oh, most roynl uncle," sho cried, as she hurried forward, "I have come to insist that tho Lady Gertrude be speedily dispatched, for she has an swered me mockingly threo times this very day. See, I have tried to punish her myself by clinging to her abun dant tresses, but I grow weary of the battle, so now I come to you and de mand to be avenged. I detest the woman. She shall die!" "Gently! gently!" said the king, soothingly. "Sit down by my side, and we will talk this matter over." But the princess would not listen to reason. She immediately worked her self tip into another fury, and flung her arms madly into the air, and gestic ulated so wildly that the king was quite terrified at her extraordinary be havior. Ho realized that it would be impossible to interrupt her or to check the torrent of angry words she wns pouring forth, so he sat aud listened to her flow of abuse in silent amaze ment. But suddenly the noise censed. The princess' eyes nearly started from her head, and with an odd, choking sound in her throat she fell on to her face and did not move again. "I regret to say, yonr majesty, that her royal highness the Princess Alicia has not revived," said the lord cham berlain, when he returned to the room a few minutes later. He had superin tended the removal of the princess to her own apartment, and then he com manded the court physician to attend her, but he had reported that nothing could be done. She had died in the last fit of passionate rage she had in dulged in, and in spite of the shock caused by her unexpected demise there was, nevertheless, n feeling of distinct relief prevalent in the palace. "Will your majesty give orders for the princess to be embalmed before sho is removed to her own home?" asked the lord chamberlain, as he consulted with the king about the final arrangements. Her loyal mother would naturally wish to receive lier, and in the meantime I will take care that the bad news is gently broken to her." "Certainly not," said the king, em phatically. "My niece is alone an swerable for her death, and she made herself so thoroughly disliked during her brief visit here that I will not be put to the expense of embalming her. The Princess Alicia never was a favor ite of mine, and ] will not allow one penny to be spent in buying the neces sary drugs and spices. Ido not care what happens to her. If you think she is still worthy of being treated with ceremony, then you must arrauge it among yourselves. I care not." The lord chamberlain then sug gested to the council of state that the princess be packed in sugar and sent to her mother with the annual gift of preserves from the king. This plau seemed to be so sensible that everyone expressed himself will ing to try it, and accordingly the body of the princess was conveyed out of the palace and placed where the rays of the sun would shine upon it. While this was being done the chancellor bad an oblong-shaped box made for him, and when it was ready they laid the poor princess gently inside it, then they thickly sprinkled her with the finest sugar they could obtain and carefully closed the lid. When the sweets were placed in the still-room of Alicia's mother's palace by its keeper the letter's boy hungered for them. At midnight he stole into the apartment, and began to eat. But a noise in one of tho boxes alarmed him and he screamed in terror. His father coming to his rescue found the sitting bolt upright in the eofiin. "Your royal highness," he gasped in astonishment. "What aro you doing here?" Then he recollected what a terriblo temper the princess possessed, and he feared that she would naturally be vexed at finding herself packed among the dried fruits, so, in order to prevent a scene, ho humbly threw himself at her feet. "Pardon, princess," he entreated. "It is through no fault of mine that you were sent home in this condition. I cannot understand how it occurred." But, to his amazement, t.#b princess smiled upon him before she spoke, and when she did so there was not one trace of annoyance in her voice. "There is uothing to forgive," she said, kindly. "I can't remember what brought me to this plight ; but I am sure;you are not responsible for it. Perhaps a note has been sent to me. Let us seek it." So tho keeper of the still room rum maged among the sugar, and present ly ho came upon the letter lying in a very crumpled condition at the bot tom of the box. The princess read the paper quietly through, and then she looked heartily ashamed of her self. "You had hotter see it, I think," sho said, shyly. "Or stay, I will read it aloud. Listen. " 'To her most gracious majesty the Queen of Oden. Madam—On behalf of the members of tho council of state, I beg to forward herewith the pre served remains of your daughter, the Princess Alicia, aud also to inform you that she met her death in an un expected manner on Monday last. Owing to the many unnecessary quar rels that took place in the palace dur ing the period of her royal highness's visit, his majesty, the King of luany, considers that he is entitled to refuse to bo put to any expense concerning tho young lady, therefore we, tho members of tho state council, have en deavored to please you by embalming the princess in a suitable way, and trust that you will forgive any slight stiokiness the sugar may cause.— Filialen, Chancellor.'" When the princess came to the end of this extraordinary document she sighed. "I am afraid I have been very tiresome," she said, regretfully. "But at last lam changed. Ido not think I could be cross now, however much I might wish to. What can have caused this alteration, I won der?" "Perhaps it is the sugar," suggested the keeper of the still room, anil the princess clapped her hands. "Yes; that must be it," she de clared. "The sweetness of the sugar has so entered into my system while I lay in that box that it has completely transformed my nature. It must have been a fit of rage that so nearly killed me, but how glad I am to be alive still, although I am very hungry. I will never lose my temper again." And the princess kept her word so thoroughly that those about her never even saw her frown, and her great im provement was discussed all over the city. Her cure had been so marvel ous that it became the fashion to wear a little lump of sugar nround the neck as a charm against rage, and very soon the country over which the princess reigned gained a reputation for not containing one bad-tempered indi vidual; for, with the splendid ex ample of Alicia always before them, her subjects quickly learnt never to appear cross or put out, however great might be the provocation. No Respecter of Royalty, Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria has a keen sense of humor. He was riding through a narrow country road recently to a town called Szent-Jacob, The local postmaster came along thriv ing the mail to the railroad statirn. He kept to the middle of the road, ,-e --fusing to turn out, and forcing the coachman of the royal carriage to turn his team into the gully alongside the road. The Emperor hailed the self satisfied peasant and asked him why he had not yielded a part of the road. "Why? Because the royal Hungar ian post gives the road to nobody." "Very good," answered the Em peror laughingly, and handed the yokel a gold piece to show that there was no bard feeling. The Extreme of Unconventional. All night the red wine flowed! Was eail! Morning dawned upon a wild scene of revelry. Some were singing bacchanalian songs; others danced gro tesquely; while still others, and these were drunkest of all, picked their teeth! —Detroit Journal. Ten Weeks For lu Cents. Thnt hig family paper. The Illustrated Weekly Sentinel, of Denver, Col. (founded 1890) ten weeks on trial for 10c; clubs of tt, fide; 12 for SI. Special offer solely to introduce it. Latest mining news, illustrations of scenery, true stories of love and adventure. Address as above; mention this paper; stamps taken. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. £2 trial bottle and treatise Iree. Dr.R.H.Ki.iNK. Ltd. 081 ArohSt. I'hila.Ra Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchildren teeth luff, softens the cum*., reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 35c a bottle. I use Piso's Cure for Consumption both In my family and practice.- Dr. G. W. PATTER SON, Inksier, Mich., Nov. 5,1894. The Nile Is the longest river in the world, 4,300 miles. The Niger is 2,500 miles, and the Zambesi 1,600 miles. iffakes tlic UIUIICH Strong, From hard work or excessive exercise soreness and stiffness sets in and lays up. St. Jacobs Oil will euro it after a.few ap plications and make the muscles limber aud strong. The Island of Key West has 25,000 Inhabitants on a surface of only 2,000 acres. XdncateYoar How els With Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. tOc, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Mrs. Elizabeth Skeats, who recently died in London at the age of 87, prided herself on being the mother of six policemen. She was pensioned by the Queen in 1889, and Her Majesty per sonally interested herself in Mrs. Cheats' welfare, SlMflilliU 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 SYKUP CO. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs 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 docs not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW TORE, N.F.- £&* Saher'x Sffdi are Warranted to Produce. HI 0 DOLLARS WORTH FOR^IOO.^B ulv. along. Bond Postnl for Lint to the IT. Hejfc Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonsocket, B. IT Thompson's Eye Water 10 QI Thin Sitnnlnrc Is on every box ot Laxctlve Bromo Quinine Tablets. Accept no substitute represented to be "Just as good." A GRIP CURE that DOES CURE/~^Z pST'Si, ilsmS'S what "Brings Release From Dirt and SENT PUKE WENT FREE _ fl tai a r*a w %M r% i Yo : 2T ? Plays, Paper Scenory, PUys lr Mnlo Character* oulv, LJ Best Coußh Syrup. Tables Good. U0 P* K VlT.nu, M;k l> Xntorl.l,, AniHteiir'a ljuij. H to Umt guld t>T~nrmlk W ff\ * f 1 I I P U to the Stage, Quldo to delecting liny*, "How to Make lip.* ■; ■jj ■ ■tfu -ijj mm ■wgL M Wk. Wfgg& ■ B ■ ■ ■ ■ SAMUEI, FUENC 11, *GF J IQFT JI ■ M R"TI ■ 0 I I L J SB Weal 83d Street* - New York Clur. ■ ■ B 1 I ■■■■ I Slip lOlMjllflMl | ' Every cough makes , 1 your throat more raw fit and irritable. Every fl cough congests the lining ® membrane of your lungs. 8 Ceasetearing your throat | and lungs in this way. J Put the parts at rest and I give them a chance to j heal. You will need some I help to do this, and you I will find it in ' ApfS I Cherry [ Pectoral From the first dose the | quiet and rest begin: the I tickling in the throat I ceases; the spasm weak- 1 ens; the cough disap- 1 pears. Do not wait for B pneumonia and con- 1 sumption but cut short B your cold without delay. B Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pec- f I toral Plaster should be I I over the lungs of every per- I I son troubled with a cough. | I Write to the Doctor. I I Unusual opportunities and long ex- I I giving you medical all vice? Wrlto I ■ froaly all the particulars In jrour case, M B been with our t'horry Pectoral. You I ■ will recelvo a prompt reply, without fl ■ CUat " Address, DR. J. C. AYER. I Lowell, Mass. K A GOOD GARDEN is a pleasure and a profit. Gregory's seed book di rects a right beginning. Gregory's seed insure the most successful ending. Get tuo book now it's froe. Jumcs J. H. Gregory & Sou. Marbictead. Mass. nUCIIM ATIQM CURE O—Sample bottle. 4 days' KntulYJA I loWl treatment, postpaid, 1<) cents. ■ ■ALI:XANI>EH REMEDI C0.. '.M8 Greenwich Bt..N.Y. The Sahara desert is three times as large as the Mediterranean. Xlifr' In NO Jelling. Be sure not to let rheumatism stay In the system longer than you can got a bottlo of St. Jacobs Oil to euro It. There 19 no tell t ig what part it may strike or how much misery it may give. Where Life Is Longest. More people over 100 years old are found in mild climates than in the higher latitudes. According to the last census of the German empire, of a population of 55,000,000, only 78 have passed the 100 th year. France, with a population of 40,000,000, has 213 cen tenarians. In England there are 146, in Ireland 578, and in Scotland 46. Sweden has 10, and Norway 23, Bel gium 5, Denmark 2, Switzerland none. Spain, with a population of 18,000,000, has 401 persons over 100 years of age. Of the 2,250,000 inhabitants of Servia, 575 persons have passed the century mark. It is said that the eldest person living whose age has been proven is Bruno Cotrlm, born in Africa, and now i living in Rio de Janeiro. He is 150 years old. A coachman In Moscow has I lived for 140 years. So-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weah ■ten strong, blood pure. 60c, 11. All druggist* A good Arabian horse can canter in the desert for 24 hours In summer and 48 hours in winter without drinking. Deafness Cannot Be Cared by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of tho ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an >n flamed condition of tho mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets In flamed you have n rambling sound or Imper feet hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness la tho result, and unless tho intlam inatiou can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will ho destroy d fori ver. Nino cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing butnn in flamed condition of the mucons surfaces. Wo will givo One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not bo cured by Hall's Catarrh cure. Send for circulars, froe. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, Q. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hail's Family Fills are the best Persian Ideas. An American traveler in Persia I learned that the common soldiers of ! ' that country supposed that the Eng- |' lish practice of firing a salute at the ' burial of a soldier had for its object ' the driving away of devils. Other mis- * taken impressions no less absurd ho ' * reports in his "Persian Life and Cus- 4 toms. A village soldier asked me if I * knew of dog-worshippers. I told him 4 [ had heard of fire-worshippers, cow- * worshippers, and the like, but not of ' dog-worshippers. He said he had seen i some in Teheran. Some foreigners ' there had fed dogs at their tables, < had washed and clothed them, fondled * them in their laps, and taken them riding in their carriages; were they i not dog-worshippers? An English sea * captain,whose ship touched at Bushire, 4 took a horseback ride through the { streets of the city, but made so poor a < display of horsemanship as to astonish * and amuse the people. The next day ' a vender of fruits came on board the ' ship and said to the captain: "I have ' made such an explanation as to free you from all reproach. There is no one who does not think that you are | an expert rider, as becomes one of a ' nation of horsemen." "And how did you do that?" asked the captain. "I told them you were drunk." At the beginning of the eighte3nth century people were hanged in Great Britain for the illicit manufacture of salt. To Cure Constipation Torever* Take Cuscarets Caudy Cathartic. 10c or Csc. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. In the middle of a game of tennis in Central India the other day a tiger bounded into the midst of the players. Dennty Is Dlood 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, l'cgin to-day to ! banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, j and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Under the direction of the Egyptian ' Museum of Berlin, excavations are be ing made at Sakkara solely in the in terests of science, without any desire , for material gain. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All i Druggists refund money it it fails to cure. 250. j Africa is the most elevated of all the . continents. It is the "Continent of Plateaus." The great table-land In the south has a mean altitude of over 3,500 feet: the wide table-land in the | north has an average elevation of , about 1,300 feet. Knocks Toughs and Colds. Dr. Arnold's Cough Killer cures Loughs and | Colds.Prcveuts Cousumiitlhn.All druggistß.2sc Nearly 600 cats were exhibited at I London's last cat show in January. The price asked for some of the finest animals ran from $250 up to $1,500. I \Society 1 f Women S \ ana,in fact,nearly all ' Vx, \[ 1 women who undcTgo tk J a neTvous strain, are S compelled to TepTet- /* JKiKli\/ V fully watch the gTow- / /fin' —ftTli. 1 /mg pallor of their [ ' I|£ / ¥ cheeks, the coming \ /., jj\ I wrinkles and thinness \ ) that become more jniln rV £ ""distressing cveTy day. y ~ V \ >/\y knows tli&t ill-health 'jk ( h is a fatal enemy to rraT 'll J 1 beauty and that good |!:f!wk / health gives to the jij ffijt fl\ ./ g plainest face an en- ' |rak IF k'RJ* /J V dunng attractiveness. v,|k l\v- (I A PuTe blood and strong \ :|h I i' \ 1/ ncTvcs these aTe the HV\ y 1 I secret of health and J /J \ Dr. Williams" Pink y Pills for Pale People build up and purify the blood, and \ strengthen the neTves. To the young girl they are invalu- \ to the mother they aTe a necessity, to the woman [i A approaching fifty they aTe the best remedy that science / y has devised for this crisis of her life. . f Mrs. Jacob Weaver, of Bushnell, 111., is fifty-six years old. She says. U jl "I suffered tor five or six years with the trouble that comes to women at \ || this time of life. I was much weakened, was unable, much of the time, to H do my own work, and suffered beyond my power to describe. I was down- II 1 hearted ntul melancholy. Nothing seemed to do me any good. Then I l| M made up my mind to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. J U I bought the first box in March, 1897, and was benefited from the start. k if A box and a half cured me completely, and I am now rugged and strong." 0 { —Hutkntil (It!.) Record I Tl The genuine package always bears the foil name t\t a 1) all druggists or sent postpaid on receipt of price 50* (j J- per boxby the Dt Williams Medicine Co, bchenectady.N V. \ i DISTANCE MAKES NO DIFFERENCE O To our customers w£o live in O 0 money, no matter where you , t Our Spring Clothing Catalogue i > with samples of cloth attached j, A Hr H \Ve issuea 16 color Lithograph- j l ▼ D ■ ed hook showing Carpets, K-igSj X Mf Portieres in their natural colors, j . ▼ We pay freight, sew carpets free, A and furnish wadded lining free. { I ▼ A good Solid Oak [ A Buffet with beveled \ 1 X plate glass for *7.85 is_ • . ~ , -vw S < > ▼ nut one of thousands oi .. . , J ouMiig General Cata- A Mattings, Bedding, £ Crockery, Silverware, J^/i, v 4 y A Clocks, Upholstery 'j $ jft f T JI jl3 ' X Goods, Baby Carriages, ii T Refrigerators, Pic Ill'Sfel it v moneyfor over 1,500,000 \ \ j A pleased customers. Why not for you ? All ( f t X catalogues are mailed free. Which do you | j ▼ wants Address this way, ♦jULIUS HINES& SON, Baltimore, Md. Dept. 305 J J HEAL THYSELF or Know Thyself Manual. A 91-page pamphlet by a Humanitarian and emi nent medical author. This Is a unique Vadc Slecum of Medical Science for MEN ONLY, whether married, unmarried, or about to marry: youmr, middle aged or old. l'rlco 51 cents by mail, waled ; sent free for Hi; davs. Ad dress The Poabody Medical Institute. No. 1 fiul finch St., Boston, Muss. C'bb f Consulting Physician, graduate of Harvard Medical College, class lHfd. Lai" Surgeon sth Mass. Reg. Vols., the most emi- A'me'rf?. !'"f" ALWA VS (TIIKS \N here Others Fall. Consultation in person or by letter, from tofl. Sundays in to 1. The fame the Pea Ikm I y Medical Institute has at tallied has sul.ieeted It to a test which only a merit orb>us Institution oouhl undergo. 1, .ston jotirnaL ThePeabody Medical Institute has luuuy imlta j tors, but no equals.—Boston llerald. to Athletic Goods— " Spalding." Accept no substitute. Handsome Catalogue Free. A. G. SPALDING Ai BROS., New York. Chicago. Denver. I'. N. U. 9 "J9 DROPQY NEW DISCOVERY: gives ■ quick relief and curss want cneen. Book mt testimonials and lOdnvn 1 Lrectaaent * ro ® Dr. B. H. OEEEN'B BOMB. Bo* D. Atlanta.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers