4 'You Never Miss the Water [ Till the Well Runs Dry." j We never realize ihe value of health | until it is gone. When old time strength and vigor are V)anting, purify the blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla; soon re stored appetite, perfect digestion, steady nerves and even temper <will prove it is bringing back the glovj of perfect health. Anthony Hudson, tho first white set- j tier In Pierce county, Wis., is still liv- j ing. having just passed his 100 th mile stone in life. He is actively engaged In farming, cultivates 30 acres without 1 employing help, his wife lending him j assistance in harvest time. Arc You Using Allen's Foot-Ea*e ? It is the ouly cure for Swollen, Smarting, Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corna and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot- Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. Hold by all Druggists, Grocers und Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmstead, Lelloy, N. Y. Notwithstanding the fact that there is nothing new under the sun, the United States Patent Office granted nearly 25,000 patents last year to peo ple who had hit upon a new idea. Ko-To-Bae for Fifty Cento. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 11. All druggists. The Government is paying from S2OO ; to S6OO a day for each vessel carrying horses, supplies and army baggage to the Philippines, and SI,OOO a day for I each vessel that carries troops. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely dersngo the whole sys tem when entering it through tho mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescription- from reputable physi cians, as the damaco they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F.J.Cheney & Co., Toledo. 0., ne mercury, and is taken internally, acting di rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, in buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken Internally and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by J. Cheney St Co. Testimonials free. SW~Sold by druggists; price 7fic. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best The United States turns out annually 185,000 pounds of plug tobacco, 12,000,000 pounds of fine cut, 14,000,000 pounds of snuff, 1.000,000 cigars and 5.000.000,000 cigarettes. Milkweed, commonly believed to be poisonous, is used as foe# in some parts of the Tyrol. The First Silk Hat. In an English newspaper of the date of Jan. 16, 1797, appears the following: "John Hetherington, haberdasher, ol the Strand, was arraigned before the lord mayor yesterday on the charge of breach of the peace and inciting a riot, and was required to give bond in the sum of £SOO. It was in evi dence that Mr. Hetherington, who is well connected, appeared upon the pub lic highway, wearing upon his head what he called a silk hat (which was offered in evidence), a tall structure having a shining luster and calculator] to frighten timid people. As a matter of fact, the officers of the crown stated that several women fainted at the un usual sight, while children screamed, dogs yelped, and a young son of Cord wainer Thomas, who was returning from a chandler's shop, was thrown down by the crowd which had coljected and had his right arm broken. For these reasons the defendant was seized by the guards and taken before the lord mayor. In extenuation of his orime defendant claimed he had not violated any law of the kingdom, but wa3 merely exercising a right to ap pear in a head-dress of hie own design —a right not denied to any English man." Mrs. Serlmp't Gardening. Old Friend —"Did you have much oi a garden this year?" Mrs. Scrimp (of Scrimpville)—"No, it didn't amount to much. In the spring I gave a grand garden digging tourna ment, the young men who dug the most to have the pick of tho girls for the evening, and it worked very well, but it cost me 'most two dollars for re freshments. Then I had a planting bee, and that'wasn't so expensive, only the planting wasn't half done. Later on I tried to get up a weeding festival, but somehow the young folks sort o' lost interest, and I gave up gardening in disgust." A Letter to Mrs. Pinkham Brought health to Mrs. Archambo. [LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM NO. 4*,39j] 41 DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —For two years 1 felt tired and so weak and dizzy that sortie days I could hardly go around the house. Backache and head ache all the time nnd my food would not digest and had such pains in the womb and troubled with leucorrhcea and kidneys were affected. 44 After birth of each child I grew weaker, and hearing so much of the good you had done, I wrote to you and have taken six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, one box of Lozenges, one box of Liver Pills, one package of Sanative Wash, and to day lam feeling as well as I ever did. When I get up in the morning I feel as fresh as I did when a girl and eat and sleep well and do all of my work. If ever I feel weak again shall know where to get my strength. I know your medicine cured me."— MRS. SALINA ARCHAMBO, CHABI.EMONT, MASS. The present Mrs. Pinkham's expert e: sin treating female ills is unparal leled; for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometime past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women a year. All women who suffer are invited to write to Mit Pinkham #t Lynn, Mass., for advice, which will be promptly given without charge. SAYS HE'S A WATER-WITCH. J A Western Farmer Who Claims to Hau Sopernatural Powers. * I Frank M. Witkee, a pioneer farmer, ' of Yankton County, South Dakota, has, in a most mysterious manner, lo cated water upon his farm as well as upon farms of other Yankton County farmers. He was very much in need j of water for his largo farm. Ho had I bored for water five times to the depth I of 100 feet and seven times to the ! depth of between forty and seventy feet, but without success. In his predicament ho remembered , an old story that if a water-witch J holds a forked stick in her haud when ever she passes over water the willow stiok will be drawn toward the earth. He also recalled another story of his youth that auts always go to water, and wherever there is a collection of ant hills there is water beneath. He resolved to play water-witch. Here is the story of his experience: "I cut a forked willow stick, the limbs forming the fork being as large as a lead pencil, and went ont to an ant village on my farm. I grasped the prongs of the willow fork and bent slightly forward in order to give the witch all possible chance to work, pro viding she was with me. "Well, that willow stiok began to turn gently in my hands. It was just a mild force that was exerted, but it frightened me, and I was on the point of dropping the stick and getting out of that spooky locality as fast as I could, when I bapponed to think that I came down there to find water, aud there was no sense in running away. "I knew from the pressure on the stick that there was but little water if any beneath the ant village, andlweut along until I reached a slight rise in the ground. I dually stood on top of i small ridge. "When I bent forward the prongs f that fork began to twist in my hand, t clutohed it with all my might, aud the bark came off in my hands, but she third, or upright limb, turned en tirely over and pointed straight to ward the earth. I afterward took a twelve-inch well augur and sank a hole an that spot. At a depth of seventy (oet I found water, aud it is twenty six feet deep. "In all the time that wo have used it the amount in the well has not been reducod a barrel seemingly, and is as pure and sweet as spring water. "Since discovering that I possess the witch I have located a dozen wells in widely separated localities, and never failed to be absolutely correct in pointing out good water." WORDS OF WISDOM. Talkers are no great doers.— Shakespeare. Simple duty hath no place for fear. —Whittier. Slumber is more sweet than toil.— Tennyson. Suspicion's but at best a coward's virtue.—Otway. Self trust is the first secret of suc cess. —Emerson. Speaking truth is like writing fair, and oomes only by practice.—Kuskin. The humblest mau or woman can live splendidly. That is the royal truth we need to believe, you aud I, who have no "mission" and no great sphere to move in.—William Gaunett. Thero is no finer chemistry than that by which the element of suffer ing is so compounded with spiritual ! foroes that it issues to the world as ! gentleness aud strength.—GeorgeS. j Merriam. Bo not diverted from yonr duty by i auy idle reflections the silly world | may make ou you; for tlioir censures I are not in your power, and consc ! rjuently should be no part of your concern.—Epictetus. | The true moment at which to call ( upon one's self to take any new step I in virtue is at tko fainting point, when | it would seem so easy to drop all and |to give all up; when, if you do not, ; you make of yourself a power.—J. F. W. Ware. If thou art desirous with right faith to know the true light, put away from I thee vain and evil joys, and also the vain sorrow and the evil fear of this | world; that is that thou lift up not ■ thyself with arrogance in thy health and in thy prosperity, nor, again de spair of any good in any adversity. For the mind is ever hound in misery if either of these two evils reigns.— King Alfred's "Boetkus." Traiiß-CiiuciiHiM Mail Expedition*. To cross the Caucasus range, which divides Europe and Asia, and on tho snow-covered peaks of which no ani mal could find footing to draw either wagon or sled, the Russian Govern ment employs the jirisoners who have been sentenced to compulsory labor. Three or four of these are always dis patched together, loaded with heavy mail sacks, watched aud aided from time to time by Cossacks, who fre quently cut out away for them with pick and shovel. They climb the steep, sinking at times to the knees or waist iu tho snow. A harder task could not be devised, even as a meas ure of puuishment for the worst of criminals. The job of the officer in charge of each of these trans-Caucasus mail expeditions does not subject hira to any envy ou the part of his comradeß in the army. A Nation of Meat Eaters. When meat is considered, one in stantly comes to the conclusion that it is a very fortunate thing that the United States is far and away the greatest producer. For we Americana consume eleven billion pounds every year, or 147 pounds for every person —considerably more than tho average individual weight of the population. Of this immense meat ration five bil lion pounds are beef, four billion pounds are pork and eight million pounds are mntton. | EXTRAORDINARY PLEA FOR "BOY. •few York Maiclstrate Thinks Petty Lar- I ccny the Fault of Insufficient Wages. I Magistrate Crane, when a youth by the name of Louis E. Wilson was brought before him recently charged with petty larceny by a photographic ' supply oompany asked the prisoner to j tell his own story. "I did it," said | the boy with evident sincerity, "but I I'll never do it again." The firm's | ggprosentative said it was desirable to I make an example. When the Magis- I trate was informed that the boy's ; wages were $5 a week, he said: I "Five dollars a week is not enough for this boy to live on. It is no great wonder that he stole." "I began on $2 a week, aud swung myself up to 81200 a year," said the firm's representative. "You can't tell me anything along that line that I do not know," the Magistrate broke in. "I have passed through that kind of experience right here in New York. I had nobody to help me, and I bad to get along on 82 a week myself, the best way 1 could. In my case, my employerspaid no more attention to me than if I were a dog. I know that my services were worth at least SSO a week to them, and they paid me $2. "There were days when I did not eat at all. There was one day—l shall never forget it—when I handled 82500 in cash for my firm, though I did not have the price of a meal all day. I confess that that day ouly the knowl edge that I had a mother who believed in my absolute honesty restrained me from stealing. The firm was one'of the largest aud most, influential iu this city. I was pretty near the rook upon which this youth floundered you see. Shall I now condemn him because I managed to Bteer clear of it? Yon are a business man, I can understand your position; but I am a Magistrate, and I am n Magistrate who has passed through tho hardships against which this boy is now battling for liis life. I hesitate, as a man and a Magistrate, to send this boy down town with the stamp of a criminal upon him. "I will pay the amount of this pecu lation," the Magistrate ventured. The offer was not accepted. Tho Magistrate then askod that the president of the oompany bo brought before him. This was dono aud after a conference with Magistrate Crane tho charge was withdrawn.—New York Post. Dlveraity of Crops. For several years prices have, qnite generally, boen uuremunerative aud production' consequently limited. Farmers hove refrained from hiring help and have contented themselves with what could be produced by the family. I kuow of no farm that is yielding to its fullest capacity; yet some are producing more than twice as much per acre as adjoining farms equally good. To illustrate: A farm of ijOO acres, IGO of wkioli aro improved, receiving careful treatmekt and above the aver age condition of farms iu tho vicinity, bus a cash income of from 8600 to 8700 yearly as the result of the work of two men. An adjoining farm of forty acres, with the Bamo labor, aver age about 8500. A "river" farm of forty acres, with a little more work, gives about 81000. Small holdings, diversity of crops aud profitable prices will more than double our production without any in crease in tho area of improved land. France, with nine times our popula tion to the square mile produces over eight busbols of wheat per capita for the five years ending with 1807. Our production for the same period was but little moro than seven bushels per capita.—North American Review, Scholars Surprised the Principal. The principal of one of tho public schools was very much surprised oue day not long before school olosed. It is tho custom in some of the schools when a stranger, or more likely the principal or one of the trustees enters for them to say to the school at large: "Good morning, children." Then the children as with oue voice still answer: "Good morning, sir." It may have been this custom which brought about the surprise for the principal. The children in the primary school had been sewing aud the work was done remarkably well. It WBH warm, uncomfortable weather, and the children had done so well that the teacher thought they should be re warded by the approbation of the principal, aud she sent lor him to come to her room. When he entered the sewing wa3 around everywhere, and the room looked so mnch more like a dressmaker's shop than a school that ho exclaimed involuntarily: "Why, hullo 1" "Hullo!" responded every little mite in tho room, and so spontaneously that teacher aud principal turned away that the children might not see them emile.—New York Times. Primitive Industry in Constantlnopc. There are no large manufactories in Constantinople, Turkey; everythiug that is made hero is mado_iu the coun try village fashion, and is of inferior quality. Carpentry is very poor, ow ing partly to the bad wood used aud partly to the careless, unskilled labor. Much of the wood on the market seems to be out at the wrong time of the year, and the workmen have no idea of turning out goods with exaot measurement and finish. It is hardly an exaggeration to say that in this great city there are few doors or win dows that are well fitting. Conse quently there is room for the intro duction of doors, windows, sashes, nnd all the furnishings connected therewith. There might also be a market for wood dressed for flooring, house-building aud other purposes.— Correspondence iu the Near i-'aik Tri . fcune. P ifis 1 Look atyourtongue! If it's coated, | I your stomach is bad, your liver out o! I I order. Ayer's Pills will clean your I I tongue, cure your dyspepsia, make I I your liver right. Easy to take, easy I Ito operate. 25c. All druggists. I "Want your moustache or beard u beautiful brown or rich black ? Then U3O BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers | A Bellville (111.) man recently added $63,000 to his tax returns because hia "conscious commanded it." /font Tobacco Spit and Smoke Toar Life 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 91. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. HOW TO OVERCOME INSOMNIA Bleep May Be Induced by Holding One's Breath for a Time. From the New York Press: In these days, when the mercury is trying to leap the hundred hurdle, the hardest problem of New Yorkers is how to get to eleep at night. Turn and strive as one may to place himself, sleep won't eome. A prominent New York physi cian, himself a sufferer from insomnia for many years, has discovered a brand new way of putting one's self to sleep almost instantaneously. It has worked well in his own case and never has failed in the many trials he has made spon his patients. After taking a deep Inspiration tho breath Is held until pos itive discomfort is felt. It is then let gently out. The process is repeated a second and a third time, and this is as a rule sufficient to obtain sleep. The mind must be fixed upon the experi ment and one's thoughts must not be allowed to wander. Insomnia is pro duced by tw© kinds of cerebral activity directly opposite in nature, a too active cerebral circulation and an insufficient cerebral circulation. The former can easily be recognized from the throb bing and pulsating arteries. The solf asphyxlation of the patient causes a flow of nervous blood to tho brain and an increase of the carbonic acid and waste products of decomposition. These products, carried to the brain by the blood, overwhelm its centers and so produce sleep. Dr. Johann Meuli- Hiltz, a German physician, writes en thusiastically about the effect of sleep ing with the head low as a means of obtaining most refreshing slumber. He raises the foot of the bed so that it forms an inclined plane. He says that the sleep thus obtained is more benefi cial; that one awakens with a clearer head, a wider mental horizon. He as serts that the neck increases in size, that the cerebral circulation is im proved and the Influence upon the lungs is so great that it can lessen the tendency to consumption. He recom mends that the lowering of the head be done gradually, and says that in somnia often is caused by sleeping with the head too high. Queen Who Studied Medicine. Few people know why the queen of Portugal studied medicine, although many are aware that she has taken the degree of M. D. She married the crown prince of Portugal without knowing much about him, but his .sterling good qualities quickly made her fall in love with him. When the tendency to stout ness first showed Itself In her husband, to his great discomfort, 6he determined to watch over him, believing she could do him more good than the doctors, as she was constantly with him. Hence she devoted herself to medicine under the tuition of the doctors of the coun try. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is duo not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup ot Figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the CALI FORNIA FIO SYRUP CO. with the medi-. cal profession, and the satisfaction which tho genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please renumber the came of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CL LOUISVILLE, T,. rcn voaK.N.r. LOCKJAW AND_ ITS CAUSE. Analysl* of Cartridges Used In Toy Pis tola Would He a Good Thiug. The prevalence of lockjaw since the Fourth of July led Henry Glick to ad dress a letter to the New York Times in which he suggests that an investi gation on the part of experienced phy sicians of the cartridges or caps used in toy pistols might do much to pre vent the spread of the disease. Many of the recent victims of tetanus have brought on tho malady by injuries re sulting from the use of toy pistols. "If by experiments," says Mr. Glick, "the cause can be traced to the pow der or cartridge, the remedy is at hand, and if the incubation of the germ can bo checked before the alarm ing symptoms arise all cases of tetanus may not necessarily become fatal." This subject was called to the atten tion of a well-known specialist on face and jaw diseases, who has treated many cja3es of tetanus with good effect, having studied it for many years. He said that the idea of an investigation such as that suggested by Mr. Glick seemed to him a good one, but he had not heard of any such being set on foot. "Is there'any method by which it would bo likely to be done, except in the case of some individual physician sacrificing time and effort to it?" he was asked. "No," he replied, "I don't know that there is. It certainly would be a good thing to determine just what is contained in the cartridges and pow der used, for a clean instrument never causes tetanus. It' is an infectious disease, and its germ is never found in maiden soil, but only in soil that has been worked. "A man stepping on a clean knife or running a cleau nail into his foot would not be in the slightest danger of tetanus. It is tlie rusty nail, out of some old fence or railroad tie that is coated with tetanus germs, and n splinter can produce the disease just as readily as a nail or knife. The germ is carried into the blood and all through the body, and to tho fourth ventricle of tho brain, on which it acts. But oven after it has been dissemina ted through tho body the malady may be cured. "Very few physicians understand tho treatment of tetanus. As a rule, they use poultices instead of using ice packs, which keep down the tempera ture and prevent the spread of germ life. At Bellevue Hospital I don't think they have used the ice packs, but they could do so without the slightest danger of that method inter fering with their use of the serum. I have found the ice pack notably effec tive in stopping the germ incubation. "When a wound is made which later causes lockjaw,tho skin is apt to close up before the surgeon gets the wound thoroughly cleaned out. If ho could eradicate all the pus by cutting wide and deep, there would be no resultant tetanus. As a rule he doesn't make a large enough cut to get all the germs out, and the disease spreads." Mexican Proverbs. There are many fine epigrams and proverbs in Spanish, says a writer in the Philadelphia Inquirer. Many of them oannot be translated so as to preserve the terseness and aptness of the original. Many, of course, are the same as the English proverbs, or simply change the simile. They are used with all possible variety of ap plication. A gentleman who was seated near of group of young ladies iu a railway station, busy with their farewell kisses, stood it as long as he could and then protested: "Don't count your mouoy iu the presence of the poor." Following are some of the proverbs not uncommonly heard in Mexico: "He who never ventures will never cross the sea." "There is no gain without pain." "Flies canuot enter a closed mouth." "A cat in gloves will never catch rats." "To the hungry no bread is dry." "A book that is Bhut makes no scholar." "The good laundress washes the shirt first." "When the river is passed the saint is forgotten." "He who has little has little to fear." "Do not trnst your money to those who keep their eyes on the floor and make au outward sign of piety." "Wind and good luck do not last." "It is good fishing in troubled waters." "A frugal, rich father and a spend thrift son." "No word is ill-spoken if it is not ill-understood." "A tongue may infiict a deeper wound than a sword." Kditor's First Obligation. That a newspaper is not primarily a public institution is ably argued by the Attica (Ind.) Ledger, which con tends that it is not the editor's duty to bear tho expense of booming his town and every business enterprise in it. Such gospel should be more genernliy proclaimed. The news paper man's first obligation is to mak ing a competence for himself and build up a property—just as in the case ol the druggist or hardware dealer or dry goods man. Printing Office Growls. "Ah me!" sighed the old hand press. "I've had a hard row to hoo since thd editor died. Popple don't seem to know what I was made for. At first they used me for a corn sheller, and now they're using mo for a gridiron!" "Don't growl," replied the offioe towel, "for you haven't snffqrod half as much as I have. Last summer they used me for a baseball bat, and now they're using me for an axe-han dle."—Atlanta Constitution. We cannot believe all we read in all advertise ments, but when we see an article advertised month after month and year after year, we know that it must be a good thing. If you do not use Ivory Stap, try it, and you will find that the claims for it are moderate. Ivory Soap is good because it is made by men who have been soap manufacturers all of their lives, they know how to select their materials and how to make pure soap. A Rainy Day. It Is not until we take the ralnrall In the bulk that we can realize what a stupendous quantity of water showers down in Great Britain and Ireland in one year, and even when we have the figures before us it is difficult to realize their magnitude. To say, for instance, that D,262,370,000,0n0 cubic feet of rain on an average fell annually in the united kingdom conveys little or noth ing, though it implies something moist, and when we further learn that the weight of the same amounts to 258.- 126,500,000 tons, except for a feeling of thankfulness that it did not fall on our toes all at once, we are only con scious that it makes a very pretty row af figures. With the laudable inten tion of making these latter figures look small we will merely say that the total weight of the rain that falls in one year on the British isles is only equal to l-119th part of the weight of one paltry square mile of the earth's sur face, from the surface to the center of the earth. When we consider that there are 121,000 square miles of such ! surface in the united kingdom alone one can understand what an infinitesi mal fraction of the total weight of the British isles the annual rainfall wouid amount to. Why, 4,300,000 Forth bridges would almost equal it.—Lud gate. Reallfttlc Playing. Petted Daughter—"They asked me to play at Mrs. Highup's this evening, and I did; but " Fond Mother (proudly)—" Were they not entranced?" Petted Daughter—"Hum! Y/hen I played 'Life on the Ocean Wave,' with variations, half of them left the room." Fond Mother (ecstatically)—" That's wonderful! They must have been sea sick." Benuty In Rlocd Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Casearets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Casearets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. An apparatus has been devised fo • ! automatically photographing people .is they enter shops and other p!a es. "DON'T BORROW TROUBLE." BUY 3APOL.IO 'TiS CHEAPER m THE END. " For fix year* I wn a Tiotlni of dys pepsia in Its worst form i could fat nothing but milk toast, and ai times ir.y stomach wouid ' not retain nnrl digest oven that Last March I ! began taking I'ASCAKETS and since then 1 ! have steadily improved, until 1 am as well as I | ewer was in my life. - ' DAVID H. MURPHY. Newark, o. | S CATHARTIC ksuMasi&to TAADE MASH W,C,3TlßEC >^^^^' Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do •ood, Never .Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. l(k . iOe. 1 CURE CONSTiPATiON. ... Nfl.Tft.RAO S P ,(I and gunranteed by nil drug- It W iU MMu gists to CV'K E Tobacco JJabiU CARTERS INK —None go good, but it costs no ; mere than the poorest. lA§T£ MA POSITIVELY CURED J I \ KO *" * * liinsii ASTII >IA CIITTI: H I i trial 1 " moiled tree. I M !:niciNfc Co., ST. LUC IS. MO. FL KiILUITIM I lolYl postpaid, Iti oent H B, Aa*XAiiika EIUEUY Co., 340 Greenwich St.. N Y Fariu For Sulo. I One of the very best hill farms in 1 ' Waitsfleld, Vermont, seven (7) miles , from railroad, ore-half (*£) mile from steam sawmills, comprising 200 acres, half of which is under the highest ( state of cultivation. Plenty of good timber and ex, client pastures. Sugar orchard of 2000 trees, equipped with tfcvelve hundred tin tubs two years old; > the balance wooden tubs newly paint d and in first-class condition. Latest improved evaporator; iron arch, large suga ring-off arch, sugar-house con taining (50 cords four-foot dry wood; three years' supply stov.w <>d on hand. , Barns in first-class condition, one nearly new. 17."i ton silo; abundance of small fruit; splendid orchard of grafted trees. The place kept through last winter forty (40) head of cattle, seven horses and other small stock; n ver failing water at barns and dwelling. Complete set of tools of th best make. The whole place is well fenced and thoroughly well kept up. DwvllLtg is first-class; two stories, twelve rooms, recently painted inside and out. The whole would b sold at a great bar gain. on acount of death in family. , For further in ormat i >n apply to F. A Joslyn, Waltsfleld, Vermont. ' Fits pernvtnet tly cured. No lits or nervous* ; ness alter first day's use I)r. Kline's (treat Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.li.H.Ki.i.sa,Ltd. kJlArohfrt Rbilu.Pn After six years' suffering I was cured by Pi bo's Cure.-- M ahv Thomson, Ohio Ave., Alleghany, l'a., March 19,1891. Rear Admiral Bartlett J. Cromwell had the honor of being the first navai cadet appointed from Nebraska. He was graduated as a midshipman on ! June 1, 1861. To Cure Constipation Forever* Take Casearets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Lord Kelvin has resigned the pro f- rship of natural philosophy in the University o-f Glasgow, which he had held for 53 years. He Is now *5 yearn of age. Bducate Tour Rowels Witts Chb carets. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. , 0c,25c. If C.G.C. fail* druggists refund money- Caviar is madt from sturgeon eggs, salted in brine. It is the most costly i product of the fisheries of this coun tiy, and while largely relished by epi cures. a taste for it must usually be acquired. Until recently its manufac ture was monopolized by the Rus-ans, most of it being prepared on th-- Volga river and Caspian sen, and at the pros i ent time about 8.00U.000 pounds of it .are exported annually from the domin 11ens of the Czar. Mrs. Window's Soothing Pymp for children teething, snitens the gums, reduces intinnnna tioD,aallah pain, cures wind oolic.£k a bottle. W, L. DOUGLAS liC3 & $3.50 SHOES e Worth $4 to $G compared with other makes. Indorsed by over 1.000.000 wearers, ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES TIIK (IK.M IXK have W. L. bung Us' niiia- and price nUmpcd on otlon. Take no substitute claimed I K. to be a* good. Lnrgcst makers Av of si and SB.BO shoes In the i A'WK world. Your dealer should keep ' v ,"A them—lf not. w- win send von * •**- - u p-.iiron receipt of i-rl-e. state ; kluU ot leather*. ami width, plain or cup tue. 5 Catalogue l Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mass. ~ GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS | Are the heat. Ask for Ihom. tatnamon tlum <o in tin in chimney.. All dealers. I i'l ITSIII u<; <;LASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. I Dr. Ricord's Essence of Life KuhffuSE I ard.no cr-falling remedy for all case-* >f nervous, mental. phv-i al do idty, hue vitality and | re liinturo iio. av in h si xes; positive, remanent | I'lU'l'; t ill treatlUHtit or $1 a bottle; stamp for j circular. J. JAi DL'Eb. Agent, 17t> Broadway. N Y. 1 ' ; Thompson's Eyewater P. & u. M 'y-j II
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers