Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, May 22, 1899, Image 3

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    " To Err is Human."
'But to err all the time is
criminal or idiotic. Don't
continue the mistake of
neglecting your blood. Take
Hood's Sarsaparilla now. It
'will make pure, live blood,
and put you in good health.
• All Cone " Hod no appetite or strength,
could not sleep or get rested, was com
pletely run down. Two bottles Hood's Sar
saparilla cured the tired feeling and I do
A. Dick, Mill villc, N.J.
HniKi'b Tills euro liver ills . the mm irritating and
only cathartic to take with HoodV tfartttparifiiT
F. ,T. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., Props, of
Hall's Catarrh Cure, offer SIOO reward for any
case of catarrh thatcannot bo cured by taking
Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for testimonials,
free. Sold by Druggists. 75c.
Fits permanently cured. No fits nr nervous
ness niter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise
free. Dr.R.H.K line, Ltd. 031 Arch Stl'hila.Pa
Mra-Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, alluys pain, cures wind colic. 25c a buttle.
I can recommend Piso's Curo for Consump
tion to sufferers from Asthma.- !•'. D. TOWN
-BKND, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, 1894.
During 1898 Switzerland's imports
exceeded Its exports by $61,000,000. It
seems queer that a great share of the
imports consists of watches.
Te Cure Conntlpntton Forever.
Take Cuscarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
GUTTA-PERCHA SCARCE.
Difficult to Get Enough for a Pacific
Cable.
In connection with the Pacific cable
a very Interesting question arises, says
the Engineering Magazine. From
where is the gutta-percha for this gi
gantic cable to come? Every whisper
of the construction of a transpacific
lino sends the gutta-percha market at
Singapore up by leaps and bounds. The
ruling price of the gum is the highest
that has ever obtained. It Is stated,
on what authority It Is hard to say,
that the visible supply of gutta-percha
is insufficient for the task, and that if
this cable is laid it will bo the last—the
last with a gutta-percha insulation at
least.
While this pessimism on the part of
the gutta-percha producers savors
somewhat of a desire to stiffen the
market, there is yet a sufficiently rea
sonable foundation for it in the wanton
destruction of the gutta-percha forests.
It will be interesting to see the out
come of the situation. If the United
States acquires an island In the Caro
lines the building of the cable line
seems possible, though expensive. If
they do not find a landing place the
operation of the cable seems to require
a prohibitively costly plant. And
meanwhile there is the question of the
disappearing gutta-percha tree.
Holding; Himself High.
The Chicago Post tells of a doctor
who hurried into a drug store. "I've
been called to attend the Croesus
baby," he said, "and I've given a pre
scription that calls for nothing but
paragorlc. When they send it over
here you must tell them it will take at
least an hour to put it up, nnd the
cost will be $3.50. That's the only
way to make them think I'm any good,
the medicine's any good and you're
any good, and I want to keep their
bulsenss."
A CHARMING grandmother!
What a pleasant influence in the house is a delight
ful old lady in good health 1
MRS. MOLLIE BARBER, St. James, Mo., writes: "I took
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound during change of
life, and have passed through that
critical period safely. I suffered for _ „ _
years with falling of the womb and aaßL;i™lL. SJa Br SJHv
female weakness. At times Coulcl g*. ~ ™
hardly stand on my feet, also had tSEmI3 aWJS&iifIU
leucorrhoea. I tried several good
doctors, but instead of getting better, grew worse all the
time. A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham's Compound.
I did so and after taking six bottles, was cured of both
Liver Pills" cured'' mo
and I am now sound
and well. It helped me through the change of life period. I
am fifty-five years old."
The women of advanced years who are healthy and happy
are invariably those who have known how to secure help'
when they needed it. Mrs. Pinkham will advise any woman
free of charge who writes about her health. Her address is
Lynn. Mass.
"Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, But Quick
Witted People Use
SAPOLIO
Yarrow's torpedo-boat' destroyer Tn
adsuma, built for the Japanese Gov
ernment made an average of 31.037
knots on her trial trip.
Kdncste Your Rowels With ?ancaret>.
Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever.
10c, 26c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
John Burroughs, the critic, Is quite
a hermit, and lives by himself in a lit
tle cabin on the Hudson half way be
tween New York and Albany.
Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Ease,
A powder to shake into your shoes; reets the
feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen. Sore,
Hot, Callous. Aching, Sweating Feet and
Ingrowing Nulls. Allen's Foot Base makes
new or light rlioes easy. At all shoe
stores and druggists, 25cts. Sample mulled
FREE. Adr's Ailou 8. Olmsted, Leltoy, N. Y.
A Denver man just returned from
Mexico, reports that English Is taught
in the public schools of most of the
larger cities. In Guadalajara the
children "were provided with both
Spanish and English text books and
rather disconcerted members of our
party, when they addressed us in pure
English, while we could not return the
compliment by saying a single word
to the little ones in their language."
Don't Tobacco Spit and SmtAe Your Life A Tray.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netle. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or 81. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Gen. A. S. Kimball, Depot Quarter
Master of the U. S. Army in New York
City, has sent to Lyman McCarty, As
sistant General Passenger Agent of the
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad In New
York, a letter of thanks for the prompt
movement of troops that were ticket
ed over the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
during the past year. He says that
many of these movements were made
on short notice and his department had
too frequently to rely upon insufficient
and sometimes inaccurate data. He
realized that under such circumstances
the company was placed in an embar
rassing position and the extraordinary
c fforts made by the line to give satis
faction in every respect merited and
received his fullest appreciation.
AMERICAN LOCOMOTIVES.
English Workmen Have Many Objections
to Their Introduction.
English workmen do not view with
complacency the Introduction of the
American locomotives on the Midland
railway. They are not only an af
front to their national pride, but they
j see in them a positive menace to the
engineers' trades union, which has
been one of the most powerful in all
Europe. The American locomotive is
placed on the rails in Great Britain
at a cost of from 20 to 30 per cent less
than the British makers can produce
the same sort of machine. So the
working of the American locomotives
is watched with much more than ordi
nary interest by men on both sides of
the ocean. If the machines can be
made thoroughly adapted to British
requirements at such a saving of cost
to the British railway companies, it
means that the British maker must
produce them at a like cost or else
be thrown out of the market. That
means lower wages to the British
workman, and against that he will
fight with all his characteristic ob-.
stinacy, as he has to the introduction
of labor saving machinery. Even the
long drawn out and disastrous strike
which made possible the Introduction
of the American locomotive, has not
faught them the whole of their lesson.
There is even now a proposition on
foot that the union of locomotive
| drivers shall adopt a rule prohibiting
j members from handling an American
! made locomotive, when the engineers'
[ union shall reach the conclusion if it
j does, that the introduction of the
American machine threatens seriously
the wages of their trade.
RUSSIAN THISTLE A BOON
GREAT VALUE OF AN INTRUDER IN
THE FAR WEST.
Vebrnikn Stockmen Find That n Plont
Once Regarded as a Menace to Agricul
ture in '.Valuable Hot It an Feed and
Fuel—A Case of Figs From Thistles.
The Nebraska State Agricultural De
partment at Lincoln is in recept of
some interesting data relating to the
use of the ltussian thistle in Nebraska
as food for all lines of stock and as
fuel for heating purposes. Thousands
of tons of this extraordinary plant are
consumed annually in that State for
those purposes. The agricultural de
partment shortly will issue a lengthy
report on the subject, treating it in all
its details. According to the informa
tion the department has secured, the
Russian thistle, which a few years ago
was considered a dangerous menace to
the agricultural interests of the entire
Missouri Valley, has proved to bo oue
of the best grazing plants known to
this section. For the last two years
farmers' organizations have been ex
perimenting with the plnnt, but the
progress of the experiments have not
been fully reported until now, when
there is no longer any doubt as to the
utility of the weed.
Five years ago the Russian thistle
first made its appearance in South Da
kota and scientists declared that the
agricultural prosperity of the whole
country was threatened by the weed.
The stock ra?ige was soon alive with
the new growth and the whole State
became a vast seed bed for the thistle.
There was much genuine alarm autfjng
stockmen and farmers. The fall winds
carried the seeds to the four parts of
the compass and the extraordinary vi
tality of the plant was evidenced by
vast beds of thistles appearing in spots
so barren as to refuse to yield other
forms of vegetation. The raindity
with which the growth overspread the
whole country between the Missouri
river aud the mountains caused many
students of agriculture and ctook rais
ing to declare that this vast domain
would again revert to the wild things
of the prairie.
The Department of Agriculture at
Washington sent ont men to investi
gate the situation and many Govern
ment bulletins were issued on this,
"ilie greatest of evils to agriculture."
A quotation from the agricultural de
partment report of 1893 reads: "There
is no doubt that the plant will spread
throughout the whole great plains aud
still farther east, destroying a large
portion of the wheat-producing region
of the United States."
In spite of this prediction of awful
calamity from the highest sources of
agricultural information, this Bame
Russian thistle is filling a long-felt
want in Nortliwesteru'Nebraska. The
thistle in a dry state very Jmuch re
sembles alfalfa and the experienoo of
farmers and stock men is that it is
more sought by stock than is any other
wild hay.
As fuel, the thistle is not to be de
spised. Two bales of thistles are de
clared to equal a cord of wood in point
of heat, and four bales equal a ton of
coal. The cost of the weed is nothing,
as it can be secured by tons in any
draw on the prairie, where it has been
tumbled by tha winds. The manner
in which the weed is used as fuel is
novel, but successful.
A vessel of heavy sheet iron, formed
like the old-fashioned wash boiler, is
used for the two-eyed cooking stove.
Tho thistle is thrown into this nnd
tramped down as hard as possiblo.
Then tho vessel is inverted over the
stove in which it is to be consumed.
The absence of air in the vessel pre
vents the flames from extending too
rapidly in that direction and the fuel
drops gradually into the body of tho
stove as the fire burns its way into the
mass. A vessel full of the weed will
heat a large room for several hours to
a very comfortable temperature.
Louis P. Cummins is one of the
largest farmers and stock raisers iu
Nebraska. His ranch and farm is
near Rushville, Neb., and he is presi
dent of the grange of that section. In
a speech before the organization a few
days ago, in which ho had been re
quested to give the members the bene
fit of his experience in feeding thistle
to stock, Mr. Cummins said:
"My first use of the thistle was last
winter, when I fed it alike to horses
and cattle. Though at first a little shy
they soon learned to eat it with avid
ity. I found that cattle of all ages,
including the young calf just begin
ning to eat hay, wiil eat the thistle
and grow fat on the weed. During
the present winter my horses and
cattle have fed mainly on thistles
gathered from my own place, which I
started as fodder early in the fall.
Tho stock even fed to advantage on
thistles as they stood in the field, but
I believe that much of the nntritous
element of the weed is lost by leaving
it in the weather. When in February
the stock could no longer feed on the
thistles in the field, becauso of the
weather, I began foddering them from
thistles, wliioh I had cut and stacked
in the open ou August 31, 181)7. It is
proper to note that this date is rather
late for harvesting thistles for fodder,
as the weed becomes old at that time
and the thorns become brittle enough
to stick severely. During the present
winter I have fed thistles to a largo
mum'ber of young stock (if all kinds
and I find them tho equal of anything
I can purchase. The stofck seoms to
find somethiug especially appetizing
about tho thistle -and lick the very
chaff from the ground. As a healthful,
milk-produciflg feed I believe the
thistlo has no superior.' .1
"I do not'eontend thiit the thistle
will become a substiute for other feed
for stock, but do believe ,it yvill be
more geiipralty aaopted than any other
food in the Western States. Its' pro
lific growth commends it in the' first
place. Still; oA deserted lands it "does
not thrive as in a cultivated state. I
have cultivated some in rows three
feet apart and And that it reaches
more than double the size of the wild
weed. This peouliar weed flourishes
as abundantly during severe droughts
as at other times and I really believe
that it grows more luxuriantly during
dry weather. It should be cut when
in blossom and Btackel in all cases,
while yet partly green, as it is ex
tremely difficult and disagreeable to
handle when perfeotly dry. I regard
the advent of the Russian-thistle to this
particular locality as a boon of no lit
tle consequence and its future is full
of promise."
A BRAVE KENTUCKIAN'S MONUMENT.
First SolUier to Lav Doitii Ills Life in
the Louisiana Purchase.
One of tho last acts of the late Con
gress was to authorize the Secretary
of War to erect at the expense of
SSOOO a fitting monument over the re
mains of Sergeant Charles Floyd, a
member of the Lewis and Clark expe
dition, who died August 20, 1801,
near the present site of Sioux City,
lowa, and was tho first soldier to lay
down his life within the Louisiana
purchase.
Sergeant Floyd was n Keutuckian,
a soldier in tho First Regiment of in
fantry of the regular army, of which
Captaiu Clark was an officer, and tho
latter, writing of him, said: "His
father is a man much rispected, tho'
possest of moderate wealth." In the
diary of Lewis aud Clark under date
of August 20 it is recorded that after
a conference with an Indian warrior
named Stageannja, which in English
moans Great Blue Eye, "who begged
us to give them whisky, the Indians
mounted their horses and left us, hav
ing received a canister of whisky at
parting. Here we had the misfortune
to lose one of our Bergeauts, Charles
Floyd. Ho was yesterday seized with
a billious cholic, aud all our care and
attention were ineffective to relieve
him. A little before his death he said
to Captain Clark: 'I am going to leave
you.' His strength failed as he add
ed: 'I want you to write me a letter.'
He died with a composure which
justified tho high opinion we had
formed of his firmness and good con
duct. He was buried on top of the
bluff with the honors due to a brave
soldier. The place of his interment
was marked by a cedar post on which
his name and the date of his death
was inscribed. About a mile beyond
the place to which we gave his name
is a river about thirty yards wide,
whioh we called Floyd's Creek."
The river still bears his name, as
you will see by reference to the map.
The bluff at Sioux City is still called
Floyd's bluff. His grave has been
protected all these years, and has
been a landmark in that country. It
is a graceful act to erect a monument
in his honor.
"Sending: Down" n Collegian.
A curious sight was wituessod in
the principal streets of Cambridge,
England, the other day. What at
first sight appeared to be a funeral on
an extensive scale passed along the
streets, but there was no hearse. To
make up for the deficiency, however,
there were plenty of mourning
coaches, decked with crape and with
drawn blinds. Leading this mourn
ful procession was an open landau
containing three undergraduates who
wore the "trappings aud suits of
woe" very lightly indeed. Behiud
came nineteen hansoms with whips
draped, bearing the departing one's
friends. At the station there were
three groans for the Queen's don aud
three cheers for the unfortunate one
who had been "sent down." In re
sponse to cries for a speech, tho de
porting collegian said: "Gentlemen,
1 must thank you all for this loyal
demonstration. It makes mo very
pleased, especially fn view of the cir
cumstances uuder which I depart,"
an effusion which was greeted with
tremendous cheers. As tho train
steamed out of the station the mourn
ers, drawn up in line, whistled the
"Dead March." That is tho way a
man is "sent down" from Cambridge
in 1899.—London Correspondence in
Chicago Tribune.
Japnntmu Mntche*.
Of matches, as well as of most othei
manufactures in Japau, complaint has
been hearil time aud again from tho
market to whioh they liavo been ex
ported. We now gather from n ver
nacular contemporary that Japan is
fast losing the trade; Japanese
matches are being ousted by matches
of Swedish manufacture which are
bouuty-fod, but are still three dollnrs
per ton dearer than Japanese matches.
The reason why Japan is fast losing
the market in India and China is be
cause Swedish matches are of better
quality, not a single had stick being
found in a box, while there is nu aver
age of three bad ones in each small
box of Japanese matches—with re
gard to which we may say that if tho
average is above tbree the matches ex
ported are infinitely superior to those
retailed in Japan.—Kobe Chroniclo.
Lord Kuflaell'rt Early Eft union.
Lord Russell of Killoweu, tho Lord
Chief Justice of England, bails from
Newry, the place of "high church and
no steeple, dirty streets and no peo
ple," according to Dean Swift. In
his boyhood Lord Bnssell belonged
to a literary society, the members of
which were for the most part youths
of fifteen or sixteen, and on one occa
sion they had to write an essay on
"The Age We Live In—lts Tenden
cies and Its Exigencies." Lord Rus
sell completed, "and laid the cres
cent in the dust, played havoo with
SQjne venerable dynasties, and pro
posed reforms which even in the pres
ent day would make the most advanced
reformer shake, in his shoes." The
esSay was actually printed, though
the lord chief justice says he is happy
to state that iio oo'py .now exists to rise
un in judgment against him.
*. .
: THE MERRY SIDE OFLIPE.
' STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE
FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS.
"Wilt Thou Lovd Me, Forever? Play in*
With Iliin—Changeable.-Ho Did the
Dunning Part—Hi* Great Idealization—
A Sign of Stupidity, Etc., Etc.
One suug, his sweetheart's trotli to hold:
"Dear, will you love mo wkou I'm old?"
Another voiced this rounclolay:
"Oh, wilt thou love when I'm gray?"
And still another grieved one called:
"Wilt thou love me, pot, when I am bald?'
But saddest wail of all was that—
"Sweet, will you love me when I'm fat?"
—Chicago Record.
Changeable.
"Yes, iq one day the mercury varied
forty-seven degrees."
"Almost equal to my wife's tem
per."—Cleveluud Plain Dealer.
A Sign ot Stupidity.
"What does Adolphus Binks do?"
"Well, ho works for a living like the
rest of us."
"I didn't thiuK he would turn out
bo stupid."—Chicago Record.
Playing With Him.
The Timid Lover —"You know the
old adage, 'Faint heart never won
fair lady.'"
Miss Second Season—"But I'm a
brunette, you know."—Life.
He l>ld the ltuuolug fart.
The Major—"And did the fcnemy
keep up a running firo?"
The Corporal—"Well, I ' apt upthe
running aud the enemy 1, -it up the
fire all right."—Yonkers Statesman.
Hi* Great Itealizu'. tin.
"Funny about that alarm clock, isn't
it?"
"llow funny?"
"Why, I didn't realize how near it
was till it went off."—Richmond Des
patch.
Working the Old IVlan.
"That old man has a pretty daugh
ter."
"Awfully pretty, I should think."
"Why?"
"Well, hoy, look how those fellows
are laughing at his chestnuts."—Pick-
Me-Up.
Cain. Very High.
First Heiress—"l don't see why
they refer to a prince as his high
ness."
Second Heiress (who has married
one) —"I guess your father never had
to put up the price for him." —Brook-
lyn Life.
Keeping Loaded.
Harris—"Walters has been looking
pretty sad since his daughter got
married, hasn't he?"
Correll—"Y'es, you see, he had no
sooner got his daughter off his hands
than he found he would have to put
her husband on his feet."—Brooklyn
Life.
Noteworthy.
"Remarkable fellow that, "remarked
tho admiring friend. "He could play
tho piano by ear before he was seven
years old."
"I don't see anything—"
"That isn't the point. He quit it
entirely after he grow up."—Wash
ington Star.
Arguing by Analogy.
Teacher—"Who can tell me what
useful article we get from the whale?
Johnny?"
Scholar—"Whalebone."
Teacher—"Right! Now, what lit
tle boy or girl knows what we get
from the seal? Tommy?"
Scholar—"Sealing wax."—Harlem
Life.
Editorial Courtesy.
Officer "What's the row in
there?"
Office Boy—"De. editor is declinin'
> poem 'with thanks' " —Judge.
Why He Lost the Patient.
Physician—"Diet is the main thing
In this case. Your husband eats too
much. That is a feature of tho dis
ease and he should be watched."
Mrs. Youngwife—"But, doctor, he
is always so hungry. What can I
do?"
Physician (absently)—" Couldn't
you propare his meals yourself?"—
New York World.
Ropeil Him 10.
Mr. Truax—"The one who can say
'No' injsneh away as to make a per
son foel under obligations is the one
that wins in this world."
Miss Wobbsleigh—"T suppose so,
bnt of oourse she must say 'Y'es' after
she has been properly teased."
He thought hard for a few minutes
and then decided that there was no
way out of it.—Chicago News.
Would Tuke No Illsk.
"He isn't exactly what I'd call an
insincere man," remarked Mr. Bly
kins, "and he wants you to like him.
Bat "
"Yes," said the person who is al
ways eager to hear bad news about
human nature.
"Well, he's the sort of man who
will find out what time you are pnre
to be too busy to leave beforq l;o Jakes
chances on asking ygu.out ty, lynch."
—Washington Star.
I tf o6 o A s^^
o °
£ <l>\, °
O e
S HOW TO WASH FLANNELS. %
° Dissolve fine shavings of Ivory Soap in boiling water, ®
° and when cool enough to bear your hand in it, immerse °
° one piece of flannel. Don't rub it with soap, but knead °
° it with the hands. Don't rinse in plain water or in cold °
% water, but make a second solution, warm and well blued, °
° for this purpose. Use a clothes-wringer; hand-wringing °
° is insufficient. Dry quickly in a warm place. If left to °
° stand wet, flannel shrinks. °
c e
E Cut out these directions and tell the laundress to follow ®
j° them with Ivory Soap. It keeps the flannels very soft. °
I r o
I )° Copyrijht 1?00, by Th Proctor k Qunble Co.. Cincinnati. 0
V.9.P £0 Q Q. 3.0 P.QJLgJLftflfl Q 000 P_Q Q_p_Q Q OQQpO OOOOQOQJ? QQJLOJLfIJLP^ 1
Speckled or brook trout may be '
caught in Pennsylvania from April 15
to July 15, but none must be kept less
than five inches lonj>
Beauty la Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
! beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
; tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver end driving all im
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
i Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug*
| gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
To his intimates Senator A. G. Fos
ter, of Washington, is known as "the
man who laughs." He is a capital
' narrator of anecdotes. In appearance
he is vigorous, short of stature and
weighs about 200 pounds.
To Cure A Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 250
Paderewski's home is a veritable
museum of musical relics. Belongings I
of the great composers have been col
lected from all ends of the earth by
the pianist.
Ifo-To-Bao for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
meu strong, blood pure. 50c, CI. All druggist*
A Now Legal Invention.
Some Missouri lawyer has invented
a brand-new basis for a claim for dam- |
ages against a railway compny. He \
has a client who was a member of the !
non-commissioned staff of one of the I
volunteer regiments enlisted for the |
war with Spain. While the army was
being concentrated in Florida the sol- j
dier, by reason of alleged negligence
of the Fort Scott and Memphis Rail- J
way. fell from a car at Jacksonville, |
sustaining injuries that necessitated
his discharge from the army, Through ;
his attorney he has now brought suit
against the railway company for $25,-
000 damages. The peculiarity of the
case lies in the fact that plaintiff sets
forth in his complaint, as one of the
principal damages for which he seeks
recompense, "that by reason of defend
cnt's negligence, plaintiff was deprived
of his opportunity to win glory and
honor as a soldier in the war with
Spain, to his loss and damage."—
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.
fiiiii ii"\\ ■■■■! HEAL THYSELF
or Know Thyself Manual.
Bent nPedkttUuJh 110 ' b> " numn,ll <iirlan and eml.
. T' l }" !" a nnl.nH. viclo Mnrum or Meilknl Selrnco
Tor MhN ONLY, whether married unmarried or
BO coilta by mall, sealed ; gent free for fill dnvs Ad
dress The Poobody Medleal Institute, No. I Hu'lflnch
Lute Surgeon sth Mass. Hog. Vols.. the iuo-.t i-inl.
ALW AYS (TIIKS
IT" 1,1 "" rsuu ~r by
-Medical Institute has at
or is I oJ i n V*" whi(h " nl >' ,n '' rlt - !
ti.o•i i Hi Unclergo.-iJosto,, joii run I. ;
towlbitSoSiiUl.taf—^tiSVler"lU. IU " """"
"BIG FOUR "
"THESEA LEVEL ROUTE"
NEW YORK.
DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE.
WACNER SLEEPING CARS.
DINING CARS.
M. E. IHGAtLS, E. 0. McCORHICK.
President, Puss. Traffic Mgr.
WARREN J. LYNCH,
Asst. Gcii'l Pass.& Ticket Act.
MALE HELP sum prize, to introduce i
our Endless ( liain. Send 25c for sample '
Member's certificate and particulars. ' j
i .St TTI 11. Teen-.. \i„,a, Colorado,
AHCMTQ fifteen cents for sample i
AUINIO of largo MOTH PltfSoF BAti.
Great sprint? seller. Bi profits. PIKItPON'T, !
-SIVITKIt Jt CO., Sttlon A. l itis).,,rg. P,i
TITANTED—ca** of had health thut K-I-P-A-N-B
" will not benefit. Send 6 ots. to liipans hemlml
(fo„ New Yurk, for lOtauiplea and 1000 cm: imontaK ,
ALBXAjiDBa Ekmjwx 00.. 'HiQr—nnich St.. M. Y.
Sour Stomach
j "After I w: Induced to try CAHCA
w BETS, 1 will never be without them in the houso.
My liver was in a very bud shape, and my hea*
* ached and 1 had stomach trouble. Now. since tali
ing Cascarets. I feel Uuc. My wifo has also usv'
) •hem with beneficial results for sour stomach."
, Jos. Kueiilinq. lU2I Congress St.. St. Louis, Mo
Jy f IP CATHARTIC
Ipom
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
3ood, Never Sleken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Ti-rllng Iti-nciiy ( nmiuinr, tlilcnpo, Montreal. New YorL. 118
Nn.Tn.RAR an '' guaranteed by all drug-
HU IU DMU gists to CUBK Tobacco liubiL
ti Spalding
OFFICIAL
I League
. !"(!' "nd"
be ns -d in ull g nnes.
ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES.
If ft dealer does not carry Spalding's athletic
goods in stock, send your name ami address to
; us (and his, too) for a copy of our handsomely
j illustrated catalogue.
A. C. SPALDINC SL BROS.,
New York. Denver. Clih-ntro.
! Columbia
Hartford and Vedetla
$
B^cles.
NEW MODELS FOS 1899.
| Goiumbia Beval-Gear Chainluss, 575
| Columbia Chain Wheels, . . 50
| Hartfords 35
I Vedettes 525, 26 |
1 Awk any Columbia I paler I
■ for Catalogue, Uooklet*, j
I FolderN, etc., or write to
H ,|N t enclosing Ntamp.
I POPE MFG. CO.,
HARTFORD, CONN.
~"~GOL D E N~TOWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are the heat. Ask for them. Cost no more
than common chimneys. All dealers.
I'ITTsiII lt<j GLAKS CO., Allegheny, Pa.
You will never know what
GOOD INK
is unless you use Carter's. It costs
no more than poor ink.
Funny booklet " How to Make Ink Pictures " free.
CARTER'S INK CO., Boston, Mass.
f|ENßipNKfe^
"Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal Examiner U.H. Penuion Bureau.
Syrsiu civil war.lSodludlcatitigclaims,atty biuoix
HDADCY NF.W DISCOVERY; *ia
UrwV " ■ O ■ quickrlif and cure# wool
1 case*. Book of testimonials and 10 itnva* trHutra-ut
Free. Dr. H. H. QUEEN'B HONS. Box D. Atlanta. Qa.
P. N. U. 18 '99
CURES WHhKE ALL ELSE FAILS. 3
Dost Cough Syrup. Taatos Good. Übo *
I