44 A Good Name At Home Is a Tower of Strength Abroad." In Lowell, cMass., where Hood's Sarsapa rilla is made, it still has a larger sale than all other blood purifiers. Its fame and cures and sales have spread abroad, and H is universally recognized as the best blood medicine money can buy. Remember Fits rermanently cured. No fit" or nervoua ref-b affer first day's use of Dr. Kline's (Jreau Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise liee. Dr.R.II.KuNE. Ltd. 031 Arch St.Phila.Pa M rs. Wlnslow's Soothing Pymp for children teething, soitens 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. Bducate Tour Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 26c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists relund money. FRANCE'S TARDY REPARATION. Countries Like People Cannot Do Wrong with Impunity. France has tried to comfort herself ■with the reflection that the life of one Jew is 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 France has opposed discovery with added deceit she has 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 ha 3 caused. Discredited throughout Europe, she 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 en 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. Tun Wise Maxims. 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. . 'lake things always by the smooth handle. 10. When angry, count ten before you speak; if very angry, a hundred. [LETTER TO MRS. PINKIIAU NO. 78,465] "I was a sufferer from female weak ness. Every month regularly as the menses came, I suffered dreadful pains in uterus, ovaries DrDl/anC were affected and had leucorrhoea. SUFFERING 1 had my children GIVE PLACE very fast and it TO PERIODS luftmev ery xveak. vear apo 1 was OF JO W tuken with flood ing and almost died. The doctor even gave me up and wonders how I ever lived. 44 1 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 I am 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 Mrs. Drown Was IleTped* 41 1 must tell you that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has done more for me than any doctor. 44 1 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 since. I recommend your medicine to all."— MRS. MAGGIE A. BROWN, WEST PT. PLEASANT, N. J. | J CHILDREN'S COLUMN. I tu . . . . . The Valley of Mukebelleve. There's an old covered wagon, Quite rusty and gray, That stands 'neath an elm tree Just over the way; And it goes on a journey, On each pleasant day, To the beautiful valley of Makebelievo. They don't charge you fare On this wonderful trip; Each passenger goes with A smile on his lip, L'ke A bee buzzing'round For honey to sip, To the beautiful valley of Makebelievo. It's a queer, sweet land they Are bound for today; It's the home of the goblin, And land of the fay; And though you won't see them, You'll hear them, they say, All about In the valley of Makehelieve, Bright Fancy and Youth are The winged steeds that draw This magical coach to That fair land before. Now see how they're prancing, And see how they paw, And it's ho! for the valley of Makebelieve! The way is quite plain for The young and the gay, But you never will lind it— You old ones, and gray— For the path leads back through The years to the day When you played in the valley of Makebe lieve. —Douglas Zobriskie Doty. A llirtl** Nest in School. A country school xvas surprise:! ono morniug by the announcement from a Jenny Wren that she meant to neigh bor with them. One shutter cbnneed to be closed, and she hopped through a broken slat with a twig in her mouth. After turning her head from side to Bide, and ej'eiug the eutire school through the glass, she denied that that window sill was the very piaee she wanted for her nest. For her to decide was to act, and within two weeks Jenny wns sitting on a nest full of eggs. She became the pet of tho happy school. Under the teacher's good guidance, they scattered crumbs upon the windowledge, so that her daily bread came without lunch toil. Of course, the shutter was never moved; but, as the pleasant acquaintance lengthened and the warmer days came on, the window was raised, and Jenny looked upon the bright faces with full content. When the little birds were all hatched—one, two, three, four—it wns hard to tell which was the prouder, the mother wren or the school. When feeding time came, that nest full of mouths was the centre of interest. Teacher and pnpils were helped in their work by the nearness of this happy family. —Primary Education. Gnme of Town Whoop. The good old game of town whoop seems to have fallen iuto disfavor, or to have been forgotten. We huve all played hare and hounds. But have you over played town hoop? This is the way we did it: In the first place we all met at some special point—say the old town hall, and our route was carefully mapped out —from the town hall to a certain laue, up the lane to the dead elm, from the elm to a brook (probably a mile aivny), and so 011, but our last point had to be the place from which we started; also each stopping point was carefully noted. After the chafed and chasers were selected we set oil', giving the former to the first stopping plnce before the chasers started after them. When they reached this point they were com pelled to whoop, and thereafter at each of the stopping places along tho route determined upon before the start. They could hide within one yard each side of the route, but no more, nnd they were compelled to keep within bounds. If any fell by the wayside or were caught they were mnde captives, and were made to go under the paddle, that well known form of hoy punishment. Those who escaped could each choose one of the pursuers, who on his part was then compelled to undergo the same punishment. Sometimes we would run for miles and miles, and great would be the rejoicing of the paddlers when the race was over and they who had lost were compelled to submit to the caresses of their con querors.—New York Herald. Sir John Lubbock's Pet. No mortal man ever had stranger pets than Sir John Lubbock, and every reader who kuowß what it is to have a wasp's sting on the nape of the neck will he nstonisbed to hear that the well known banker once kept a wasp as a household pet—a wasp, too,which became so lame that when it reached its allottod span,it laid down and died in its owner's arms, so to speak. Sir John caught this remarkable wasp in the Pyrenees, and immediately made up his mind to tame it- He began by teaching it to take its meals on his baud and although the tiny creature was at first shy of going through its table d'hote on such ail unusual fes tive board, in a very short space of time it grew to expect to be fed in t nt way. Sir John preserved this pet with the greatest care. True, it stung him once, but, then, it had every ex cuse for doing so. Sir John was ex amining it while on a railway journey and the door being opened by a ticket collector, ho unceremoniously stuffed it iuto a bottle, and the outraged Spaniard, not feeling quite nt homo during the process, gave him a gentle reminder as to the proper way to treat a gnost. Tho wasp was a pet in every sense of the word,and became so fond of the ownet that it allowed itself to be stroked. It enjoyed civilization for just nine months, when it fell ill, and although Sir John did all he could to prolong its life, it died. Many wasps have been under Sir John's oh serration, but be has never had snob a genuine pet as this one. The others he has taken in hand for the purposes of experiment and to show that many of these insects which the thought less are apt to kill and maltreat pro vided a most entertaining study. Sir John's world is really made up of a lot of little worlds. When he is tired of the banking world, he turns to the political world; then, when he wants a change, he busies himself in either the wasp world, the bee world, the spider world, or the ant world—the last four of which are just as curious as our own world. Sir John's private sanctum at his country seat is a re ceptacle for bees and wasps, and small wonder, seeing that a store of honey is always provided for their delecta tion. As the winged creatures come and go the master of the house studies their habits; and, as he has been studying them for more than a gener ation, it is not surprising that he knows almost as much about the in sect world as the insects do themselves. The experiments which he has made with his pets may be numbered by the thousand, but how he has acquired all his knowledge one does not pretend to understand. It is not everybody who would care to trifle with a wasp. Some time ago Sir John found a wasp whose wings were so smeared with honey that it couldn't fly. He watched it and presently saw a lot of other wasps—chums of the sticky one—come up and lick the honey off the back of their distressed companion. The operation, however,was not conducted in as praiseworthy a fashion as it might have been, so Sir John went to the rescue and, after giving the invalid a bath, put it out to dry in a bottle. When it was nice and clean and re spectable looking he let it loose; but, to his intense surprise, nfter flying home, it came back, perhaps not ex actly to express its gratitude, but at all events to fetch some more honey. —Chums. A 1,1 vo 1101 l Show. I saw a live doll show last winter— fourteen live dolls, and a nurse all dressed up with white apron and cap. At least, she called them dolls, and they behaved very much like dolls, moving only at her touch. They had evidently been taught that "children should be Been and not heard," all but the "squeaking" doll and the "proverb grandma," which will be described in their turn. The exhibi tion was gotten up by n girls' club that was organized lor "sweet charity's" sake. The C. W. B. M. ladies were giving a social, and one room had been converted into a nur sery for the dolls. They charged live cents admission, and they iutended to spend the money in making some body happier at Christinas. The most of the dolls were jointed, and, when the nurse pressed a spring in the back of their necks, they would bob their heads in a little courtesy. A lady standing by one said that she thought people made courtesies with their bodies. "till, but dolls do not, you know," answered the uurse. And, sure enough, they don't. The biggest doll of all was a rag baby, which wns thrown carelessly in a roekiug chair. She behaved bcuuti tifully, though every or.e who passed her took hold of her head to see if she was jointed, mid they would ask if she was filled with sawdust. She never once smiled, till a little boy, in passing out, said, "Good night, Miss Hug." All the dolls laughe lat that. Bnt, they all did splendidly, and I know the nurse was proud of them- There were three paper dolls, Tina, Teas and Tot, dressed in plaited wall paper dresses and quaint paper hats. Their arms only were jointed. The china doll wore a dark dress and a white apron. The little Esquimau, when wound up, would stump across the floor. Then the nurse would turn her round, wind her up again, and she would trot back. She was dressed in white furry lookiug stuff. The young-lady doll wore her big sister's dress.aud looked quite stylish. The Scotch lassie was equipped for sport,, dressed in plaid, with her skates sluug over her shoulder. A man offered the nurse ten cents for the "squeaking" doll. Who pressed in the chest, she would say "Papa" or "Mamma" in a squeaky voice, very much like a doll. Poor thing! Every one wanted to hear her "say it over and over again." She, the nurse said, wns a presont from Mrs. McKinley. "Pocahontas" was like a veritable Indian, with her red (candy-painted) cheeks and long straight black hair. She sat on the floor beside a Japanese lady, who wore a gay-flowered dress and carried a Japanese umbrella. A sweet-faced nun, "Sister Marguer ite," stood guard by a high-chair in which sat a curly-haired baby doll. The "baby" was jointed, and could make her little curtsy, like the others. They were all remarkably polite dolls, owing, perhaps, to the presence of the "proverb grandma." When wound up, she would jerk out, in slow suc cession, these three proverbs: "Penny wise, pound-foolish," "Spare-rod, spoil-child," and "All's-well-'t-ends well." The "proverb grandma" is the min islpr's daughter, and when the nurse, in describing her, said she was very energetic, her papa said: "What's that you say? Active is she?" Then everybody laughed. Quite a jolly lot of dolls they were, who were transformed in a trice into fourteen hungry girls as they were invited to the dining room. Their tongues were soon loosened, and in a few minutes they went home, happy that they had given Others pleasure. —Sunday School Times. The annual tribute of the United States to consumption is over 100,000 of its inhabitants OUTGROWN. i I sometimes fenr they'll turn her head And make the lassie vain, Because her cheeks are rose-leaf red; Her eyes like sun-lit rain. To me she once would run for praise Or sympathy when sad. But I'm nobody nowadays, I'm only just "her dad." She's been to school until she known Far more than I; 'tis truth. She's like a duchess when she goes Out walking with some youth. With mo she oucetrod leafy ways, Nor cared for any lad. But I'm nobody nowadays, I'm only just "her dad." •Twns all in vain I undertook Some talk of frocks and frills And so in silence now I look With reverence on the bills. I treasure still the old-time phrase- She says its form is bad. I'm so old-fashioned nowadays! I'm only just "her dad." —Washington Star. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Eilith—"Chappie is wearing n Took of importance." Lena—"Yes, and it's a horrible misfit."—Life. "What did Finuerty give the bride?" "Two fire-escapeH and a jumping net."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. "I thought you were going to have your cellar made water-tight?" "I was, but I found a canoe was much cheaper."—Life. "So old Yabsley is dead, eh? Well, welll Did ho leave anything?" "Yes. It broke his heart to do it, but he left everything."—Tit-Bits. Timid Guest—"ls this hotel fire proof?" Transient—"Give it up. You see, they have never had a fire here."—Philadelphia North American. You say that ruin must occur, Oh! tell us, gentle sceptic, Are you a great philosopher Or just a plain dyspeptic? —Washington Star. Customer—"What is the meaning of that sign. 'Painless Barbers?'" Barber—"The barbers in this shop are not allowed to talk while shaving." —New York Journal. There was an old girl in Now Guinea, Who though short was remarkably skuinea, Iu the season of drought She never went ought, Just stayed home aud looked sweet and played shuinea. —Yale Record. Miss Topnot—"lsn't it too bad about this book?" Miss ranlmndle— "Why, what is the matter?" Miss Topnot—"Why, I didn't discover un til I had finished it that 1 had read it before." —Detroit Free Press. "William, wake up; there's some body pounding on the back door." "Don't be scarred, Susan. I ordered our new stepladder delivered at. mid night so the neighbors wouldn't find out we had one."—Chicago Record. "The gentleman from Squedunk is a thief, a liar, and " "Bang!" went the gavel, and the presiding of ficer exclaimed: "Thegentleman will j please address his remarks to the Chair." —Philadelphia North Ameri can. "What does M. C. after a gentle man's name stand for?" inquired the i foreign visitor. "Oh," replied the ! man who considered himself a wag, j "that can stand for a lot of things— ! 'Mighty Conversational' for in stance.'—Washington Star. | "You break our engagement be | cause I am poor," she said, scorn fully. "If I were worth a million you would insist upon an early mar riage." "Certainly, for then I could support you in a style worthy of the woman I love."—Detroit Free Press. An old Cornish woman, who had prospered from small beginnings, was asked how she had got on so well. "Ah! you see, sir," said she, "most people be alius thinking of what they do want; but I and my old man we be alius thinking of what we can do with out." How Wlllielm Helped llliotleg. There is a capital story of Mr. Rhodes and the German Emperor iu To-Day. It may be too good to be true, but it is certainly good enough to|repeat. To tire Emperor William Mr. Rhodes was heard to say : "Aud why did you send that telegram? That telegram was the saving of me. Every one thought I was ruiued. I thought I was ruined. Theu your telegram came and saved me." "But why," said the Emperor, "were they so excited about it?" "Oh," replied Mr. Rhodes, "it was just like boys at school. When they are whacking a boy very often every one will join in the cry against him; but they wouldn't let a boy from another school join iu. More likely it would create a reaction in favor of the of fender. You were the boy from the other sjhool, you see." To-Day adds that, so far from being offended by this plain speaking, tbe Emperor ap pears to have hoen much impressed i by it. Proved tho Doc's Intclllgeuce. Sir Walter Scott was a great lover of dogs aud always had fine ones around him. One day, in conversation with a friend, he said: "Those dogs," pointing to two hounds lying on the hearth, "understand every word X say." To prove it, he took up a book wd apparently read this sentence: "I havo two lazy, good-for-nothing logs that lie by tho fire asleep and let tho cattle ruin my garden." Both Jogs instantly sprang up and ran out jf the room, and finding no cattle in die garden, returned end laid down by ;he fire. Again Sir Walter read the lentenoe, and again they ran out and returned, disappointed. Tho third Sime their ma-ter told the story the Jogs looked up in his face, whinued ind wagged their tails, as much as to iay, "You havo fooled us twice; you :au't do it a third time. A Case of Pontic ' .Intico. Poetic justice has been dealt to n British sportsman, who died of blood poisoning brought about by the scratch of a wild rabbit ho was lettiug loosa (or the hounds in a coursing match. Are There Four TaKt.es. Experiments recently performed give 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 Sittings. Of a large number of persons tested, tew 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. The 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 Foot. Ache and Dura ? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, n powuer for the feet It makes Tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching and Sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoo Stores. 25u Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Lellov, N. Y. There are over 70 miles of tunnels cut in the solid rock of Gibraltar. After physicians had given me tip, I was paved by Pi bo's Cure. Ralph Kkiecj, Wil li uiu sport, Pa., Nov. 22, 18U3. The number of penniless men in the Klondike is placed at 3,000. Beatify la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Eegin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —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 MO,OOO. To Care Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fail 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. If ewer ; {see a snow \ 1 Skim in i ; summer? I We never did; but we have F ( seen the clothing at this time V , of the year so covered with Bl dandruff that it looked as if it r ( had been out in a regular snow- > , storm. . No need of this snowstorm. ( As the summer sun would '' i melt the falling snow so will | I Aprs: I iteir I i Vigor ! melt these flakes of dandruff in | the scalp. It goes further than > 3 this: it prevents their formation. | J It has still other properties: ' ■ it will restore color to gray hair \ Jin just ten times out of every > a ten cases. ' dg And it docs even more: it ) jj feeds and nourishes the roots . € of the hair. Thin hair becomes } M thick hair; and short hair be- , J comes long hair. a We have a book on the Hair ' and Scalp. It is yours, for the \ jj asking. , jj If you do not obtain all the benefits ' 5 there is some dlflieulty with your geif- . ra oral inuy ho easily re- ) J ° V DK. J. C. AYJfitt, Lowell, Mass. J Docsu't your boy write well? Perhaps £ J he hasn't good ink. £ i CARTER'S INK f 4 IS THE BEST INK. |- j More used than any other. Don't cost L 4 you any more than poor ink. Ask for it. J, drops (-Ann*. Bonk of tentimnninUand IO ilnvtt' treatm-nt Free. Dr. H. U GREENS BOMB Box D. Atlanta. Qa. "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. In Mexico Months Are Named After the Arrival of Birds. 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 vicissitudes of weather, with seasonal aspects of vegetation, and with the constantly changing sights and sounds of the animal world, cays Popular Sci ence Monthly. In the calendar of the 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 the months are named variously after the arrival of birds, the blossoming of 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 kite were thus noted. Hesiod 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 lamo." from the time of her shining. Hound to ISe 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 be mine. How shall I do it, I wonder' Gentle Maid: "It is surely coming. ] am so nervous and frightened! I know he is going to be terrible dramatic. 1 do hope I sha'n't have to help him Uf off his knees. Goodness! why doesn't 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! So am I." Gallant Man (innocently): "Then why shouldn't we take it to gether?" Gentle Maid (innocently): "Possibly your wife and my husband j 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- 1 headed is relatively thick, one red hair being almost as thick as five fair or three brown hairs. With 30,000 red hairs the scalp is well thatched, where as with the same number of fair haus ! one is comparatively bald. It takes ! 160,000 fair and 105,000 brown hairs to ! cover adequately an ordinary head. ilon't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yoar I.ife Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag aetic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To* Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men itrong. All druggists, 50c or 11. 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. No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, 81. All druggista A process has been invented and pat ented in Brazil for preparing coffee in tabloids by a system of compression. W. H. Griffin, Jackson, Michigan, writes: "Buffered with Catarrh for fifteen years. Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me." Sold by L)rug gists. 75c. | "h fSandfu: of Dirt May Be a Houseful of Shame." Keep Your House Clean With SAPOLIO "After I wan Induced to try t'ASCA* R ETS, 1 will never bo without them in the house. My liver was in a very bad shape, and my head ached and I had stomach trouble. Now. since tak i teel !u o .My wile has also 11!6(8 them with beneficial results lor sour stomach." Jos- KitEULiNG. net Congress St.. St. Louis. Mo. CANDY m CATHARTIC , Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do £nod. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 2i>c. 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... terllnir UrmtMly < timpany. Chicnpn. Montrrnl, Krw York. SIS Mfa.Tn.RAP gold 011,1 gnartinteed by all drug- WU" I U'DHCj gists to CT UK Tobacco Habit. [LETTER TO MRS. PIXKHAM NO 40,970] "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's Vegetable Compound cured me and it ha 3 been a year since I had an attack. firs. Edna Jackson, Pearl, La. i If Mrs. Pinkham's Compound will cur. i such jevere cases as this surely it j must be a great medicine—is there any sufferer foolish enough not to give it a trial ? The University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME. INDIANA. riiinit'N, Letter*, Economic* itud History, .l'>iirimli*tii, Art, Science. Pharmacy, l,nw, Civil, >1 clinctiicnl itud Electrical Kngiiu-er ! iu. Architecture. 'thorough Preparatory and ('omiiiereinl Course*. Ecclesiastical students i t speci i rates. | Room* Free. Junior or Senior \ ear, Collegiate i Courses. Room* to K cut, moderate chuige. St. Edward'* Hull for hoys under in The ofku Year will open September 185 M). Catalogue* Free. Addre** KEY . A. KlssEY. < . s. < .. President. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS ; Are flic heat. Ask for them. Cost no more 1 than common chimneys. All dealers, i PITTS It I' lt( > tiI. ASS t'O., Yllcghciiy, Pa. FIENSION^STK*^ * Successfully Prosecutes Claim 3. Lata Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. jyibi'i civil war. 15adjudicating claims, alt v situ-a 117" ANTED-rase of bad health that R I-P-A N 8 1 ' * will not benefit. Send 6 ct. to It i pans Chemical Co., New York, for lo samples undlooo testimonials. RHEUMATISM 1 1 ALEXANDER BBMKDX Co.. iMGrounwi'eh St., N.Y.' P. N. U. 0 '99 I ■
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers