"For the Sake of Fun Mischief is Doric." £L 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 I cures all diseases promoted by impura blood or Ivw state of the system. Bishop Torrepiaivni, head of the Ro man Catholic Diocese of Armidale, Australia, weighs 365 pounds. Ask Your Dealer for Allen'* I'oot Ea *e, A powder to shako into your shoes; rest" the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Bore, Ilot, Callous. Aching, Sweating Fe-t and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Hn.se makes new or tight shoes easy. At all drug gists and shoes stores, 25 ets. Sample mail-d FItEE. Adr's Allen S. Olmsted, LeKoy, 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 ogo paid $1,500, and which lie sold the other day for $12,000._ Don't Tobirco Spit and Smoke Your V.lfe Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be maf aetic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men itrong. All druggists, 60c or CI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or Now York. J. Pierpont Morgan spent four y. ars at the Boston English High School, where he stood head of his class throughout the entire course. ttdncate Yoar Bowels With OaacareM. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, 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 Onio, CITY or TOLEDO, I LUCAS COUNTY. F FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the rtrni of F. J. CHENEY & 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 anil every case of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Bworu to before me and subscribed in my 1 —I prcsencA this 6th day of December, 4 SEAL r A. D. 1886. A. \V. GLEASON. ( —v—') Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists. 76c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Piso's Cure is the medicine to break up children's Coughs and Colds.- Mrs. M. Cf. BLUNT, byraguc. Wash., March 8, 18M. THE PULPIT AND THE PEW. Minister Makes the Congregation and tho Congregation the Minister. feetwr—n a minister and his congre gation L'.icre Is an action and a reaction so that the minister makes the con gregation and the congregation the minister, says lan MacLaren In the Liadies' 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 ere ated an atmosphere so genial, and yet so bracing, that every good in its min ister has been fostered and everything petty killed. /agp] I PUIS J Is your breath had? Then your 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 beard a beautiful 2 brown or rich black? Then use \ BUCKINGHAM'S DYEj The University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME. INDIANA. CTn*lc*, Letter*, Economic* nnd History, Jnuriinlisui, Art, Science. I'liurmncy. Law, Clvily ,>F( Inimical anil Electrical Engineer ing. Architecture. 'I borough Preparatory anil Commercial Conrwe*. Ecclesiastical students at sped*' rates Room* Free. Junior or Senior ear, Collegiats Courses. Room* to It cut, moderate charge. St. Edward'* llnll for boys under 13. The Alltu Year will open September 5 th, 1899. t atiilotfuen Free. Adilres* REV. A. AiOKICISSi: Y. C. 8. C.. Preidout. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the bent. A*k for them. Cost no more than common chimneys. All dealer*. PITTSBURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. CARTER'S INK I. what .tbe largest and beat ► webool systems on. THE NATIONS BANKS INSTITUTIONS FC'NDED ON THE PEOPLE*S DEBTS. Organized to Rol tli 9 People Direct and Through the weruent —Them KothHchildH Will Soii Own All the Gold In the World Mil and Unmlned A good Democrat wi\s from west ern Missouri to the Minslppi Valley Democrat to say: "We are having plennot rain, and If it keep 3 on I feel surjive -will have 'overproduction' this yet and all the products of the farm kl be cheap and (as the Republlcanji sayl nasty, and in need of protectni. What 13 that finance committee! the senate going to recommend? Ifional banks, I suppose. Don't you tik that some of the people who hawboen so en gulfed by that wave of |>sperlty will see the error of their ly and come over and help suppress ie wave and Its wavers? I think the tional banks are a greater curse, if ;sible, to the people than the gold s dard. I be lieve the government s lp should be our standard of a doll whether on gold, paper or silver. the govern ment be the bank of ie, and dele gate that right to no ip or corpora tion." Replying to the aba! we will say that the sole object anjurpose of the creation of the flnancimmlttee was to establish the gold sldard and fas ten the national firmly on the backs of the peopj We are now living under a governlit by and for the Rothschilds. Thejare bankers and lenders of certiflcaj of debt called money. In order thatfey might lend a larger volume oj these debt certificates and eltually con trol the world's nances and thereby govern all fc people of the world, It was to limit the volume and annuautput of basic money, real money, njey that repre sents no debt, but is fiand stands on Its own bottom. Accjingly, by in trigue, bribery, deceiljieft, and such other crookedness anqoundrelism as these people are famiHwith, they se cured the demonetizan of the money that is the most benaal to the peo ple —namely, silver—tiuse this was the money that the l>le dug out of the earth, free and pampered, in larger volume than aether kind, and had it stamped in dominations best suited to their convejee in carrying on their daily With this money of the people! full and free circulation, and belnaded to by each year's product of thaines, it would have been Imposslblor the Roths childs and their intational gang of financial cutthroats!) corner the money market and fp the people to borrow and pay Interion rotfen shin plaster certificates ofcbt. It is easy to corner gold, beet# it Is the rich man's money and d not go out among the people; I silver is free and easy in its way:! loves to min gle with the "commiherd" In dimes, quarters, halves anjlollars. Hence It was necessary to |rid of, still fur ther favoring the rjat the expense of the poor, and plac) the latter more firmly under the hi of the Roths childs and their (ernational cut throats. as aforesaiit was essential to establish and sUin the national banks (founded on file debts), which are owned by the biers themselves; and by this hocuspa of extra finan cial crookedness th are enabled to lend their money the government, which is the peoptind also to the people individually,' that the people pay the bankers dle interest, and ths bankers still ty their money to lend out to somebf else, or lock it up In their vaults, they prefer. It is the most beaut! system of stu pendous public anjprivate robbery that was ever invell—worthy of the intricate and sching brain of a Rothschild. And tjworst of it all is that the people, ljg sovereign, are the only authorltjfhat can create pioney; consequerf the money that they borrow from hankers and pay double interest on the very same money that they cie and stand good for. All this woijlead one to con clude that the pec! must he natural born unthinkers; ain answer to this supposition we it frankly confess that some of theme. If things con tinue as now, th'tothschild family will own all the th money (gold) in the world beforeother generation, and when that tiqtomes who will be tho masters of all) people on earth? It does not requimuch wisdom to answer this quest Tlie Truth .caking Out. Now that the vuteers and some of the war correspnts are coming home we are beglug to get the truth in this wretchedfilipplne business. From these souf the people are learning that thiess dispatches and even the private'ils have been cen sored to a degrthat is absolutely amazing. We apently know as lit tle about the rjfacts of the Phil ippine war as wbuld if we were in habitatir.g the pts of Central Af rica. We may blre that where there is so much seen there must of ne cessity be a grerial of very bad busi ness, says the J Mississippi Valley Democrat and Jnal of Agriculture. Mr. James Crean, one of the most distinguished of our war correspondents,]) took a prominent part In the gallg-harge up San Juan Hill, and was lously wounded In that ever memjle engagement, has Just returned fi the seat of war in the Philippincsteferring to his ex perience while ie, he says: "When I to General Otis that he was gate my dispatches and striking out of m things I had wit nesed with eyes, and which tho American ,ple had a right to know, he said; 'I don't propose to al low the American public to know any thing about this campaign that will agitate or excite it. So long as I am in command here, the people of the United States will know only such facts as I deem advisable to allow to be known. Any man who writes any thing about this campaign contrary to my orders will be expelled from the Philippines. We are not going to have any public agitation about this cam paign if I can prevent it." And General Otis has always claimed, from the beginning of this abomina ble business, that he was acting strict ly under orders from Washington, and he no doubt told the truth. The president of the United States has taken it upon him self to declare and carry on an il legal war—illegal by his own adminis tration—against a people who were our friends and allies, and during this war he has issued orders and exercised au thority that no ruler on earth would think of assuming to himself, except possibly the czar of Russia or the shah of Persia. And the president of the United States is a servant of the peo ple! No wonder he courts secrecy re garding his "benevolent assimilation" in the east. But what have the Amer ican people to say about it? TEE ISSUES OF 1900. Democrats who favor the "second declaration of independence," made at Chicago in 1896, would like to know why so many of our papers are occu pying so much valuable space in their columns with the opinion of men who belong to the so-called goldbug Democ racy. These same men—many of them, at least —were in the convention, and there tried to defeat the will of the people; but not being successful, after ward as ardently labored to that end in the campaign that followed, as well as at the polls. Why the opinions of these men shoud be constantly thrust upon the readers of our valuable pa pers as a reason for changing the plat form on the question of bimetallism is a matter of no little concern. This "second declaration of inde pendence" was adopted over their pro test, and nothing has occurred since to change the minds of those who favored its adoption. It was not the intention of the framers and supports of the Chicago platform that it should be set aside at the behest of its enemies, but, like the first declaration of independ ence, it was the intention that it should stand as the creed of the party that adopted it until the war was over, the victory won and the principles de clared firmly imbedded in the laws of the land. Any number of opinions from the goldbug Democracy, however well col lated, in opposition to the Chicago platform, will not serve to change the mind of a single loyal Democrat. It is not empty victory that the true Dem ocrat is seeking, but it is the estab lishment of correct principles of gov ernment for the benefit and enjoyment of the masses. True Democrats prefer to go down in honorable defeat rather than be parties to a meaningless vic tory. Great reforms are not usually accomplished in a single battle, and most certainly there was nothing in the outcome of "the first great battle" for independent bimetallism to dis courage any of its friends and support ers. Notwithstanding the opposition of the combined forces of the Repub lican party, the Middle- of-the-Road Populist party and the Gold Democ racy, aided by the money powers of this country and Europe, the princi ples of bimetallism came near suc ceeding. Still we are told that this issue cannot win. If it cannot win, why not? This conclusion of some of our papers is certainly not deduced from the results of "the first great battle." The impress of that great educational contest is manifesting itself in every section of the country, and it is a well-known fact that the friends of the independent bimetallism are more numerous today than ever before. It is only by sup pressing the true sentiment of the masses and by giving undue promi nence through the press to the opin ions of its enemies that a victory for bimetallism can even be retarded. De spite the efforts of its enemies, the Chicago platform will continue to be the creed of the Democracy until its principles are victorious at the polls. M. E. CLODEFELLER. Crawfordsville, Ind. View* of R Repuhlleiin Or pan. From the Portland Oregonian: The McKinley administration has made most disgraceful appointments to of fice at the behest of unscrupulous poli ticians. It has betrayed the civil ser vice to the spoilsmen, paralyzed the organization of the army, violated its pledges as to currency reform, humil iated its most efficient servants and discredited American intelligence and valor in the eyes of the civilized world. In a time for courage it has quailed. In a time for decision it has hesitated. In a time for action it has delayed. In a time for honest dealing it has falter ed and equivocated. Its policy has been to drift; its aim has been to pla cate everybody, however unworthy, I and cater to everything, however mis chievous; its course has been to sac rifice any and every vital interest of the nation on the altar of partisan and personal politics. Nothing conveys a more inaccurate Idea of a whole truth than a part of a truth so prominently brought forth as to throw the other parts into shad ow. This is the art of caricature, and bj the happy use of that art you migjht caricature Apollo Belvidere.—Bulwtr Lytton. pweteteiei* xzexxxen# | NEWS AND NOTES | § FOR WOMEN. I I n vested by the Queen. Nurse Isabella Smith, of London, has been invested by Her Majesty with the Older of the Royal Red Cross at Windsor Castle. Miss Smith has served in the naval hospitals in England, and was for three years in the hospital at Malta. The coveted cross has been bestowed upon h*r for her courageous bearing when in charge of the nursing staff on the hos pital ship which accompanied the Benin expedition. Miss Smith is now at the Royal Naval Hospital, Haslar. Tight Sleeves Vermis Gloves. No allowances are made for gloves by the dressmakers. The newest sleeves cover tho knuckles and are caught round the thumb just like old world mittens. With these sleeves a four-button glove is out of the ques tion and we shall have to revert to the one-button glovq of the sixties. At the wrists the new sleeves are so tight that even the shortest glove would be in the way, yet it is not at all the thing to wear long gloves out side tho sleeves. The solution of tho problem isHiberniau, to say the least. Wear short sleeves and long gloves, rucked to the elbow. A New Faaliion Idea. The makers of fashions are trying to introduce a new idea, suggested doubtless by the prevailing mode of long tunics, loose in front. The new fashiou is to induce one to wear cer tain frocks without corsets. The frock is to have its own corset—in other words, it is to be stiffened so as to make the use of stays superfluous. The stiffening is to be done so as to make tho lines of the back curve gracefully, leaving the line of the front long and supple without litting closely. Whethei the patrons of the "artists" who have evolved this idea will consent to adopt it remains to bo scon. But it is certainly original. Mexican I-ace Industry. The methods of manufacture in the popular Mexican drawn lace work are directly opposed to those of most lace makers. Instead of weaving the gossamer fabric from single threads stitches are picked out or a solid piece of the finest linen cloth, leaving the remainder in some artistic design. This process is an extremely trying one, but the results are exquisite. Japanese linen is the fabric gener ally employed in this character of work. It is as fine as silk, and adapted to the most delicate patterns. Some of the designs are so elaborate and perfectly executed as to be scarcely distinguishable from tho real Batteuberg make. Alt sorts of conventional patterns are reproduced from the rarest and most costly specimens, although work of this high standard is not so general in demand as the art embroideries, includiug doilies, centres, tray cloths and table covers. Reward of a Willing Mother. A young student at one of the large art institutions decided this winter to try for a prize. He was under twenty, aud his competitors were all older than he. He wrote his mother about it, begging her to come and pose for him, saying that he knew ho could win if only she were his subject. Sho had a large family at home to look after, and a small boy hardly two mouths old. Moreover, the had CDiue, never au easy time for a mothor to break away, pick up a small baby, and establish herself alone in a distant town, merely to sit as a model for a son. Most women would have hesitated, as hoped-for prizes being uncertain quantities, particularly for boys still iu their teens, and proscnt home duties beiug, according to all rules of logic, paramount. But this mother did not hesitate. Her son had asked her to come, and so proved a rare loyalty. That was enough for her. At great iucouveuieuce to her self she went, though cheerfully, aud tho picture was painted. Now the papers announce that the young boy painter has won tho prize! This will Bend him for a two-years' course of study in Faris. It is like some old story of the mas ters, and certainly few sweeter stories of painters and their mothers have ever been told.—Harper's Bazar. Popular Women ol America. Edward Bok, replying to a corre spondent asking who will be the most widely beloved woman of tho nine teenth century, considers Martha Washington as having a very firm place in the affections of the people. "Naturally," he says, "the conspicu ous position accorded the wife of a President of the United States gives rare opportunities for a woman to at tract and hold tho love of a nation, and in this respect Mrs. MoKinley has been singularly successful. But, after all, a woman's qualities as a woman must remain the strongest forces to her claims of respect and affection. It is not alone because Dolly Madison was tho wife of James Madison that Americans hold her memory in tender regard as a woman of unexampled heroism. Lucy Webb Hayes wou the respect aud love of thousands of people ou grounds other than by right of her title as the wife of the President. "It is not because Frances Folsom Cloveland is the wife of un ex-Presi dent of the United States that she holds so large a place in the affections of the American people. Of tho many daughters of the Presidents only 0110 is remembered—Nellie Grant; and yet a President's daughter is only a whit less conspicuous iu tho eyes of tho cbuntry than is hr mother, 'fkltofet Lane, the niece of James Buchanan, occupied officially tho rela tion of a President's daughter* aud a few young women liavo won for a President's administration so large a share of the affections of the people. And 'Winnie' Davis won the love of every Southerner. Harriet Beecher Stowe, Louisa May Alcott, Frances E. Willard, Clara Barton, Margaret Bottome and Mafid Ballington Booth also have secured places in the hearts of tho people."—Ladies' Home Jour nal. Tlio Needlework Carnrritohe. There was laid in London recently the cornerstone of a building which has many claims to interest American as well as English women, firstly, be cause the building of which the corner stone is the forerunner will be de voted to the development of artistic needlework among indigent gentle women, and secondly, because Queen Victoria's third daughter, the Princess Christian, is President of tho Royal School of Art Needlework, which is to be housed in the building when it is completed. Princess Christian has been President of the society since its inception and has raised 870,000 to ward tho fund for its erection. The school was founded in 1872, and is the pioneer in work of this kind. The objeot aimed at was the two-fold one of restoring the nearly lost art of ornamental needlework to its proper place among the decorative arts, and at the same time providing remunerative employment for edu cated women who were dependent on their own exertions for a living. The school has gone from success to success, though housed in all sorts of uncomfortable quarters, hired from time to time as it outgrew them, and now that a suitable edifice is at last in sigbt plans are being made for still greater usefnlness. The school has become an authority in affairs of the needle and applica tions for hints on art needlework como to it from all parts of the world. Its influence on this line of work in America was first felt after the Cen tennial Exposition nt Philadelphia, where many artistio specimens of em broidery were shown, and it has since furnished instructors for decorative art societies in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Chicago. Women trained nt this royal school have also gone to Aus tralia, Africa, India, South America and other countries, and have spread their knowledge of the art they had acquired, many of them securing very lucrative positions. The number of private pupils taught by the school and its branches number nearly 15,000. Gn.llp. Miss Maria Mitchell, formerly oi Vassar College, is a very bright as tronomer. The only woman of royal lineage who is known to hold the title of M. D. is Queen Amalie of Portugal. •Teanette Sohwerin, the most prom inent representative of the Woman's Rights movement in Germany, is dead. Mrs. Brown Davis is one of the chief computers engaged upon the nautical almanac in tho Naval Observa tory in Washington. Mrs. Edith Poyer, a resident oi Woodstock, 111., indulges in au odd fancy—she keeps a mouse farm for her own amusement. The Empress of Japan is distin guished for her clever manipulation <Jf tho koto, a Jnpanuse instrument resembling the zither. Mrs. May Wright Sewnll, the new Presidont of tho International Coun cil of Women, is mistress of three languages besides her own. Miss Florence M. Lyon, fellow in botany at the University of Chicago, has received so. appointment as in structor of botany at Smith College. Among the delegates at the Inter national Council of Women was Dr. Ida Kalin, a Chinese woman, vlio was educated at Ann Arbor by American missionaries. That the British Museum is now open on Sundays and holidays is due to tho Queen, who interested herself in the question of making the building free to the public on those days and gave orders to that effect. It is well known that tho Princess of Wales and her two sisters were early trained in all domestic economics. They had to mnke thoir own gowns when at homo, nnd the Princess of YVales has always been an industrious worker. She has bbcome an expert bookbinder. Miss Amelia Kussner recently fin ished miniatures of the Czar and Czarina. They were so pleased with Miss Kussnor's work that they sent her autographed photographs of them selves, and tho Czarina presented Miss Kussner with a bracelet of diamonds and rubies us a special mark of ap preciation. (Helming* Front tint Shop-. Beautiful crystal buttons set with variously colored stones. Fine white mnline veils with smal embroidered dots closely spaoerl. Cheeks, stripes aud figured effects in toile du nordo for fancy waists. Gray ostrioh feather boas in short and long lengths for evening wear. Flexible gold chains, set with ame thysts, torquoise, pearls and crystal. Loug scarfs to match or iu contrast to tho gown, which uro to bo draped gracefully around the shoulders. Mohair gowns iu whito aud colors trimmed with innumerable rows ol stitching or plain or fancy braids. All varieties of light-weight tucked materials iu combination with narrow lace inserting or tiuo embroidery. Costumes of white crepe de chin? showing detached figures of rich blond luce applied in the form of gar lands. Broad assortments of whito and delicately colored allovers for general trimmings made of taffeta, satin aud net.—Dry Goods Economist. 1 If Dot had played with common sozp 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. IVORT SOAP— 99'X00 PER CENT. PURE. Benjamin I J. Richards, the new pr; B- 1 ident of the American Whist League. ' learned to play whist when C years > >ld. To Care Conntlp&tton Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 100 or 25c. If C. C. C. full to cure, Uruttfists refund muuey The Church of Scotland has 43 mil lion schools in India, wtih 3.000 pupils. Ko-To-Bac for Fifty Centa. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, 11. Ail druggists. The Princess of Naples is paid to be the most beautiful member of a reign ing family. Mre.Wlnslov'sSeethingPyrup forchildren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflnniniii teon, allays pain, cures wind colic. a bottle. 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 BUhBBBBBB ' or the sake of her daughter. Write B3WMJBLmW B to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn. Mass., fWO'f'Jfir'O** f° r her advice about all matters BV! 1/ B amKLtt'Sf 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., wri'es: "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —A year ago I suffered from profusv and Irregular menstruation I - -■ j ~i , ■ and leucorrhoea. My appetite was variable, stomach sour and bowels W were not regular, and was subject to pains like jla\ colic during menstruation. HT. \A I wrote you and began to ® take Lydia E. Pinkham's 3)9 Vegetable Compound and IfeL vAy used two packages of flgglfr > si Sanative Wash. You can't .. r> imagine my relief. My \ l courses are natural and general health improved." W MRS. NANNIE ADKINS, 'FT?, F La Due. Mo., writes: 1 // I l\\ X/vU'V "DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM— A /j JA \ Jl > I feel it my duty to tell J / you of the good your 7\S / J \ W/Wffl |l Vegetable Compound has\ /T, J V V 'III J')/ done my daughter. She Svl /' /_ \ Jf f / ' 1 suffered untold agony at MA I / /A time of menstruation be- ' If// An foretakingyourmedicine; fj ' '// / but the Compound has / 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 medicino for young girls." "Don't Put Off Till To-morrow the Du ties of To-Day." Buy a Cake of _ SAPOLIO CONSTIPATION "1 have gone !•! dnya r.t a tlmo without a movement of tlto bowels, nut being able to move them except by using hut water iujtctions. Chronic constipation for eeveu ycurs placed mo in this terrible condition; during that tlmo I dla ev erything 1 heard of but never found any relief; such was my case until 1 begun using CASCAIIETb. 1 now have from one to three passages u duy, and if 1 was rich 1 would give 9209.(0 lor each movement; it is such a relief.' AYLMEU L. HUNT, 1(J89 Russell bl.. Detroit, Mich. CATHARTIC Istoctwitilo TRADE MARK j Pleasant, Palatable Potent. Tnsto (iood. Do Good, Ncvor Sicken, Woaken, or Gripe, Hie, 2Uc. 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, loatreii, Hew York. 322 Br. Rlcord's Essence of Ufa ard. never-failing remedy for all cases of nervous, mental, physical debility, los. vitality and pre mature decay in both sexes; positive, 'iwruuinent cure: full treatment f6, or fl a bottle: stamp for **Vla*. 4. J AcyUEH. Agent, Kf Broadway. U. k. ! There are 635 prtTr ssional guides in : the Tyrolese Mountains. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar i tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by itirring up the lazy liver and driving all im | purities from the body. Begin to-dny to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, I and that sickly bilious complexion by lakiog I Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. 1 [ About one German woman woiks In every 27 in a factory. j Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous- I ness alter first day's use of Dr. tvhlie's brunt Nei ve lt.-si.orer. $2 trial bottle and treatise I free. Dr. K.H.KLINE, Ltd. KJlAruh iSt.Pbila.Pa. W. L. DOUGLAS 53&53.50 SHOES JJ,"' ■ M Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. Indorsed by over 1.000,000 'wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES Tsko no substitute claimed kind of ieuther. size arid width, jdain or cup too Catalogue <■ Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. nENSIONv'v" I psucce ssf u ute sCIaI ms. S 3,vrsi:i civil war. ISaiUndicttlinaclaim.. attyaiuS RHEUMATISM ■ 'IUI.MH EEMMPK Co.. WSOrMawtjliat.. ,Y P. M. U. 84 'Bf SBWWWwHh Best Cough Syrup. Toatee Good. Use M to time. Bold by druggists. M i^fitMy^iaißsaagi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers