Spring $ # Medicine. ( f There's no season when good med- f icino is so much needed as in Spring, J A and there's no medicine which does a Y so much good in Spring as Rood's f Sursapuriila. In fact, Spring Medi- $ cine is another name foi Hood's Sur- A snpurillu. snpurillu. Do not delay taking it. A v Don't put it oir till your health tone \ r gets too low to be lifted. f I Hood's i * Sarsaparilla j A Will give you a good appetite, purify A x and enrich your blood, overcome Y t that tired feeling, give you mental r Q and digestive strength and steady f Q nerves. Be sure to ask for HOOD'S, A A and be sure that you get Hood's, the Y best medicine money can buy. Get r V a bottle TO-DAY. All druggists. # d I>rlco*l. # m '* h I'OIO.UOOR. ... i.utr >ur*ice. Tho Irish brigade in the Boer army numbers 2,500 men. The German bri gade has 2,000, nearly all trained in the German army, and commanded by offi cers who fought against France in 1870. And a third brigade of foreigners is composed of French. Scotch and Eng lish, the last two elements fighting as valiantly against tho British as those who make up the Irish brigade. There are nearly 200 Americans, principally from the Rocky Mountain country, en rolled in the Irish brigade. Gen. Blake, a West Point graduate and an Indian fighter en Die plains, leads this brigade. PO.- .ILLUFT. Wyoming o .uveyard of vast numbers of enormous fossils. The bones of animals and great reptiles that flourished In the jurassic and the triassic period of the earth's• geologi cal history are now being dug out ol the sandstone strata and the shale. Fossil mining has become quite an in dustry in the state. MY BtAUIIhUL BABY BOY Weak Women Made Happy ly Lydia K. Pinltliam'a Vegedkble Compound "Letter!* from Two Who Now Hav Children. "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM: —It was my ardent desire to have a child. 1 had been married three years and was childless, so wrote to you to find out ago, stating my case to you. " I had pains through my bowels, headache, and backache, felt tired and sleepy all the time, was troubled with the whites. I followed your advice, took your Vegetable Com pound, and it did me lots of good. I now have a bain* girl. I certainly be lieve I would have miscarried had it not been for Lydia E. Pink ham's Vege table Compound. I had a very easy time ; was sick only a short time. I think your medicine is a godsend to women in the condition in which 1 was. I recommend it to all as the best medicine for women." MRS. MART Lam:, C'oytee, Tenn. INSOMNIA have been using ( ASt.'.IKIvTN lor insomnia, with which I have been afflicted for over twenty years, and I can say that Cuscarots have given me more relief than any other reme dy I have ever tried. 1 shall certainly recom mend them to my friends as being all they are .represented." THUS. GILLAKU, Elgin, 111. CATHARTIC mmmmb TRADE MARK REOISTERCO Hetnant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. Il!r £>c .iOc ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... NO-TO-BAC r. n. pT n, 'oo. PWONMISRPSwSa [ Most talked of potato on earth ! I r.er'B Earliest Six Weeks' Potato. , [ largest farm and vegetable seed Y^Wb I frowersln U.S. Potatoes, ft. 20and/y f',tal upnhbl. Rend this notice and be.jgjftngfo,KALly jj |j JOHNA'SALZER SEED (HACROSSM DROPSY fHSffiSiaSsss cases Bo.ik of testimonials and 10 dny' treatment Free, Dr. H. H. GREEN'S 80NB. BOX o. Atlanta, Oa. ore u h 1 Thompson's Eye Water BRYAN NAMES ISSUES THAT ARE UPPERMOST IN THE HEARTS OF PEOPLE, We Must Release Ourselves From Finan cial Bondage to England The Great Breeder of Trusts Anglo-Amerlcuu Conspiracy Exposed to Light. The effort of the Republican party to secure additional legislation on the money question is compelling the peo ple to study the subject anew. The fact that England's reverses in the Boer war disturbed the New York mar kets and caused a drop in stock values, variously estimated at from five hun dred millions to one billion, has led the people to inquire what would be the result in case England should ever at tack a nation of her size and become engaged in a great war, writes W. J. Bryan in the New York Journal. The gold standard plan will not be complete until the gold is the only le gal tender, and when that time comes It will be Impossible for the United States to have an independent policy on any subject, because the threat of a financial panic will be the answer to every attempt at independence. This danger is gradually dawning upon those who in 1890 were deceived by the ?ry of "sound money" and "an honest dollar." The attempt of the Republicans to establish a paper money trust and give to national banks control of the paper money of the nation is causing alarm among those who seemed in different to the gold standard scheme. The fact that a permanent national bank issue upon present security will necessitate a permanent and increas ing national debt is compelling atten tion, and those who believe that the people should he consulted in matters >f legislation will not forget that this 'hange from green backs to national lank notes is being attempted without :he question ever having been sub mitted to the people at a national elec ion. I have found the people rapidly twakening to the dangers of the trusts. Vlen who did not think the question mportant in 189G are now convinced 'hat the private monopoly has reach ed proportions where It is dangerous to the political as well as the industrial velfare of the nation. "Give the hoy a chance" is a slogan .hat will be repeated with increasing rmphasis by those who realize that ander monopolistic tendencies the day of industrial freedom is fast passing md the day of industrial servitude ap proaching. As various branches of industry are passing into the hands of a few great aiagnates, the consumers of finished products, the wage-earner and the pro ducer of raw material, all realize that '.he evils of a landed aristocracy are small in comparison with the evils of '.he threatened industrial despotism. The attempts now being made to destroy competition when fully con summated will substitute for a multi tude of independent and ambitious producers, artisans, merchants, manu facturers, bankers and professional lien a few men of immense wealth, controlling all production, with many employes, a few great corporation law yers, with many clerks, and one great bank, with branches throughout the country. There is apparent among the plain people a feeling that they are not shar ing in the prosperity which Republican orators and editors picture with so much rhetoric. The Republicans as sume that a man will vote the Repub lican ticket as long as he is not com pelled to ask alms. They underrate the intelligence and patriotism of the masses when they think the producers of wealth incapable of seeing the ten dency of Republican legislation. In all my speeches I devoted consid erable time to the subject of imperi alism, and I found that the arguments against a colonial policy were well re ceived. I am convinced that the effort to en graft such a policy upon our form of government will alienate more Repub licans than have left the Republican party in any previous campaign. As the purpose of Republican leaders to forcibly annex the Philippine islands become more apparent, the defenders of that policy become more and more bold in their repudiation of fundamen tal principles, and as the doctrine of force is more boldly avowed the dis affection among the Republicans in creases. When the Republican party meets the speeches of Abraham Lincoln in the next campaign it will find that the gulf between Linoolnism and Hanna- Ism 13 so great that the admirers of the former cannot be followers of the lat ter. If the Republicans assert that an im perial policy will pay, they will be compelled to put a pecuniary value upon the lives that will be sacrificed in the purchase of the supposed advan tages. If they assert that the nation is following divine guidance in the prose cution of a war of conquest they will be compelled to show the credentials of the man through whom the divine will has been revealed. If they assert that circumstances make it necessary to remain in the Philippine islands, they will be met with the reply that a Republican ad ministration has created the circum stances which are relied upon to jus tify the retention of the islands. Great Converters. Mr. W. H. Harvey, the author of "Coin's Financial School" and other books, and who has lately written a new work eutltled "Coin on Money, Trusts and Imperialism," that prom- [ ises to be more popular than any of ' his books, has received many letters personally and through his publishers that reflects the power of his writings. ■ The new book will in all probability | surpass the "School," as evidenced by the orders for it and the showers of I letters and commendation. Mr. Phillip j Kief of Kerkhoven, Minn., in a letter to the publishers says: "Seven out of ten Republicans will vote with us this fall who read your book on "Money, Trusts and Imperialism." While Mr. Kief's estimate may be too high, hun dreds of others write in the same vein, and there is no doubt but that the latter book is a power in the land. The Democratic organization everywhere would do well to encourage its circula tion. A LA WEYLER. One essential reason why Mr. Mc- Kinley is afraid to offer mediation be tween Great Britain and the Boers is that it exposes his own conduct toward the Filipinos to the sneers of the world. He is now talking of issuing a proclamation declaring all Filipinos bearing arms to be bandits, not en titled to the protection of the rules of war. This is another way of saying that no quarter is to be given to any found with arms in their hands. Gen. Weyler has been held up to the execration of humanity for issuing a similar order directed against the Cu ban patriots. And yet his order had at least the technical justification that the Cubans were in tne eyes of the world still subjects of Spain. But the Filipinos have accepted American sovereignty and have from the first denied the right of Spain,against whom they had for three years been in rebel lion, to transfer a sovereignty over them which she did not possess.—Bur lington (la.) Democrat-Journal. ENGLISH CONTEMPT. One English newspaper, the London j Review, has the correct idea about American newspapers and American public sentiment, in the matter of the war against the South African repub lics. It says: We fear no correct presentment ol the real feeling in America regarding! the war reaches this country, but thera 1 is no doubt the balance is against us. The administration organs and finan cial organs are still strongly with us, but the latter are beginning to waver because the war is begining to injure trade. It must not be forgotten how completely the administration is in the hands of the great financiers and trust companies. The Money Trust Movement. The Washington Times condemns the "nefarious measures of currency juggling which Mr. Hanna and his con tributory Wall street clique are en deavoring to push through congress," and adds: "The menace of this money trust movement to the political fortunes of Mr. McKlnley and the ideas and poli cies he represents is entirely obvious to thinking Republicans. Even the doc trinaires of the organization who are honestly deluded with the belief that the single gold standard would furnish money of redemption sufficient In quantity to make exchanges, preserve the equilibrium of prices, and the equities between debtors and creditors, are distinctly alarmed at a scheme which would in effect wipe out the idea of a metallic currency and place the country on u single basis of bank ers' credits." Benefits to labor: The Chicago street • car companies contemplate requiring their conductors, gripmen and motor men to furnish bonds from a surety company. As the bonds require $5 pre mium each and the rake-off consider able. the benevolence of the scheme ia apparent. By and by every man, woman and child in the country will be compelled to furnish bonds and pay a l>remlum to breathe the free air ol heaven. It will add to the prosperity of the surety companies. It is said that John D. Rockefeller is #bout to sever his connection with the Standard Oil company, to avoid any further annoyance from the anti trust crusade against the Standard. This will be a relief to the company, but the agitation may follow Mr. Rock efeller inasmuch as he is the author of it. Mr. Rockefeller must sever all connection with himself to escape, and even then the odor of coal oil will cling to his memory. The Chicago Tribune thinks Senator Pettigrew should resign because he has made himself so very obnoxious to the Imperialists, who can not bear to bo called by their right, name. There are plenty of other McKinley organs who want everybody but Republican im perialists to go away and let their scheme alone. It is sad to think that there are some Americans left who will neither resign nor shut up. Simon Bolivar Buckner. who once ran for president and carried one pre cinct in the United States, is now tell ing the country how badly Mr. Bryan will be beaten in 1900. This venerable prophet of evil could speak more au thoritatively of the prospect of fogyisra as represented by those souvenirs of an age that is gone, Palmer and Buckner. —Buffalo Times. The new criminal defense adopted by the Republican party in Kentucky and approved by the McKinley organs all over the country is the aroused pas sions of a defendant in a law suit, which iavyel him to the plaintiff. TRIJE BUL^WHACKEft ' tire oir tho'Metl'wJio " Fr ° lBbt " ed It" an the ylalusi The ambition of every Hue bnll whacker in the old days on the pl.tinr, was some day to be a wagon master' of a freight train. The wagon master was tho boss of everything in tha train. His employers gave him full control of the train and its freight. Ho gave orders with an imperial will, and when he shot and killed a man who was wilful or refused to accept his authority there was no one to call him to account. Jlauy times a wagon master was entrusted with the trans portation of $20,000, even 830,000 worth of freight over 2000 miles of trail through a hostile Indian coun try, where no whites had passed for weeks and where no law was, known. The wagon master kept close watch over the men on the wagon 3. He knew what bullwhackers knew how to work the oxen, and what bullwhackers were lazy. Ho examined the wagons several times a day; he had loads shifted from weak to strong wagons; he knew where water could be had and where each camp was to be made; he reckoned how long food would last nud what spots in the long route would be the most likely ones for at tacks by savages. For this service he got 8123 a mouth. Another man next in authority to the wagon master was the herder, who somotimes acted as deputy wagon master. In the day timo the herder rested in a wagon under tho canvas top. The moment camp was reached his work began. Ho bossed the men about feeding tho oxen, getting the mess of flapjacks, coll'ee and bacon, ami occasionally somo elk, bear or buffalo meat. Then while the men slept he kept watch of the catup, lest the oxen might stampede in fright or some Indians draw near. When day light came he called: "801 l oat, roll out, roll out," to tho men. Then when he had eaten his morning llup jacks and drunk his coffee he would go to bed in tho wagon. .Largo vol umes might be tilled with stories con cerning the days of freighting along the Utah and Santa Fe trails. Near Wagon Mound, N. M., there is a boulder surrounded by eleven white crosses. Tho spot is plainly visible from the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad ears. A gang of Mexi can bandits lay concealed there one day in June, 18GG, when a freight train of unusually valuable merchan dise was expected that way. In the battle that was waged between -he bullwhackers and bandits eleven of the former and four bandits were killed.—New York Sun. A Millionaire's Imagination. "The deals of Cecil Rhodes are generally profitable, and, though in vestors are still waiting for their dividends from the Chartered Com pany, that concern has a rich asset in Rhodesia, and the British Empire a flourish colony. Where once tho Kaffir kings hail their place of killing a beautiful town now stands. Mr. Rhodes' dream has come true. When chided with embarking on such a massive undertaking, he replied quietly: 'ln fancy I see people, point, iug toward Lobengula'scamp, walking through shady avenues.' "Not only does Bulawayo have shady avenues, but wide streets, beautiful buildings, tramways, a gov ernment house, handsome stores, a race course, line club-house, and, iu every respect, is a modern city of perhaps 4000 inhabitants. A railroad and telegragh connect it with Capo Town. Both are now being pushed into Central Africa. In the near future another road will open the way to Bevia on tho East Coast. "Wliero the Kaffir hordes formerly lived in sluggish indolence or else fought to exterminate one another, towns are now springing up, trees growing, steam plows turning up the soil. A class' of human beings dwells here now that 11. M. Stanley characterized as the 'pick of Pic cadilly in South African co3tuuic.' Everywhere you see signs of Rhodes handiwork. lie pays for experiment in forestry, gardening and irrigation. He hopes by example to teach the na tive African how to develop the laud." —Ainslee's Magazine. A Chemical Experiment* Gentlemen, I will now endeavor to show you the combustibility of chem ical compounds. This experiment, you perhaps know, is delightfully dan gerous; it has undoubtedly caused more deaths iu various schools and colleges than uny other experiment known to science. Only yesterday three laboratories were totally wrecked and five hundred and Mifty-scveu stu dents were instantly killed during the performance of this experiment. When exposed to view, gentlemen, it ex plodes with terrific violence. A slight jai will 3et it off, therefore no one is allowed to wink or breathe while the substance is iu tho room. Those meu under the chairs may save themselves some iuconveuienco by climbing up into tho gallery. That pale individual who is pushiug vigorously against the door might better save his strength for future emergencies. The door, gentlemen, is doubly locked aud barred. Don't be alarmed at that dis tant rumbling; my assistants are only bringing tho compound up the stairs and tho bomb-proof cases are heavy. Before £he experiment begins I feel obliged to inform that fleshy person iu tho further corner that he had bet ter get up from his kuees and open his eyes so he may get the full benefit of the lecture. Everything is now ready. I will hasten below to the basement and call for the Cambridge fire encouragers while my assistant performs the experiment.—Harvard Lampoon. The Possibilities of Man. What man has got to do man can 3o.—New York Press. What Do Hie Children Drink? I Don't give them tea o.r,.c'ofTeo. Have | you tried the new food Heinle called'" GRAIS-O? It is delicious and nourishing, 1 and takes the place of coffee. The "'more | tiRAIN-0 you give the children tho ihofe \ health you distribute through their sys i turns. GRAIN-0 is mado of pure grains, HOU whou properly prepared litre the dhoiS® Pernios of coffuu, but costs about u much. Ail grocers sell it. 15e. and 25c. ,| It is proposed by a Michigan com pany to carry an electric current of 40,- 000 volts 90 miles. What simii We Have For Dessert) This question arises in the family daily. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious aud healthful dessert. Prepared In 2 iiiin. No boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot water & set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. An Edinburg professor says it is the "morning dram" which is the curse of ' the country. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a dean Bkin. 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. . Austria had 255 strikes in 1898, in volving 885 establishments, with .39.000 laborers. Jcll-O, tin N *v Blisscrt, Pleases all the fnmily. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. Music is being printed in one-half the time on aluminum plates as against stones. To Cure Constipation Forever# Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. A referendum of the labor unions in Colorado decided to nominate a State | ticket. VITALITY low, debilitated or exhausted cured I by Dr. Kline's Invigorating Tonic. FIIEB $1 trial bottle for 2 weeks' treatment. Dr. Kline, Ld., 981 Arch St., Philadelphia. Founded 187 L The London Stock Exchange has raised $.12,500 for the Indian famine relief fund. Piso's Cure is a wonderful Cougli medicine. -Mrs. W. I'D HI nr. Van Stolen and Blake Aves., Brooklyn, N*. Y., Oct. 20,18 M. Artificial flowers, mixed with the real ones, are just now used for table decora tions. Edac&te Yoar Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. The number of persons employed in English collieries is over .385.000. The Rest Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS CUII.L TONIC. It Is simply iron and quinine In a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 500. The Australian rabbit is said to be as 1 far from extinction as ever. How Are Tour Kidneys V Dr. Hobbs' Sparagus Pills cure all kidney ills. Sara pie free. Add. Sterling itemedy Co., Chicago or 11. V. Since the close oi the Civil War SIOO.- ; 000,000 has been spent in the South for | negro education. To Core a Cold in One I>ay. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All druggists refund the money if it falls to cure. B. \V . GROVE'S signature is ou each box. 25c. The Chinese minister at Washington ! makes his official and social visits about the capital in an automobile. ■■ —minimi—MHHimmii 1 1 mini auiiTgomotSMßiMHEh I Cou Hardly Breathe "I had a terrible cold and H could hardly breathe. I then | tried Ayer's Cherry Pectorol | and it gave me immediate relief, f J I don't believe there is a cough | | remedy in the world anvwherc I 1 near as good."—W. C. Layton, | I Sidcll, 111., May 29, 1899. aniiMilm n iinnwmtnnaiiimn i mi jm | Cures Night Colds How will vouf cough he tonight ? Worse, probably. For it s first a cold, tben a cough, then bronchitis or pneumonia, and at last consumption. Coughs always tend downward. It's first the throat and then the lungs. They don't naturally tend to get well. You have Jo help Nature a little. You can stop this downward I tendency any time by taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Then 1 take it tonight. You will cough less and sleep better, and by tomorrow at this time you will be greatly improved. Yon can get a small bottlo of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, now, for 25 cents. For hard coughs, bronchitis,asthma,and tho croup, tho fo cent si/.o is hotter. For chronic cases, as consumption, anil to keep on tho SI.OO size is most MORPHINE in Mopph.M? habit, t rial treatment, free of 'liaryv, of the moitremarkabte remedy ever discovered. Contains Cireat Vital Principle heretofore unknown. Re. frnetory Cnioa solicited. Confidential corresponded a Invited from all, especially Physicians. ST. JAMBS SOCIETY, u3i BROADWAY. NEW YORK. . .. . "I am getting mighty tired picking up pieces of soap that are thrown out around this house. The very first time I go to town I am going to get a box of Ivory Soap that floats on the water so you | Ca " SCe IVORY SOAP-IT FLOATS. : Some Splendid Opportunities Are Open la tlie Australian Colonies. ! Queensland is practically undevel oped as yet, and It is only 40 years old. that having been the time since its separation as a colony. It contains nearly 700,000 square miles, and has only 500,000 population. North Queens land has a population of only 100,000, and yet it is an exceedingly rich sec tion in natural resources. Charter Towers, 82 miles west of Townsville, the principal gold mining section, pro duced 457,850 ounces of gold in 1898, of the value of $5.7*84,720, and the total output of gold for the colony during the past year was 920,048 ounces, val ued at $13,751,775. The colony has produced, up to date, minerals to the ! value of $225,000,000. Copper, silver.tin, | etc., are some of the minerals existing ;in large quantities. Within the next few years there will be a tremendous ; output of copper, as a railroad is being j built to the very rich Chilagoe mines. North Queensland is a great grazing j country, and, as the climate and the | abundance of native grasses are all fa vorable to grazing, the profit on sheep and cattle is very large. There are numbers of sheep ranches on which there are 100,000 sheep, one of which 'has 1,250,000 head. Cattle raising is also extensively engaged in, the ex ports of cattle from the northern por tion of the colony alone being 2,500 | head a day for ten months in the year. A herder can sell cattle at —with a ; profit—ss a head, and when he gets $lO, as he often does, the profit is very great.—Cincinnati Commercial-Trib une. lliiitllng V.as Too. j Critic —Ob, Mr. Pennington, there is j one thing J do so like about your nov | HIS. Mr. Pennington (much pleased)— Yes! And what is that? Critic—The; j lire printed in such clear type.—Stra; j Btories. Progress. With time comes progress hnd advance j merit in all lines of successfully conducted | ! enterprises. Success comes to those only \ who havo goods with superior merit and a | | reputation. In the manufacture of l uu- i | dry starch fortlie last quarter of a <•- ' ury, J. C. Muhinger has been the peer of ill others, and to-day is placing on the i market his latest inventions, "lied Cross" ; and "Huhfngor'* Best," the finest laundry ! starches ever offered the public. His new and original method enables I you to obtain one large 10*. package of j "Hod Cro-s" starch, one large 10c. package j I of "Ilubingor's Ilest" starch, with tie* pre- 1 I mlums, two Shakespeare panels, printed in i twelve beautiful colors, as natural n ii:'o, i or one Twentieth Century Girl calendar.! I the finest of its kind over printed, ail for ' sc. Ask your grocer. | The Rev. Dr. Mackenzie, a I're iiv I I terhm minister of San I'rmvi o . has 1 I made a fortune by raisin- oranges #IOO lie wind. #IOO. , The. venders of this paper will he pleased to : learn that there is at least; one dreaded dls ; ease that science has been able to care in all , I its stages, and that is Catsrrh. Hall's Catarrh i C ure is the only positive cure now known to i j the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- ; i stitutional disease, requires n constitutional j ! treatment. Hall's Catarrh i ure is taken iut.er- , lially, acting directly upon the blood and inn- j I nous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy j ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con- I | stitution and assisting nature in doing its i work. Tlie proprietors have so much faith in | its curative powers that thev offer One Hun dred Hollars for any case that it fails to - ure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. ,1. CIIKNKY A Co, Toledo, O. I Sold by Druggists. 7.V. Hall's Family Pills arc the best. I Capital invested in farming in tlii country is estimated at $i 6.000,00. >.ooo. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your I.ife Aay. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag : netlc, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- ! Bac, tlie wonder- worker, that makes weak men ! strong. All druggists, 50c or CI. Cureguaran- ! teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. ! Ma (til in- Glass Blowing. A glass factory has been started at St. Helens, in which the whole system of blowing is replaced by an automatic arrangement of molds and blow pipes worked by compressed air. The output has been much increased. Mrs Win-low'- SnothingSyiup for> hihlii>\ teething, softens the gums, reduces iutlamma tion, allaysi>ain.cures wind colic.•'.) a bottle. ALABASTTNE In tho original entirely different l'rom all kal somlnes. Heady for use in tints by adding cold water. LADIES naturally prefer ALA BASTING for walls and ceil ings, because it i 3 pure, clean, durable. Put up in dry pow dered form, In five-pound pack ages, with full directions. ALL kalsomines are cheap, tem porary preparations made from whiting, chalks, clays, et.- , and stuck on walls with de caying animal glue. ALAI3AS TINE is not a kalsomlne. BEWARE Of the dealer who says he can sell you the "same thing" as ALA BASTING or "something Just as good." H\ 1B Glther not posted or LA try ing to deceive you. AND IN OFFERING something he has bought cheap and tries to sell on ALABASTINE'S de mands, he may not realize the damage you will suffer by a. kalsomlne on your walls. SENSIBLE dealers will not buy a lawsuit. Healers risk one by selling and consumers by using Infringement. Alabastlne Co. own right to make wall coat ing to mix with cold water. THE INTERIOR WALLS of every church and school should be coated only with pure, dur able ALA BASTING. It safe guards health. Hundreds of tons used yearly for this work. IN BUYING AT, A BASTING, customers should avoid get ting cheap kalsomines under different names. Insist on having our goods in packages and properly labeled. NUISANCE of wall paner Is ob viated by ALABASTINE. It can be used on plastered walls, wood ceilings, brick or can vas. A child can brush It on. It docs not rub or seal© off. ESTABLISHED in favor, shun all imitations. Ask paint deal er or druggist for tint card. Write us for interesting book let free. AHA BASTING CO., Grand Rapids, Mich. R*M € C'eSsts i to pain thh y car 200,000 w Hlf i u't'fi! i 3 0 .2 2 est earlu'ct-Tiimnto (iiit't'it on uarth. * ('— A W. L„ DOUGLAS S3 & 3.50 SHOES <QsyWoi'th $4 to compared "N. m\ with other makes, f /Mi / 000 wearers. hsA §3 ji | (*> ' L LUGLAS jfoE CO^Bro^kton;'M/SS^' I ON u lO DAYS TRIAI Separators. nizos 1 to l.loowa, price front 45 to according to size. 15 cows, prices $7 LoslU. They male) 15 per cent move butter. Catalogue an terms free Don't bir until ufacturers and sell direct to th <J 1 HSUN.S I'tW Alt L MFG'^CO!! GrXjBSOMriA. PA. R TP BP ft! s,:< lln i) PAI Eli I gfgg vice ii a to put gullibility. Send for •'lnventors' ! n ,T r u ~ U KK "• *tkvi;.VS ACOT. Lstab.. 18b4. 817 l-ltlisi.. WiiNliiii M t on, l>. t'. tsi ain lies: ("hiiTi;;,('l,-M-iainl ami Detroit DR. ARNOLDS COUSH I Cures (otlgliK mid t 'oUls. MOT ofl (J BpfiA j I re vents ConHiimnl ion. K BR B pa D All DriigclMs. 25c. S &B GREGORY'S SEE3S ' I ", r 40 7 * ar " ( l'" 'avorito i, it li prac. h**'cfctahigiirt deacrilxis r.ll ti- J. U. tiOXUOItV * RON. Rarblabrail, Hum. • CURES WHERE ALL BSC FAILS™ |H
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers