Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, September 25, 1899, Image 3
44 He Laughs Best Who Laughs Lost." A hearty laugh indicates a degree of good health obtainable through pure blood, ols but one person in ten has pure blood, the other nine should purify the blood with Hood's Sarsapariila. Then they can (augh first, last and all the time, for Farm For Sale. One of the very best hill farms lr "Waltsfleld, Vermont, seven (7) mileL from railroad, one-half (%) mile from Bteam sawmills, comprising 200 acres, half of which is under the highest state of cultivation. Plenty of good timber and excellent pastures. Sugar orchard of 2000 trees, equipped with twelve hundred tin tubs two years old; the balance wooden tubs newly painted and in first-class condition. Latest improved evaporator; iron arch, large BUgaring-off arch, sugar-house con taining 60 cords four-foot dry wood; three years' supply stovewood on hand. Barns in first-class condition, one nearly new, 175 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; never failing water at barns and dwelling. Complete set of tools of the best make. The whole place is well fenced and thoroughly well kept up. Dwelling is first-class: two stories, twelve rooms, recently painted inside and out. The whole would be sold at a great bar gain, on acount of death in family. For further information apply to F. A. Joslyn, Waitsfleld, Vermont. There are cotton mills in 43 of the 97 counties in North Carolina, the total number in the State being 205. fldncate Yonr Bowels With vMcareti. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c,25c. if C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. A Brazilian doctor claims to have discovered an Infallible cure for snake bites of all kinds. He administers soup, containing two grammes of calo mel and 30 grammes of strong lemon Juice. To Care Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. M C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. LAWN PLAYHOUSES Large Enough for Three or Four Little Girls and Their Dolls. The latest novelties in the smart toy ■hops are large playhouses, to be set upon the lawn for the use of the little girls of the family. These come in very pretty designs, counterparts of the Queen Anne cottages in which the lit tle mothers really live. They are large enough to accommodate three or four little girls and their dolly families. The Interiors consist of one large room, which is furnished with small chairs, tables, couches, beds, bureaus, book cases and so on, all of which articles of furniture come in very attractive forms and can be purchased at any of the large shops dealing in children's toys and games. These houses will be welcomed gladly by the little misses, for they open out a vista of afternoon teas, parties and receptions at which the hostess can play at being a real live mamma and social leader. Placed In a shaded corner of the lawn, or out In the orchard, the girls of the family will pass many a happy hour when the sun is too hot for outdoor exercise. Let Tliem Alone. People over 30 would do well to give up milk and eggs in any form as a diet," said a well-known physician. "These are the structure-forming food of animals which mature In a short time, and when taken in quantities by human beings whose structures have already formed they tend only to the hardening and aging of the tissues. I have seen people who were beginning to find stair climbing difficult, and who were losing their elasticity, much ben efited by eliminating these articles from their diet. That there has been a great Increase in the duration of life below the age of 30 statistics prove, but beyond that period there has been no Improvement. In my opinion, the person over 30 would have as good a chance to preserve life as the child lust beginning its struggle with exist ence If he would only suit his diet to his years. XVliare the Great Forest. Are. A table In Science shows that Can ada leads all other countries In the extent of her forests. She possesses 799,230,720 acres of forest-covered land, as against 450,000,000 acres In the Unit ed States. Russia Is credited with 495.240.000 acres, about 48,000,000 more than the United States. India come 3 next with 140,000,000. Germany has 34,347,000 acres, France 23,466,450, and the British Islands only 2,695,000. The table does not Include Africa or South America, both of which contain im mense forests. It may surprise some readers to learn that the percentage of forest-covered land is larger In several European countries, Germany for in •tance. than in the United States. pwpj fPi ki<S | j Sick headache. Food doesn't di- 1 I gest well, appetite poor, bowels con- I I stipated, tongue coated. It's your I I liver I Ayer's Pills are liver pills, I I easy and safe. They cure dyspep- I I sia, biliousness. 25c. All Druggists. I Want your moustache or beard a baautiiui brown or rich black ? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYEMirs | NEWS AND NOTES 1 I FOR WOMEN. | Fans Like Fluttering Blossoms. Pretty fans to carrywith one's pale hued frocks are made to represent different flowers. The sticks are all a-flutter with silken petals, and at tho top of each stick is a full-blown flower, rose, lily, pansy, etc., made of silk. Tho effect is very odd and dainty. Tho Popular Jewelry. Homo of the most fashionable jewelry is found at the curio shops where odd buckles, watch fobs and queer rings are shown. There is a great craze for opaque jewels set in old silver. Turquoise, jade, coial and also pearls are most attractive set in oxidized silver and gun metal. For Autumn Wear. Some of the autumn models are very stylish and becoming to women who like to appear dressy. A gown of mas tio cloth has a bolero of pale mastic satin Btitched in a new and odd French manner; the edges are strapped with cloth, and the revers curl back in a novel way to show a vest of white silk with habs fastened down the centre by cross bars of gold and orystal drops. A smart little coat to be worn with this dress is of pale mastio cloth, trimmed with curved bands of stitch ing outlined by a tiny black chenille and white silk braid; the fronts are caught together by links of silver fili gree, and the revers and collar are faced with white silk prettily patterned with black. Her lliiabanrt'A Partner. "Among what are known as the la boring classes in this country the woman is tho financial head of the house," writes Frances Evans, of "Tho Wife and Her Huolmud's Business," in the Ladies' Home Journal. "The oian is the wage earner; the woman ;he wage holder. Every mechanic who is considered a steady man hands jver his wages to his wife when he is paid off". She handles the money and lirects the financial interests of the sntire family. The women of that slass estimate n man's character by lis willingness to intrust his earnings his wife or mother. The wife of a lay laborer is compelled by necessity so be a partner in the matrimonial 3oncorn; but let the husband of one of these women rise gradually or sudden ly into large means and wide business interests and you will you see her lit tle by little accustom herself to cod iling, in the form of servants and lux uries. She is no longer compelled to find ways and means, while her hus band takes pride in turning her into a fine lady, and so destroys the healthy partnership of former days without offering her compensation for the earlier confidence between them." Koia Bonlieur and Iler Pupils. The house in the Rue d'Assas whioh Rosa Bonhuer owned for forty years is to be bought and torn down by the municipality of Paris. After the artist removed to By, near Fon tainbleau, the house in tho Rue d'As sas was converted into a temporary homo for poor artists. Men and girls were received, but no one could stay longer than two weeks—just time I enough to enablo them to find cheap and suitable accommodations. Tho house was surrounded with flowers, 1 an oasis in a dull, dirty street, and at {one timo Mine. Rosa's menagerie added to the din of the neighbor hood. A monkey, dogs, cats, a sheep, a goat and a pet lamb were among the smaller "models" who wero | introduced to the visitor by their I mistress. An amusing story is told of Mine, j Rosa's influonce over a class of young girls who had been her [father's pu pils and in whom she took a great in terest. She dressed in men's clothes I and wore her hair oropped closely, like a boy's, but tho girls of her drawing-class adored Mme. Rosa, and | their sole ambition was to resemble her. One morning Rosa Bonheur en ■ tered the class room with her firm step and expansive smile. She stopped short and raised her hands in horror. "What folly is this?" she cried. "Have you all gone mad?" Thoy had all out their hair short to do honor to their beloved mistress' closely oropped pate! It was not a joke. Rosn was furious. "Good-by, my little imbeciles. I will not teaoh such a room full of scarecrows," she said. "When your hair grows again I you may send for me," and she left - them. It took many tears and a com- J mitteo of penitent short-haired young "imbeciles" to placate her, but they never tried to imitate Mme. Rosa's oddities of dress again.—New York Commercial Advertiser. One Way Women Karri a Living. "It is a custom," said a well-known hotel man, "for managers of some seasido and mountain hotels to em ploy women to introduce guests to one another. A clever woman of tact can earn from sls to $25 a week and board at this. She must be eduuated, tactful and pleasant, and must have tho rare faculty of being able to in gratiate herself into the good graces of tho women guests and introduce them to others, so as to make them feel at home, and provide company for those who otherwise might be lonely during their stay. There is no better advertisement for a hotel or Bummer resort than a good news paper to get people to patronizo the hotel, and the next best thing is to treat them so well that they'll go away and talk about the hotel to their friends and return again themselves. "When a man and his wife arrive at a hotel they do not readily make ac quaintances, because they do not know who is who. The proprietor or manager has not the time to introduce people, Hl' v 3 a smart woman to attend to this all will go well. She keeps a sharp lookout for all arrivals. Of course, in a big hotel she can'i wait on all. The long-term guests are first songht out. The women folks meet in the corridors, pallors, porticos, etc., ana a woman of tact will not find it difficult to approach new women guests. Of course, this woman is not publicly known as au introducer or entertainer. She is recognized simply as a guest staying at the hotel. She must have a hus band who is employed or in business or in a profession. I knew a lawyer's wife who is thus engaged. He is perfectly willing that she should earn a fee in this resjiectablo way. Then I know a doctor's wife who has a good place at a mountain hotel. The doc tor is the physician of the house. A doctor's wife, if clever, can make her services invaluable. You know, the doctor and the doctor's wife are pub lic property at a hotel, so far as their services are concerned. It is inter esting to watch a clever woman at work, introducing people. It is so deftly accomplished, and the result is so satisfactory that life becomes pleasant at a resort. I have seen a clever woman sit on the portico with a woman she knew. In less than a half hour this same clever woman would be surrounded by half a dozen women who were chatting and laughing, and yet were strangers at dinner during the evening before. But it must all be done with tact, judgment and dis crimination. An introducer or enter tainer must not be forward. Some women do not desire introductions. Others wish to bo consulted before introduction. The clever woman can readily learn who desire to know peo ple and have speaking acquaintances at least during their stay at the hotel. It can all be so deftly done that not a single guest will ever have a suspicion that her kind friend is a paid enter tainer of the hotel manager.—New York Sun. Of the recorded ministers of the So ciety of Friends 113 are women. Dr. Mary Sherman is a member ol the Board of Health of Brookfield, Mass. Queen MnrgltorKa of Italy owns a lace handkerchief that is valued at $30,000. For twenty years Mrs. A. R. Long has been postmistress at Charlotte ville, Va. There are two Scotch peeresses, tho Baroness Kinloss and Baroness Gray, who is the wife of MacLaren Smith. A new woman's club has been formed in London to which no one under six feet in height is admitted. Miss Hirsch, the twelve-year-old daughter of the late Baron Hirsch, in herited nearly 835,000,000 from her father's estate. At the Emporia (Kan.) State Nor mal School one of the girls is known to her ohums as "Postscript." Her real name is Adeline Moore. Thirteen nurses gave their lives to the hospital work in the late war, and diod as truly for the country as any soldier who fell by a bullet. The wife of Grand Duke Sergius Alexandrovitch of Russia, the sister of the present Czarina, is known to possess great histrionic talent. Mile. Lucie JFanre, founder and President of the League of Children of France, has secured a place in tho Exposition for children's exhibits. The girls' clubs of several Southern Kansas towns have resolved nover to marry a young man unless ho served with tho famous Twentieth Kansas Regiment. The Czar's three-year-old daughter> the Grand Duchess Olga Nikelaevua, is the owner of a doll whose frock is ornamented with priceless emeralds and fastened with gold pins. For the first time in tho history of Onondaga County, N. Y., a woman has been chosen President of the County Medical Society. She is Dr. Margaret Stanton, of Syracuse. Miss Enid Yandell, a New York ar tist, has been awarded the prize of fered for the best design for a foun tain, to be erected in Providence, R, 1., by Paul I'ajnotti, of Turin, Italy, in honor of the memory of Carrie Ma thilda Brown Pajnotti. Fashion's and Fancies. The rage for spangles has resulted in net tunics, embroidered in tinsel. The smart autumn riding habit is of whipcord in a new herringbone weave. Sashes are in stylo again. The new ones are of flowered ribbon, broad and with fringed ends. Mourning hats for young girls are of dead blaok chip, with wide brims, and trimmed with plain whito tulle or tulle dotted with black. Black point d'esprit net continues to be in great use, both for making new toilets and fancy waists, and for freshening gowns and bodies of black satin, taffeta, faille, Indian silk and grenadine. ! A new kind of mousselino that is said not to crush as easily as ordinary mousseline is called mousseline chiffon. It has been insertioned with needle-run laces, painted, pleated ant rucked, and is said to hold its own bravely. The "everyday" hat for fall is the Alpine. Its new shape is more than ever on tho masculiue order, the only difference being that the dent is not quite so deep, while the brim sprends more. Soft bands with rosettes will be used as a trimming. Foulards without number are being made. This silk was never prettier or more popular. A pretty way to make a foulard is to use a wide laoe panel on the skirt and a lace yoke on the bodice. The gowns of this silk are all dressy and intended for after- I noon costumes. RETROSPECTS. I met her in a glare of light. One May, it was a regal night. And she was stately. In form and faco she looked a queen-* I don't remember having seen Her equal lately. But Sue, in spite of royal pose, At heart was tender us the rose, And soon confided That some old gypsy once had rend Her fortuue, and "The Man," she said. Would come as I did, I blessed that fortune-teller then, And pitied those unlucky men Whom Sue had slighted. I know they must be in distress, In black despair and nothing loss— Indeed, benighted. To-day I'm one of that sad crow, And yet cau smile in spite of Sue- She was doliciousl I hear she's found another "flame," "Beneath the light" (the way I came). Nor is suspicious. The fortune-teller seems to know The way they come, but how they go Is more confusing. Yet, come and go, you kuow, they must, And I, at last, can And it just A bit amusing! —Chicago Record. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Mrs. Benhain—"Mother will spend Sunday with ua if the weather is pleas ant." Benham—"Z think we need rain." The man who woos nnd runs away Will never woo another day; But ho who kisses one girl may Bo sure to kiss some more some day. —Philadelphia Record "I know a Scotchman who says he never played golf in his life." "Good; we can teach hira the game and he can teach us the dialect."—Chicago Rec ord. "Why should I marry you?" she asked, coldly. "Well, of course," he replied, viciously, "you can bo an old maid if you wish."—Philadelphia North American. "How do you feel about this pro posed alliauce with England, Garan by?" "Well, I think our nation will cheerfully look upon her in the light of a little sister." Tommy Wagg—"Pa, what does 'M.D.' after a doctor's name mean?" Mr. Wagg—"Perhaps it refers to his patients, my boy, and stands for 'many dead!' " —Fun. "Hello, Spiflins, are you doing much these days?" "A little, Snaggs. I have just sold three oil wells." "Ah, in the hole sale business, I see."— Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. Little Ethel (whose birthday gifts are numerous and valuable)— "Mam jna, it's just too bad!" Her Mamma —"What, dear?" Little Ethel — "That we are born only once." Mamma—"Dear me, Nellie! How have you torn that great hole in your pinafore? It wasn't there this morn ing." Nellie—"Where do you sup pose it was then, mamma, dear?"— Punch. First Tramp (in the road)—" Why don't you go in? The dog's all right. Don't you see him waggin' his tail?" Second Tramp—"Yes; and he's growl in' at the same time, I dunno which end to believe." Coacher (loudly)—"Two are out! play for the batter." Mrs. Notupp— "Hatter! b-a-t-t-e-r! Goodness sakes, what sort of batter are these meu playing for?" Mr. Muun—"Dough, madam."—Judge. "You're the biggest freak in tho museum," exclaimed the petrified man as the fat lady aocidently stepped ou his toe. "As for you, sir," indig nantly replied the fat lnily, "you posi tively have no feelings whatever." Of course hair dye doesn't hurt the brain. We have the assurance of the maker that it does not, aud if any doubt still remains, there is the further fact that nobody who has any brains ever dyes.—Detroit Journal. Miss Cute—"What made Miss Millions accept Cholly after first re fusing him?" Miss Pert—"Oh, he looked so cheap wheu she turned him down that she couldn't let the chance for a bargain escape her."—Philadel phia Record. "I am all out of patience with you, flack. I should just like to kuow why George Jou6s is always at the head of his class, while you are always at tlio foot?" Jack hesitated for a moment, and then, looking his mother squarely in the face, ho said, innocently: "You forget that Jones has very clever par ents." "I have just learned," 6he said, with a perceptible tinge of asperity, "that I am the ninth girl to whom you have been engaged." "Well," lie suavely replied, "that ought to make you glad." "Glad!" she ex claimed; "I'd like to know why?" "Don't you know," he answered, "that there's luck in odd numbers."— Minneapolis Tribune. Saved by a Cat. Score ono for pussy. A Bristol (England) cat n few days ago proved the means of saving a whole family from destruction by fire. At half past two in the morning a shopkeeper named Ledo Schniedermann was aroused by his pet tabby, which was gently scratching his face. He tried to drivo her away, but as tho faithful feline persisted, he aroused himself, to find the room full of smoke. He nlarmed a lodger, Her man Jlulller, end also his sister and another young woman. They all rnshed to the stairs, where the fiamos were already spreading. With tho excoption of the lodger, the inmates, taking puss with thorn, reached a lauding, from which tbey escaped to the back yard. Just as the flames shot right through the spiral staircase, Muller, who had stopped to put ou his boots, was out off from escape. The flames reached hiß room, aud then, throwing out some bedding, ho ieapod from the seoond-story window. He badly sprained his ankle and was taken t> the infirmary,.-New York Herald. FASHIONS CHANGE. And It Is Now ths Fashion to Get Un married. Nbw York Tribune: A group of lit tle girls, from 12 to 14, were talking with each other one day on Bailey's heach at Newport, a few days ago, and a stranger curious to hear what the children of the elect conversed about, took a seat on the sand in their neigh borhood. They were talking of the fu ture, as children of their age are wont to do, and, of course, the prospective bridegroom came in for a large share of their attention. "Yes, I shall mar ry," announced unquestionably the beauty of the party, a lovely girl of 13, "but," she added with calm conviction, "I do not think I shall stay married long. I get tired of people so easily. I shall probably get a divorce after a few years. Her Eentiments did not seem to excite any surprise or disap proval, but one of the group said timid ly: "My mother thinks it is very wrong to be divorced. She says It is a solemn vow for better or worse, and if It is for worse, why people mußt stand it." The other laughed mock ingly, and the first speaker who seem ed to be the spokesman for the party answered with the wearied air of a woman of the world, which she had successful copies from some admired friend of her mother's, "How funny you are, Margery, with your old fash ioned Ideas. Fashions change in mar riage like in everything else, and just now it is the fashion to get unmarried whenever you want to." Bplrlloalista Disport Without Spirit.* Spiritualists had a jolly picnic at Braintree, Mass., with baseball, wheel barrow and potato races and other wholesome outdoor sports, with not a cabinet or a screen in sight. Now, if the spirits had consented to appear under such auspices through the me diumship of the contestants in the po tato race, for example, many skeptics might be gathered into the fold of spiritualistic belief, but there was no manifestation of the supernatural on that cheerful day. For some reasons all spirits, whatever may have been their character during the mortal life, show an exclusive partiality for dark ness and slow music when summoned back to earth. A Handfiome Admission. England is the country which holds the record for the consumption of al cohol. Englishmen, and even Eng lishwomen, drink enormous quantities of alcohol, and the vice is even more prevalent in Ireland, where it has as sumed unheard-of proportions. But we must not flatter ourselves that we are much better in France. Unhappily alcoholism is increasing alarmingly in our country.—Bordeaux La France. Fleasnre of Anticipation. From Brooklyn Life: May—"l shouldn't think you'd be feeling so gay after quarreling with Jack last nigh't." Madge—"But just think of making up again!" lfo-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, sl. All druggists. The number of summer hotels in the United States is estimated at 23.000. Tall persons have the advantage of gn ater longevity than short ones. 69 Cents for Nothing Just issued, a wonderful catalogue of everything to eat, wear and use. It costs us &2 cents to print and 17 cents to mail eacli copy. It's free to all who write for it This book contains 304 pages (size 144xlOVJ ln.>, has 10,000 illustrations, nnd quotes 100,000 articles at wholesale prices to consumers. 1 lere is the book : 1 Ins valuahlq cata Machines, Shirts, Shoes, Silverware, Stoves, Tinware I obacco. Towels, Trunks, Underwear, Upholstery VVii' tc, I ,es ..'i ,| d thousands of other articles. \\ ith this hook in your possession, you can buy cheaper than the average dealer. on ran save sums of money on everything you need, at any season of the year. Lithographed Carpet and Rug Catalogue, and our Clothing Catalogue with samples attached, ore also free. Express, ige paid on clothing, freight paid on carpet. Which book shall we send you f Address this way: JULIUS HINES & SON BALTIJVIOKIi, MI). Department jjj.3 PILES "IsufTemUbe torture* of'tlic dimmed with protruding piles brought on by constipa tion with which I was afflicted for twenty years. I ran across your CASUARKTS in the town of Newell, la., and never found anything to equal them. To-day J am entirely free from piles and feel like a new man." C. H. KEITZ, 1411 Jones St., Sioux City, la. CATHARTIC pom TRADE MARK REOI&TVRED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c, MkJ. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... BUrllnf firmed* Company. ( Mr.go. Rontrr.l, New York. Sit UA.Tn RAP Sold and guaranteed by all drug "U" I U-DAIf gists to CTRE Tobacco llablt. ■MB HIjitStOPPED~FREE"" n ■ r Permanently Cared A. 'M Ini.nlly Prevented by ■ ■ ■ KB DR. KLINE'S GREAT L ■ W HERVE restorer ' PmriUvr enre f#r all Ntrrmu DUtisu. Fill. Hpiltpi p, M Bpaimi and St. I'UtM' Panca. bol iuor NorvouMMK H *nr tint day'■ a•. TreatiM and $S trial bottla WM free *• patiaau, thry pay Tim c > irm chtmra only Barters INK l "Too Good and Too Cheap 'to b® without it" "All ready to start?" "Yes; here is my Ivory Soap, that finishes my packing. I always lay in a supply before going on the road. It is one of the comforts a traveling man can carry with him. IV QRY SOAP—IT FLOAT'S. In Switzerland, as elsewhere, there i has been for years a great influx from ! the country to the towns. From 1891 to 1897 the increase of population in Zurich was 10,000 to 11,000 a year. Don't Tobarro Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be map netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, SOo or 81. Cure'guarun teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Macaroni and vermicelli are simply a mixture of wheaten flour and water, pressed through molds and dried. Tin y are produced largely in Italy, where | they are favorite articles of food. Absolutely Free. To introduce Fiudloy's Eye Salve I will I send by mail, absolutely FREE, a 25 cent box I to any "one writing me a postal enrd giving name and address. It cures 9ore eyes at once. Address J. P. HAYTEH, Decatur, Texas. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Fyrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflanium- j tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. 1 We have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for JO years.—LIZZIE FEKHEE, I Camp St., Harrisburg, Pa., May 4. 1804. MOTHERHOOD is woman's natural destiny. Many women are denied the happiness of children through some derangement of the generative organs. Actual barrenness is rare. Among the many triumphs of LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable of su PP ose d barrenness. This great <9Saflnr medicine is so well calculated to regu- I mu late every function of the generative or gans that its efficiency is vouched for >OB by multitudes of women. mLB M A MRS. ED. WOLFORD, of Lone Tree, " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —Before taking Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I had one child which lived only six hours. The doctor said it did nothave the proper nourishment while I was carrying it. I did not feel at all well during preg nancy. In time I conceived again, and . M. thought I would write to you for advice. Words cannot express the gratitude I feel towards you for the help that your modi felt like a new person; did my work up to the last, and was sick only a V ' I pnf OKf. short time. My baby weighed ten joy of our home. He is now six fll weeks old and weighs sixteen <T -- // pounds. Your medicine is cer suffered with inflammation of Selttoitfß < V the womb, pains in back, left Smjwm % & ,k could not walk across the floor withoutsuffering intense pain. two years ago I wrote to you for advice, and began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. '■ ' I had not finished the first bottle before I felt better. I tock four bottles, and have been strong and perfectly healthy ever since, and now have two of the nicest little girls." "Where Dirt Gathers. Waste Rules." Great Saving Results From the Use of SAPOLIO W. L. DOUGLAS $3&53.50 SHOES jffij™ Worth $4 to $8 compared with other makes. / S Indo'rurd by over P 1,000,000 wearers, Off ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES [1 V M TIIK (JKNTIM: IIIITS W. L. I> 1 > I.KI (■ w* fadjK, iy name and price lUmped on bollom. . 1 Tnko no substitute claimed 3L.. .** L. to tic as pood. I.arpest inakera I pK of *:i and tft.fiO hlioqb In the I v,rld. Your dealer should keep ! them—lf not. wo will send you .w*/ •;i aiuilron receipt of price. Stato 1 klud of leather. size and width, plain or cap toe. ' < atalogue C Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. P. N. U. 86 '99 Dr. Ricord's Essence of Life ard, ne\er-fntlinp rfiHe*t>''fr all'raw-r m nervous mental, physical debility, log! vitality and pre -111 Itnra decay in both sexes; positive, permanent <nre; full treatment #/>, or #1 a bottle; stamp for ciri alar. 4 JAuQl'Eti, Agent, lid Broadway, N. V. How's Thin? e offer One Hundred T)ollr- Reward foi any ea e of Catarrh that cannot b ; cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. _, T F. J. CIiBNKV & Co.. Props., Toledo, O. \> o. the undersigned. have known F.J. Che ney;oi the In t 15 years and believe him per foctly honor bir 11 ill business transactions • and financially ato carry out any obliga tion 111 de by their linu. WEST & TKUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Oh o. WAJIIIINO, KINNAN Sr MAHVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. I . j! 1 - Catarrh Cure isinken in*er nail y, act- Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur jaces of th system. Pi ic •, 75c. pe bottle, bold byall D.uggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best. I The first automobile club of Ger many has just been organized and the Duke of Ratibor is the President. Deantv Is Illood Deep. | Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im* | purities from the body. Begin to day to 1 banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. I The proporth n of married p.rsona to single ones is as 75 to 1,000. I GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS | Are tlie hest. Auk for them. Coat no more 1 than common clilinneya. All dealers. | I'ITTSIU'KG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa, Fiensionkw?T wSuccessfully Prosecutes Claims. Lato PrtnrlmvlExdmtner U.S. Pension Bureau. Syrniuelvii war. lf adjudieatinp Halms. att.v since, RHEUMATISM !££ 1 1 AUEXAHDBB Beukov Co.. MCQrer.awich St,, N. Y.