"Never Do Things' by Halves." Sometimes the condition of your health could be de scribed as half-sick and half well. You may not be ill enough to go to bed but too ill to be happy or efficient in your home or your business. Why not be wholly well? Your drjgged out. tired feeling is due to poor blood and nothing else. Make your blood rich by us ing Hood's Sarsaparilla'. It works to perfection; there is nothing like it. Tired Feeling "My husband would come home from work so tired he could hardly move. He began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and it cured him. It cured my girl's headaches." Mrs. A. J. Sprague, 57 G.ik St.. Fall 9sr>er, Mass. Hood's I'iHsiMire lltw Ills; the non Irritating and b to tolf with Hood's .SartupiiritWu \ /Drßull'sN Ciirrs all Throat and Lung Affections. COUGH SYRUP Get the genuine. Refine substitutes. A I XIS SOKE jf Dt. Dull"; /Wis cure Dyspepsia. Tt ial , 20 for sc. "Tea" School. The oddest school in the United States Is now in daily session at Fine hurst, Summerville, S. C., says the New York Journal. Uncle Sam's paternal and financial part in the institution makes it of interest to the nation. It is situated in the heart of the tea lands about Summerville. and its odd feature is the curriculum. Under the super vision of a competent teacher thirty South Carolina pickaninnies are taught the three old fashioned K's — "readin*. Titin' and 'r'thmetic"—and tea picking. And the last is not the least important study. The rapid de ) veiopment of tea raising in the South has received additional impetus from the announced intention of Sir Thomas \ Upton to invest $500,000 in tea cul f ture in South Carolina. Sir Thomas is I familiar with the soil and climatic 1 conditions of the state, having at one \ time worked as a laborer on a rice \ plantation in Georgetown county. \ The United States Department ot Agriculture is taking a lively interest in the "tea school," and has given it financial aid. There is a Chinese daily paper pub lished in San Francisco. Woman's 3 roubles Why trifle with health when the easiest and surest help is the best known medicine in the world ? J^LydiaJLJPinkhanVs^V^^ is known everywhere and thousands of women have been curse!of serious kid ney derangements hy it. Mrs. Pinkham's meth ods have the endorse ment of the mayor, the postmaster and others of her own city. Her medicine has the endorsement of an un numbered multitude of grateful women whose letters are constantly printed in this paper. Every woman should read these letters. Mrs. Plnkham advises suffering women free of charge. Her address Is Lynn, Mass. FiIDMOLIAR®^! Most talked of potato ou curtb ! flnr I rir'n Karl lust six Weeks' I'otato. I lArgMt farm and vufHable tfoeil | growers in U.S. Potatoes, s!.'.!<> and 1 ,u| up 11 bhl. Send thin notice arid ■"><:. M IIJOIA'SALZE'R SEEDJIAC|O^^J Morphines Morphine, fl.nuitnnuin, or ..ther dru habit, t rln 11 ecu 1111 • nt. free oreli h rjre, nfth.s ran .' remarkable remedy <?vr div.ovrred. Contains 4;rent VlfaJ trlnelplo heretofore unknown. lie. frnctory Cnaoo solicited. Confidential correspond™ e Invited fr .11 :;11, cjie.i. !lv J'Hthlllh 111. ST. JAMES SOCIETY, uJi BROADWAY, NEW V>kK. 1\ N. U. i) 00 (Bgapttq CARTERS INK ho best Ink iniule, but no dearer ► than the poorest. DR. ARNOLD'S GOUGH KILLER All Driicglstn. 'A5<3 !Thompson's Eye Water EARLY . CONVENTION. PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRATS FA VOR QUICK ACTION. Wo Need IMontj Time for the Cumjiiilgn Soon to Be Foujjh t the Money Power an 1 All Other Kind* of The Democratic National Committee meets Feb. 22 to fix the time and place for the meeting of the Democratic na tional convention. In my Judgment it should be an early convention, not later than the month of June; and May would be preferable to June. The reasons for an early con vention are: 1. The Democratic party represents a great cause. It must realize that fact. To represent that cause it must be a progressive party—a truly progressive party is aggressive. If it realizes its mission it will set the pace—which means an early convention. 2. If it lap after the Republican convention, it will be Judged as a party that seeks meanly to take advantage of the mistakes of the opposing party— will fall below what the people demand as an ideal reform party. A party with a remedy does not need to wait to see, what any other party is going to do. A party without a remedy, or too timid to be aggressive with a remedy, will lose caste with the people in a crisis like the present, where the republic is at stake. A late convention is ground lost; an early convention is ground gained. 3. To those who say that a national campaign disturbs business, and should therefore be short, the answer is: To put our national household In order is more important in a business way than any other business to which the people can turn their attention. What do we profit by a few months of undisturbed business, if evils are at work, that is, unchecked, to eventually bankrupt the people and overthrow the republic? The most important business the peo ple of this nation now have before them is to study the principles of gov ernment and to avert an impending calamity. 4. If the Democratic convention Is early and will do what is expected of It —a proper platform and Bryan its nominee—it will unite and set in mo tion all the affirmative reform forces of the nation. If it waits, the Populist convention may meet and make sepa rate nominations —resulting in three tickets. 5. A new national committee comes into existence at the time of the con vention, and it should have ample time to formulate and push a• campaign of organization and education. W. H. Harvey. EDITORIAL ETCHINGS. Who has the old custom house? The Standard Oil bank. And who has the $3,320,000 which the Standard Oil bank paid for it? The Standard Oil bank. And to whom is the government under contract to pay rent for it? The Standard Oil bank. What has the gov ernment? It has Mr. Gage, the great est living dealer in real estate on "easy terms." —New York World. Let us save the trust magnates. "Great wealth does not bring happi uesß."—Andrew Carnegie. "It Is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven." As we are in the salvation business. It is the duty of every American citi zen to aid In abolishing trusts to save their operators. In the coming campaign Mr. McKtn ley will have at his back au army of trust-y followers. "A really elastic currency" Is one which contracts or expands, according to the pull of a pet bank.—New York World. The literature of the trust question Is assuming vast proportions. It Is time to get from the abstract to the concrete, and the main responsibility Is upon the congress of the United States: First, to withdraw the sup port of the tariff laws front monopo lies; next, to procure an amendment of the constitution, and follow this by general laws that shall bring all com binations In restraint of trade under complete subjection. Philadelphia Ledger. There is a remarkable unanimity among the government employes and the beneficiaries of the trusts to secure the re-election of Mr. McKinley. If some of the great anxiety mani fested by President McKinley to put the Puerto Ricans "on their feet," as he expresses it, were bestowed upon American citizens, there might not be so much opposition to his policy. Senator Elkins is mentioned in con nection with the nomination for vice president by the Republican national convention. The senator would make an excellent vice president, and strict ly in line with the McKinley policy. He is the patron of as many trusts and combines as he can get into; permits the use of his name to boost all sorts of schemes concocted by the easy cor poration laws of West Virginia, and is in every way qualified to be the suc cessful candidate for nomination out side of Mark Hanna himself. Congressman Ross (Rep.) of Ver mont, is decidedly mixed on the situa tion. He announced in the house the other day, referring to the Philippines: "The flag of the nation has been placed on these islands. That Is the emblem of its policy and ever has been. That policy is individual manhood, the right to enjoy religious and civil liberty, the right to stand protected equally with every other man before the law. in the enjoyment of freedom, of personal rights, *nd of property. Let the fiag be planted and become dominant on and ovur every island and every in habitant. In no other way can this congress and nation discharge its duty to the people of the United States and to the people of the islands." Then the McKinley disciple, in a burst of patriotism, adds, "that the United States takes sovereignty over Puerto Rico and the Philippines, unrestrained by the provisions of the constitution." A confession of an unconstitutional policy. THE DEVIL CITES SCRIPTURE. We have been warned that even the devil would cite scripture for a pur pose, and now to verify the warning comes Comptroller Dawes, who hap pens to be one of Mr. McKinley's clerks, and makes a speech at Spring field, 111., in which he raises his unc tuous hands and preaches thus: "Rather than have in the hands of any corporation the power to absolute ly fix the price of a necessity of life, the people would eventually do one of two things. They will enact legisla-1 tion for the absolute protection of the j people, or they will enact legislation ; for the enforced creation of competl-1 tion by the disintegration of the' trusts." "These are brave words." says the New York News, "and we wish we could prophesy their fulfillment, but the trouble is Dawes is not a man who inspires all the confidence in the world. By his own showing, indeed, by liis own confession, ho permitted the Globe National bank of Boston to continue in business, without making any dis closures to the public, after he had dis covered crookedness on the part of the president. Several months ago the Globe was found to be in a wabbly state, and the comptroller forced Pres ident Cole to disgorge some $500,000 that had been diverted. Of this fact the depositors were kept in profound ignorance. Later, no thanks to Mr. Dawes, another discrepancy amounting to $,'100,000 was discovered, but even after that the clearing house was per mitted to bolster the concern up until many insiders no doubt got out from under. "The comptroller is not a very good authority 011 what the ethics of any sit uation demand." WHY THE PEOPLE ARE POOR. I see that Congressman De Armond has been figuring c-n Uncle Sam's grow ing expense account, and discovers that, while within sixty years our pop ulation has increased 50 per cent, our annual appropriations for 1900 (exclud ing army and navy appropriations in both instances) are more than 175 per cent greater than those for 1880. These facts would not be particularly distressing if the government were do ing many more things in a useful way now than it did then. It is doing some, no doubt, but it is not digging a Nica raguan canal, not establishing a sys tem of parcels post, not either buying out the present telegraph monopolies nor building a postal telegraph of its own, not doing anything to continue our drainage canal to the Mississippi river as a true ship canal. In brief, it is doing none of the great things for internal development and the fostering of trade and commerce, but is fritter ing away its funds on trivialities until the burden of taxation is so great that when appeal is made for some of the enterprises here enumerated, the an swer is always: "We can't afford it." And it might be worth while, too, to consider to what extent men inter ested in the maintenance of monopolies which the government undertakings mentioned would destroy may have themselves systematically caused and fostered this condition of penury. It is curious that all of the people— that is, the state—are always poorer than a few of the people. It is one of the cases in which the whole is not greater than a part.—Willis J. Abbot, in Chicago Journal. THURSTON'S SERVICES. The Nebraska constituents of Sena tor Thurston are wasting time in writ ing him sharp letters concerning his acceptance of employment with the Standard Oil company. When Mr. Thurston was elected United States senator he was an attor ney lor the Union Pacific railroad. This place he held while the government was trying in vain to collect its loan to the railway corporation —an effort not made easier by the presence of one of the corporation's attorneys in the sen ate. Breaking with the railroad—over a question of his fee. it is said —he has gone into the employ of the most men acing of modern corporate criminals, the Standard Oil company, and will represent that corporation, and inci dentally the state of Nebraska, in the senate for another year. A gentleman capable of doing these things will not be moved by sharp let ters. To complete the picture of Mr. Thurston, it is perhaps only necessary to add that he is the sternest defender of national honor and honest money Nabraska, or any other state, ever pro duced.—Chicago Journal (Rep.). Many of our newspapers continue to talk about the National City "bank robbery." This is very strange. Sec retary Gage has fully explained that there wasn't anything but a "conveni ence." The bank didn't need a "jim my" to break into the United States treasury. No woman can make a man weak who cnnnot flrst make him think h is strong. A Thotiffhtlaaa Habit. Long before the average child under stands how moisture promotes adhe sion between two solid bodies he has contracted the habit of wotting his thumb every few seconds while turning the pages of a book. The practice is a most objectionable one. and mothers and teachers should discourage it for sanitary reasons as well as on the grounds of simple refinement. Fancy a child suffering from diphtheria or some serious disease of the mouth and gums transferring the germ-laden sali va to the porous paper to be in turn carried to the mouth of the next one to perform the surac operation! Unhap pily. it is practiced by older people, and by many that ought to know bet tor. The baker, for instance, intro duces his thumb or forefinger between his lips when he takes a sheet of paper from a pile of sheets to wrap the rolls or cake that you buy at his shop. Per haps the dainties do not touch the identical spot of contamination, but again perhaps they do. conveying caries or some other taint of impurity to the eater. The librarian handling library cards sometimes forgets him self in the same way; so do people ar ranging slips of paper and counting bank notes. Because done innocently and unconsciously, the practice is none the less prejudicial to health and of fensive to good taste. Slow Are Your Kidney* t Dr flol)b3'Sparagns PiMscureall kidney Ills. Sam- Die free. Add. Sterling Koinedy Co.. Ctucugo or N. Y All bicycles arc taxed by the French (iovernmcnt. Try Grnin-O! Try Grain-Of Ask your grocer to-day to show you a package of Guain-O, the new food drink that takes the place of cofTee. Children may drink it without injury us well as the adult. All who try ii like it. Giiain-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but is made from pure grains; tlie most delicate stomach receives it without distress, yi the price of coffee. 15c. and 2fic. per package. Sold by all grocers. A dcai mute run a barber shop in Topeka, Kansas. Joll-O, the Kftv I>sscrl, Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. There are 7,431 miles <>i railroads in Mexico. To ('tire Constipation l r orover Take Castanets Cantlv Cathartic. 100 or 25e. If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. During the present year _'s important conventions will be hold in Cleveland. To Cure a Cold in One Way. Take Laxative Mhomo Tabi.kts. All druggists refund the money If it falls to cure. K. W. Urow's signature Is on each box. ie. Boston's municipal debt increased $3,- 000.000 last year. y 1 iamty low, debilitated or exhausted cured by Dr. Kline's Invigorating Tonic. Fiikb #1 trial bottle for J weeks' treatment. Dr. Kline. Id., Hill Arch St., Philadelphia. Founded 187 L There are 347 women blacksmiths in Knglmul. Dennty la Dlood Deep. Clean blood means a dean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, 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. A Fold reserve is being accumulated in India. 1 believe Pirn's Cure for Consumption saved my boy's life last, summer. Mrs. AllikDouu- LAss, Le Hoy, Mich., Oct. 20. 1801. The principal undertaker of Green ville, S. C.. says that in the past six years he lias buried in that town the bodies of 73 persons who met death by You ('am Have It Almo. The lady whose linens you envy, uses "lted Cross" and "Hubinger's Best" laundry starch. It is ousy to make your self an object of envy also. Ask your grocer, ho cau tell you just how you can got one largo 10c. package of "Red Cross" starch, one largo 10c. package of "Ilubingor's Best" .-larch, with the premiums, two beautiful Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful col ors, or one Twentieth Century Girl cal endar, all for 50. The salary of the mayor of Munich lias been raised from $4,000 to $5,000 a year. Eduratn Yonr Bowels With Cascarot*. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Pottery-makers in Great Britain and the United States of America are draw ing up a price list to govern prices in both countries. BAD BREATH " V have Itpeii using CAM'ARRT# and an a ralld and otfentivu laxative they are simply won derful. M.v daughter and I wi re bothered with 6i -k stomach and our breath was very bad. Aftor taking a few doses of t'asearets wo t.ave improved wonderfully i'h -y are a great help in tbo family." VV I I.HJC I.M iX A NAC.KI.. 1117 Rltiunhouso St.. ( inclnnutl. Ohio. CANDY TnAOC MASK RCaisTinxo ■ Pleasant. I'ulatablo. Potent. Taste flood. Do ' ir Hlckon. Weaken. 01 (irlpo, Wo. 86c. fiOo. CURE CONSTIPATION. ... V '"a ul "eil hv all drug- W-OttU ui.-isio Cl RUTobaoeo llabit. ION 10 HAYS TRIAL. l r j per eent morn butter. < atnloguo 4.1 IISO.N -N 1 .!\V,\ l!'l" M P( , J R| co|! GIBSOWIA, I A. PS Y DISOOyBRy;,!.., Free. Dr H. H OSSEN 9 BOMS. Box 11. Atlanta, o*. lieafoetH Cannot Ha Cured by local appllral.ions.aH they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear There is only one way to cure deafness, and thai is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness iscansed by an hi tlamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gels in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect bearing, and when il is entirely closed Deafness is the result, ami mil rs the inilam mation can be takep out. niul this tube re stored toils normal condition, hearing will bo destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten HIM caused by catarrh, which U nothing but nn inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. Wo will give Gne Hundred Dollar-* for any case of Deafness (caused lv catarrh) that cannot he cured bv Ilall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Ciiknf.v A Co., Toledo, (). Sold by Druggists. ;.V. Hall's Family Pills are tlie besc. Mexico is one of the United States' best customers in the sewing machine line. Don't Tobacco Spit aud Smoke Tour V.lfe Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be rrag nctic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No To* Bao, the wonder-worker, that makes weal; men strong. All druggists, 500 or (I. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Berlin, Germany, is to construct an underground railway costing $25,000.- 000. What Simll AVe Have For Drtaertl This quostion arises in the family daily. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 rain. No boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot water A set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. Painters in the car shops at Knnxvillc arc working 15 to 17 hours a day. M rsAVinslow's Southing Syt up for children teething, softens the gums, reduces i nHammn tion, allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. The average toy makers in Saxony makes about one cent an hour. The Rest Prescription for Chills and Fever Is a bottle of G nova's Tastki.esh C'HII.L Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine hi a tasteless form. No euro—ut> pay. Price 50c. Late statistics show that in London more than 300,000 families earn less than seventy-five cents a day. | W^rthiess" Mtt3Hßnuotgr :c? ?. "wv- uu< • What a lot of trash is sold as cough cures. The hollow drum makes the loudest noise—the biggest advertise ment often covers worthlessness. Sixty years of cures and such testi mony as the follow ing have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will do. " I had a most stubborn cough a for many years. It deprived me !; of sleep and made me lose flesh rapidly. I was treated by many eminent physicians, but could get t no permanent relief. I then tried I Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and I be- I | gan to get better at once. I now r sleep well, my old flesh is back, l! and I enjoy myself in every way I at the age of seventy-four."— R. N. I MANN, Fall Mills, Tenn., Feb. 7, R 1899. ; I I I 111 II !■!! I II IIT I I 111111 l MUBIII mmmmmmoammm HUM m. masm—— l It s the do-as-you-would-be done-by cough medicine. Try a 25-cent bottle. aamxamamvmaxmmmmmtmnmtmmmu W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES as 4 s4 to $6 compared with other makes. f & AJ,(KM),Oo'o wcurera. fe* ttfcv tfj / \ ' ,ave W ' pi lf\ 2 stamped on bottom. 'Fake t M V n< substitute claimed t( be Ty / should keen them—if "Sextia for carriage. Stat'e kind of leather, VWiit' 1 . and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free. MlMtvnos L DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. I FOR 14 CENTSf v " w ' H h to K*hi thiayear 20(i,iHO w Uk 1 f'kg I'.nrl'rtt kinerH'.d ('iietiinberli'te S X IraMll l " l'tOrosse Market l.ottuee. li.o X S LAW^wIhhVI Htrawl>erry .Melon, loe x JMWliffwt " IT l>y Me • ZWWmi 1 •" V Kj ,u ' 'atihitge, pic B SwfflllJ a " Brilliant. Klower Seed*, l. r n- A Wlvm Worth SI.OO, I'or 11 cent*. jntig zW HI Above 10 I'kgs. worth fl.tm, tr will • m ml HI mini you tr• e, toirethor with our # <* fU ® K SALZER l S MILLION DOLLAR "POTATO S SHI H upon receipt of thin uotico A l4c. Z JB: knotr wlfn you oner try Sn t y.rr'a z m Pri/enon Salnr'a loop- rar- A Z OHtnarlinHtTomato (iiAnt on earth. \ ('— Z Z JOIIV X. S lI.ZKII tit.Hl) ML. I.A I KOSSK, WIS. Z vice at* to pntentnbllltv. Send for "Inventors' Primer." JIII.O 11. STICVKNS A CO.. Attyi-.. I listah., 1864. SI 7 I Mini., \VaNliin H iii. D. (. I; i i it. -11 •• -. i hit .i; o, Cl'\ clu ml au<l Detroit. S CURES WHERt ALL fISE FAILS. 5 ■ Best Cough Syrup. Ton ten good. Uso E iutliuo. Sold 1)\ druggihts. • ■ j BaSKBBGaBHBSai \ ■ lii the country it is hard to get help for the house hold work. Wives, mothers and daughters who do their own work should have the very best of everything to do it with. Ivory Soap is the best: it cleans quickest and is easiest on the hands. It floats. A WORD OF WARNING.—There are many white soaps, each represented to be "just as good as the Ivory ; they ARE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack thj peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for "Ivory " Soap and insist upon getting It. Red, Rough Hands, itching, Burning \ Palms, and Painful Finger Ends. '' -Jfj One Night Treatment Soak the hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear, during the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching, feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful, and points to a speedy cure of the most distress ing cases when physicians and all else fail. Sore Hands 8 Years Cured. Pain So Intense Would Nearly Twist Fingers From Sockets, hands Puffed Up Like a Toad. Water Rail Through Bandages to Floor. Had to Walk the Floor Until Would Fall Asleep. Fingers Would Peel Like an Onion. Doctors Could Not Cure. Eight rears a;ro I got sore hands, commencing with :t burning sensation on my fingers and on top of the hand. When I ruhhed them, you could see little white pimples. I felt like twisting my ringers out of their sockets. 1 had high fever, and eold chills ran over me, and so 1 kept it going until I was tired out. Nights, I had to walk the floor until I fell asleep. My hands peeled like ail onion, the ringer nails got loose, and the water ran out, and wherever there was a little pimple there the burning fire was that happened at least ten times. I am running a blacksmith shop, horse shoeing, and I would not shut up the shop for anybody, but it was hard. My hands pufled up worse than a toad. When I drove horse nails, the water from my hands ran through the bandage, on to the floor. My cus tomers refused to look at my hand. I had a friend take me to the doctor; he gave a solution of something to hatlie my hands. I went to another doctor, I think, for a year. 1 found your advertisement in a I'tica news paper, and I got the ('UTICI'RA. remedies. As soon as 1 used them I began to gain, and after using a small quantity of them I was entirely cured. 1 would not take fifty dollars for a cake of C'l TICI RA SOAP if I could not get any more. I would not, sutler anv more as I did, for the whole countrv. Fob. 22,181)9. CASPEII I)IKT\S( III.EK, Pembroke, Genesee ( 0., N. V. tfliiiplll'fl Gomplets External and Internal Treatment for Every humor, consisting ofCuTii riiA Hue (25c.), to cleanse the xkln of crusts and scale* ami soften the thickened cuticle, CuTtcuitA OINTMENT (50c.), l " itching, Inthunmution, and irritation, ami sootbeaud The bet, SI .25 heal, ami CtTlrlliA UKSOI.VENT (Sue.), to cool and cleanse the blood. A tfINQI.K HET IS often sulHciem to euro the moat torturing, disfiguring, and humiliating skin, scalp, ami Mood humors, with loss of hair, when at' else fails. Hold throughout the world. POTTKK I MUM AND CUEM. Cotir., Sole Crops., l!ostu<i, U. S. A.• All about the Skin, Scalp, and lluir," froe. Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soap Exclusively for presorting, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands. In the form of baths for aunoving irritations, inflam mations, and dialings, or too free or offensive perspiration, in tiio form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, and especially mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used it to use any other, especially for preserving and purifying tho skin, scalp, and hair of Infants and children. CiiTlcrnA SOAl*combines delicate emolilentproperties derived from (,'UTK I HI, the great, skin cure, with tho purest of cleansing Ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compounded is to be 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 be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in ONE SOAP at ONE I'UICK, vi/.., TWKXTV FIVH CUNTS, the LITSI skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet aud ULST baby soap in the world.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers