"Necessity is the Mother of Invention." It <was the necessity for a reliable blood purifier and tonic that brought into exist ence Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is a highly concentrated extract prepared by a com bination, proportion and process peculiar to itself and giving to Hood's Sarsapa rilla unequalled curative povue-. There ! more C.itarrh In this section of the country than all other diseases put together, ana until thej&nt few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctor!! pronounced It a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by coustantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in curable. Science has proven catarrh to bo a constitutional disease and therefore requirei constitutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the onlv constitutional cure on the market It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acta dirootly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Phey offer one hundred dollars for any case It fails to cure. Send for circulars and testi monials. Address F.J. CjiunkyA Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. One of the minor, but yet very con siderable, demands for iron and steel, of recent origin, is that entailed by the use of metal tubing in mine shafts. To Care Constipation forever* , Tako Cusoiircta Caml.v Cathartic. 10c or Ssc If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund moucy Alcohol was first distilled by the Ara bians, and when we talk about coffee and alcohol we are using Arabic words. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour I.ife Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netlc. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Dac, the wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 81. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling liemedy Co., Chicago or New York. DYING TWENTY-FIVE YEARS. Giant Poplar In Maryland Hun Lived Two Centuries or More. From the Baltimore Sun: The old est and largest tree in Talbot county is deud. It has been dying for tweuty-ttve years or more. The tree is a mam moth tulip poplar In a field of Poplar Hill farm, near the public road leading from Easton to Trappe, about a milo and a half from Easton. The farm has been named for the tree for at least 200 years and is the property of Mrs. Edmund Law Rogers, born Plater, of Baltimore, and was part of the orig inal Plater grant made in early colonial times. Scientific men whe have from time to time visited this tree have said that It would take at least 1,000 years for this species of poplar to grow to such size in this lo cality. It stands alone, a picturesque feature of the landscape, in an open field, and can be seen for miles from all roads and from the water courses. The wonderful size of the tree is In the magnitude and height of its trunk. Approximately it is 250 feet high and twenty feet in diameter. The head is comparatively small and the first limb is 200 feet from the ground, and it car ries its diameter symmetrically all the way up. From its top at night, for many venturesome and agile climbers have ascended it, the light in Sharp's island lighthouse can be plainly seen. A horse and carriage behind it cannot be seen from the nearby public road. The lightning has not spared it. It is seamed and gashed and split by the many bolts which have also knocked huge limbs from its top. Tradition says that 200 years ago, which is as far back as tradition claims to have known the tree —it is named in land deeds 150 years ago—it had lightning marks on it, and even then showed signs of failure. Three years ago it was struck four times in one summer. This fierce attack undoubtedly has tened its end. Well, the giant tree is dead. The old poplar of Poplar Hill probably saw the beginning of the twentieth century and died just before the beginning of the twentieth. It was the Mount Shasta of the Talbot land scape. A CAPABLE mother must be a healthy mother. The experienceof maternity shouldnot be approached without careful physical preparation. Correct and practical counsel is what the expectant and would be mother needs and this counsel she can secure without cost by — writing to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn. Mass. M JS3 43 I9F F MRS. CORA GILSON, Yates, Manistee SSSLmL Co., Mich., writes: ■ jcxwt "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —Two years ago mWmvJR § I began having such dull, heavy, drag ging pains in my back, menses were pro m m USJ Li fuse and painful and was troubled with leucorrhcea. I took patent medicines and consulted a physician, but received no benefit and could not become pregnant. "Seeing one of your books, I wrote to you telling you my troubles and asking for advice. You an- swered my letter promptly and I followed the directions faithfully, and derived so V*' much benefit that I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- T|7 . JSMB pound enough. I now find myself jmT pregnant and have begun its use again. I cannot praise it I think Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is an I 'jji excellent medicine. I took iy several bottles of it before j I the birth of my baby and I I VA'f got along nicely. I had no I \ after-pains and am now / \ Sreffll strong and enjoying good I 1 Safes7Sßffil health. Baby is also fat and | gjaßßp/l] aSStI MRS. CHAS. GERBIG, 304 1 u South Monroe St., Balti- 1 more, Md., writes: "DEAR 1 WMFMM 1 I MRS. PINKHAM —Before tak- PMF 1 Ing Lydia E. Pinkham's I I ] Vegetable Compound I was I unable to become pregnant; but since I have used It my health is much improved, and X have a big baby boy, the joy and pride of our home." That books do not necessarily pro mote intelligence is proved by the fact that Italy turns out twice as many publications as the United States every year. In the number of books published annually this country is sur passed by Germany, France, Italy and Great Britain, the countries ranking in the order named. 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 talcing Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Many cities in Europe are f-o.ving the problem of the destruction of iron gas and water pipes by electrolysis by substituting for them pipes made of glass. As glass is almost a perfect non-conductor of electiicity, there It of course no electrolysis. Further ad vantages are the saving of electricity and the absence of danger of shock from wandering currents. Mrs Winslow'aflorthincr Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces in ft urn nm tion, allays pain,cures wind coiic.2sc a bottle. Lake Superior is remarkable for the fact that it never gives up its dead. There are three varieties of the dog that never bark—the Australian dog, the Egyptian shepherd* dog, and "lion headed" dog of Thibet. Wholesale Prices for All. hould pay retail prices for xHV'VI) anything you buy. We sell -v everything to EAT, WEAIt Guaranteed Buggg. write for it. It tells all about 538.0U everything you use in you. house, everything you wear, everything you cat. U tells tural Implements, nil sorts S'SeT J!"," t|*Tlr. ,W yl merchandising has made the name '•HineV* on yn 20c. to C-1.10. nrtirle correspond to the Freight D, id; f toiling uifi'V on silver. # eiced Free% T.ITIIOnHAPIIET) CAII VET and ft jtni CA TAI.OUI E SH <, \vixo fCm GOODS /.V XA TURAL COLORS, I AXD KXQC/SI TE MA DE TO- I i O U HER cL Or 111 X G LATA - I J.OGVE icith CLOTH SAMPLES \V A TTA Cll ED. A HE A LSO Fit EE. ''HEIGHT THE PAID; CLOTH IXG EXPITE SS E D EIT E E Slior.H, EVE It y WHE HE Catalogue* at , LN - N MESICAL I XSTHEMEXTS and ' *0 WoO. BICYCLES ALSO FREE. Which book shall wo send you? Address this way: JULIUS BINES & SON BALTIMORE, MD. Dept. aia The Prison Bird. In the Paris Museum of Natural His tory at present there is to be seen the only living captive specimen of what African explorers have called the "pris on bird." The peculiarity of this feathered beauty is that he is the most tyrannical and jealous of husbands, imprisoning his mate throughout her nesting time. Livingstone watched the bird's habits while in Monpour, and in his subsequent observations referred to the nest as a prison and the female bird as a slave. The nest is built in the hollow of a tree through an open ing in the bark. As soon as it is com pleted the mother bird enters carefully and fearfully and settles down in it. Then papa walls up the opening, leav ing only just space enough for air and food to pass through. He keeps faith ful guard and brings food at regular intervals without fail. The female thrives under her enforced retirement. But if the prison bird is killed, or in any other way prevented from fulfill ing his duties, the mother and her little ones must die of starvation, for she cannot free herself from bondage. Nor mally the imprisonment lasts until the chicks are old enough to fly. Then the male bird destroys the barrier with his beak and liberates his family. "It Is charming," writes Livingstone, "to see the joy with which the little prisoners greet the light and the unknown world." THE NATURAL RATIO. IT IS ALWAYS THE COMMER CIAL RATIO. Th Fictitious Ratio or US to 1 Tells the Story of How the Producer 11a. llern Mulcted for the Benefit of the Money Sharks. Horace Boles has been Interviewed again, and ho informs the public that he is a "bimetalllst." He would have to be that or quit being a Democrat. The principles of Democracy declare as positively for gold and silver as the basis for the nation's monetary system as they declare against high protection and its products, which are industrial monopolies and discriminating laws in the interest of capital combinations. But Mr. Boies is mistaken when he Bays the coinage ratio is not essential. He seems to be under the impression that the ratio should conform to the commercial value of the metals in the arbitrary way. The history of coinage does not Justify Mr. Boies' conclusion. If gold were demonetized and silver made the only metal money of final redemption the present difference be tween the coinage value of gold and the commercial value of silver bullion would he reversed. The arts and sciences and mechanics could not find use for nearly all the gold production, and the market price for it would cer tainly be made by a surplus in its anx iety to sell. But having a fixed value for coinage purposes, and its coinage being free and unlimited, naturally and necessarily its bullion value would be its coinage value. The same thing would be true of silver, but of no other metals, because gold and silver are the only metals that possess all the con stitutional and other requisite qualities for money metals. The experience of commerce and money changing for thousands of years proves this to be true. But merely possessing the requi site qualities does not make either one of the metals legal tender money. That is done by the flat of the government coining It, and the fiat fixes the quality and the quantity—that is, fineness— that shall constitute a legal tender for a specified purchasing and debt-paying power. Less than 50 cents' worth of silver, bullion value, now has 100 cents' worth of debt-paying and pur chasing power because the flat of the government makes it a legal tender for that many cents, and the government itself receives it at that value. After all, therefore, it Is the flat of the gov ernment and not the qualities them selves which the metals possess that makes them money. Hundreds of years of experience shows that the difference in the quality of the metals produced fluctuates from a fraction below to a fraction above sixteen pounds of sil ver to one pound of gold. The ratio of production is 1G to 1. Therefore that is the natural commer cial ratio. Thirty-two to one is the bankers' ratio. The difference between the bankers' ratio and the natural com mercial ratio represents the amount subtracted from the purchase price of wheat and other products of the farm, by an act of government (1873) hos tile to the producing millions and friendly to dealers in money, bonds and interest. Rottenness. From the Coldwater (Mich.) Sun: It Is interesting to note that in McKln ley's Jumble of politics, one of its sec tions will keep on telling a given lie after the other sections have been called off and muzzled. The latest in stance lies with the state department, which is the natural breeding place of liars. Col. Denby, one of the peace commissioners at Manila, cabled over a roseate dispatch twenty-four hours after the correspondents' "round rob in" bad shown up the rottenness of the whole situation, In which he claimed that everything was all right, that the Islands were being rapidly pacified, and that the volunteers were eagerly re enlisting—in fact, had to be restrained to keep from falling over themselves In order to get into the new regiments. That, of course, is what might be ex pected from Denby. He is, or was, a Cleveland gold Democrat, pompous and windy, whom Cleveland sent as min ister to China. There about his first official act was to get his son appointed as secretary of legation and a second son shoved into a fat Job in the Chi nese imperial customs service, which is controlled by an Englishman named Sir Robert Hart, the agent and tool of the British government. Naturally from then on Denby drew his breath according to the wishes of Sir Robert Hart and the British government. He now has no difficulty in finding things exactly the way McKinley wants them found. Troubles of Their Own. From the Butte (Mont.) Miner: Those newspapers of the Republican persuasion which are busily engaged liuding trouble in the ranks of the De mocracy are respectfully invited to pause and ponder over th 6 following from the Portland Oregonian: "President McKinley has shown him self to be a mere instrument in the hands of politicians. He has shown it in all possible ways, and the whole country is talking about it. In civil and military affairs it has been the same. Such ability as he has is neu tralized by his excessive amiability. Something more than mere complais ance in action is required in the presi dent of the United States." Here is trouble right here in the family, so to speak, and there is no occasion for the Republican newspa pers to get over into the Democratic pasture to look for other family trou bles. The Oregonian is, and has been always, a Republican newspaper. It is, in the opinion of the Miner, the itrongest Republican newspaper and the most ably edited In the four states of the northwest corner of the country —with apologies to the 13utto Inter Mountain. It was due to the efforts of the Oregonian more than any other cause that Oregon gave her electoral vote to William McKinley in 189(1. Sub sequent events have no doubt caused the Oregonian to change the estimato it placed upon McKinley three years ago. All must admit that when a news paper of the Republican standing and general ability of the Oregonian goes back on the man it helped elect, there must be some ground for it. It is ap parent McKinley will not have the cor dial support of the Oregonian next year. The Position of Wheat. From the Gallipolis (Ohio) Bulletin: Much is said about the wheat yield for 1899, says the Pittsburg Post, and the man who reads the inspired articles will hardly be able to determine whether he is in the midst of plenty or treading on the borders of famine. The thoroughbred speculator under stands that all this talk is for the day or week and is made to buy or sell on, having but little to do with the actual condition of the wheat crop. No one need be alarmed. The United States has raised more wheat than is needed here and will have a large exportable surplus. The yield of winter wheat will not be less than 275,000,000 bush els, and the yield of spring wheat not less than 250,000,000 bushels, making 520,000,000 bushels, being above the average for the past ten years. Clear ances of wheat and flour from the United States and Canada for the year ending July 1 have agregated 226,000,- 000 bushels, against 234.000,000 bushels for the corresponding time a year ago, the two largest years in the history of the country. Because of the accumula tion of stocks and fair wheat yield in Europe it is estimated that the foreign demand will not exceed 170,000,000 bushels. The corn crop is estimated at over 1,400,000,000 bushels, and then there are oats, rye, buckwheat, and numerous other food products which are all handicaps to a famine. All this talk of a short crop and famine can be traced to bullish speculators who want higher prices at which to sell,and, on the other hand, the tales of great plenty are fairy stories of the bears, who want the bottom knocked out of the market. Farmers who will hold their wheat for a spell will get good value, but the prospect for higher prices at present is not encouraging. The price will likely remain near its present level, but under existing con ditions will tend upward rather than downward. Shadow* Before. "Coming events cast their shadows before." The New York Tribune, con trolled by Whitelaw Reid, ex-Paris peace commissioner, and until recently a thoroughgoing McKinley organ, has lately been pouring hot shot into the McKinley camp, because, first, of what it calls the president's betrayal of tho civil-service merit system by his re cent order turning over some ten thou sand ofllces to the spoilsmen, and, sec ond, because of his failure to confirm the sentence of the court-martial in the case of Capt. Carter, convicted of rob bing the government of a million or so dollars by means of corrupt con tracts. The Minneapolis Tribune, the Portland Oregonian and a number of other prominent Republican newspa pers have declared that it may be'nec essary for the Republican party to nominate another than McKinley for president next year; while Harper's Weekly, an enthusiastic supporter of McKinley in 1896, now says: "We wonder if Mr. McKinley knows what some good men —not gold Democrats or independents, but old-time Repub licans—are saying of him. They are saying that he has done more harm to the country than Mr. Bryan could have done. No one can regret more than ourselves that this is a fact. We are not prepared to assent to it, but it is certainly worthy of Mr. McKlnley's se rious reflection He is alienating the friends who made his election possible, and whose support may be absolutely necessary to bis party next year. There can be no question that the tide of Re publican opinion is steadily setting against the renomination of McKinley and little question that he will be out of the race before the Republican na tional committee meets." Fusion or Bust. From the Paulding (Ohio) Demo crat: William J. Bryan will be the leader of the Democrats, the free-silver Republicans and the Populists in 1900. The Chicago platform will be readopt ed and it will declare against imperial ism, against the trusts, and in favor of direct legislation. Any movement or ganized to detract from this leader and these issues, while it may be with hon est Intentions, is a move that will help the Hanna-McKinley combine and to strengthen the money trust, the syndi cates, the combines and the corpora tions. Whoever is not for William J. Bryan and the Chicago platform from this time until the close of the polls in 1900 is for the Hanna syndicate and the money power, either directly or in directly. A United Party. From the Jacksonville (111.) Courier: The great Democratic party is more firmly united than ever before in tho history of the organization. The grave perils which threaten the republic are fully realized by the masses of the peo ple, and they look to the Democratic party as the medium for relief. They will not be disappointed. The hosts are organizing to make a supreme ef fort for the preservation of the repub lic founded by the patriot fathers from the hands of the imperialist goldite conspirators. And the people will win this time. ONE WAY TO BEG MONEY. ■lts In Hotel Writing Itooina and Write! L.I (tors to t.ueat. Oppoidto llliu. A novel method of securing n liv ing without labor has been described by the house deteotive of the Audi torium Hotel. The detective is on the lookout for a mau who is sys tematically working on the sympathies of the guests of the Auditorium and other leading hotels for a good in come. This mau, who is contiunally seen busy writing in the writing rooms of hotels, is of middle age and slender build. His clothes show the effects of wear and a general appearance ol the shabby-geuteel characterizes him. When his hat is removed, a shining, bald crown speaks of long experience with the world. As he writes with nervous haste, it is noticeable that he has been used to such occupation, and his soft, shapely hands show no signs of hard labor. Invariably this shabby gentleman seats himself opposite some prosper ous traveler who is attending to his business correspondence. He writes a long letter, pausing many times to think of proper phraseology. Then, watching his opportunity, he passes the letter across the table with a deprecating gesture and remains with his head bowed, his soft hands cover ing his face, while the traveler reads the letter. In well chosen language, the letter lells a tale of misfortune. In touch ing words the writer depicts his fall from affluence to poverty through circumstances beyond his control. Invariably the letter ends with an appeal of SI with which to buy the victim of misfortune a day's food and lodging, and often the dollar is quietly Blipped across the writing table by the traveler who is touchod by the silent appeal. No words are spoken. There is nothing of the rough manner of the uncouth, mendicant in the beggar's appeal. When he receives money, he gratefully bows his thanks and leaves the writing-room as silently as he entered. I How long this shabby sharper has been living off the stream of travel in Chicago cannot bo told, but for the last six months hotel people have been on the lookout for him. Ho silent and smooth are his methods, however, that no one has yet caught him in the act of working his peculiar game, and he still passes in and out of the lead ing hotels unmolested by detectives or porters.—Chicago Inter-Ocean. Bicycle Polo. Polo played without the regulation sticks, merely by the substitution of cycles for horses, is a new game among riders, though it requires no small amount of skill. It is obvious that the latter form of game is pos sibly only-, for expert wheelmen or wheel women. When the bell is struck, not with a stick, but always with the front wheel, it means that tho wheel must be lifted clear of the ground to give it the necessary play, and that is a feat beyond the average rider. The rules for the new game are the same as those of the stick polo, and the player must always, on penalty of s J foul, keep his cycle to the left of an imaginary lino drawn from the op- I ponents' goal to the centre of the j ball—i. e., must keep the ball on hie right hand side. Then," to mako e sharp stroke, the front wheel is lifted, j the left hand brought sharply back and the ball is struck with the rim and tire of the hinder part of the front | wheel. It sounds like a perilous feat, I and is somewhat, though not more sc j than the game played with sticks. In practice for either falls are frequent ; and inevitable. The rule about keep ing on one side of the ball is evidently | framed in order to avoid as far as pos- I sible such disastrous collisions as would ensue from orossing righl athwart arider.—Waverley Magazine, Judicial Cruelty in Hungary. A revolting instance of magisterial cruelty in tho Hungarian villago ol Mocsa, in the county of Komorn, has | just come to light. Last November j the offices of the community were j broken into, and some money was j stolen. Thirteen persons were ar rested, and, on their refusal to con fess, were abominably tortured. They | were bound hand and foot, and beaten with boxwood sticks by the magis j trate and his assistants, who nlsc | lighted methylated spirits under the bare feet of one prisoner, aud then poured the burning spirit over them. The unhappy wretch, in order to escape further torture, said that he had taken the money and buried it near a pond. His prosecutors, on failing to find it, became more en raged than over, and ran pointed knives under his tiuger-nails. Other prisoners were starved for days, aud, with their hands tied behind them, wore bound to frames aud left there until they fainted. After all these horrors, the actual thief, who was still at liberty gave himself up to the public prosecutor at Komorn. The Criminal Court is now making a strict inquiry into tho affair.—Vienna Cor respondence in London Standard. It lia* Knriclicd Many. Ono of the most profitable woods is sandal wood. Tho East lurtiuii Gov eminent has had a monopoly 011 th sandal wood trade, to the enormous profit of the stockholders, for several Hundred years past. The method of preparing tho wood tree for market is interesting. After the tree has beer | felled it is allowed to lio for a feu weeks, during whioh time, on account of its puugent odors, it is assailed as t delicious morsel by myriads of the voracious white auts of India, and these greedy colonies soon leave noth ing but tho heart, whiob is the sandal wood of trade. Sandal wood cuts beautifully uuder the chisel, aud specimens bearing 75,000 impressions to the square inch have come from tin autzraver'a tool. ~f>. Ntl&lai --v"* i [h | t_,]E3 Should women vote? Well, if they could, They'd vote for what is pure and good; And Ivory Soap, because it's best, Would simply overwhelm the rest. IVORY SOAP IS 99%, PER CENT. PURE. Piso's Cure for Consumption has no equal I as n Cough modloliip. K. St. A hhott, 983 teen eca St., Buffalo, N. V., May 9, 1894. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous- i ness after first day's use of I)r. Kline's Clreat Nerve Restorer. S3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. I►. 11. K 1.l NE,l,td.U,il Ai'eli St.Pliila.Pu. Macon, Mo., has been suffering from a house famine for several months. Wo-To-Bao for Firty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, maltes tvcalt mea stroug, blood pure. 50c, 11. All druggists. i Wild Excitement on a Carette. People who Imagine that the carettc j Is a sedate and quiet vehicle, fit only for old women and elderly men who wish to avoid excitement, are cherish ing a delusion. As a typical carette experience a trip from the river to Madison street, recently, may be cited. Directly in front of Cen tral Music hall the carette, which was on the wrong side of the street, collided with'a heavy truck loaded with coops containing live chickens. The truck driver expostulated with the car ette driver, and ordered him to take the other side of the street at once. The I latter declined. Hot words followed, | and a moment later a challenge to a I duel was given and accepted. Both i men drew their whips and stood up on their seats. The lashes flew, and the horses, thinking the blows intended for them, started up and pulled the ve hicles apart. The carette turned out I so quickly that a beer wagon almost [ took its wheel off. A moment later, I while the passengers were recovering I from the excitement, a cable train j swept round the corner of Madison j street and was stopped within three inches of the venerable equines at tached to the carette, while the passen-! gers scrambled out in confusion and alarm.—Chicago Inter Ocean. Sad Ending to Festtvltie*. The cable announces that young Vis count Castlereagli, eldest son of the Marquis of Londonderry, has suffered concussion of the brain tnrough a fall from his horse and will be confined to j hie bed for several weeks at least, even if no more serious complications de velop. The accident will put a sud den and sad ending to the festivities in honor of the coming of age of the j young nobleman. The birthday has | been celebrated at Mount Stewart, County Down, one of the seats to which the viscount is heir. One day last week more than 1,000 tenants were feasted on the estate. Viscount Cas tlereagh, who was educated at Sand hurst, the English West Point, is a second lieutenant in the Royal Horse Guards, and is heir to 50,000 acres of land. Mail from Kuiihah .Soldiers. The mail matter that comes to To peka from Manila sometimes numbers as high as 1,000 pieces a day. Look at your f • covered with pimples? Your skin rough and blotchy? It's your liver! Ayer's Pills arc liver pills. They cure constipation, biliousness, and dyspepsia. 25c. All druggists* Want your moustache or beard a beautiful I j BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers j "Ons Year Borrows Another Year's Fool." You Didn't Use Last Year. Perhaps You Will Hot This Year. Flndley'* Kyo Sulvo Cures Soro eyes in 3 days; chronic cases in 30 days, or money back. All druggists, or by mail, 25c. per box. J. I*. Haytkr, Decatur, Texas. Various devices have been used in Europe for the v ntilation of tunnels. In some cases oil-burning or electric locomotives have been substituted for the trip through the tunnel and in other cases artificial ventilation has been used. Educate Tonr Tlnweln Wltn Candy Cathartic, euro conßiip&tion forever. il)c, 25c. It C. C. C. fall, druggists refund money. Miss Mercedes de Laski, one of the latest London debutantes, is six feet three inches in height. "My wife bad plmplcN on lierface,but she has been taking CASCAKBTS and they have all disappeared. I had been troubled with constipation for some time, but after tak ing the first Cascaret 1 have had no trouble with this ailment. We cannot speak too high ly of Cascarets " TitLD Wahtman. 6708 Gormaatown Ave., Philadelphia. Pa. MI CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REGISTERED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste (lood. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. Ilk-. 25c.50c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Rnatrty I unpnay, Chicago, Montreal. Raw fori. fl no-TO-bac saKMKas.sar CARTERS INK Ask for it. If your dealer hasn't ►- it he can get it easily. m. L. DOUGLAS £3 & $3.50 SHOES JJ," a 'd£ Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. $■ Indorsed !>y over fr in 1,000,000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES j Take no aubstltuto claimed AOo*ami $3.50 shoes In the world. Your dealernhoald keep ■'-W a pair on receipt of price. Stnte kind of leather, nize and width, plain or can toe. Catalogue C Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton. Mass. THEY CURE, m of C.OI.DEN KOI> Sl ITOSITOKIKS. for the absolute cure of the delicuto diseases of wom en. I'sed successfully for 10 years. Send 4c in stamps, chambers Medicine Co., 24 Fort Stroot West. Detroit. Mich. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS \ret he best. Ask for them. Coat no more \ than common chimney-. All denier*, j PITTS HP ltd GLASS co., Allegheny, Pa. Or. Rlcord's Essence of Life KuISmSS aid, nevcr-failin i -nio ly for all case* i nervous, mental, phy-i al w' lry. 1>- vitality and 1 re inftturo .iM. av in . sexes; positive, permanent mire: ;till i. 1 men' >; .• r *1 a Untie: -amp for circular. J. JA. gULii. Ay- iv . 170 lhi adway. N. A. fr™ Successful I ;< ProspciJtcs Claims. RKEIl M AT ISM ?;!■'"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers