Blood Humors 'Are Cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla "I was troubled with blotches on my face, It Purifip* ftnd be 6 ttn taking ■ I rurmes Hood's Bar*iipnrilla. thft Rlnnrl ATter taking one bottle uu> I wns entirely cured." Miss ETHEL Mixen, Clarksburg, Mas*. "My brother bad a humor lu his blood which broke out In Cures frightful sore*. He ... . began taklug Hood's All Eruptions. Hnrsnpnrillaand it per manently cured him." 11. L. ELLIS, Mount Laurel, N.J. "My little boy linda large scrofula sore on his neck. I pure tinted eradicates a bottle of Hood's Bar saparilla and it cured. OCrOTUIa. I take Hood's us my spring tonic." Bins. MINNIP. BPEAH, Pa rife li ville, N. Y. A Counter Proposition. A Memphis young lady who is very fond of her sister's little child, a boy of 2 or 3 years, who is visiting her now, was trying yesterday to get him to let her "fix him up" to have hi 3 photograph taken. She got her curl ing tongs and was trying to coax him to let her curl his hair. But with true boyish disgust at the idea of having his hair- treated like a girl's, he re fused HO submit to the process. She insisted, however, and offered him svery kind of bribe, but in every in stance he refused to allow her to do what she wished, and finally, becom ing tired of her attempt to get him to submit, he sat down, crossed his legs, and looked up at hei very seriously and said: "Auntie, I teil you what I'll do. I won't take a dollar to let you curl my hair, but I'll give you a dollar If you Just go away and let my hair alone." —Memphis Scimitar. Wmm&n are Invited to write to Mrs. Pinkhsm for free advice afaaist their health, Mrs. Pinkknn J is a wo man, 111 you ftstfG painful periods, kaafeaches or any of the snore serious ills of women, write to Mrs, Plnithant? she has helped multitudes. Your tetter will ha sacredly confidential, Lydia £. PSnkham's Vegetable Compound Is known wherever the Eng lish language is spoken. Nothing else can ficssi hly bo so sura So help suf fering women. No other medicine has helped so many. Remember this when something else Is sug gested. Mrs. Pinkham's ad dross is Lynn > Mass. Her helping hand is always outstretched to suffering women. Try Grain-O! I . Try Grain-O! | Ask your Orocer to-day to show R you a package of GRAIN-O, tbo new H food drink that takes tho place of E coffee. ft The children may drink it without K injury as well as tho adult. All who J, try it, liko it. GIiAIN-0 has that n rich soul brown of Mocha or Java, g but it is made from pure grains, and 8j the most delicate stomach receives it fe without distress. } the price of coffee, w 15 cents and 25 cents per packago S Sold by all grocers. ;! Tastes like Coffee ( Looks like CofTeo f Insist that j our grocer sires yon GRAIN-Ob Accept no imitation. E AGENTS! AGENTS! AGENTS! Thegrandei' and fastest sell tug book over published i? DARKNESS £ DAYLIGHT or UGH rs srql SI LAD o'ftj QF YO3K LIFE , - —WITH ntfiOOVOTIOM J BY 11F.V. LYMAN ABBOTT. Splendidly illustrated with 251) superb engravings from flash-light photographs of reantfe. Mintste. ■ay: -God speed it." Everyone laughs and me* over It. and Agont* ar* sollin (it bj/MtotuMtirf.'.SWlOfX) more Agen wanted *ll through tho South-men ■ud women. $1 |Ot> to 92U0 a month made. Vend for Term* to Agents. Address HARTFORD PiniJ*illN(2 11 art lord, Conn. _ jPOTATOESIiffIj 5 ISfeiSCLO VER < # JOII* A. BAl.Zt.lt SEED t 0.. I.A ( HOUSE, W IS. A. ( . F DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH Lure* tough* nnd Colds. I# 11 I V"n I'rerent* fonsumptloa. IK II I PM All Druggist*. 25c- KlfcLfcfil ~ "KN. UT 10. 'O. DROPSY fSSSSSSSSiSs MMR. Book Of testimonial* and 10 davs' treatment 1T. Dr. H. M. OttEEH ■ •018. IOJ . AUaaU, oa. T.oril RitntlolpK Churchill'* I'rophcry. When the Duke of Marlborough was married to Mrs. Hammersley by May or Hewitt he met soon after the cere mony severn 1 distinguished men, of one of whom he asked if he had ever met his brother, Lord Randolph Churchill. Upon being told that Lord Randolph and this gentleman had been brought together by Mr. Jerome, Lord Randolph's father-in-law, the Duke speke quite freely of his brother's politicnl career. He war asked by one distinguished American why it was that Lord Randolph had so suddenly resigned his office as the head of the British War Department. Tho Duke of Marlborough hesitated a moment, aud theu said: "My brother discovered things there that were appalling. Jf ever the cover is taken off that box aud the inquiry and incompetence that are inside of it are revealed, it will not only de stroy any administration that may be m power at the time, but may bring England dangerously uenr something like revolution. My brother could uot face the grave responsibility, aud my only hopo is that there will eome a purification beforo Great Britiau is entangled in a desperate war. That confidence revealed by the Duke has been brought to tlie mind of the gentlemen who beard it tnauy times of late.—Philadelphia Tress, New York Letter. A Caution* Man. The familiar saw that 110 man enn •JO a hero to his valet was illustrated :o me a few (lay 3 ago in an amplified lud peculiar form. It was while sit •.iug with a mau of affairs that his itenographer eutered, sayiug that a certain other mau desired to speak to iiy acquaintance over tho telephouc. "Take it," said my man, and forth with picked up his extension machine, through which he talked with the mau it the other cud, the conversation iu iludiug matters of finance, politics and personal busiuess of a most famil iar aud contidential sort. Ho didn't niud me at all—l didn't count. We mntiuued our conversation, aud just is I was ready to leave the stenog rapher entered with several sheets of manuscript, which she laid 011 the lesk. "That goes on tile," said my man. "I invariably have a record kept of my telephone talks, and I've found it to pay. While f talk tho iteuographer holds the main line and outs it down." I made up my mind :hat if I had anything particular to lay to that man hereafter I'd tell him 011 the street, or in some place other than his office. —Cleveland Plain- Dealer. CauftGft of Decay in Timber. Decay in timber "is brought abouc in three ways—by the action of bac teria in tho albumen in the sap, by die absorptiou of water and by the iction of insects. An ordinary fir tele graph pole, without any chemical prep aration, will become rotten in seven fears. Creosote is a most effective preservative. A line of 318 creosoted poles erected iu 1818 was examined thirteen years afterward and only two showed the slightest sign of decay. In 1883 the poles wero still in use, and apparently sound. Another line of forty miles of poles were put up in 18(11 iu groups of three. Tho first in each trio was a plain polo, the second had been treated by a patent lotion and the third had been creosoted. 111 1870 ail the plain poles bad been re moved, thirty per cent, of the spec ially treated poles were exhausted, while the whole of the creosoted poles were sound. Women Thanked by Congress. The bill offering the thanks of Con gress to Miss Helen Gould for her kindness to the soldiers during tho late war will probably pass botli houses without opposition. Only two women have ever received the thanks of Con gress. Thb lirst was Dolly Madison, for having saved the original draft of the declaration of independence and Gilbert Stuart'n portrait of Washing ton at the time the White ilouso was captured by the British army and burned in 1811. In 1878 a similar honor was conferred upon Mrs. Eliza beth Thompson of New York City in acknowledgement of iur gift of Frank Carpenter's picture of President Lin coln and Cabinet signing the emanci pation proclamation. Washington Correspondence Chicago Itccoid. A Very YOUUR Foreman. A boy of twelve, though he looks older, iu Chicago, who is named George Stern, is foreman of a huge workshop in a manufactory, and has control over some eighty men and boys, none of whom seems to rescut tho youth of their responsible foreman; indeed, it says mych for Stern that he is greatly respected by the small army of work ers under him, and that his employers are perfectly satisfied with their some what daring experiment of placing so young a lad above so many fully grown men. There is only 011 c boy in his workshop who is his junior. Find Rich Ucil of China Clay. W. R. Bond and F. M. Hughes, of Custer, have discovered 011 the South ern slope of Harney Peak, five miles east of Custer, S. 13., a forty-foot ledge of the finest quality of onyx and kaolin, or china clay. Tho vein of clay is tlfteen feet wide aud tho qual ity is said to be the best. It is used for the manufacture of liue porcelain. The United States imports 75,000 tons annually, principally from Frauco. This is said to bo the largest body of kaolin in the United States. Leap Yonrs in tho Twentieth Century, The twentieth century will have tho greatest number of leap years possible (or a century—namely, twenty-four, the year 3901 will be tho first one, then every fourth year after that fa and including the your 2000. February will three times ha re five Sundays; iu 1920, 1918 and 197(5. BARBED WIRE IN THE WEST. What the Introduction of Wire Fences Via* Meant to Man and lleast. In tlie Century magazine Mr. E. Hough, author of "Tlie Story of the Cowboy," tells of the introduction of that "fourfold abomination" which marked out the path of civilization in| the far West: j A few years ago a villager down iu! Illinois bent a bit of irou about a strand of fence wire, and noticed that his cattle avoided it. Out of this.' idea grew a system of fencing which, has preserved our pine forests a few decades longer, but which brought td| an eud many decades earlier thej glorious free days of the open and un-t fenced West. Tho great cattle* ranges, over which roamed one of the! most independent populations evert seen on earth, could never have been fenced by rails, or stone walls, or boards of pine. It was difficult enough for the spider-like genius of ; advancing civilization to keep them j fenced with the cver-rcuewed web of j the fatal wire against which the wild men of the early days rebelled so ! strenuously. Yet mile by mile, thousands of miles after thousands of j miles, the cheap aud easily spun web crawled out across the West aud held !it hard and firm. You can never un ! coil the deadly web, neituer cau you i replace tho victim which it strangled. Little more than a dozen years ago the writer was with a party huutiug ' for buffalo calves iu the upper part of the Panhandle of Texas, where wo knew of a little herd still remaining 1 of thoso great animals, even thencou j sidercd virtually extinct. It was a , weary and desolate laud, where be tween water-hole and water-holo lay | sixty or seventy miles of absolute ! desert. Not a tree broke the endless ; monotony of tho plains. Tho soil was like hint. Tho sky had for months been guiltless of a drop of rain. It was a region so utterly un suitcd for the habitation of mankind that these last few representatives of a passing race of great American ani mals had chosen it as their tiual place of refuge, thinking that perhaps there they would never again hear the sound of rifleshot or see again the face of mau. Yet one morning, as wo faced the sun of another waterless ( day, we came upon a line of strong j wire fence, coming from where no ' man could tell, and running in one unbroken line to the uttermost limits of our vision! It was no delusion, no miracle, no wonder of the wild mirage. It was an accursed fact. It ; had no right there, on that free land, I where even the wind had swept for ' ages uufettered by so much as a leaf |or stem of straggling tree. As we marveled and muttered at this thing, j wo saw, in the red light of the east, a little moving band of great forms , which we knew to bo those of the buffalo. They saw us also, and with the instinct of a generation of perse cution swept away at once in flight. Across their line lay this fourfold abomination, this corded barrier, this ; new thing, this infamy never boforo | dreamed of on these free plains. Close bunched, the buffalo struck it | with the forco of a heavy locomotive, aud crushed through and over it as though they passed so many straws. Ah, thero was a thing dramatic, ad ' mirable, out thero on that faraway i desert! It was the old West rending j the net of the retiarius, casting aside ; the strands set for its undoing, aud standing on unhindered, free! See- I iug tbo beauty of this spoctacle, our best roper, a cow-puncher born on tbo | old range, rose in his stirrups and | took off his hat to cheer tho buffalo as | they lumbered on. For tweuty panels j the fence lay flat, and we rode across ! it. Along its inner side was a path I worn inches deep by the feet of count | less antelope, cut off by this fence from their ancient way to some un | known water-hole. No man of our | party felt glad at this evidence of ap proaching civilization, this fence i thrusting out into tlie wild land. : Every mau was partisan for tho buf- I falo and the antelope, and exulted at | this prostration of their euemy, | I hough knowing with sorrow how brief must be tlieir little victory. Hunting I'or IVurls. Pearls cuter so largely into the com pletion of tho fashionable woman's eve ning dress that the pearl hunting indus try is on tho increase. The dealers in pearls l'rom tho Concho River, in Texas, are profiting from this in crease in the demand for pearls, and : tho harvest brought from that locality ] finds a ready market iu Now York and other largo cities. The demand for pearls from the Coneho River is of recent date, it having inquired several years of hard work to creato a market for pearls from a comparatively unknown local ity. Men who are engaged in tho oc cupation of pearl hunting nlong tho Concho find it profitable, ns do others who hunt along the tributaries of the Upper Colorado River. Circuit I. I lie Yarmouth Bloater. The export statistics allow that as the result of last year's successful fish ing 141,585 barrels of herring have been sent from Yarmouth to all part 3 of the world—from New York on the one hand, to Jericho on the other. What a fortuuato fishing it was is shown in tho fact that tho export was 100,000 barrels in excess of that of the previous year, while tho number of herrings landed during tho season at Yarmouth was 319,110,000. • Removing Rallies of RugUnli King*. The work of removing the bodies ol |tbe kings which for years have lain beneath St. George's Chapel at Wind sor Castle has been begun, in order to make room for Queen Victoria and her descendants. .Man'* Ago of i>l*crction. A mau is said to have arrived at the age of discretion when he is more of a fnnl Oio li looks.—New York Press SOLDIER A POOR CORRESPONDENT. Why the Lsv Letters to Manila Were Mot Answered. The Postoflice Department has re* ceutlybeec stirred up in a remarkable manner by a young woman in lowa. She happens to have a lover in ouo of the regiments now on duty in tho Philippine Islands, and recently made complaint of the inefficiency of the postal service, directed to the Post master-General and also to the mem ber of Congress from tho district iu which she lives. 8110 was boiling with indignation because she had writteu twenty-four times to her lover in the Philippines aud had received 110 re ply; indeed, she had not heard a word from hitn since his departure on tho troopship from San Francisco, and was confident he had written her regularly, as he had promised to do, and that his letters had either beeu destroyed or were lying in some corner where they had been over looked or were lost 011 the way, or that he had been killed by the Fili pinos and General Otis had neglected to report his death. She denounced the expansion policy of tho adminis tration, declared that it was a cruel and a wicked war, and demanded that her lover should be sent home at once. As the youug lady's father is a per son of some prominenco in a political way, the Congressman took up the matter with the Postoffiee Department, and a cablegram was sent to the Super intendent of the Postal Service iu the Philippine Islands at tho cost of s\) a word, ordering an investigation. The report has just been received. Th-a special agent to whom the easo was assigned says that he found the girl's lover without any difficulty, en joying good health and an average state of happiness. He promptly ad mitted that he had received a lot of letters from his sweetheart iu lowa 110 couldn't remember whether the exact number was twenty-three or twenty-four—but they had come iu bunches by every transport and had been duly delivered at the camp of bis company. He also acknowledged with equal candor that he had not answered any of them because tho weather was too hot, aud ho wasn't much of a writer, anyhow. He liked to receive letters, but hated to answer them, and declared 110 had told the girl so before he left home. There fore, he did not see why she was mak ing such a fuss about it. He would write her by tho next mail aud scold her for making an official matter of their love affair. A copy of the report was sent to the member of Congress, with the request that ho forward it to the young lady. —Washington Correspondence Chi cago Record. Spectacled For Nlalii lino. The Tipton, Ind., newspapers are responsible for tho assertion that a man iu that city, whose name, for business reasons, is Withheld for tho present, has perfected a contrivance by which persons can see clearly in the darkest night without tho aid of artificial light. The instrument resembles an orili nary puir of spectacles, except that the glasses are rather thicker than customarily worn, aud have a slight brownish tint when viewed by day light. They are placed on the ejes at night, the same as ordinary spectacles. The lenses are made of transparent stone, which is ground aud polished in a peculiar manner, so as to collect aud intensify the rave of light. No night is so cloudy, it is asserted, but that some rays of light from tho stars will filter through the earth's cloudy envelope, aud those rays are so in tensified by the lens that all objects are plainly visible. lndianapolis News. Food Sliotv I'li.VAiocnoiiiicfl. There's a new face! Tho Food Show face. It is awful. As bad as tho gum chewor's face. You'd think tho majority of Food Show visitors were suffering from something that preveuted their hold ing their mouths still. And so they go, round and round, from booth to booth, exhibiting this frightful face. It's chew, chew, chew! Ugh! Why haven't they the graco to stand by a booth till they've suffi ciently masticated their "sample." But no, they evidontly consider econ - omy is wealth, for they ecouomizo their time by doing their chewing and promenading at once. All those old familiar "before" and "after" pict ures are nothing to tho "living pict ures" seeu every day.—Philadelphia Record. Hook* For Crimea. In order to give hooks for cranes greater strength for a certain quantity of metal, a foreigu inventor constructs them of steel bars welded together, and, when roughly shaped, aro stamped out, causing them to assume at the bight or bent, portion, where tho greatest stress occurs, a double chancel-like section comprised of an upper ant lower tlauge, united by a central connecting web, thus dis posing the metal into a girder form. By such manufacture it is stated that the metal is disposed to the best ad vantage to resist the stresses imposed upon it. Street Tree*. The city gardener of Springfield, Mass., recommends that sidewalk trees should be planted ou tho lawu sides, and not 011 the curb sides of the avenue, in cases where the houses are set back, so as to allow of a small plot in front of the sidewalk lino. This has some advantages. On the other hand, with tree trunks so near to the lawn, the roots would make the lawn so dry, that not even grass would thrive during hot summer w?ather. Itwilidepend on circumstances which jpiethod is best.—Meehaus' Moutblj*. Frightening the Mnnt M. Foa, the French explorer, says that lions have a wholesome fear of African wolves, which hunt In papks, and do not scruple to attack even the lion. There are terrible battles In which the lion succumbs to numbers, and dies fighting. In connection with the lion's fear of wolves, M. Foa tells a story from his own experience. It was a very dark night, so black that trees could not be distinguished until the travelers were close upon them. Lions prowled about the party,.one of them roaring from a point so close as to have an alarming effect on the nerves. The animals could not be 6een, but they could be heard on all sides. Reaching a tree, the men found one of their comrades with rifle cocked peering into the darkness, trying to discover the whereabouts of the ani mals, that could be plainly heard walk ing among the leaves. A second man was trying to relight a half-extin guished torch. Still the lions could be heard coining and going in tho darkness. At this point the na tive servant whispered the advice to imitate the cry of wolves In tho distance. The party at once be gan barking and shouting, "Hu! hu! hu!" in an undertone, as if the pack were still at a distance, while the man at the camp made the same well-imi tated cry. The effect was instantane ous. There was the sound of a rapid stampede across the dry leaves. Tho lions decamped in a panic, driven oft by the supposed approach of a pack of wolves. For the rest of the night the party was undisturbed. There In more Catarrh !n this section of the ] country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a preat many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in curable. Science has proven catarrh to boa constitutional dlse-s- and therefore require! constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. .1. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally In doses from 10 drops to a tea spoon ful. It acts directly on , the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. ! They offer one hundred dollars for any case it falls to r;: iv. S'-nd fur circulars and t• - - t.i - inoniais. Address F.J. Curney& Co., Toledo, O. | Sold ny Druggists, 75c. Rail's Family Pills are the bust. On the express trains running be tween Vienna and Constantinople the nse of a sleeping-birth costs sixty cents first class and forty cents second class for every twelve hours. A Host on Institution Among the unique institutions of this city is tho Feabody Medical Institute, 4 lluifinch street, established nine years before the death of the great philanthropist, the late Mr. George Peabody, from whom it takes its name. During the past tkhty years it ha" acdiieved a wide and lasting distinction, and today it is tho best of it- kind in this country. The medical publieuims of this instituto have millions of readers, and r.re as standard as gold. Their latest pamphlet, ninety-four i ages, entitled "Know I hyself." froe by niail on receipt of six cents for postage. Hend lor it to-day.—Boston Jour nal. In China there arc no native factoric:-. industries being still in the cottage stage, and agricultural employs more people than any sort of trade. Something For Xofhing:. What will tho inventive brain of man do next? J. C. Ilubingor, "The Starch King," Is now introducing by Ids aow and original method, the Endless Chain Starcli book, which enables you to get from your grocer one largo 10c. package of "Rod j Cross" starch, one largo 10c. package of ! "Hublngor's Best" starch, with tho pre miums, two Shakespeare panels, printed in ] twelve beautiful colors, or one Twentieth Century Girl calendar, embossed In gold, all for sc. Ask your grocer. Work performed by New York cab inetmakers on Lincoln's birthday must be paid tor at double rates. Vitality low, debilitated or exhausted cured by Dr. Kline's Invigorating Tonic. Fhee 91 trial bottle for 2 weeks' treatment. Dr. K1 ne, Ld„ 821 An.h m., I'm.ml<•' ph.a. Founded IST Fifty-eight per cent, of tlie 7.125 em ploycs of the Pullman works were born outside of the United States. M ra. Wl nsl ow's Soothing Hyt dp for children 1 teething, sot tens tho gums, reduces in flam ma - tion. allays puiu. cures wind colic. 25c a buttle The State of Washington furnished over 500,000 tons of coal 10 California : last year. I ronld not. get along without PJo's Pure for Consumption. It always cures.- - Mi s. K.C. Moulton, Keedham, Mass.. October 22. lt'J4. The Park laborers of Brooklyn have been organized into a local assembly of the Knights of Labor. I To Cure n Cold In One Day. j Take Laxative Bkomo Ql'lSlnk Tablets. All druggl-ls refund the m-msy If it falls to cure. E. W . Ouovk's signature Is on each box. 25c. San Francisco, Denver and Chicago all have trolley funeral services, and new Milwaukee is considering the prop osition. Jcll-O, tlc IVcir Dessert, Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— j Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. I At your grocers. 10 cts. I Lights dot the coast line of Great Britain at the rate of one to every 14 miles. The Ilest Prescription for Chills Mid Fever is a bottle of (iitOVK's TastBI.BSS I'nii.L Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No euro—no pay. l'rlee 50c. A leading pistol manufacturer in Mas '.chi:setts has founded a hospital. HTiat Shall We Have For Dessert? Tills question arises in tho family dull v. Let us answer it to-day. Try Joll-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared In 2 miu. No boiling! 110 baking! Simply add a little hot water A set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. Anderson (Ind.) carpenters have >een conceded the eight-hour day and ;o cents an hour. Dr-Bull's COUCH SYRUP Curss Croup and Whooping-Cough Unexcelled for Consumptives. Gives ; quick, sure results. Refuse substitutes. 1 Or. £uir t Pills cure Ihliousncn Trial,tajm je. | A simple and safe way to clean costly and easily injured articles is to make a suds of hot water and Ivory Soap, and allow it to cool until lukewarm. This solution, while very effective, is perfectly harmless. Ivory Soap contains no alkali. It will not destroy the surface or texture of any material, however delicate. Ivory Soap differs from other soaps. It is more carefully made, and the materials used in its manu facture are the purest and best. First How iu pßruittse. A Russian correspondent sends us ; details of a very interesting and amus ! ing tale told by a Russian veterinary | surgeon who was sent into the I'rai j district to buy horses and hay for tlie peasants of the famine-stricken prov inces. He had to do mostly with the natives (kirgliis), who are half-savage, but who, nevertheless, were found t-> be extremely honest and absolutely trustworthy in all buying and selling, some of them even' offering to give horses for the starving peasants. Quite a different story has the surgeon to tell of the Ural Cossacks, who did their level best to cheat him in the most barefaced manner, and on whom 110 reliance was to be placed. And yet these Cossacks are very religious and so simple in certain respects that a swindler succeeded in selling them quite a number of tickets for—para disc. The veterinary surgeon saw sev eral of those tickets, which were marked "First rows," and sold for 2.> rubles, back scats bringing consid erably less.—Commercial intelligence. Why People Are IDghthumled. A professor who has made a stud?, of children says he has discovered why the majority of peopie are right handed. Infants use both hands until they begin to speak. The motor speech function controls the right side of the body and the first right-handed mo- : tions. tending to help out speech. As \ speech grows so growo right-handed- j nest. I I Look I 25 Years ' Younger | "I am now seventy-two vests | of age and tnv hai; is as dark as f I | it was twenty-five rears ago. 9 ' I Peopie Day I look at least that | i | much younger than I am. I i| ! £ would be cntirclv bald or snow- § 1 gj white if it were not fco your | I | Hair Vigor." Mrs. Anna p 8 Lawrence, Chicago, 111., Dec. | ] | it, 1898. jjjjt I Is yours { I Snow-white? ! ; jj There is no getting around G cuch a testimonial as this. You ; j can't read it over without being j ' convinced. These persons do j , not misrepresent, for their tcsti- 1 momals arc ail unsolicited. Avcr's Hair Vigor restores | color to grav hair every time. | | And it is a wonderful food to g the hair, making it grow rich j | and heavy, and keeping it soft j I and glossy all the lime. It is j 1 also an elegant dressing. , 1 51.00 a bottle. All drujglsts. Write the Doctor W If 3*ou tlo not obtain nil tlic benefits you A desire from the use of the Vigor, write B the Doctor about It. He will tell vou just fl the right thing to do. and will sJ nd vou W his hook ou the U.tir and Scale if ton ft u request it. Address. fc | Dr. J. i . A visit, Lowd!. . hook for tb-al flower mid vegetable { | growers. Free for the asking. \ i Value of Soap as a IHain fectnnt. Soap is an important health factor White almond soap and potash soaj are claimed to destroy cholera germs in all germ diseases copious use 01 soap in washing is recommended bj physicians. It is not only the removal of dirt and effete matter by the use 01 soap, but the destruction of microbe! parasites and germs of disease. | NONE SUCH| u2 Nothing hobbles the muscles fl GA and unfits for work like ft j SORENESS Ji hfe and STIFFNESS ■ 92 Nothing relaxes them and makes fl a speedy perfect cure like y jj Si Jacobs Oil jj 1 tei! 5 m&o'' | &Z £ iSS3S9SS ssiwr-r. Rap. Sprtt*- r; ; SEEDS " :i lT"'h"e.^^V t lO DO;.Lrtf.-u FOR W herd I'eißioe* 11 -o%t.t,| nninr send ' '• sl Catalog lOc't aicne, itj DO NOT SEND US ANY MONEYI \ riiKsi.M roil veil.'. \s m EE B 3 * niL o It I 11 u Wo. 362. 2 Rub'(isand2 Pearls. '. hi Iwatitifnl Ring will adorn your hand wi'hout nir. cost to you. mmhl um any money, iti-j \ nam. ami mldrc ••. W • will send y • 1 Postpaid b • 1 our l.arjje, Handsome Dollies. different .!• si-:.v s-;i them to your Family and Frcttd-af li* •a- !i spiel is- rlie *l'-'land wo will send you by d turn mad the beautiful Ulu-. \N.■ , m*•l lit 1:. Srerliti" Silver Bracelet. Soli/ ('<•; . 1 1.1 .'(1 bracelet:.. K. 1.1 tiold Kins. N-h*| sn] s Ivor Bra Pr-s,ir id I'pii and l'earl llamU f. r a- lliiiK our Handsome I>.JlU*h. I-. A. l(Ki:i> tV CO.. Jewelry l> *il <!?! Iliir.suii Htri*rt. M "% Oltf W. L n DOUGLAS S3 & 3.50 SHOES /ELWorth S4 to $6 compared j*/\ with other makes. / // It Viiilorwd liy over r-. 91 / 1,000,000 wearers. B>l| & ■ I ['T 1 ' 1 h* ve W. L. [/ ' M stamped on*bottom. I V j- no substitute claimed to be / cxtra b>r carriage. State kind ot ieathef and width, plain or can toe. Cat. free ouriyocts w - I- DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. §ON 10 DAYS TRIAIi Aliimlnutn Ituat. I'ruuf ( rriu ScpuratorM, alze* lto 114 cows, priof from to $lO according to siza I'-cowb,pricess7 toslo. Tboy males l r j per font more butter. Catalogue ufneturors and sell direct to ths < ■ I ttsds.s l'V'wAu'r 'lit ro" S >"o_ GIBBQNIA. X-IV. 8 CURES V/HEBE Alt ELSE FAlis! te
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers