44 A Stitch in Time Saves Nine,' A broken stitch, like the 44 little rift 'within the lute," ts the beginning of trouble. 44 1 am tired, not ill," 44 It qvifl soon pass a~vay." 44 1 don t believe in medicine These are the broken stitches that lead to serious illness. Nature is tvise and iti Hood's Sarsaparilla she has furnished the means to take up broken stitches. Why ? because it starts at the root and cleanses the blood. Bad Blood — 44 For years I <was troubled <with my blood, my face <nas pale, I never felt well. Three bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla made me feel better and gave me a healthy color." Mac Cross, 24 Cedar Av., South, Minneapolis, Minn. 3focd<£ SwUgfaliffg __ flood's IMIls enro liver llU; the non-Irritating and only cathartic to take with Hood' Karaitparilla* Gr.Buirs i Tho best remedv for vOUSII Consumption. Cures Coughs, Colds, Grippe, oyrup Bronchitis, Hoarse + ' ness. Asthma, Whooping cough, Croup Small dosrs ; quick, sure results. Vt.Hull t Jh.UcutcConstipation, Innfiojut sc. Mortality. One of the counties of the state ot Connecticut once boasted of a judge who. though poorly furnished with those little refinements usually met with in polished society, was an ener getic. shrewd man, and a promising lawyer. \ neighbor of his was about to give away his daughter In marriage, and having a deep-rooted dislike to the clerical profession, and being de termined. as he said, "to have no par son In his house," he sent for his friend the judge, to perform the cere mony. The judge came, and, the can didates for the connubial yoke taking their places before htm, lie addressed the bride: "You swear you will marry this man?" "Yes. sir," was the reply. "And you (addressing the bridegroom) swear you will marry this woman?" "Well, I do," said the groom. "Then," said the judge, "I swear you're mar ried!" FOR MiDDLE-ACED WOMEN. fwo Letters from Women Helped Through the "Change of Life" by Lydia 1. l'ink ham's Vegetable Compound. 44 DEAR MRS. PINKHAM :—When I first wrote to you I was in a very bad con dition. 1 was passing through the change of life, and the doctors said'l had bladder and liver trouble. I had suffered for nine years. Doctors failed to do me any good. Since I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, my health lias improved very much. 1 will gladly recommend your medicine to others and am sure that it will prove as great a blessing to them as it has to me."—MRS. GEO. H. JUNE, 001 DeKalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Relief Came Promptly 44 DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—I had been under treatment with the doctors for tour years, and seemed to get no better, I thought I would try your medicine. My trouble was change of life, and I must say that I never had anything help rae so much as Lydia 10. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Relief came almost immediately. I have better health now than 1 over had. I feel like a new woman, perfectly strong. I give Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound all the credit, and would not do without her medicine for any thing. I havo recommended it to several of my friends. There is no need of women suffering so much for Mrs. Pinkham's remedies are a sure cure."—■ MAHAL A BUTLER, Bridge water, 111. Another Woman Helped " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM : —I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound during change of life and derived great benefit from its use."—MARY E. JAMES, 136 Coy don St., Bradford, Pa. ———— What do the Children Drink ? Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried tlio now food drink called GRAIN-O? It is dolieioua and nourishing and takes tho plaeo \ of coffee. |i Tho more Grain-0 you give tho children tho more health you distrib ute through their systems. Graiu-0 i 9 made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like tho choice grades of coffeo but costs about as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. Try Crain-O! Insist that your grocer gives you GRAIN-O Accept no imitation. ' PsWiW! 'EiISsCLOVER' F JOIIN A. SAI./I K HEED CO., LA ( I(O.H.SK, WIS. A. T. F CARTER'S INK Is THE BEST Ink. ~ WRES \VIIERE ALL ELSE FAILS. gj BOERS FED BY AMERICA. THEIR COMMISSARIES FAIRLY BURST. INC WITH OUR FOOD PRODUCTS. Embattled Farmers of South Africa Am ply Provisioned For a Long; Sioße Their Staft of Life i* Indian Corn—llow tho National Dish ia Prepared. Exporters in New York City who make a specialty of the South African trade are doing a great deal of think ing at the present time over the prob lem that- is greatly perplexing the British Government—that is, the ex tent to which tho Boors are prepared, as far as food supplies are concerned, to withstand the protracted siege that seems likely to ensue on the British advance. These exporters appear to believe that the Boers are remarkably well provisioned, and that any at tempt to starve them out is hardly likely to succeed soon. The extent of American trade witl the Transvaal, especially in the mut ter of cereals and foodstuffs, according to the statement of one versed in the statistics of international trade, was something of which the American peo ple had no just conception. It was added that the Boers and South Afri cans generally, although nominally farmers, raise very little of their own food, but ure fed almost entirely by foreign nations. As to canned moats and jerked beef—or, as the Boers themselves call it, bill-tong—practi cally all of the immense quantity con sumed in South Africa is supplied by Aiuericau firms, shipping through tho port of New York. '.'Tho British Government has shown a remarkable lack of foresight," re marked oue of tho largest local food exportersto South Africa, "iu forming a just estimate of the preparedness of the Boers for war, and the work of the intelligence department ill gaining any accurate information concerning their military supplies is only oue aspect of the case. As a matter of fact, the Boers have not only been laying up an almost inexhaustible supply of powder and cartridges, but an abundant sup ply of food as well. If tho British suc ceed in getting as far as Pretoria or Johannesburg aud attempt to lay siege to the cities, they will discover that the inhabitants will suffer little from the lack of food; that their granaries are fairly bursting with the products of American and Australian farms; aud that iu nil the other food-staples of war time, such as canned beef, the Dutch are plentifully provided. "I base these conclusious'upon the examination of my own books. My firm sends great quantities of flour aud canned goods to South Africa every year, aud especially to Delagoa Buy, Port Nulal, Durban, East Lon don, aud Port Elizabeth, which are the chief ports of entry to tho Trans vaal and the Orange Free State. ,1 have never known the South African trade to bo so brisk as it hss been during the past year, and especially the past few months. "It was porfoctly apparent that the Transvnalers were ordering a great deal more stud' than they could readily consume; aud tho trade in that direc tion has for some time been looked upon as abnormal. "Take the ense of flour exports, for example. Flour, under the mosl favorable circumstances, can hardly be preserved over a year, but iu spite of that fact tho Afrikanders have been increasing their orders during the past fow months in a most surprising way. Iu the year 189!), according to my figure, some 300,000 sacks of fiout were sent from New York to Dolagoa Bay, and about 100,0D0 sacks to the other South African ports—a large amount of which also finds its way into the Transvaal. "This amount is about twice tho normal annual trade in flour. The largest flour shipments over known were sent iu April and May, which are not ordinarily busy months in the South African trade. I kuow one firm that sent 50,000 sacks a month iu the spring of tho present year, and tho shipments of other New York con cerns were equally large. "Other commodities than flour, however, have been Bent iu vast amounts to South Africa during the past few months. One of the choicest delicacies to the Boer paluto is the coreal know as samp. Samp is cracked corn, degermiuated. It is al most the staff of life with tho Boers, and is also largely used by the aborig ines-. The Boers boil it into a sort porridge aud bake it with pork—after the fashion of American pork and beans. Shipload after shipload of this, to theiu, iudispeusablo article has been sent to Delagoa Bay during the past few months, and yon can make up your mind that it is coming in handy at the present- time. Canned beef is also a favorite article of diet with the people of the Transvaal, aud thousands of cases of this have been sent by American packers. "Those who havo visited South Africa recently will have no occasion to ask where this is stored away. AH over the Republic are scattered im mense sheet-iron storehouses, and I have not the slightest doubt that these nre at the present time crammed full of canned beef aud other convenient edibles sent from America during tho past year or so, and which will prove, I am sure, oue of the strongest weap ons of the Dutch in the struggle al ready under way. whon it comes to a siege."—New York Post. "Scent Fanning" Industry. The culture of povfuiue-boariug plants and trees, known as "soeut farming," is a profitable industry iu Australia, whore the soil is particu larly suitable for the cultivation of such plants. Tim I>uelA of Hie Sexes. Life to a man is a duel between him <nd his enemies; life to a rvoman is a duel between her and bet friends.— Vow York Press, OUR CREAT ALASKAN WEALTH. Borernor Brady Hires Vlrl<l Idea o4 Northwest ltesources. "Alaska: Its Resources and Needs," is the title of au article by John G. Brady, Governor of Alaska, printed in the Independent. Governor Brady writes: " lf you want to get. a vivid impres sion of the extent of Alaska hitch up a caribou ill the northern part of Maine, drive him south as long as he will stand the climate, aud continue the journey on horseback or or foot to tho end of Florida, and then to the mouth of the Mississippi. If, on the other hand, you choose to compass Alaska by water you will have to fol low a coast line of 25,000 miles. "A vast source of wealth is to be found in its fisheries. The canning industry did not fairly begin till 1882; now it is pursued with immense, and even disastrous, rivalry, The value of tho pack last year was more than three and a half million dollars. From tho best estimates the value of the pack this year will be 81,120,000. New legislation aud a thorough en forcemout of existing laws are needed to regulate wasteful and destructive competition. Our cod is practically inexhaustible, It is safe to assume that we have the grandest banks iu the world, covering 125,000 square wiles. "But it is the miliiug possibilities of Alaska that nre attracting the at tention of the world. It is difficult to set forth with accuracy truthful statements of the product of the min ing camps. Last summer I visited Cape Nome. A soldier, in a jokiug spirit, said he was going to wash gold out of the beach. Greatly to his as tonishment, he found what ho did uot expect, and soou for fifteen miles along the beach a string of tents was pitched and occupied by men who averaged S2O a day. I am satisfied that the yield at Nome will reach two and a quarter millions for this year. "Attention is turned, naturally, to our new acquisitions iu the Philip pines aud the West Indies, but it would be unfortunate to wholly divert the miud of our legislators from the growing needs of Alaska. In all our vast extent of coast there is uot a single lighthouse. We need the ex tension of telegraph facilities. A man said to me last summer that he would willingly have given a thousand dollars if he could have sent a mes sage of ten words to tho Stntes." WISE WORDS. Money is a fine thing, but it is bet ter to labor th.au to live in idleness. Gossip has been well defined as put ting two aud two together and making it five. Ho who commits injustice is ever made more wretched than he who suf fers it. Speculation is a short cut to wealth for tho few, the broad road to destruc tion for the many. OUR GREAT ALASKAN WtALIH. AVOID STEPPING UPON CRACKS Bovernor Brad, !.. VWld Id., F-nltartt, .f H.n, r.opl. XTh.n W.lk- NortliwMt Hpwinrcm. ...i i T1 t, , ~ , ~ ln * Along th Pavement*. Alaska: Its Resources ami Needs, From tie Phlladslpbla Record: "I is the title of an article by John O. wonder wby lt , Baid a |ck ob . Brady, Govetuor of Alaska, printed Beryfir the oth „ „ .. that nlne . in the Independent. Governor Brady plo out of evpry tm , n walk|ng along . , . . , . the sidewalk invariably try to avoid "If you want to gel, a v.vid imprcs- , rracks Qr divlsionß s.on of the extent of Alaska hitch up |n between Now a caribou in the northern part of .. „ Maine, drive him south as long as he " (a " ce ' lf ' h , e divisions are made so will stand the climate, and continue that an ° rdl " ary ™ a , n f st , e P w ™ ld I the journey on horseback or or foot to m , easure about two-third, of the width the end of Florida, and then to the 01 one sectlon ot ,ho a Sßlng, he | mouth of the Mississippi. If, on the naturally tnke about three stp P s in | other hand, you choose to compass "ossing two of them. But Instead of Alaska by water you will have to fol- ma king the three steps of the same | low n const line of 20,000 miles. length and setting one foot down upon . "A vast source of wealth is to be * be Beam - you will find that he will j found ill its fisheries. The canning Invariably take a step either a little j industry did not fairly begin till 1882; longer or a little shorter than Is really now it is pursued with immense, anil most convenient, Just to enable him even disastrous, rivalry, The value '° avoid stepping upon the crack or of tho pack last year was more than Beam. It seems to be done almost un three and a half million dollars. From consciously, and yet If on the next tho best estimates the value of the square the size of the division In the pack this year will be 81,120,000. pavement Is changed, you will notice New legislation and a thorough en- that almost Invariably the pedestrian forccmout of existing laws are needed adapts his steps to the new arrange to regulate wasteful and destructive ment, and still continues to avoid the competition. Our cod is practically cracks. Children used to play a gaitoe | inexhaustible, It is safe to assume called 'poison' on their way to school, i that we have the grandest banks in The game consisted entirely In care- ! tho world, covering 125,001) square fully avoiding stepping upon a stone I wiles. or some other material selected by the "But it is the milling possibilities leader to bo designated as 'poison,' to I of Alaska that are attracting the at- get foot upon which was supposed to be teution of the world. It is difficult followed by direful consequences. 1 to set forth with accuracy truthful whether the habit of 'looking where statements of the product of the nun- you 6tep . thuß acqnlred lB continued i ing camps. Last summer I visited by tboße who now trv t0 avoid cracks Cape Nome A soldier in a joking , cannot Bay but , f noU spirit said he was going to wash gold find tbat m who w out of the beach Greatly to his as- are to habit bere d tonishment, he fottud what he did not Bcr i bed ." expect, and soon for fifteen miles along the beach a string of tents was Th. Boston n.by'a M.mm. pitched and occupied by men who From the New York Commercial averaged §2O a day. I am satisfied Advertiser: The Boston baby must that the yield at Nome will reach two have brought his mamma to New and a quarter millions for this year. York yesterday. There was nothing "Attention is turned, naturally, to particularly Bostonese in her appenr our new acquisitions in the Philip- aiK . e and sh e didn't have the baby with pines and the West Indies, but it b er, but as she was getting out of an would be unfortunate to wholly divert elevated car „ he dro pp Pd a book-of the mind of our legislators from the course. The simple New Yorker picked giowing needs of Alaska. In all our | b up and restored lt to its owner who vast extent of coast there is not a lurned and said . .. Thanl( Mr _ single lighthouse. We need the ex- thank y ou --immeasurably." tension of telegraph facilities. A man said to me last summer that he Th* Prescription for Chill* would will in olv lmvft rvivpn n thnrißfinrl 101(1 Fo ™ r 19 n bottle of GKOVK'S TASTKKRBB WOUKI wiinngiy nave gi\ en a tuousana Chill Tonic . It lB Blmp i y iron ftn(! quinine in dollars if ho could have sent a mcs- a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Trice 50c. sage of leu words to tho States." ~ 4 . 7 ~ . ° Boston s police made J0.760 arrests ; last year, as compared with 41.816 in j WISE WORDS. 1808. The records show a slight in- ] ; # I crease in the crimes in which violence Money is a line thing, but it is bet- \ is employed. tor to labor than to live in idleness. , _ . ~ lour TSciclihnr Him Thrm. Gossip has been well denned as put- „ i .> -m ... , o. . .. . 1 , . , .. . /. Has what? Those beautiful Shakes- ! ling two and two together and making „ „ ~ , , . , . P ° b pearo panels given away In Introducing 1 vt " "'Red Cross" and "Hubinger's Best" ' He who commits injustice is ever laundry starch, J. C. Hubiager's latest j made more wretched than he who suf- an ,i greatest Inventions. All starch put fers it. up under "Red Cross" or "Wash Tub" ! Speculation is a short cut to wealth trade mark brands Is genuine, and goods for tho few, the broad road to destruc- of a manufacturer with twenty-five years' tiou for the many. experience. He who receives a benefit should These nre h,fl oul ? brands; be has no never forget it; he who bestows should ,nturost whatever in any other starch, uevof remember it. ! 80 be Bure >' ou & ot on, y tho be9t - Happiness consists iu being perfectly The celebrated Boer ponies have the satisfied with what wo have got and blood ot the Basuto pony in them, and with what we haven't got. the Bastuo pony is a pure-bred Scotch- Judge thyself with tho judgment ol ,llan - He is not even a half caste, sincerity, and thou wilt judge others To cr* Cold in One Day. with the judgment of charity. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All 1-1 •j i * druggists refund tho money if it fails to cure. Everyman will persevere over little E. W. GROVE'S signature la on each box. 25c. things, but few show the same spirit iu going after things that are worth More than 58.000 copies of the Gos haviug. l ,c ' s a,, d Psalters have becii distributed as gifts from the Bible Society among Nothing more completely bailies regiments sailing for South Africa, oue who is lull of trick and duplicity _ than straightforward and simple iu- —-.rrrr.i-r- 1 —— tegrity iu another. • Often a muu who has eight or nine j f-4/yjV sons thinks he has done all that is i J * J; necessary to baud his name down to ' future generations. yy Generally when a man thinks sue cess is iu sight ho has just begun to ! f flTtllTirf (lllf" travel over the rough road leading to ! L the foot of the ladder. numnumamamaFOKxiaasajiimsmmatm Good nature is the very air of 11 "About a ye;f ego my hair good mind; the sign of 11 large and j VIS com in2 out very fast. I generous soul, and the peculiar soil t c k' • u • iu which virtue prospers. bought & bottle of Avers Hair The majority of men coufouud hap Vigor to stop this. It not only piness with the means by which it is stopped the falling, but also j acquired. Money in their eyes is tho madc hair grow vcrv rapidly, chief element ot happiness. .. J . .• ' / If you would he useful and happy, ' " ntll now , 11 18 45 .V"*" In ! if you would be strong and brave, be- length and very thick. —Mrs. i lieve ill tho future, believe in it for , A. Bovdston, Atchison, Kans., ! yourselves, believe iu it for the world. v . q Bolieve in a millennium of some kind | All the events of a life are neees- j __ sary to a higher development. The | Hi -J common task is a round by which we I T JT* PP(i 1 climb to glorious acbievcmcut. The ladder winch loads us to perfection is made up of small events and smali 1 JT g ' ii victories. Iu the economy of life Tflo B ICHII* nothing is useless, and nothing is wasted. Everything iu its place is a——eia. —in a. the best thing for that place. Life is tj -t. i. r a law, not an accident. Havc )' ou evcf thought why —,— your hair is falling out ? It is The gooTwome,', who at'e trying to J }eCaUS = >' 0U are s,arvin g >' ouf | reform the altogether vile .system of hair. If this Starvation continues below-stairs life should take a lesson your hair will continue to fall. fmidt 1° B i rvftut . (u rr e - TKcre is ° nc g°° d haif bold) in Halifax can hope to obtiiu _ . TJ • \r employment without caving remained H IS Aycr S Hair Vigor. It goes at least two years in tho place where right to the roots of the hair last, previously engaged. This is the °i „■ .1 / .0 one recommendation that is ot avail. and 8 1VCS ,I, J em l u t St , the fooi I In New York if a servant, a domestic, that they need. The hair stops E stays two years iu one plaeo she re- falling, becomes healthy, and I coives from a charity society a 820 f.l■ 1, j . L gold piece. This i, equivalent to grows thick and long. P a monthly increase of eighty-three Aycr s Hair Vigor will do EJ and one-third ceuts in her salary. another thing, also: it always R Tho cash payment of thrice that snui _ 1 . rj j ■ will not persuade Cinderella to remain r " torcs color to faded or I longer than a few weeks, for Cin- hair. si.oo bottle. Alt drufjiets. | dorella, Esq., of New York, always nwxßnwn ,' v ajs iiiumaimiimil 1 iiniiMiiiiainiii .iMimn.a.t noeds a re t.—New York Press. , 6 I Write the Doctor ... ~ „ , _ If you do not obtain nil tho lionoflts von I All the funerals 111 Paris are eon- desire from tho uso of tho Viiror, writo 9 ducted by a single syndicate, which I has a licensed monopoly of the busi' his book on the Hair and Scalp if you I tip Hit request it. Address, t c Dr. J. c. AY EH, Lowell, Mats. I All the funerals in Paris are con ducted by a single syndicate, which has a licensed monopoly of the busi' Destt, The total revenue of New Soutn Wales for the year 1898 was $17,500,000, the best record ever made bv the colonv. Hirw". Tlili T W. offer One Hundred Doller. Reword for lEsre3t^rh t ? ,l | rh tllatoanDot b<: cured bj F/J. c'heskv & Co.. P,ops., Toledo, O. "I'doreiKned, have known F.J. Che ney lor the la-t 15 years, and believe him per feetljr honorable in alt business tan-actions fionm a d n .b"fhJi'r I fl^® arry 0,,t HDy oUiga 'i,RCXX,Wholesale Druggisra, Toledo, WaLDINO, KtNXAN cfr M\HVIN WlinlpaaU Druggists. Toledo. Ohio. ' hole9aU i.f.'i- * V, nt ' Out ft is taken tniernallv, net lug directly upon the blood and mucous sur- Ku'ii >T ten ?- Mc . P* bottle. Sold by u al i 1 M L>r^KKi I l ts -. l ortlmuniaU free, llall & h amily I'illa are the be A Pottery-makers in Great Britain and the United States of America are draw ing up a price list to govern prices in both Countries. What Shall Wo Have For Dcurrtl This question nrises in the family dntly. Lot us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 miu. No boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot water Sc set to cool. Flavors: Lemou.Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. The former military camp at Montauk ! Point, which a few months ago was I fairly alive with American soldiers, is now only a wild waste. I Wo think Plso's Cure for Consumption is I the only medicine for Coughs.—.Tknme Pinck- AHD. Spriugtlcid, Ills., Oct. 1, 180 L Tn Devonshire the cycle has been ap plied to butter making. A man sits on his bicycle, pedals, and by means of a chain turns the churn. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Hyrap forrhilclren i | tecthinv, softens the gums, reduces intlnmniH tion. allays pain.cures wind colic.£ic a bottle, j | The number of Irishmen vvlio have ; | been prominently associated with the crisis and the war in South Africa is re markable. Jcll-O, Hn !*c\v Denert, 1 Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— , j Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry, i At your grocers. 10 ctg. The African Methodist Episcopal church will endeavor to raise $600,000 for its twentieth century thank offering by January 1. 1901. f 1900 | jk There is every good $ I St. Jacobs Oil f , should cure ' I RHEUMATISM f | NEURALGIA i| | LUMBAGO I I SCIATICA | for the rest of the century. One par- V | SURELY AND PROMPTLY * 1 ' Sprtlr *rppn r Wh.l la Itl Ul''" arivT^V' rAT SEEDS^x. 1 \\ tn rrflDrr.^^y^^L | . vo^ -rH •r n l th a1 of adr. with alcne.oe, | W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES jj,^ frth S4 to $6 compared with other makes. / | 1,000,000 wearers. t&v. £3 fir rjptiiiJ lie have W. L. ! ;. r' I' I•: II I ft, and width, plain <>r can toe. Cat. free, j wumvEiEis "• L DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. SON IO DAYS TRIAL c> iM>r IM•> ■ I.IIU 1 ' ' ,l " l i OKl |® li I HMO X.s r \V AKI M GIBSONIA. PA. AGENTci! AGENTS! AGENTS! The grandest ntirf/fM/tffttj'tfiiHt book ever published is D ASM ESS ; DAYiiSHT or LIGHTS and SHADOWS OF NEW YORK LIFE BY 11ISV. LYMA .V A lUHITT. Splendidly illustrated with 550 Miner!) engraving* frniu JUuh-light pholn.irapli* •>, , -ul lift. Ministers ! say: "Qodapf'i it." Everyone laughs and cries over I it, and Agents ar> selbn • i: hy S TIOOO morn Agents wanted nil through the Houth men and women. # 100 to t$2(M) a month liutde. Send for Terms to Ag-nt*. Vddreea II AltTI OKI! I'IHI.IMIIM. CO.. Il.tri l ord, Conn. | ■■■|A STOPPED r s-iEE ■ H J wCji Parmanenily Cured "-V I J Insanity Prevented b, ?• 91 HUH Bn - "LINE'S GREAT gp^^STQIjHI^ DROPSY NEW DISCOVERY;,I... Hi ....T.";...i7i'i: B T V!. l s.ssi , *r* v. Dr. 11. H. QUEEN'B BUNS, Bo- B Atlanta, 0a HOW TO GET OFFICE S^fKSSStS the Uovernineut Oflbm Trniulug Nchooi, Washing ten. 1 C. U m-f. I ' ' 1 !•*. I'. ■-1 1 illlll'.-f, aneiit. P. N. U. 8 00 Thompson's Eye Water THE CARE OF BLANKETS. Never let blankets remain in service after they are soiled, dirt rots the fibre and invites moths. Because of the peculiar saw-tooth formation of wool hair it is neces sary that a soap made of the best materials be used; a cheap soap, especially one which contains rosin, will cause the blanket to become hard by matting the fibre. T<r IVasb Blankets am! Retain their Softness. Dissolve shavings of Ivory Soap In boiling water, add cold water until nearly hike warm. Immerse a blanket and knead with the hands, rinse in dean warm water in which also some Ivory Soap has been dissolved. Dry in a place that is neither very warm nor very cold. Sleep for Skin-Tortured Babies | In a Warm Bath^th And a single anointing with CUTICURA, purest of emollients and greatest of skin cures. This is the purest, sweetest, most speedy, per manent, and economical treatment for torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted, and pimply skin and scalp humors with loss of hair, of infants and children, and is sure to succeed when all other remedies fail. Millions of Women Use Cinicura Soap Exclusively for preserving, purifying, ami beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, ami daudruff, and tho stopping of falling hair, for soften* ing, whitening, and soothing rod, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, ami dialings, or too freo or offensive per spiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, and especially mothers, and for all tho purposes of tho toilet, bath, ard nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used it to us.? any other, especially for preserving and purifying tho skin, scalp, and hair of infants and children. CUTI CUKA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CCTICURA, the groat skin cure, with tho purest of cleansing ingredients and tho most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated or toilet soap ever compounded is to bo compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to he compared with it for all tho purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, viz., TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, tho BEST skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet soap and BEST baby soap iu tho world. /IHIIOBHFS# Externa! and Internal Treatment for Every Humor, FCLVTIL CH constating of < 'unci iu HOAP (25C.), t , rlennae the nkin of 'runts ond XW scales and Bolton the thickened cuticle, CLTICUUA OINTMENT (.SUE ), CCt I rtr- I " H, " n I tl > ull!, V itching, inlhumn.it ion, and irritation, and soothe and i he Set, 51.25 heal, "'• I-IIA UK-OW NT (TOE ). to cool and elc-anse the blood. A' I Niil.li f* ET id often mi tlicient to cure the modi torturing, di Mienrim/ and humiliating skin, scalp, aud blood humors, with IOH of hair, when all else fails. I'OTTBH 1). ANI <J. ('oar., Bole Props., liostou, U. 6. A. *' All about the Bkiu, tiettlp, and lluir," freo PR. ARNOLD'S OQUDR ICIS LFR All Druggists, iisc Go■■lbll b rs lu cl\ il war. IS aaluUioatincelaluis, atty siuoft
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers