"Never Do Things by Halves." Sometimes the condition of your health could be de scribed as half-sick and half ivell. 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 nvholly v>ell ? Your dragged ouf, 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 vxHjld come home from nvork 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 Oak St., Fall Mass. Hood'a I'illsmrs Utt Ills; the nonlnltstlng and only cathartic to talcs with Hood's SsrsaparHls. /Drßull'sN Cure# all Throst aud Lung; Affections. COUGH SYRUP; Get the genuine. Refuse substitutes. A \IS SURE/ Dt. £uiri nil, cur. Vyipefitia. TV,a/, 20 foryu "Tea" School. The oddest school In ths United States Is now In dally session at Pine hurst, Summerville, S. C., Bays 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 R's — "reaflin", 'ritln' and 'r'thmettc"—and tea picking. And the last is not the least important study. The rapid de velopment of tea raising In the South has received additional Impetus from the announced Intention of Sir Thomas Lipton to invest $500,000 In tea cul ture in South Carolina. Sir Thomas is familiar with the soil and climatic ronditions of the stjte, having at one time worked as a laborer on a rice plantation in Georgetown county. The United States Department of Agriculture is taking a lively Interest in the "tea school," and has given It financial aid. There is a Chinese daily paper pub lished ill San Francisco. VWwman's S€seSis®y TTroubios Why trifle with health when the easiest antl surest help is the best known medicine in the world 7 J^Lydia^E^Pinkhamh^egs^^ is known everywhere and thousands of women have been cured of serious kid ney derangements by it. Mrs. Pinkham's meth ods have the endorse ment of tho 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. Pinkham advises suffering women free of charge. Her address Is Lynn, Mass, I TSE MILiiON bOLiAß™ A l®ll r n'i j- ' , Up abb!. Semi this iiolit;cniid > "c!wL,| IJOMA.S ALZE'r 5 FED 6-LACRotSls] IBK habit. I Pin 11 rcn tmont. lYee of ch 11 rxet of the moit rrmarkal-l.: rcnu-Uy ever discovered. Contains Grent Vital t'rlnrlplo heretofore unknown. Ro. fYnrtory Chk-h solicited. Confidential correspondence Invited all. especially Iliynlrlu lie. ST. JAMES SOCIETY, uli BROADWAY, KBW YORK. r. n. u. 9 00 I £<3%Fty's SEEDS j C*t T ? ft .°** i j Barter's ink iio best Ink mude, but 110 dearer than tho poorest. DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH I'?eCJnU U Con\.?mptlm ,U KILLER All Drueelitß, 35e- Bmlfcifcifcii r ;o".™S.t 0 ".™S. tb {Thompson's Eye Water \ PEST OF PRAIRIE DOGS FARMS IN THE TEXAS PANHANDLE ABANDONED BECAUSE OF THEM. Ilarr Taken Possession of the Country From Which Other Animate Have Keen Driven—'Thousands of Dollars Spent In Fighting; Them. THERE has been such an in crease in the number of prairie (logs iu the panhandle section (, of Texas during the past few years that msuy tarins will have to bo abandoned unless some method of ex terminating the pest is adopted soon. These little animals have multiplied many fold since the country has be r.omo settled up with stockmen and farmers. The other wild animals, suoh as coyotes and wolves, have been driven out,'and the prairie dogs now have undisputed sway. In some parts of the panhandle there are colonies of prairie dogs which literally overran the country. There nre often as many as 5000 of them found ocoupying a few acres of ground. The cultivation of wheat around Abilene ad other locali ties of the panhandle is seriously im peded by the destruction wrought by the little animals. It frequently hap j pens thai colonies of the prairie dogs are established right in the center of a large wheat field and the animals forage on tho growing grain, com pletely destroying the crop. Many farmers and stockmen have undertaken tho task of exterminating the prairie dogs on their own laud. Among these who have made a war against the pest is Frank Sterrot, a I prominent stockman of Abilene. Last year he expended SISOO in extermin ating prairie dogs on his ranch. All of the (logs 011 about sixty sections of land were killed. This year he re ports that the dogs have invaded the land from the adjoining territory on all sidos, anil he will hnve to do 3ome | more slaughtering of the animals ' around the outer edges. He claims : that tho money expended iu killing , the animals is a good investment; as ! the increase iu the yield of grasscoin -1 pensates for the outlay. The favorite j method of killing the dogs on farms i whero live stock is not running at large is by poison. A stockman living !at Sweetwater invented a trap for t catching the animals severnl months ago and it is rapidly coming into gen eral use. This trap is placed over the holes made by the animals and cap tures them when they come to the j surface. Thousands of live dogs have been captured in this manner and in some places they are skiuned and their skins marketed in St. Louis and Chi cago for good prices. LEGISLATION- IS riIOI'OSED. The fact that thousands of acres of grass aud growing farm products nre annually destroyod by tho pests caused a strong effort to be made at tho last session of the State Legislature to pro vido for the extermination of the ani mals in the State. This bill made it tho duty of the owners of laud to kill all the dogs on their property, and wheu they failed to do so the work was to be done under tho direction of the Board of County Commissioners aud the cost of same charged as a tax against the owner of the property. The west aud southwost Texas mem bers of the Legislature favorod tho passage of the bill, but it was opposed by tho east Texas members. Thero are no prairie dogs in east Texas and tho representatives iu tho Legislature from that part of the State were un able to take the bill seriously. The extermination measuro will come up again for consideration at tho next regular session of tho Legislature and it is believed that it will be passed. It is conservatively estimated that in some sections of the panhandle coun try fully fifty per cent, of the grass and agricultural crops are destroyed each year by the animals. The prairie ilog|is a remarkable aui mal in many respects. It is of a very domestic nature. They live in colonies of from 500 to 5000 inhabitants. They live in holes which are usually from fifteen to twenty-five feet deep. They are careful to have all their living holes iu a dry soil. Thero is one hole in each colony which goes down to water aud somo of these wnter holes have been known to bo over 200 feet deep. The animals are so alort and wary that it is almost impossible to shoot them oven at close range. SHIFTED AS SQUIItRELS TO CHICAGO, It is claimed by those who have tasted the flesh of the animal that they arc good to oat and that the meat very much resembles that of tho squirrel in taste. It is said that but for their uusavory name tho little ani mals would be iu demand in the game markets of the country. Somo years ago, immediately after the construc tion of the Fort Worth (c Denver City Railroad through the panhandle, n young man from Chicago got stranded at Quanah while making his way from Fort Worth to Denver looking for u job. He was waiting to catch a freight train at the little town aud toolc a wnlk through the surrounding country to kill time pending tho ar rival of his train. He camo upon a large colony of prairie dogs and, be ing of nu inventive turn of mind and in needy circumstances, tho thought occurred to him that the little animals might be the means of furnishiughim a stake. He went back to town and proposed to the station telegraph operator, who happened to have a few dollars saved, that they engage in the business of killing and shipping dressed prairie dogs to tho Chicago market in the guise of prairie squir rels. The operator consented to the scheme aud a letter was written to a large commission house of Chicago offering a carload consigniuentjof the animals. The commission house re plied that they would receive the ship ment and urging that it be rushed for ■ ward. Upon receiving this favorable | teply the two men busied themselves during the next few days making Aad setting traps for the auimals. A num ber of boys were also employed by them and in a short time a refriger ator car that bad been ordered by them in which to make the shipment was set on the siding at Quanah and was soon filled with the dressed ani mals. The shipment reached Chicago in due time and the "prairie squir rels" are said to have mot with a ready sale. At any rate the two ship pers received handsomo cash returns from their car and a hurry-up order for as many more as they could ship. It is said that two more cars of the little auimals were sent to the Chicago commission house and that the two men t%eu left Quanah with their well fillod purses. FRESH TRADE DEVELOPMENTS. Two telepoue exchanges in Ohio, ai Gabon and Shelby, nre provided with aluminum wires instead of copper. It is believed that this is the first appli cation of aluminum to telephone ser vice. A shrewd chap named Cassias Alley, in Anderson, Ind., has established 8 barbwire telephone line, twelve miles long, which competes with those ot the old compauies. He offers the pub lic lower rates, however, and gets a good deal of business. A California miner v.lio has been prospecting aloug tho shores of Dis enchantment Bay, in Alaska, declares that he has found platinum, of which the world has now an inadequate sup ply. The metal is associated with gold, aud is to be found about forty five miles northwest of Sitka. The platinum is tho more valuable de posit, however. Seven-eighths of the Java suear crop comes to America, and is packed iu bamboo matting. It has recently beeu discovered that tho supply of bamboo is becoming exhausted, and 110 good substitute has bceu found. A sugar planter iu Java declares that a fortune awaits tho man who will devise an equally serviceable aud cheap mode of packiug sugar for shipment. The Consul at Asuncion mentions that 111 Paraguay cotton shawls, large handkerchiefs of tho same material aud socks nud stockings are exten sively worn. At present most of them come from Germany or England. Handkerchiefs are often substituted, especially iu hot weather, for shirts aud collars. Handkerchiefs with printed borders, having either dots or flowers in the design, sell well. The oil industry of California is at tracting attention by its increase. Tho output now amounts to 15,000 barrels a day, or nearly ti,000,000 a year. This yields to the producers between $7,000,000 aud $8,000,000 annually. Tho value of California's gold is scarcely more than twioathis amouut. At present Los Augeles gets a large part of tho beueflt, but it is said that indications of oil aro found all over tho State. Queer Human Kemahia. During the last few years the Gov. eminent has dug up somo queer hu man remains in various places. From a prehistoric mound iu Alabama was obtained a skull that was completely filled with suail shells, though fox what purpose cannot bo imagined. Near Chillicothe, Ohio, were uneartlicA several skeletous wearing copper masks—another unique discovery iu arcUaoology. Most remarkable of all was a human skull of irou—uot pro duced by artifice, mind you, but so made by nature. It was found im bedded in a mass of iron ore, and evi dently it was inclosed iu that way originally by some accident. In the course of centuries tho bone was dis integrated gradually by the action of water, each particlo being replaced by a particle of iron, until at length tho skull was uolougerbouo but metal. Its structure iu tlio iron is perfect in every detail, save that tho top of the head and tho lower jaw aro missing This is one of few human fossils that have beeu disclosed up to date.—Chi cago Tribune. President Ki-uger's Hat* There would seem to bo a perti nent hint of national character iu that, statue of Presideut Kruger to he erected in Pretoria. In the naive dis regard of current convention there is something that may in a measuro ex plain tho prevalence of tho unex pected in tho sterner business now iu hand in South Africa. It has long been tho fashion to chafe at the sup posed artistic limitations of modern masculine attire. Trousers have been the sculptor's bane, and the high hat has remained beyond. Tho critics, who make cowards of us all, have echoed the prejudice. Even in circles sufficiently removed from tho sus picion of a pale sestheticism the dom inance of a high hat has been ques tioned. It had never occurred to auy one to attempt to give it artistic cur rency till "Oom Paul" suddenly stood forth in it in all the audacity of im perishable bronze. There is a touch almost of moral graudeur iu this grim indifference to a well nourished preju dice. It is no ordinary man who could elect to face prosterity in a high hat. —New York Telegram. Interesting Washington Character. One of the most, interesting charac ters about Washington, aud oue of the most highly respected of the '250, 000 officials in the employ of Unclo Sam, is Captain Charles Loeffler, tho confidential messenger and doorkeep er of the President. Captain Leof fler probably knows more famous men than any other person living, because he has stood at tho entrance of tho executive chamber for over thirty years, and everybody who has entered the presence of the chief magistrate of this nation during all that time has handed a card to him. A Thoughtless Habit. Long before the average child under etande how moisture promotes adhe sion between two solid bodies he has contracted the habit of wetting 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 nexj; one to perform the same operation! Unhap pily. it is practiced by older people, and by many that ought to know bet ter. 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 nnd unconsciously, the practice is none the less prejudicial to health and of fensive to good taste. Dnw Are Your Kidney* V fir Hobbfi" Sparapuß Pills cure oil kidney Ills. Sam ple free. Add. Sterliug itemed)- Co., Chicago or N. Y. All bicycles arc taxed by the French Government. Trjr Grain-OI 'Fry Id rain-O ! Ask your grocer to-dny to show you n package of GIIAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coflfeo. Children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it llko it. Giuix-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but is made from pure grains; the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. % the price of coiToe. 15c. and 25c. per package. Sold by all grocers. A deaf mute runs a barber shop in Topcka, Kansas. Joll-O, Ili> Xew Drsscrl. lMenses all the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and btrawborry. At your grocers. 10 cts. There arc 7,431 miles of railroads in Mexico. To Cure Constipation Forover# Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 23a if C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. During the present year 25 important conventions will be held in Cleveland. To Cure a Cold In One Dny. Take LAXATIVE BHOMO QUININE TABLETS. All driurglots refund the money If it falls to cure. E. W. GllOVK's signature is ou each box. 250. Boston's municipal debt increased $3,- 000.000 last year. VITALITY low, debilitated or exhausted cured by Dr. Kline's invigorating Tonic. FUKE $1 trial hot,tie for 2 weeks' treatment. Dr. Klne, Ld., 031 Arch St., Philadelphia. Founded 1871. There arc 347 women blacksmiths in England. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Ns 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 complexiou L>y taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. A fold reserve is being accumulated in India. I believe Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my boy's life last summer.- Mrs. Allik DOUG LASS, Le Koy, .Mich., Oct. 20,180-1. The principal undertaker of Green ville. S. C., says that in the past six years be has buried in that town the bodies of 73 persons who met death by violence. You Can Haro It Also. The lady whose linens you envy, usqs "Red Cross" and "Hubinger's Best" laundry starch. It is easy to make your self an object of envy also. Ask your grocer, be cau tell you just how you can get one largo 10c. package of "Red Cross" starch, one large 10c. package of "Hubinger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two beautiful Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful col ors, or one Twentieth Century Girl cal endar, ail for sc. The salary of the mayor of Munich has been raised from $4,000 to $5,000 a year. Educate Yonr Bowels \T!th Cascarets. 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 arc draw ing up a price list to govern prices in both countries. BAD BREATH •• H hiivc been (itltiff CASCARI'TI and as a tnlld and otfcoiive laxative they arc umiply won derful. My daughter c.nil I were bothered with sick stomach and our brcuth was very bnri. After taking a tow DNBCI* of CUNCURCLS we I.HVO Improved wonderfully. Thoy are a nrcathelp In tbo family." 1137 Rlttonliouso St.. Cincinnati, Ohio. CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REOIS7BR6O Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Rood. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 2ic. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... MrrHuff llrmril, H.lruco. Mnntr.nl. !Wi, York. :t|S Sold and guaranteed by all drug- I U DAu gists to t'UKt; Tobacco Habit. I _ ON to DAM TRIAL. from *5 to $lO t<> 'BI/.0. 15cows,prices$7 t.osl(i. make 15 per cent more butter. Catalogue ufueturors and soil direct to the til listN-S rV!\V A ill M fg" *ot c) -A. D R O PS Y S2K;S rasas. Boak of tnatunoaiala and 1 0 tla ve* ti eMmint Free. Dr. B. U. QAEENB BOMS. Box B. Atlanta, *. Deafness Cannot Bo Cnrrd bv local applications.as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear There 1B only on* way to cure deafness, and that i by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the KußtAchian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sou mi or imper fect hearing, and when it. Is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation ran be taken out and this tune re stored toits normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cuses out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any ease of Deafness (caused bv catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHF.XEY 8c CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Tills are the best. Mexico is one of the United Stales' best customers in the sewing machine line. Don't Tobacco Spit aiid Smoke lour Life Atay. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or tl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago cr Now York. Berlin, Germany, is to construct an underground railway costing $25,000,- 000. What Mta.ll YVc Have For Dessert? This quostion arises in the family dally. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 min. No boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot water i sot to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. Painters in the car shops at Knoxville arc working 15 to 17 hours a day. Mrs. Window'sSoothingßytap forchiltlren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion. allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc a bottle. The average toy makers in Saxony makes about one cent an hour. The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is ft bottle of Gnovi'B TASTELESS CHILL TONIC. It is simply iron and quinine in a tastelosß form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c. Late statistics show that in London more than 300,000 families earn less than I seventy-live cents a day. e I I—. ' p——i mammuM m 1 an——— Worthless Stuff! mi—lam—ni 11 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 ling have taught us what Aycr's Cherry Pectoral will do. \ " I had a most stubborn cough for many years. It deprived me of sleep and made me lose flesh rapidly. I was treated by many eminent physicians, but could get no permanent relief. I then tried [ Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and I be gan to get better at once. I now 1 sleep well, my old flesh is back, and I enjoy myself in every way I; at the age of seventy-four."—R. N. I MANN, Fall Mills, Tenn., Feb. 7, I. miiwnii im iia i ki—ftm r i"ig, mtcbbwr It's the do-as-you-would-be- I donc-by cough medicine. Try | 1 25-cent bottle. i. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES made! J\- with other makes. f & J ,000,000 wearers. ifck. j r ' r " " ' ' j Vinilii-tdier, raimais 'w.'i'.'ouUGLAS SHOE CO.", Brockton, Mass.'' •M^ssecea9*oao*(M**f | FOR 14 CEPfITSf Wn wish to pain tliM yr-.r 2 '•iiMjrnUl ( 'ucnmberl6c Z •■tearlioat Tomato Giant on earth. • ('- 2 10111 A. HAI.ZEK BKRU CO., I.A t'ROHSK, WIS. Z ••••••aiaeesaosasaaosHßaecS PATENTtPH 1 virr n* to pnlrntnhilily. Heml for "Inventors' Primer." MII.O 11. STKVFNS A CO., 1 total)., 1864. SI7 I Itli !•)., WumIIIIIUImi. IL C. } lira itches: Cli'velHixl ami Detroit. r '' In 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 goo w as the 'lvory'; " they ARE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack t peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for "Ivory " Soap and Insist upon getting it. Sore ~~ Red, Rough Hands, Itching, Burning \ I .(<£)■ Palms, and Painful Finger Ends. U-=Ji One Night Treafnient 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 Fi'igers From Sockets. Hands Puffed Up Like a Toad. Water Ran Through Bandages to Floor. Had to Walk the Floor Until Would Fall Asleep. Fingers Would Peel Like an Onion. Doctors Could Not Eight rears ago I got sore hand?, commencing with a burning sensation on my Angers and on top of the hand When I rubbed them, you could see little white pimples. I felt like twisting my Angers outof their sockets. I had high fever, and cold chills ran over tne, and so I kept it going until I was tired out. Nights, I had to walk tlm floor until I fell asleep. My hands peeled like an onion, the Anger nails got loose, and the water ran out, and wherever there was a little pimple there the burning lire was that happened at least ten tides, i am running a blacksmith shop, horse shoeing, and I would not shut, up the shop for anybody, but it was hard. My h: nds puffed up worse than a fad. When 1 drove horse nails, the water from my hands ran through the bandage, 011 to the floor. My cus tomer.! refused to look at my hand. 1 had a frieud take me to the doctor; he gave a solution of something to bathe my hands. I went to another doctor, I think, for a year. L found your advertisement in a Utica news paper, and I got the CuTict'RA remedies. As soon as I used them I began to gain, and after using a small quantity of them 1 was entirely cured. I would not take fifty dollars for a cake of CTticura Soap if 1 could not get any more. I would not suffer any more as 1 did, for the whole country. Feb. 22,1895. CASPER DIETS! IILEU, Pembroke, Genesee Co., N'. V. fill iPfiira Com ?kte External and Internal Treatment for Every humor, %ÜB'fivUlCi confuting of Cutxci ua Poap (25c.), to cleonso the skin of crusts and sculps and soften tlic thickened cuticlo, Cuticdra Ointment (40c.), to intuiiily allay itching, inflammation, nnd irritation, and <mtheand ine bet, $1.25 heal, ""'l Cuticura Kemoi.vent (50c.), to cool and clean-e the blood. A rilKOi.E Set Is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring, snd humiliating skin, scalp, and blood humors, with loss of hair, when a'l else fails, Fold throughout the world. Potter Diiuo and Cut*. Coup., Sole Props., Uostou, U. S. A. " All about the Skin, Scalp, and Hair," free. Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soap Exclusively for presorvlnpr, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing tho scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of failing hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths for annoying Irritations, Inilam. motions, and dialings, or too free or offensive perspiration, In tiie form of washes foi 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 oilier, especially for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of infants and children. Cuticura Soai* combines delicate emollient properties derived from Cuticura, the groat skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compounded Is to be compared wit'* 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 nil th*. purp- sea of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in One Soap at One Prick, Twrntv-Five Cknts, the BRBI skiu and complexion soap, the best toilet and baby soap in the world.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers