"Peace Hath Her Victories rKo less renowned than war,'' said Milton, and now, in the Spring, is the time to get a peaceful victory over the impurities which have been accumulating in the blood during Winter's hearty eating. The ban ner of peace is borne aloft by Hood's Sarsaparilla. It brings rest and comfort to the weary jA oody racked by paius of all sorts and kinds. * Eta beneficial effects prove it to be the great specific to be relied upon for victory. Hood's never Uitappoint*. B't Rheum—"My mother was serious ly afflicted with salt rheum and painful run ning sores. No medicine helped her until •Hood's Sarsaparilla was used, which made her entirely well." Esss E. MAPLESTONE, 458 Dearborn Street, Chicago, 111. Tired Feeling— "l had that tired, dull * feeling, dyspepsia, headaches and sinking spells, hut Hood's Sarsaparilla made me a now man. 1 never was better than now." JOHN MACK, Oskalooso, lowa. Hoods Pills* cure liver ills; non-Irritating and the only cathartic to take with Hood's Sur*aparHhL GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Alc for them. Coituo rnoio than common chhnnevs. Ail dealer*. FITT.SBUKG GLASS CD., Allegheny. Pa. WANTED- axe of l.ml health that K-I-I'-A-N S will not benefit. Send 6 uts.to Kipans • 'hemirttl Co., New Vork, for lUHiiiu)>les and 1000 toaiiiuonlal-. * S": Thompson's Eye Water ITITWRW I—iimi II m "I IT HI irmrrninn I I um Ml INmi— Tin M The Pioneer Medicine is A.yers Sarsaparilla , Before sarsaparillas were known, ago, it began \ then you can count A When you ' 3 sars ?~ . enough; you can have confidence at once. If you want an experiment, buy anybody's Sarsaparilla; if you want a cure, you must buy Alters [The Sarsaparilla £ Jp which made Sarsaparilla famous] THE GLORY OF MAKTT Strength, Vitality, Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR. SELF-PRESERVATION. > .Vc - I A C.rcat Medical Treatise on Ilappy .flfHjt / TUrWr/ri\/r/rMX* r "W< *- t ' lo cause and cure of Ex- TWm / 'n C haustcil Vitality, Nervous and Physical jFjs-*fvr|f / f)F W I IFF B Debility, Atrophy (wasting), and Vari- WjSESwB / A.W'fc B cocele, also on ALL DISEASES AND /ftrw lKß / T:'_ W WEAKNESSES OF MAN Jmm what- VF^gK arising. Truo Principles of JajgA. vunui riiunri p Treatment. 870 pp. 12mo, with £n-JHHBI MUW IHTStLF. gravings. HEAL THYSELF. _„jrt Contains 125 ItvvalunWo PrcMcrlptlons for acute and chronic diseases. Embossed full gilt. PRICE ONLY $1 BY MAIL (sealed). (Nearedition, with latest observations of the author ) Bead this GItEAT WORK now and KNOW THYSELF, fur knowledge la power. Address The Peabody .Medical Institute, No. 4 Bulfinch St., Boston. Mass. (Established In IWIO ) Chief Consulting Physician and Author, Graduate of Harvard Medical College. Class 1604 Surgeon Eifth Massachusetts Regiment Vol. Tho Must Eminent Specialist In America, who Cures Where Others Pall. Consultation In person or by letter, oto 6 : Sundays 10 to I. Confidential. The National awarded the dold Medal for this Grand Prise Treatise, which ts truly A BOOK FOII EVERY MAN, Young. Middle-aged, or Old. Married or Single The Diagnostician, or Know Thyself Manual, a Ot-page pamphlet with testimonials and endorse ments of the press. Price, 00cents, but mailed FREEforOOdnvs. Send now. It Is a perfect VADE MECUSI and of great value for W'SAK and FA!UNO MEN by a Humanitarian ahd Celebrated Medical Author, distinguished throughout this country and Europe. Address as above. The Dress everywhere highly endorse the Peabody Medical Institute. Read the following The Peabody Medical Institute has been established in Boston 37 years, and ihe fame which It has ■attained has subjected it to a test which only a meritorious Institution could undergo.-Bostoa Journal "The Peabody Medical Institute has ti.au y imitators, but uo cuuals. "-Beaton Herald. To Blake Divorce Kaey. Lithuania, a province of Russia, feu a strange custom, which js intended to protect the bride, should her marriage prove unhappy. Previous to the wed ding ceremony the mother. In the pres ence ot witnesses, severely boxes the bride's ears. As time goes by should the benedict prove faithless or unkind, ; his vrow can sue for a divorce on tha ! plea that she was forced Into the mar ! riage by her mother against her will, ! and on that score the verdict of the I Judge will be in her favor. Knowledge. Unless the heart Is in perfect sym pathy with the head, the comprehen sion of any great work of art is im- Dossible. —Geothe. Easy Chance*. A slip may sprilQ, a thump may bruise, easy chances for pala and trouble. An easy way to euro right off is to use St. Jacobs Oil. It takes no chances and knows what it can do. The highest price ever paid for a race horse was $150,000 for the famous Ormonde. l*o-To-Bac for Fifty Cents* Guarantoed tobacco hobit cure, makes we%l men stroug, blood pure. 60c. sl. All druggist* Alaska babies rarely cry. When they do, they are held under a little stream of running water, usually un der a barrel tap, until they stop. Knocks Cough* and Colds. Dr. Arnold's Cough Killer cures C'oughsand Colds.Prevents Consumption.All druggists.2sc It fs believed that aluminum was originally discovered B. C. 40, but if so the dircovery was confined to only a few, and was quickly forgotten. Educate Your Bowels Witn Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. full* druggists refund money Frederick Remington, the artist, who is just back from Havana, al ways used a small, folding pocket camera while In Cuba, designed by , hirn and made especially for his use. Peach Treat on Heavy Soil. There is a widespread belief that peach trees will only succeed on sandy light soil. It is true they need always a dry soil, but this can be secured ' where the soil is uearly pure clay if it be thoroughly underdrnined. This is better thau putting the peach tree on plum stocks, as is often advised when the tree is to be planted in clay soil. The plum, as well as the peaoh, ab hors wet feet, and both will do best on clay soil, which is always rich in potash, if the clay soil has been thor oughly underdrained. Field Pea* For Orchard*. There is natural adaptability of the orchard for peas aside from the fact that the pea roots increaso nitrogen in the soil. The pea must be sown early, and therefore the plowing is done when it does not injure the tree roots. Then the broad leaves of the pea shade the soil and apparently absorb enough moisture at night to keep the plant fresh and growing. Then after the peas are harvested the hogs can be turned in to eat what have been scat tered in harvesting. If the hogs are left without rings in their noses they will root over the surface soil and thus cover what excrement they have dropped. This with continued extra feeding in the orchard is the best way to enrich it. Training the Evergreen. The main objection raised to the pruning of evergreens lies in the fact that there is a continual exudatiou of resin from the wound. Where grown for timber or hedge purposes, pruning is without doubt beneficial or neces sary; bat otherwise as ornamentals or for shelter belts their natural form with low spreading branches and tow eriug tops is by far the most pleasing and desirable. In hedge planting, where the prime object is a screen or border, and not for the exclusion of stock, one of the most beautiful trees that cau be used is our common arbor vitro or white cedar. Its beauty, as such, largely depends on the skill exercised in pruning. Mr. Gardner, of Osago, lowa, a well-known authority on the growing of evergreens, offers the following sug gestions on the shaping of conifers: "They cau be made to grow in any required shape. Suppose the spruces or pines or arbor vitaes are two or three feet high, aud you wish to grow them in symmetrical cone shape. When the new shoots have about obtained their full length, the latter part of Juue or early July, cut all the new growth back to cue inch for even balance all round. Do not cut the leader. Dur ing the remainder of the season, buds will form ou the stubs of new growth. Duds will also appear bursting through the bark on the one-year-old wood, and frequently from the two year old. But for the cutting back of the shoots these buds would forever remain dor mant. If the trees are of consider able, say five to eight feet, and havo never been pruned, then early in the spring cut off all branches that haug over a lower branch. Make the lower branches the longest, aud each suc ceeding set as you go up should be shortened in. At the proper time, wheu the tree has completed its new growth, cut it back as in the first case to about one inch, where it is desirable to do so to fill up a space, for instance. —Ameri- can Cultivator. Snccen*ful Culture of Gooseberries. Gooseberries do best on a clay soil which has been made rich by a liberal application of well-rotted manure. I And that few fertilizers surpass barn yard manure. I have also used as a mulch well-rotted straw, wood and coal ashes, leaves, vines and anything that could be gathered up. Aftei seleotiug the location I prepare my land by plowing and pulverizing thor oughly. I then mark out rows six feet apart, using great care to have them perfectly straight. With two horses aud a large plow I furrow out and set my plants six feet apart in the furrow. The plants cau then be cul tivated each way. To some this dis tance may seem great, but I And from experience that it is much the best, as there is plenty of room for cultivation and the application of fertilizers. The space between the pushes can bo uti lized for growing beans, cucumbers, muskmolons, dwarf tomatoes and the like, as the vines remain green a long time, thus affording shade and protec tion to the soil during the summer. I prefer to plant in spring as soon as the soil is dry enough to work well, especially if the plants have been taken up the previous fall aud heeled in over winter. Select hardy, vigorous bushes and take great care in setting. It is of the greatest importance to get a full stand, for plants that are put in later are at a great disadvantage and sel dom do well. Properly prune both roots and tops before planting, lay the roots out straight in the furrow and cover with a flue, rich soil. With mo cultivation is the easiest part. After the fruit is harvested and the vine crop, if any, is out of the waT, I plow the longest way of the field with a dis,- mond plow, throwing the soil to the bushes. In early spring I cultivate the other way and harrow, which levels the ground and prepares it for the small crops. The sooner this plowing is done after the fruit is off, the bet ter.—F. S. White, in American 'Agri culturist. The average weight of a man in the latitude of New York is HP pounds: of a woman 125. | IT COSTS YOU HOTHING f o But a postal to find A S are paying j£ V ftsBSQBBrJ Furniture, 'Carpets, Hugs. LaeoCurtains, Y j| Story ,ods.V,, ••• TATFRA/OD L" ' Sr" l u^o9 Mirrors.' Baby •> KufilmfWttW fi Carriages, Ucfrigcr- V V B'rW f _f dtors. Stoves, Tin- A varc, Lamps, Bicy- A > I. fl clee. Pianos, Organs. V A *ayi J Shoes, Hats, Gents' V A Furniahlnrs, etc. •J* Carpets and Diaper- A Largest Sizo lea, and cxprcssago A •> Reed Rocker. £n mudo-to-order A •*• rw., ti in Clothing (*o.oo to v A Price*l.w. sl4 00)t guaranteed i* to tit. 2 Why arc wo doing •> business in every IJBSr V V stato and territory (k. Yin this country? IfjTftg-;-' ■ Y y Why has our busl ifflamfl *l* *t* ness doubiod itself X A during the past year? A Our Free Catalogues / stFrw/rfj Y V toll the story. Which Li Y V do you want? Write 1" Y J today. Address this Hiqh Grade X X Sewing Machines, X A upwards from *8.50. A HINES HINES & SON, Baltimore, Md. Dept. 3os New York banks pay out in interest and dividends every quarter not far from $130,000,000. To (hire Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 23c. If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists rotund money- Favorite Pastime of Children. The flsh may be represented by ob long pieces of cardboard (if mamma has time, pictures of fish may be past ed on these), the under side of each having a number to tell the child the weight of the flsh he has caught. On the upper side place small double pointed tacks, into which the hook i? caught. The fl3hing hook may bt made of a bent pin, and for the pole a long pencil will answer. On a rainy or snowy day the little ones will en- Joy this sport hugely, and there will be no catching cold. The lileaalng* of Wnr. "This here last war," remarked the old lady, "has been a blessln' to my fam'ly; John's drowln' a big pension fer one ear an' three fingers; the ole man's writin' a war history; Moll's en gaged to a sergeant, an' Jennie's gwine to marry a feller that come within an ace of beln' a gln'rul!" ; v iW iii All Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, SYRUP OF Flos, manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO.. illustrate the value of obtaining* the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system. It Is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on tho kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing figs are used, ns they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember tho full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCI6CO. GAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N. Y. For sale by all Druggists.—Price 50c. per bottle. -#!eeo§%. Salier'i Scctli ara Warranted to Produce. |3 lO DOLLARS>VOitTD FOR 10c. 0 0000 RICVCLES -/fTTINk HTAJIIMKU * models! und wiiwe:B g°°i :G/ o ,# *°ry alearlnq aala. EARJia BICYCLE SKs K. F. Mvud t'yeie Uuniouuy. LuU-iuiu, 111. FREE S3 ITK3 Pormanently CuraS fla lid -Qli In,unity Pra,nl,d b, IK M BUI DR. KLINE-S GREAT . B m W RERVE RESTORER '' PMIUT* OBTD fbr all ATWIM NIMMI, fit*, KpiUpty, and SI. TUm' Vanr*. ho I li*or XerrouasMS lojtitu'.o of MtKllciutt. V3l Arch St.. "MliuUlitUia Pa. P. H U. It '99 a Best Cough Syrup. Tastos Good. Use *1 £ In tlma Sold by drugglnta. S| DOCTOR TOO LATE. rh Moaqulto Had Saved the Soeke bltten Man—An Acne Care. New York Press: "Talktn' about rattlesnakes," said an Erie railroad brakeman, "did you ever hear how the mosquitoes saved a man's lite up near Gulf Summit last summer? Well, while getting out railroad ties In a slashin' over hack of tho Summit, Abe More house was bitten In the leg by a rat tlesnake. A Susquehanna doctor was at once sent for and the leg was band aged tightly above the wound. It was expected that Morehouse would die before the doctor could come up the pike on his bike. Just as soon as the leg was bared to put on the band age it was attacked by a swarm of mosquitoes, and when the doctor ar rived ho found the man as lively as a cricket and In no need of a doctor, but the ground was covered with dead and dying mosquitoes. They had sucked the poison from the wound and saved Morehouse's life. The mosquitoes pre sented their bills and died. The doc tor presented his bill and got his money. This was hard on the mos quitoes, but I presume Morehouse's life was worth savin'. Thero was Sol Timson, another brakeman. Sol used to brake on the Delaware division, from Susquehanna to Port Jervls. He had the ague awfully. Had it so bad that some of his teeth shook out, and |he shook the buttons off his coat. A lot of his friends had sure cures for the ague, and each gave him the pre scription. At last when he had 13 prescriptions, he took them all to a Port Jervis drug store and had them put up. He took them home and put them all Into one Jug. Then ho shook the Jug, mixed the 13 prescriptions thoroughly, and took three doses. He never shook again until the hearse struck a stone." An Opera for the Queen. With reference to the bequest made to the corporation eighteen years aga by a certain Sig. Favale, says the Lon don City Press, it seems that, in addi tion to the money left to form mar riage portions for city maidens, the signor bequeathed to her majesty his unpublished tragic opera In three act 3 entitled "Elzlra." His last request was that her majesty should command its representation, and that the proceeds should be devoted to the poor of Lon don. That opera is still preserved in tho archives, but up to the present no step has been taken to insure Its pro duction. Perhaps one day we shall see it given In the theater tho Guildhall School of Music now possesses. Trifling fhal Cost*. There Is n way of trifling that costs n heap of money. Neglect rheumatism ami it may put one on crutches, with loss of time and money. St. Jacobs Oil will cure It surely, right away. Only about one In 1,000 cattle shipped abroad from this country dies or is Inst at sea. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smobo Tour T.ITo Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be raag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, taUo No-To- Bac, tlic wonder-worker, that maucs weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 81. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kcmcdy Co., Chicago or New York. Fumigation of fruit trees infected with the San Jose scale by the use of the gas of prussic acid is a remedy which is now said to be certainly ef fective. Beonty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascnrets, 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 C'ascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Admiral Schley is said to be a de scendant of the family of which Nathan Hale was a irember. A bill to compel drinkers of liquors to register and obtain a l'.oense is be fore the Michigan Legislature. I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs by PIFO'S Cure for Consumption.— LOUlSA LIXDAMAX, Bethany, IkJo., January 8, ISDi. I Mr?. Window's Soothing Syrup forchildron teething, softens tho gums.reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, euros wind colic. 25c a bottle. The management of the largest and newest hotel in Boston has just de- I elded to exclude "drummers" or trav- I eling salesmen from the house on the ground that lie does not wish the lobby turned into a business office. To Cure a Cold in One Hay. Take LnxntlTo Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if It falls to cure. 25c. Harlow N. Higginbotham, former President of the World's? Columbian Exposition, has greenhouses in which are 50,000 carnations, his favorite flower. H. IT. GREEN'S SONS, of Atlanta. Gn.. arc the only successlul Dropsy Specialists in tho world. See their liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. The passion flower, which grows in the South American forests, can only be enjoyed where it grows, as it fades almost as soon as it is picked. Write It Down* Write It down in a book, so you can soe It every day, that St. Jacobs Oil Is as sure to euro Lama Back or Lumbago as you write it down. It does its best with it and loaves behind a euro that stays. M. Kolomnn Szell, the new Hun garian Premier, is a man of 56, who has been in politics since early youth. At 32 he was Minister of Finance. PrafnM* Cannot Bo Cured hv locall applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of tho ear. There Is only one way to euro deafness, end that is by constitu tional remedies. D. afnoss is caused by an n flamed condition of tho mucous llningofthe Eustachian rube. Whon this tube gets in . 'Jpou you havo a rumbling sound or imper loot hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness i - tho result, and unless the inflam mation can ho taken out and tills tube re- 1 stored to its normal condition, hearing will be i destroy d forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which Is nothing butan In llamed • ondltlon of tho mucous surfaces. We will give Ono Handled Dollars for any case of Deafnos-t (caused by catarrh) that can not bo cured by Hall's caturrb cure. Send for circulars, free. „,1 , *'• J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O, Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. MOTHERHOOD is woman's natural destiny. Many women are denied the happiness of children through some derangement of the generative organs. Actual barrenness is rare. Among the many triumphs of LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the overcoming of cases ° f su PP° sed barrenness. This great WlfvJj medicine is so v?ell calculated to rega in. mm late every function of the generative or %Jflr gans that its efficiency is vouched for flfni/ by multitudes of women. 2> B ELtmSOmn M tf MRS. ED. WOLFORD, of Lone Tree, —— lowa, writes: " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM—Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I had one child which lived only six hours. The doctor said it did not have the proper nourishment while I was carrying it. I did not feel at all well during preg nancy. In time I conceived again, and .ax™, thought I would write to you for advice. Words cannot express the gratitude I feci JiV „ towards you for the help that your medi- % „ W cine was to mo during this time. I felt like a new person; did my work up to the last, and was sick only a 6hort time. My baby weighed ten pounds. He is a fine boy, the fipnj|t w 'mDmL*IK. m joy of our home. He is now six s \ weeks old and weighs sixteen // pounds. Your medicine is cer- ly / JuTs m tainly a boon in pregnancy." \/s r Doyle, S. Dak., writes: Ever since my last child I , Jifiy \ suffered with inflammation of jfflflMljy e the womb, pains in back, left fiWMBjBBf /■ wa side, abdomen and groins. My /'/}lSrws & & P head ached all the time. I fid could not walk across the floor without suffering intense pain. two years ago I wrote to you for advice, and began taking ffl":t-f Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. 1 had not finished the first bottle before I felt better. I took four bottles, and have been strong and perfectly healthy ever since, and nenv have two of the nicest little girls." Vnluublo Rwor li of Honor. [ A carved sword of honor, owned by the Gackwar of Baroda, India, is by far the most valuable in the world, its hilt and scabbard being encrusted with diamonds, rubies and emeralds of the rarest kind, the whole being valued at £220,000. Several of the na tive Indian princes have swords of honor of more than half the value of that belonging to the ruler cf Baroda, the golden hilts being studded with the most valuable precious stones. The Shah of Persia had a sword valued at upwards of £IO,OOO which he wore on his visit to Great Britain. The czar i cf Russia and the sultan of Turkey i possesß swords, set with diamonds and j other precious stones worth thousands of pounds. The sword of honor pre- ' ecnted to Lord Wolseley by the Egyp tians is set with diamonds and valued at £2,000. There to Stay. Tho laying of the foundation stone of tho Gordon College in the Soudan ie an indication of the practical character of British colonization, which unites piety for Gordon's memory and annioty for necessary and useful work with the thorough assurance of the conquerors of territory. The Scudan has been de livered from the dominion of the crue! Uaggara3, a fact which will be of Im mense importance Cor the growth o 1 tho new province. The laying of the foundation stone also signifies that the English established themselves in the Soudan with tho intention of remain ing there.—Berlin National Zeitung. trendy to Iteleiit. The Itev. M. Gocdley—And do you love your neighbor as yourself? Mrs. Scroggs—Well, I can't say that I do, but I'd be willing to try if she'd return that last pound of coffee she borrowed from us. 18|L Any Girl C^.nTell& A / ? f'r A physician who makes the fcf *w test and. is honest about it can J (c tell you that, in many cases,the \ - hfinwr* in~- number of red corpuscles in the v\ bleed is doubled after a course J ((?. may not be entirely clear fron? \ IV the doctor's statement, but any girl who has tried the piils can tell w y°u that it means red lips, bright h eyes, good appetite, absence of f* |y- /HMBhßK' aa> headache, and that it. trans- 19 V' forms the pale and sallow gin V ' nto a hnaiden who glows with Cp the beauty which perfect healths*- (A grow debilitated as jF Prom gWlhood into womanhood f -)t should not neglect the pill best*J / \jrTKSSi \' adapted foT this paniculaT ill. r 1/ Frank B. Trout, of 103 Griswold Ave., Detroit, Mich., says t "At the Vra |U) ege of fourteen we had to take our daughter from school on account of ill > health. She weighed only 90 pounds, was pale and sallow and the doctor* I] \\ enid she had nntcmia. Finally we gave her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for 61 mji Pale People. When she had taken two boxes she was strong enough to JL+ *•/ leave her bed, and iu less than six months was something like herself. fQ| L/? To-day she is entirely cured, and is a big, strong, healthy girl, weighing Jfefc IC\ 150 P ountia ' au(i has u * ver haJ a ick day since."— Detroit EvtningNtutt, The genuine Or Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are Sold only in packages, the wrapper always bearing 3? the full name. At all druggists, or direct from the y> Dr Williams Medicine Co . Schenectady,M Y, 5Q f per bo*. 5 It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Say "Woman's Work is Never Done." | lil' V- h-'riO [ "A rape worm eighteen S'oct loam at I least came on the arena r.ilcr is taking two [.'ASCARE'iVj. This 1 UIIi euro bus caused my bad 'touh.ii for rij.; Pure cars. I urn still taking Career t -. tho on!;,-cailiurtlc worthy of aouihj by suusli.'u per.; !o " L \, Eowr.ES, Baird, llass. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tar-to Gcod To Good. Never Sicken. Weaken. or Gripe. 10c. 20e. tta. ... CURE COH3TI RATION. ... BleiT.ll9 Stptupi.y (t-ajinnr. CUt&ign, Montreal. Krw York. SIS HO-T3-3AC Spalding's. | Tradc- A'i ai'lt ! Means i "Standard of Quality" on Athletic Goods insistupon Spalding's Handsome Catalogue Fr*. A. U. &A'A.Ll>l.>iu S'aw York. Chicago. Denrer. DROPSY SffiKKZTKP cmten. Bork of toHiimonialxand I O l-iv*' irpit'rn-M Free. Dr. H. H RUntN'a BOMB Box D. Atlanta. Ga. D ► 11M AT! M cri? r hot tl* 4 day*' K1£l! 11l A M u*YI treatment, postpaid, It) cent*. ® ■ Alex AiiUKii lIkUKD* CO.. iHtiUraauwich hl . M Y.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers