"He That Stays Does the Business." Alt the t world admires "staying power/' On this quality success depends. The blood is the best friend the heart has. Hood's SarsapartUa is the best friend the blood ever had: cleanses it of everything, gives perfect health and strength. According to bulletin No. 95. just Is sued by the Department of Agriculture, New Jersey is building more roads and better roads for the money than any other State in the Union. Bdacate Yonr Bowels With Cnietrata. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 100,25 c. If C. C. C, fall, druggists refund money. Buckingham Palace has a scent foun tain, which on state occasions is fed with eau de cologne. Fits rermanently cured. No At-* or nervonw reps nfter firpt day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H. KLINE. Ltd. 031 Arch St.Phila.Pa Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Pymn for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion. allays pain, cures wiud colic.2sc u bottle. The forest area of all the British possessions in America is estimated at about 800,000,000 acres. To Cure Constipation Forever, Take Cuscarets Caudv Cathartic. 100 or 25a VC.C.C. fail to oure, druggists refund money. Giant and Still Growing. Paris correspondence London Tele graph: Among the hospital patients of Dr. Lucan Championniers is a man seven feet four inches in height. He Is 27 years old, and is still growing. He takes after his father, who was seven feet eight, whereas hie mother was ol short stature. At the age of 18 he was a youth below middle height, but after an illness he grew four inches in a few days. A second illness produced another rapid Increase In his height After that he had Beveral successive attacks of a debilitating complaint. On recovery he invariably found he had grown several inches, till, when at 81, he went to serve In the army he had reached seven feet He was the youngest of twelve children, and, for tunately for them, he is the tallest ol them all by a foot or so. Comforting Assurance. Mother —I'd Just like to know who this young man Is you nave engaged yourself to. Daughter—Oh, he comes of a splendid family. "Does his fam ily object to the match?" "Y-e-s." "Then I guess he's all right."— New "ftirk Weekly. What a Little Faith Did FOR MRS. ROCKWELL. [LETTER TO URS, FINKTTAM NO. 69,884] "I was a great sufferer from female weakness and had no strength. It was impossible for me to attend to my household duties. I had tried every thing and many doctors, but found no relief. "My sister advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which 1 did; before using all of one bottle I felt better. 1 kept on with it and to my great surprise 1 am cured. All who suffer from female complaints should give it a trial." —Mits. ROCK WELL, 1209 S. DIVISION ST., GRAND RAEIDS, MICH. From a Grateful Newark Woman. " When I wrote to you I was very sick, had not been well for two years. The doctors did not seem to help me, and one said 1 could not live three months. I had womb trouble, falling, ulcers, kidney and bladder trouble. There seemed to be such A drawing and burning pain in my bowels that I could not rest anywhere. After using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and Sanative Wash and follow ing your advice, I feel well again and strongerthan ever. My bowels feci as if they had been made over new. With many thanks for your help, I remain, L. G., 74 ANN ST., NEWARK, N. J." BAD BREATH •* I have been ualn* CASCARFTI and aa Jtnlll and offootlvo laxative tiiey arc simply won erful. My <laui<litr and 1 wore lot lit-rod with tick stomach and our breath was very bad. After taking a few doses of Cuscarets we have Improved Wonderfully. They arc a great help In Lbo family." Wll.ll ELM IN A NAOEL. Kiiumbouse Bt., Cincinnati, Ohio. M CATHARTIC . T*AO MANN RCOIOTINCO Pleasant. Palatable Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never blcken. Weaken, or Gripe, lbc 25c 60a ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... tfrtl.g ltsMiy fldf y. Mostrrsl. No. Tsrk. Ml MO-TO-BAC GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are tlio lrf. Ask for them. Cost no more than common chimney*. All dealers. PITTSBURG GLASS CO., Allegheny.Pa. ".SiC{Thompson's Eye Water DEWEY'S SUCCESSOR. REAR ADMIRAL JOHN CRITTEN DEN WATSON. Was Horn in Kentucky anil Is of Good Lineage Served on the Hartford During the Civil War Embraced by Farragut. Since the assignment of Rear Ad miral John Watson to succceed Admiral Dewey in the Philippines was an nounced public interest has been aroused in the man whom the navy de partment considered competent to shoulder the responsibilities so long and ably bqrne by the nation's hero. There is not an officer in the naval service who is not keenly alive to the cares and perplexities of the situation at Manila, and realizes that there may yet be chances to win undying glory and fame. "A thousand questions are likely to arise," said Rear Admiral Jouett, U. S. N., retired—known in the service as Fighting Jim Jouett—"to perplex and bedevil the man who goes out to Man ila as Dewey's relief. Well, the depart ment has bullded wiser than it knew in ordering Watson to the Philippines. Watson is an admirable compound in character of cool courage in the hour of danger and audacity. He will meet every trick and stratagem of the Fil ipinos with one a little better, and there is not a fitter man in the service for that moat difficult Manila detail than John Crittenden Watson." John Crittenden Watson comes from good fighting stock. He was born in Frankfort, Ky., in 1842. His father was Dr. Watson, and his mother was the daughter of ex-Attorney General of the United States and ex-Senator John J. Crittenden of Kentucky, a union man when it required courage to be such in Kentucky. It may be stated here as a peculiar fact that some of the most dashing and brilliant officers of our navy came from Kentucky, 1,200 miles from blue water. ADMIRAL WATSON. but so It Is. There Is Jouett, chief of them all, In his brilliant record of al most reckless daring, whom Farragut— a Tennessee man—trusted as he did his good right hand, in the fierce naval combats of 1862-3-4. Then comes Phythian Berry, William Nelson, a naval lieutenant, whom President Lin coln made a major general of volun teers, killed In 1862, and latest Lieuten ant Commander Luclen Young, whose brilllanj, dash at Santiago Is fresh ill the country's memory. Rear Admiral Watson Is a nephew of the late Major General Thomas L. Crittenden, who commanded the Twen tieth corps, who died shortly after the war. Another uncle was General George P. Crittenden, who went south in' 1861 and commanded a division In the con federate army. Watson was appointed to Annapolis In 1857, In his fifteenth year, the age limit for youth then be ing 14 to 20. In 1861, a passed mid shipman, he was on the Hartford with Farragut, and there won the friend ship of the great admiral by a feat of courage that was as necessary as It was daring. It was a fine April morning in 1862, when Farragut's fleet ran by Forts Jackson and St. Philip, on the Missis sippi river, fifty-two miles below New Orleans. The ships of Farragut's fleet were all of wood, and General Duncan, commanding the forts, with his second, Colonel Higgins, thought the Lord had delivered Farragut and his fleet into their hands, as they beheld It coming up, formed in two lines, the Hartford being easily distinguished as the flag ship by its broad blue admiral's, pen nant. The forts were admirably ar ranged for effective gunnery, having a barbette battery of sixty-foure and quick guns that swept the river for miles. Had not Farragut directed his fleet to run in shore and under the gun fire not a ship would ever have got away. The forts are situated on the two banks of the river, and about a mile and a half below each other. As the Hartford passed Fort St. Philip a shower of grape from one of the big guns tore the foremast into match wood, and seriously disabled the sail power of the ship. It was necessary to take In some sail and set others, but the blocks haa jammed and the Hartford was In dan ger of swinging about and running aground. The fire of grape aloft was so terrible that the command, "Go aloft and clear blocks and tackle on main yard," was not obeyed with that promptness that follows an order given by the commander of a man-of-war. But the hesitance was momentary. "Come on, you sons of seacooks," yelled a young voice, and up the rat lines to the disabled rigging went a midshipman, followed by the entire watch, shamed beyond words at their momentary hesitation. Running out lightly to the end of the yard and standing sixty feet from the deck with the grape clipping ropes and tearing great slivers of wood from mast and spar, young Watson as calmly gave the necessary orders as if he were at a practice drill. One after another the men were struck by the howling storm of grape and either fell lifeless on the deck below or was knocked out of the rigging into the river boiling with the stroke of shot and shell, but the Indian fighting blood of his heroic ancestry was up and John Crittenden Watson never looked around. When everything was taut and in working order, follow ing the "Jackies" down, Watson saluted the admiral and reported, "All clear, sir." Grim old Farragut simply seized the daring boy in his arms, and how the crew cheered. "Had we ever got around there the confederate guns would have destroyed us in five min utes," said Fleet Captain Percival Drayton, of the west gulf squadron, as he told the story to Captain, afterward Rear Admiral Bryson. "Young Wat son's ready appreciation of the danger and prompt action saved the Hartford in my opinion, and Farragut always thought so, too." There are many people still living in Kentucky who are bound to the incom parable Dewey's succcessor by ties of blood, and who will watch with Interest and pride his career In our new far eastern possession. Doubtless they have no fear but that their distin guished relative will be able to cope with any and every question, and lend fresh honors and luster to the names of his ancestors. How We 1)1,1 it. "I wish, John," remarked Mrs. Fev ersham, "1 wish when you get time you would take down the parlor stove and carry it to the attic. I'm tired seeing it around this warm weather." "Very well, Maria," responded Mr. Feversham, "I will do as you wish. Thereupon he proceeded to roll up his hands and spit on his sleeves prior to tackling the Job. Carefully placing some old newspaper around he removed the pipe without spilling a particle of dust on the carpet. He then called an as sistant, and the two men lifted the stove as tenderly as they might an in fant and transported it to the atic. Not a profane word escaped the lips of eith er man; neither did they hark their knuckles against the close turns in the hallway. On Mrs. Feversham's return everything was clean and shipshape, and Mr. Feversham was sitting com fortably smoking and reading the Sun day World. The explanation of this remarkable mystery lies in the fact that John was a professional tinsmith and was doing a hang-up Job for his own household. Those who expected to read that Mr. Feversham got covered with soot and the entire neighborhood with blasphemy will now take five minutes off to recover from their sur prise. Hardly the Right Word. Codwallader—Funny that a .woman can never.throw anything straight. Jenkins (whose wife has red hair) H'm, not funny exactly; rather provi dential. Isn't It? 1 J —■■ **Mi HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. I Airing the Red. The daily airing of the bed and its covering is necessary for health and is hygienic. Each article should be spread over chairs and convenient places, open windows and doors where there will be a current of air circulating through the room, for an hour or more. On a damp morning the beddiug should be hung near the fire. The mattress should be turned end to end every day, and brushed all over with a whisk broom at least once a week. Have a large covering of heavy unbleached cautou flannel, and tuck it all around the mattress after it has been well aired. Put the fleecy side outside. This will keep your sheet on better and keep the mattress clean. Then the under sheet may bo put on; well tucked all around without wrinkles, but not have it too tight, as that helps to wear out sheets. Then lay the upper sheet with the wide hem at the top, then the blankets, i each one laid straight with enough to • place underneath the bottom of the , mattress! The blankets should bo separated, as it is more convenient for washing. Spread coverlet smooth- j ly, and, if tho edges are trimmed with ribbon or lace let it hang down, j Put on the bolster over the whole on tho top. It should be covered with the same material us the cover- ! let. This will serve for day duty, be- j ing replaced at night with a medium sized pillow and a smaller one to in* I sure comfort. These pillows should be hung up in"a bag made of ticking during the day after being well aired. —New York Journal. Mildew mid Other Slalns. Mildew and iron rust are almost in delible unless they are taken out at once. One of tho most successful methods of removing mildew is as fol lows: Mix half a cup of soft soap with equal quantities of powdered starch and salt. Squeeze in the juice of a lemon. Spread this mixture on the mildew spots, 011 both sides; spread the spotted cloth on the grass and let it lie in a strong sun one day aud re main until the next morning, then turn it over aud let it bleach another day 011 this side. Take the cloth up and riuso it well. Of course, such stains can only be removed from white goods, as this stain eradicator would remove the color from any colored goods. Re move iron-rust stains with salt wet to a paste with lemon juice. It is said that the juice of a tomato aud salt are equally efficacious. Fresh ink stains may usually be washed out in clear water if 110 soap has been used 011 them, and the faiut remnant of dark color left bleached out 011 tho gras3 after moistening it with soda and boiling water. If tho stain is obstinate, soak it in sour milk, then wash and bleach it out. An excellent rule for remov ing the stains of shoeblncking, ink, mildew and other obstinate marks is as follows: Stir and strain through a cloth oue pound of washing-soda and half a pound of chloride of lime dis solved in one gallon boiling water. Put it into an old jar, not into a bottle or into anything where the light will reach it, as it takes away some of tho strength. Let it stand about an hour, stirring it once in awhile before using it. To free any goods or clothes from sweet apple or fruit stains, mildew or blacking, toak the part stuinod in this solution until it is almost gone, and then rub it with soop aud water. This mixture leaves a yellowish spot in place of the other stain, and it will come out easily with good rubbing in soap and water. The soap prevents this strong mixture eating into the cloth. This last stain-eradioator must be used with caution. Recipes. Baked Irish Stew—Fill a dish with alternate layers of sliced beef, pota toes and onions, season with pepper and salt, moisten with water or stock, I cover the top with potatoes and bake in a moderate oven uutil brown. A Plain Pudding Sauce—Beat to a croam a tablespoonful of butter aud a large cupful of sugar. Put in a small saucepan three tablespoonfuls of corn starch, add just enough cold water to stir it smooth, then pour over it boil ing water to make it the consistency required. Cook until clear; mix with tho butter and sugar and flour to taste. Baked Macaroni—Boil one-quarter of a pound of macaroni in two quarts of boiling salted water forty minutes, or until tender; pour into a colander and pour cold water over; put a layer of macaroni in a buttered dish t then 11 little very thin white sauce and grated cheese; then the remainder of maca roni sauce aud u little salt and pepper, having grated cheese 011 top; brown in hot oven. Egg Patties—Bake shells of pufl paste in deep patty pans, which can bo kept 011 hand several days. Make a tilling of almost any kind of lean meat, chopped line, and warmed in a little of its own gravy—or with butter and a little water—and season with salt, pepper and a little parsley or onion juice, or both. Fill the shells half full of the hot tilling, carefully slip an egg over the top, and bake as for scalloped potatoes. Serve atonce. These are a dainty and toothsome luncheon disb. Neapolitan Blanc Mango—Dissolve two-thirds of a package of gelatine in ouo pint of hot milk, add three-quar ters of a cupful of sugar, and divide into three equal parts, lut-j one stii the beaten whites of two eggs and flavor with vanilla. Into tl 0 second stir the beaten yolks and flavor with lemon. Into tho third stir two heap ing tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate, dissolve in a little warm water and flavored with vauilla. Add tho beaten white of an egg to each one of the three parts, wot a mold, pour in tho Chocolate, and then add the whitoaud later the yellow. When perfectly hurd turn out 011 a dish aud serve with whipped cream. Jeweled Portieres. ! For those who have ugly views from their back windows or corridors lead ing to back stairs, etc., it is quite a ieriou3 matter as to how best to hide them. Draperies are expensive when the material is good, and inexpensive material gets easily tossed. Bead blinds, which may be made with very little trouble at home, are clean and tidy, besides being pretty, ar.d have the further advantage of admitting the light while preventing people from looking into the room. Measure the width of the window or doorway you wish to hide and get a carpenter to make a narrow lath to fit it, with small grooves all the way along at equal dis tances and rather close together. The only thing you will then require Is a ball or two of macrerae cord and plenty of large glass beads In pretty colors, to mix too many colors is a mistake. Thread the string with a bead and knot ( to prevent Its slipping; do this at inter ; vals all the way down the string unul It Is the length required. It is advisa ' ble to tie each string securely on the groove in the wooden lath as you go ' along, as they are apt to tangle if loose. Try to Lave the strings as close I together as possible; the effect is quite spoiled If they are straggly or far apart. By the exercise of a little patience and I Ingenuity a pretty pattern of flowers or | birds may be introduced. Beads suita ble for this purpose may be purchased I at a very low price. A Parting Shot* "Perhaps It is best after all," re marked the rejected suitor as he lin gered in the hall. "A man of 25 would soon tire of a wife who hovered round the 32 mark." "Why, Mr. Ar dent," said the woman in the case, "how very ungallant of you to insin uate that I am 32." "Well, perhaps you are not," he replied, "but it cer tainly struck me that you were some where near the freezing point." Do Tour Foot Ache and llnrn ? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Easo, ft powuer for the feet It makes light or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching unil Sweating Feet. Bold by all Druggists, Grocers und Shoe Stores. 25c Sample sent FREE. Address Allen b. Olmsted, Leltoy, N. Y. The London Mail tells of an English doctor who refused to attend a man dying of hemorrhage because his fee was two shillings and sixpence, and the man's wife had only two shillings to offer him. When the woman re turned to her husband's side he was dead. COURTS PROTECT ENTERPRISE. Important Dec I* inn In Regard to Rcputn tioiiH Built Up by Advertising. In the United States Circuit Court in San Francisco, Cal., a decision has been given that is of great interest to manufacturers of proprietary articles and to publishers. The case in question was the suit of the California Fig Syrup Co. to obtain a perma nent injunction, which was granted, en joining a large non-secret manufacturing concern and others from usiug the name "Syrup of Figs," or "Fig i>yrup," und or dering the defendants to pay costs and damages. The decision proves that the courts will protect the valuable reputation ol an article of merit, built up by probity of word us well os by extensive advertising, so that the owner may reap the full benellt. The overwhelming evidence presented, as to the merits of the company's laxative, could not be gainsutd by the defendants, and the injunction was the result. The dogs in Barnwell county, S. C., arc returned at a valuation of $12,830, while the assessed vulue of the entire property of the county in sheep and goats is $2Ol. ( > Do you get-up with a @ J . headache? , * * Is there a bad taste in ym your mouth? X * * Then you have a poor 1 | appetite and a weak dip"s- A " f tion. You are frequently W i f dizzy, always feci dull and A j drowsy. You have cold ▼ 4 I hands and feet. You get A but little benefit from your j? ( } food. You have no ambition A . to work and the sharp pains X ▼ of neuralgia dart through w JL your body. Y What i's the cause of all to A this trouble? A W Constipated bowels. Y ▼ will give you prompt relief ▼ I A and certain cure. j A Keep Your Blood Pure. a Y If you have neglected your Y i A case a long time, you had A Y better take X four's sarsapariiia y X also. It will remove all Jr Hp impurities that have been X accumulating in your blood X ' and will greatly strengthen ft® X your nerves. .T Wrlia the Qcctcr. jv X medlooljjdUoe. „ aM A frmmt h) \ ~ .3T^-, \ ')- I*f %' _a i / i ' I xM Mr. Ehen E. Rexford, probably the best known writer on the culture and care of flowers, gives the following recipe for an insecticide that he has found to be more satisfactory than hellebore or Paris-green: Shave a quarter of a pound of Ivory Soap in water sufficient to cover it and dissolve upon the stove, then add five gallons of warm water. Spray this solution upon the plants with a florist's syringe, or if they are small dip them bodily into it. in either case be sure to reach every part. Let them stand half an hour and then rinse with clear water. Every aphis that the solution comes in contact with will be promptly killed. Tho Vicissitudes of an Emperor. The vicissitudes which Louis Na- 1 poleon experienced almost from the cradle to the grave were probably all but unexampled. He was a fugitive before he could speak articulately. In the interval between his 20th and his 40th year he was a prisoner in Stras burg, Lorlent, Ham and the Concier gerie. He was an outlaw for more than half his life. There were incidents, at Strasburg, and later at Boulogne, which brought upon him the mock and J I jeer of Europe. He carried a baton as a special constable in Park Lane on Chartists' Day. Then, by a sudden j turn of fortune, he became President |of the French Republic. The Coup d'Etat made him Emperor of the French; and thenceforth for fifteen years he was, perhaps, the most-con- j eidered man of Europe. It was said of I him that on being asked whether he | should not find it difficult to rule the I French nation he replied, "Oh, no! nothing is more easy. II leur faut une | guerre tousles quartre ans." (They just need a war every four years.) This policy held good in a modified degree. The Crimean war was for him a suc cess, although not precisely a triumph; the Italian campaign, in spite of its hard-fought victories, ended abruptly in approximation to a failure. The Mexican expedition was an utter fiasco. Yet Napoleon might have gone on WK his program of a war every four years but for the circumstances that there happened to be in Europe in the mid dle 'Sixties an infinitely stronger, more masterful and more ruse man than the dreamy and decaying Na poleon. When he and Bismarck walked along the Biarritz beach in Oc tober, 1865, Bismarck expounding his political speculations as they strolled —"ls he mad?" the Emperor whisper ed to Prosper Merimee, on whose arm he leaned. Napoleon had very soon to recognize that madness had no part in the character of Otto von Bis marck. The Prussian Premier was his superior in energy, in determination, and in finesse; and he foiled the French Emperor at every turn.—Archi bald Forbes ("Life of Napoleon III.") Dcnuty 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 Btirring 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 Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gtats, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Telegraphic communication Is to be established between the Scottish is lands Hum. Egg, Canna and Muck, and they are nil to be connected with the mainland through the Isle of Skye. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Toor Life A .ray. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of lite, nerve and vigor, take No-To* Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, COc or 61. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and samplo free. Address Sterling liemedy Co. Chicago or Now York. An English find.) clergyman refuses to pay poll tax on the ground that he I Is church property the property of the congregation as much as is the pas- ! toral residence, and that, as such, he i Is exempt from taxation, the same as the parsonage. No-To-llao for Flirty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, mahes weals men surog, blood pure. 50c, |l. All druggist* This is a great country for big fairs as those ahead of us demonstrate. They are the Greater America, at Omaha. July 1, 1599; the Pan-America at Buffalo, in 1901; the Ohio Centennial! at Toledo, in 1902, and the Louisiana Centennial, at Ft. Louis, in 1003. E. A. Rood, Toledo, Ohio, ears: "Hall's Ca tarrh ( a roc -rod my entarrh lifto >n years ago anl she has had no return ot it. It's i a sure euro.' Fold by Druggists, 16c. For Whooping Cough. Plso's Cure is a suc cessful reiiiedy. . I'. J l ll s KI:, ui TUroop Ave., j Brooklyn, >.. \N ov. 11. IdOL ] ® best is, Ave, ths Chsapsst," Avoid imitations of and Substitutes for SAPOLIO Feeding Bottles, j Most people are of opinion that feed ing bottles for babies must bo an in vention of modern times. According to Prof. J. N. Mosby, noted English an tiquary, however, this is not the easo. This gentleman, who was lecturing re cently before an antiquarian society, stated that it was the custom among the Greeks for the nurses to carry a j sponge full of honey in a small pot to stop the children from crying. The j professor went on to say that there are two Greek vases in the British Mu ' seum, dating from 700 B. C., which j closely resemble the feeding bottles [ used subsequently by the Romans. In | tho old Roman cemetery of St. Sepul chre, Canterbury, England, a feeding bottlo of bright red polished ware was I dug up in 1861, and Prof. Mosby came | to the conclusion that this bottle must I have been buried with the little Roman I child to whose wants it had ministered during lifetime. A Crookery Jajj. "When Wigsby is in his cups b has eyes like saucers." Yes. and bowl legs."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. IpF SiwJwU THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF Fito is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the CALI FORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes tiie name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing thern, and it noes not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN Fit AN CISCO, Cal. LOUISVILLE, KJ. NEW YOUR. N.Y„ Don't Stop Tobacco Suddenly It injure* nervous system do so. BACO- Cl UO is the only cure tlmt RE/LLY CORES nnil notifies you when to stop. Sold with a guarantee that, three boxes will cure anv case BACO-CURO 'if cure you. At nil druinclstnor by m.iil prepaid, .1 n box, a bnxin St..>ll Booklet free. Writs EL'UBKA CHEMICAL CO., Lu Crosse. Wis. "THE nru/rif J Jtlie world's preatet I ern by LIFEOFUCWLY 01 n IT Kiir.E. sh.AU U Ski',!. iffi. DROP cHDrtk. Book of teMimnninUand |O J n m' Fr'P. Dr. H H GREENS EONS. Bo* D. Atlanta 0. RHEUMATISM ' 'ALIXAMOXn 11KMK..V CO.'. kCj},% P. 8. L'. 27 "JJ soSdSSift 'u lt r * i ;?* a - Nn ? Co.. New York, for lonauipi'J*' aud
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers