"Courage and Strength in Times of Danger." Tfead the warning between the lines. What is that warn ing? It is of the danger from accumulation of badness in the blood, caused by the usual heavy living of the Winter months. Spring is the clearing, cleansing time of the year ; the forerunner of the brightness and beauty of ijf' glorious Summer. Follow the principle that Nature lay 9 down. Start in at once and purify your blood with that great specific, Ilood's Sar saparllia. 11 never disappoints. i Tumorr. "A tumor as big as a large mar- E ble name under my tongue, and instead of letting my physician operate on it, I used my favorite spring tonic, Qpod's Sarsaparilla. Tho bunch soon disappeared." Mas. il. M. ConuitN, 57(J Mer'k St, Lowell, Muss. Rheumatism— "l had rheumatism for five years and can conscientiously say that Hood's Sarsupari 11a has given me entire re lief. As a blood purifier it has helped my Children wonderfully." Mas. S. A. SACAK. 83 Franklin Avenue. Passaic, N. J. Hood * fills euro liver ills, the non irritating and the only cathartic to take with flood's Santaparllla. i • The Atlanta School Board has re pealed the rule under which children were permitted to attend church on church holidays without demerit. 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 f stirring up the lazy P.ver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, — ; ?auty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Cars Without Wheals. Street cars without wheels are the latest novelty in vehicles. The cars run on ball bearings, and being near the line instead of raised above it, are not subject to the same amount of resistance in the form of centrifugal force. Much greater speed is thus ob tained, and the wear of the balls in carrying the car is much less than the wear of the wheel rims. The move ment of the tramcar is easy and agree able. Home vs. Boston. Rome is envious of Boston's subway and will start one of her own through the Quirinai hill to the slopes of the Viminal and Esquillne. The tunnel will be 53 feet wide, with tracks for car riages, electric cars and foot passen gers. An electric street railroad from V the Porta del Popolo to the Porta San [ Giovanni will pass through it. Tffis engineers give out that it will take f only seven months to build the tunnel. PAINFUL PERIODS NO MORE MRS. GEORGE OSMUN, of Belvidere, Warren Co., N. J., writes: 44 Suffering as I had from weakness, irregularities and backache for several years, a release from this suffering was a blessing. Oh! how I wish more suffering women would accept your kind offer and be relieved. There is no need for women to suffer. Mrs. Pinkham's advice and Lydia E. j ' Pinkham's Vegetable Compouud will relieve Mrs. IDA PETERS, Milan, Tenn., writes: "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM—When I wrote to yon Kr time asking your advice I was a great \ r sufferer. Menstruations were irregular, some* f times a week too soon and then a week or two w^en w^en they appeared were very profuse; great pain and tenderness in the bowels, pain in t back and limbs, leucorrhoea all the time. I (yiji -HvSyffßfe was Weo, k ail d nervous and had no appetite. ® urn * n tf anc * choking sensation in my throat. I received your reply and followed all your instructions and now lam cured. 1 owe my ISSB9m recovery all to Mrs. Pinkham's advice and her wonderful remedies." _ ELLA BRENNER, East Rochester, 44 1 have been thankful a thousand times S//, /l. ] j since I wrote to you for what your Vegeta ns \SSL Compound has done for me. I followed K your advice carefully and now I feel like a iftQvfeferl\ different person. My troubles were back- J\i ache, headache, nervous tired feeling, pain ful menstruation and leucorrhoea. I took * our hottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta si'l \ Compound, one box of Pills, one package iwßitffi W \°* anat^ve Wash and am now well." IRS MAGGIE StlNE ' New Berl * n " * * iave suffered with terrible backache u" I I in the small of my back for about seven /|_ ISzwi I years, and could never get anything to help me. I tried several physicians, but tound / V - Ro help. I have now taken three bottles Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com / pound, and feel like a different woman." MRS. H. A., 124 S. Cedar Street, Owosso, Mich., writes: •• Nearly three years ago I wrote to you asking advice in regard to my health. I was so miserable; suffered from painful menstruation und backache, was nervous, dizzy and faint. I received such a kind letter from you, telling me just what to do. I followed your advice and I now am recommending Lydia £2. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I thank God for this pain destroyer." (II STOPPED FREE ■ llrffP Permanently Cure* 53 mm -&A Insanity Prevented by M BM DR. KUU£'S GREAT * B m Vtr&r SERVE RESTORER ■ PoltlYeeure fer nil /rtmousJOUeatei, >if<, HpiUptf, Opaimt and HI. Vnit' Doner. IoHl?or Kervoui jfter " r *t dajr'a one. TreßtieiiiisßtrialbottU free to FltpatUDta. tbey pa;ui<texprtaa cliafgeaonlf Institute of He dlcino.'J3l Arch St.. "hlltuKTuUla I'au STOCKS AND GRAIN eoiiimiftHioii, 1-16. Correspondence Solicited. OTTERSON & WILSOM, I "SBSSKiJS* PbQne. 14627 BIT ad. 02 Broadway. New York. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Ak for them. Co*t no more than common rhimney*. All dealers. PITTSBUKO GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. Hall's Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. Sold by 7sc. 7sc. F. J. CHENEY 6C CO., Props., Toledo, O. We have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for 20 years.— LIZZIE FEKULI., Camp St., Harriaburg, Pa., May i, 180 L Ann Grant, a domestic servant, who died recently at Linton, in Cambridge shire, at the age of 87 years, had served 71 years in one family. Sdurate Tour Bowela Wlfh Cnscsreti. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists ref uud money Mrs. Joubert, wife of the commander of the Transvaal forces, accompanies her husband in the field, and has her self gained a considerable knowledge of military mattrs. To Core Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Cand v Cathartic. 10c orCnc. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. LONG TRIPS. An Bight Thousund Mile Continuous Railway Journey. Some idea of the immense extent ol Russian territory may be gleaned from the enormous railway runs that are possible there. In the latest edition of the Continental Bradshaw there may be found times of starting and arrival of a continuous series of rail way trains making up a connected railway journey which would begin al Calais and would end at Kijutschi, the most eastward station at present open on the Trans-Siberian railway, about twenty hours' journey east of Kras noyarsk in Central Siberia. The length of this journey is, as nearly as possi ble, 5,100 miles, and of this distance some 3,600 miles are traversed in Rus sian railway carriages. The time oc cupied would be twelve dpys and twen ty hours. It is possible to travel by rail as far as Irkutsk, the capital of Eastern Siberia, which is 660 miles east of Karnoyarsk. This exceeds the longest possible American run by nearly 1,000 miles. Our longest trans continental trip is in Canada from Halifax, in Nova Scotia, where the traveler may get into a Canadian Pa cific car and go through to Vancouver on the shores of the Pacific, 3,666 miles away. The longest possible run would be from Halifax to Vera Cruz, on the gulf of Mexico, via New York, Mont gomery and Mexico, a distance of about 4,200 miles. When the Trans- Manchurian railway joins the Trans- Siberian, as it will do, at Onon, it will be possible to travel continuously by rail from Calais to Port Arthur. The latter part of tho route has not yet been definitely decided upon, but the estimated total distance will not be much less than 8.000 miles, which will be performed in about twenty days. A Stickler for Farts. Tired Treadwell—Ah, dat was too bad! You asked fer bread and dey gives you a stone. Sauntering Sim— Naw; git it right. Git it right! I asked dem fer bread and dey gives me a hunk ot coal in de neck.—Chicago News. HEADACHE "Until niy wire mid tliy.elf linvo been UKlng CASCARETS and tbev are the be.t medicine we have ever had in the house. Last 1 week my wifo was frantic with headache for twoday., she tried some of vonrCASCAKETS, j and they relieved tho pain in her head almost immediately. We hoth recommend Cascarets." „ , CIIAS. STBDETOHO. Pittsburg Safe & Deposit Co, Pittsburg, Pa. A A CATHARTIC mdcawto TRADE MARK REOISTIRCD 1 Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do j Good, Never Sicken, Wqpken. or Gripe. 10c, 25q,600. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... ' Btrllnr R.w.dy CoM, B r, CMcign, Moatr.nl, New Yerk. 317 ; | HO-TOBAC gfiit* to cljHE^obaceo S7t°RTiCULJUREp Severe Boot Pruning Favored. | Although the horticulturist oi the \ Georgia Experiment Station declinea I to make any positive statement con | cerning the advisability ot severe root J pruning when plantiu ; young trees, I he says that he is fairly satisfied that | peach trees from which the roots have i been largely cut off, will live and j flourish in Georgia even in stiff clay j and under adverse weather conditions. | The same statement may also be made of apple and cherry trees. In some | experiments made the last two years he found that the root-pruned trees i made fewer, deeper, larger and more i robust roots. These roots penetrated 17i inches against 9J inches for the roots of uupruned trees. Pruning Currant Bushes. Most growers of currants allow the bushes to take their own way of growth. As the currant plant is al ways produced from cuttings it is sure to send up a number of shoots from ! each set and these quickly make a mass i of shrubbery that keeps the inside ol | the bush from receiving enough sun light to perfect the fruit. Besides, ; where there is a great mass of shrub bery some of the leaves are likely not to get thoroughly dusted with helle bore, and thus allow the currant worm to perpetuate itself. Some for this ; reason advocate reducing the bush to a single stem. This makes it easy to control the currant worm and the finest ] fruit is thus produced. But just as I good fruit, and greater in amount, can { bo grown by leaving two or three stems. Occasionally a stem breaks down by accident, and if it is the only | one therois a gap in the row. Even if all the single stems remain their yield J cannot be as great as it will be by leav- | ing two, three, or perhaps four to grow from one rooting. To Renew a Strawberry Bed. There are two ways of renewing strawberry beds besides the one of re- ! setting entirely. Of late the best growers try to get the heaviest possi- j ble crop the first season after the vines come into bearing and then plowing up the vines and reset or put in some I other crop. Others are beginning to adopt the plan oi mowing the vines i after the crop is off and after they are ! dry, raking them between the rows I and burning them and then working the soil very close to tho old rows with cultivators, and hand hoeing in j the rows so as to give the runners n J chance to find well pulverized soil iu j which to start the new growth. Still another plan is to work the soil up between the rows, as above i stated, and as soon as the runners have spread out between the rows and j taken root tlie old vines are cut off with a sharp boo and new rows estab lished between whero the old ones were, the space occupied by tlie rows ! being worked up with the cultivator. Either of these plans are good and practicable, and for small patches we think tliem preferable to resetting al together. Strawberries take kindly to fertilizers, and it is possible to i grow very large crops if they are at- j tended to in a proper manner and at the right time. No farm garden j should be without a few rows of these j berries. Ornamental Horticulture. As a rule we do not place sufficient value upon the purely ornamental side of farm life. Country property would be greatly improved if farmers would consider the looks of the house, gar dens and fields a little, and indirectly they would gain thereby. A farming couutry that is pleasing to the eye al- { ways attracts more people to tlie re gion, and the neai-by market for pro duce is thus built up. Railroad com panies appreciate the value of this by offering prizes frequently for the | prettiest farm 011 the line of their ( route, which can bo viewed from the j car windows. They also pay consid erable in prizes for the best grounds around their depots. Manufacturers likewise are trying to make their fac tories attractive by cultivating trees, flowers and shrubbery on the grounds. Altogether many of our most success ful business men attach more impor tance to the value of oruamental gar dening and horticulture than the aver- ' age farmer. Ornamental horticulture need not tiff a waste, either. It is possible to combine with it profitable work that j more than pays for the outlay of time, money and labor. Thus in some places there is a demand for cut flowers, so that the "farmer who [raises plenty of tino specimens iu tho front garden can j sell them at a fair price. But flowers are not the only oruaments. Many of our fruit trees present pretty sights at all seasons [of the year. AVhat is ! handsomer than a garden of fruit trees in the blossom season, or again wher. the fruits are ripening? Such a sight is admired by anybody. Even vines i lend attraction to the place. The taste in arranging these fruit j trees will decide the value of the or namentation. If one has an eye for the beautiful ho will cover up ugly spots iu the landscape, aud arrauge his trees so as to intensify auy particular ! bright place. It costs no more to do thi3 than to plant the trees and vines in a haphazard way. The house and barns eaa bo changed njaterially by training a few, vine?, flowfj-s and shrubbery around them. It may not be possible to find a money market for . the fruits thus raised, but tliey will supply the table with something that is always desirable, and that is not al ways the ease on every farm.—James Bidgway, in American Cultivator. i ; now T" Navo Labor m Sprinif Cleaning:. I : Spring cleaning is no longer the labor it < was in the days of our grandmothers. Women understand how to save themselves by the use of modern conveniences. When ( beginning the work everything should be In readiness tacks, hammers, brooms, ; with a supply of Ivory Soap ( which is the i best for all cleaning purposes;, lime, am monia, and carbolic acid. Good weather should be selected, and only one or two j rooms cleaned at a time; air and 6unshiue should he freely admitted. ELIZA 11. PAUSES. Rammer and Winter Clonrts. Many must have noticed that in winter time the sky seems to lack the : roominess and lofty arching of sum mer. It appears on cloudy, or partially I cloudy days, to bo nearer the earth ' than is the case on similar days dur ; lng the summer months. That this ap pearance is no figment of the imagina- I tion is shown by recent investigations made at the Upsala Observatory on the elevation of clouds. It is found that all varieties of clouds float at a much I greater altitude in summer than in ! winter. The months of greatest ele , vation, at least in Sweden, are June and July. Kaiser Wilhelm we usually call a Hohenzollern, but. as a matter of the real name has been lengthened by the addition of Hohen, upper. He is a deseendent of the Count of Zolltrn, Thassalon by name, who founded the line about the year 800. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your I.lfe Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, bo mag ; netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 60c or sl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Aduren Sterling Rqznedy Co., Chicago or New York. j General Gi|y V. Kcnry was recently i asked what kind of a man would suc ! ceed in Puerto Rico. He answered, j "One with considerable money and as j much patience." To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All j Druggists refund money if it fails to curs. 'Joo I The Queen of Ilanover will be 81 in I April. Victoria will be SO in May. In I the same month ex-Empress Eugenie will be ■}, An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, I SYRUP OF FIGS, manufactured by the CALIFORNIA B'IO 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 the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna aud other aromatic plants, by a method known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember tlio full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO. CAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N. Y. For sale by all Druggists.—Price 50c. per bottle. j * G' "'' - The Chafnless wheel girl in helping the chain wheel girl up the hill. But there are excellent chain wheels. Wo make them. The picturu shows thai the Chainless Is the better hill climber, be cause the bevel-gearing cannot bo cramped or twisted under the extra strain. The same unl -1 formlty of action make-* the (Jhainless exception ally easy running at all times. New 1899 Models' Chainless, $75; Colum bia chain wheels, SSO; Harlfjrds, $35 i 1 Vedettes, $25, $26, Catalogue free of dealers or by mall for 2-cent stamp ! POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. t Spalding OFFICIAL LEAGUE tonal 1 Jeague Ball ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES. If a dealer does not carry Spalding's athletic goods in stock, send your name and Hildresa to I us (and his, too) for a copy of our handsomely i. Illustrated catalogue. A. C. SPALDING & BROS., N>vr York. Denver. Chicago. Thompson's Eye Water TXT ANTED—< 'aae of bad health that R-I-P-A-N-B "▼ Will not benefit. Send b cts.to Hi pa nit Chemical 0o„ New York, for 10samples and 1000 testimonial* k' PUZZLE DEPARTMENT. "j m aoieisfeieieieiJ ie The solutions to these puzzles will up- i t pear iu a succeeding issue. ;! 23 ,r 89.—Two Drop-Vowel Proverbs* Q -t -s b-tt-r t- s-ff-r s-v-r-1- tli-n t- s-b el-gbtl-. Tb- -nw-rd 1- -k sli- -Id b- r-v- -1-d b tli- - -tw-rd 1-f-. d 80.—Four Pled Rivers of the United States. 0 1. Aaceibms. 2. Aoohtctri. 3. - Aeicwpbp. 4. Aisnfcr. y —x j 91.—A Squate. 1. A coat of steel. 2. A measure of _ land. 3. A metal. 4. To loan. 92.—A Word Puzzle. 8 lam a word of six letters, signifying G | to bo left over; transpose me, aud I 1 ! pertain to the sea; drop one letter and 1 | transpose me again, and I work uuder -1 ground; curtail and transpose, and I • mean deportment; drop a letter, and 3 I become humanity; curtail, and I be come myself. j ANSWERS TO PREVIOUS PUZZLES. / 85.—Five Pied Lakes of North * America—Chesuucook, Carson, Nicol £ lot, Borguc, Peoria. 83.—A Square— NATAL AOU L A I TUNAS a AL A I S i- L A S S A s 87.—A Progressive Enigma—l, j George was in town to-day; he came ! from Georgetown. 2. Give that pan | - and a plate to ma, and hand me my , Panama hat. 3. Jane will soou bo a 5 tall and as fat as her father, 88.—A Diamond—• M ! T Y It MYX O N i It O 0 IT WASN'T ALWAYS VULCAR. In Old-Fashioncd Days a "Dish"' of Tea Was Proper Stylo. Etiquette ia a strange ..flair. It | changes so indisputably that what ill one century will be called polite in another will bo dnbbed the climax of vulgarity. Take that simple matter, for example, the drinking of tea from the saucer. When tea was first used ; in England it was drunk from a dish. ! In old collections of china many of these quaint pieces will be found; thoy are shallow basins devoid of bandies altogether. Then some one introduced cups ' with handles nnd saucers. Old-fash ioned folk did not care for them, and ' as a protest thoy poured their tea into the saucer and drank it from there, i harking back as far as thoy could to ; the old beloved "dish." But as to be old-fashioned is usual- j ly an unpardonable social crimo, peo plo who wero up-to-date determined that to drink from the saucer was a vulgar habit, just as bad as oating J with a knife. Iu the kitchen and comfortable quarters of that kind, j where those who drank their tea drank it as they preferred, tho fashion j for pouring it into the saucer contin- 1 ued. But upstairs my lady was far j too fastidious. She waited until hers cooled, or drank it scalding. And so I matters have gone on. Even if this j year a leader of society were to stait the old fashion again it would take many a long month to do away with the great prejudice there is iu Eng land for tea-drinking out of the saucer. It lias been said that the Queen sometimes drinks her tea that way. Her gracious majesty may or may not do so; even should she, that would ' not make it correct for my lady in her ] parlor to do so too. Why IV® ltlu.li. "Unsteadiness of purpose and in- j stability of mind are regarded as gen- ' eral characteristics of blushers," say the Paris experts who bnvo been in- i vestigating tho blushing habit. "Hab itual blushers are also subject ta | changes in temperature. Our obser vation shows tlmt they blush oftener and more violently in damp aud stormy weather than on cold winter days or during the heat of summer. At all times, however, it, is the condition of the mind that produces the disease. An uueertniu stir to their feelings may be productive of blushing in those hereditarily inclinod to it; others are \ made to blush by any painful shock,] occasiouod by shame, remorse, grief | or by the reproaches of superiors or j friends. A pretty girl who listens to 1 the first compliments paid to her with a blushing check is certainly ail agree bio if not always a pretty picture. But a blushing man is an abomination. Strong men do not blush. Only tlie j weak, womanish, supersensitive men j do."—Chicago Times-Herald. "Flomray Atkllns." The new Chinese regiment of tho Bristish army, at Wei-Hai-Wei, is to j be an infantry one, aimed, with the ! Martini-Metford rille, a weapon which has been highly spoken of as the re sult of experience in various parts of j Africa. Tho men will ho paid §8 a month, and when the other advantages i of the service are taken into account there should he little difficulty in ob taining a select body of men. Major Bower's first difficulty will, apparent- j ly, ho that of securing accommodation for the new troops at Wei-Hai-Wei, ' for at present,so far ns can he learned, there is nothing ready in that respect. The uniform has not yet been settled, but in all,probability it will he a pic turesquo hut serviceable adaption of the dress of the Chinese soldier. As ] to the lighting qualities of the men, it is of course too early to speak with ' oertainty, but, knowing the class from 1 which they wilt probably come, Ma jor -Bower is sanguine that in ■ due timqhe will common,,! a really effec tive force.—North China Herald. j The Rev. Dr. Handley Carr Glynn Moule, who succeeds Canon Robinson as Norrisian professor of divinity at Cambridge University, has made a mark as a scholar and pr< ach r, Mrs. Winslow'sSoothingSyrup forrhildren teething, softens the Hums, reduces inilHmma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.a bottle. Fire has destroyed the cottage in which Joseph Haydn was born at Rohrati, in Lower Austria. The com memorative, saved. Tfo-To-Bac for Fifty Centa. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, mulces weak men strong, blood pure. 50c,81. All druggist* To Instruct Artisans. Hanover is to establish a series of lectures and demonstrations for the instruction of artisans and apprentices in all trades, and if they are found suc cessful they will be Instituted through out the empire. There are to be model workshops, and exhibitions of tools and machinery, together with instruction in bookkeeping and in making esti mates. The first course of lectures will be to cabinetmakers, locksmiths, shoe makers and tailors, ether trades being taken up one after another, the inten tion being that higher instruction in all shall be placed within reach of every learner or operative. no—a > The courtship period for Ayer's Sarsaparilla I passed long since, when it won the con fidence and esteem of thoughtful men and women 50 years ago. You need have no doubts, if, when you ' go to buy Sarsaparilla, you simply say the old name ; That is the kind that cured your fathers and their fathers before them, and it is the kind that will cure you. Other Sarsaparillas may look like it, may even taste like it, but somehow or other they haven't the knack of curing people that I Ayer's has. Just try one bottle of Ayer's I today. THE GLORY OF MAN! Strength, Vitality, Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR. SELF-PRESERVATION. oaiiHO anil cure of V\- / C haußlctl Vitality, .Nervous and Physical JT. / Of # !IFF // Ucl,ill ty, Atrophy (wasting), and Vari j vr ;ui-. M * u " ' j'l' -'i■ Al ' 1 ' I' l ''- 't") -' AX[ uvori r ' 1 pp. i AfiUfj IriioLLr. giaviugs. HEAL THYSELF for acute arid chronic dlscnse*. End., wed. full gilt! Chief'coMultlng l'l'ri otilrrlVLi'!'T*;. '.. 1 jjgjj} 1 v j$5U? " V'"."'• < l " ro '" l ' i ' r '° .SSS ; i''' . £g£ | . ; "Forbid a Fool a Thing and that he will Do." Don't Use SAPOLIO S I 0 PER WEEK. I Loral agent wanted at, once Jn every town, litrge or small. Nothing to sell, short lioura; -alary, ten dollara per week. Addrea* with atamp, J. AuO4 12ti7 Uroadwa , Hooin l'J, New York City. . *' ■ p. n. b: 'n"'Vj RHEUMATISM SSpM'S' '■ Al.kx utpiu BxnM r 00.. aaQraauwick St.. H. k'. 1 n I 'l* **s *•* %♦ v *l* v ••• v •** •X* O 111 SUMMER COMFORT. f * ** " ft What's niccrthana V T ft ft comfortable home? y V 00l nil n II il u nil Ir takes very little V i V 1'! l ' I money to furnish V " !• IflM' r >- ' - finely. Our general y j 111 1 JT'I j'! tells all about Fur- V ■1 y y r' J '> ''"y niture, Hcfripora- ¥ . Y T , . tors, Pic'tire*. Mat- y i Price 51.10. tings, Sii\erwure, O " V Mirrors, Ilaby Carriages, Stoves. bedding, y X Upholstery Goods, Clocks, Crockery, Ti- y X Catalogue No. 59 shows wonderful tar- X I a gains in Pianos, Organs, bicycles and X A Sewing Machines. x Our IG-colbr Lithographed Catalogue 2 £♦ No. 47 shows Carnets, Hugs. Portieresand a f •> laico Curtains in hand-painted colors. A •> Carpet sewed and lined free, and freight A 3 ;• prc)taid. < a Wo raantifacturo ♦ y Clothing ($5.50 to y *jj* $14.90) cut to your X 4* anteoil to fir. and X y prepay cxprcssagr. y Y Catalogue No. 57 ♦ X jl 1 | OW8 j eainples flr X X bargains in Shoes', %([ X y Hat". Mackintosh- y S nd Ueulß ' Fur " I'ricc $3.50. X y uishmgs. y A Why pay retail prices when you can X buy cheaper man your local dealer? All T catalogues are free. Address this way : X j ;i; JULIUS HIKES & SOX, £ ' ! | llcut. 305 naltiuiorc, Mil..}. D RO P S Y raaee. Book of testimonial*and IO IIIITI' treatm-nt Free. Dr. H. H. OKEEH'B 80N8 Box D. Atlanta 8a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers