ON THE KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS /-.eanses the System ..^EFFECTUALLY OVERCOMES l/t-fii ! W"SRR, "IHCIAL ERF ECT& BUT THE GENUINE - MAHT D By (AUR>R]NIA (TO SjYRVF(®. ipO'tVILLf. "*,'££ •*'„ .Sft fOB SALI BY AUORU6(iiSTi PBiU SOt PtR BCTTIL SI 00 Reward, SI 00. The renders of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to euro in nil its stages, a ml that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh tire is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- ; ing the foundation of the disease, and giving i the patient strength by building up the eon- j stitution and assisting nature in doing its J work. The proprietors have so much faith i n its curat ve powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars lor any ease that it fails to cure. ! Send lor list of testimonials. Address F. .1 ( HKNEY & Co, Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7. r x;. Hall's Family Pills are the best. H. If. GREKX'B SONS, of Atlanta. Ga.. are tin- only successful Dropsy Specialists in tin world. See their liberal offer in Advertisement in another c >lumn of this paper. The India College under the aus pices of the Lutheran General Synod, has 40 teac hers and 883 students. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Auay, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be map nctic, full of lifo, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Dac, the wondor-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, COc or Cl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and eamplo free. Address Sterling liemedy Co., Chicago or New York. The War Department is considering the desirability of having a Cuban ex hibit ut the Paris Exposition. Rdneare Your Bowels With Cuscarct*. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Research laboratories are to be es tablished in various part of India, un der churge_of_heulth_offlccrs. Municipal Novelty. There is a decidedly humorous side which occasionally comes to light in connection with the undertakings of municipal corporations, but the action ! of the enterprising city fathers of a small Hungarian town is certainly unique. The mayor and whole town cou-heil, consisting of eight members, formed themselves into a hand of forg crs, and carried on a thriving business In the town hall, manufacturing paper ! notes current In Austria, which they circulated pretty extensively. A work shop, well fitted with the necessary Implements, was fixed up In a cellar of the town hall, and they actually set policemen to guard the door while they were at work. This remarkable state Of affairs existed for over a couple of years, when the business was detected, the mayor and councillors fighting like '■ professional brigands on being ar rested. Didn't Know Kipling. Mr. Howells has lately spoken of Rudyard Kipling as the most famous man In the world today. It would. In deed. be difficult to suggest a man whose name is more widely known. The following story is a curious com mentary on the value of fame: Dur ing Kipling's illness, Henry James, the American author, was one night driv- i Ing home In a cab from his club In j London. The news had just come that the crisis was past and the great writer : was on the road to recovery. As he stepped out on the sidewalk, Mr. James handed the paper he had bought to the cabman. "Kipling's all l ight," he said. The cabman took the paper and leaned down with a puzzled look on his face. "I don't seem to know the name o' the 'oss!" he said.—St. Louis Republic. S.I;A:IIINIDM.IIHIKNAII^ Cures a Coiieh or Cold nt once, Conquers Croup without fail. 77j Is the best for JJrouchitis. (irippe, Hoarseness. Whooping-Cough. ana -3 for the cure of Consumption. Mothers praise it. Doctors prescribe it. Tj L Small doses; quick, sure results, jjjP MPS I ||H Morphine, I.nutinnum, or other drug )ial<it,trlnl treatment, free efchnrire, of the most remarkable remedy ever discovered. Contains ' t;rcnt Vltnl Frlnclplo heretofore unknown. Re fractory Canes solicited. Confidential correspondence Invited from all, especially Physicians. ST. JAMLS SOCIETY, PBt BROADWAY, NHW YORK. CARTER'S INK Is food for thought Thompson's Eye Water 1 CHICAGO PLATFORM. NEVER CAN BE SEPARATED FROM DEMOCRACY. It t'nißf from the People as a Protest Against Clevelandism, Carllslelsm, Whitney is m anrl Wall Street lam—With It Reaffirmed the Party Will Win. In 1896 a large number of people had become restless under, and dissat- I iefied with, the management of these commercial politicians who had con trolled party organizations, and con cluded to take matters into their own hands. The Chicago convention, rep resenting a great party, took that par | ty out of the gambling arena of the stock markets, and put it once more on the high plane of public welfare. With their eyes on the future, with the voices of their ancestors and the pa triots of '76 in their ears, and with the weight of the heritage they should leave to their children resting on their hearts, they presented as issues funda mental truths. As champion they sc , lccted a statesman from the west, with I clear brain and honest heart and de | voted to the interests of the people, j Since that time these professional is | sue makers have had a dull market for ' their productions. Lately they have been trying to persuade the allied | forces of reform that a new set of prin j ciples is needed. We have re-examined j the construction of the Chicago pro j duction and the material of which it is made. It does not show evidence of wear or indication of decay. It has in \it life, power and purpose. Its ckam i pion has been tried and has been found to be true in purpose and intent. We are not much impressed by any reason advanced for laying aside the platform of the standard-bearer. These commercial agents have abandoned the idea of a new construction and set up a repair shop. They have been to see Mr. Bryan to persuade him to give his consent to their employment to make a few trifling changes. In their ignorance of the principles upon which i the structure was builded, in utter mis conception of the character and ability of its architect, they advise the changes that would destroy the structure. It is time to remember that intellectual fcrce, that motives, that moral respon sibilities, are individual. There is no intellectual power in a corporation. The motives of every such organiza tion are the motives of individuals. The moral responsibility must be paid upon the individuals. Make what legal restrictions and limitations you can, what good are the restrictions and lim itations if the individuals that fur l nish the intellect and the motives are able to escape observation, retain what they extort from their victims by the aid of these monsters, and preserve their standing among their fellow men?—A. J. Van Vorhis. NO DEAD ISSUES. The American people have always been confronted with political issues of vital importance to a government • hnscd upon popular sovereignty. Since the beginning of the nation to the pres ent day, not a single question con cerning the people, or bearing upon their welfare and proper manner of ! government, may bo said to have been abandoned or cast out Into any fancied Gehenna of dead, extinct issues. An issue can only die, become extinct, when n radical change in our form of government makes it treason to broach it. or impossible to maintain it. The principles of human freedom, equal rights and political liberty rest upon so slender a foothold, so delicate ly are they balanced in the scale of hu man ambition and greed, that it be hooves a free people to beware of be ing caught napping when the bogie man of imperialism comes prowling about with the intent to subvert or un dermine their liberties. | Because a certain issue is not con stantly reiterated is not a reason why that issue has been abandoned, or even substituted by other issues. National autonomy, and the integrity of our na tional existence upon the lines estab lished in the constitution, which was and is but the fulfillment of the princi ples given to the world in the declara tion of independence, arc issues not to be frowned down by clownish com i< all tics and covert sneers of derision. Ihey are living Issues and draw with them all other issues in any man j ner pertaining to them. The people know where the Demo i cratic party stands on the silver ques tion; they know that the Chicago plat form enunciated a financial doctrine incapable of being argued out of ex istence because of its vital Importance I to the welfare of the whole people, and tL" fact that it is not a dead issue is patent from the continued efforts of \ the Republican party to keep alive the . issue of the gold standard, with its most radical and pernicious results. Having established that financial tru ism. it is assumed that the Democratic party should become blind to all other j issues, and forsake those which are also of the greatest moment, and of the 1 most vital importance, inasmuch as they are pressing upovt the people with all the power of an administration which assumes upon itself all of the i prerogatives of government, to the ex ! elusion of its other co-ordinate | branches. ! Whatever issues are of material in terest to the welfare of the people are within the province and policy of the party of Jefferson, of Washington and ; Lincoln, and it purposes to include those issues as living issues whether sounded through a trumpet or implied in its opposition to any and all meas : ures foisted upon the people under the | guise of loyalty to President McKin ley or the Empress of India. Let all men know and be advised, once for all. that the Democratic party does not in tend to abandon any issue of import ance to the national and individual welfare. SHOCKING THE GOLD STANDARD Every adverse wind that blows upon the gold standard gives it a chill that endangers its vitality. To mention silver is to throw it into spasms call ing for a ru6h of all sorts of physi cians, even jesters, to restore it to life and jubilation. Another blow is given it from an unexpected adversary who does not mention the bugbear of sil ver. but makes it feel the same cold chills. Count von Posadowsky-Wehner, the German minister of the interior be came an open heretic in the presence of Andrew D. White, U. S. Ambassador at Berlin, and of other dignitaries of the German empire, all of whom agreed with him, at least, nobody dis puted him. "If this unterbilanz (meaning "bal ance of trade") against Germany con tinues, says he, "We shall have to drop the gold standard." Here is a nice ad mission. The gold standard then, is not the creator of a balance of trade in favor of the nation adopting it. It certainly is not, in fact it is and al ways has been the direct opposite. The fact that the balance of trade has been so enormously in favor of the United States during the past two years, is wholly due to our enormous produc tions and not to the gold standard. That it is not due to the gold standard Is evident from the remarks of the German count whose grievance arises out of the fact that the gold standard gives a balance of trade against Ger many, and if it keeps on he will drop it. The count's declaration was di rected at the United States, and he de sired some advantageous commercial treaty which would equalize this bal ance of trade, that is, give Germany an advantage by reducing the balance in our favor. European financiers, as well as some of our own, regard the enormous sum of about six hundred millions of dol lars, the annual balance of trade in our favor, a very good thing for the country, too much, in fact, for If it be continued several years longer, it will abßorb all the money in the world. But when we investigate, it is discovered that our balance of trade is as fictitious as the quantity of our circulating medium. In 189S-9, the balance of trade in our favor was in excess of six hundred and sixteen mil lions of dollars in gold. As a matter of fact, deducting from the amount of gold actually received, the total amount of our exports, there was only about eighty millions balance, and that was not all coined as the mint reports show. It goes, some say, towards pay ing interest on our indebtedness abroad, expenses of Americans in En- | rope, steamship passages, etc., etc. It certainly never gets Into circulation, for onr money stock, instead of in creasing, is being constantly con tracted, and our debts are increasing faster than our output of gold and bal ance of trade combined. The impe rial minister of the German interior is undoubtedly correct in his evident I belief that the-dropping of the gold standard would restore the balance of trade in favor of Germany, a result that would be experienced in every producing nation in the world. AGUINALDO'S PROPOSITION. New York, Nov. 23.—A letter to the World from its Hongkong correspond- 1 ent, under date of Oct. 19, gives a re markable interview with Aguinaldo. The interview, according to the corre spondent, comes from an American who has lived for years in the Philip pines and has known Aguinaldo for a long time. He has been through the lines and has been two weeks with the insurgent commander-in-chief. This American is a business man with several correspondents on the New York Produce Exchange and agent of one of the firms running a line of steamers to Manila. For years he was a Philippine agent of Russell & Co., of Hongkong, San Francisco, New York and Boston. According to the interview Agui naldo wants peace, and to get it he is willing to repay the J20.000.000 which the United States paid to Spain for tlKi Philippines, and will consent to Ameft. ican soldiers remaining in Manila till the debt is canceled. He wants a re public to consist of a president, con gress and judiciary, the president to be elected by the votes of the people, the congress to be chosen in the same manner from all the Philippine isl-' ands; a judiciary to be appointed by the president or by the senate; local governments in all districts and cities to be elected by the legal voters there of; the American soldiery to be with drawn (with some exceptions) from the country; to satisfy the American! people a subsidy on the receipts from the customs and exports to pay the ( American government $20,000,000, the j amount paid Spain; also the taxes of' real estate and personal estates to be dedicated to the same, and all to be repaid in five years; American sol- j diers (the number to be agreed upon) to remain at Manila until this debt is paid, then to be withdrawn from the island. One More Question. i I "I want to ask one more question," | said little Frank, as he was being put to bed. "Weil," acquiesced the tired mamma. "When holes come in stock ings, what -becomes of the piece of stocking that was there before the hole came?" When a fellow ii told that he takes the cake, he wonders if it is dough. I SCENERY Kow Painted Upon Tonjh Brown Paper for Portability. Except as regards the part that mechanism plays, the scenic artists of Italy are the best in the world, as ef fective painters, and the fact is so well recognized in these days of almost all scenery being done by contract—a res ident scenic artist Is getting to be a rarity—that a great trade of this sort has sprung up between the painters of Italy and the managers everywhere. And this is particularly so as regards companies that come to America. So heavy has been the cost of transport ing tons of scenery, and so exacting have the customs officials been of late years, that the generality of managers at one time found it cheaper to have new scenes painted after they arrived. But the Italian system has largely done away with all this, for it includes the painting of the scenery on large sheets of a peculiarly tough sort of brown paper, these being numbered and joined together with unerring ac curacy. A recent grand opera produc tion in this country depended scenic ally upon these sheets of paper alone, and not even the oldest playgoer in the house could distinguish any pecu liarity. Of course, the sheets are spread upon canvas in the ordinary way, and a "toucher-lip" Is required after they are- spread, but the system is imenseful useful when a now pro duction is taken from one capital to another at a great distance, and the Italian artists are sending their sheets to managers all over the world. What I>o the Children Drink? Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink ended GRAIN-O? It is delicious and nourishing, and takes the place of coffee. The more GRAIN-0 you give the children the more houlth you distribute through their sys tems. GRAIX-0 is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tßstes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about % as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. Sea Gnlln a*. Weather Forecasters. Prince Krapot.kin, in Nature, says that on Aug. 26 while off Broadstairs, he noticed several flocks of gulls flying along the coast toward Dover. The wind was then and had been through out August from the northeast., but an old fisherman remarked that the gulls were moving to the south coast to meet a southwest wind, which war, sure to come. The change then predicted then occurred the following day. Mr. Ing alls strengthens this forecast by a statement in hi 3 Weather Lore: "The arrival of sea gulls from the Solway Firth to Holywood, Dumfriesshire, is generally followed by a high wind ana heavy wind from the southwest" Attention is cnllod to the very useful articles contained in the premium list of tne Continental Tobacco Co.'a advertisement of their Star Ting Tobacco in nnother column of this paper. It will pay to save tho "Star" tin tags and HO take advantage of the best list ever issued by the Star Tobacco. Automobile races will soon be the order of the day. They are popular in France and draw largo crowds. How Are Yonr Kidneys f Dr Hobtis'Hpnrairus Pills ourenll kidney tils. Sam ple free. Add. Sterling Kernedy Co., Chicago or N. Y. Wireless messages have been suc cessfully sent between captive bal loons one mile high, six miles apart. To Cor© Constipation Forever# Take Cascarcts Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. A Patagonian expedition is organ ized in London, and is to be backed by the Argentine Government. - Use It "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor lor a great many years and it has been very satisfactory to me in every way. I have recommended it to a great many of my friends and they have all been perfectly satisfied with it." Mrs. A. Edwards, San Fran cisco, Cal., Feb. g, 1899. Talk About It That's always the way with our Hair Vigor. When per sons use it they are always so highly pleased with it that they tell their friends about it. If your hair is short, too thin, splits at the ends, is rough, or is falling out, our Hair Vigor will perfectly satisfy you. If your hair is just a little gray, or perfectly white, Ayer's Hair Vigor will bring back to it all the dark, rich color it had years and years ago, Write tlic Doctor T f you do not obta in all the benefits you desire Crura tho use of the Vigor, write tho D>cCor about it. Ho will ten you just the right thing to do, and will ond you R his book on tho Hair and Scalp if you 8 request it. Address, J Dr. J. C. AVER, Lowell, Mass. I THE LIMIT IN LIFE INSURANCE. In AH the. Companies of the World • Man Might Get Perhaps S 10,000,000. Several papers have published a paragraph to the effect that the Prince of Wales is insured for about £lO,- 000,000, a portion of the insurance being for the benefit of creditors, und a much larger portion in favor of per sons neither Velated to him nor hav ing any iuterest whatever in his Jiv ing, Professor A. F. Harvey, the in surance actuary, who is authority ou all such matters, considers the state ments ridiculous, and particularly the one that Prince Albert is insured for the benefit of people who have no in surable iuterest in him. "Up to about 125 years ago the practice of taking out insurance on the lives of Kings, Queens and others in authority, where there was no possible insurance iuterest, obtained to a great extent," said the Professor when his attention was called to the paragraph. "The practice became so general, scandalous and vicious that in 1774 Parliament enacted a statute (14 Geo. 3, c. 48), prohibiting abso lutely all insurance in which there was no interest to the beneficiary in the life of the principal iu tho con tract, and prohibiting the payment oi money under a policy written to se cure a debt beyond the actual sum due. This law against wager or gam bling policies was followed up in France aud Germany and iu most of the States of this country, aud has since been rigidly enforced every where." The amount of life insurance car ried by the Priuce of Wales has never beeu made public, aud is probably known to only a lew people. It is evident, however, that the total is not one-tenth of the sum named in the paragraph referred to. The most heavily insured man in the United States is ex-Postmaster-General John Wauamaker, of Philadelphia, and his insurance amounts to only $2,025,000. The word "only" applies hero be cause of the comparison with $48,- 600,000, or, to be more accurate, $48,- 775,000, according to the present market value here of $10,000,000. At a meeting of the National Life Under writers' Association in Philadelphia four years ago Mr. Wauamaker stated that one of the first things he did after becoming of ago was to insure his life. When Mr. Wauamaker ad dressed the Association his life in surance amounted to $1,525,000, and all but $60,000 had beeu taken after ho was fifty years of age. According to an Eastern insurance journal "the amount of life insurance which cau be secured upon a single life among the United States com panies foots up $2,600,000." The paper gives a tabulated list of forty two old-line companies aud what pur ports to be the limit of each. The figures are correct in tho main, but there are seme bad errors in the list. Some of the companies insure for more than the amounts credited to them, but in every such case the com pany reinsures a portion of the risk. The figures in the table represent the limits without such reinsurance. Of course, there could he no reinsurance on a persou that tocfic the limit in every company. Legal reserve aud stipulated premium companies that are not usually classed as old-liners are omitted from the table, as also assess ment companies, fraternal organiza tions and several industrial companies that write very little, if any, ordinary life insurance. Accident companies i that pay death claims, but do not write ordinary life insurance, are like wise omitted. Inc.'udiug all these, tho total life iusuruuee that a persou j could get in the United States would ; probably still fall below $3,000,000. j There are about 350 life insurance I companies iu tho world, not couutiug | American companies. Very few of them insure for as much as $25,000 ' and the average is not half that sum, ! but supposing it were $20,000 the total would be 0n1y57,000,000, which, j added to the American total, would still make only about oue-lifth the sum I the Prince of Wales is reported to be j insured for. A Itemuvkit hie Cliuvitv. | An appeal lias appeared iu a Berlin contemporary for a remarkable char | ity. Some two hundred years ago, j says the Jewish World, when the Ber j liu community was still very small, pious Jews founded a sooiety in con nection with tho religions service then held by mourners at break of dawn. In order, however, to enable the poor to observe "the seven days of mourning for relatives with some de gree of comfort, the following scheme was devised and which is still, we be lieve, in use in other towns besides Berlin. Two boxes fitted with one aud the same key were sent to the house of the mourner. In the first was a purse the mourner had to emp ty. If in need he retained as much of the money as he required; if in fair circumstances he could put the money in the second box, and even, if he chose, augment thu sum from his pocket. None but the administrative committee had therefore an inkling of who had given or who had taken. For discretion, simplicity and trust iu human goodness this Jewish char ity caunot well he excelled.—Loudon Globe. Hi. Forlorn dominion. The moat forlorn object in Atchison at present is a man who is visiting his kin. Ho is accompanied by his wife. 3he is being taken around to aftor noon parties and is receiving aud re turning calls. She has the appearance of being in her element. He wanders up one side of tho street and down the other until meal time. In tho evening he feels like talking, having beeu lone some all day, but thu men of the household have beeu working all day, are tired and go to bed, and the wom en are being "entertained," so he goes to bed at 8.30 o'clock.—Atchison Globe. If silverware is kept clean it does not often have to be polished. After using the silver it should always be washed with a suds, made by dissolving some shavings of Ivory Soap in warm water, then wiped dry and rubbed lightly with a soft paper, a chamois skin or a piece of flannel. All highly-polished metal surfaces will retain their polish much longer if this plan is followed and rubbing with compounds avoided as much as possible. "fr ★ ★ fm.STAR'Ls; ★ "Star" tin tags (showing small stars printed on under side A °f * a ß). "Horse Shoe," "J. T. t " "Good Luck," "Cross Bow," y^ ★ and "Drummond" Natural Leaf Tin Tags are of equal value in A securing presents mentioned below, and may be assorted. yf ★ Every man, woman and child cau find something on the list A that they would like to have, and can have yf * PEI3! _ * *1 Match Box I S3 Clock, 8-day. Calendar, Thermora- * 2 Kii'fe, one blade, good stud 85 eter. Burome'er 600 R H Inches 26 1 24 him case, leather, no better made. 600 M *4 Child s Set, Knife, Fork and 26 26 Kevolver. nutoiuatlc, double action. . 6 bait and Pepper Set. .ue each, quad- 32 or 38 caliber 600 A ruple plate on whit metal 60 126 Tool Set. not playthings, but real W 6 1- rench Briar Wood Pipe . 26 tools .650 ' Razor, hollow ground, fine hnglish 27 Toilet Set decorated porcelain, A y\ m h'ocl 6<i | very handsome 800 \ 8 Butter Knife, triple plate, beat 28 Remington Kitle No. 4. 31 or 82 eal . 800 „ quality 60 | 28 Watch, sterling ailvcr,full jeweled 1000 a W • Sugar Shell triple plate, beat qual.. i 30 Dress Suit < 'ase, leather, haudsome wflp *ll Knife, "Keen Hotter," two blade* 76 31 Sewing Machine, flrat class, with 12 Butcher Kuife, "Keen Kutter," 8-lu all attachments 1500 *l3 Shears, "Keen Kutter " 8 incn 76 Heel 1500 14 Nut Set. (hacker and 6 Picas, silver 8". Hide, (Jolt's. 16-shot, 2-J-niUber. 1600 A , *" M (Washburn), rosewood, in- jm 16 Base ball, "Ass ciation," best qual. leu laid 2000 ★ + plated goods.. lfin Winchester Repeating Shot Gun, *lB nickel, stem wind and set". 20u 12 3000 a 18 Carvers, good steel, buckborn 37 Remington, double-barrel, hatn on ui 'il *;•••; .■ 200 ,uer H " ot 10 or 13 gauge 2000 P< ★ lit St7,™r T.We Bpoons. 3A Blpyol., fd.nd.rd in.ke, l.diM or A i """" * A ★ horn handles 260 Bnot Gun. Remington, double bar -22 Six each. Genuine Rogers' Knives rel, bainraerleas 3000 .^A and Forks. l*st plated goods. .600 40 itegtua Music Box. 16* iuch Diau . .6000 -JL- THE ABOVE OFFER EXPIRES NOVEMBER 30TH. 1900. A . Soecial NotlPP ' I'Mn " star " Tin Tags (that la. Star tin tags with no am->ll JLr • stars printed or, under side of tag), are not ,/„.! /orprrwi a hundred, if WBKAK IN .HIND that a dime'* worth ol A ? STAR PLUG TOBACCO ? •yt will lul lona.r and afford muri- pl.-a.nru than u diui.'a worll, ot an. otherbrand. MAKE THE TE3TI Send tags to COVTIVKVIMI, TOBACCO CO., SI. Louis. Mo. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Lights Kill the lllrda. Scarcely a morning passes but • quite a number of birds, large and small, are picked up in the courtyard i of the city hall in more or less injured condition. Some dying, some dead. They are birds usually found some dis tance away In the country. Linnets. ' finches, yellow birds, even occasionally blackbirds, robins and larks. It is sup posed that they are attracted by the brilliant electric lights around the base of the Penn statue. It is a well-known fact that at the foot of the statue of liberty in New York harbor hundreds of birds are picked up every year. They have flown with such fore# against the metal figure while blinded by the intense light as to kill them selves.—Philadelphia Inquirer, To Stop Note IHeetlitig. Bleeding of the nose is often very difficult to stop, but the efficacy of the following method is vouched for by a correspondent of the New York Times. The writer says: "Cut some blotting paper about an inch square, roll It about the size of a lead pencil, and put it up the nostril that is bleeding. The hollow in it will allow the sufTerer to breathe: the blood will fill the space between the tub 3 and the nose, and will very soon coagulate and cease to Bow." Br.utj- I# Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean Bkin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by •tirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin today to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion bv taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug guts, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. It is not generally known that the remains of all the Czars of Russia since Peter the Great, lie In a memorial chapel built on one of the islands of the Neva. All the cenotaphs are exactly alike, each being a block of white marble, without any decoration what ever. The Glasgow Town Council has awarded a contract for two elecerie traction engines to an American com pany solely on the ground of an earlier delivery than could be promised In Great Britain. Vers MTV low, debilitated or exhausted eared bv Br. Kline s Invigorating Tonie. l ure #l trial hottle tor Z weeks' treatment. Dr. HI ne. Ld., IKSI Arch St., Philadelphia. Found* i 1871. I am entirely cured of hemorrlinge of Wnga by PI BO'S Cure for Consumption.-Lwi.iiu, LUHMJULy, Bethany,Mo., January 8. I CONSTIPATION "l have gone 14 dny at a time, without a movemeut of the buwoli, not being alilo to movo them except by übiu hot. water Injections. Chronic constipation for seven yearj placed mo In | this terrlblo condition; during that time I did ev erything 1 lieurd of but never found any relief; Mich was my case until 1 begun using CASCAKKTS. 1 now have from one to three passages a day, and If I wus rich 1 would giro fIUMW for each movement; It is such a relief.' AYLMEU L- HUNT, ICSU llussell Si.. Detroit, Mich. CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. TaMc Good. I)o Good, Never Sicken, Weuken, or Gripe. 10c. 2CN-. 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... SUrilac homed; Company, t bicago, Montreal, Bow York. 321 DON'T STOP TOBACCO SUDDENLY It, injures nervous syatep- *o do so. BACO CURO i* the only cure that Keally Pure* and not!lies you wlios# to stop. Sold with a guarantee that three boxes will cure any case. IMt O-IJUROI* vegetable and harmless, 'fc ■ has cured thousands, it will curt you. At, all drugirists or by mail prep*'d. a box; . boxes Booklet free. Write hritEKA CHBMICAI. Co., La T rosse. Wis. $19,000 OFFERED by heirs tf the late Anthony Pollok, Esq., fur best maritime life-saving appliance. \\> can furnish MII i.t -rmatinn i>|A.SON, FHWVH'K A LA\V- Ill.Nt 1., \\ italiiiiHton, 11. ARNOLD' B 0 OUCH S COUCH Prevents UOTSG KILLER || ASTHMA PQSITIVILV CURED.I § I IKWII | mi Rill Nil ASTII If A (TK.il od' ,-. tins. A trial ia- kage uialkd ire®. B |Uuu,lk Ultua. ail-niviMt Co., ST. Lorl,. Mo. | DROPSY NEW DISCOVERY;CIV*. r.refi. Bo.ik Of tegt.muuiala and 1() ,U ym> Peatman® re. Ur. U. H OKEEK B 80MB, V>z B Atlanta. OA. P. N. U. 61 'JJ
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers