Tl> fcltortest Way. The shortest vmy out of an attack of neuralgia Is to oSe St. Jacobs Oil, which affords not only a sure relief, but a prompt oure. It soothes, subdues aud ends the suffering. Birmingham turns out every week 300.000,000 cut nails, 100,000,000 buttons, : 4.000 miles' of wire of different sizes. I five tons of hairpins. 500 tons of nuts | and 20,000 pairs of spectacles. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Tnko Laxative Hrotno Quinine Tablets. All Drugkfibts refund money if it fails to cure. 25a, I The public entrance doors of the ! great building of the Bank of England i are so finely balanced that a clerk, by pressing a knob under his desk, can j close them instantly. Dr.Seth Arnold's Cough Killer invaluable as ' a TOUFCH remedy. Kfrect magical.— LIZ/IK J. JUNK, 448 West 25TLI St., N. V.. Deo. 11, 18T>7. In case Canada becomes a part of the United States, a native Missourian proposes the state motto for greater America: "United we stand, divided by Niagara Falls." To Cure Constipation Forever. ! Take Cast-arets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. i If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money- ' There are 118 schools for music in Berlin. "Out of Sight Out of Mind." In other months we forget the harsh 'winds of Spring. \But they have their use, as some say, to blow out the bad air accumulated after Winter storms and Spring thaws. There is far more important accumulation of badness in the veins and ar teries of humanity, which needs Hood's Sarsaparilla. This great Spring Medicine clarifies j the blood as nothing else can. It cures I scrofula, kidney disease, liver troubles, I rheumatism and kindred ailments. Thus it gives perfect health, strength and ap petite for months to come. Kidneys-" My kidneys troubled me, and on advice took Hood's Sarsaparilla which gave prompt relief, better appetite. My sleep is refreshing. It cured my wife also." MICHAEL BOYLE, 3473 Denny Street, Pittsburg, Pa. Dyspepsia— " Complicated with liver and kidney trouble, I suffered for years with dyspepsia, with severe pains. Hood's Sarsaparilla made me strong and hearty." J. B. EMERTON, Main Street, Auburn, Me. Hip Disease-" Five running sores on my nip caused me to use crutches. Was confined to bed every winter. Hood's Sar saparilla saved my life, as it cured me |>er feetly. Am strong ami well." ANNIE ROBERT, 49 Fourth St., Full River, Mass. Uafmhiffg Hood'* Mil* cure liver Ills, the non-lrrltatlng and the only Viitliuitlo tc tuko with ll.Hjd'a .VtmaiMrilluT Piano Practice and Peas. Lesehetlzky, the famous teacher of the piano in Vienna, often brightens his talk with reminiscence. "I al ways practiced a piece with six dried peas," he said to one pupil, "When ' I began I would lay the six peas on the piano rack side by side. Then I when 1 had played the piece through perfectly, or a part of it, I would put one of the peas in my pocket. And so I would go on until I had played it through perfectly six times in suc cession and all the peas were in my pockets. But if I made 'a single mis take, say in the third playing or the fourth playing, I would put the six peas on the rack and begin all over again. Whoever practices with six dried peas is sure to play as well as he can." —Ladles' Home Journal. President Kruger's favorite reading Is the work of Mark Twain. PERFECT womanhood depends on perfect health. Nature's rarest gifts of physical beauty vanish before pain. Sweet dispositions turn morbid and fretful. The possessions that win good hus- bands and keep their love should be guard- inng ICtCf* T edby women every moment of their lives. rtmKr SL M The greatest menace to woman's per- ■mgf\ MM! M■ manent happiness in life is the suffering that comes from derangement of the feminine organs. WWUUIf Many thousands of women have realized —— this too late to save their beauty, barely in time to save their lives. Many other thousands have availed of the generous in vitation of Mrs. Pinkham to counsel all suffering women free of charge. MRS. H. J. GARRETSON, Bound Brook, N. J., writes: "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —I have been tak- chronic of the left could not walk across the room without help. After giving up all hopes of recovery, I was advised to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and wrote for special information. I bsjjan to improve) from the first bottle, and am now fully restored to health." 1 You Will Never Know } A how much money you 4 : A Llk * or our f rce . c " ta '°P u . es * v J , Japan am? China Straw 4 t 1 Y • for a batch of samples. J , ▼ TY< Mattings 9 to 35 cents. Q ♦ "X. We isRUC catal °g c s k il of Furniture. Crockery, T $ * ViU Bedding, Silverware, 4 'A ft Sewing Machines. Up-A ! a 1 holstery Goods, Clocks, Y i Baby Carriages, Refrip- $ Ware, Stoves, Mirrors, Pianos, Organs, etc. Y j ▼ Our made to-order Clothing book with sam- ▼ A pies attached, tells you all about guaranteed-to- A Y fit Suits, expressage paid to your station. X I Y We publish a 16-color Lithographed Catalogue Y | • of Carpets, Rugs. Portierts ami Lace Curtains, ▼ A all in their natural colors. Wc sew Carpets A ! Y free, furnish wadded Lining free and prepay T I • freight. | j' A There are no better ▼ X Wheels built than our /^ = =Sj/\ Ajssn. A : money. How is #18.7s A All catalogues are free—which do you want ? Y j A Address this way: * ▼ IJnliiisHines&SßD,! ▼ I>opt. 305 Baltimore, Md. V Fnrloso Ten Cents And pet hr mail trial bottles Iloxsie's Croup tire and Hoxtde's Dinks for t roup. Coughs, Colds, Brunch it .v. A.P. Hoxsio, Buffalt, N. Y Fits rermnnently rured. Xoflts or nervous rt'ss after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Groat Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise liee. Dr.R.H.KI.INE. Ltd. OCI ArchSt.Phlla,Pa MrOVinslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, HOftens the gums.reduces iuflamma tiou, allays pain, cures wind colic. i>e a bottlo. After physicians had given me np, I was saved by Piso'n Cure.- RALPH EIUEO, il- Liaii:sport, Pa n Nov. 22, 181 W. Jerusalem Is now nothing but a shadow of the magnificent city of ancient times. It is three miles in circumference, and is situated on a rock mountain. Bennfy In Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. C'ascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by I stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im j purities from the bodv. 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. General Annenkow, the builder of the Trans-Caspian Hallway, who died recently, had been disgraced and de prived of all his offices four years ago for peculations which were said to amount to 11,000,000 roubles. In the war against Turkey in 187S he was in charge of the transportation. From Head to Foot. For all aches, from head to foot, Rt. Jacobs Oil has ourative qualities to reuch the pains aud aches of the human family, and to relievo and cure them promptly. "The thin red line" was formed by the Ninety-second Highlanders at In kerman: Klnglake's "Invasion of the Crimea" describes it. Ivinglake was the first to use the expression. Educate Yonr Bowels Wltn Cnsenrot*. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. lOc, 25c. if C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money The annual report of Superintendent of Prisons Collins to the Legislature at Albany shows satisfactory progress in the development of new industries in the prisons. Sixteen industries have been established, giving employ ment to 1,546 men, an increase during the year of 402. The value of goods shipped from prisons for the use of the State and its various political divisions was $494,720 15. They Never Sleep. There are several species of fish, reptiles and insects which never sleep during their stay in this world. Among fish It Is now positively known that pike, salmon and goldfish never sleep at all. Also that there are sev eral others of the fish family that never sleep more than a few minutes during a month. There are dozens of species of flies which never Indulge In slumber, and from three to five spe cies of serpents which the naturalists have never yet been able to catch nap ping. HOT AND COLD WAVES. Roth Hindu Flourish Beautifully In This Happy Land of Freedom. Speaking about cold waves and weather in general a member of the Maryland Academy of Sciences said: "\Ve have some kinds of weather in the United States that are unknown abroad. Take the cold wave, for ex ample, that struck the far South a toupie of years ago. It was a record breaker, you kuow, carrying the rigors of winter to a lower latitude than has been known for sixty years at least. Florida suffered 81,000,000 worth of damage. At Pensacola the oranges froze hard ou the trees. The ther mometer at Tampa fell to 18 degrees above zero, five degrees below the lowest ever noted. At Orange Park ice two inches thick formed on ponds. A cold wave of equal severity, it is said, struck the flowery peninsula in 1835, but temperatures were not re corded with reliable accuracy. "Cold waves are unknown in Eu rope. We may justly pride ourselves upon them as an American institution. It is the same way with blizzards. Whoever heard of a blizzard in Eu ropo? "Cold waves are very strange phe nomena. Nobody knows with cer tainty where they come from or how they are formed. They are formed somewhere inland in the far North west, in the latitude of greatest cold, which, as you know, is a good way south of the North Pole. At the North Pole it is probably compara tively warm, and that extremity of tho earth's axis is perhaps surrounded by an open and unfrozen sea. A3 for the typical cold wave, my belief is that it is composed of air drawn from the higher aud more frigid regions of the atmosphere. Ascend to an altitude of thirty miles above the earth's surface aud you might find a rarified air at a temperature of 100 degrees below zero, or even much lower. The body of cold formed by the downrush of this frigid air from above starts on a journey eastward across the continent, traveling at the speed of a fast railway train, thirty-five or forty miles an hour. As it proceeds it spreads out. Obviously the cold air would be gradu ally warmed during the trip unless the waves were replenished with cold in some fashion. My notion is that while the wave is in transit fresh cold is continually drawn into it from above, where there is always an un limited supply of air at an extremely low temperature. Finally, the wave passes off over the ocean. In some manner the Alleghany Mountains seem to interrupt the passag&of cold waves, to a certain extent, as if the cold air was banked up against that range of hills, and its passage thus impeded. On this accouut it is very difficult to predict cold waves for the region of Baltimore and Washington. "Tho lowest temperature ever re corded 011 the earth was taken at Werchojausk, in the interior of Si beria, Januflry 15, 1885. It was 90 degrees and a fraction below zero. Werchojausk is in tho latitude of tho pole of cold, and in the warmest sea son it never thaws. Tho highest tem perature recorded is 121 degrees and a fraction, taken in Algeria, .Tuly 17, 1879. The lowest temperature on record in the United States is 04 de grees below zero, at Tobacco Garden, N. D. Groely, the Arctic explorer, has probably experienced a wider range of temperature than any other living man. He recorded GG degrees below zero at Fort Conger, on Lady Franklin Bay. On another occasion, in the Maricopa Desert of Arizona, his thermometer in the shade ran up to 114 degrees above. A lucifer match dropped upon tho burning sands of Sahara will catch fire. It is very dif ficult, even with tho finest thermom eters, to get accurate records of ex treme temperatures, and on that ac 20unt such observations in general ire to be regarded as only approxi mately correct." The Regret of Bismarck's Rescuer. Bismarck stories continue to en liven the German press. A few days since the world was informed of a youthful escapade of the late Chan cellor at Rudesheim which nearly led to his death by drowning. He was saved by the prompt action of a Nas sau cadet, who sprang into the rivei and brought the sobered student to shore. Bismarck did not care to be reminded in later days of this inci dent, and, to judge by the sequel, it constituted a source of regret also to the cadet. The latest story depicts the bravo rescuer of the future Chan cellor as he was one day marching with the army of Prince Alexander of Hesse during the war of 1867. The former cadet had developed into the corpulent Captain Sterzing, with whom the exertion of marching under a blazing July sun did not seem to agree. At intervals the exhausted officer wiped his forehead and gave vent to low muttered imprecations. In the course of one of these out bursts he was heard to say: "Ah, if I had only let him drown!" "Let whom drown, captain?" in quired the colonel of the regiment. "Why," answered the Nassauer, in his broad dialect, "had I just let Bis marck drown that day instead of fetching him out of the Rhine, there would have been no need for us to run like this."—London Post. Hl.tory Told in Knots. Tying knots in the handkerchief to jog one's memory had its origin in China thousands of yenrs ago. jßefore writing was invented in that country, which did not happen until 3000 B. C., memorable and important events wero recorded by long knotted cords. The most ancient history of China is still preserved as told by these knots. When Emperor Tsehang ICi invented writing the entire system of "knot ting" was abandoned. And to-day the knots made by us in handkerchiefs are the only surviving descendants ol that ancient custom. I 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 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 does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. Col. _ _____ lIKW YOnRM. "For six years U wan a victim of<lys pcpelu in it* worst form, i could eut nothing but muk touHt. unci at times my stomach would not retain and digest even that. Last March l began taking CASCAItETS and since then 1 have steadily improved, until I am as well us I ever was in my life." DAVID R. MURPHY. Newark, o. $$ CATHARTIC \stezmw) TRADE WARM REOISTERED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never .SH'KIMI. Weaken. O lu . ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Slerlln* Remedy Company. < hlcnco. Montreal. New York. 311 lift.™ S|flp Sold arid un-iranr.M-d by all drug- Ku Iw'ofiu gists to CXJKF Tobacco llablu ,#§EEDg% Salzer'i Bcet!s sre Wiirrantcd to Prodnee. 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 10c. Rd <4v. SC " Spalding's Trade-Mark Means "Standard of Quality" on Athletic Goods Insist upon Spalding's Handsome Catalogue Fre •. A. O. bi'ALDING & UKOS., New York. Chicago. Denver. {/■'■■ HEAL THYSELF or Know Thyself Manual. A 91-patre pamphlet by a Humanitarian and eml. 'nt medical author. #J H I?Jir A .V U vJV'9r UE Y A,IO Mocum of Medical Science for MLN ONLY, whether married, unmarried, or al>iut to marry • young, middle aged or old. Price 3d cents by mall, sealed ; stmt free for6ddavs. Ad dress The Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Hulflneh St., Ifc.ston, Mass. Chief Consulting Physician, graduate of Harvard Medical ("ollege, claas \H(A, Late Burgeon sth Jlusw. Reg. Vols . the most eml- A"S T ERFJ,""WHS ALWAYS CHILES \\ here Oilier* Fall. Consultation in uersou or by lottor, from 9to 6. Sundays 10 to 1. The fame the Pealmdy Medical Institute has at tained has subjected It to a test whleh only a nierlt orlous Institution could undergo.—RontonJournal The Peaijoily Medical Institute has monv linlial tors, but no equals.—Dostou Herald. ?* c IW ''\ r J > " ni 'nm List ••) 11 e Arnold Medical C.r*>or%t'en. Wnnnnockew R. IT W'ANTP.D-' aseof Imd healih that R-I-P-A-N-P " will not benefit.Send acts.to Kij.ans' lic'iiiical Co., New York, for losainplws und looe testimonial 100 Reward. ®IOO. The readers of this paper will bo pleased tc learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease thatneiennn lias been able to euro in all its stages, ami that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known t.r he medical fraternity. Catarrh being aeon stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and niu J.cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy, ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the 'patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature In doing it> work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer Olio Hun •TF rod Dollars for any case that it fails to cure, end for list of testimonials. Address. F. J.CHRNEY <FC Co., Toledo, 0. ®DW by Druggists. Tec. ball's Family Pills we the best. THE PARSON'S DAUGHTER. Little foot whose lightest pat Rcems to glorify the mat, Waving hair and picture hat, Grace the nymphs have taught hor; Gown the pink of lit and style, Lips that ravish when they smile- Like a vision, down the aisle Comes the parson's daughter. As she passes, like a dart, To each luckless fellow's heart Leaps a throbbing thrill and .smart. When his eye has sought her; Tries ,'j.e then his sight to bless With oue glimpse of face or tress, Does she know it?—well, I guetsl Pretty parson's daughter. Leans she now upon her glove Cheeks whose dimples tempt to love, And, with saintly look above, Hears her "pa" exhort her; But. within those upturned eyes, Fair as sunny summer skies, Just u hint of mischief lies— Roguish parson's daughter. From their azure depths askance, When the hymn-book gave the chance, Did I get one laughing glance? I was sure I caught her; Are her thoughts so far amiss As to stray, like mine, to bliss? For, last night, I stole a kiss From the parson's daughter. —Joe Lincoln, in L. A. W. Bulletin, PITH AND POINT. Flynn says that be once let a room to a ma* who paid bun "two weeks ahead every Saturday night." We tench a baby how to talk, Aud then seek with a will And mildly yearn to have It learn The art of keeping still. —L. A. W. Bulletin. An enterprising undertaker displays in his window this notice; "Why walk about in misery when you cau bo decently buried for SG?" Briggs—"That was a great dance. I hope I made an impression on that girl." Griggs—"l guess you did. She has been limping ever since." Teacher—"What happens when a man's temperature goes down as far as it can go?" Smart Scholar—"He has cold feet, ma'am."—Tit-Bits. He .nnrried the girl of his choice In spite of the things his friends said; To-dav they look on aud rejoice While ho wishes that he were dead. —Chicago News. "If you don't have me, "he exclaimed with uuwouted passion, "I'll go to the dogs." "Not," she coldly re turned, "if the dogs see you first."— Chicago News. First Deaf Mute (with fingers)— "Jigson did not speak when he passed by." Second Deaf Mute "Ho couldn't; he froze his fingers last night."—Syracuse Herald. Miimie (breathlessly sucking a big etick of candy)—" Quick, Billy, or Mickie'll be here before we've eaten itl Oh! Don't ye wish we wuz 6word swallerers?"—Brooklyn Life. "They tell me Grimley, that your daughter sings with great expression." "Greatest expression you over saw. Her owu mother can't recognize her face when she's singing at her best." Friend—"What a splendid purse you have got there?" Husband—"A birthday present from my wife." "But was there anything inside of it?" "Of course. , Tbo unpaid bill for the purse." Laura—"He told me I was so inter esting and so beautiful." Julia— "And you will trust yourself for life with a man who begins deceiving you even at the commencement of his courtship!" "I am glad to hear that Bonis is getting better prices for his literary output." "Yes. He wrote a maga zine article at one sitting with which he paid off a debt of seven years' standing."—Chicago Tribune. Blank's wife is one of the women who occasionally takes the platform to advocate some reform movement. Blank was accosted by a fellow citizen the other night, who said: "I heard your wife lecture. Her power of dic tion is wonderful." "Yes, fair. But it's nothing compared to her power of contradiction."—Detroit Free Press. Dewey's Life n Lesaon. It lias boeu said that Cuinmodore Dewey sought to obtain the command of the Asiatic station because he fore saw the opportunity that was to come to him. In one sense this is true Dewey has always been a man of action, a natural fighter. That he went gladly to the East Indies com mand, when at least two other flag officers could have had it if they had wanted it, and that he preferred tak ing service afloat to any kind of com fortable duty otf shore, is true; but it was the seaman's instinct that led him, rather than any prophetic power. There were several questions of grave importance likely to come before the country, and Commodore Dewey knew that the man in command at sea is the man who is in a position to make opportunities for himself; while the men who oling to easy billets ashore must--when war-clouds threaten —stand around and wait for chances to come to them. It was no mere chance that put George Dewey in command in the East; it was the logical working out of the principles of a lifetime. The men who had always had sufficient influence to keep them in time of peace in easy places in Now York and Washington, while others did the hard work of the service at sea, discovered that all their in fluence could not give them the places of danger and of honor in time of war. It was a good lesson for the navy, and it should be remembered by every young officer,—Joseph L. Stiokney, in Harper's Magaziue. An Error In Punctuation. The following aneedote illnstratos the importance of correct punctua tion: At some ports in tlie kingdom prayers are offered for the safety of the crew of outgoing vessels. A slip as follows was handed to tho Sailors' Mission chaplaiu: "Captain Jones go ing to sea his wife, desires the prayers at the congregation." And, amid the giggling of some, they prayed ac eordingly.—London Chronicle. AN EXCtLLtN I UUiVIBINaI UN. SUCCESSFUL ENTERPRISE BASED ON MERITS. The Importance of Informing llc Fnblle of the Value of an Article Through liie Leading Newttpapem* The few remedies which hnvo attained to wide-world fume, us truly beaelleiui In ef fect and giving satlafu -11011 to millions of i people everywhere, ure the products of the knowledge of the most eminent pliy- 1 diciuns, utid presented in the form most I acceptable to the human system by the i skill of the world'sgreat chemists: and one of the most suece-sful examples is the SyrnpofFigs manufactured by the Culi- : fornia Fig Syrup Co. Unlike' a host of imitations anil cheap substitutes, Syrup of Figs is permanently honetlciul in its effects, ! and therefore lives and promotes good j health, while inferior preparations are be ing cast aside aim forgotten. In olden times if a remedy give temporary relief to Individuals here and there, it was thought good, but BOW-O-dayH a laxative remedy must give satisfaction to all. If you have never used Syrup of Figs, give'it a trial; you will be pleased with it, and rec ommend it to your friends or to any who duller Trom constipation, over-feeding, colds, headaches, biliousness, or other ills resulting from an inactive condition of the. kidneys, liver and bowels. In the process of manufacturing the pleasant family laxative made by the California Fig Syrup Co., and named I Syrup of Figs, figs are used, lis they are ! pleasant to the taste; but the medicinal properties of the remedy are obtained from an excellent combination of plants known to te medicinally laxative and to act most beneficially. As the true and original remedy, numed Svrup of Figs, is manufac tured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, a knowledge or that fact will assist In avoiding the worthless imitations manu factured by other parties. The Company has selected for years past the leading pub lications of the United States through which to inform the public of the merit* of its remedy. Greece Burs iho Theater Hat. j The flr3t official act of M. Trlanto | phyllacos, the Grecian minister of the j interior, was to issue an order forbid ding the wearing of hats at any theat rical representation. This met with ' unanimous approval from the men and a storm of protests from the women. One of Athens' leaders of fashion ap peared at the theater a short time ago with her luxuriant tresses crowned with 'a very minute bonnet. The of ficer on duty politely called her atten tion to the printed notices forbidding the wearing of hats, and she was obliged to remove the objectionable headgear, all the while vowing to be revenged. The next evening the wom an arrived at the theater bonnetless, but her hair was arranged in such a manner that it was little short of a monument on top of her head. Those of the spectators behind her deeply regretted that the law had not also forbidden monstrosities of tho hair dresser's art. r.asily Gotten Over, A cripple from a sprain is one who neg lects to use St. Jacobs Oil to cure it. Prompt use of it brings prompt cure, and the trouble is gotten over easily. Professor (to his young wife as they j come out of the church after the wed- I ding)—So, now we are each other's i forever, Emma. Wife—Yes, Ferdi- ; nand, but you had better make a note of it or else you'll forget it. Don't Tobneoo Sjlt and Smoke Tour Life Awnjr. To 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 SI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. In the last week of January Parce- J lorta had a strike of cabmen. They re fused to take anyone but priests on | their way to dying persons; these they j took free of charge. Tfo-To-Uac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit euro, makes weak tteu strong, blood pure. 50c. 81. Ail druggists. J. Pierpont Morgan is said to be I greatly displeased that the fact has been made public that he gave $25,000 for the electrie lighting of St. Paul's Cathedral, London. §Modern Scscncc Recognizes*!!' | RHEUMATISM g j| &s ei Disease of the Blood I ?/)) . There is & popular ide& th&t thib (Nsf Wis caused by exposure to cold, and that xjj ftp some localities are infected with it more W than others Such conditions frequently Jj|] |Q> promote the development of the disease, M VA but from the fact that this ailment runs W flyl in certain families, it is shown to be hered-|k \M itary, and consequently a disease of the W g blood. M IS/ Among the oldest and best known residents of Bluffs, 111., Is Adam IV/ Vangundy. He has always been prominently identified with the interests W UV of 'hat place. He was the first President of the Hoard of Trustees, oud for B jflf Q I° U K time has been n Justice of the Peace. He says : "I had been a suf- IJi ill I terer of rheumatism for a number of years and the pain at times was very \ fl WI intense. I tried all the proprietary medicines I could think or hear of, but ( 0 ftY received no relief. yi lU\ "I finally placed my case with several physicians and doctored with D& ivll them for some time, but they failed to do me any good. Finally, with my Afll [f/L hopes of relief nearly exhausted I read nu article regarding Dr. Williams' VVr Pink Pills for Pnle People, which induced me to try them. I was anxious 7/jj AN to get rid of the terrible disease and bought two boxes of the pills, I began "Kflf using them about March, 1897. After I had taken two boxes I was com- JN§ 1(11 pletely cured, and the pain has never returned. I think it is the best medi- Wf fly/ c * nc 1 have ever taken, and am willing at any time to testify to its good ike j A merits."— Bluff's (III.) Times . ly I "To Save Time is to lengthen Life." Do You Value Life? Then Use SAPOLIO J J | Do not think for a single | j I moment that consumption will I, j ever strike you a sudden blow. I j It does not come that way. li ] It creeps its way alone. ), | First, you think it is"a little 14 cold; nothing but a little hack- I' I ing cough ; then a little loss in 1- I weight: then a harder cough; I H then the lever and tho night ■ I sweats. I] :j The suddenness comes when g I you have a hemorrhage. T j Better stop the disease while K H it is yet creeping. {1 H You can do it with J You first notice that you I cough less. The pressure on I the chest is lifted. That feeling I | of suffocation is removed. A p cureishastenedbyplacingoncof I | Dr. Aycr's Cherry j j j Pectoral Plaster jj | over the Cheat. I A Eoc.'r r.-'co. t: It is on the Diseases cf the i Throat and Lungs. } j Yir f / o I j I>K. J. C. AYE!:, Lowell, Mass. i| GOLDEN CROWN LUMP CHIMNEYS Are the le*t. A<kfortlicm. ( ont 110 inure than common chimney*. All dealer*. riTT.Nlil K<; GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa, A COODGARDEN Is a pleasure nn<l a pro lit. Gregory's sued l*>ok di rect.- a r.v.ir Itcifinning. Gregory's -eed insure tho | luost successful ending. Get tuo nook now it's trow. James J. H. Gregory £s sou, Marlnciiafti. Mass. V b O u u v ß WALL paper ' ll\ MAIL. Choice < f many factories. Sample* mailed free. Price, 3 cents to *3.co a roll. Amenta . wautedin every town. A. FAM AlilMi. at, i* aud 41 North Seventh Btieet. Philadelphia. la. P. N. U. 11 'D9 D ROPSYSS^ cane*. Book mf tnuLiuionialH ami | O tin >■' treatment Free. Dr. H. H. OKhEN d 60N8. Boa D. Atlanta. Qa* RHEUMATISMfSrT% 4 .2?5: ■•ALLXANI>KI KjlUkjjx Co.. UitlUraeuwich tit..2LX. ! ".'P; Thsmpson's Eye Water
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers