" 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. AH Cone " Had 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 M Rs. A. DICK, Mi 11 vi! 1.-, N.J. Hood's PHIB cure liver Ilia; the non-lrritatlnf* and enly cathartic to take" with Hood'a Hur^muriiui F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., Props, of Hall's Catarrh Cure, offer SIOO reward for any e,sc of catarrh thatcannot be cured by taking all's Catarrh Cure. Send for testimonials, free. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Fits permanently cured. Noflts or nervous ness after flist day's use of I)r. Kline's Croat Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.II.KLINE, Ltd. 031 Arch StPhiUPa Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soltons the gums, reduces inflamma tion. ullays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. I can recommend Piso's Cure for Consump tion to sufferers from Asthma. E. D. TOWN SEN i). Ft. Howard, Wis., May i ID4. During 1898 Switzerland's Imports exceeded its exports by $64,000,000. It seems queer that a great share of the Imports consists of watches. T* Our® Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets CauU.v Cuthartia 10c or Csc. tf C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money GUTTA-PERCHA SCARCE. Difficult to Qot Enough for a I'iiclUo 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 tho construction of a transpacific line 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 it this cabjp is laid it will be 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 </", 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 tho disappearing gutta-percha tree. Holding Illnnoir 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 paragoric. When they send it over here you must tell them it will take at least an hour to put it up, and 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 i good health! Mrs. Mollie Barrzr, 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 m<F°M m years with falling of the womb and fHB BMiT&JBm female weakness. At times could jr ti hardly stand on my feet, also had MII&SSIsE. 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 leucorrhoea and falling of womb. I am now enjoying good 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 year 3 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 In adsuma, built for the Japanese Gov ernment made an average of 51.037 knots on her trial trip. Etoncate Your Bowel* With ?na carets. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. Wc,2Bc. If QC.C. fail* druggists refund money. John Burroughs, the crltlr, is quite a hermit, and lives by himself in a lit tle cabin on the Hudson half way be tween New York und Albany. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Raw, A powder to sbako into your shoes; rests the feot. Cures Corns, bunions. Swollen. Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot Ease makes new or light shoes easy. At all shoe stores and druggists, 25cts. Sample mailed FREE. Adr's Allen 8. Olmsted, Loltoy, 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 <-ur party, when they addressed us in p ire English, while we could not return the compliment by saying a single word to the little ones in their language." Dent Tobacco Spit and Smoko Tour Life Awt? To quit tobacco easily and forever, be c ag netic, full of life, nervo and vigor, take No To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak i ion strong. All druggists, 600 or sl. Cure guar an teed. Booklet and sample free. Add: ass Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Gen. A. S. Kimball, Depot Quarter Master of the U. S. Army in New York City, lias sent to Lyman McCarty, As sistant General Passenger Agent of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad in New York, a letter of thanks for the prompt moveihent of troops that were ticket ed over the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad during the past year. He says that many of these movements were n tde 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 efforts made by the lino to give satis faction in every respect merited and received his fullest appreciation. AMERICAN LOCOMOTIVES. liugllHh Workmon Iluve Many Objections to Th-'ir 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 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 tho rails in Great Britain at a cost of from 20 to 30 per cent le3S 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 cut and disastrous strike which made possible tho Introduction of the American locomotive, has not taught 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 members from handling an American made locomotive, when tho engineers' union shall reach the conclusion if it does, that tho introduction of the American machine threatens seriously the wages of their trade. i NEWS AND NOTESI 1 FOR WOMEN | Cotton Funcy Dress floods. A new type of fancy dress goods, which is made in England, is manu factured from cotton. The colors are red, green und black, forming checks three-eighths of an inch square. The mercerized threads ate in green and red, producing an effect wonderfully suggestive of silk. Monogram I ans tho Latest Fad. Souvenir buttons and buckles from soldiers have goue out of date as the society girl's fed. She is now collect ing monograms of hotels and various civic societies. These are pasted on a fan, and will be displayed on the verandas at watering place resorts in the summer. A story is supposed to go with each monogram, and if the young man who sends a girl a mono gram does not know one he must in vent one, the more romantio the bet ter. The "full-Back" Skirt. The skin-tight skirt, known fifteen years ago as the "puli-baok," is com ing into fashion again. The clinging skirt has worked its way into favor gradually, and now it is declared to be the correct skirt of the day. This new undergarment is made of finely ribbed woven silk. The upper part of it looks not unlike a jersey, only it is much longer. It is pulled on in the same way, over the head, aud clings to the figure. This sheath of woven silk reaches as far as ten inches below the hips. Here it is finished with a band of coarse mesh lace insertion, through which ribbons are run, which are tied at tho back, drawing the gar ment closely to the figure. To this band of lace insertion a silk flounce is attached, which is now all that re mains of the ultra fashionable woman's once cherished silk petticoat. With this remarkable undergarment the outer sheath-like dress skiyt may be seen to advantage in all its clinging beauty. These garments may be pur chased in a variety of colors, aud by their trimmings of laco aud ribbons may be made exquisitely dainty. A prominent society woman has just or dered a half dozon of these undergar ments in different pretty colors. One to bo worn beneath gray Venetian cloth gown is of pale violet woven silk, cut with a low, round neck, which is trimmed with a frill of laco caught in the center with a rosette of shaded violet baby ribbon. The same nar row ribbon is run through the inser tion near the knees. The silk flounce is of deep violet peau do soie, trimmed with two rufiles of the same silk, which are appliqued with bands of narrow mauve velvet.—New York Journal. Hints About HairrirofsitiK* In hnirdrossing it should never bo forgotten that with a long face the hair should be full over the ears and never high on top; with a wide face a high coiffure is desirable, A long nose should never balance a large knot at the back of the head. Thick, mat-like curl fringes are vulgar and give an animal expression to the face, yet some elderly women look better with a curled bang, which seems to soften the face. Wearing the hair brushed oil' the face demands a noble forehead. A good roll, wave or loose puff, pulled slightly forward, improvos some faces. Some foreheads look better with hair drawn tightly off the sides; others with tiny waves or carls. If the cheekbones are promi nent fluff out the hair, for a large face the hair high and broad, a part and pretty waves slightly fluffed up above the ears give youthfulness to middle aged women, aud a rule that applies to everyone is never to tie the hair, roll, twist or arrange it in any way tightly. This strains the roots of the hair, is absolutely injurious and makes any face hard. Neither should many hairpins be used. If each pin is made to do its duty aud the hair is arranged to fit the head, few pins will be needed. Never use metal or wire hairpins of any kind. They are ruin •us to the hair. Use tho shell or the imitation shell of medium size. A young girl with a pretty nock should wlieu in evening dress wear her hair low, and a woman with n short, fat neck should wear hers high. Parting the hair slightly at the side takes five years away from the age, but too pro nounced a parting is hard and mascu line. Overolaborate hairdressiug is Hot good form, and, as nature always makes hair, skin aud eyes to harmon ize, dyeing is bad taste, as well as in jurious. To be kept healthy and glossy the hair must be brushed every day, and even then the operation must be accomplished quickly. Many peo ple nso borax or ammonia in the water. This is bad, for each dries out the natural oil. If the hair is natnrally dry immediately after wash ing rub in n few drops of the best olive oil and brush well. Most of the fashions in hairdressing come from the stage, as actresses are invariably clever in arrrauging their hair to suit their Btyle of feature or to harmonize with a special costume. Then they spread until everyone adopts the new hair arrangement, often without stop ping to learn if it is bocoming to the character aud form of their features. —fihicago Kecord. Flowers For Summer Huts.' Some novelties in flowers have ap peared. A large-sized pansy with aix or eight upper petals in prettily gauffred silk aud two lower petals of velvet, variously marked, has met with Immense success. It is ouo 6f the latest creations of Mile. Statib; <vho, besides exercising her profession of ptemiere to a wholesale house, directs two municipal classes, where the art of making artificial flowers is taught in all its branches. This flower is re produced in no less than seventy dif- ferent tints nnd combinations, mostly violets, mauvres, oroliid pinks, crim sons, dahlia tints and yellows. The same house has also brought out a large double poppy, very full blown, with silk petals, that milliners are or dering freely. Both these are used in couples, the two set back to back, but as many as four of the pansies, with as many buds, may be grouped to gether. Some milliners are evincing a great taste for small pompon roses, several mounted together on one stalk, while others prefer larger blooms arranged with very pale leaves of velvet, some being so pale as to be almost white. For the rest, the flowers most in favor are primroses anemones, wild hya cinths, lilac, forget-me-nots and blue cornflowers. As regards colors generally, the brightest shades of mauve and "violet, especially those with a preponderance of blue, are being somewhat set aside for those showing an excess of dull red or pink. Among the darker shades, that of the wood violet is in high favor, while themauvestendin the same direction toward the orchid and faded rose tints. In the pinks and reds, too, we find the choice to lie chiefly in deep and rich or delicate and pale lines. Yellow figures largely in straws, and also us an accessory to other colors in flowers, particularly pansies. but it is not much used in the tulles, mousselines and ribbons. All the light blues promise to be extremely fashionable, and also medium tones of grayish blue.—Millinery Trade Re view. Gossip, Mine. Rostand, wife of the author of Cyrano de Bergerac, has a gift of her own for writing verses. The Woman's College of Baltimore will receive between $25,000 and $50,- 000 as the residuary legatee of the lute Getfrge R. Berry of that city. The city of Tilsit is about to erect a monument to the memory of Queen Louise, who met Napoleon there in 1807 and sought to soften his heart in behalf of her sous. The girls of Pretoria, South Africa, have been invited to compete for an appointment worth $-1000 a year. The post is that of professor of mining in the State Girls' School. Mrs. MclCinley particularly admires the Oriental room of the White House, and this npnrtmeut she will probably have completed in the near future and perfected in its minutest appointment. Mile, de Richelieu, who is to marry Count Eduard de Rochefoucauld, is a granduiece of Heinrich Heine, the poet. 3he is a descendant, also, of the famous Due de Richelieu of the regency. Miss Beatrice Cutler, a trained phy sician, has been appointed inspector of the women pilgrims at El Teh, Egypt, by the Egyptian quarantine board. Her dutios are to inspect the women coming back from Mecca for this year, on aocount of plaguo. Mrs. Ella Knowles Haskell, of Helena, Mont., who has just retired from the Assistaut Attorney-General ship of that State, was the first and only woman to hold that place. She was elected by the Populists, is a native of New Hampshire and a gradu ate of Bates College. Queen Natalie of Servia is following in the footsteps of Carmen Sylva, Queen ot Ronmania, having secluded herself in a charming villa perfumed with the odors of roses, near Florence. She is writing a romance of personal reminiscences, which has its begin ning in Servia and its epilogue in Berritz. Mme. Melba is said to be an excel lent whistler. During her school days at Melbourne, Australia, where she at tended a very staid institution known as the Presbyterian Ladies' College, she was the despair of the teachers because she would persist in whistling the popular airs of the day whenever she was out in the corridors or grounds. Fashion Notes. White lace boleros will be worn ovei white with the new black net and mousseline de soie skirts. Tucks have held their own as a means of decoration, and will be revived with a flourish on our new summer gowns. . A new fad in French jewelry is a flexible chain of gold with a pearl set in each end. This is wound around the necktie and tied in a bow as if it were ribbon. Clasps, so that ribbon belts may be easily iuterchaugeable, have almost superseded beltbuokles. The newest are of silver, gilded with a dull, red dish finish, and with these pressod velvet ribbon is used. Spangled nets are more in demand than over for evening gowns. One of the newest black nets has incrusta tions of cream lace, between which tho spangles are sewn on closely, en voloping one another like fish scales. True lover's knots in black and col ored velvet and satin, stiffly wi-fed, appear on some of the new hats, and are employed to finish the decollotago of evening gowns or to fasten the Mario Antoinette fichu of a house gown. A new idea is to disguise the exist ence of any collar band at all, and to carry the yoke itself in whatever fashion it may be made up to the chin. Indi cations point to the reign of tho plain or simply rolled collar iu the imme diate future, and it is said that chiffon and lace ears and tabs and bows are to bo abolished from the nape of the neck. In Paris toques of maideuhnir fern, with large, stiff cabbage roses, are popular. Tho more unuaturni the shade of tho flowers the sweller are they considered. White and black tulle hats, and indeed white and black all sorts and shapes, are like wise very much worn, as are entire toques and hats of Parma violets trimmed on one side with a white bird. MYTH OF POCAHONTAS. THE BEAUTIFUL LECEND SHATTERED BT GRIM ICONOCLASTS. Around the Story or Her ICeacue of Cap tain John Smith the Charm of roetry Can No Conger Clnger— What History Shows to Be Hie Farts in the Cine. The iconoclast is never a popular person, least of all when his irreverent hammer assails the cherished heroines of history. We are willing to give up, if we must, King Canute and William Tell, the apple of Newton and the oherry tree of Washington, the hump of Richurd 111. and the cat of Whit tington, but when the ruthless hand of modern investigation strikes at Lnoretio and Godiva, Jeanne d'Arc and Pocahontas, we are ready to cry, "Vandiil, stay thy impious hand!" Around the story of Pocahontas and her rescue of Captain John Smith the charm of poetry and romance has ever lingered. Every child is familiar with it. In his recent speech in the Senate, presenting to the Uuited States an oil portrait of the Indian princess, Sena ter Daniel, of Virginia, thus described the incident which youug America has always loved to believe as gospel his tory : "Wrapped in a robe of coon skins sat the tall, gaunt, sour old Indian Emperor, and Smith, who had slain two of his Indian assailants in the fight on the Chickahominy, was con demned to die. Two stones were brought forth before I' whatan and Smith was dragged to th i, and clubs were raised to beat out his brains, when, 10, an Indian girl >f twelve or thirteen years of age rn iied upon the scone, caught his head in her arms and laid her own upon Lis to save him from death. The sour old King re lented and Smith was saved, for the intercessor was Powhatan's favorite daughter, Pocahontas." But, alas for faith in history and in human nature, and alas for some of the first families of Virginia, modern investigators have pronounced the in cident a myth, nnd have even tarnished the fair fame of the lovely Pocahontas, declares the New York Mail and Ex press. One historian assures us that the copper-colored lady was a mere camp follower of the whites, and Pro fessor Cooke in his "History cf Vir ginia," gives an alleged interview be tween Smith and Pocahontas, then Mrs. John Rolfe, in London, which wonld indicate that she had the strongest possible motive for rescuing the adventurous gallant from the club of her father, had his head ever been in any danger. Unfortunately for the credibility of the dubbing story, it rests upon the unsupported testimony of Captain Smith, who was a notorious braggart and liar, or, as historian Fuller more euphemistically puts it, in the earliest known biography of Smith, "It sonndeth much to the diminution of his deeds that he alone is tho herald to publish and proclaim them." It was on the sth of January, 1(108, that Smith left Jamestown for Wero wdwocomoca, the Indian village, to visit King Powhatan in his wigwam. Three days later he returned, escorted by four Indians. Of what occurred in the meantime there was no other white witness than Smith himself, and he tells two stories about it. In his "True Relation," written soon after his visit to Powhatan and published in London in June, 1008, there is no mention whatever of the romantic Po cahontas incident. On the contrary, he says "The Powhatan treated ma most courteously, and sent me back to Jamestown." Sixteen years later, while in London, where Pocahontas was being feted as the daughter of a king, -Smith published his "Gencrall His toric," in which he for the first time recalls to his own mind the alleged faot that Powhatan's "courtesy' had been administered with a club, and that the tawny lady "hazarded the beating out of her own brains to ?nvo mine." It is n significant fact that Ban croft, most accurate and conscien tious of historians, while he mentions the rescue incident, with a qualifying annotation in the first edition of his history, entirely omits it in the last. Deane, in a note to his edition of Smith's works, attributes the legend to Smith's "natural propensity for embellishment," as well as to a desire to feed the interest felt in Pocahontas, then visiting in England. Mr. E. D. Neill, in his "English Colonization in \merica," rejects the clubbing inci dent entirely,; follows Strachey's statement of a marriage of P.ocahon tas earlier than her union with Holfe, and seriously questions other charac ters than that r.i the notorious gallant, Captain Smith. Charles Dudley Warner, in his "Study of the Life and Writings of John Smith," treats the rescue humorously and with obvious skepticism. Henry Adams rejects it entirely, as does Henry Cabot Lodge in his "English Colonies in America." Yet, as a beautiful idealization, the portrait presented by Senator Daniel in the name of Mr. Henry S. Well come, an American citizen residing in London, was properly accepted by the Government, and it will worthily adorn the new Library of Congress. That noble structure is full of alle gorical representations, and among them the De Passe portrait of the lovely Pocahontas will ever remind the boholder of the romantic story whioh he would like to believe a "True Pielation." Footle Flight. "So you are going to be a poet, young man?" queried the ex-editor, in whose voice there was a note of cynic ism. "Welt, there's always room in the upper story." "That's were I've lauded in just six mouths' time; attic of a skyscraper with a prospect of having to t,a',;o to the roof when the weather wjH .per mit."—Detroit Free Pfess., , tt y is <r 55 is <rcnnrsmnri '''' ' i ' 0 jj j i o HOW TO WASH FLANNELS. I ° Dissolve fine shavings of Ivory Soap in boiling water, ® ° and when coo! 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. ® ° Cut out these directions and tell the laundress to follow ° g them with Ivory Soap. It keeps the flannels very soft. ° v ° >0 CopyritMlSOO. by The Procter * Gamble Co.. Ctncinaad. 0 kJUULa-g-SAS! Speckled or brook trout may be caught in Pennsylvania from April 13 | to July 15, but none must be kept less | than live inches lon Beauty la Dlood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarcts, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- Eurities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascorets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, otic. 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. Ah Druggists refund money if it fuils to cure. 230 Paderewski's home is a veritable museum of musical relics. Belongings 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 men strong, blood pure. 60c, 81. All druggists. A New 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 volunteer regiments enlisted for the war with Spain. While the army was being concentrated in Florida the sol- I dier, by reason of alleged negligence 1 of the Fort Scott and Memphis Bail- ' 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 er'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. HEiL THYSELF or Know Thyself (Vianuol. A 91-pape pamphlet by a Humanitarian and emi nent medical author. #3IfSMJUV l V e . W* Mneum of Medical Science for MEN ONLY, whether married unmarried or about to marry: youtig, middle-aged or old. p'rlco W cents by mail, sealed ; Bent free for 60 days. Ad dress The Veabody Medical Institute. No. t fiulflneh St., lioston, Mass. Chief Consulting Physician graduate of Harvard Medical Colic*,? olass lX Late Surgeon sth Muss. Reg. Vols., the most eini. ALWAYS (TItES Where Others Fall. Consultation In person or by letter, from 9 too. Sundays 10 to 1. J Medical Institute has at tained has subjected It to a test which only n merit orious Institution could undergo,—Roston Journal I t -* | "BIG FOUR" "THESEA LEVEL ROUTE" TO NEW YORK. DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE. WAGNER SLEEPING CARS. DINING CARS. M. E. INGALLS, E. 0. McCORMICK. President, Pass. Traffic Mgr. j WARREN J. LYNCH, Asst. Gen'l Pass. & Ticket Agt MALE HELP sumo prize, to introduce our Endless Chain. Send 2V for sample, Member's certificate and particulars. r. C. KUTTKK. Trean., Alma, Colorado, ARFMTQ Send fifteen cents for sample MULPIsO of large MOTir I'lMOl' livti. Great spring seller. Bi-r profits. I'IIOKPONT, SIMTEU & CO., Station A. Pittsburg, Pa. TXT"ANTED—Case of bad health that H-I-P-A-N-F ▼ will not benefit. Send ft eta.to Hipana Chemical Co.. New York, for lOsainplei* U ud luoo testimonials "IXKXAMDXJI BSMT.I>I GO.. MIORA&AWICK SL.ILY! ! 3 "After I wl Induced to try CASCA w it F.TS, I will never be without thorn in the house. My liver was in a very bad shape and iny head ' ached and 1 had stomach trouble. Now. since tak • Injj Cascarets. I feel line. .My wife has ah,o used > them wit h benellciu I results lor sour stomach." , Jos- KuxuLixa. littl Congress St.. bt. Louis, Mo. ! j&r CANDY I CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do 9ood, Never .Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 23c. 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... trrlln* Ittmrtly Company, Cldr.Ro. Montreal, New Yo-Y. Sit HG-70-BAC S Spalding qjgg,. OFFICIAL t Le a gut Ntlonl Li' JUB to be us-d in ull g.imea. ACCEPT NO SiriISTITUTKS. If a dealer does not carry Spalding's athletic j goods m stork, send your name and address to I us (and his, too) for a copy ol our handsomely I illustrated catalogue. A. C. SPALDING & BROS.. " Yorli. D. nvi-r, l Columbia Hartford and Vedette Bicycles. NEW MODELS FOR 1899. Columbia Bevei-Gear Chainless, $75 Columbia Chain Wheels, . . 50 I Vedettes $25, 26 1 I Vfili any <'g>liiiiil>ju <lc:il<T I I for Catalogue, Booklet., I I Colliers, etc., or write to E 1 u*> cneltMlng 2-eent ulaiii)). I I POPE MFG. CO, I I HARTFORD, CONN. I h———b GOLDEN CROWN UUP CHIMNEYS ! Are the beat. Ask for them. Cost no more I tliun common chimney*. All dealers. , PITTSm KG (II, ASM 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, Mask fIENSION^KR^ J" SucccpsfuU^Pro^eouteiClaims. 3yrai'.i civil war, 15adjudicating claims, att.y siuca DROPSY oases. Book of temunoninisand IO tlnira' treatment Free. Dr. H H OXIESH'S 60NB. Bo* D. Atlanta. Ga. P. N. U. 18 '99
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers