44 A Good Name At Home h Tower of Strength Abroad." h Lowell, SMass., where Hood's Sarsapa rilla is made, it still has a larger sale than all other blood purifiers. Its fame and cures and sates have spread abroad, and it is universally recognized as the best blood medicine money can buy. "Remember Fits rorninncTitly cured. or nervous r.CFß after first clay's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerv® Restorer. $2 trial bottlo and treatise liee. Dr.R.H.Ki.INE. Ltd. 931 Arch St.Phila.Pa Mrs.Wlnslow's Soothing Pyrup forrhildi'en teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc a bottle. Boston banks paid out $20,000,000 in dividends on July 1. New York banks are said to have paid ten times that. Krtnrats Your Bowel* With Cnnoareti. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, we, 26c. If C. C. C. fail* druggists refund money. FRANCE'S TARDY REPARATION. Countries Dike People Cannot Do Wrong with Impnnily. France has tried to comfort herself ■with the reflection that the life of ODQ Jew ;!s unimportant, and that her inter ests may best be served by an act of possible lawlessness, says the Specta tor. But her hopes are doomed to dis appointment and all her casuistry Is of no avail. Piece by piece the truth has been uncovered, and though Franco has opposed discovery with added deceit she lias today no chance of going backward. She will be forced to perform with an ill grace a common act of reparation, which some years ago might most gracefully have been performed. But she cannot for half a century undo the evil which her un righteousness has caused. Discredited throughout Europe, sire stands sullied among the nations, finding no confi dence in her institutions, and inspiring nothing else than distrust. And the moral of it all is that nations, no more than individuals, may stamp upon the elementary rules of right and wrong. The morality which governs peoples Is not precisely the same as governs men in the conduct of their lives; a coun try has not the same high obligation of truth and outspokenness as is laid upon separate citizens. But countries, too, have their truth, and while they may simulate before rivals, they must exact within their borders a love of justice. No defection may pass with impunity; when once the sense of duty Is obscured disaster is certain; for there always remains one taper of light to illumine the dim places. Had M. Zola never pierced the darkness then France might have had the satis faction of keeping forever under lock and key a man who she knew had been Illegally condemned; she might still have declared with Infinite scorn that her action was an affaire de cuisine and that a Jew had no right to a gen erous" protection. And though she would have suffered in herself, when the moment of battle came she might for a while have escaped the notice of Europe. But M. Zola was not to be extinguished; he revealed to the whole world his country's injustice and made an ultimate reparation necessary. The national confidence In the army will for awhile be shaken, but justice will presently be re-established, and with it a proper sense of patriotism. Ten Wis© Maxima. 1. Never put off till tomorrow what you can do today. 2. Never trouble another for what you can do yourself, 3. Never spend your money before you have It. 4. Never buy what you don't want because it is cheap. 5. Pride costs more than hunger, thirst, or cold. 6. We seldom repent of having eaten too little. 7. Nothing is troublesome that we do willingly. 8. How much pain the evils have cost us that have never happened. 9. lake things always by the smooth handle. 10. When angry, count ten before you speak; if very angry, a hundred. [LITTEIt TO US. PINKITAM HO. 78,465] "I was a sufferer from female weak ness. Every month regularly as the menses came, I suffered dreadful pains in uterus, ovaries OrOf/IDC ftr woro affected and rtsmuuzs Isr had leuoorrhoEa . SUFFERING I had my children GIVE PLACE very fast and it T/l OMTDinn Q left me very weak. Ac it .v A J ear R *° 1 waa Ur %3%3 Y taken with flood ing and almost died. The doctor even gave me up and wonders how I ever lived. " I wrote for Mrs. Pinkham's advice at Lynn, Mass., and took her medicine and began to get well. I took several bottles of the Compound and used the Sanative Wash, and can truly say that lam cured. You would hardly know me, I am feeling and looking so well. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound made me what I am."— MRS. J. F. STRETCH, 461 MECHANIC ST., CAMDEN, N. J. How Mn Brown Was Helped. "I must tell you that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has done more for me than any doctor. " I was troubled with irregular menstruation. Last summer I began the use of your Vegetable Compound, and after taking two bottles, I have been regular every month staee. I recommend your medietas to all. H— MRS. MAGGIE A. BROWN, WEST P*. PLEASANT, N. J. DISHONEST DOLLARS. GOLD ALWAYS ROBS THE AMERICAN PRODUCT. What the Change from Bimetallism to Monometallism Has Done to Aid Foreigners Has Never Been Success fully Kefuted—Weights and Mcusures. Absurd is the contention that the gold dollar is an honest one because the gold which it contains is just as valuable before coinage as afterward. This is, in fact, another phase of the same thought. The equality referred to is produced by law. If a man have a lump of gold of proper fineness, the law provides that he may take it to the mint and have it coined into money without expense and without delay. Hence they are practically the same thing. Exactly the same result would follow in the case of any other sub stafice similarly treated. Suppose the government stood ready to grind into flour, with no charge or loss of time, ail the wheat that might be offered for the purpose. Manifestly a bushel of wheat would be worth just as much as the flour that it would take the flour, bake it into bread and hand back the bread to the owner of the flour with no charge whatever, then this result would follow: The bushel of wheat would be worth all the flour it would make; the flour would be worth all the bread it would make, and consequently the wheat, the flour and the bread would all be of equal value. But it would be the law, and nothing else, that would make them so. The price of gold stated in dollars and cents is merely the price fixed by law, or the mint rate. Properly speaking, it is not a "price" at all. It signifies nothing more than that a certain weight of the metal will be manufactured into a cer tain amount of coin. That is to say, j the government will take 232.2 grains ! of gold, mix 25.8 of alloy with it, fash | ion it into a piece of certain shape, ; stamp emblems or designs upon it, and I call it an "eagle," or ten dollars. Orig inally the eagle contained 247V4 grains of pure gold. Now It contains 232.2 grains. When the former weight pre vailed a dollar's worth of gold was 24% grains. Now it is 23.22 grains. What has happened to the gold? Noth ing. The law has been changed. That is all. "Closed Down." In the town of Fairmount, near Cin | cinnati, the people are now experienc j ing a taste of the good things which | the great system of trusts has in store J for the people everywhere. At Fair | mount there has been in steady opera j tion for 20 years a barbed wire fence factory employing some 500 men. This i factory having now fallen under the j control of one of the steel trusts that j concern now closes down. The trust | acquired the factory for that very pur ! pose. The shut-down was not occa | sioned by an over-supply of barbed wire fencing; it was ordered with the ! intention of creating an under-supply. Of course the 500 employes have been ; thrown out of work, and some of them who voted, either wil lingly or under coercion, for the ; "advance agent of prosperity" two years and a half ago, are doubt j less wondering whether closing the mints really has any virtues in the i direction of opening the mills. The ' disemployment of these 500 men at Fairmount is chiefly notable because it happens to be concentrated in its ef ; fects. There is nothing else peculiar i about it. In a more scattered way that same thing is going on all over the country. Under the trust regime not I only mechanics, but salesmen, clerk 3 : bookkeepers and small business men are being crowded into the growing ; army of the disemployed. Yet we ure told that times are prosperous. For whom?—the public, Chicago? Tli© Gold Standard Farmer. We clip the following letter, which was recently addressed to the editor of the Democrat and Journal of St. Louis: I cannot but pity many of our fellow-men who find it difficult to obtain even the bare necessities of life, crying for their oppressors. Why, how much—or, rather, how little—sense it takes to realize that something is wrong when we find millionaires able to pile up other millions from year to year, while upon the other hand the man with a few thousands invested in real estate can, by constant effort, only make a living. Yet too many of them are like the farmer (he is a Mcllanna ite), who said to me: "Times are all right, money is plenty, but somehow I cannot pay my debts." Poor fellow, he was much like another farmer, who said, "I cannot read and don't know much about politics, but Mr. S says the gold standard Is best, and he ought to know." Mr. S was a banker, and held mortgages against the farmer for probably all that he was worth. It is passing strange that these same men, when they go to a merchant in their own town, will not believe him, but think he is laying for them, and Is making large profits upon every thing he sells, when in reality it takes careful financiering to keep afloat. Now, what kind of an animal is the gold standard farmer? His genealogy Is beyond my ken, and I have frequent ly tried to discover the source of his perversity. Hate seemingly has per meated his very soul; he so detests anything not having the brand "Re publican" upon it that he refuses to even view it. Like one whom I once law knock a paper out of the hands of a person and kick it after it was upon the ground. Such people will always vote the ticket according to its label; they need masters, and for my part I would have no objections, ir I and mine were not included in the serfdom and have to suffer as well. There is hope dawning. I now find some, whom we regarded as hopeless, are inquiring after the truth, and may the people unite and in 1900 sweep over this fair land with such force as to presage the utter destruction of the golden calf worshipers. Let Ameri cans rule in America. No treacherous Briton need give us advice. DR. K . Beardstown, 111. Murk Hunua on Spies. From the Chicago Chronicle: "We commend the president for the judi cious modifications of the civil service rules recently promulgated," says Mark Hanna in his Ohio platform. In an interview for publication Mr. Joanna stands by the platform and the order. He attempts to justify the latter by saying that when President Cleveland was about to go out he issued an order which had the effect to give permanent jobs to a lot of Democrats in positions where they could act as "spies" upon the Republican administration. He says that the present Republican ad ministration is responsible to the peo ple for its conduct of public affairs, and it cannot justly be held responsi ble if it is surrounded by "Democratic spies." Therefore the president is to be commended for his "judicious" or der. Of course Mr. Hanna does not expect any intelligent man to accept this statement as a sufficient justifi cation for turning over 10,000 places in cue public service to spoilsmen. An administration has no business to have secrets in any branches of the service affected by this order. If there is any use for the services of spies then it is because something is wrong which ought to be exposed. If anything is wrong the presence of men in the ser vice who will expose it is for the pub lic good. Mr. Hanna's talk about spies implies that things are done which ought not to be done. It implies that there are things which the party bosses wish to keep secret when there should be no secrets and everything should be open to the public. It implies a purpose on the part of the Republican bosses So convert the public service into a party machine—to pervert and degrade it to the accomplishment of merely party ends. Spying which will tend to prevent such degradations of the public service is a very desirable thing. But Mr. Hanna and his fel low-bosses are not worried about spies. Wo hear nothing about spies in the British civil service, where the merit system is more extended and more rig orously applied than it ever has been here. The simple truth is that the spoilsmen want the spoils, and their talk about spies is the best excuse they can think of for seizing what they want. NUHA and Face Kctallat ion. From the New York World: The executive department at Washington seriously proposes to fine the American people $15,000,000 a year for an offense committed by the Brazilian govern ment. This is the way of it. We con sume 600,000,000 pounds of coffee a year. More than ten-elevenths of it— or practically all —comes from Brazil. But Brazil imposes import duties—not nearly so heavy, it is true, as our own average—upon many articles which we sell to that country. Our government complains of this and .'as asked Bra zil to quit it, in order ti,nt our people may sell more of their products to Brazilians. Brazil needs revenue and hesitates to yield to this demand. Our government therefore threatens—under a provision of law which permits the president to legislate in such cases-- to levy a retaliatory duty of three cents a pound on all the Brazilian coffee we use. That is to say, it proposes to make everybody in the United States pay 3 cents a pound more than now for every pound of coffee used. With our enormous Dingley tariff duties in force, why should we complain that Brazil imposes much lower import dues for the sake of revenue? And why shc-.'J the American people be required to suf fer for Brazil's offense? Trusts in England and Germany. From the Louisville Courier-Jour nal: In reply to a declaration of Mr. Havemeyer that the protective tariff is the mother of all trusts, it i 3 alleged that trusts are equally bad in other countries. Even in free-trade England it is avowed trusts are very numerous. There are combinations in England, to be sure, but there are no tariff laws to protect them. Wherever foreign com petition can destroy them they do not exist. Even where they exist the ex tent of their power is limited by com petition from other countries, so far as that is practicable, and the statis tics of English trade show that it is so in a large degree. When we come to Germany, however, we find a country like our own, with a high protective tariff. It is here that the trusts flour ish. Of all European countries, says an authority upon the subject, it is in Germany that the trusts have spread most extensively and been most suc cessful. There is no reason why they should not be, for there the legislation is calculated to protect them from as sault and to cause them to multiply. Truth Working Eastward. Cleveland Leader: Governor Roose velt told the people out west the other day that ultimately the destinies of the country would be decided by the dwell ers between the Alleghenles and the Pacific. It is pleasant to note that one eastern man is willing to admit that there is something to this country be yond the shores of Manhattan Island. HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. Turning Blankota. Careful housekeepers cut all pairs of blankets apart after they are washed the first time, and turn the top to the bottom. Finish the blanket after the first washing at the top and bottom in worsted with blanket stitch, which is a species of the familiar buttonhole stitch. If this is not done tho blan kets become worn and thin at the top and thickened at the bottom where they are folded over. Filtering Drinking Water. Unless one is careful to clean the filter every few clays it is much better to dispense with it and make use of a flannel bag, which may be fastened on the faucet. This will merely act as a strainer, but it has this advautage; By changing it for a fresh one each day one is assured that the water does not pass through decaying matter, as is the case when the filter is not sys tematically cleaned. It must be re membered that neither straining nor fil tering will remove any substance that is dissolved in the water; therefore when water is contaminated by drain age, or from other causes, it should be boiled before being used either for drinking purposes or in the prepara tion of food.—Ladies' Heme Journal. Cleaning Pictures. Oil paintings exposed directly to tho air accumulate dust, dirt, 3Oot and sulphuric acid on them, and in time they lose much of their beauty. The question of cleaning them without in juring the paint has been a puzzling one to artists and ownerß of valuablo paintings. If brushing them with a dry silk handkerchief will not clean them, washing the surface gently with pure distilled water is recom mended by professional picture cleauerH. Then they should be "flicked off" softly with a silk hand kerchief. In obstinate cases it is necessary to restore parts of the pic tures with size colors cr parchment size. But this work should not he undertaken by one unfamiliar with painting. The frames should be cleaned with distilled water, and then rubbed dry with a silk olotb. It is well iu the summer months to keep oil paiutings and all pictures not pro tected by glass covered from the dust and flies. —The New Voice. Preparing h Picnic f.unclicon. The time has arrived to hasten away to the woods with baskets and rods, shawls atffl suushades. The day will be the more enjoyable if the lunch is properly put up and prepared. First provide yourself with oiled paper, some jelly tumblers with airtight tops, wooden plates, Japanese napkins and a few empty tin boxes. Then go to work, forbidding any ono to bother or jump around with teasing remarks. The coffee can he boiled, strained and put into an airtight jar. It will be easy to heat it, and it will taste well enough to a hungry party. Lemonade can bo made when needed from a syrup of juice and sugar, a tablespoouful ton tumblerful of water, for, of course, you must settle near a spring. The ice can be wrapped in a bit of Hanhel and carried in a tin box. Butter and cream will keep, if iu tumblers, next to the ice. Mayon naise dressing can also he taken in au airtight tumbler. The lobster,chicken, crab or salmon can he cut up, all ready to mix, when needed. The let tuce, as soou as one arrives at tho spot where the lunch is to be, should he put iuto a pan of water and set in the shade. The bread for the sand wiches ought to be cut very thin and tho filling chopped fine, to be mixed with seasoning or dressing. Sandwiches keep better if not spread until just before use, although if haste is ueedful they can he filled at home aud carefully packed in oiled paper, one at a time. If something hot is called for afryingpin aud some eggs can he taken along. With a jar of tomatoes, stewed and strained and seasoned with a bit of bacon, an onion and some mushrooms, a Spanish omelette can be made a few minutes. Or spaghetti can he cooked with but little trouble. Wash the pieces in running water, drain and parboil,then add to a broth made of beef extract or capsules, and when all is absorbed and tho strips are tender, sprinkle over grated Parmesan cheese aud servo with salt and pepper at once. Fruit can he taken along or bought on the way. Anything hut the regu lation slabsided sandwiches, hard boiled eggs and messy preserves will be appreciated. Just because people are hungry is no reason why they must he stuffed with hackneyed and indigest ible things.—New York Herald. Keclpc*. Gooseberry Fool—Put a quart of green gooseberries into a deep baking dish, aud when quite soft rub them through a colander and add sugar to taste. When cold add one-half cup ful of cream and serve. Strawberry Meringue Beat five eggs with one cupfnl of sugar, add ing one-quarter pound of slightly warmed butter and one cupful of milk. Mix one teaspoonfnl of baking powder with three cupfuls of flour, then sift into the first mixture, and stir until smooth. Turn into a shal low baking-pan aud hake. Cover with a layer of ripe strawberries aud then a layer of meringue, and hake for a moment more. Soalloped Tomatoes—Season one quart of tomatoes with salt oud pepper to.taste, one-half cup of sugar and a few drops of oniou juice. Butter a deep baking dish and sprinkle over it a layer of bread crumbs aud put iu a layer of tomatoes. Dot with bits of butter; then bread crumbs, tomatoes, and so on until the dish is full, having the bread crumbs on top. Moisten with sweet cream and hake in a moderate oven. Brown just before lending to the table. Are There Four Tauten. Experiments recently performed glv reason for believing that most so called sensations of taste are little more than combination of reports to the brain made by the nerves of sight, smell and touch, says Science Stftlngs. Of a large number of persons tested, few could distinguish, when their eyes were covered and their noses closed, between weak solutions of tea, coffee and quinine, and even those who were most successful made frequent and ludicrous mistakes. Still great difficul ty was found in discrimination by means of the unaided tongue between meats as unlike as pork and turkey especially when the meat was first finely divided. The experiments indi cated that there are at most only four real taste sensations, namely, sour, sweet, bitter and salt, and it is doubt ful if there are more than two—sweet and bitter. This may suggest to folks of frugal mind that a lot of money might be saved by going to table blind fold and with nose put temporarily out of commission. One could then call viands and liquids whatever one chose, and tradesmen's bills could be mate rially reduced by the employment of a Judicious imagination. In the course of the said tests a woman of great re pute as a cook said raw potatoes chopped were acorns, roast pork she called boiled beef, raw turnip chopped she called cabbage sweetened, raw ap ple was grape juice, roast turkey was called beef, and horse radish she said was something she had never tasted. Tho Sweet Girl Graduate. "My graduation essay will be Just dreadful," said the sweet girl. "Why do you think so, Ethel?" "Well, Aunt Jane wanted to help me, so I am let ting her write while ma and I worry about my gown."—Detroit Free Press. I>o Your Feot Ache and Burn ? Shakeiuto your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powaer for the foot It makes Tight or Now Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous. Aehlug and Sweating Feot. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers und Shoe Stores. 250 Sample sent FItEE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leltoy, N. V. ' There are over 70 miles of tunnels cut in the solid lock of Gibraltar. After physicians had given me up, I was saved by Piso's Cure.-KALPH EHIKU, Wil liamsport, Pa., Nov. -2,1593. The number of penniless men in the Klondike is placed at 3,000. Dcantr la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Casearets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Casearets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. A Chicago street beggar who died a few days ago left a fortune of SIO,OOO. To Core Constipation Forever. Take Casearets Candy Cathartic. 100 or 23c. U C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money Englishmen may now spend a fort night in Paris or Switzerland for $35 or enjoy a Norwegian tour for SSO. CVCf [ See a Snow I siom in I We never did; but we have seen the clothing at this time f . of the year so covered with ik j dandruff that it looked as if it ■ { had been out in a regular snow- > . storm. i No need of this snowstorm. I As the summer sun would 1 i melt the failing snow so will j I Aycrs j Vigor i * melt these flakes of dandruff in 5 the scalp, it goes further than 1 this: itpreventstheirformation. i It has still other properties: ' | it will restore color to gray hair | in just ten times out of every > ' ten cases. ' | And it does even more: it | " feeds and nourishes the roots . < of the hair. Thin hair becomes t i thick hair; and short hair be- , ' comes long hair. £ ' We have a book on the Hair ' | and Scalp. It is yours, for the i J asking. . * If you do not obtain all the benefits ' A you expected from tho u*e of the Vl^or, I write the doctor about It. Probably I ' there Is some difficulty with your gen- . 4 oral system which may l>o easily re- I moved. AddreM. ' $ DR. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass. i Doesn't your boy write well ? Perhaps (t he hasn't good ink. [T CARTER'S INK I IS THE BEST INK. IF- More used than any other. Don't cost It yon any more than poor ink. Ask for it. [T DRO PBYffiOTsK r S case*. Book pf testimonials and 111 dn vm' treatment Free. Or. H. 8 QBEEM S EONS BOX D. Atlanta, da "You see, madam, Ivory Soap is really the most economical. The cake is so large that it easily divides into two cakes of the ordinary size. There is twice as much soap as you get in the usual cake of toilet soap. Then it is very economical in use, for although it lathers quickly, it is always firm and hard, even in hot water. As it floats, you can not lose it or leave it to waste in the bowl. We sell it to all of our best trade for general use." PRIMITIVE CHRONOLOGY. Tn Mexico Mnntlin Are Named After the Arrival of Blrda. The most primitive method in chro nology is that which enables man to orient himself in the world of time by associating particular lurations with 1 vicissitudes of weather, with seasonal aspects of vegetation, and with the j constantly changing sights and sounds j of the animal world, cays Popular Sci- i ence Monthly. In the calendar of the j Crees, for example, we find such desig nations as "duck-month." "frog moon," "leaf-moon," "berries-ripe month," "buffalo-rutting moon," "leaves entirely changed," "leaves in the trees," "fish-catching moon," "moon that strikes the earth cold," "coldest moon," "ice-thawing moon," "eagles-seen moon." So in the calen dars of Central America and Mexico j the months are named variously after i the arrival of birds, the blossoming of j flowers, the blowing of winds, the re- | turn of mosquitoes and the appearance of fishes. The Greeks constantly used the movements of birds to mark the | seasons; the arrival of the swallow and i kite were thus noted. Hesicd tells us how the cry of the crane signaled the \ departure of winter, while the sitting of the pleiades gave notice to the plow man when to begin his work. The In cas called Venus "the hairy," on ac count of the brightness of her rays, Just as the Peruvians named her the "eight-hour torch," or "the twilight lamD." from the time of her shining. Hound to Bo Married. Gallant Man (aside): "At last I have her all to myself. Now I can tell hei how much I love her and ask her to bf mine. How shall I do it, I wonder*. Gentle Maid: "It is surely coming. I am so nervous and frightened! l know he is going to be terrible dramatic. 1 do hope I sha'n't have to help him up off his knees. Goodness! why doesn'i he say something? I must break this ! horrible silence." (Aloud, recklessly: ; "Have you ever been abroad?" Gal lant Man (smilingly): "No, I'm sav ing It for a wedding trip." 'Gentle ! Maid (demurely): "Why, how funny! I So am I." Gallant Man (innocently): "Then why shouldn't we take it to gether?" Gentle Maid (innocently): "Possibly your wife and my husband ! might object to going in such a crowd." j Gallant Man (brilliantly): "The crowd would be objectionably large if your husband and my wife were husband and wife." (Further conversation dis jointed and indistinct.) Regarding Red Headed People. Red-headed people, as is well known, are less subject to baldness than oth ers. A London doctor explains the matter thus: The hair of the red headed is relatively thick, one red hair being almost as thick as five fair or 1 three brown hairs. With 30,000 red- | hairs the scalp is well thatched, when- | as with the same number of fair hans : one is comparatively bald. It takds j 160.000 fair and 105,000 brown hairs to i cover adequately an ordinary head. Oon't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yoar I.lfo Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be inag ietic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Uac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or sl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. A good ironer in a London laundry earns from $2 to $2 50 daily. So-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. GuaiAwiteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 81. All druggists. A process has been invented and pat ented in Brazil for preparing coffee in tkolofds by a system of compression. W. W. Griffin, Jackson, Michigan, writes: < "Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen years. Hairs Catarrh Cure cured rntv' Sold by 'Drug gists. 75c. "A Handfu of Dirt May Be a Houseful of Shame." Keep Your House Clean With SAPOLIO ••After I wim Induced to try CASCA* ItRTS, 1 will never bo without them in the bouse. My liver .is in i very bad shape and my head I ached unci 1 hud stomach trouble. Now. since tak r.g Ca.sear eta. 1 feel line. My wife lias also used j 'hem with beneficial results for sour stomach." , Jos Kkkklinq. lU2I Congress St.. St. '-ouii. Mo. Ira CANDY mf CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REOISTERED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do iooil. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. SOo. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... "torllne Iterant; t'i>m|);in, t blespo. Montreal, Nen York. 311 ft P Sold and gun rant cod by alldrue. fllP I U w kjiU gists to CI!ICE Tobacco Ilablt. . [LETTER TO MRS. PINKDAM NO 48,970] "I had female com plaints so bad that it caused me to have hysterical fits; have had as many as nine in one day. "Five bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound cured me and it has been a year since 1 had an attack. rtrs. Edna Jackson, Pearl, I~s. II Mrs. Plskham's Compound will cur. such jcvere cases as this surely it must be a great medicine—is there any sufferer foolish enough not to give it a trial ? The University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAIVIE. INDIANA. i In-sic*, Letter*. Economic* and History, .luurnuliMtii, Art, Sflnicc, Pharmacy, l.aw, Civil, At Hiaciilcnl and Mlci'tricitl Engineer ing. am liiii elnre. 'thorough Preparatory and Cenimercinl Coarsen. Errlesiastieul student* t sjiei ia rates. Ito< in - Free. .In .i. r< r s.-nii r s ear.Colleg ate Course Kooui* to Kent, inudernte <'•: ii ge. SI. Ivbvnnl'* Hull for beys under i:t. The ."jtit i Year will open September ,~>tli, lS'.llt. t ut.ilogues Free. Address REV. A. UoICKISSEY, C. S.C.. President. ""GOLDEN CROWN LUMP CHIMNEYS Are the bent. Ask for them. Cost. no more than common chlmnevs. All dealers. I"ITTsISt lUi CLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. I|ENSION^XMrR% * Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Prinolnftl Examiner U.S. Penelon Bureau. 3yra in civil war. 15 adjudicating claims, uttv since \\ ' ANTED ; aseof bad healih that IM-P-A-N-8 " will not lienelit. Send 6eta.to Hij .ana < hemira] Co., New York, for loaaiuplea and luuo tetKiinonjals "ALIIAMDM IUMNV Co., Wttrewn wi'CH St., N|£ P. N. u. 30 'oa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers