44 For the Sake of Fun Mischief is Done." A vast amount of mischief is done, too, because people neglect to keep their blood pure. It appears in eruptions, dyspepsia, indigestion, nervousness, kidney diseases, and other ailments. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures all diseases promoted by impure blood or IOVJ state of the system, rffocd-A SdUafymlffg Bishop Torregianni, head of the Ro man Catholic Dioeese of Armldalc, Australia, weighs 365 pounds. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot Ease, A powder to shake into your shoes; rests the feot. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous. Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At all drug gists and shoes stores, 25 ots. Sample mailed FBEE. Adr's Allen S. Olmsted, Loiloy, N. Y. The best price ever paid in Berlin for property was for a corner meas uring two yards long and two wide, for which a cigar dealer a few years ago paid $1,500, and which he sold ih other day for $12,000. iton't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yoar IJfe Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag aetic, full of life, nervo and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men itrong. All druggists, 50c or 11. Curoguaran teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. J. Pierpont Morgan spent four y ars at the Boston English High School, whore he stood head of his class throughout the entire course. Educate Tour Rowels With Oasenrnts. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. loc, '-50. If C. G. C. fall, druggists refund money. Congressman-elect Gordon, of Ohio, who succeeds Mr. Marshall, of that State, has the unique distinction of coming from a district that never sent a Republican to Congress. STATE OP OHIO, CITY OP TOLEDO, • LUCAS COUNTY. i 8 FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath tlinthe is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. CIIENEY Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CAT A nun Cu RE. FRA X K J. CnEn kY. Sworn to before mo and subscribed in my I —•' — 1 presence, this Gth day of December, -{SEAL > A. I). 1888. A. W. OLRASON, ( - ) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send lor testimonials, free. • F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hell's Family Pills are tho host. Piso's Cure is the medicine to break un i children's Coughs and Colds.- Mrs. M. Gf. BLUNT, Sprague, Wash., March B,IBM. THE PULPIT AND THE PEW. Minister Makes tho Congregation and the Congregation tho Minister. Between a minister and his congre gation there is an action and a reaction so that the minister makes tho con gregation and the congregation the minister, says lan MacLaren in the Ladies' Home Journal. When one speaks of a minister's service to his people one is not thinking of pew rents and offertories and statistics and crowds; nor of schools and guilds and classes and lectures. The master achievement of the minister is to form character and to make men. The chief question, therefore, to consider about a minister's work is: What kind of men has he made? And one, at least, of the most deci sive questions by which the members of a congregation can be judged is: What have they made of their minis ter? By that one does not mean what salary they may give him, nor how agreeable they may be to him, but how far he has become a man and risen to his height in the atmosphere of his congregation. Some congregations have ruined ministers by harassing them till they lost heart and self-con trol and became peevish and ill-tem pered. Some congregations, again, have ruined ministers by so humoring and petting them that they could en dure no contradiction and became childish. That congregation has done its duty most effectively which has cre ated an atmosphere so genial, and yel so bracing, that every good in its min ister has been fostered and everything petty killed. | Is your breath bad? Then best friends turn their heads aside. A bad breath means a bad liver. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, sick headache. 25c. All druggists. Want your moustache or bearil a beautiful ( Priiwn ~r ricli l-IH.-k ? Thttn use 1 BUCKINGHAM'S DYE tvhiskers I [he University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME* INDIANA. ClaMNics, Letter*, Economics mid History, Journalism* .Art, Hcience. Pharmacy, Lnw, Civil* ,tl Inimical ami Electrical Kiifriiit-er* Inu. Architecture. Thorough Preparatory ami ('oiuuicrcinl Courses. Ecclesiastical students nt special rates Kon ins Free. Junior or Senior Year, Collegiate Courses. Rooms to Kent, moderate charge. St. E1 ward's llall for boys under 13. The 50th Year will open September sth, 1809. Catalogue* Free. Address ItEV. A. MOIiIUSSEY.C. S.C.. President. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Ask for them. Cost no more tlmu common chimneys. All dealers. PITTSIII'KG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. CARTER'S INK Is what the largest and best school systems use. OUR BUDGET OF UUHOK. LAUGHTER-PROVOKING STORIES FOR LOVERS OF FUN. In Yeari to Come—Preparing For the Worst—Why They Are Made—The In nocent Cause—Wifely Condolence-And the Hear (toy Wondered, Etc., Etc. Baby's In his little crib, Crying like all fury; Papa's doing Housework and Mamma's on tho jury. —Chicago News. Why They Are Made. Jaggles—"Why do they make paste diamonds?'' Waggles—"To stick people.' Town Topics. Preparing For tho Worst. Jaggles—"Every man should learn to swim." Waggles—"That's so. Ho nover knows when his Lest-girl will throw him overboard."—Judge. And tho Dear lioy Wondered. Lester —"Congratulations, dear boy 1 I hear you've got married." Potter—"No; only engaged Lester—"Humph! Again I con gratulate you!"— Town Topics. A Little Mild Practice. "And you think I'd better ask your father now?" "Yes. It will be a little mild prac tice for you. Then come back and ask ma!"— Cleveland Plain Dealer. Figuratively Expressed. *'A man must be a creature of iron will," said Mr. Blykins, loudly. "Yes," answered bis wife, "and a woman ought to know a thing or two about blacksmithing."—Washington Star. Wifely Condolence. "What & perfect idiot lam,' wailed Slumper. And for the purpose of consoling him his wife absent-mindedly re marked: "Nooneis perfect, William." -Tit-Bits. The Way It Happened. "And how did you como to marry him?" "I didn't come to marry him," an swered the womanly little woman, in dignantly; "he came to marry mo.' 1 —Chicago Post. The Innocent Cause Smith—"You're looking rather fagged, Brown." Brown—"Yes, have been troubled with insomnia lately." Smith--"You don't say! Boy or girl?"— Harlem Life. 'Tin Better So. Harry—"Why did you postponO your marriage?" Jack—"My fiance has just graduated from a oookkig school, and I want to give her time to forget what she has learned."—New York Journal. An Awkward Feature. Crimsonbeak—"lt will be rath<* awkward when this wireless telegraphy comes into general use." Yeast— "Why so?" "Well, it would sound funny to ask a man to send you a wireless Wire." A OucHtion of Precedence. Very Polite Gentleman (to bull) "You first." L "After you, sir. --Life. Tho Leason. "This, said Miss Cayenne, as she held a manuscript at arm's length, "is [ what I should call a didactic poem.'' "Why, it doesn't teach anything." "It ought to. It ought to teach you to quit writing verses."—Washington I Star. Tho Horrible Man. Census Enumerator (to Miss Back number) —"Your age, please?" Miss Backnumber (sweetly have seen twenty-four summers. Census Enumerator—"Been blind the greater part of your life, eh?"— Harlem Life. Quite Pointed. She—"l don't believe tho dock i* running." He—"Oh, yes, it is." She—"Well, I'll not dispute you, but I'm positive that it is not going faster than a walk this morning."— Detroit Free Press. So lie Remains Dirty. "Johnnie," said the mission teacher, severely, to 0110 of tho children iu Uor care, "why do you como hore so dirty? Why don't you wash your face?" "I can' l 1 said Johnnie. "My mother's a 'washwoman' and she goes oil' and takes tho soap."- -New York Times. "Some men are forever diking shop," said Mr. Meektou's wife scorn fully. | "That's a fact," he answered, it's a great failing we have. A woman nover does that way," he added ap- I provingly. "She doesn't stand around I and talk about it when she feols like shoppiug. She just goes ahead and shops."—Washington Star. HARE BREEDING FARM. Novel Projeot of Ten Enterprising Pennsyl vania Young Men. A corner in rabbit meat in Western Pennsylvania, as well as Ohio Valley towns as far down the river as Cin cinnati, is threatened. Ten enter prising young men of Allegheny have completed arrangements for estab lishing a breeding farm near Industry, the aim of the venture being to give more and better meat to the great army of consumers in this part of tho country. The common, e very-day township rabbit is not wanted, as he is a little 100 light for cornering pur poses, but heavier Belgian hare, an advanced type of rabbit. "Bert" D. Taggart, of 513 Federal street, Allegheny, who is at tho head of tho venture, wauts all the Belgian hares that he can possibly secure; 500 pairs are needed to get the venture started right, and Mr. Taggart expects to Bend to Europe for at least 300 pairs. Speaking of the project Mr. Taggart said lately: "Should everything go well in three years wo will be able to put our first product on the market. It may seem a long time and the mouey to bo ex pended considerable, but wo think it will pay in the long run. Wo purpose to raise 1,000,000 hares per year and to sell them, too. We will kill ami sell them ready for tho pot. One million looks like a whole lot, but it ain't so mauy when you know that the people of Pittsburg and Allegheny eat 1,000,000 rabbits every year. Ten thousand per day during the season is tho amount consumed. We havo figured long and closely, and with the Ohio Valley towns, which we cau reach in twelve hours' run, we cau easily dispose of 1,000,000 hares per year. I violate no confidence in say ing 'that we expect to be able to furnish the hares dressed cheaper than tho ordinary pot hunter who now supplies tho market cau shoot tho wild rabbit. "The Belgian haro is by far tho better for our business. He is much larger and his meat is better. A Belgian haro will clean about four pounds, while our common rabbit will clean but two and a half pounds. The hare, too, is very prolific—a pair of good hares will produce at least three families of six each yearly. No one can find fault with this increase. We have already found that our first hares will cost us not less than twenty cents apiece. The entire farm in the suburbs will bo fenced in with the wire used iu chicken farms, and every effort will be made to protect the little animals and bring them on as fast as possible to tho great and hungry public." POPULAR SCIENCE. It is estimated that one crow will destroy 700,000 insects every year. An English mechauic has discovered that salt restores apparently drowned animals. In the British army in India there are about 1500 cases of typhoid fever every year, 300 of them fatal. Scientific men generally believe that the bed of tho Pacific Ocean was once above water and inhabited by men. The Hawaiian Islands a century ago had a uative population of some 100,- 000, which has diminished to less than 30,000 at tho present time. Ostriches, when frightoued, get over tho ground at tho rate of twenty five miles an hour. Their strides measuie eleven and a half feet. An Indian elephant can carry from 800 to 1000 pounds, march eight to ten hours a day, and do with tivo or six hours' sleep. He needs GOO pounds of green feed daily, besides grain. Tho therapeutic value of liquid air is very great. It is said to bo a cure for diphtheria, cancer and other germ diseases, destroying the bacilli by spraying. The intense cold makes organic life impossible. Tho recent epidemic of lockjaw is not dilficult of explanation. Tho dis ease is produced by a microbe gettiug iuto any break in the skin. The microbe abounds at all times, at some places more than others. Farmers believe that persistent cold in winter is useful in exterminating insects. Experiments made iu Ger many indicate, however, that insects which survive a steady low tempera ture, perish if there are changes from cold to warm and back to cold. The air is clear at Arequipa, Peru. From the ob sei va to at that place, 8050 feet above the sea, a black spot, one inch in diameter, placed on a white disk, has been seen on Mount Charchaui, a distance of eleven miles, through a thirteen-iuch telescope. For students of psychology, ants are considered the most interesting of all animals. To the large number of treatises on them a new one has been added by E. Wasmauu (Stuttgart), who shows that ants can be taught tc give up instinctive actions by showing them a better way. Why II W Silent. A physician describes a remarkable case of a patient's confidence iu his medical adviser: "When I was a stu dent iu London I had a patient, an Irishman, with a broken leg. When the plaster bandage was removed and a lighter one pat in its place, I noticed that one of the pins wont iu with great difficulty, and I could not understand it. A week afterward, on removing this pin, I found it had stuck hard and fast, and I was forced to remove it with the forceps. What was my as tonishment to find that tho pin had been run through the skin twice, in stead of through the cloth. "'Why, Pat,' said I, 'didn't you know that piu was sticking in you J' " 'To be sure I did,' replied Pat, H*ut I thought you knowed your btisj ness, so iliilfme tongue."' 1 WOMAN'S WORLD. | *feeee€eee€e€ee€e- LACE IS FASHIONABLE. Its Vojuo Suggests a Mi-iHH or Li veil* hood For Some Women. Lace is so fashionable this year, so much more so than it has been, that everybody ought to know how to look after it, and the care required is by no means so easy a task us might be supposed. To begin with, the look Df age adds greatly to its beauty, but beyond a certain point lace can look too yellow, and also can look not only old, but dirty, and care must be taken to avoid this. Lace should be put away in soft blue tissue-paper. It is thought that blue tissue-paper keeps it from turning, and the most valuable lace is always laid away in blue paper. The lavish use of lace has suggested a means of livelihood for some gentle women who had learned the art of lace-mending, and they are now mak idg an income by repairing and clean ing laces. In the first place, valuable lace cannot be intrusted to any one. The woman who has to clean it must have learned how to clean lace, and also how to make lace, for again and again d stitch or two will bo dropped or broken, and the pattern must be made perfect. This can only be done by the most skilled fingers. The cleaning of lace is a long process, and even the lace barbes and the lace bows now commonly worn have to go through a long performance before tliey are made possible. An old -fash ioned receipt for cleaning laco (a very good one, too) comes from England. The directions read that a good lather of soap should be made, iu which the lace shall be put and loft to stand for a short time; then put the lace into a | second water and allow it to stand, [ and so on, until all traces of the soap are removed and the water is absolute ly clear ouce more. The laco is then taken and pressed between the bauds —never rubbed or squeezed. After this it is put in flannel, and the flan nel squeezed together hard with the palms of the hand. The lace is then stretched on another flannel cloth and put to dry in the sun, great care being taken that the edges are all pulled out, so that each little loop shows to tl.e best advantage. It is easily seen th it I such a process will take a long time, but all these efforts are well worth ! while, for the laco looks like new if it i is thoroughly well done. Laces should not be left to lie loose i in a drawer among ribbons and the | hundred and one odds and ends, but ! every woman, and every child too, | should have a box where all her bits Df lace should be placed. There should I be several layers of blue tissue-paper, in which the laco should be carefully rolled. There should be, too, some delicate sachet-powder put into the box; if possible, a bit of tho scented llannel that the Parisian dressmakers use so much. This Hauuel, as is well known, retains its perfume longer than anything else, but it is so very ex pensive that it is beyond the reach of most people, so it is well to have sachet that can be renewed. For this purpose nothing is better than equal parts of heliotrope or violet with orris root. This can be put in a sachet-bag underneath two or three layers of tis sue-paper, so that no foreign sub stance shall come near the lace itself. Laco should never be put away fold ed, but should be rolled on rolls of blue tissue-paper.—Harper's Bazar. Tli© Coll©!?© Woman In Her Home, "Another means by which a wom an's success and happiness are se cured at home is in makiug herself felt as the mistress of the household," writes Katharine Boich, of "Tho Col lege-Bred Woinaa iu Her Homo," iu tho Ladies' Homo Journal. "She must bo the one to arrange hours of work, and not the servants. She must be the one to regulate the habits of tho children, and not they them selves. It is for her to set the stand ard of the homo life. Her position requires tirmuess, nud every member of the family should recoguizo and yield to her authority iu her own do main. Let her assuino with courage and dignity tho authority which be lougs to bar, so that everyone shall feel she is equal to it, while at the same time she welcomes couusel and suggestion from others. There are womeu who are too iguorant or indif ferent to guide their homes success fully, and women too weak to meet the responsibility, women who are in terror of their servants, or slaves to the whims of children or husbands. It is not so that happy homes are made. Just as a man directs the work of his subordinates and keeps the control of all his business in his own hands, so the woman who has a home to guide must bo ready to assume and control tho affairs of her household. Observation aud experience go to show that as the years bring added re sponsibility, and also added comforts lo the woman at home, she finds her restlessness growing loss and her satisfaction growing deeper. The college recedes to its proper placo as fche academy of life, and the wife and mothor realizes that heart and mind are tilled to tho utmost. Her great anxiety becomes rather to use all the opportunities open to her than to wish for others. She finds herself absorbed in her work without the feeling that she has boon thwarted iu her most serious ambitious." Monograms on Gloves. The two latest fancies of our fair English cousius, writes a smart American woman in London, is the embroidering of monograms 011 gloves aud writing iu white ink. Gloves made to order with monograms are devoid of stitching 011 the back, and the monogram is embroidered in the •66nter. These which al*o purchased • froiA : leteck! aiid theii embroidered i i ! .-'i , : j 1: have tno monogram set between the thumb seam aud first row of stitch ing, and others have it placed on the wrist below the stitching. It is almost too soon to tell whether this new fancy is to bo popular. It is certainly very striking, and is open to the seri ous objection that it has a tendency to make the hand look larger than the ordinary glove. A glove of suede iu the new bluet whade, with a white monogram in the middle of the back, is really to the conservative taste more striking than pretty. The use of a delicate white ink to correspond with a white crest or monogram is an exceedingly refined innovation. It may be used with very delicate tints, but is, of course, most telling on paper of some deep shade. Deep Russian blue or sultan red shows to great advantage under white ink. The very prettiest, how ever, aro the wedgewood effects in 0 variety of shades of blue, the blue gray being the most effective. Tho monograms and crests used with wedgewood hluo papers are of tho tiniest, to carry out the wedgewood eftec-t in its entirety. Of course noth ing but pure white wax must be used with this combination.—Brooklyn Eagle. Th© New Silk FettlcoatD. The very latest petticoat may bo a forerunner of the bustle. It is a bil lowy creation with a deep ruffle, through tho bottom of which a fine •reed is run. At the back the lower half of the skirt hangs iu folds. There aro six folds, and through each ouo a reed is run, which makes tho skirt stand out at the bottom with a stiff ness almost aggressive. At the waist line, however, the skirt is very fiat. Women of fashion in buying silk pet ticoats these days order a shorter silk skirt to match, as well as a corset. Brocade is the silk most iu favor, and both the skirt and the corset aro em broidered exquisitely with the owner's monogram. Lace flounces trim tho skirt, and a tiny frill of the same pat tern of lace finishes tho corset at tho top. The Handkerchief l>res*. Tho handkerchief gown, fur which some dressmakers prophesied a season of popularity, has not made much of a stir as yet, for the reason that four fifths of the dresses are composed of such ethereal fabrics that anything with even a hint of solidity about it looks heavy and ungraceful. Never theless these pretty bordered squares are worn by many smartly dressed women. Purple-mauve, with borders of sulphur or saffron, subdued by faint checks of gray aud black, is a smart combination. Tbo tunic is especially pretty with a handkerchief dress, whether the points aro iu front and back or at the sides. In dark blue, bordered with pale blue, it is very ef fective. Languor Not Komantlc. One by ouo old poetic idols are bo ing shattered by tho utilitariau and practical fin-de-siecle woman doctor. The latest icouoclast is responsible for the asseveration that what is so poeti cal in poetry and the old novels about the whiteness of the skin means some thing not so poetical. It is due, sho suys, to tho languor of tlie muscular tissues throughout the body, aud tho slowuess and languor that was so of teu characterized as a charming femi nine attribute is associated with indi gestion, and is therefore thoroughly unromautic. Fashion's Fads ami Fancies. Narrow ljlnck velvet ribbou is used to trim colored pique gowns. Braids finished with a short fringe are among the new dress trimmings. Gray kid shoes with stockings to match aro worn with light gowns in place of the white ones so long popu lar. This season steel and silver bid fair to tako in a great measure the placo of the gold and colored adornment so much in vogue of late. It is said by thoso who know that gray is the result of the black and white craze. Everything white is veiled or trimmed with black lace, anil vice versa. Chiffon ties have stayed longer and taken a stronger hold than many prophesied. As a finishing touch to the costume, these fluffy scraps, with their elaborate ends, are invaluable. The taffeta silk coat and skirt, tailor made, is a very stylish costume for general usefulness, and when worn with u white chiffon or lace vest, a sailor knot, of lace, and luce falling over tho. hands, the effect is charming. White is the invariable combination, notwithstanding that gray will com bine with any and every color. Mousse lino do soie, lace, chiffon, appliques of silk and sutin, luce braid, white cord nud narrow ribbon aro all used separately aud together as the style requires. Lace is still so prodigally used on countless other materials that it is an agreeable variety to seo it omitted on sheer cotton gowns; hence we see some of the newest India muslins, batistes and dimities with only em broidered yokes aud bauds aud bounces of the dress fabrio and no laces. Tho universal adoption of the rib bon stock collar has been tho means of bx-inging in many new ribbons. Velvet ribbon will begin a reign iu the fall. Iu fact, everything that can bo inado of velvet will be. Capes, tunics, dresses, coats, cloaks, bats, shirts—everything will be velvet, and velvet means furs as well. The smart bandanna silk handker chief arranged iu a four-in-hand neck tie stands at tho head of the list, but a rising novelty is the automobile of black satin, powdered with crimson sparks and drawn at the neck in a four-in-hatnd knot and at tho burst in a 1 aaifor's knot. Then its two long cuds, are secured in the wearer's belt. If Dot had played with common soap What wreck there'd be to-morrow! Her hands all chapped, her dress past hope, Her toys a tale of sorrow. But mother lets her play like this And wash whate'er she chooses, For not a thing will go amiss When Ivory Soap she uses. IVORY SOAP— 99 %o PER CENT. PURE. R< njamin L. Richards, the new pr s- Went of the American Whist League. 1 learned to play whist when 0 years i DTH. To Core Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 100 or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund mon< , The Church of Scotland has 4:5 nr. - •ion schools in India, wiih 3,000 pupils. Wo-To-Boc for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, sl. All druggists. The? Princess of Naples is said to be i the most beautiful member of a r ign- Ing family. Mrs. Winslov *s Soi thingPyrup for children j teething, softens the gums, reduces inllnniina- : tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc a bottle I MANY a dutiful daughter pays in pain for her mother's ignorance or perhaps neglect. The mother suffered and she thinks her daughter must suffer also. This is true only to a limited extent. No excessive pain is healthy. Every mother should inform her- self for her own sake and especially INDVWENT £.* SUKt SS: SQ iffb *l3°s $ or ler a^v ice about all matters B\ißsU> il concerning the ills of the feminine organs. Many a young girl's beauty is wasted by unnecessary pain at time of menstruation, and many indulgent mothers with mistaken kindness permit their daughters to grow careless about physical health. Miss CARRIE M. LAMB, Big Beaver, Mich., writes: "DEAR MRS. PINKHA.M— A year ago I suffered from profuse and irregular menstruation F" , ■ •- i, in— and leucorrhoea. My ft appetite was variable, stomach sour and bowels jijr were not regular, and was subject to pains like A colic during menstruation. li jtjj I wrote you and began to H nl take Lydia E. Pinkham's W_ , 19 Vegetable Compound and j used two packages of Sanative Wash. You can't in r\ \ imagine my relief. My \ A courses are natural and jary J generalhealthimproved." ST ff- MRS. NANNIE ADKINS, /M / La Due, Mo., writes: F /JII \\ y "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM — A n JA \ J I feel it my duty to tell ' If /* VJ 1 you of the good your l\p J J \ if Vegetable Compound has \ /y- J V i ll) 1)11 done my daughter. She p\l M /// / // suffered untold agony at 111 J A time of menstruation be- ' If/J jw fore takingyourmedicine; ""*•-*/ if) ' '/ / but the Compound has f relieved the pain, given her a better color, and she feels stronger, and has improved every way. lam very grateful to you for the benefit she has received. It is a great medicine for young girls." "Don't Put Off Tiii To-morrow the Du ties of To-Day." Buy a Cake of "1 huvo gone 11 dayi at a tlmo without a movement of the bowels, not belli# allo to move tbeni except by using hot water Injections. Chrouiccoustlpnik a for bovcu years placed me In this terrible condition; during that time I did ev erything 1 heard of but never found any relief; such was my ease until 1 begun using CASCARETS. I now have from one to t broo passuges a day. and ir 1 was rich 1 would give sloo.lofor each movement; it Is such a relief. " Ayi.meul . lit NT, IGSD Hussell St.. Detroit. Mich. CATHARTIC . Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c,20c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATIOR. ... Sterling Kemedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, Kcw York. 322 Or. Rlcord's Essence of Life ard, never-falling remedy 1 for all cases of nervdne, mental,.-physical debility, los vitality and yre hiatqvq fleecy In both sexes; positive, permanent