44 Circumstances Alter Cases/' In cases of scrofula, salt rheum, dys pepsia, nervousness, catarrh, rheumatism, eruptions, etc., the circumstances may be ■altered by purifying and enriching the Hood <with Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is the great remedy for all ages and both sexes, & because Farm For Sale. One of the very best hill farms ir Waitsfleld, Vermont, seven (7) miles from railroad, one-half (%) 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. Luteal improved evaporator; iron arch, large sugaring-off arch, sugarrhouse con taining CO cords four-foot ; dry. wood; three years' supply stovewcod 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. Russia has abolished the distinction ithat has heretofore existed between Russian afid Finnish postage stamps. Finnish postoffices tre now provided with Russian stamps only. Sdacate Toar Bowels With Oascorets. Cathartic, cure constipation forever. ioc, 2oc. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. HAS TICKED FIVE CENTURIES Famous Old Clock In Rouen Has Kepi Time for SIO Tears. From the Cincinnati Enquirer: Rouen, one of the principal cities of France, and the greatest seat of its •cotton manufacture, possesses the old est public clocks in the world. The tfreat Rouen clock has held its place in that city for 510 years and is the pride of Its citizens. Placed in 1389, It has been running without interrup tion from that day to this, requiring nothing except cleaning and a few trifling repairs of its accessory parts. The great clock has so accustomed the citizens to look upon its exacti tude as a matter of course that when, in 1572, the breaking of a wire pre vent its sounding 5 o'clock one morn ing, the population was In a state of consternation. The magistrates sum moned the custodian—Guillaume Pe- I tit —and remonstrated gravely with him. Until 1712 the great clock had no pendulum. For 323 years it had no other regulator than a "foliot," an appartus unknown to the majority of modern clock makers. The pendulum in clock work was introduced in 1659, but so well satisfied were the people of Rouen with the time keeping qual ities of their famous old clock that fifty-three years were allowed to pass before a pendulum was substituted for the "foliot." Equipped with this new apparatus it has continued to this day to strike the hours and chime the •quarters. How a Sea Gall Catches a Mole. A farm manager at Fodderty, Ding -wall, Scotland, watching a mole catcher at work, saw sea gulls hovering over, and occasionally alighting upon a tur nip field, in which the observer and •others were at work. A particularly large and handsome bird attracted his attention by the graceful way In which it floated slowly over the drills, in tently scanning the surface of the ground. Suddenly, steadying Itself a moment, it dropped, dug Its bill Into the ground, and rose with a mole tor Its prey. Resting a few minutes, It gracefully began again a further search lor prey. In a few minutes a second mole was unearthed. Czar'a Military Household. The military household of the czar is composed of 98 officers of various ranks, 83 of whom belong to the army and 15 to the navy. Nineteen mem bers of the royal family are Included in this list. I Mrs. Barnard Thanks MRS. PINKHAM FOR HEALTH. [LBTTEB TO MBS. PINKHAM NO. 18,992] " DEAR FRIEND—I feel it my duty to •express my gratitude and thanks to you for what your medicine has done for me. I was very miserable and los ing flesh very fast, had bladder trouble, fluttering pains about the heart and would get so dizzy and suffered with painful menstruation. I was reading in a paper about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, so I wrote to j'ou and after taking two bottles I felt like a new person. Your Vegetable Compound has entirely cured me and I cannot praise it enough."—M ßS. J. O. IJAKNARD, MILLTOWN, WASHINGTON CO., ME. An lowa Woman's Convincing Statement. "I tried three doctors, and the last one said nothing but an operation would help me. My trouble was pro fuse flowing; sometimes I would think I would flow to death. I was so weak that the least work would tire ma. Reading of so many being cured by your medicine, I made up my mind to write to you for advice, and I am BO glad that I did. I took Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills and followed your directions, and am now well and strong. I shall recom mend your medicine to all, for it saved my life."—Mxss A. P., Box 21 ABBOTT, lowa. DOOM OF RANGE HORSES THE VAST HERDS OF THE NORTH WEST DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY. Cattlemen anl Sheepmen Are Driving Them From the Pattarasce an<l Water Kaposure Is Killing .Them, and Fac tories Are Cunning Tliein. Gradually but surely the greatherds of range horses'on the interior plateaus of Washington, Idaho and Montana are being driven to the wall. Several causos are working to depopulate the bunch grass ranges of the vast herds that have roamed there for centuries. Briefly stated, the chief causos aro the increased demand for irrigable lands by settlers and the purchase or lease, followed by fenoing, of great areas of range lands by cattlemen and sheep men. The latter are fencing in tho springs, creeks and ponds that form the water sources so vital to range in dustry. These facts denote a new era in the development of Western sheep aud cattle raising, increasing produc tion, nud putting the industry on a solid basis. It ends the indiscrinate pasturage of cattle, sheep and horses over immense areas of the Northwest ern States. It means the confining of the cattle and sheep to lands that can be aoquired, fenced and made more productive, and it means also the gradual extinction of the horses. The horses, or at least their owners, know that their hour of doom has Btruok, declares the New York Sun. Already they are being moved off the ranges by tens of thousands. Thqpe left are forced to eke out a precarious existence on the dry pasture lands left by the cattle aud sheep herders, where they may die of thirst in the summer or starve to death in the winter, with no one to mourn their end. During the last two years at least CQ,OOO head of range horses have been romoved from the ranges of Eastern Washington alone. Thoir disposition has been approximately as follows: Sblppeil to Chicago and other Eastern markets. 10,000 Sent to Aluska during the Kloaklke rush '. J _ 8,000 Canned Into horsemeut at Linton, Oregon, for shipment to Franoe 9,000 Driven to Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and Utah, largely for pack and saddle horses 10,000 Broken for use by new settlers In Washington 10.000 Died during the last two winters.... 8,000 Loss from State In two years 65,000 This loss has been double the naturnl increase, reducing the num ber of wild horses in the State from about 125,000 to 80,000 or 90,000. At this rate of decrease they would last for many years, hilt the faot is that the horses are being confined to a smaller area each successive year, thereby increasing the chances of de struction. Tho figures given are based on es timates furnished by E. F. Benson, who has charge of leasing the range lands of the Northern Pacifio Railway. Ho reports that the cattle and sheep men are now leasing, buying nnd fencing lands so rapidly that the range horses already find it difficult to obtain water. The attempt of large numbers to feed on the scanty rrugo loft to them must leave them thin in the fall, and it will need only one hard winter, with deep snow and cold weather, to kill them off by thou sands. Their usual method of winter feeding is to paw through tho snow for the tufts of rich bunch grass which furnish their sustenance, but under the present conditions these tufts will be eaten oil' by the hungry herds before the BUOW Hies. At least 5000 horses died of starvation last winter in the districts north and south of the Snake River. From fifty to eighty per oent. of some bauds van ished under the conditions of short grass and deep snow. The cattle and sheep, on the other hand, are round ed up in the lower valleys during the fall and fed during the winter. Mr. Benson reports that the range horses are now confined almost en tirely to the thinly populated counties of Douglas, Lincoln, Adams and Franklin and parts of Yakima and Kliokitat. These animals are worth from $3 to 820, according to size aud quality. A large proportion of them are oayuses, others are strong, large boned horses. In June 5000 head of Douglas County horses were sold for shipment East at $2.50, 83 and 80 a head, ac cording to size. The horse canning factory at Linton, Oregon, has con verted about 9000 head into meat for shipment to Franoe and Germany in the last two years. A still larger nnmber will be canned in the near fu ture, for the industrial department of the Northern Pacifio Railway has aid ed in the establishment of another horse canniug factory at Medora, North Dakota. A home market for many thousand head has been occa sioned by the boom in the wheat in dustry consequent upon the good orops and the good prioes of the past two years. Thousands of wild horses, weighing 1100 pounds and upward, have been broken to the plow by both old and now settlers. The indications are that this local absorption will con tinue in a limited way for several years in Eastern Washington aud Idaho. While the cattle and sheep mon have in effect combined against their com mon enemy, the range horses, it is no less true that cattlemen look askance at the steadily increasing numbers of sheep pastured in the open range oountry. While the natural increase of the bands of sheep is rapid, tens of thousands more have been moved to the Northwest from California on ac count of fierce drought. The Bhoep beoome profitable from the first year, since the two prinoipal orops, lambs and wool, coming in May and June, are salable within the fiscal year, while the herds of cattle must be maintained three or four years before profitable returns are possible. It is duo to this fact that the cattle men be- gan purchasing and fenoing the range lands several years ago, and the sheep men, as a matter of self-protec tion, have followed suit. The need of the sheepmen for wider pasturage has cnused the industry and its custom of occupying the open ranges to he offi cially recognised by the United States Government in its measures for policing and protecting the great for estry reserves recently set apart in Washington and Oregon. The Gov erment's primary object is to prevent forest tires, which greatly injure the watershed. On condition that they use the utmost precaution to prevent Area the sheep men are permitted to drive their bands into the rich pasture lands on the mountain slopes of these reserves. The forest supervisors have divided the reserves into districts for the various bands, the limits being marked by streams, ridges and other natural boundaries. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. The cooling of the air oontinucs un til condensation of the watery vapor begins. Watery vapor is always pres ent in greater or leHs quantities. The temperature at which this condensa tion takes place is the dew point, and if this occurs at thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit or below, frost is formed. Eleven different fats in emulsions have been tested to determine whether they would allay cough and increase weight. The effects with cod-liver oil proved to be variable. The best re sults were given by beef fai, olive, peanut and cocoanut oil, and the ex perimenter has concluded that a mix ture of these four fats, with the ad dition of a little clover oil, is much superior to cod-liver oil. Many people regard gold as of one color; this is a mistake, as pure gold varies considerably in hue. An ex pert can tell the locality from whence it was derived by itscolor. Australian gold is is very much redder than Cali fornian, Nugget gold (Klondike, for instance) is yellow, whereas that from quartz is of a deeper "golden" tint. The reddest gold comes from the Ural Mountains. Of course'few people see pure gold, for the metal of commerce and even our coins are alloyed. Na tive metal is much too soft to be usod alone, and roquires an alloy to enable it withstand rough wear and tear. In Enghshjpotteries last year 4,9 per cent, of the male workers and 12.4 of the females suffered lend poi soning. After investigation, Profes sors Thorpe and Oliver recommend that the use of raw lead in giazes and colors be prohibited, and that young persons and women be excluded from work in certain operations. Experi ments of the last few months have shown that satisfactory leadless glazes are now within reach of the manufac turer. In some branches of the pot tery industry, however, it might be difficult to dispense altogether with lead compounds, and in such cases the risk of poisoning could be greatly re duced by using the lead iu the form of a fritted double silicate, The older faotories, in which it is impossible to introduce favorable sanitary condi tions, should bo closed. Bohemia now furnishes the largest emonnt of graphite for Europenn use. It is found in its purest condition iu tho gneiss accompanied by crystalline limestone near Schwartzbach and Mor gan. That portion of the mineral suf ficiently pure is shipped away as it is mined, but the inferior product is ground iu mills where a stream of water takes up the powdered graphite and deposits it in sheets in the form of mud. These are subsequently pressed and dried in a stove. There is in Bohemia an average yearlyproductiou of 885 tons, which oomes principally from three mines—the two mentioned above and that of Krummau, which produces an inferior grade of the sub stance. Those mines afford employ ment to 728 operatives, and the better qualities of the graphite are always in active demaud. Hpftniili Indifference. Nothing, indeed, is so striking to the traveler as the perfect serenity of Madrid, says a writer in Blackwood's, and it is a serenity not of carelessness but of resignation. Tho Spaniard, being a brave man, regrets that he has been beaten; but, being also a creature of confirmed habit, he convinces him self that regretjs notjworth express ing. So once more the pertinaoity of the Spanish character is exempli fied. The great kings who in the past ruled the peninsula suffered many and grievous defeats, and it was their constant praotice to put away from their minds the unpalatable truth. Two years ago the average Spaniard was secure in the knowledge that Cuba would be his until the end of time; to-day he knows that Cuba be longs to him no more. But he does not deolare his knowledge; he bears it with what patience he may, and turns to celebrate the distinctions of the past. Nor cau the unprejudiced traveler traverse Spain without a side glanoe at the neighboring re public. The French and theSpaniauls are both popularly believed to carry Latin blood in their veins, aud though many a conquest has mixed tho race of eaoh, they still Btand to oue another iu the relation of distaut cousins. Unable to Iteturn tlie Compliment. A Yorkshire farmer was asked to ; the funeral of a neighbor's third wife, aud as he had attended the funerals of j the two others, his own wife was rather surprised when he declined this I invitation. On being pressed, he gavo | his reason with some hesitation: j "Well, thee sees, lass, it makes a chap feel a bit awkward like to bo alius accepting other folks' civilities, when he never has nowt o't' sooart of j his awn to ax 'em back to."—New i York World. Dizzy? Then your liver isn't acting well. You suffer from bilious ness, constipation. Ayer's Pills act directly on the liver. For 60 years the Standard Family Pill. Small doses cure. 25c. All druggists. Waut your muuntache or benrd a beautiful brown or rich black ? Then uae BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers | Do Tour Feet Ache and Hum ? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powaer for the feet It makes Tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching and Sweating Feet Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores. 25c Sample sent FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y. A tank of chlorate of potash recently exploded in a factory in Lancashire, ICngland, with disastrous results. As the substance is not combustible in it self, although a powerful aid to com bustion under some circumstances, the disaster is not easy to account for. To Core Constipation Forever* Take Cuscarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c, If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. Diamonds and other precious stones to the value of $20,000,000 wt re import ed at New York during the last fiscal year. Three years ago the imports of this kind amounted to only $7,500,000. The market price of diamonds is now 25 per cent, higher than it was a year ago. ORIGIN OF THE TERM CADDIE. Ingenious Explanation of Common Goll Term bj Frank Boyd. To some, at least, of the unnumbered and innumerable host of golfers the question may have occurred at one time or another—Whence ' ame the word "caddie"? Frank Boyd, In his "Omitted Chapters in the History of Monifleth," which he contributes to "The Book of Monifleth Golf Links Ba zar," offers an ingenious as well as highly amusing explanation of the term. There was, he says, a Culdee, or "Keledei," establishment at Moni fleth at one time, till the monks of Ar broath dispossessed the Culdees of their lands and made them their serv ants. One day it occurred to a monk, while having a game of golf, to make the Keledei carry his clubs. He found this contributed greatly to his comfort. "The plan was adopted by the rest of the monks, and henceforth they never went out without being accompanied by their Keledei. Now you know," continues Mr. Boyd, "that In these parts the practice is to cut short words in which the letter T is used. A na tive, for Instance, never says 'Balgray,' It is always 'Balgrie.' Thus it was natural that in the course of time the T should drop out of the 'Keledei,' and it should come to sound like 'caydee,' and to this day this is how the word is pronounced by superfine Scotch youths. In the strong Forfarshire vernacular It was, however, broadened out to 'cad die.' " As a matter of fact, the origin of the term "caddie" does not appear to have ever been satisfactorily explained. Jamieson, who defines caddie as one who earns a livelihood by running er rands, delivering messages, and so on, expresses the opinion that the term was originally the same with the French cadet, which, as he remarks, is sometimes used to denote a young per son in general. Dr. Murray, In his colossal work, holds the same view, but how the word came to be employed to denote the lad who carries a play er's golf clubs has still to be elucidated. —Literature. Dangerous Place. First Tragedian—Just listen to this: "In California there are ostrich eggs weighing three pounds." Second Tra gedian—Oreat Scott! Isn't it lucky our troupe didn't get a chance to play In California this year? An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, SYRUP OF FIGS, manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co., illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pieasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of tho remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember tho full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO. CAL. IOUIBVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N. Y. For sale by all Druggists.— Price 50c. per bottler WATERINC FLYING ENGINES, Vonr Thousand Gallons Taken in While the Train is in Motion. Among the remarkable features of modem railway travel the oue that al ways attracts attention is the trick of taking water by the engine while it is lin motion. The American tourist has become accustomed to seeing the nar row trough, twelve to fourteen hun dred feet long, at various dead level points along the road, and he knows that the atrip of water whioh it coil# tains is scooped up by the engine as it speeds over the tracks, but people from foreign countries often ask ques tions about the water between the traoks, and marvel when they hear the I story about "drinking" the engine on the fly. What seems a marvellous mechani cal oontrivauce is an extremely simple thing. A pipe with a scoop end is fastened to the tender. It is 0 shaped, with the top end pointing in to the water tank and the bottom curled un der the body of the cender. By a series of levers this end may be dropped until it reaches the level of the ties. When the engine reaches the trough the fireman drops the scoop end which is 31 inches high and twelve inohes wide, into the trough into which it sinks a distanoe of about six inches, or within an inch of the bottom. It may wabble slightly with out doing any harm, because the trough is twenty-four inohes wide. Dropping the end is all that is done, for the motion of the engine does the rest. The water rushes into the pipe and thence into the tank with a rush and a foroe whioh suggests to the un initiated the use of powerful engines. "The most remarkable thing about the water taking scoop'" said a New York Central Railroad official, "is the faot that the speed of the train must be reduced when the water is taken on. It reaches the bends in the pipe with suoh force that if the train were allowed to go at its regular speed the metal would be -seriously strained, so we reduce the speed to about thirty miles an hour and have the best results." While the engine is passing over the trough at the rate of thirty miles an hour it takes up about four thou sand gallons of water—about as much as would be contained in one hundred spirit barrels. Valuable Advertising Hints. A good catchline is often half the battle. It is always possible to learn some thing from watohing the advertising of others. | To print announcements that are not believable is almost an absolute waste of spaoe. The best thing in au advertisement is spooific information about the arti cle advertised. Most of the magazine matter is as unreadable as the body of the magazines themselves. The newspaper is likely to become constantly a better medium, for every year the number of readers of it in creases. The picture ought to suggest the subjeot of the advertisement, and the advertisement ought to appear to have suggosted the picture. Perhaps the worst fault of the neophyte adwnter is the struggle for originality at the expense of good judgment and common sense. A slight misrepresentation in a single advertisement may often cast a shadow of doubt over all the adver tiser's aubsequent efforts, oven though these be thoroughly reliable. There appears to be a growing oon viction among advertisers that a judicious use of white space is one ol the most effeotive methods of display ing an advertisement. The contrast between the blaok type and the white paper is one that apparently attracts the eye at the first glance. It gives, also, an impression of easy reading— one of the best impressions, perhaps, that an announcement can give to prospective readers.—Printers' Ink. Discovery of the Southern Icefields. The hpme and origin of the south ern ioeb'ftrg are a matter full of ro mantic interest. In 1771 Captain Cook sailed down into the unknown Antarctic regions, and after terrible hardships reached a spot where he saw a snow-white brightness in the clouds to the south, and he knew ho was near the icefields. Four hours later he was stopped by a great ice barrier in lpti' tude seventy-one degrees south,where the mountains of ioe, rising one above the other, tier upon tier, into the distance, were lost in the clouds oi the polar sky. The desolate gi-andeur of that ioy coast appalled the great navigator, and, seeing no possibility of pushing to the pole over those jpa passablo mountains, he contented himself with having gone further than any one had ever been before, and, he thought, as far as any man could go. He speaks of vast glaoiers descending from the interior, and of ice islands and floats near the coast; and .from his remarks ,it [is easily seen that he had found the home of southern bergs. —London Globe. A Higli-Prlced Paper. If the Argentine Repnblio is to be judged by the Buenos Ayres Herald, a copy of whioh has been placed on our desk, the people of the oountry m'hst bo rolling in wealth. The subscrip tion prioe of the paper, whioh fs a daily, is 821 per annum; its eight pages are three-quarters filled with ad vertisements. According to the olaims put forth it is the "most widely cir culated paper on the oontinent," and the proprietor, therefore, must be a millionaire. A perusal shows that the people down there make the word "distinguished" do duty for the word "rospeotable," but when-people can pay twenty-fonr.dollars a year for an eight-page journal they have the right to u'se the word in that sense. THE LAUNDRY CLASS. In many of the schools of Domestic Science, Laundry work is now taught in a thorough and scientific manner. In the Laundry class-room Ivory Soap is always used to wash the articles that require special care and it is frequently used to the exclusion of all other soaps. It is as important to know the best materials for domestic use as to know the best methods for using them, and Ivory Soap is very generally recognized, by those who have carefully investigated the subject, as the safest and purest soap. Spanish Care Dwellers of To-dayw We commonly refer the cave dwell ers to pre-historlc times, but there are still some of these people in parts of Europe that are considered civiliz ed. Their primitive dwellings are. In some cases, natural caves, and In oth ers have been hewn out of the rocks. Some of these homes in Spain are de scribed by a writer. He says: "There is no need of an alms house In Alcala. One side of the hill above the town Is honey-combed with caves, which are used by the poor as dwellings, free of rent and taxes. These caves run In tiers, with paths between them, and before each Is a garden in which grow the prickly pear, flg, vllas, maize and vegetables. The combination of rock and foliage gives the whole hillside that Blngular appearance of rocky fertility seen only In southern lands, and particularly In the presence of cactus growth. The people seemed quite as comfortably Bituated as many who lived In houses, and In general appearance the alms bouse hill of Alca la was more attractive than the gipsy quarter of Oranada. Doubtless these caves have the advantage over ordi nary houses of being warmer in win ter and cooler in summer." A Cultured Monarch. King Oscar 11, king of Norway and Sweden, Is one of the most cultur ed men in Europe. He is remarkable in literature, his works comprising musical compositions, verse, fiction, and many volumes on technical sub jects, and he has also translated into Bwedish Oothe's Faust, which alone is a very great undertaking. He is a fine speaker, and in his youth had such a remarkably flno and well train ed voice that it was considered one of his greatest gifts. The king, though now an old man, bas a splendid pres ence, and in manner is simple and un affected. He spends many months of the year at Tullgarn, his grand old onstle on the edge of the cliffs over hanging the sea, and one of his great est pleasures is drilling his little grandsons. Deafueaa Cannot Re Cured by local applications,as they cannot reach tho diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafnen*, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in llanied condition of the mucous lining of the Kustachiun Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when itls entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out, and this tuho re stored toits normal condition, hearing will he destroyed forever. Nine oases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused lv catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. During trie International Exposition soon to be held at Buffalo, the Niagara Falls will be illuminated by huge elec tric searchlights, equipped with multi colored glasses, and arc lights will be operated in the Cave of the Winds. Don't Tobieeo Spit and Snoke Your Mfe Airay u 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, 60c or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. A homing pigeon owned at Church, in Lancashire, has been returned to its loft ufter a remarkable adventure. It was caught by one of the crew of the Cunard liner Lucanla off the New foundland coast, taken to Liverpool, and then dispatched home by rail. Tfo-To-Bac for Fifty Centa. Guaranteed tobacoo habit cure, makes weak Ben strong, blood pure. 60c, |l. All druggists. Copper has risen and aluminum de clined until the price of the two metals is almost the same. One pound of ! aluminum is equivalent to two of cop per in carrying electrical energy and if it were as easy to work and solder would probably displace copper to a considerable extent. "Knowledge is Folly Unless Put to Use." You Know SAPOLIO? THEN USE IT. A few weeks ago the Krupp factory turned out its twenty-thousandth large gun for European armies. Deanfy la 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, blackhead®, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Toronto claims to he the Leipsic of Canada. Nearly $20,000,000 is said to he invested in that city and neighbor hood in the paper-making, printing and book-binding trades. Fits permanently cured. No fit* or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.U.Kline,Ltd.tUl Arch St.Pkila.Pa. I can recommend Piso's Cure for Consump tion to sufferers from Asthma.—F. D. Town send. Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4. 16'JL Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums. reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc a bottle. 1 TAPE WORMS "A Upo worm eighteen feet long at least came on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This lam sure has caused my bad health for the past three years. lam atlli taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people " Geo W. Bowles, Baird, Mais. CATHARTIC keUKOMM) TRAD! MARK RfOtSTKRfD Pleasant. Taste Good Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Krmedy < oapany. ( hleagn, Montreal, New York. Sl3 Nn.Tn.RIP Bo,d and guaranteed by all drug llU IU DAU gists to CIIKE Tobacco Habit. W. La DOUGLAS $3&53.50 SHOES Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes, g' B Indorsed by over jPJ 1,000,000 wearers. ®6f tR all leathers, all styles M THE GKMINB have W. L. Donglaa' I Take ro substitute claimed L to be as good. Largest makers of $3 anil #3.50 shoes In the world. Your dealer should keep .'XTry'-M a patron receipt of price. State klud of leather, size and width, plain or cap toe. Catalogue C Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mass. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Ask for them. Cost no more than common chimneys. All dealers. PITTSBURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. CARTERS INK Is scientifically compounded of the best materials. P. N. U. 37 '99 Or. Ricard's Essence of Life ard, never-failing remedy for all cases of nervous, mental, physical debility. lon vitality and |>re niatnro decay in both sexes; positive,'permanent cure; full treatment $5, or *1 a bottle; statin, for circular. J. JA< (JUES. Agent, 176 Broadway, N. Y. I ASTHMA POSITIVELY CURED. I ( ItONIi YM SWEDISH ASTIIMA I'LUI | doea this. A trial package mailed iree. a Collins lines. Mkph ink Co., St. Louis, Mo. I If 9 or™Tsu o th, i Thompson's Eye Water RHEUMATISM SESSS. Ai.kxandkb Kr.mr.nv Co . ,'46 Greenwich St.. N.Y. g CUfflS WMtKi: ALL ILbfc (AILS. £ MBost Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uso ■ in time. Sold by druggists. B \ ■
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers