> Spring { Medicine. J V There's no season when good med- f f lolne le so much needed as In Spring, i A and there's no medicine which does a \ so much good In Spring as Hood's \ f Sarsaparillo. In fact, Spring Medi- f # cine Is another name for nood's Sar- i A saparilla. Do not delay taking it. a \ Don't put it off till your health tone \ f gets too low to be lifted. f I Hood's I J Sarsaparilla f A Will give you a good appetite, purify A \ aud enrich your blood, overcome \ ► ▼ tbat tired feeling, give you mental f 0 and digestive strength and steady i nerves, Besuro to ask for HOOD'S, A \ aud be sure thnt you got Hood's, the J b9t medicine money can buy. Get v If a bottle TO-DAY. All druggists. j f Price sl. SfQEHMMmL Cures a Cough or Cold at once, Conquers Croup without fall. /I Is the best for Bronchitis, Grippe, Hoarseness, WhoopTiig-Cough, and for the cure of Consumption. Mothers praise it. Doctors prescribe It. Small doses ; quick, sure results. kfll Japs The 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 lighting as valiantly against the British as those who make up the Irish brigade. There Rre 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 on the plains, leads thii brigade. / re. ~ in lng. Wyoming . u ..iveyard of vast i numbers of enormous fossils. Thf \ bones of animals and great reptile.: } that flourished in the Jurassic and the \ triassic period of the earth's geologi j 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 UiiAuiiruL bAtiY BOY Weak Women Made Happy by Lydia & Piukbam'a Vegetable Compound Letters from Two Who Now Have Children. "Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—lt was my ardent desire to have a child. I had been married three years and was childless, so wrote to you to find out |gljK'JSSjJfe . reasOD ' ter some time ago, stating my case to you. " I had pains through my bowels, headache, and backache, felt tired and sleepy nil 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 baby girl. I certainly be lieve I would have miscarried had it not been for Lydia E. l'inkham'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 I was. I recommend it to all as the best medicine for women." Mrs. Mart Lane, Coytee, Tenn. INSOMNIA '•S have been aftlos CAM'AIt ttTS for Insomnia, with which [ have been silflietud for over tweniy years, and I can say that Cascarets have given mo moro relief than any other reme dy I Inivo ever tried. I shut! certainly recom mend them to my friends us bclnj* all they are represented."' Thos. Gillari), Elgin, lit G CATHARTIC Jk TftAOe MASH RIOISTIRCD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Siokon. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... SUrlUg ll.Tdy laapwy, Ctilraffa. ■•ntrral. New Yar*. 51® NO-TO-R** Bold by an drug r. n. p. hT'oo. FBinioffD^P 0 ®! Most talked of"potato on earth ! Our_*al|A[ Catalog lei lso also about 8a 1- AMMKitiCkCWi cer's .Earliest six Weeks' Potato. I.urcet farm and vegetable oeed groweraln U.H. Potatoes, fl.2oandl up abb). Rend thin uoilro and 6c. .TsAiJjWn j jPHNASALZER SEEDJ-LA_CRggwisj new d ! rc ° very : itm •ffßen Bi <k of tetimnnia? U and KMnva' tieatmeiit Free. Dr. H. H. OKEEM B BOMS. Box 1. Atlanta, 0a Eye Water ifnt I CHILDREN'S COLUMN. ||| The Conceited Coin*. •I'm just as good as silver!" The Nickel proudly cried; '•The head of Madam Liberty Is stamped upon my side. I am as white and shining As any dime can be— He needn't put on any airs, I'm twice as thick as he!" •I'm every bit as good as gold!" The Penny blustered louil; •'That tiny, thin gold dollar- He needn't feel so proud; For all his airs and graces I do not give a llg; I'm burnished just as bright as he, And half again as big!" And when the Cent and Nickel Went out upon their way. Alas! the world still held them cheap, Whatever they might say. The Double Eagle smiled. "You'll And," He said, "that par is par; It doesn't matter how you boast, But what you realjy are!" Outlook. How Birds Work. Perhaps you fancy the birds don'l work. Just watch them next time yon have a chance anil you'll find they are busy every minute. During the summer thrushes get up before 3 o'clock in the morning and don't go to bed till after 0 o'clock at night, so they work nearly 11) honrs. Think of this next time you feel inclined to grumble when you have somothiug to do for mother. Blackbirds are not so iudustrious. They only work 17 hours, but during that time they feed their little ones between 40 and 50 times. Have you ever seen a nest of young birds?" If you have, J dare say that you have noticed that their month is always open, as though they were ready for a meal. Ho Mr. and' Mrs. Dicky Bird have a pretty busy time. He Meant In He Polite. During the visit of the Princess of Wales to the Loudon hospital a little blind boy iu one of the wards was sittiug on a chair, aud the princess spoke to him. The chairman of the hospital, thinking it would be nice for the lad to know who had been speak ing to him, said: "That lady who has been speaking to you is the' Prin cess of Wales. Would you like to come up aud make your bow to her and speak to her?" The boy was delighted and jumped off his chair. He was led up to the princess, and she was told of his wish, to which she very readily acceded. The bow was duly made and then came the speech: "How aro you, miss?"—a speech which was hardly expected, but which was answered by five minutes' conversation, and the boy returned to his chair proud and happy. A Chicken Without Wing*. Chickens with exploring disposition sometimes come to grief, and such was the fate that befell a young occu pant of a South Carolina barnyard. The chick ono day found itself on the threshold of the stable. Jt began its ÜBital round of exploratiou, and pres ently scampered into a stall occupied by mule. This fellow, moved either by hunger or a bad temper, put down his hoad aud bit off the poor little chick's two wiugs! Strange tone late, but true, never theless this chicken lived to grow up. Of course it was never as other chick ens,aud it had to be very careful about running too fast. Jt eould tear aloug in a at> night line without trouble, but if it turned a corner on the run, over it weut. In losing its wings it had lost its equilibrium. The poor thing came to a premature end. One night it fell off the reost, and landed oxactly on its back. With out its wings it could not right itself, and tbo next morning it -.vus dead. How n Hoc XVa. Sold. Here is a true dog story: A family down town having a false grate in one of the rooms of the honse placed some red paper behind it to give it the effect of fire: One of the coldest days the dog belonging to the household came iu from out of doors, and seeing the paper in the grate, de liberately walked up to it and lay down before it, curled up iu the best way to receive the glowiug hoat as it came from the fire. Ho remained for a few moments. Feeling no warmth,he raised his head and looked over his shoulder at the grate. Still feeling no heat, he weut across aud carefully applied his nose to the grate and amelt it. It was cold as ice. With a look of the most supreme disgust, his tail curled down between his legs, every hair on his body say ing, "I'm sold," the dog trotted out of the room, not even deigning to cast a look at the party in the room who had watched his actions and latigbed so heartily at his misfortunes. I'hat dog had reason as well as instinct.— Troy Times. 801 l Kindergarten. Over ill Germany thore are 5000 children in one district alone who are employed to dress dolls aud help in the manufacture of various kinds of toys. All the children who do this work are under 12 years of age. They are taught the art of dressing a doll at the tender age of four. At the same time, according to the compul sory education law, they are obliged to go to kindergarton for at least one year, aud that term is devoted to such things as the''making of dolls and dressing them, doing everything, in fact, excepting molding the heads, which is done by nieu expert at it. After that the German children have three or four years of study, when they are allowed to go into the doll and toy factories to add to the family's income to the extent of a few cents a day. The children who go to the kinder garten have lota of fun making olothee for the dolliea, and bo fond do they get of some of the little waxen-faced creatures that they are often sore at heart when the matron comes aronad aud collects them all, to be sent abroad, many to America, where more fortunate littlo girls may buy them and keep them for their own. ]>£• ami Mniiltnyit in file Mirror. I saw a performing monkey the other day. He went through many tricks very successfully. Tow ard the end of the performance he was ordered to put 011 his cocked hat before a hand mirror -- which he did. He was next told to set it straight, and he tried on his geueral's headgear repentedly at different angles, causing much laugh ter. When all was over, and the organ man, his helpers and the two moukeys were preparing to depart, I sow that "the general" had possessed himself of the little mirror and was studying his own countenance with great delight. He had placed the glnsH on top of the barrel organ, aud he bent over it again and again, grimacing energetically. He after ward picked up his mirror and con templated himself earnestly and con tentedly at different angles. His face had been profoundly sad, like the faces of most monkeys I have seen, but now the wrinkles smoothed them selves ont and he nearly smiled! Why is it that dogs hardly ever re gard a picture as anything but a flat surface with patches of color dotted over it? In all my large canine ac quaintance [ know but one dog who sees that portraits are likenesses of people. As for his own reflection in a glass,a dog generally mistakes it for an enemy and "goes for" it. Later, when knocks on the nose and Absence of scent have done their part in con vincing him of his mistake, a dog will look coldly, not to say despitefully, at the mirror. Sometimes it is as if dogs resented their reflections as caricatures of themselves.—London News. TIIO Pet ltonver That Broke Jail. Professor W. W. Molntyre of Toronto has, or bad, a wonderful pet beaver named Buff. Butt* was caught in a trap at Love sick lake. He was a fine young beaver about eighteen months old. Bull'was soou quite lame, writes Professor Mclutyre, so that the trap pers could stroke him and he seemed to like it. When camp was broken up BufFwas taken to a farm house and put into a j closet. About 11 o'clock he went upon an exploring expedition,cutting his way through the door into the kitchen,and thence wandering all over the house. ; It was easy to trace his trail, as tell tale signs in the shape of chairs and tables minus a leg, perhaps two, were I strewn in every direction. He was shut up again, but cut his way out j once more, . this time, being beaten with a small switch, he thundered up on the floor with his tail, uttering a pitiful cry. As it was evident that he could not be kept iu the house, a small stone house was built for him. But!' was quite an attraction to the neighborhood, and numbers of people came to see him, so that he was al ways sure of a liberal supply of bread. There was a small pond about 200 feet from the house,and the bovsused to take him to it daily, first having fastened a small rope around each hind foot. Buff would swim uuder water till he came to the end of his tether, whon he would come to the surface and swim back to the shallow water, where he would sit and wash himself. A largo sugar kettle was sunk in the ground and filled with water for him. Ho was also given a quantity of poplar wood. He saw what this 1 meant, and set to work, cutting the wood into pieces about two feet long, setting them on end, resting against . the upper rim of the kettle. When j lie had built the framework of quite a i large house he took mouthfuls of earth, and with it stopped all holes and cracks, making his house frost proof. exhibited a keen interest in everything about the place. Before long the first snow fell, and Buff sought his house, where he spout the winter. When spring returned he seemed possessed by a longing for his old home. It had been his habit to cnt wood given to him into lengths of about two feet. One evening the boys gave him an extra large supply of wood, and he seemed delighted. When all was quiet in the night Buff worked con tinuously, and, piling his short sticks high enough for him to reach the top of the fenco he regained his liberty and returned to bis brothers. Ciiwk* CiHtlmr Kornii. "Au eoiploymeut which hundreds of poor Greeks, living in and near New York City find quite profitable at this season of the year ia fern gather ing," said a fern dealer in New York City. Up to ten years ago this in dustry was exclusively in the hands of a few Frenchmen, but in the fall of 'OO those men happened to engage the services of four or five Greeks to help them collect ferns. Once ini tiated into the secrets of the trade the Greeks decided to go into the bnsiness for themselves, with the result that they and a large number of their conn trymen, now monopolize the supply of ferns sent to the Ne.v York mar ket."—Washington Star. Shiiujlo* From Stump*. A now industry has sprung up in the out-overpine lands of Minnesota. A Michigan shiugle manufacturer has located east of Sandstone with ma chinery suitable to transform the thousands of large stumps into shingles. These stumps now stand from two to fonr leet above ground and are as sound as the day the tree was cut. RUBBER CATHERERS IN BRAZIL. The 17. S. 8. Wilmington Explores tta# * Amazon River. "By studying on a map of Brazil yon can sco that the Fata river ex tends almost due vest south of the Island of Marajo, to a net-work of narrow streams, known as the Passes, which connect the Parn with the Amazon. These numerous channels are from 70 to 150 yards in width,and some of them are navigable for ves sels of 18 to 20 feet draft. These Passes are interesting enough to those traversing them in small craft, but to the officers and sailors of such steam ers at U. S. H. Wilmington they are trebly so. At night there is little to arrest the attention other than the weird, dark shapes of tho banks, which ever seem close aboard. The land beiug low aud Hat, and the trees near the water's edge, it seems as if the ship has forsaken her natural element and is running overland on invisible wheels. "When daylight comas in a sudden burst of light likejthe unheralded flash of the theatre's illumination, there is revealed on each side of the narrow channel tho forest's solid hanging vines, of creepers and foliage and branches brilliant with the multitudin ous hues of tropical vegetatiou. "There is a strange chattering of animal life and a whirr of winged insects. The discordant cries of myriad parrots echo from the trees. There is human life, too. Here and there embowered in tho jungle can be seen little wooden huts,with thatched roofs and sides open to tho cooling winds. "These are the homes of the rubber gathers, who labor day in and day out collecting the milky sap of the Hevea brasiliensis. This rubber gathering is interesting, and tho Wil mington's crew watch curiously as the winding channel reveals little groups of natives at work along tho edge of tho stream. "Those on board who have read the descriptions tell others of the manner in which the half-naked Indians labor, of how each family works what is called an 'estrada,' or street, a path through the forest, which embraces as many rubber trees as can be con veniently teuded, of how these trees are slit with a machete and a cup fitted in the cut to catch tho sap, and of the manner in which the owner makes his daily round aud brings to his hut the collocted juice. "There is also interest in the des cription of its next stage, when tho sap is dipped up by a stick and re volved over a smokey fire. The smoke causes each layer to coagulate ou the stick, and when the desired amount is formed it is removed and made ready for shipment. These balls of crude rubber usually weigh in the neighbor hood of 25 pounds, aud are of a dark lustrous hne. It was a novel experi ence, this visit of the Wilmington's crew to the home of the rubber gather ers, and the closest attention was paid to tho everchanging scenery as the white cruiser steamed slowly along through the Passes."—AinHlee's Mag azine. A Walter Wlio Sieve I the Czar'* 1,1 fr. The Havre correspondent of the Petit Jonrnal has made the discovery of a man who 30 years ago was the talk of everybody aud everywhere. He is none other than Ernest Groult, who is now 62 years old. It was he who seized Berezowski as he was about to assassiunte the Emperor of Russia. It may be remembered that it waß on the day of the Grand Prix that Berezowski fired two shots at him. Groult, who was a waiter at the time, was carrying a telegram to tho Marquis de Datnpierro, and happened to be close to the assassin. Without a moment's hesitation Groult seized him. A hand to hand struggle took place be tween the two meu. What followed is well known. Next day an aide-de camp of the emperor came to con gradulato the waiter and ho gave him 600 francs and a watch. He wanted to take Groult to ltussia but he re fused. He was wrong, for since then misfortune nd oblivion have over taken him. He sent n potition to the Russian government setting forth his destitute condition, hut it was re jected. The poor man is now a waiter in a small hotel in Havre, but he is unable to work any longer, and says he must go to the hospital. Berezowski was condemned and sentenced to transportation. Ho runs this version of the event. It does not appear to be quite exact—London Globo. More Tlian He ('tin d Manet. It is related of the Emperor Wil liam of Germany that, at a recent re view in Berlin, he reprimanded old General von Meerschoidt for losing bis presence of mind at a critical moment. "If your majesty thinks that I am getting too old, I beg of you to allow me to re ign." "No, no," replied tho Kaiser, "you are too young to resign. Indeed, if your blood didn't course through your veins quite so fast, you would be a more useful army leader. " On the evening of that day the Kaiser and the general met at a court ball. The general was talking to some vonng ladies. "Ah Meer scheidt," cried William, "that is right —get ready to marry ! Take a young wife; then that excitable temperment of vonrs will soon vanish." The old general, it is stnted, bowed low before his imperial mejesty as he coolly re torted; "I beg to be excused, your majesty; a young emperor aud a young wife would bo more than I could possibly stand." iiuiing: Apptiu)im. A Colorado woman has designed a handy rnliug apparatus, having a rigid guide bar attached to the upper sur face of tho ruler by brackets,, with 3 pen support sliding 011 the bar to hold the pen out of contact with the edge of the ruler. What D# Ilni Children Drink J Don't glvr? them ten or coffee. Have you tried the now food drink called GHAIN-O? It is delicious and nourishing, and tnkes the place of coffee. The more GRAIK-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their sys tems. GRAIN-O is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about H as much. AH grocers sell It. 15c. and 25c. It is proposed b} r a Michigan com pany to carry an electric current of 40,- 000 volts 90 miles. What Khali We Wave For Deasert? This question arises in the family daily. Let j us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious ; and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 mlu No 1 boiling! no inking! Simply add a little hot J water A set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, j Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. An Edinburg professor says it is the j "morning drain which is the curse of the country. Beauty la Blood Deet. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirhng 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 .59.°°° laborers. Jdl-O, the New Dessert* Pleases all tho family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Rnspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. Music is being printed in one-half the time 011 aluminum plates as against stones. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cusouret# Candy Cathartic. 10oor25. i It C. C. C. full 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 by Dr. Kline's Invigorating Tonic. FHEE 91 trial bottle tor 2 weeks' treatment. Dr. K1 no, ! Ld., Uttl Arch St., Philadelphia. Founded 187 L The London Stock Exchange has raised $42,500 for the Indian famine relief fund. Plso's Pure is a wonderful Cough medicine. —Mrs. W. PICKFHT. Van Siclen aud Blake ; A vet.., Brooklyn, N. Y.. Oct. 20,16 W. Artificial flowers, mixed with the real ; ones, arc just now used for table decora- I tions. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 100, 25c. It C. C. C. fall, druggist* refund money. The number of persons employed /n j English collieries is over 385,000. The Best Prencrlptlon for Chills and Fever is a bottle of GitOVK's TASTELESS CIIILL TONIC. It LA simply iron and quinine la a tasteless form. No cure—uo pay. Pries 600 The Australian rabbit is said to be as far from extinction as ever. Bow Are Toor Kidneys V Dr. Hobbs' Sparagus Pills cure all kidney Ills. Banv pie free. Add. Sterling ilemedy Co., Chicago or N. Y Since the close of the Civil War SIOO,- 000,000 has been spent in the South for negro education. To Cnre a Cold In One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All druggist* refund the money if it fAlls to cure. E. W. Uaovs's signature Is on each box. 86c. 1 The Chinese minister at Washington makes his official and social visits about the capital in an automobile. I Could Hardly Breathe ..... . _ I mmmmmm turamtammu mmmm mu j " I had a terrible cold and could hardly breathe. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral and it gave me immediate relief. I don't believe there is a cough remedy in the world anywhere near as good."—W. C. Layton, Sidell. 111., May 29, 1899. Cures Night Colds How will your cough be tonight ? Worse, probably. For it s first a cold, then 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 to help Nature a little. You can stop this downward tendency any time by taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Then take it tonight. You will cough less and sleep better, and by i tomorrow at this time you will be greatly improved. You can get a small bottlo of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, now, for 26 cents. For hard coughs, bronchitis,asthma,and tho croup, tho 60 cent slzo Is better. For chronic cases, as consumption, and to keep on hand, the SI.OO slzo is most economical. 11l MWMgWBHMMMM—— —MWHB—S MORPHINE^ MWJißaßgg ■■■ Morphine, l.nudanum, or otlu-r ilra, li&bit.trlnltrentiiiont. free ofclinren, of the most remarkable remedy ever d.tcovered. runt.ii s Great vital B'rlnclple heretofore unknown, ftis. frnctory Cuaoa solicited. Confidential correspondence Invited from all, especially Pb TRlelnnn. ST. J ANILS ' SOCIETY, üßi BROADWAY, IBW YORK. " 1 "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 can see it. IVO RY SOAP-IT FLOATS. Some Splendid Opportunltleu Arn Open ID the Aimtruliun Coloulea. | Queensland is practically undevel i oped as yet, and it is only 40 years old, ! that having been the time since its j separation as a colony. It contains ; nearly 700,000 square miles, and has I only 500,000 population. North Queens- ! | land has a population of only 100,000, ; | find yet It is an exceedingly rich sec ' t.ion in natural resources. Charter I ; Towers, 82 miles west of Townsvillo, I | ( the principal gold mining section, pro -1 duced 457,850 ounces of gold in 1898, of the value of $5,784,720, and the total i output of gold for the colony during ! the past year was 920,048 ounces, val ued at $13,751,775. The colony ha 9 j produced, up to date, minerals to the | | value of $225,000,000. Copper, silver,tin, j etc., are some of the minerals existing ■in large quantities. Within the next few years there will be a tremendous i output of copper, as a railroad is being j built to the very rich Chilagoe mines j : North Queensland is a great grazing ; country, and, as the climate and the abundance of native grasses are all fa vorable to grazing, the profit on 6heep and cattle is very large. There are numbers of sheep ranches on whicb , there are 100,000 sheep, one of whicb I has 1,250,000 head. Cattle raising IF 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 j profit—ss a head, and when he get? ; $lO, as he often doc 3, the profit is very j great.—Cincinnati Commcrcial-Trib- t una. _ lilntlinc Hit* .oo i, Too. Critic —Oh, Mr. Pennington, there i: ' one thing 1 do so like about your nov I pis. Mr. Pennington (much pleased)— | Yes! And what is that? Critic—The; J Rre printed in such clear type.—Stra; 1 Btorles. Progress. With time comes progress and advnnce | ment in uli line 9 of successfully conducted ; enterprises. Success comes to those only j who have goods with superior merit and a j reputation. In the manufacture of 1 un l dry starch for the last quarter of a oen | tury, J. C. Hublnger has been the peer of j ill others, and to-day is placing ou the I market his latest Inventions, "Red Cross" and "Hublnger's Best," the finest laundry j starches over offered the public, j His new and original method enables you to obtain one large 10*. package of , "Red Cro s" starch, one largo 10c. package I of "Hublnger's Best" starch, with the pio- I miuras, two Shakespeare panels, printed in | twelve beautiful colors, as nntural as life, j or one Twentieth Century Girl calendar. ! the finest of Its kind ever printed, all for I 50. Ask your grocer. I The Rev. Dr. Mackenzie, a Presby terian minister of San Francisco* has J ; made a fortune by raising oranges. • 100 Hewunl • 1 00. i The readers of this paper will be pleased to ! learn that there is at h ast ono dreaded (lis- < ease that science has been üb.e to cure in all Its stages, mid that Is Catarrh. Hull's Catarrh ('lire is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con ! stitution.il disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hull's*'alarrh urc i taken Inter ; nally, acting direotly upon the blond andnm- I eous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy. | ing the foundation of the disease, and giving j the pitient strength by building up the con | stitutiou and agisting natur • in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in Its curat ve powers that they ofTer Ono Hun dred Hollars lor any case that it fails to cure. Bend lorllstof testimonials. Address I F J ( 'IIKNEY & Co., Toledo, O. I Sold by Druggists, 75c. | Hall's Family Pills are the beet- I Capital invested in farming in this country is estimated at $i6.000.000,000. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Lift Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the v. onder-worker, that makes weak men ( strong. All druggists, Mc or tl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York. Mnclilne (ilHm Blowing, A glass factory has been started at ' St. Helens, in which the whole system of blowing is replaced by an automatic j arrangement of molds and blow pipes worked by compressed air. The output I has been much increased. Mrs Vni'slow'sflnctblngftyrup for child 1 teething Miltei.s the gums, reduces intlntnma- I Uon. allays pain, cures wind colio.Jflx u buttle. 1 ABABASTINE IS the original and only durable wall coating, entirely different from all kul somines. Heady for use in white or fourteen beautiful tints by adding cold water. L 'ABIES naturally prefer ABA BASTINE for walls and ceil ings, because it is pure, clean, durable. Put up In dry pow dered form, in five-pound pack ages, with full directions. ABB kalsomlnes ere cheap, tem porary preparations mado from and stuck ori walls with de caying animal glue. ABABAS TINE Is not a kalsomlne. BEWARE of the dealer who says he can sell you the "same thing" as ABABASTINE or "something Just as good. ' Ho is either not posted or la try ing to deceive you. ANB IN OFFERING something he has bought cheap and tries to sell on ABABASTINE'S de mands, he may not realize the damage you will suffer by a kalaomlne on your walls. SEN SI BEE dealers will not buy a lawsuit. Dealers risk one by selling and consumers by using Infringement. Alabastlne Co. own right to make wall coat ing to mix with cold wator. THE INTERIOR WAELS of every church and school should bo coated only with pure, dur able-ABABASTINE. It safe guards health. Hundreds of tons used yearly for this work, IN BUYING ABABASTINE. customers should avoid get ting cheap kalsomlnes under different names. Insist on having our goods in packages and properly labeled. NUISANCE of wall paper Is ob viated by ABABASTINE. It can be used on plastered walls, wood ceilings, brick or can vas. A child can brush It on. It does not rub or scale off. ESTABBTSHED in favor. Shun all imitations. Ask ralnt deal er or druggist for t.nt card. Write us for interesting book let. free. ABABASTINE CO., Grand Rapids, Mich. I FA FOR 14 CERTS $ 6 * ut**' ? 1 !'d c 0 r 200 jj 010 2 La. Worth 'tM.Oo! lor 1 I JUS I X eat aarlieatTomato tiiaut on earth. X * JOHN A. HAI/ZEK BKKII CO., LA < KOSHR, Wit X iHHtMIMHtMtHHCMti W. L. DOUGLAS S3 & 3.50 SHOES o rjioj. N)\ with other makes. / m J ' umtmm ""**•' LDOUBLAS SHOE CO "Brockton, MaisT ION IO KAYS TKUL $. r > to 410a -cording to 'site. 15c<iws. price* $7 t.oslo. The • make U 1 ItSt > N -* Ir. VV A UL M ?" GIBSONIA. k-A. PATENTI^iS vice on to luilentubllllr. Horn! f r "Inv.n *rj .(11. 11 B. STHEVS A '<>., Ul.b., imt. 817 1411.5 c., WuMbluvloii, u. J? onucliMi Chicago. Cleveland and Detroit. DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH KIT I EN All DruggUta, < oc IMlakLll J^^BAEAIYRSJEE,BS RV 4. *. uuiuou/aVoH. n*r bi,in H. 8—
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers