" What's in a Name?" Everything, when you come to medi cines. cA sarsaparilla by any other name can never equal Hood's, because of the peculiar combination, proportion and pro cess by which Hood's possesses merit peculiar to itself, and by which it cures when all other medicines fail. Cures scrofula, salt rheum, dyspepsia, catarrh, rheumatism, that tired feeling, etc. DROPSY "7 L R . Y .i'"; caaB. Boon of testimonial* and lOdnv*' tieatmeut FW. Dr. H. H. QUEEN'B BONtt. Box B. Atlanta, Qa. Deafnoß* Cannot He Cur d lv local npplcatioiiß,aß'they cannot reach the diseased port on or -he ear. There is only one way to cure (leafueae. And that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in llnmed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it Is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out. ami this tune re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but au inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused bv catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, bend for circulars, free. F J. CHENEY & Co H Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. llall's Family l'illsare the best. We think Piso's Cure for Consumption is tho only medicine for Coughs.- J KNNIK PINCK AUD, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1, 1891. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. §2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H. KLINE. Ltd.93I Arch St. Phi la. Pa. The income from the Monte Carlo gaming tables for the past year reaches $5,520,000. Dcnnty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. C'ascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. fluwntmn * omiuercti. The Hawaiian islands are an exam pie of commercial development undei a close or protected system. It was in 1866 that the Islands first touched ai Interest of $1,000,000 in our impor trade, chiefly through the whale-flsh erles, as they made a convenient stop ping place for American whalers. Thr Interest was not doubled until the reci procity treaty went Into effect (1877), and sugar became the great article ol commerce, with rice as the second in Importance, but representing only one tenth the value of the sugar. The granting of free entry into the United States for these two products was equivalent to remitting to the Ha waiian planters the sum of $1,000,000 a year, every dollar of which acted as a bounty on production. It was na tural to find that so liberal a gift waa soon appreciated, and the energies of the Islands were directed into laying out plantations of sugar and rice. As rice proved of uncertain profit th e cultivation for export has not pros pered, although the domestic consump tion increased through the influx of Asiatics. The exports of this grain were 2,250,000 pounds in 1876, e,ttained a maximum of 13,684,200 pounds in 1887, and are now about 5,500,000 Dounde a year.—Harper's Magazine. A Burglary Story. They were telling "burglary sto ries" JifSsfcai'M cine. I can never praise it enough. I was ——— —J a constant sufferer from womb trouble, and leucorrhoea, had a continual pain in abdomen. Sometimes I could not walk across the floor for three or four weeks at a time. Since using your medicine, I now have no more tear ing-down pains, or tired , taken four bottles and used |[[ MRS. M. BAUMANN, 771 W. 21st St., Chicago, 111., writes: "After two months' trial ofLydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I can not say enough in praise for it. I was a very sick woman with womb trouble when I began its use, but no w I am well." Are Yuo ruing Allen's Foot-Kase ? It is tbronly cure for Swollen, Smarting, Tired, Aohlng, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot- Ease. a powder to be shaken into the shoes. Hold by all Druggists. Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25f\ Sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmstead, LeKoy, N. Y. So much German beer is being sold in England that British brewers fear they will suffer by the competition. ■derate Tour Rowels With Cases rets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 26c. It C. O. C. fail, druggists refund money Nearly one-third of the world's sav ings are in the 980 savings banks of the United States. j/K£T&: pfl^ Lookatyourtongue! If it'scoated, I I your stomach is bad, your liver out of I I order. Ayer's Pills will clean your I I tongue, cure your dyspepsia, make I I your liver right. Easy to take, easy I Ito operate. 25c. All druggists. I Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Then uso BUCKINGHAM'S HEAD ACHE "Both my wife and myself have been using CASCARETS and thev are tho best medicine we have ever had in the house. Last week my wlfo was frantic with headache for two days, she tried some of your CASCARETS, ind thev relieved the pain In her head almost Immediately. Wo both recommend Cuscarets." CH A9. STEDEFORD. Pittsburg Safe & Deposit Co., Pittsburg, Pa. M CATHARTIC mwA TNADB MARK RIOISTERBO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Blcken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling H-medy foapiny, (hle*o, Monfre.l. New York. Sl7 NO-TO-RAft ' So,(I nnfl faranteed by all drug llU IU L)mVI gists to CiJKE Tobacco Uablt- A Modern instance. The wonderful advance made in the science of farming during the last few years is one of the best examples of American progresslveness. A little incident recounted by the Ashtabula (Ohio) Sentinel Is characteristic. One evening, a short time ago, a society in Jefferson needed a gallon of cream. The committee called up by telephone tho proprietors of a milk farm two miles north of the town, and asked If they could furnish it. The reply was that they could as soon as milking was done. In thirty minutes from the time the call was made, the cream was de livered. The milk had been drawn from the cow, put into a separator, the cream extracted and sent to town by a matron a bicycle. A few years ago the committee would have had to send a hoy in the afternoon, "yesterday's milk" would have had to be skimmed, and if the boy had not treed too many chipmunks on the way, he might have got back in time for the festival. A Gentle Hint. A singular custom prevails among the Tartars or Kurds. If a man loses his cattle or other property he pours a little brown sugar into a piece of colored cloth, ties it up and carries one such parcel to each of his friends and acquaintances. In return he Is presented, according to circumstances, with a cow or sheep or a sum of money. (NEWS AND NOTES! FOR WOMEN. 1 J**-*#******* k* aoeteieteK* ***** All** Grant's Suit of Gladatono. English women are entering the ranks of tho sculptors with snch ef fect that one of the artistic sensations of the year in England is she bust of Gladstone, reoeutly exhibited by Miss Grant. She is the daughter of Sir Francis Grant, a former president of the Royal Academy, and her mother was a daughter of the Earl of Elgin, from whom the Elgin collection of Parthenon marbles was named, as it was due to his efforts that they were secured by England from the Turks. Keeping llair In Curl. The subject of keeping hair in cnrl is one that is of immense interest to women. White of eggs, quince juice and the like are unpleasant to use and produce a sticky, "floury" appearance most inartistio and unbecoming. The proper way to curl the hair with ail iron is to dampen Blightly and curl slowly, holding on the iron until al most cool. Then slip iron through and put an invisible pin into the curl to keep it tightly coiled until the hair is dressed. By that time the hair has cooled thoroughly in the ourl and will last for hours longer than if curled in the ordinary hasty way. Iceland's Progressive Daughters. Iceland has a woman's club known as the Thorwaldsen Society. It is philanthropic and educational in its aims, and just now is trying to raise money enough to found a national university at Reykjavik, to obviate the now existent necessity for sons and brothers to spend their college years across the seas. The Club pub lishes a paper, in which editors and contributors are all women. In addi tion to the women's club, there are a book club and an amusement club, to which men also beloug. The amuse ment olub meets every week in winter and gives frequent cotillons. The New Wrinkle For Wrinkle*. Fruit-poultices are the latest fad for the complexion. They should bo worn all night, and are said to be Bpecifio for wrinkleß. Tho best fruit is the strawberry, but others are ef fective. Take the interior of the fruit, Bpread on a band of linen and tie over the wrinkled part of the face. The result is said to exoeed the wildest expectations. Other directions for the complexion are "Never wash the faco in quite plain water, nor in cold water, nor with soap." Also "Wash the face in hot water and do not be afraid to use soap." "Use no powder at all" and "Use a little orris pow der." Be sure to carry out all these directions. The fruit cure will rectify all errors of judgment. Fruits and Herri** For the New nats. Very autumnal looking are the hats in deep yellow straws, trimmed with late fruits and berries. Different forms may be trimmed in this way, the directoire cape-line and the wide sailor being most suitable. The crowns are often bound round with narrow ribbon velvet, blaok claret maroon or green, and if the straw is an openwork one, still narrower velvet will be threaded in and out of its meshes. The bnnohea of ftuits— grapes, blaokberries. medlars, elder berries or nuts—arranged with their own foliage, rest on the brim. A ponf of some contrasting color is generally added. This is sometimes fnade in the form of a oircular rosette, with a bunch of poppy stamens in the middle. Private Secretary For Alany People. "Few trades are so overcrowded as that of stenography, because twenty girls can be found for each position offered," writes Frances E. Lauigan in the Ladies' Homo Journal. "Anew branch of regular stenography is that of the typewriter-stenographer who works by the piece. She visits her customers each morning, takes notes, and does her work upon herown type writer, returning the letters promptly for signature. Sho also does copying. To business men who have not suffi cient work, nor office room sufficient to share with a typewriter, she is in valuable. She is also a valued assist ant to women who avo busy with club work, answering their letters, copying rules and regulations, aud filing away their business papers." Plalil Waists Are Fashionable. For blouse waists bright plaids will be most fashionable, both in woolen fabrics and silk. Their great con venience will assure them success, as they form a set-off to almost any skirt. They assume somewhat the Bkirt-front style, with a deep box-plait down the centre and sleeves terminating iu a high stiff cuff edged by a frilling of the material. In the pluitls preferred bright crim son is blended with subdued shades of green and blue, frequently sen livened with a yellow aud orange nar row satin crossbar. The same idea for winter will be carried out in vel vet and plush. This fashion will probably bring us back in a measure to black skirts, of which the vogue has greatly diminished. With very light-colored skirts the novelty will be greater and the effect in no way less ened.—Dry Goods Economist. Mother of All tlio Iferroßhofl*. Across the street from the Herre shoff ship yards in Bristol, whore tho Defender and the Columbia were built, there stands an old country house, with a generous New England "stoop." In front of it there is a row of magnificent trees, and it louks out upon the Bay of Bristol. Sometimes in pleasant weather a little old woman in black comes out and sits for a while with one of her daughters and watches the stately yaohts come up the harbor h-om Newport and Fall River Hheis the mother of *ll the Herreshoffs, Last February she celebrated her eighty-ninth birthday, and she was yet hale enongh to take pride in the Columbia as she was building in tho shops. She is a descendant of the fa mous family of Lewises of Boston, merchants and shipmen, and she brings to the present branch of the family much of Its skill as ship de signers and builders. —Washington Star. Autumn Wraps. Golf capes are the wrap par ex cellence for chilly evenings, but numerous lighter garments are shown for the carriage or promenade. Silk jacketß are to be much worn in the attractive mode known as the ' 'coatee." Some of these dainty little wraps are made in the modified Eton shape,with points reaching below the waist. Some of them fold away with rovers, others lap just below the bust and fasten with three buttons below the point where the lapels fold back. It ia the fashion of the moment to have the lapels undeoorated. But one pretty model of navy blue silk has three overlapping revers, the tipper and lower being of the blue and the middle one of white satin. Jaunty capes are shown. They should reaoh just below the waist. One in innstio color was edged in front with plaited chiffon and finished with a chou and long Btrings. The popular bowknot trimming of applique in laoe com pleted a very fetching little garment. A style of trimming for capes and tunics, which some one has called the "penwiper" decoration, is in scollops. Another line of garniture with a de scriptive name is "railroad stitching." These fashions ore likely to be so popular as to be overdone after a little. Some of the long ulsters are extremely plain. No doubt we shall get used to them, however, as the fashion for polonaises and princess dresses Beems to be on the increase. New York Commercial Advertiser. ,! ff J Feminine Cliit Chat. The "hello" girl is becoming ob solete. Princess Charles of Denmark takes long rides daily on her blcyole. The Princess of Wales tried gclf for several months, but doesn't like the game. The Woman's College in Lucknow, India, has the largest entrance class they have yet had. Lady Salisbury, wife of Lord Salis bury, is spoken of as the proudest woman in England. Miss Ellen 0. Witter, of Denver, Col., is the only woman authorized to practice before the United States Land Offioe. Mary Elizabeth Lease is probably the loudest-voiced woman orator in the world. It is Bnid she can be heard two blocks away in an open-air speeoh. The number of women who were permitted to attend lectures at the Prussian universities last semester was 414. In 1895-'9G the number was only 117. Miss Margaret Long, daughter of the Secretary of the Navy, and Miss Mabel Austin, daughter of ex-Gover nor Austin, of Minnesota, are study ing medicine together. The Chamber of Commerce, Cin cinnati, Ohio, has a restaurant run by three Scotch women, and they clear about $15,000 a year, although their annual rental is SSOOO. Miss Flora Shaw and Mrs. May Fitzgibbon, of Toronto, are aotively interested in tho project of bringing women colonists f rem the mother coun try to settle in Canada. 1 St. Petersburg has a woman's olnb of 3000 members. They are investi gating the standing and position of women throughout the world. Tliey had to get permission from the Czar before organizing. Ever since the days of President Pierce the first lady of the land has laid tribute to the conservatory of the White House from whioh to send fragaut messengers of comfort and cheer to the unfortunate and sick. Gleanings From the Shops. Wreaths of small green artificial leaves for tho hair. Tiny glove handkerchiefs edged with full flounces of rare lace. Wide plaitings of black net heavily increased with pendant paillettes. White cloth garnitures in noroll de signs outlined with tinsel, silver or iridescent cordings. New assortments of elastic belts in white pearl and jet, with buckles in various fancifnl shapes. Mousseline de soie shirt waists de corated with exquisitely wrought silver, gold or orystal buttons. Collets made of chiffon or lace with medici collar and long stole ends thnt fasten at the wnist or fall in aoft, un dulating folds. Many princess costumes composed entirely of rich heavy lace, incrusted with floral applications of chiffon in natural tintings. Large hats of black, yellow or white straw, encircled with garlands of flowers, soft drapings of maliues and black velvet strings. Gowns of white point d'esprit dot ted effectively with black, adorned with cream lace threaded with narrow black velvet ribbon. Fichu scarfs which pass twice around the neck and fall in long, graceful ends, made of lace or some sheer transparent fabric. Tunic robes in pastel shades of fine crepon decorated with bands of rich oluny or detached appliques out from this same lace.—Dry Goods Econo mist. The cost of the world's wars since the Crimean campaign has been $12,- 203.000.000. LIVINC IN FRANCE. It Doe. Not Come lip to Our American Ideas of Comfort* We exaggerate in onr minds the Inxury of life on the continent, No hotel there equals any of the first-class hotels in our great cities. The first thing to disappoint us is the lift— what we elaborately call the elevator. It is a poor piece of maohinery abroad, always stopping and always out of or der. In the best hotel in Paris, the Con tinental, one gets lnxnry, comfort and even splendor, but never one's cards or notes. There is a fatal gulf for these. One is a number, not an in dividuality. The table is, however, very luxurious. It is a cleau and well ordered caravansary. As for the oom fort of warmth in winter, they do not know the meaning of the word. We are justly accused of exaggerating tho heat of our rooms in America; the fur nace is denounced; but after freezing to death in Paris, one of the coldest of cities, very far north, cursed with an abominable winter climate, one re turns willingly to the heated rooms of America. We exaggerate the excellence of the French bed. There is no such thing in France as that oomfortable, broad, low thing whioh we call a Frenoh bed. A high, hard, narrow ehelf is the apol ogy for it. We exaggerate our comforts by hav ing gas in oar sleeping rooms, and hot and cold water in our stationary wash bowls and bathrooms. They never exaggerate comfort in France. You have as many candles as you will pay for, and no bath, unless you order it, when men laboriously bring yon a tub filled with hot or cold water, and take it away after you have bathed. We exaggerate very much the sup posed good liviug in France. To go to a hotel in Paris to livo we must ex pert out of the season very little good food, very little that is sustaining and nourishing. It is "all sauce." There are no good joints of mutton, no good Amerioan desserts. There is an especial discomfort to the sick, who never get good toast, good custard, good tapioca pudding, nor oysters that they like. —Harper's Bazar. WISE WORDS. We live no more of our time here than we live well.—Carlyle. One ought to have a good memory when ho has told a lie.—Fuller. The fruit derived from labor is the sweetest of all pleasures.—Vanenar gues. Kindness is the golden chain by which sooiety is bound together.— Goethe. The highest manhood resides in dis position, not in mere intellect.—H. W. Beecher. He that wants money, means aud content is without three good friends. —Shakspeare. Unbecoming forwardness oftenor prooeeds from ignorance than impu dence. —Greville. Of all the faculties of the mind mem ory is the first that flourishes and the first that dies.—Cotton. The desire of knowledge, like tho thirst of riches, increases evor with the acquisition of it.—Sterne. Always remember that there are two sides to every question, and that there is a possibility of your being on the wrong side.—Spargeon. Spare minutes are the gold dust of time; the portions of life most fruitful in good or evil; the gaps through which temptations enter.—Mrs. Thrall. Opportunities are never found by the indolent and inattentive; they are for the men and women who try to ad vance, and you should endeavor to en joy them in their fulness.—Sterne. That is not the best sermon that makes the hearers go away talking to one another and praising the preacher, but that which makes tliem go away thoughtful and serious, and hastening to be alone.—The Watchman. Father and Son Marry Sister*. Justice Thomas McCann, of Lorain, Ohio, in one recent day joiued in holy bonds of wedlook Joseph Hartmau and his son Adam to the two Bordee sisters, Katie and Gertie. An.interesting com plication of relationships thus arises. Of course, Gertie, who married the father, Joseph Hartmau, will be both stepmother and sister-iu-law to the son, Adam Hartmau. Hence, if Adam and his wife have any children Gertie will be grandmother to her nephews and nieces, but Katie, the son's wife, will be aunt to her father-in-law's children, aud Adam will liavo to bo an uncle to his own half-brothers aud sisters. The children of the father will be aunts and uncles and oousins to the chil dren of the son. Tho wife of the father becomes her own sister's mother-in-law and father and son be come brothers-in-law "Eflect of Marriage on Salaries. A youug mau aud n young woman employed in a big supply house in Chicago fell in love and were engaged to bo married. The aggregate salary of the two was $lB. Man's salary $8 n week Woman's salary 410 a week Tho young man notified his em ployers that he was about to marry and rather hinted that an increase of salary would be acceptable. The young woman notified the firm that she was about to marry and hoped that she would be permitted to keep her place. On the first pay day after the mar riage the envelopes came as follows: Man's salary 410 a week Woman's salary 48 a week —Chicago Becord. Those Koinuntlc Kansas Girl*. A number of Topeka girls have or ganized a club to go out early in the morning aud kiss tho grass because it Is Dewey.—Atchison Globe ii llsfeJ, The odor left by a highly-scented toilet soap is not agreeable to most people of refined tastes. A delicate perfume may be used after an Ivory Soap bath with much more pleasing effect. Ivory Soap leaves only a comfortable feeling of perfect cleanliness. Aurora. 111., has had 34 Mayors dur ing the laßt_4o_ years. Don't Tobacco Spit anil Smoke Tour I.lfe Avtaj, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To* | Dac, the wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or Si. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New York. Tattooing is just now the popular pastime of the leisured world. To Core Constipation Forever. Take Cnacarets Candv Cathartic. 10c or2.Tc. If C. C. C. full to cure, druggists refund money Extraordinary Case of Dluod-Folannlng. An extraordinary case of blood-poi soning is reported by a Vienna jour nal. The victim was a young girl named Schwartz, aged 22. Some days ago she went for a walk wearing a green silk blouse. She became over heated, and the dye of the material ran. Unhappily she had sustained some trifling accidental wound under the arm, and the pigment got into the blood. Upon returning home she com plained of pain, but would not con sent to a medical examination. The injured Bpot became greatly inflam- j ed, causing intense suffering, and on the following day the physician dis covered the cause. Remedies were J Immediately applied, but it was too late, and after a brief illness the girl died. Pictorial I'ostoard Craze. Some idea of the pictorial postcard craze in Germany is given by the fig ures just published by our consul at Frankfort, says the London Globe. About 12,000 workmen are employed in producing these postal souvenirs, and it is estimated that every day about 100 new designs are published. Allowing for each card an issue of 1,000 only—and this is a modest esti mate —it means a total of 100,000 per day, or something like 30,000,000 per annum. Since the introduction of the souvenir card the number of postcards dispatched in Germany has increased by 12,000,000. The latest cards are a great improvement on the earlier ones, and some bear etchings by artists of repute. mm ON THE KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS /•leanses the System effectually D |SPE J; nL OVERCOMES l/rro <■* 1 Habitual CONDON PERMANENTLY EFFECTS, Buy THe GENUINE - MAN'F O By (AUfcKNIA (TO tyRVP(B roft SAU BY AU CARTERSINK It's good enough for Uncle Sam, and it's good enough for you. While European Russia is suffering" from famine, the crops in Siberia have been unusually good. TVo-To-IJae for FlTty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco hebit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, |l. Ail druggists. Saved Through Chess. In 1396 Mohammed Balba usurped j the crown of Granada in spite of the | superior claims of his elder brother j .lussef. He was very unsuccessful In [ his conduct cf the war against the I Christians and was at length assassi nated by poison absorbed through his skin from a shirt. He entertained a | desperate dislike to the brother whom | he had injured, and when he knew that his own fate was sealed he sent an order to the governor of the prison in which Jussef was confined that he should be executed immediately. When | the order arrived Jussef was playing ; chess with the chaplain of the prison, j With great difficulty Ju3sef obtained a j respite from the governor permitting him to finish the game. Before it was ended, however, news came that the usurper had died of the poison. This canceled tne order of execution and j Jussef, instead of going to the scaf j fold, mounted the throne. Dried Fly Statistics j Among the exports of Mexico last ! year are to he noted two tons of dried | flies. /Drßull'sN Cure* all Throat ami Lung Affections. COUGH SYRUP Get the genuine. Refuse substitutes. A Vis SURE/ Dr. Bull's nils cure Dyspepsia. Trial, so for ye. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 &33.50 SHOES t Worth $4 to $6 compared wit* other makes. 1.00U.U00 wt'srers, ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES TIIK GEM INK hat* DoyftU.' Tako no substitute claimed to bo aa good. Largest makers of #3 and $3.50 shoes in tho \v<|< INK CO 544 lort | Street Wat, Detroit, Midi. I GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Ask for them Cost no more I than common chimneys. All dealers. riTTsKI'IMi GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. ARNOLD'S ItML couch Prevents bar KILLER Dr. Ricord's Essence of Life ard, never-failing remedy for all cases of nervous, mental, physical debi.ity, los vitality and pre . mature decay in both sexes; positive, "permanent cure: lull treatment sft, or .*1 a bottle; stamp for circular. J. JAcQUES. Agent, 176 Broadway. N. k. I ASTHMA POSITIVELY CURED, I HOSII rsSU KIHSII AJsTII.MA CLUI. I doea this. A trial ia Kagu mailed irea ■ Collins Bhoh. Mki-icink Co.,bt. Louis, Mo. D j u,o" :Thompson's Eye Water RHEUMATISM Ai.xxa wmn Rkmkdy CO.. 34oGreenwich St.. X Y. P. >i. U. 41 Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use M Id time. Sold by druggists. Bf