"Honor is Purchased by Deeds We Do." Deeds, not words, count In battles of peace as well as in war. It is not what we say, but what Hood's Sarsapardla does, that tells the story of its merit. It has ■won many remarkable "victories over the arch enemy of mankind impure blood. Be sure to get only Hood's, because I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lunffe by Piso'a Cure for Consumption.— LOUlSA LXNDAMAN, bethany, Mo., Juuuary 8, 18W. In Madagascar silk is the only fabric used in the manufacture of clothing. It is cheaper than linen in Ireland. ■o-10-Dae lor ilitf Cent*. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 11. All druggists. Traces of gold have been found in the province of Puerto Principe. Educate Tear Bowels With Casearets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. t0c,360. If U. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. ANNAPOLIS CADETS, flow on Their Summer Trip la Foreign Waters. One of the most pleasant thing! about being an Annapolis cadet is tht chance they have of going on summer cruises. The second class men are now aboard an old-fashioned sailing vessel, such as was used by our navy before we had steam warships. These young men are required to do the work of common sailors; in fact, they do every thing there is to be done on the boat They started in June, and will return In September. They stop for a week or so at Plymouth, England, and ar rangements have been made for them to spend a few days in London. Then they sail for Lisbon, Portugal, and the boys are wondering how Spain's neigh bors will receive them. After that they go to Gibraltar, and then home again. Of course there is a good deal of fun to be got out of the trip, and a great deal to see; but it is a part of their four years' course at the naval acad emy, and they have to work hard scrubbing decks and taking in sails, and the slightest disobedience is pun ished. Before they left this country they stopped off Hampton Roads for a few days and went through a lot of drilling, including the "deserting of the ship." In this drill the crew puts pro visions In the small boats, launch them and row away toward land, just as they would have to do if the ship took lire or were in a sinking condition. Au Unhappy Name. I remember hearing the following story from the late Canon Bardsley, author of "English Names and Sur names." There was once a woman— "a little 'crackey,' I think," said the canon, byway of parenthesis —who had a son whom she had christened "What." Her idea seems to have been that when In after days he was asked bis name, and kept saying "What," amusing scenes would follow, which was likely enough, especially if the boy was careful to pronounce the as pirate. Such a scene did, I believe, occur once wlien ho went to school, and was told, as a newcomer, to stand np and furnish certain particulars. "What is your name?" asked the teacher. "What," blurted out the boy, amid the laughter of the class. "What Is your name?" asked the master again, with more emphasis. "What," replied the boy. "Your name, sir!" roared back the infuriated pedagogue. "What, What!" roared back the terri fied urchin. The sequel I forget, but I believe it one of those cases in which the follies of the parents are visited on the children of the first generation.— Notes and Queries. Getting Illm to Work. "I notice that your boy mows the lawn every three or four days. How do you get him to do it?" "S-sh-ht Don't let him hear. His papa threat ened, when he bought the mower, to punish him severely if he ever dared to take it out of the basement."—Chicago Times-Herald. Yang-Tu, China's delegate to the peace congress, was educated at Har vard. [LETTER TO URS. FINRHAM NO. 93,284] " DEAR MRS. PIXKHAM—For some time I have thought of writing to you to let you know of the great benefit I have received _ _ . from the use of mrSrn Johnson L ydi E. Pink- Savei# from ham's Vegeta- Insanliy by ble compound. Bm ma m SOOQ ftftCT t 110 Mrs. Plnkham birth of my fi „ st child, I com menced to have spells with my spine. Every month I grew \yorse and at last became so bad that I found I was gradually losing my mind. 44 Tho doctors treated me for female troubles, but I got no better. One told me that I would be insane. I was advised by a friend to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, and before I had taken all of the first bottle my neighbors noticed the change in me. 44 1 have now taken five bottles and cannot find words sufficient to praise it. I advise every woman who is suffering from any female weakness to give it a fair trial. I thank you for your good medicine."—MßS. GERTRUDE M. JOHN SON, JON ESI/9Xl' , TEXAS. Mrs. Perkins' Letter. 44 1 had female trouble of all kinds, had three doctors, but only grew worse. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills and used the Banative Wash, and can not praise your remedies enough."— ÜBA. EFFIE PBRKIKS. PEARL, LA. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Affections are the roots of life. The love that is not split, is spoilt. large doors swing on very small hinges. It is not the length but the depth of a life that tells. The more perfect the trust the more perfect the peace. There is no mortal whom pain and disease do not reach. The grace of sympathy is pu:.hased at the cost of suffering. 44 Half a mind" is never worCli half as much as a whole one. He who drifts to ruin, will get there just as surely as he who drives. Our children have liberty born in them, but law they have to learn. Keason is the glory of human na ture. He is next to the gods whom reason, and not passion, impels. Drudgery is as necessary to call out the treasures of tho mind as harrow ing and planting those of earth. Ignorauce is a blank sheet on which we may write; but error is a scribbled one on which we must first erase. If you have good health be happy, for you have nine-tenths of all that nature has ever giveu to any man. Many an act of duty or self-sacrifice, at first sight supposed to be impossi ble, has, by continued contemplation, becotne so attuned to the disposition that it has been, performed with ease and even with pleasure. The willingness of young men to give or receive money on the mere turn of a chance is u token of the decay of manliness and self respect, which is more alarming than almost anything besides. It has an inherent baseness about it which shows a base soul. SOMETHING NEW IN STEEL. Alleged Discovery That Is Expected to Revolutionize a Great Industry. Just f. Americans begin to feel thaV they are upon the verge of developing superiority to Great Britain, not only in shipbuilding, but in the steel trade, in which such a number of valuable foreign contracts have lately been taken by our manufacturers iu the face of British competition; and just as nature seems to encourage the American aspiration by showing that tho English coal mines will be ex hausted wilhiu another fifty years, science seems to be coming to tlie aid of the Britisher, and may be about to open new fields of competition iu steel in which America must take part if she is to maintain her hard-earned prestige. The discovery has been demon strated in London, and is being made much of by the English press,that the ability to produce perfect steel by casting it in a vacuum made by liquid hydrogen wilh a process that it is not proposed to make public, has at last attained practicability. A company has been formed with a capital of thirty thousand pounds to experimen tally develop the process aucl if the plan is as successful as Professor De war, the discoverer, presumes it will be, the air bubbles that now cause flawß and weakness iu steel will be done away with and a metal will re sult such as the world has never seen. To say that this means a possible revolution in the steel trade is to put it mildly, aud if tho Euglish govern ment can control the process, as it is now intimated may be the case, then American scientists and those of othor countries will be put upon tbeir met tle to get even with the Britishers. Liquid hydrogen, which is the great agent now discovered, is de scribed as a clear, colorle-s, trans parent and ve y volatile fluid, 110 clearer than pure water, but only ouo fourteenth the density of water. Iu its lightness it is out of all proportion to any known liquid. A piece of paper when placed in it sinks. The differ ence between liquid hydrogen and liquid air is as great if not greater than the difference between the ordin ary temperature and liquid air. Liquid hydrogen places temperature at with in twenty degrees of absolute zero, which is represented by 494 degrees Fahrenheit and 273 degrees Centigrade below zero. The boiliug point of liquid hydrogen is 252 degrees below zero, at which it is capable of enor mous pressure. The discovery must affect every problem of physics and chemistry. Its possibilities are illimitable. It may revolutionize the methods tliut have been laboriously built up during the last three hundred years. Whose Umbrella? Sometimes an umbrella seems to arouse suspicion, eveu wlieu it is in honest bautlß, Thus a London paper tells a painful tale of a young man iu a street-car, wlio carried au umbrella which had been his birthday gift. On the sent facing him was a lady with a precocious boy,evidently about five years old. The youngster regard ed the young man with attention for a few moments, aud then his eyes wan dered to the umbrella. He gazed at it in silence for a second, then he wriggled in his seat, clapped his hands and shouted: "O mamma, don't that look like papa's umbrella?" "Hush, hush, my child," said the mother. "Papa was looking for his umbrella this evening, mamma," continued the boy. "Yes, yes, but he found it," said thq mother, hurriedly, as the conver sation was becoming of interest to other passengers. "Why, mamma," continued the youngster, "you know ho didn't. You told him that he didu't know enough to keep an umbrella. Why, mammq—" At this Sage the young mau left the oar. HE LO3T HIS PENCILS. But the Reporter Wrote His Story with nn Electric Light Bull). ,4 Did I ever tell you about the time that I wrote a story with au incan descent light bulb?" said the police reporter to a few of his professional friends. "No? Well, it's a fact, just the same, and all I had to write with was one of these glass globes." The hearers moved uneasily and one was heard to sav something about taking another draw. The police re porter was undaunted, however, and went on: "This is no pipe dream. I was working on the Brooklyn Eagle and had been sent down to a small inter ior town on one of the 4 hottest' stories you ever heard about—double murder with a good mystery end —dead peo ple both prominent, aud suspected murderer a prominent citizen. "I pulled iuto the station at exactly 11 o'clock and of course went into the station, the only telegraph office iu the towu, to tell the operator that I'd have some 4 stuff' to file not later than 1 o'clock in the morning. He was an agreeable fellow,and he said he would go home and get two hours' sleep aud be back in time to handle my story. I jumped in the town and in an hour was back to the telegraph office, which the operator had left opeu for me. "I peeled off my coat aud vest and sat down to write the crime story of my life. My hand sought my upper vest pocket, where I carried my pen cils, and, jumping Jupiter! I had lost every ouo of them. I remembered that I ha l them a little while before when taking some notes, but they were gone now. 4, 1 then began to gaze around the office. The operator bad plenty of ink, but nary a pen or pencil could I find. I was in a beautiful bole. Within an hour of filing time and not a thiug to write with. I just thought aud thought, and iu doing so hap pened to look again at the operator's desk. There lay a pad of thin paper aud between the first and second sheets was a piece of carbou paper. The way out of my difficulty came to me like a flush. "111 the little office were three in candescent lamps. I turned the key and put out one, unscrewed it, and in another moment had the pad of paper with its carbon sheet in front of me. At the big end of the bulb was a pro truding point of glass. I took the globe in my hand, holding it like a stylus, and marked on the top sheet: 4 The Eagle, Brooklyn, N. Y.' Imag ine my joy when I lifted the upper carbon paper to find that it had taken the impression perfectly. Then I went to work aud at 1 o'clock when the op erator arrived, had a starter for him of a thousand words," "Did you finish the story that way?" was asked. "Yes. The operator offered me writing material, but the novelty of the thing had taken hold of mo. Ho I ran the other 1500 words out iu the ; fame way." "Then," drawled the court recorder, "you waked up." Atlanta Constitu tion. Tactful Boy. "One of the beautiful traits in the makeup of Washington messenger boys," said a railroad mau who lives in Washington, "is their tactfuluess. I think otherwise. They are chock full aud loaded down with tact —with the copper on. To illustrate: "My wife went over to New York city a few weeks ago to attend the bedside of a seriously ill relative, who was not expected to live. This morn ing I was sitting in my office, wonder ing why I didu't get a tetter from her by tho first mail when a tousle-headed messeuger boy joggled open the door. " 'Wheve'll I find de office o' Mr. name. " 'Right here, son,' said I. 'You're talking to him.' " 'Well,' said the kid, measuriug me up with the probable expectation that I'd do a stage back fall, 'l've got a death message for yon, an' they tole me at th' office that it was im portant.' "Nice, mild, tactful way of putting it, wasn't it? He just left it up to me to wonder, while 1 was ripping the en velope open, whether the message announced the death of our aged rela tive or the decease of my wife. It happened to be the former, but I am inclined to believe that that boy would have been just a bit i etter pleased had it been the latter." Washington Post. How Thov Catoli Scorcher, in London. A great many communications have recently been sent to the London papers saying t at the Kingston police always catch the wrong person when they attempt to stop the wheelmen from furious riding. The policemen have contradicted these accusations. There seems to be a mistake some where. Possibly the true explanation may be found in what is said to be a "true American story" printed in the London Mail. This story, says The Mail, has a great bearing on the ca-e at hand. There is a certain time when tho vision of the officer loses the renl offender and he never gets him within the range of his eyes again. Here is the story, which is said to explain matters: "A gentleman was leaning out of a railway carriage window to kiss his wife, who was on the platform bidding him good-by. The train, how ever, moved on with that oelerity for which American trains are famous iy anecdote; so fast, indeed, that the chas.e salute was bestowed on a por ter at the next station. The sugges tion is that, us the cyclists travel so fast iu Ringston, the police do not catch the scorcher, but the slow rider who is coming up iust behind him." BREEZY KANSAS YARNS, Bow Eastern Correspondent. Add to the Unlqne Fame of a Great State. Mr. Coburn, the agricultural com missioner of Kansas, charges all the notoriety that Kansas has suffered from during the last quarter of a cen tury to eastern newspaper correspon dents, who, he says, have visited that state, and have tried to interest their readers by inventing freaks and fabul ous stories. "It has been left to the correspon dents of eastern papers to portray Kansas to the world in all the various shades and tints," savs Mr. Coburn, "l'rom those of gloomiest midnight and deepest woe to brightest noonday and heaven's gilding. His finest work, that which has always stamped him as possessing the true artistic temperament, has been his treatment of weather conditions, especially our impulsive zephyrs and periods of pro crastinated rainfall. The lines of thought always discernible in his work are that we are in a chronic condition of cyclone, drought or blizzard, varie gated by invasions and devastations of chinchbugs and grasshoppers. In dealing with tliq former he describes the wind which he says blew a cow up against the side of a barn and held her there for 12 days, or until she starved to death. The same wind,says this veracious chronicler, blew the cracks out of the fences, sucked a cistern from the ground, moved the township line and ohanged the day of the week, while it yanked the buug hole out of a barrel and buried it in a sandhill 80 miles away. "On another occasion, when stopping at a farmhouse, a cyclone came up and he, with the family, went into the cel lar. The house was soon blown away; presently the cellar went, too, lolling over and over like a silk hat. He was early spilled out, but with infinite labor dragged himself back in the teeth of the wind, intending to take refuge in the hole the cellar came out of, but to his great cousternation he found that the hole had been blown away also. Shortly after this, a far mer was riding along the road with a jug of sorghum tied with a strap to his saddle-horn. A cyclone came up, and after it had passed the jug handle was found inside tSiejug and the strap was sticking out of the jug's mouth, the jug having been blown inside out without spilling a drop of the molasses. Duriug the same blow a goat happened to get in its path, and his hair was blown off until be looked us clean as a skinned banann. This made tlie goat look so much like a Mexican dog with horns that it was placed on ex hibition at the World's fair, attracting attention as one of the great curiosi ties of the centnry. "The eastern correspondent is equally at ease in dealing with the intervuls occurring between showers, which the fertility of his imagination nnd the ex treme elasticity of his conscience per mit him to describe as 'droughts.' Whatever portion of his voenbulary has not already been exhausted in de scribing the 'cyclone' is at once avail able for writing up the 'drought.' Through him a wondering world learns of the alleged Kansas ferry man who was to haul water ten months in the year in order to keep his boat running; of the families who each morning are compelled to run their wells through clotheswringers that they may obtain water for cook ing purposes; of neighborhoods where it is so dry that water is wet only on one side, and where fish,to nllaytbirst and rince the dust from their throats, swarm out on the prairies and lap the boiling dew from the buffalo grass. He it is who says this distressing scarcity of moisture is forced upon us by the corporations that have cornered the water supply to put into their stocks, and to such an extent that far mers have to soak their hogs over night in order to make them hold swill. "Another remarkable Btory is told of a man who was driving over the divide north of Dodge City, when a shower came up. He was riding a buckboard, which has a bottom made by fastening floats between the axles with spaces o half an inch between the cloatß. The water fell so fast that it could not run through the bottom of the buckboard as fast as it fell. Rushing down the side of the divide the water struck a barbed wi e fence and dammed up until the water ran over the top wire of the fence. This was because the rain came so fast that it couldn't get through between the wires of the fence. On the same trip the traveler says he saw a jack rabbit drown while it was jumping through the air." I.ofl HI. Daughter in the Well. George Smith of Blaine, Me., while drawing water for his cows, lost u tin pail in tlio well. He had let his eldest daughter, a girl of 17, into the well by a line to recover the pail, when he saw that his cuttlo bad entered a field of potatoes that had been newly poisoned. In his desire to save his cows from death he forgot all about his daughter. When he came back half an hour later she had wept her self into convulsions and was making a desperate effort to cling to the stones in the well to escape drowning. Smith has promised her an 885 organ if she will stop tnlking about the event—New York Sun. A Mohhp l * Fncomfortahlo Situation. .Tule Lill witnessed a scrimmage the other day between a couple of chicken hawks at a great elevation. The rnoket proved to be over a mouse which one of them was carrying, finally being compelled to drop it, when the bird that had been doing the scrapping swooped down on the mouse and suc ceeded in catching it before it had fallen 30 feet. —Preston Plain Dealer, BOGUS ANCIENT MANUSCRIPT. The Alleged Treasure* Were "Failed" lu Central Asia. Oriental lata will do well to be on their suard in connection with Central Asian manuscripts, which have of lato provided them with such an endles3 subject of discussion, says the Scots man. It was Capt. Bower who first discovered the existence of some ex tremely ancient manuscripts during his great Journey acrosß central Asia, and Dr. Sven Hedin brought back a rich collection for the edification and mystification of orientalists. Since then the supply of anciont manuscripts has been very great, but it is stated that the gravest suspicion is now cast upon the authenticity of a very large proportion of these so-called relics of antiquity. An English officer who is now en gaged in some exploring work in Cen tral Asia has discovered that there exists In Khotan a regular manufac tory of the manuscript relics, and so large is the output that he believes that at least 95 per cent of the manu scripts which have reached Europe from central Asia during recent years are spurious. The process of manu facture has been explained to him, and so impressed is he with the difficulty of distinguishing between the genuine and the counterfeit that he has him self adopted a rule of never under any circumstances buying any ancient book offered to him for sale. Meanwhile there is much searching of hearts among the owners of the manuscripts which have already found their way Into European collections. A Picked Kin-. There was a game of baseball the other day at one of the 1 ,cal ball parks between a local team and a picked nine. A clerk In one of the dry goods stores got the afternoon off and took his girl, who was not a connoisseur of a ball game. In the second inning the ball c&me skipping into the grand stand and the umpire Called "fdul." "Bay," said the wise girl, "why did he call that ball fowl? I didn't see any feathers on It." "Didn't I telHrou that it was a picked nine?" he replied. Are You I'Mlng Allen's Foot-Ratio ? It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen a Foot- Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmstead, Leltoy, N. Y. Kamchatka may soon become as popular a resort as the Klondike, as gold has been discovered there In promising quantities. ifcxit Tobacco Spit and Smoke Toar I.lfc Away* To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag aetic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or fI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. In an exciting battle with a lot of copperhead snakes, on Richard Ed ward's farm, near Shamokin, Pa., Hugh Jenkins killed seven of them. rsf vigor | What does it do? It causes the oil glands In the skin to become more active, making the hair soft and glossy, precisely as nature intended. It cleanses the scalp from dandruff and thus removes one of the great causes of baldness. It makes a better circu . lation in the scalp and stops the hair from coming out. it Prevent m fs Cures Boldness Ayer's Hair Vigor will surely make hair grow on djjß bald heads, provided only there is any life remain- H ing in the hair bulbs. ■ It restores color to gray or white hair. It does not do this in a moment, as i will a hair dye; but in a short time the gray color of age gradually disap pears and the darker color of youth takes its place. Would you like a copy f of our book on the Hair W and Scalp? It is free. If you do not obtain nil tho benoflt® you expected from the use of the Viao* write the Doctor about It. * DWW Addreas. DR. J. C. AYER Lowell, Mass. "BIG FOUR" "THESEA LEVEL ROUTE" TO NEW YORK. DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE. WACNER SLEEPINC CARS. DININC CARS. . E. IN GALLS, WARREN J. LYNCH, President, Ben. Pees. & TUM Agt I I i * Wi A tasteful appearance in dress often comes as much from good laundering as from the quality of the clothing. Good laundering requires good soap and Ivory Soap is the best. The fading of delicate shades is frequently the ruination of an expensive garment. Any color that will stand the free application of water can be washed with Ivory Soap, COPVHMMTIMO >Y THE PROCTCR & Q ABOUT BERNHARDT. Mme. Bernhardt gives the following account of her admission Into the Con servatoire: "Auber was present, and asked me: 'Your name is Sarah?' 'Yes, sir.' 'You are a Jewess?' 'By birth, •ir, but I have been baptized.'" Sarah then recited two verses of "Les Deux Pigeons," and was interrupted. "That will do; you are admitted." Then came the business of selecting the right class. Beauvallet declared for tragedy, Hegnier for comedy, Provost for both, and Sarah selected both, and thus de voted herself simultaneously to the culture of the two muses, Melpomene and Thalia. It seems that at first the future queen of the stage did not care for it in the least. Above all she hated her daily Journeys to and fro in the omni bus, "and to this day I detest promis cuous assemblies and miscellaneous crowds." Mme. Bernhadt next assures us that she was never able to win a first prize at the Conservatoire, only a second, and that but once, and for trag edy. After a year's study at the Con servatoire, Mme. Bernhardt passed into the company of the Theater Francais, and made her debut In Racine's "Iphi genle." She writes: "My arms were so long and so thin that when in the scene of the sacrifice I uplifted them before the altar the house burst into a roar of laughter and I was mortified to tears. I next played Valerie in Scribe's play of that name, with Co- Quelin as Ambroise, and I was success ful. But even then I could not over come my innate dislike for the stage. I never put foot inside the theater ex cept for rehearsals and performances." In 1579, as all the world will remem ber, Sarah Bernhadt went to London for the first time, appearing in "Phe dre." She at once established her po sition in that country and was not only a success on the stage, but the "lion ess" in chief of the London season, every fashionable hostess seeking the privilege of her acquaintance, and no party was considered complete with out her presence. To (hire Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Cantly Cathartic. 10c or 25c. U C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Llcennen for Horseshoer.*. An enactment in Washington re quires horseshoers to pass an examina tion and to be licensed. The improvements that are bring made to the Baltimore and Ohio South western Railroad between Parkers burg and East St. Louis are being pushed rapidly to completion. Seven teen thousand tons of 8" lb. steel rail have been placed in the track and there are still 25,000 tons to come, de livery being delayed on account of rush of orders at the mills. The com pany has also put In 125 miles of gravel ballast and expects to get out 200 miles more during the season and it is hop d by fall that tin- track will rank as the best in the west. A great many grade reductions and changes in line are a'so being made between Cincinnati and St. Louis. The purpose is to make a uni from one half of one per cent, grade be tween Cincinnati and St. Louis, as well as to eliminate a large amount of objectionable curvature. At one point, for instance, the line is to be shortened a mile and a half, 360 degrees of cur vature eliminated and seven bridges abandoned. How'i This? We offer One Hundred Dollur* Reward foT any ca-e of Catarrh that oannot be cured by Hall'B Catarrh Cure. P. J. CHENEY A CO., Props.. Toledo, O. " . to© undersigned, have known F. J Che ney lor the la-t 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion m de by their flrra. A TRCAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, WaldVno, Kin nan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Prioe, 75c. per bottle. Sold b^ al ,y\V*K , l t " r > Testimonials free. Hall s Family Pill# are the best You Will Realize that "Thev Live Well Who Live Cleanly," if You Use SAPOLIO i The telegraph will be extended 1,000 miles south of Khartoum by the end of the year. Beauty 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 itirring 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 toll of an ordinary ship passing through the Suez Canal averages about $4,000. The distance is ninety* two miles. Mrs.Winslow'sSoothing Byrup forchildreia teething, softens the gums, reduces i ntlamma* tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc abotuA Lazy Liver "I liave been troubled a great deal with a torpid liver, which produces constipa tion. I found CASCAKETS to bo all you claim for them, and secured such relief the first triaL that I purchased another supply and was com pletely cured. I shall only be too glad to reo ornmend Cascarets whenever the opportunity Is presented." J. A Smith. 2920 Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa m CATHARTIC trade mark registered Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. I* Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, of Gripe. 10c, 25c. 60a ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Hrmnlr CompiaT, Oilman. Montreal, New York. "WO anrt guaranteed by all drug- NU- I U'OAu gists to CIKE Tobacco Habit? The University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME. INDIANA. ClttNslM, I.of tort. Economic* nml History. lmit*iiiilimvii, Art. Science. I'liit miacy. Law. Civil, >1 cliucnicul and Elect rim I Engineer* iny. Architecture. 'I borough Preparatory and Commercial Course*. Ecclesiastical students at special ratea Koiim* Free. Junior or Senior Year. Collegiate Courses. Knom* to Kent, moderate charge. St. Edward'* llall lor boys under 13. The ofiin Year will open September sth, IBW). Catalogue* Free. Add re** KEY'. A. .>IOK it I.SSL Y, C. S. C.. President. CARTER'S INK Is what Uncle Sam uses. stopped fpee ■ IP Permanently Cured ■ fli Inwnlty Prevented by KB ■ H B&et OR. KLINE'S GREAT DL| ■ B w heRVE restorer ear* for U Jfrrwx* Mtuu. Fiu KpUtpif, f uTVllp*a*BU t? eeonlf GOLDEN CROWN [flip CHIMNEYS Are the heat. Ask for tliem. Cost rio more than common chimney*. All lcter. riTTSltl K<; GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa, Dr. Hicord's Essence of Life *'/: 1 J* ard, never-failing remedy for all cases of nervouf mental, physical debility, I<>* vitality ami pro mature decay in both sexes; positive, permanent •ure; full treatment <5, or fl a bottle; stamp fof circular. J. JACQUES. Agent, 176 Broadwuy, N. Y. JIE NS9 O N U'" h " "V, 3yra iu civil war. [5 adjudicutlug claims, atty 1 DROPSYSK^ caaaa. Book of testimonials and lOdnte' traatnasrf Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN 8 EONS. Box D, Atlanta. Or RHEUMATISM ZSSZFSSStt'Sii 1 'Alxxahdu Bimidi Co., aaOreeuwicA St.. N.I. P. NT U. 32 '99 PBBB t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers