44 Actions of the Just Smell Sweet'" The fragrance of life is -vigor and strength, neither of -which can be found in a person -whose blood is impure, and -whose every breath speaks of internal troubles. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood and makes the -weak strong. Ask for Allen's Foot Ease, A powder for the feet. It cures hot, smart ing, aching, sweating feet and ingrowing nails: kills the bting of oorns and bunions; 30.000 testimonials; nil drug and shoe stores •ell it; 2J7\; sample mailed FREE. Address. Allen 8. Olmstead, Leßoy, N. Y. His Foible. He wasn't superstitious, Ne'er read between the lines; But as a first-class letterer, He had great faith in signs. Beauty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by itirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- Kurities from the body. Begin to-day to aniah pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. ID Self-Defense. "Are you willing to work for your dinner?" asked the woman. "Dat de pends on wot you wants done," re plied the tramp. "I want you to beat that carpet hanging on the line over there,' she said. "Lady," answered the wanderer, "I'm poor and I'm hun gry, but I'm honest, an' I'm not goin' U> begin beatin' me way t'rough de world at dls late day—see?" When it comes to making improve ments In all branches of railroad service the Baltimore and Ohio Hail road do s not have to retire from the front rank. As "nothing is too good for the Irish." so nothing is too good for Baltimore and Ohio Railroad patrons and a pro gressive step in dining car service is being taken. The Royal Blue Line dining cars are being shipped as rapid ly as possible to change the interiors so that each car will have a table de' hote compartment and a cafe, where the service will be ala carte. This part of the ear will have easy chairs, tables and other conveniences of a first-class cafe, where gentlemen can smoke and eat without Interfering with those who prefer a different state of things. Piflo's Cure for Consumption hus saved me many a doctor's bill. 8. F. Hopkins Place, Baltimore, Md., Dec. 3,1094. Mrs.Winslow'sSoothingFyrap for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.3sc a bottle. CAPTURED OR MASSACRED. Relief Expedition Organizing to Rescue Americans In llrazll. Mr. Frank Greenfield, a member of a prominent Fort Scott (Kan.) family, has arrived homo from South America to organize a relief expedition to res cue a party of Americans, of whom his brother, Albert io one, from the Inte rior of Brazil. The Greenfield boys Joined a party of miners at Johannes burg, South Africa, two years ago, and went to South America. In Buenos Ayres Albert joined the expedition to go Into the regions or the Amazon tc develop a big rubber concession which Mr. Price had secured from the Brazil ian government. They started up the Parana river in a boat in February, 1898, following it as far as navigable, and started on a 1,500 mile journey through the jungles and over the mountains. They were last heard from at Cuyaba, in the province of Natta grossa, on June 15, 1898. Frank Green field is convinced that they have been captured or massacred by the savage natives. Got to Do .Something. "Faughl he is of *e canaille! I hate heem. Louee, Uear-r-r me— l will smash hees hat!" "No, Henri, do not do oet. Zey vill send you to ze prisone for four-r-r years!" "Ah, zen I vill smash a hat zat ees like hees!"—Cleve land Plain Dealer. Austria Han No Colonies. Austria is the only empire in the world which has never had colonies, or even transmarine possessions, In any quarter of the earth. Her ambition has hitherto been purely continental. Mrs. Col. Richardson SAVED BY MRS. PINKHAM. [LETTEX TO UKS. PINKIIAM NO. 72,896] ••You have saved my life, snatched me from the brink of tlie grave almost, and I wish to thank you. About eigh teen months ago I was a total wreck, physically. I had been troubled with leucorrhoea for some time, but had given hardly any attention to the trouble. 44 At last iufiammation of the womb and ovaries resulted and then I suf fered agonies, had to give up my pro fession (musician and piano player), was confined to my bed and life became a terrible cross. My husband sum moned the best physicians, but their benefit was but temporary at best. I believe I should have contracted the morphine habit under their care, if my common sense had not intervened. 44 One day my husband noticed the ad vertisement of your remedies and im mediately bought me a full trial. Boon the pain in my ovaries was gone. lam now well, strong and robust, walk, ride a wheel, and feel like a girl in her teens. I would not be without Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; It is like water of life to me. I am very gratefully and sincerely you* well wisher, and I heartily recommend your remedies. I hope some poor creature may be helped to health by reading my story."—Mrs. Col. fi. P. 11l cha up §024, &HHIELARPKB, Wlfl. SIGNS OF THE TIMES. AS SEEN BY JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE. There Is No Prosperity for the Masses —The Result in 1890 Merely Strength ened the Strong That They Might Further Oppress the Weak. From the Mississippi "Valley Demo crat and Journal of Agriculture: A prominent man of Odessa, Mo., writ ing under date of June 20, asks us to give our opinion of "the signs of the times—whether they are good or evil." This, we confess, is a difficult task. By nature we are inclined to he optimistic. We like to look on the bftght side of things, and to feel that the world is progressing and getting better, and that we are really in the midst of pros perity. But it requires a good deal of faith to believe all this in the face of indisputable facts as they exist. There is unquestionably a good deal of pros perity in the land, but it is confined to certain favored classes. In some in stances, in the protected factories and foundries, wages have been increased; but in no instance have we heard that they were restored to the old average. These institutions could very well af ford to increase wages on the eve of a new campaign, for political effect, and circumstances lead us to believe that this is the true explanation of this fea ture; for there are just as many men seeking employment now as ever be fore, and the general average of wages ! has not increased. Such prosperity as |we have has not yet reached the j masses of the people. One of the bad I features is found in the fact that there ! is not increased demand for property, except in circumscribed and specially favored localities. Farms and country property are almost unsalable, and real estate in the cities, in spite of all the blowing of the daily papers. Is a "drug on the market." The papers are sim ply whistling in the real estate grave yard, hoping to drive the spooks away. If you take the average of real values in this city now—and St. Louis is bet ter off than the other large cities —and compare them with those of '9l to the beginning of '94, you will find that they are at least 40 per cent less than they were then, and you can't sell real es tate even at the reduced prices. Yet you can borrow money, if you have gilt-edged security, at 3, 4 and 5 per cent. A 5 per cent loan will attract money lenders like ants to a lump of sugar. The banks and safety deposit vaults are literally glutted with idle money, and bankers point to this fact as a veriflcation of their claim that we I have an "abundance of money." Of course it is abundant as they see it, j but if they would get out among the t people they would soon discover that very few have anything more than I enough to last them for pocket change through the day or week, and millions have not even that much. Our ruin ous financial system has drained the money away from the people and con gested it in the banks and safety de posit vaults, and produced property stagnation. What we need is a cur rency that will circulate among the masses, and the whole history of civ ! ilizatton proves that nothing serves ! this purpose so well as silver and pa j per. Gold is not a circulating cur | rency, and its nature is such that it J cannot be made to fill this important ! office. Gold is the money of the rich, silver the money of the poor; and for thirty years past all our legislation has been on the side of the users of gold. Last year our trade balances brought an average of nearly $8 per capita in gold into the United States, but its ben efits did not reach the people. Those who were already overrich became richer. A few hundred very rich peo ple added many millions to their wealth, and now have "vast stores" of money, but the masses of the people a.'s as poor as ever. The farmer's side of the question has been very strongly stated by one of our able country ex changes. During the first week of March, 1897, the week of McKinley's inauguration, when the coming pros perity was heralded abroad, a farmer of Boone county, in this state, brought twelve head of hogs to his local mar ket and sold them for $104.10. With part of tills money he bought the fol lowing bill of goods: Three kegs of nails at $1.75 each. Two hundred pounds fencing wire at $1.90 per hundred. One cook stove for S3O. One hundred feet screening, 85 cents. One plow, $lO. Miscellaneous hardware and tin ware, $11.62, Patent medicines and drugs, $10.50. One hundred and eighty pounds sugar, $lO. This left him something over S2O to pay his doctor's bills and square ac counts with the editor. The first week In this month the same farmer brought thirteen hogs to his local market and and sold them for $lO5. Then, at the suggestion of the editor, he visited the same stores that he had purchased his goods from in 1897, and obtained pres ent prices for the same articles, with the following results: Three kegs nails, $3.50 each; in crease, $5.25. Two hundred pounds wire, $3.10; in crease, $2.40. The same cook stove, S3B; in crease, SB. The same screening, $1.50; increase, 65 cents. The same plow, $12.50; increase $2.50. Duplicate bill of hardware and tin ware, $16.40; increase, $4.78. The same bill of drugs, sl7; increase, $6.50. One hundred and eighty pounds of sugar, $11.25; increase, $1.25. Total increase, $31.33. The farmer received less for his hogs than he did in 1897, and would have been required to pay $31.58 more for his small bill of necessaries for his family and farm. It can readily be seen, therefore, that the farmer, as usual, "got left" in the mighty wave of prosperity that has come to us. The editor carried the comparison a little further, with the following results: "The farmer might have "followed the prosperity story further for his own instruction and profit. Here is a St. Louis market report for the week McKinley was inaugurated, in 1897, and this week's report, giving the top prices on WHAT THE FARMER STILL SELLS: March, June, 1897. 1899. Cattle $4.95 $5.08 Hog 3 3.90 3.85 Wheat 93% .77% Cotton 07 .05% Thus cattle alone have advanced, and that rise a small one. Hogs have held their own. Wheat is off 15 cents and cotton is down nearly 2 cents. Then suppose he starts an investiga tion as to the THINGS THE FARMER BUYS; March, June, 1897. 1899. Nails, per keg $1.75 $3.50 Wire, per cwt 1.90 3.10 Per Cent Advance. Stoves 22 Plows V 25 All hardware 25@40 Tinware 40 All drugs, patent medicines . 33 1-3 Lumber 10@25 Sugar 10 Dry goods 2@20 Doctor bills no less. Insurance no less. Taxes higher than ever—having to pay war stamp taxes. A farmer can get a little more for his cattle, but the material in a house that would have cost him SI,OOO in March, 1897, would cost him now $1,300. He cannot get a farthing more for his pork, but it costs him $7.50 more to build a half mile of wire fence. His wheat will not sell for as much by 15 or 20 cents, but the plow he puts it in with costs him a fourth more. The editor concludes hi 3 remarks by saying that McKinley's prosperity fable is like "a pyramid set on its apex—it is top-heavy and bound to topple." These are some of the "signs of the times." Retirement of Greenbacks. Not satisfied with burying the money question every week, Republicans are preparing to retire greenbacks, in crease the privileges of national banks and reduce the tax on bank circulation. The substitution of bonds for green backs will increase the taxes upon tho people, already overburdened, while the reduction on tax on circulation will re lieve the banks already enjoying great special advantages. The trust question is not a new one, and yet it has grown in interest and importance bedtuso the trusts have grown in number. Attor ney-General Griggs is reported as say ing: If anything be done to control the trusts, it must be done by the states." No one who has examined this subject will believe that state legislation is sufficient. The federal government must deal with the trust as soon as its pernicious influence ex tends beyond the limits of the state in which it is organized. The president, through his attorney-general, can en force the law now in existence. If that law is not sufficient he can recommend laws which are sufficient. If the con stitution will not permit the extin guishment of trusts he can recommend an amendment to the constitution con conferring power upon the federal gov ernment to destroy the monoply princi ple in industry. The Republican party, through its administration, could ex tinguish its trusts if it desired to do so. It is powerless to deal with the ques tion because it mortgaged itself to the trusts to obtain the money necessary to carry the last election.—William J. Bryan. Rotter Way Thau Fighting. The soldier makes trouble for the present as well as for the future gen erations. Of course, this fact must not deprive the hero in uniform of the honor due him for the great battles which ho has fought for tile rights ol man; of the laurels falling to him for patriotic work in camp and field. The time has come in the progress of the world when a better means can be adopted for the adjustment of interna tional differences, says the Dallas News. The soldier himself recognizes this encouraging fact. The people ol all civilized nations are coming to un derstand it this way. Some of the war lords do not, but they will be brought around before time flies very much farther. The question for the next century is not tile question of power to kill, but of power to save. The pol icy of the coming time will not bo war, but peace. Twaddle for Political Effect. The twaddle about the Filipinos be ing encouraged by anti-expansion ex pressions in the United States is all for political effect. If the Filipinos are as ignorant and worthless as they have been represented, they can know noth ing of American affairs, says the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Besides, there is the strict press censorship for the sup pression of all facts unfavorable to the administration. Dl.'imonrfri In Pretoria. The area of the Pretoria diamond fields continues to be Increased by dis coveries In almost every direction, and the yield from the extensive wash is reported as highly encouraging, the returns from some of the mines for the first three months of the year running as high as 6,000 carats. NOVEL TEMPERANCE SCHEME. Bow a Manufacturer Secured a "Drj* Town In Indiana. A manufacturer at Three Oaks, Ind., has Just Inaugurated a temperance re form in that town that is at once novel and apparently practicable, says the Cleveland Leader. This man, who has laveral hundred employes, recently of fered to pay into the village treasury annually an amount equal to the li cense fees derived from the saloons if the authorities would abolish the sa loons and make the to vb "dry." If the offer was refused he threatened to remove his factory to another town. The proposition was submitted to the council and it in turn referred the mat ter to the people at a special election. The result was an overwhelming vic tory for temperance. The saloons will be closed, the village treasury will re ceive the annual payment promised, and the factory will not be removed. Of course it is not difficult to under stand why this manufacturer desired the closilng of the saloons. He prob ably realized that he could get better work from his employes if they were always sober, and will doubtless dis cover that the money paid for the closing of the saloons is well Invested. Scorching. "It says here," said the boarder who reads the war news, "that the Chinese In the Philippines sire going to the front with shooting irons." "Weil" remarked the bachelor boarder, as he ruefully surveyed his scorched bosom, "there ain't any change here. The Chi nese of Chicago are still going to the front with burning irons."—Chicago News. The young man who won in the com petitive examination of 30 aspirants for the West Point cadetshlp from Congressman Joy's Tenth District of Illinois bears the somewhat ap propriate name of Jame3 A. Mars. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot Ease, A powder to shako into your shoes; rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollou, Rore, Hot, Callous, Aching. Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Base makes new or tight shoes easy. At all drug gists and shoes stores, 25 ots. Sample mailed FREE. Adr's Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, I.'. Y. Some large English timbermen who have been making a tour through the lumber regions of the United States were struck with the enormous waste of timber due to the stave industry, which slaughtered the trees, taking only the best without regard to other uses which might be subserved by a more conservative method of opera tion. Aon't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your I.lfe Anay. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag nctic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take NoTo- Uac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and samplo free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. The Pennsylvania Naval Reserve was organized in 1893, and similar or ganizations are now found in twenty States—California. Connecticut, Flor ida, Illinois, Georgia, Louisiana, New Jersey, Now York, North Caro lina, Ohio. Pennsylvania, Rhode Isl and South Carolina, Virginia, D!s trict of Columbia, Missouri and Ore gon. Educate Yonr Bowels With Cnsearets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Four agents of the Nashville. Chat tanooga and St. Louis Railroad measure in height respectively 8 feet 3 inches, 8 feet 3 inches, 6 feet Vc in li, and 6 feet 3!J inches, and their aggre gate weight is 1.018 pounds. They have b.M n photographed together, and would like to hear from any other railroad that can furnish a group of four their equals in feet and pounds. *3^"-' 2 ;< Does Yonr Li IkM Adc? "5 i Are your nerves weak? * y Can't you sleep well? Pain in your back? Lack energy? ; ► , Appetite poor? Digestion L'-j , bad? Boils or pimples? r*J These are sure signs of tv 5 ), poisoning. U ways found in constipated 5 b, bowels. .<4 If the contents of the J bowels are not removed from s j , the body each day, as nature i intended, these poisonous bl b substances are sure to be T| absorbed into the blood, al- j ► . ways causing suffering and frequently causing severe bJ % disease. T , There is a common sense <| j| B They daily insure an easy J* y and natural movement of ' , the bowels. , b You will find thatthe use of q ( ayer's ;; oarsaparliia :• 4 with the pills will hasten J* b recovery. It cleanses the q blood from ail impurities and y b is a great tonic to the nerves, i Write the Doctor. j Oar Medical Department ha* on® . L ' of tho moat eminent physician* In * , " the United Stutea. Tell the doctor 4 4 Juit how you are •uff®rin. Yon L k Will receive tho best medical advlo® j j Without coat. Addroea, ~ .4 PR. J. C. AYER, ►. ► Lowell, Mail, 4 THE MEN IN THE MORNING Oh, the men in tho morningl They begin before dawning, And they keep it up straight through till noon! They bronk on ray dreaming With banging and screaming. Till my temper is all out of tuuel There's the skim-milk man And the trim milkman, Who brings us milk warm from the cow. There's the butcher, the baker, And the hulled-corn maker. Who appears with so stately a bow. There's the man with the papers. Who cuts up such capers, And the man with the fish to broil. There's the man with letters (That are never from debtors), And the man with the kerosene oil. There's the shy little grocer, Who always says "Oh, sir!" And the man who brings up tho coal. There's the long-faced wood muu— The would-lf-ho-could man. Who is always so dolefully droll. There's tho boisterous iceman, And tho coiToe-and-spice man, And the man with the creamery butter. There's the handsome-eyed fruit man. And tho "honey-to-suit*" man, Who has so amusing a stutter. Thoir number i 9 lcgionl Some man the region Of my back door is always adorning. Oh, the bliss of privation Beyond civilization, Where's never u man in tho morning! —Emma C. Dowd, in tho Sun. HUMOR OF THE DAY. "Jelkins made a fortune in Wall street." "He doesn't look prosper ous." "No; —it took every cent he had." —Puck. Days when the business man has had an unsatisfactory breakfast tho office boy has to earn his salary,— Somerville Journal. We aro a witless world, I wot, To work all day when it's so hot. Now that wo have electric light, Let's sleep all day and work all night! —Chicago Record. "It won't do any good to tench school-girls to sew." 44 Why not?" 44 Lots of married women who know how to sow won't sew." —Chicago llec ord. "Papa, dear, why are these water* proof sole 3 called 'gutta percha?'" "Because, my lad, they enable you to perch in tho gutter without getting wet."—Tid-Bits. Young Mistress—"This isn't a e'enn knife, Jane." New Servant— 4t lsn't it, mum? I don't know how that is. I'm sure it ought to be. Tho last thing it cut was soap!"— Punch. Old Bachelor—"Do you expect to j marry, or do yon prefer to keep yonr I liberty, Miss Van Sand?" Miss Van Sand—"What a funny question. I ! intend to do both."—Harlem Life. 44 You are quite run down," said tho facetious cyclist to the man he had knocked over; 44 you ought to take something." "I will," said his vic tim, jumping up; "I'll take your name aud address."—Piek-Mo-Up. First American — 4 ' Bicycles and iu tomobiles. What show has the ho so here in Paris? You seldom even see him on tho boulevards." Second ! American (who has just dined) —"No; ■ he's in tho soup,"—Chicago News, j "What kind of an alarm clock have ! you?" was asked of a baker whose j work demauds his presence in tho wee hours. "Two years old, fat, chubby, full of ginger and with lungs like a tire gong."—Harper's Bazar. One Volunteer—"lf you really he liovo you won't die when your time comes, what makes you dodge every time a bullet coincs along?" Second Volunteer— 4 'There is a time to die i and also a time to dodge."—lndian apolis Journal. He—"So you visited Pompeii?" She—"Oh, yes." He—"How did you like it?" She—"Well, I must say I was awfully disappointed in tho ! place. Of course, it was beautifully j located, aud all that, but it was dread- I fully out of repair."—Tit-Bits. I Sulphur and Treacle For Restlessness. I "Confirmed reatlossuesa" is one of tho new maladies of school life. It has shown itself unmistakably at tiio | great scholastic institution at Han well, and hue led large numbers of the urchins there to receive a caning or other punishment as a cure for it. The homceopathic method of treating restlessness of body with restlessness of rod aroused the wrath of a clerical member of tho Central Loudon School District Committee,who declared that such a system of pathology was worthy of the darkness of tho middle ages. Restlessness was due to tho spring weather, and he suggested that iustead of birching them, they should be dosed with sulphur and treacle. If that did not give them repose, a little paregoric might bo tried. Another member declared tbat the dire disease had manifested itself among his col leagues on tho occasion of several meetings of late, upon which tho clerical objector declared, amid much amusement, that he would have no hesitation ia recommending tho birch to gentlemen who showed pronounced symptoms of the malady. It was ultimately loft to the schoolmaster to sootho the boys in the way he thought best.—London Telegraph. \ Characteristic of Great Men. "So far as I have encountered them," said a citizen of the world, "n characteristic of great men is that they have time. They are not in a hurry; their work doesn't boss them, but they boss their work. They don't not as if every minute you stayed was valuable timo lost to them; they don't fret and fidget. What timo they do devote to you appears to be time that they ean spare, and take things easy in, and b genuine Syrup of figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIQ SVBUP Co. I only, a knowledge of that fact will ) ] assist one in avoiding t lie worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the CAI.I FORXIA Flo SYRUP CO. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty I of the excellence of its remedy. It is I far in advance of ull other laxatives, as it acts on the kidne; liver and bowels without irritating or weaken- - ing them, and it does not gripe nor 1 nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, •AN Pit AN CISCO, CoL LOFISVIILE, KJ. !E\V I'OIIKsK.T. 1 ''East, West, Home is Best," if Kept Clean With SAPOLIO 1 Fit* permanently cured. >*n fit* or nervous alter Aim day's 11-0 "f 1 >r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise , lree. Dr.R.H.Ki.iNr, I.td. ICI Arch St.Phila.Pa A New Orleans man Is said to have invented a sugar cane planter, in the form of a wagon, that with three men and four mules will do the woik here- I tofore done by nine men and mint ! mules. Wo-To-Rao for Fifty Centa. Guaranteed tobacco bab.v curu, makes weak men strong, blood pure. OUc.tl. Ail druggists. I The last mule-car has disappeared from New Orleans. | "CASC.IRETS do nil claimed fbr tltn i met are atruiy wonderful medic ;i 1 brxeoften wished !<;.• a medicine a Mint t • t ill- and at last have found it in C - -•i.r. . Sim. u.k.IMK tin m. n.r I blood has U - u ur Hed u. 1 try c< nplexion I as !: - ; proved wonder! : > and I crl nn b better i. ; way.'' Si its . S.w.uk E. b.LLAii- Luttreil. 'i'ei \\ CAfiDY W V. SJy' CATHARTIC TkADI MA.'t.i *• "" . - TT7TT■ r Pleasant. Pnlat.ib'o. Potent. Taste Good. Da Good Never Sic ten. Weaken. or Gripe. 10c. 35e. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Hrim-ily Company. < idrnro, Montreal. New York. SlB fcifii-Vft-ftIAP Hold and gunrnnteed !>v ail drug* nVS" I Kists to (fI?UE Tobacco Habit. The University of Notre Dane NOTRE DAME. INDIANA. Classic*, Letter-, Men no mi en nml HKtory, J<> 11 r 1 nli-'ii, Art. Seieiiee. I'linrinuey, I.IIVV, Civil, .1! elineiiicul mid Fleetrli-ul Fugiuter iuw, .\relilli el lire. 1 borough I'ri'iinriilury uml (' mmereiul Courses, i" • •loF-:astt< ul students t-; .. i. rides. o<.in - Free. h. ... ror .s..,imr (Vll-giaU ' ItoOIII* 111 |{ oil I , 111 .1 , St. IvhvnrtPM 111111 |..|-iH.ysuiii'er 1;:. T' •>(! 1 Veur will open September ."iili, ! 18W). Catalogue-. I rec. Ad:!re-* j tI. V. A. AlOßit JMME V, ( . 1.. I'reside lit. "BIG FOUR" "THESEA LEVEL ROUTE" TO I NEW YORK. DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE. WACNER SLEEPINC CASS. DiIUNC CARS. JJ. E. ING.ULS, WARREN J. LYNCH, President. Gen. Puss. <& Ticket Agt. """GOLDEN GROWN Are (lie '.ipst. Ask ror them. Cost no more tli.in "iiinmon i lilmnev-. .% 11 dealers. 111 - lUi GL ASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. Dr. Rlcord's Essence of Life Kr.^.SS urd.rio.er-failinßrpme.lv for all oa-p* . 1 nervous, mental, nhysh-al debility. 1■- \i!alP\ an.l 1 re urtMfm-ny in „. X i-; p.-M ive. permanent -•jiiv: tull treaiio'ju > .1->1 .1 l tile; stamp for Hi. ular. J- ,A gUES. Agent, 176 Bi judway. N. Y. . UkIUHWi. ■ ■mr. 1 ASTHMA POSITIVELY CURED, j ;• < NSU FHlsi I tsTIIAIA CLUI I n ... vUI.H A I rial I ... .. mill), d ir-e. I | L.UIKI BH<>-. MM u :NK I U.,M. Loiia, Mo.I 'wnuuftMiiiMTiiiii .•.wiMiß'wmir-■ "I^aw—" DROPSY sasiswswro •. Bk of testimonial* nnd IO du trwuii. Nt Free. Dr. H. H. OREEN'B BONB BOX I>, Atlitnt* -. "iUUdIVH ftaMKliX Co., ii4eUrou wicli St., N Y P. N. U. 81 '99 L ule"' Thompson's Eye Water ■ I