" Only the First Step is Difficult." The first step in Spring should be to cleanse Nature's house from Winter's accumu lations. Hood's Sarsaparilla does this 'work easily. It is America's Greatest Spring Medicine. It purifies the blood, as millons of people say. It makes the weak strong, as nervous men and women gladly testify. It cures all blood diseases, as thousands of cured voluntarily write. It is just the medicine for you, as you will gladly say I after you have given it a fair trial. Bad BlCOd-" Although past 70 years of age I am thoroughly well. It was three bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla that made me so after spending over SOO in medical attendance. My trouble was a raw sore on my ankle." MRS. LOUISA MASON, Court Street, Lowell, Mass. Running Sores-" After worrying four months I gave my children Hood's Sarsa parilla and it cured them of running sores. Hood's Pills cured me of dyspepsia and constipation." MRS. KATK E. THOMAS, 31 Governor St., Annapolis, Md. Consumptive cough - M Five years ago I had a consumptive cough which re duced me to a skeleton. Was advised to take Hood's Sarsnpurilla which I did and recovered normal health. I have been well ever since." MATILDA RRIDGEWATKR, Cor. Pearl and Chestnut Sts., Jeffersonvillc, Ind. 3{ccdA SaUafo/uffq Hood's Pills curs liver ills, the non-Irritating and the ouly cathartic to take with Hood's Sarwaparilla. j Fits permanently cured. No flt or nervous ness niter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great. Nerve Restorer. S" trial bottle ami treatise iree. Dr.R.H. KI.TNE, Ltd. 031 Arch Stphila.i'a Contracts made on Sunday may be enforced in Minnesota, according to u decision of the Supreme Court of that State. _ No-To-llac for Fifty (tents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak Ken strong, blood pure. 60c, 61. All drugai^Uk Dress Fronts, On most of the redingote dresses and many of the princess gowns for dressy afternoon functions the familiar straight fronts are avoided, and the edges cut in long curving scallops— thus, when the length of an ordinary coat is reached a curve is made and the material cut away in the space of three-eighths of a yard or more. When two thirds of a yard of the skirt-length Is traversed another backward scallop Is made as before, terminating at the skirt edge. The bodice portion is usually open-fronted and low cut, above a gimp of shirred silk muslin over silk or satin, gathered into a beaded band around the neck. At a public entertainment of a fashionable hotel recently a gown exactly after the style described was worn. A nar row line of otter fur finished tho edges of skirt and waist, the gown was of gray, repped silk and wool, and tho gimp of pink, crimson and green ma telasse on a deep cream ground. Failed to Conciliate. As the conventional young man sat talking with the conventional young woman tho conventional stern father came in. The young man would fain be sociable and at ease. "The open door " began he. "The front door Is open at this mipute," said the fath er.—lndianapolis Journal. THE constantly recurring monthly suffering gives women the blues! How hopeless the future appears, month after month the same siege with menstrual pain 1 Comparatively few women understand that excessive pain i indicates ill-health, or some firen/lUnrafT serious derangement of the f/jbva (/IVI/£IV M feminine organs. A million women have been WVUMVIEN helped by Mrs. Pinkham. Head ■ what two of them say. MRS. LIZZIE COLEMAN, of Wayland. N. Y., writes: "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —For years I suffered with painful menstruation and falling of womb. The bearing-down pains In my back and hips were dreadful. I could not stand for more than five minutes at a time when menstruation began. But thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, my sufferings are now BKiBMEf a thing of the past. I shall gladly recommend your medicines to all Miss C. D. MORRIS, 3 Louisburg I Square, Boston, Mass., writes: , 4k been using ~Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it has helped me wonderfully. I was r troubled with headache, backache and that weak and tired feeling. I r _ cannot say enough in praise of your "" medicine for it has done me so much BjJylijl Kpfiffi good. I shall recommend it to all rw®f§^jjS§§sl my friends who suffer." JsSr jjffpi* snappishness come with nine organs, are con nected by nerves with II \(II | /\| '' * the brain and all parts ' ' of the body. These organs must be healthy or the mind is not healthy. All low-spirited or suffering women may write to Mrs. Pink ham at Lynn, Mass., and receive her advice free of charge. Don't wait until your life is wrecked by neglect and suffering. Get advice in time. ' Don't Hide Your Light Under a Bushel." That's Just Why We Talk About SAPOLIO OverOrensaa Youngster* It v* foolishness to make the coats of young children of heavy material. Children must be kept warm, but weight does not always mean warmth, and a child should not feel Its clothes a burden. Many a little tot comes In from what ought to have been a re freshing walk weary and well nigh ex hausted, because of the weight of the coat it hns worn. A layer of wadding between the material and Its lining gives warmth without adding much to the weight of a pretty coat, and velvet, satin, poplin, cashmere, camel's hair, Bedford cord and other soft coatings are much improved in appearance by using It. Business Pressure. "Are you much rushed now, Fooz er?" "Rushed? If I were to die to-night my employer would expect me to come down town to-morrow and work un til the hour set for the funeral."— Chicago Record. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad has introduced a new feature in its sleeping car service arranging to at tach an ordinary sleeper in addition to the regular first-class sleeper now in service on through trains. The innovation will be that in these ordinary sleepers Pullman rates are reduced one half, so that passengers have the choice of paying the highest price Pullman rate or take advantage of the cheaper rate offered in ordinary The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad is the first line to introduce this service and its popularity has been predicted. In a recent treatise on alcoholism by Trull, it is stated that in England 75 per cent, of all cases of pauperism are due to drink, and in Germany 90 per cent. In Germany drink leads to 1,- 600 cases of suicide a year and sup plies the lunatic asylums with 3,000 victims. 1 SOMEHOW AND SOMEWHERE ( \ The Pains and Aches of / ( RHEUMATISM ) 1 CREEP IN. I | Right on its track | ) St. Jacobs Oil ( f CREEPS IN. 1 ) It Ponetratos, Soarches, Drives Out. f iluit m Hint. "Father," asked Tommy, the other day, "why Is It that the boy Is said to be the father of the man?" Mr. lomkins had never given this subject any thought, and was hardly prepared to answer off hand. "Why, why," ho said, Rtumblingly, "It's so because It Is so, I suppose." "Weli," said Tommy, "since I'm your father, I'm going to give you a ticket to a theater and half a crown besides. I always said that if I was a father I wouldn't he so stingy as the rest of them are. Go in, and have a good time while you're young/ I never had any chance my self!" Mr. Tomkins gazed in blank amazement at Tommy. Slowly the significance of the hint dawned upon him. Producing the silver coin he said: "Take it, Thomas. When you really do become a father, I hope it won't be your misfortune to have a son who is smarter than yourself."—Tit-Bits. Relative sire of Armle*. In Germany there is one soldier for every seventeen civilians; in France the proportion is one to 15; in Russia one to 17; in Great Britain ono to 72; in the United States, one to 445. lireeiliiiK Turkeyfi. The best results in growing turkeys are from yearling hens bred to a gobbler two years old, and three would be still better. The young lieu will lay more eggs the first year than she will in any year alter, and if she mates with a gobbler two years or over the young turks will be active and vigorous. Watch the hen turkey carefully, and remove her first eggs as soon as laid, lest they become chilled, Two and sometimes three settings of turkey eggs must be taken from the young turkeys and set under common hens before the hen turkey will sit steadi'y herself. The hen turkey must bo confined mornings when she lias young chicks, or she will draggle them through the wet grass, and thus kill them. A New Netting: Arrangement. To make dark nests inside a hen house is a matter involving not a lit tle work. At even then the nests often prove a nuisauce, since the fowls roost on them and soil them constantly. A handy coutrivauce for securing dark nests is shown iu the 3BE=EEL DAKIZ NESTS FOE THE HENS. cut. Where the fowl house is inside another building, or has a hallway, this plan can be easily aud conven iently used. Long boxes are used tor the nests, each having a partition across the middle with a rouud open ing through it large enough for a hen to pass, through. Two other round openings for each nest are made. One in the outside of the box, as shown, another in the partition of the hen pen. Place tho box against the out side of the partition so that the two openings will come together, when the hen can enter and pass around into the dark nest. A hinged cover gives access to the eggs. Maintaining the Dairy. A writer in the Dakota Farmer gives this advice: First—Select the best cows in your herd, or that you can buy, to keep, and dispose of the others. Second—The best cow for the dairy is the one that produces the greatest amount of butter fat in a year (for food consumed) when being rightly fed. Third—To renew or increase your herd raise the heifer calves from your best cows. Fourth—Test your cows by weigh ing the milk of each cow for a year and testing it occasionally with tho Babcock milk tester, and kuow how much butter fat each one does pro duce. Fifth—Use the best dairy bred sire you can get; one, if possible, that has a long line of nncestors that hare been first class dairy animals. Sixth—Keep a record of the time when the cows were bred and huvo no guesswork about the time of calving. Seventh —lt is neither profitable nor necessary for a cow to go dry more than four to six weeks. Eighth—The udder should receive prompt attention. An obstacle may be removed from tho teat the first hour that nught baffle soieuce later. Ninth—Alter separating the calf from its mother, feed the natural milk as soon as drawn, for a week or ten days. ranonal Knowledge of Farm Work. Common sense teaches us farmers that we must devote our time exclu sively to our work on tho farm or we will suffer loss. For instance, one farmer told ipe the other day that ho had some extra work to look after last Bum'Mer and that he was foolish enough to hire au extra man to do his farm work while he galloped down the road looking after some one else's work. Now it might appear that a person could make a fairly good thing if he earns $lO to SSO per mouth at something besides farming, when a common farm hand oan be hired for sls to $lB per month. The* difference between $lB and SSO is quite a nice little sum, yet when we come to count in the extras which the $lB man has to have and which must be supplied from the SSO salary it equalizes things considerably. Still I do not think here is where the great difference lies. Every true farmer has some particu lar method which no hired man caros to follow except while in sight of the "boss," and it sometimes happens that all the interests of the farm do not get the attention they would if tho owner was doing the work himself, as was the case of the farmer alluded to at the beginning of this article. This farmer said he tried his best to teach the mau that was doing his work how to cultivate corn, but it was practi cally out of the question. He simply went over the field as a machine would, regardless of the requirements of the soil. As a result a shrinkage of fifteen bushels per acre was experienced. A machine man on the farm is worse than an unruly animal, for they (the ani mals) can be tied down, with the as surance that they will come to time, but with the other fellow nothing can be done. Corn, like all other chips in one respect, has to be well cared for from the very beginning to get best results. Some places in the field may need deep cultivation, while others may require shallow, and if a mau is so absorbed in'sometbiug else that be does not notice this difference in these places he is not on the road to success ful farming. Thus it may be easily seen that, usually speaking, if a mau understands the requirements n{ his farm it would surely pay him pa well, if not better, to stay at home and do his own work or take tho place of the §lB man instead of accepting §SO a mouth elsewhere;—Elias F. Frown, in the New England Homestead. The ElTect of Inbreeding Among the sheep the direct loss from close inbreeding is the most ap parent. Tho degeneration of a flock is so rapid that you cau almost see it from one generation to another. It naturally follows that the need oi thoroughbred rams from other tiocks to add new blood to the sheep is greater in flocks that have been inbred for a succession of years. The first thing noticeable iu the line of degeneration is the undersize of the lambs. The auimals actually show smaller size from one generation to another, and if the inbreeding is kept up they become smalt and puny creatures, or at least a fair percentage of the lambs will be thus undersized. The loss is of itself twofold. Tho lamb that is undersized produces less wool because there is a smaller surface for it to grow on. Iu the course of several generations the amount of sur face mny decrease by almost a square foot. Count up how much wool is produced on a square foot of tho sheep's hide, aud you will got at the exact loss. Then the undersized lamb yields so much less meat for the butcher. The loss here, too, is con siderable, and wheu finally sent to be killed the loss ou the wool aud the mutton will make a rather startling sum. But this is not the only loss sus tained from inbreeding. The wool grad ually grows thinner on the hide of the poor, scvubby sheep. Only one hail is found where before two grew. The inherent weakness of the animals shows itself iu the thin crop of wool, tho same as an old man, or one suffer ing from long sickness or insidious disease. The quality of the wool nat urally degenerates along with the other things. Place the wool of a scrub ou the scales, aud it is found wanting iu weight. Place it then be fore the sorter aud quicker, and they quickly mark it down as second class. The fibre lacks something that experts can quickly distinguish. Here are tho four losses: less mut ton, less surface for the wool, less wool to the square inch aud inferior quality of wool, which briugs only the lowest prices in tho markets.—E. P. Smith, in American Cultivator, A Farm Letter I'.ox. It is the misfortune of many try places to be far from the poss office. It is possible that freo rural delivery may be an established fact in time, but that time is not yet. In the meantime, any plan that will make the mails more accessible to farming communities is to be welcomed. In s number of long drives through my '4 f: A CONVENIENT LETTER POST. own State Inst summer I was im pressed with the number of farm let ter boxes I saw along the roads. These were gonerally of the sort shown in the cut, and, as cau be seen, are no dis figurement—at least to the farmyards lying behind them. A stout post is set by the roadside in a position to be readily approaohed by the team con veyiug the mail from one point to an other. The box has a sloping cover that should project on all sides, to keep out the rain. It should bo high enougn so thnt tho driver can reach it easily from his seat. One or two steps make tho box accessible from the grouud. The driver of the mail wagon or stage from one town to an other is hired to take from the box each day the letters and papers to be mailed, and to bring back nnd deposit in the box tho mail he Uuds for the family at the distant postofllee. The ccst per month for such service is comparatively small, while the result is iu reality the bringing of the post office to one's doors. There nre doubt less many farms not now enjoying this privilege that might easily take ad vantage of it. The only requisite is that a mail wagon should pass that way. The letter box and an arrauge meut with the mail carrier do the rest. In this way also shopping can be done by the mail carrier, aud the purchase left in the box on the return trip, a memorandum of wants having been left in the box in the morning, wPU the money to pay for the articles nnd a small fee for the doing of the service. Such things tend to lessen the isolation of farm life, and to bring added conveniences to it, nnd for this reason are to be commended.—New York Tribune. Newfoundland is now the sixth cop per-producing country iu the world. Thero ts raor* Catarrh In tills section of the country than all other diseases put together, and uutil the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in curable. Science has proven catarrh to boa constitutional disease and therefore requirea constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the onlv constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a ten spoonful. It acts directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testi monials. Address F. J. Cnwiiy& Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Fills are tho best. In Nagasaki, Japan, there is a fire works makei ,vho manufactures pyro technic birds of great size that, when exploded, sail in a lifelike manner through the air. and perform many movements exactly like those of living birds. The secret of making these wonderful things has been in the pos session of the eldest child of the fami ly of each generation for more than 400 years. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Brorao Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. U6O. Government ordnance experts are gathering up unexploded shells around Santiago, and are sending them to Washington for examination by jud ges in order to determine the reason why they did not explode when they struck the shore, so that similar mis takes may be prevented in the future and the responsibility fixed. Captain Donahoe, of the bark Anita Berwind, who has just arrived at Philadelphia from the scene of the recent conflict, states that almost everywhere shells, apparently as sound as when they were fired from the guns on the warships of Sampson's fleet, can be picked up. Ednotuo Vonr Ttowols With Cascnretn. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. lOc, yfc. II C. C. C. tail, druggists refund money. Many of the tall, old houses in the residential streets and even squares of the inner belt of London, which less than a century ago were the houses of the well-to-do, have been cut up into tenements in the perpetual search for rooms to live. To Cnro Constipation Foroivor. Take Cuscarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 255. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. The White Star line steamer Adria tic, which was bui'.t in 1871 at Belfast and is one of the oldest boats of the line, is about to be broken up. Ksliri lsav?J i' "Every morning I have a I bad taste in my mouth; my Q tongue is coated; my head fl aches and I often feel dizzy. I 1 have no appetite for breakfast | and what food I eat distresses 8 me. 1 have a heavy feeling in | my stomach. 1 am getting so I weak that sometimes I tremble and my nerves are all unstrung. I am getting pale and thin. I am as tired in the morning as at night." fl What does your doctor say? ■ "You are suffering from ira- fl I pure blood." -J ! What is his remedy? Q | You must not have consti pated bowels if you expect the Sarsaparilla to do its beitwork. But Ayer's Pills cure constipa tion. We have a book on Paleness and Weakness which you may have for the asking. jj Writs to our Doctors. | I'orh*ps you ■would like to consult fl eminont physicians about your condl- I tion. Writo us frocly all tho particulars fl i In your caso. You will receive a prompt fl reply. fl Address, DR. J. C. AYER, fl Lowell, Mass. I 1 Spaiding'sJ^^ii^^v Trade-Mark Means "Standard of Quality" on Athletic Goods Insist upon S pa I d i ng f s I Handsome Catalogue Fn*. A. U. MALDI.Nti 6i iAiiOS., Nv York. Chicago. Denver. I FOR 14 CENTS c Q wishtoßalnthlsjoaraiW^ioO Worth •l.Od. for 1 Xotnia, © 9 Above 10 pkira. 111 MM .. fl nj-itioiii'p * 1 $ 9 u I>l jh. rotaVr -* • oV "ijo C A * JOHN A. S A 1,/.Fit NF.KP <<>.. I,a (.'HOMME, HIM. | TT-ANTED-Case of cad health that BIP-AN-fl will not benefit Send 6 eta to RlpariH Chemical Co.. Mew York for iu souvoles and loou testimonial*, WIOR, riayn, Tneks and Noveltiwi. 111'. Cat. Fm. AgU.wa**4>:jkljißsua.t.L.Mf . lock port. R .Y. j o a ® Riding in the wind and dust roughens the face and 3 ° often causes painful chapping and cracking of the skin. g ® Those who are so affected should use a pure soap. 3 2 Ivory Soap is made of vegetable oils that are soothing in 5 ° their nature; it can be used freely even on tender faces, 3 ® for there is nothing in it to irritate or injure. jj ° IVORY SOAP IS 994.X00 PER CENT. PURE. 3 >o A WORD OF WARNING.—There are many white soaps, each represented to be " Just ©j P as pood as the ' Ivorythey ARE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and 5 C, remarkable qualities of the genuine. Aik for " Ivory " Soap and insist upon getting it. 5 CaJUUULSUto s a AAAit rp b rc b." s ,o rsjuu SI6 95 ~y r\ ,S?5 sr. • GEUT?.' VL ibis HIGH sUol OO* ACME tube tires. hlph erode equipment throughout, flneat finish. enameled black, fr or mro..n, K trtmmine*. any pear, 2. -.'2, 2A or 26 l.-u irume. w: SKM) A IIINDINO iI.NF TKill QIMKAXTkK. ot:i.U TO-DiV. lffMEMl**" 11 Address. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CP. (Inc.), CHICAGO, ILL. MOTES IN A SUNBEAM. | rney Slay Now 11p Counted and Cluial fled. Counting the dancing motes In a bar of sunlight sounds like one of those hopeless, never-ending tasks with which malignant fairies delight to break the spirits of little heroines in the German folk stories. Something more than this, however, has been achieved by modern science, which is now able to count the particles float ing in any given portion of the atmos phere, says Pearson's Weekly, and de termine what proportion of these are dangerous germs and what are mere dust. Dr. Frankiand's experiments have shown us how to count the micro- : organisms, and now a Scotch scientist, by a totally different method, has been enabled to take stock of the more harmless but hardly les3 interesting i dust motes. Thirty thousand such par ticles have been detected by him in the thousandth of a cubic inoh of the air in a room. In the outside atmos phere in dry weather the same meas urement of air yielded 2,119, whereas after a heavy rainfall the number was only 521. That this power of pryir.g into atmospheric secrets will eventual- 1 ly yield very important results must be obvious to all. Among the most curl- ■ ous discoveries already made is the direct and constant relation which ex ists between dust particles e.nd fogs, mist and rain. Tobacco Bulging. Prior to 1859 Virginia was the great est tobacco-producing state of Amer ica, the annual yield being 122.000,000 pounds. The present yield of Virginia Is approximately 50,000,000 pounds per annum. Since the civil war Kentucky I has taken first place in tobacco, yield ing annually 225.000.000 pounds. The first equestrian statue rre ted in Great Britain was that of Charles I. at Charing Cross, London, lacing j Parliament street. Scanty Is mood Dee?. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Casearets, 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 banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Casearets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Of every 100 Prussians more than 31 , (34.4) have accounts in saving banks. , There are altogether 7.042.977 such ue counts. In 28.4S per cent of the cases, however, the amount deposited is under sls. The value of the U posits is 4.967,000.000 marks, or more than a ; billion dollars. Dr. Beth Arnold's Cough Killer host medi cine ever tried for Cold>. L. . Hammond, ~ voldeu tot., Newbuioii, N. V.. Nov, 2ii, lbtfT. Princeton's growth is remarkable. . Within ten years the university's en dowments and the number of the dormitories have doubled. Don't Tobtrro Spit and Smoke Tnnr T.lfc Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netlc, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To -800, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, fiOo or 51. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. The loftiest inhabited place in the ! world is the Buddhist monastery of Haine. in Thibet. It ' about 17,000 foot above the sen.. • Pteo'e Cure cured mo of a Throat and Lung trouble of threo years' standing.—E. Cady, j Huntington, lud., Nov. 12, IB'.*. Mrs.Window'* in : Sn fn-children | teething, softens the gums.re-limes 'n.Txmm-i --tion, alleys ptdtx, euros wind colic. 25c a bottle. | "1 have ro:io 14 tiny# at a tlmo without a. movement ot* the bowels, uot being able to move them except by using Lot water injections. Chronic coustipn.ion for seven years placed me ixt this terrible condition; during that, time I did ev erything 1 heard of butu^verfound any relict; such was my case until I began using CASCAItL'Ti. 1 now have from oue 10 tl.ivc passages a day. nud if I •vas rich 1 would give fcKJ.oJ for each movement; it is such a relief. * AYLMEU L. Hunt. 10cJ Bubt.cH bt.. Detroit, Mich. /V\ls CANDY & CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tr.no Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Grl| e. 100. 2u>v&oc. ... CURE CCNSTIPATIOK. ... Blerltoff Uemetij Corrptny, thlcjyo, Eon'.ret!, York. 223 ®*Od IWril for ♦ot 1 o Dr. Kc|h Arnold Medical Corjior ice n. Woonsocket, It. f And good enough for you. There is more ot Carter's Ink used by the U. S. Government tha* of all other tnakes put together. It costs you uo more than the poorest ask for it. Funny booklet" How to Make Ink Pictures** free. CARTER'S INK CO., Boston, Mass. [DIAGNOSTIC lAN ] jj r.'-..-,;.v- Ci J [<£iL ThYSELF or Know Thysoif Manuel. A (11-riaw pamphlet My a Humanitarian au.l eml. nent medical author. , ''Pig"'- Vail. Mecum of Mrrtlcal Srl.noo for Ml-.N u.\L, whether nuirr.eil, unuiurrU-d. or rl' .'.Vm'ill!^ r , r - V ./ s'" l "7 'ni'l'ile iige.l r old. Price ir". a-r - ~ s ' m } : "V 1 ,' 1 fn " fr fti days. Ad- The IVabji-Jv Medical lii-t:tute. No. S flu I finch S, . m h '' .l T consulting Phvhielnn, OSJSt America. will ALWAYS VI'IVES \\ hero Others I'oll. ' >nsn tntloulnitcrsonorby : letter, from l to 6. Sundays it) to i. ♦ . in'.t un< .o 1 Medical Institute has nt orlilna itianVnV/ \ I" 11 "'li v a merit rL.u. Vi it 'I V n,, " nr " - Journal. Ihe I etUHJ'.y Meili.-d Institute |.;j i..anv India t irs, hut uo equals—lJoitou lleruld. RENSION U Hshlngltin. Bl.t'J fw ;ucco3sfuliy Prosocutos Claims. H A.nte Frinofpnl llx&mlnor U.S. Pension Buromu kj Jy.u melvil war, lOmuudlcutiMgcluiujs.att.y •he^j, ID R O P & Y VFW ®fCOyERY; \\ . J <J u, ck relief and enrta worse esses. Bonk of tMuu.>ia,-ami 10 duvn' tn.<,uu.-n* Free. nr. c. n. uuelu b sons. Bo* d. Atisut*.. qa* I*. N. U. li VJ ACOODGARDEN Is npi r.mure snl a pro lit. Gregory's s..M ixiok ill m?rs r.'j r ..egioufso. Gregory's h1 insure die most successful cieliMg uml tnu hook aovr ic'sfrow. James J. H. Gregoxy u aon. Murb.c..aai. ulasi. R ItUKI 4TISM "Alkxanpjjii r.Kjx>x Co - .bvireeewtch at.. N.V.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers