44 He Laughs Best Who Laughs Last A hearty laugh indicates a degree of good health obtainable through pure blood. cAs but one person in ten has pure blood, the other nine should purify the blood mtiih Hoof s Sarsaparilla. Then they can Uugh first, last and all the time, for Farm For Sale. One of the very best hill farms In "Waltsfield, Vermont, seven (7) miles from railroad, one-half (V 4) mile from steam 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 sugaring-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, Waltsfleld, Vermont. There are cotton mills in 43 of the 97 counties in North Carolina, the total number in the State being 205. Cdaente Your Bowels Wltn vascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. U)c, 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 ca o mel and 30 grammes of strong lemon Juice. To Care Constipation Forever* Take Casoorets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 85c. If 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 shops 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 mteriors 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. THfese 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 Them Alone. People over 30 would do well to give up milk and eggs in any form as a diet," ald a well-known physician. "These are the structure-formtag 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 Just beginning its struggle with exist ence if he would only suit his diet to his years. Where the Great Forests 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. Ruesia is credited with 498,2*0,000 acres, about 48,000,000 more than the United States. India comes next with 140,000,000. Germany has 84,347,000 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 loarn that the percentage of forest-covered land Is larger in several European countries. Germany for In stance. than In the United States. I Pi lis' | | Sick headache. Food doesn't di- [ I gest well, appetite poor, bowels con- I I stipated, tongue coated. It's your I I liver! 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 board a beautiful brown or rich black ? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Mir* 80—£T.. Q* O*USQI9T9, P Hall.* CO._N_aH U , NH. j AS TO EXPEDIENCY. CHICAGO PLATFORM IS THE ONLY HOPE. The Fellows Who Wen hi Change It Do Not Want the Demonr*tie Party to Win—A Massachusetts Paper Fires a Broadside at Trimmer. It Is argued that the money question Is dead; that people will not Interest themselves in It; that something more exciting must be adopted for the lead ing issue; that the East will be sol idly against the West on that issue; that If the Democratic party makes bi metallism an issue It will be snowed under, etc., etc., says the Springfield Leader-Democrat All kinds of clap trap arguments are brought up to switch the Democratic party from the silver question to some other Issue. Some of these arguments are honest, but nine-tenths of them come from Re publicans and Republican papers. A few are really advanced by Democrats who have the Interest of the party at heart, and to these we will address our selves. Those who argue that silver is dead do not closely read the signs of the times; those who believe sliver will not b the leading issue should study the result of Gov. Hogg's address at Tammany hall, July 4; those who believe the silver question can be shelved should consider the cause of the constant ovations to Bryan wher ever he goes. Sappose those Democrats who forsook the party In 1896 do stand aloof yet. Suppose they nominate a ticket of their own, as they did then. Suppose that they even go over bodily to the Republican party. The party will lose no more votes than It did In 1896, even If as many, and will gain all that fllver Republican vote which either voted the Republican ticket under pro test or refrained from voting. As a matter of party policy, to say nothing about principle, It must be remembered that those silver Republicans who vot ed with the Democrats in 1896 would desert the party the moment It turned its back on or subordinated the silver question, and it Is believed that this vote is much larger than that of the gold Democrats. It should not be for gotten that there are man;' thousands of Independents and Populists who will vote for Bryan and silver who would not vote for Gorman or any other gold Democrat or any man who had to be taken up as a compromise measure, be cause of his conservatism or lack of force. All these things must be con sidered when the questions of platform and candidate are under consideration. The silver Republicans, the independ ents and the Populists will stand no dodging and no foolishness, and if the Democratic party is to hold the vote It got in 1896 and draw to It the many additional thousands that are ready to come, It must take no backward step from its position outlined in the Chi cago platform. Some new planks may be added to the platform, but none must be taken away. It must not be forgotten that the change of a few | thousand votes in some of the close states would have elected Bryan in stead of McKinley.and that this change cannot be hoped for If the party swerves from the lines of old-time De mocracy. It is now known that cer tain states were carried for McKinley by methods that cannot be used again. "God hates a quitter," was once said of a prominent politician, and If It I* true as to the individual, it is doubly true as to the party. If bimetallism was right in 1896 It Is right now. and will be right in 1900. Every argument used In favor of the double standard in the last campaign will apply equally well in the next, while many new ar guments will be added to the list be cause of later developments. Truck ling and time-serving may meet with apparent temporary success,but neither ever won a great victory. It is r>t only right but it Is expedient for the party to stand by Its guns in the interest of the great mass of the people, and against the allied powers of greed and monopoly. Hauls for an Inquiry. In view of the apparent fondness of the administration for investigations we would respectfully suggest the pro priety of congressional action next winter looking to a thorough investi gation of the conduct of the war, and especially to answer a number of per tinent questions, among which the fol lowing come to mind off hand: When was the Idea of conquest of the Philippine islands first hit upon and by whom? When was it determined that co-op eratlon with the people of the Philip pine islands against the common ene my should be abandoned and co-opera tion with the Spaniards against the Philippine republic agreed upon, and why? Was the surrender of Manila to Gen. Merrltt the result of a sham battle ar ranged without the knowledge of our then allies? Why was the commanding general of the American army kept in ignorance of the purpose of the administration a year ago to fight the Filipinos as well as the Spaniards? Was actual hostilities In February last authorized by the commanders of either of the armies Investing Manila? Did President Agulnaldo repudiate responsibility for the rioting of Feb. 4 last and request the establishment of a neutral zone to prevent any pos sibility of trouble? How many times did emissaries of the Filipino republic enter the Ameri can lines to ask for an armistice or to offer terms of peace, and what terms of peaoe were offered or suggested? What was the purpose of the cam paign to Calumplt and across Laguna de Bay, and why was the conquered territory surrendered? What propqrtion of the population of Luzon have actually oledged adher- ence to the constitution ot the United States and have shown by their works true loyalty to the American flag? How many of the Islands of the ar chipelago have formally accepted the sovereignty of the United States? ' What sums were offered the Filipino soldiers as bribes to turn over their guns and by whose authority? What was the compensation paid the Mohammedan sultan of Sulu and what was the agreement aa to annual pay ments to him? What Is the state of civilization, ed ucation, wealth and religious proclivi ties of those who are upholding the Filipino cause and of those who are supporting the United States? There are many other similar ques tions that the American people would like to have answered, but these are sufficient to suggest the proper lines of a congressional Investigation into the conduct of the Filipino-American wu. HONEST MONEY. During our war of the rebellion then, were three kinds of money which stood the shock of arms to the end. None of them was coin. Coin left the field within the first six months. The rev olutionary government of the South Is sued the best paper possible for such a government. It was precisely as good as the Issu ing power—no better, no worse. It waa a brave money—far better than cow ardly coin. It stayed with the armies, and fought with them to the bitter end, and went down with them on the field of battle. That paper money of the South was rudely executed and easily counterfeit ed. This, of course, made it practically impossible to limit the volume in cir culation; and, as already stated, an un limited money is worthless money. Money Is valuable in proportion to lim itation. If It Is possible, the counterfeiters will inflate the money to the point of worthlessness, as in the case of our continental currency and the French assignats. In the North there were two sorts of paper money. The first sixty millions were receivable in the rev enues of the government the same as coin, and legal tender for private debts. That moey waa preferred to coin during the war, and as long as it cir culated. Another class of paper money issued during the war, known as green backs, was not receivable for duties on Imports nor for Interest on the pub lic debt. It was like any other useful machine with a number of Important bolts left out. It went below par as compared with coin, or as compared with paper with* out these legal disabilities. It some times went below 50 cents on the dol lar, because of Its legal disabilities, and from no other cause. Yet, such as it was, all the shylocks and the armies of the South were beaten by It at one and the same time. All agree that the greenback saved the life of the nation. With gold only, the armies would have been paralyzed, and anarchy would have prevailed. It would have been a contest of swords, after the manner of savages, with lit tle union or adhesion on either side. Money is the instrument of association. Without money there Is no cohesion, and disintegration must ensue. A per fect money will remain at its poet in times of danger. Intrinsic money will not do this. Jersey Stands by ItsaOwn. No one will he surprised at the de cision of the New Jersey Supreme Court sustaining trusts. The incuba tion and promotion of trusts is the leading New Jersey industry. A very large proportion of the state's Income Is derived from fees for licensing them. Hence tho Supreme Court, being In fluenced —consciously or unconsciously —by its environment, naturally leans toward the trust proposition. For a New Jersey court to condemn trusts would be equivalent to a Pennsylvania tribunal denouncing the Iron industry, or a Louisiana court assailing the manufacture of sugar.—Chicago Chron icle. If the above statement is reliable there is but little difference between thecrlmlnal in the penitentiary and the Judge on the bench, and that little is in favor of the convict, says the Non conformist. If judges decide causes according to their own interest, there is little hope for the American Judic iary. If a Judge in New Jersey, Penn sylvania or Louisiana decides a cause unjustly to please his state, his party or his friends, what Is to prevent that same judge from accepting a bribe to please himself? Surely not honor, for he hasn't any. Yet there are peo ple who claim that we must not say anything against the courts because they are the sacred paladlum of our liberties. On the contrary, they are the bulwark that upholds the encroach ments of plutocracy and greed. The shortest and best legislature was that of Representative Shrader. Here It Is in full; "Damn the Supreme Court." This speech was only Intended to apply to the Supreme Court of Nebraska, but he wouldn't have gone far wrong if he had included several of the federal courts in his condemnatory ejacula tions. An KfTemlnato Custom. From the Washington Times: In his latest raid into the enemy's country Gen. Lawton found a town equipped with bathing places with "hot sponges and marble tubs." This would be a valuable acquisition to the toilet fa cilities ot our army in the Philippines If Otis had not decreed against sol diers bathing, on the ground that the custom Is effeminate. HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. Keep the Butter Firm and Sweet- Daring the hot season the batter all too frequently shows a disposition to ran, too, and the housewife is oftea at her wits' end to know how to keep it firm and sweet. An expert batter maker says that la erder to prevent rancidity butter may be worked up with a solution of bicar bonate of soda, allowing three-quar ters of aa ounce or au ouuee to each two pounds of butter. After washing thoroughly in this until the rank taste has thoroughly disappeared, the bat ter should be rinsed well with fresh cold water, and then salted imme : diately. n I're/ervlng Fruit Ju1. Various antiseptics have been pro posed and experimented with as pre servatives for fruit juices, but they are really not necessary if the juices are properly prepared by sterilizing. Grape juice has been k.pt for several years when sterilized, and without a grain of any kind of preservative. After the juice of the fruits is ex pressed it is heated in a porcelain lined kettle nearly to the boiling point. After holding it at this tem perature for fifteen minutes filter the juice through felt. Meanwhile steril ize clean bottles by standing them in water at the boiling-point, and fill them immediately with the heated juice. When the bottles are full put them back in the hot water and let them remain there for fifteen minutes. Then seal and close them tightly, and do not open uutil ready for use. Fresh fruit juices prepared in this way will retain all of their natural flavor and aroma for_wjnter use, and they can be used in all cases where the oxtraots are employed in cooking. The clear juices are much more palatable and healthier thifh any of the chemically prepared extracts.—The New Voioe. Arrangement of the Linen Cupboard. The linen cupboard may be any or dinary closet fitted up with shelves for the purpose. Four and one-half feet by six and one-half feet high will al low five shelves. The lower shelves should bo twelve to thirteen inches apart, the upper ones nine to ten inches. On the first shelf may be plaoed pil low and bolster cases; on the second, towels; on the third, tablecloths, fanoy and serviettes; on the fourth, window curtains and toilet oovers; on the fifth* the best sheets; on the sixth shelf, the bottom of the cupboard, bath sheets and common sheets. The most convenient way to fold the linen in placing it upon the shelves so as to take up least room is to fold the largest towels across so that they may be put ou the shelf in rows. The sheets may be polled in the usual way, two iu a row in length and two in width. With shelves twelve inohes apart sheets may be put in two in depth, that is, eight bundles, each sheet being a double bundle. Four pairs of double bed sheets, besides those in general nso and the small ones with the bath sheets, on the lower shelf will be enough for most households. White counterpahes, dimity bed hangings, window cur tains, cretonne onrtains for box Otto mans and the like may alf find a place in the linen cupboard, although it is best that blankets and woolen bed covers should be put away by them selves with plenty of camphor. If an extra shelf is desired in this oupboard it can be made by lessening the space betwoon the shelves con taining the lighter articles.—Washing ton Star. Recipes. Rice Griddle Oakes—Mix well one half pint of cold boiled rice with an equal quantity of buttermilk, then stir in one-half pint of sifted Graham flonr, one beaten egg and half a tea spoonful of soda, a little boiling water. Orange Padding—Peel, slice, and seed five oranges, and pour over them one cupful of sugar. Put into a donble boiler one pint of milk, into which stir one tablespoonful of corn starch and the yolks of three eggs. When thickened, pour over the oranges. Whip the whites of eggs, add three tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, and frost dish on top. Gooseberry Trifle —Put a quart of gooseberries into a porcelain kettle, with sufficient granulated sugar to sweeten them, and boil until reduced to a pulp, then pour into a glass dish. Make a boiled custard of one pint of new milk, two eggs and one-hnlf cup ful of sugar, and spread over the ber ries; cover with whipped cream when very cold and serve. Spioed Cherries—Take seven pounds of sour cherries (stoned), four pounds of sugar, one tablespoonful each of all spice, cloves and maoe, two table spoonfuls of cinnamon and one pint of strong vinegar. Make a syrup of the sugar, vinegar and spices. When it boils pour in the oherfies, oook until tender, skim out and pour in jars. Boil the syrup until quite thick, then pour over the cherries, and seal. Frozen-Fruit Souffle—Take three ounces of sugar and six egg yolks and whip slowly, warming over hot water while beating. When a solid froth, remove and ohill the bowl. Add care fully one pint of whipped cream and one cup of mashed and sweetened fresh fruit—strawberries, raspberries or grated pineapple. Turn into a wotted mold, bind with a greased oloth and bury in equal parts of ice and salt for three hours. Raspberry Vinegar—Mash raspber ries in a clay bowl, and to every pound of fruit add a pint of vinegar. Let it stand three days and then press through a jelly bag. To every pint of liqnid add half apoundof lump sugar. Sot the juiee on the fire to come to a boil, take off any Bcum that rises. Al low five minutes gentle boiling. Set it to get cold, then pour it into small bottles not holding more than a pint and cork them well. FASHIONS CHANGE. And It Is Now the Fashion to Get Cn ■nnrrlcd. Now York Tribune: A group cf lit tle girls, from 12 to 14, were talking with each other one day on Bailey's lieach 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 cf 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, "1 do not think 1 shall stay married long. I get tired of people so easily. I shall probably get a divorce after a few years. Her sentiments 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 must 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." •plrltuallsts DUport Without Spirit.! Spiritualists had a jolly picnic at Braintree, Mass., with baseball, wheel barrow and potato r::ces 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 diumshlp 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 Handsome 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. rieasare of Anticipation. From Brooklyn Life: May—"l shouldn't think you'd be feeling so gay after quarreling with Jack last night." Madge—"But just think of making up again!" No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weaU men atroug, blood pure. 500.11. All druggists. The number of summer hotels In the United States is estimated at 23.000. Tall persons have the advantage of greater longevity than short ones. 69 Cents for Nothing Just issued, a wonderful catalogue of everything to eat, wear and use. It costs us 52 cents to print anil 17 cents to mail eacli copy. It's free to all who write for it This hook contains 304 pages (size HI4XUH6 in.), has liI.UOO illustrations, and quotes ICO.OOO articles at wholesale prices to consumers. 1 lere is the book: This valuable cata dies, Sewing- Machines, Shirts, Shoes, Silverware, Stoves, Tinware, lobacco. Towels, Trunks, Underwear, Upholstery Goods. Watches, and thousands of other articles. With this book in your possession, you can buy cheaper than the average dealer. \ou can save larw* sums of money on everything you need, at any season of the year. Lithographed Carpet and Hug Catalogue, and our Clothing Catalogue with samples attached, are also free. Expressage paid on clothing, freight paid on carpet. Which book shall we send you f Address this way: JULIUS HINES & SON BALTIMORE, MD. Department 213 PILES "I aufffered the tortures of the damned with protruding piles brought on by constipa tion with which I was afflicted for twenty years. I ran across your CASCARETS in the town of Newell. la., and never found anything to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from piles and feel like a new man." C. H. KBIT/., 1411 Jones St., Sioux City, la. CATHARTIC wudcttttto TRADE MARH REOTSTERED Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Starling Remedy Company, I'Klrifo, Montreal, Raw York. SU WTA BAA Sold and guaranteed by all drug* * I U-BAO gists to CI7HE Tobacco Habit. STOPPED FREE ■ I ■ B Permanently Cured E HE l.weHy Pranntid by B H ■ ISB KLIW6 CHEAT B| P ■ w SERVE restorer ' PiwldTpeurv (Sr til Iftrmxu DU***—, far IffiUpf, Barters INK i "Too Good and Too Cheap to b© without It" ' ' OFF FOR A TRIP^ "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 FLOATS. I In Switzerland, as elsewhere, there I has been for years a great influx from the country to the towns. From 1894 ! Ito 1857 the increase of population in Zurich was 10,000 to 11,000 a year. Don't Tobacco Spit and Rmoke Toor I.lfe Anay. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nervo and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men ' strong. All druggists, 50c or §l. Cure guaran 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. They are produced largely in Italy, where they are favorite articles of food. Absolutely Free. To introduce Flndley's Eye Salve I will | send by mail, absolutely FREE, a '25 cent box to any one writing me a postal card giving name and address. It cures sore eyes at once. Address J. P. HAYTEH, Decatur, Texas. M rs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchildren teething, soitens the gums, reduces inflamnm tkn. allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc a bottle. 1 We have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for 20 years.—LIZZIE FKRRBL, Camp St., Harrisburg, May 4, 1894. 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 Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the overcoming of cases of supposed barrenness. This great Cw Mm Mm %M ww*Sf medicine is so well calculated to regu /| mm late every function of the generative or gans that its efficiency is vouched for ItTF-yn /fj Mj by multitudes of women. m £#lff Af m W MRS. ED. WOJ.FORD, of Lone Tree, ——— lowa, writes: '■ DEAR MRS. PINKHAM—Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I had one child which lived only si* hours. The doctor said it did not have the proper nourishment while I was carrying it. I did not feel at all well during preg nancy. In time I conceived again, and thought I would write to you for advice. Words cannot express the gratitude I feel towards you for the help that your medi- w „W cine waa to me during this time. I --ry.* - felt like a new person; did my work AV up to the last, and was sick only a i-Kji' ! short time. My baby weighed ten joy of onr home. He is now six weeks old and weighs sixteen pounds. Your medicine is Ever since my last child I f|5SSf \ suffered with inflammation of \^\ the womb, pains in back, left wffijlSßf jSfflw '"P \ side, abdomen and groins. My (■ SeqbS & could not walk across the floor wD-Wk without suffering 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 took 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&83.50 SHOES t Worth $4 to $6 compared with , other makes. Indorsed by over 1.000.000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES Take no substitute claimed of |:i and £1.50 shoes In the world. Your dealer should keep kind of leather, size and width, pValn or cap toe. Catalogue C Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton. Mass. P. N. U. 86 M J'J Dr. Rlcord's Essence of Life BS?Xtu!3! ard, never-falllna remedy for all cases of nervous, mental, physical debility, lost vitality and pre mature decay In both sexes; positive, permanent cure: full treatment $6, or ifllia bottle; stamp for circular. J Afieut. 17tf Broadway, N. Y. flow's This ? , We offer One Hundred Dollars Rewkrd for 1 that cannot be cured by Hall st utarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY A Co.. Prop*., Toledo, O. v*e, the undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney tor tho la-t 15 years, and believe him per- J honor ible in all business transactions and financially a bio to carry out any obliga tion m de by their firm, j TitUAX,Wholotale Druggists, Toledo, WALDINO, RINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Dmggihts. Toledo, Ohio. . Hall s Catarrh Cute is taken inlernally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous SUP faces of the system. Priop, 75c. pe;- bottle. Sold Testimonials free. Hall s Family Pills are the best. Tho first automobile club of Ger many has just been organized and the Duke of Katibor is the President. Beauty- Is Blood 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 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. The proportion of married persons ti> single ones is as 75 to 1,000. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS I Are the best. Aak for them. Coat no mora I than eoiiunon chimneys. AH dealer*. PITTSIU'ItG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. RENSIONttSSE^g^ ■^JSuccessfulJ^P^ro'^cutesClainns. 13yraiucivil war. 13adjudicating(latins, at ty sluca RHEUMATISM "illulMß Siaui Co.. MtOnenwlcil St., N Y.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers