44 He That Any Good Would Win" Should have good health. 'Pure, rich blood is the first requisite. Hood's Sarsa parilla, by giving good blood and good health, has helped many a man to success, besides giving strength and courage to women who, before taking it, could not ar.y good in life to win. I une Pint's Cure for Consumption both in my family nn<l practice.- Dr. (>. \V. PAmK bON, lnkbler, Mich., Nov. S.ISHL Fits permanently cured. No fit* or nervous* ness after first day's use of I)r. Kline's Groat Nervo Restorer. %'Z trial bottle and treatise tree. Dr.li.H.kLiNE.Ltd.o3l Arch St.Phila.Pa. Ten Weeks for lO Cents. That Hl# family paper, THE ILLUSTHATEI) WKEKLY, .if Denver, • 01.. (founded ll| will be sent ten weeks on trial for 10c; clubs of 6. 60c; 12 for sl. Special offer solely to in troduce it. Latest mining news and illus trations of scenery, true stories of iovo and adventure. Address as above and mention this paper. Stamps taken. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, aa mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole sys tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Buch articles should never be used •xcept on prescriptions from reputable physi cians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the Bowl you can possibly derive from S 1 ®! 11 *, B'lll s Catarrh Cure manufactured by r.). Cheney & Co., Toledo. 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting di rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be RU re to get the genuine. It is taken Internally and Is made In Toledo, Ohio, Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. ri .? druggists; price 76c. per bottle. Hall s Family Pills are the best. Tastes Differed. In his entertaining biography of Lord Houghton, Sir T. Weymss Reid tells how when Carlyle paid his first visit to Fryston, Mr. Milnes (Lord Houghton's father), on hearing his guest express admiration of the pros pect from the hall, pointed out the tall chimney of some manufactory on the far horizon and expressed his re gret that it should recently have been erected and spoiled the rustic char acter of the view. "Spoiled the view!" said Carlyle, "why, sir, I think that is just the pleasantest feature in the whole bit of scenery. It shows us that somebody is doing something in this part of the world at any rate." Like Finding Money*. The use of the Endless Chain Starch Book in the purchase of "Pied Cross" and 'Huhinger's Best" starch, makes it just like finding money. Why, for only 5e you are enabled to get one large 10c package of "Bed Cross" starch, one lnrge 10c pack age of "Hublnger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two Shakespeare panels, print ed in twelve beautiful colors, or one Twen tieth Century Girl Calendar, embossed in gold. Ask your grocer for this starch and obtain the beautiful Christmas presents free Ilia Record Saved Him from Punishment H. B. Ford was a member of com pany B, Idaho volunteers, which re cently got home from the Philippines, with a splendid record of hard fighting to their credit. Ford went to Spokane after the regiment was discharged. There he was recognized as an escaped convict by Sheriff Tucker of Yakima county, whom Ford, then going under the name of Feamster, attempted to shoot several years ago. For the crime he was arrested at the time and sen tenced to ten years in the penitentiary. He escaped from jail while his case was pending on an appeal and volun teered for service in the Philippines. When the sheriff heard his story he offered to ask for his permanent dis charge. and the Superior court has just 6USDended his sentence indefinitely. Too Small. Uncle 'Zek'el Watson was accustomed to seeing good-sized squares of cup cake, 'election cake or gingerbread on the super table, and when he had his first plate of Ice cream in a city res taurant he looked with some disfavor upon the macaroons and small sponge drops which accompanied it. "How do you like It?" asked his niece, who was doing the honors of the city for her uncle. "The Ice cream Is first rate," said Uncle 'Zek'el. "I call it extry good; but when you come to these things," he added, lifting one of the sponge "lady fingers" and surveying It doubtfully. "I presume to say they're all right, enough, what there is of 'em, but there isn't enough of 'em—just nothing hut gane and swallow'" ItETTER TO uns. riNKHAiI NO. 94,398] "lam so grateful to you for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has done for me that I feel ns though I must ... tell about it. A Women vear apo j was I Womßd Sut*Q— taken very sick. fy Try MfSm Doctors could do Pinkham's f e °° *? od °^ y Mm -at a m deaden the IwlOSalCinQ Sf pain which I They Only had almost con- Knew, Says stan,! - v ', 1 * ot mm * * some of your lnf°3o Compound and took one bottle and received benefit from it at once. I have taken it ever since and now have no backache, no pain in my side and my stomach and bowels are perfectly well. I can honestly say that there is nothing- like it. If I could only tell every woman how much good j*our medicine lias done me, they would surely try it."— MARTHA M. KING, NORTH ATTLEBOKO, MASS. The waj' women trifle with health shows a degree of indifference that is pastundci standing. Happiness and use fulness depend on physical health; so does a good disposition. Disease makes women nervous, irritable and snap pish. The very effort of ailing women to be good-natured makes them ner vous. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, she will help you to health and happiness. It costsnotjiing togetMrs. Pinkham's advice. Her address is Lynn, Mass. | pM YORK FMIoiTI §§ Designs For Costumes That Have Be- fj If come Popular in the Metropolis. M m iBiSBIBKBaKKii NEW YORK CITY. (Special).— The deepest pitfall in the path of the ama teur milliner is the mossiness of pro railing styles. An ateur milliners A PICTURESQUE MODEL. tend to messiness, and when the pro fessionals lean that way also the re sult is something to admire—"wonder at*' is the original meaning. In their search for the picturesque the new hats are piled so high and swathed so deep with superfluous or naments that all the symmetry of the head and figure is lost in these mouu ments of misdirected industry. AVhile the large toquo with rolling 1: DFLAN nt B1 ,0V 8 1 brim of velvet comes nearer tliau any other to being the prevailing mode, as almost invariably becoming to pret ty hair, the small, close-draped velvet toque, worn over tho face, is also a favorite to accompany tailor dress. It is trimmed with stitched bauds of cloth or silk, and a bird or an airy butterfly is added for garniture. A striking piece of headgear is the accompanying example taken from the Dry Goods Economist. It is a hat of brown and blue velvet, with roses merging from ecru to dark-brown sur rounding tho brim. The butterfly shows both colorings on a cream ground. The collet is of velvet, mousseline de soie and renaissance lace with gold buttons and cord, AVaititi*, Boillces and llloiueM. Noue but flattering comments are to be made of dress waists as tliey now reveal themselves, and powerful as has been the effort to coax women to accept more decoration on their skirts, the waists, bodices and blouses of the majority of costumes continue to steal ill the real glory and color. Stitching is in high favor as a finish for wraps and costumes. A flue ex ample of a waist trimmed with stitch ings is shown iu tho large eugraving. Several gowns were seen with uo other trimmiug save rows and rows of fanci ful stitching in some contrasting color. Blouses are now exactly like those of previous years. They are made tighter and over a very close fitting lining. The pleats, which used to bo on the upper part of the bodice, aud were widened at the breast, pulling out aiul enlarging the waist, are continued to the belt, kept flat, and sewed with , lingerie stitch. These pleats are ai rauged in every possible way, long wise, V^or.izoi)tally, diagonally, as in sertions etc. Collars are still made The Newest For in of Cloalc. The newest long cloak for theatre and general evening wear is crepe de Chine. It is lightly stretched around the shoulders to about the elbow, and from this point to the ground all the fullness is set into narrow little rib bons or tucks, doing away with all folds or flutes. This is a reversal of the usual order of things, tucks and straightness below the elbow instead of above it, as for a tall, slim woman the inuovatiou is very becoming. The high collar of this cloak is edged with feathers and the edges of the front and all around thebottou are bordered with netted silk fringe. Effect of n Well-cut Corset. It is extraordinary what a trans formation a well-cut corset will effect in a woman's appearance, aud how, without any perceptible pressure, the waist may he lengthened even as much as two inches. This is really a very important consideration at the present time, when princess dresses and eelskin skirts are so popular, and any one who wishes to have an ele gant and graceful appearance should first of all give consideration to the corset, otherwise the work of the dressmaker is likely to be lost. Sequlnn Are Fashionable. Sequins are to be seen on many things this winter, particularly on thin goods effects. White gowns of net are covered with them, but they must be sewed 011 carefully, and home sewing is usually better than that of the shops. It is better to have no sequins at all than a sequin off here and there. It is a degree worse than a missing boot button. Skirts That Are the Mode. This season's styles fulfil a twofold mission. They make the stout woman look thinner, and the slender woman becomes a dream of loveliness and shapeliness when she dons a princess effect gown, a short jacket and Direc toire hat. Every skirt is tight fitting about the hips aud very much flared around the bottom, sleeeves are small, collars high, some basques are shown, and fringe is the acme of novelty. The favorite model in skirts will ha a seamless circular shape, fitting like a glove over the hips and back, and flaring at the bottom to the width o! from four and a half to five yards. This flare is cry perceptible us thf skirt is held up, with ono hand hold ing the bottom and one the belt. The front breadth, which used to be cut perfectly straight in order to insure a "good hanging skirt," is now percep tibly flared in the skirts, which are made on the gored pattern, which will also bo very much worn. The shirred Dir. " skirt design here shown is one of thf season's favorites [IP' Look at your toagu.ell I it's coated, your stomacli is bad, your liver out of order. Ayer's Pills will clean your tongue, cure your dyspepsia, make your liver right. Easy to take, easy to operate. 25c. AH druggists. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful I brown or rich black ? Then use I BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers j Member of the Family. Omaha World-Horald: Papa Gruff— "That young Softleigh asked me for your hand today." Ethyl Gruff—"And what did you say to him, papa, dear?" Papa Gruff —"I told him your mother needed 'em both in the dishwater, but compromised by giving him my foot." Save tike Nickels* Fioni saving, comes having. Ask your grocer how you can save 15c by Investing 50. He can tell you just how you can get one large 10c package of "Red Cross" starch, one large 10c package of "fiubln ger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two beautiful Shakespeare panels, print od In twelve beautiful colors, or one Twentieth Century Girl Calendar, all for sc. Ask your grocer for this starch and obtain these beautiful Christmas presents free. Crushed Hlni. Indianapolis Journal: The Shoo Clerk —Beg your pardon, madam, but it is a number five shoe you want, in stead of a number three. She—Num ber five! You must be thinking of the size of your hat. Rain has never been known to fall in that part of Egypt between the two lower falls of the Nile. Flow Are Your Kidneys V Pr. Ilobbs - Bparncus Pills euro all kidney Ills. Ram* pie free. Add. Stcrlhiy Remedy Co., CUICUKO or N. Y. According to a German journal, more than 8 per cent, of all seafaring men are afflicted with rheumatism. An energetic temperament and ac tive habits ccnduce to longevity. To Cure Constipation Forever* Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. IT C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money- The controversy about dressing for dinner at hotels appears to have spread to Switzerland, but those who favor it are not in the least likely to carry the day. Whatever English people may do, German travelers, who regard their 1 o'clock meal as dinner and everything else as a secondary matter, neither wear dress clothes nor carry them about. The Baltimore & Ohio lines west of the Ohio River -present a very busy appearance these days, as there is scarcely a ten-mile stretch without a bridge or a construction gang at work. There are still a few of the 53 bridges purchased last January to be erected, and almost all of the 20.000 tons of 85 pound rails have been laid. At several points between Rellaire and Newark, 0., sidings of 100 car capacity are being constructed, and between Newark and Chicago Junc tion thousands of men are working on extensive grade reductions, some of the cuts and fills being two miles in length. Between Chicago Junction and Chi cago nearly a score of passing sidings are being constructed and work on these is being pushed with unusual haste, in order to complete them for the heavy winter traffic. The sidings are being built with a view of a double track some time In the future. They are to be long enough in most cases to hold three 50 car trains. The new east bound yard at Garrett. Ind., is ready for the rails, and will be com pleted by the middle of November. In one corner of the melting rooms at the New Orleans mint is a large iron tank in which the newly-cast silvei bars are dropped, hissing, to cool off. At the end of a hard day's work the surface of the water shows a faint rainbow-hued scum, like the metallic luster of stagnant pools, seen near a dye house. It comes in p-.rt from mi croscopic flakes of silver that have scaled off in cooling. KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS CLEANSES THE SYSTEM V ~ .CCS] EFFECTUALLY OVERCOMES l/rr& 1 JB, TUAL CONS^ N J ,S BE NEFIC,AL EF FECTS BVJ THE GENUINE - MANT 0 BY (AUFCKNIA FFG F SYRVP(S Y# O S . roft MU BY Ail ORUOOOTi FttU 0t ft* 6CTTIL HINTS FOR HOUSEWIVES. Retaining tlie Juice of Tart*. To prevent fruit juice from running out of tarts in the oveu, make a little I opening iu the upper crust and insert I a straw or little roll of white paper ! perpendicularly. The steam will es cape through it as through a chimney, and all the juice will be retained iu the pie. How to Preserve Gooseberries. A delicious preparation of gooseber j ties is made by gathering them before | they are qaite ripe on a sunny, dry j day. Put into dry bottles that have been scalded, cork loosely and place 'iu a pan of cold water. Put tlie pan I on the lire and allow it to heat slowly, but not boil. As soon as the berries | look white take the p;tu from the lire, but leave the bottles to co d in the water. When cold, fasten hermeti cally aud put away iua cool,dry place. A Way of Tenting Eggfi. The old method of testing eggs by a candle is a relic of the days of the tallow dip, but a similar process of discovering their condition is still em ployed. Jf when held before the light the contents of the shell are clear, the egg is fresh; if opaque, it is stale, and if a black speck is visible it is unfit for use. The best way to cook an egg is to put it into cold water and stand a hot stove. Just before the water boils the egg is 4 'soft boiled," and the white aud yoke will be found to be evenly cooked. This manner of cooking allows the heat to permeate the egg evenly, and does uot bring the white to a leathery consistency while the yoke is still soft. Stale eggs are lighter in weight than fresh ones. A newly-laid egg does not poach nicely, and it requires a half minute longer to cook than a stale ogg* __ Novelty for Lovers of Salads. Cuban pal ad, which American wom en iu Havana have learned to make, and which is considered a great deli cacy by them, is recommended by them as an addition to Thanksgiving dinners. It is made of the avacado pear, which is not a pear at all, hut is so culled because of its shape. To serve as a salad split iu two lengthwise with a sharp knife and remove the brown, shrivelled sac, which contains a black and bitter pulp that is used iu mak ing indelible ink. Slash the yellow pulp in the riud both ways aud sprinkle into the opening salt aud pepper, and perhaps a little cinnamon. The Cubans use red pepper. Place a small piece of ice in the hollow of the fruit and pour over it a French dressing. Let it stand until cold, drain, and place two halves on each plate on a bed of light green lettuce leaves. To Prepare Beef Ten. For beef tea the juiciest part of the meat should be selected, the lower part of the round being the best. There should he no fat ou the meat. Cut it into dice and put into the up per jiart of au agate or porcelain liued farina kettle, using a pound of meat to a pint of cold water. A fruit jar or any wide-moutlieu bottle may he used in place of the double kettle, and it should be placed on a stand of some kind in a kettle of hot water. Net the kettle over the tire ami boil until the juice of the meat is extracted. Then straiu the juice, pressing it out of the meat, and season to taste with salt- In cases where a great deal of nour ishment is needed, especially in con - j sumption and kindred diseases, the j juice should be squeezed from fresh meat and given warm, but never hot. The meat should be placed in an oven aud warmed, as the juice flows more freely from it iu that coudition. It is then cut into pieces of an inch or two square and pressed until dry. The usual quantity is from two to three pounds a day, taken at inter vals. A high temperature, the phy sicians say, coagulates the blood of the beof and destroys its beneficial effect. How to Feed the Hick. Never hurry the sick while eating. Pleasant little surprises help great iy Never talk about disagreeable things then. Something from a neighbor's is often a treat. It is oftenest best not to speak of the food until served. A cheery face and voice help to make the tray attractive. Have everything neat and dainty about the tray, stand or table. Anything disliked should be care fully put out of sight or changed. NV'et a clean wash cloth and freshen the face and hands before eating. If thero is great weakness, give a little at a time every two or three hours. Neighbors, just please remember this when you can furnish some little relish. A hot drink at bedtime often rests, refreshes aud soothes both the sick and the well. A little nourishment at regular hours during tho night is needed by the very weak. A little hot drink to sip between meals for the weak or tho aged, and the tired also, is a tonic. The remembrance and thought ful ness of one's weakness and need, warms the heart and aids digestion. If food must he given when there is no reli&h for it, make it plain but nourishing. Give it in such cases punctually, as you would a medi cine. A cup of hot milk, a little thickened milk, or hot drink of any kind pre ferred, on waking in the morning, helps to give tone for the coming breakfast. j mwßik " ?l IK* ' ' .' tol 1 One of the trials of those interested in the culture of flowers is the presence of destructive insects. Persons who have been discouraged by the trouble and often lack of success attending the use of insecticides will find the following simple and easily prepared wash entirely effective. It is the recipe of Mr. Eben E. Rexford, an authority of national reputation. Shave a quarter of a pound of ivory Soap in water sufficient to cover it and dissolve upon the stove, then add five gallons of warm Wc£er. Sprav this solution upon the plants with a florist's syringe, or if they are small dip them nn hm,! 0 ! 0 ? ,thcr 9* s< \ be sure to reach every part. Let them stand half an hour and then rinse with clear water. According: to Dr. Schjerning. there were only 950 cases of tuberculosis last year in a force of 511,830 men. The number of deaths from this disease in Che army has been gradually decreas ing from .42 per thousand in 1892 to .24 per thousand in 1897. Dennty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Casearets, 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 Danish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Casearets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Contagious diseases kill 240,000 peo ple in France yearly. ltducate Tour Bowels With v'ascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10c, 25c. it C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money SHE WAS A BRAVE GIRL. Kept. Her Presence of Mind Wlieu At tacked by an Alligator. Some days ago a little girl, a daugh ter of Mrs. Fields, living on Lake Gib sen, near Lakeland, Fla., jumped off the wharf on the lake to take a swim. She is an expert swimmer, but had hardly touched the water before she was seized by the leg. between the knee and ankle, by an alligator. She was pulled under the water by the sau rian, but managed to break away and started hastily toward the shore, only a few yards distant. The 'gator again came to the attack, this time seizing her in the fleshy part of the side, be tween the ribs and hip. The little one was plucky, however, and managed to again break away from the cruel jaws, this time reaching the shore, the 'ga tor following until she was on dry land; then he disappeared from view. The girl never lost her presence of mind, which probably was the reason of her escaping alive. She gives a very graphic description of the dangerous encounter, and has two very ugly wounds to vouch for her story. She says she could not see the entire length of the beast, but from what she could see would Judge it to have been only about Ave feet long—a small gator to attack a person. The girl is 14 years of age.—Baltimore S"n Not Exactly a failure. Mrs. Gotham —So your marriage was A failure? Mrs. Lakeside—Yes, but I'm the preferred creditor. All my hus band's property is in my name.—Town Topics. Conquers Croup w-it tiou 1 '"J - . RAILWAY MAIL. Kates low. Seiici :'<>r full part • i lur-to CI Vll. SKIIV I $. sC ilOOl., Lebanon, Pa. CARTEL'S IMK Has a good deep color and does not strain the eyes. DRjOPSYSSSi Free. Dr. H. 11. O..EDM'S BOSH. Bos B Atlanta, Oa. ) The first Jive persona procuring the Kndle Chain sian li Book from their grocer will each obtain one large 10c package of "Bud trow" Ktarch. one large 10c package of "EBiibing4r a> K Hp'' siarrli, two Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful colors, as natural as life, or one Twentieth Century Girl Calendar, the finest of its kind ever printed, all absolutely free. All others procuring the Ihullrai Chain starch Hook, will obtain from their grocer the above goods for sc. "Bed Cro" i.Aiitidry Starch is something entirely new, and is without doubt the great est invention of the Twentieth Century. It has no equal, and surpasses all others. It has won for itself praise from all parts of the United States. It has superseded every thing heretofore used or known topcienee in the laundry art. It Is made from wheat, rice and corn, and chemically prepared upon scientific principles by j, c. ituiiiuti r, Keokuk, loiva, an expert in the laundry profession, who has had twenty-five years' practical experience in fancy aunderlng, and who w*i the first successful ant? original (nventor of all ilne grades of starch in the United States. Ask your grocers foe thif bturoh and obtain these beautiful Christmas presents free. One of the English correspondents in France has heard it said that 20 000 of the best families in France are divided over the Dreyfus affair as bitterly and completely as only a legacy of no mat ter how few pounds, or a leligious dis ■ pute can divide b/iod relations Don't Tobacco Spit rnd Smoke Tonr Mfe Array. To quit tobacco 3asily and forever, be ma? netic. full of life, t.erve and vigor, sake No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All (lrtvgists. 50c or Si. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kemady Ca. Chicago or New York. The proportion of paupers to the population of England is lower now thai: it has been for 45 years. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.5Q SHOES UN'ON Worth $4 to $6 compared/ "v. "MNx with other makes, f* c y/e " o i iio have W I receipt of price.' of earlier, size, and width, plain a, W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mas* Lazy Livei 44 1 have bocn troubled a great deal with a torpid liver, which produces constipa tion. I found CASCARETS to be all you claim for them, and secured such relief the first trial, that I purchased another supply and was com pletely cured. 1 shall only be too glad to rec ommend Casearets whenever the opportunity Is presented." J. A. Smith. L'O.OSusquti.Anna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. m CATHARTIC loaamws) TRADE MARK RECIfiTERCD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. D* Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c.i25c, SOa ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Homed; Companr, rhlengn, Montreal. New York. S2S NO-TO-RAG B P lfl nndguii ran teed by all drug, nu i V DHu gists to CITHE Tobacco Habit. DON'T STOP TOBACCO SUDDENLY It injures nervous system to do so. BACO CURO is the only cure that Really Cures and notifies you when to stop. Sold with a guarantee that three boxes will oureanv ease. B.U ' -CURO I s vegetable and harmleks. It has cured thousands, it will euro you. At all druggists or by mail prepaid. $1 a box: l boxes $2.50. Booklet free. Write Eureka Chemical Co., La c ROSSO. Wis. J ASTHMA POSITIVLLY CURED.4 I VIEW V T ASTII.tIA CUHii I H does tlila. A trial i a kage mailed iree. I ARNOLO' s imsl ß COUGH p r _ ntH Uolds KILLER "mffSSAlSflThompson's Eye Water f. S. U. 47 so
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers