Wh.l Hit all We Hare For Dessert? This questiou arises in the family daily. Let us anajferitto-iluy. Tiy Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared iu a mfu. No hoillnKi no baking ! Simply add a little hot waterAsettocool. Flnvors: I.emou.Orance, Kaspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. The number of persons cremated in Germany from 1878 to ißgy was 3.110. Spring Humors of the Blood Coma to a certain percentage of all the people. Probably 75 per cent, of these people are cured every year by Hood's Sarsaparilla, and we hope by this advertisement to get the other 25 per oent. to take Hood's Sarsaparilla. It has made more people well, offected more wonderful cures thau any other medicine in the world. Its strength as a blood purifier is demonstrated by ita marvelous cures of Soroful* Salt Rh°um Soald h> ad Bolls. Pimples All kindsofHumor Psoriasis Blood Poisoning; Rheumatism Catarrh: Malaria, Etc. All of which are prevalent at this sea son. You need Hood's Sarsaparilla now. It will do you wonderful good. Hood's Sarsaparilla la America's Greatest Blood Medlciue. Dr. Bull's /T in Cure* at ouce coughs. Cough Syrup bronchitis and iucipicutcousuniptiou. l'nceasc. The Benefit* of Knrly ItUlng. It was once laid down Hy a cele brated writer and historian that the difference between rising at 5 and 7 in the morning for the space of forty years, supposing a man to go to bed at the same hour every night, is nearly equivalent to the addition of ten years to the life. This consideration should carry very great weight and be suffi cient to induce those who have not hitherto practiced this habit to com mence to do so more especially the people who are always complaining that life is not long enough for them to transact all the work that they have to perform. There Is much founda tion for their complaint If they persist in wasting so many valuable hours of the day in bed. The advantages and benefits of early rising cannot be over estimated; in early hours of the morning the brain is clearer and more ready for work and after a night's sleep we should be ready to attack the Arork of the day. Not a Hpookluc One. Hoax Hcnpeck's wife is an awfull talker. Did you ever meet her? JoaX —Oh. yes; I have a listening acquaint ance with her.—Philadelphia Record. Backaches Women aro wearying beyond dee orlptlon and they Indicate real trouble somewhere. Efforts to bear the dull pain are heroic, but they do not overcome It and the baokaohes continue until the cause is re moved. does this more certainly than any other modloine. It has bean doing It for thirty years. It is a wo man's medicine for wo man's Ills. It has done much for the health ot American women. Read the grateful letters from women constantly ap pearing In this paper. Mrs. Plnkham counsels women free of charge. Her address Is Lynn, Mass. What do the Children Drink ? Don't give them tea or coffee. llavN you tried tho new food drink called GRAIN-O ? it is delicious and nourishing aud takes the plueo of coffee. The more (Jrain-0 you give the children the more health you distrib ute through their system*. I flrain-6 is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee but costs about. us much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. Try Grain-O! Insiat that your grocer givca you ti It AIN-O Accept no imitation. ' u.itioiiMis ILIIDIVII Wanhlngtoti. !>. . nDADC V NEW DISCOVERY;FI,., wl W ■ QOiok rHf nd ar* wrl IMH Monk of iMtimouinJo md 10 days' treatment Vrob. Dr. ■. I. ailOtk % IONS. Bo 1. Atlat, Ba. Xy)|QICt()ICK/IQIQ(OtCfC(OIQIO(OIQICIQfOIClCIQIOKy $ NEWS AND NOTES § I FOR WOMEN. | Crepe de Chine Ties* Long crepo de chine ties with ringed ends are wound about tho eck on days not cold enough for fur ollars. The Popular lie vers. Another fashion which is forging to the front is white broadcloth revers on dark Etou jackets. This broad cloth is stitched with white silk thread in diamond shape. Hatin revers arc used almost entirely on fur coats. White satin is the favorite. Red a Favorite Tint. Red, running through the gamut of its glowing shades, from the royal da mask and Jacqae rose tints to light cherry dye, will appear as a favorite accessory on spring costumes of gray, brown, certain shades of green and blue, and notably on black costumes, jackets, capes and hats. The Prettiest Girdle. Very pretty girdles are made of velvet sewn with steel or jet beads iu an elaborate pattern and with • fringe of the beads falling in front. This fringe may be auy length desired, but is always V-shaped, aud usually about eight inches deep iu the center, gral nuting in length to the sides. Collars made in similar style are worn with these girdles. New Models Outline the Iflps* The newest models snatched from the arena of strife outline the hips almost as closely as did the eelskiu. Plaits and tucks of almost infinite variety have been conoedod, but they aro flatter and more firmly stitched down thau iu November, aud, though the domiuauce of tho overskirt is un disputed, it is not yet draped, unless the draperies are kept very low. Tim Czarina'. Shawl, The Czarina has a shawl which she values very highly. It was sent to her by the ladies of Orenburg, u town in Southeastern Russia. It reached her in a wooden box, with silver hooks and hinges, the ontside being embellished with dosigns of spears, turbans, whips, etc., on a ground of blue enamel, that being the color of the Cossack uniform. The sbawl is about ten yards square and exquisite ly fine. Vice Versa Slcirta and ISodlres. An artistic maker of frocks bewails tlie fact that the gathered skirt is gathered in the back and at the sides while the front is left perfectly plain; the bodice on the other hand is full and slightly pouched in front, but plain and close fitting at the back. The artistic maker of frocks says that this is contrary to all rules of grace and beauty, as the fulness of the skirt should he, as least in appear ance, continued oil tho bodice, and vice versa. Sinnll Wedding Invitations. From Paris comes a wedding invita tatiou, five by four-and-a-half inches in size, engraved in the new and fash ionable block lettering. It is not an essentially French form, and is sent by American residents in the City of Light. The tiny sheet of paper looks very odd to eyes accustomed to the large sheets used for weddiug invita tions on this side of the water. The block letters are also a bit unusual, al though they are much used on this side for calling, at home, cards, etc. Engraving these letters is a trifle more expensive thau script. Script engrav ing is charged for at so much per line, while the block letters are so much each letter. Woimm Lawyer* UarriMl. Tho State Supreme Court at Dover, Del., has ruled that no woman lawyer ran practice her profession in that State. Horace C. ICuowles asked that Mrs. Carrie B. liillgore, the well known attorney of Philadelphia, be allowed to appear with him iu a suit. Chancellor Nicholsou, for the court, vepliod that while they would like to exteud every courtesy to attorneys from a sister State, the request could uot be granted because of a provision of tho new Constitution. That instrument provides that of ficers of tho State shall be voters, and the lawyers have interpreted this to mean that attorneys are officers of the court, and must therefore be males. Mrs. liillgore was very indignant over the decision and will call it to the at tention of the Philadelphia courts. Sloßvrl riutit it it (1 Fancy. Most sleeves are as severe in out line and as devoid of fulness as the sleeves of a man's coat. To those whoso arms will not bear such a class ical outline, however, some latitude is allowed; two small capes often spring from the shoulder line, and a pretty sleeve Las the material carried up to within a couple of inches of tho seam, when it is stopped short with some times a row of stitching, sometimes th* raw edge left, to show a pulling or • bribing of silk or velvet. This gives across the ehest, which is fifc< eßsavy to some figures. Another variation of the sleeve modish has a slashing right down the outsido arm to the elbow or wrist, laced across with cords to show an insertion of silk underneath. One pretty sleeve In a tailor-made gown was button holed a'nd buttoned l'rom shoulder to wrist, forty buttons and buttonholes in all, an endless labor, but it seemed a perfectly fittiug sleeve ou a well modelled arm. • The Remedaled Kimono. A kimono wrapper treated as kimonos are now would be a revela tion to tho Japanese, who first in vented the custom, but a more com fortable bod-room wrapper can scarce ly be devised. The Persian figured tilk lined with albatross oloth, and faced with the bands of silk in soma plain colors, has rather superseded the simpler gowns of light wool and flannel, but both in their turn are to be ousted by the quilted silk wrappers, that are now sold at prices that make them popular for everybody. These are all made in very good shapes and of fairly good material, have a yoke and a Watteau pleat in the back, some attempt at tit at the side, with straight fronts, and are fastened with cord and buttons. The lining is in different color from the outside, but always of some color that is in good contrast, and a very surprising number of shades there are to choose from, tie sides these wrappers, there are a great many dainty negliges in light silk* covered with lace; these would be too cool were it not for the very eomfort able lining of albatross cloth, at once light and warm. For bed-room wear, the eider-down wrappers bound with ribbon and finished around the waist with cord and tassel are far smarter than wrappers that have cost twice the amount. Goiftip. Rowling is the favorite recreation of Queen Olga of Greece. Three young women near Now York run a blacksmith shop, and one in Lewiston, Me., is a shoemaker. It is estimated that in Englaud there are over two hundred thousand more uumaried women thau unmarried men. The Princess of Wales is a photog rapher of no mean ability. She and her daughters use the kodaks on every possible oocasion. Prussia has now begun appointing female Faotory Inspectors. The bud get contains appropriations for their salaries of 2400 marks each. About 1500 lives have been lost by, the oarth shocks at Ardin, in Asia Minor. Many towns have beeu com pletely wiped out of existence. A woman who died recently in Cler mont County, Ohio, at the age of ninety-eight, had taught school for seventy-eight consecutive years. "The Ants" is the name of a society of Protestant young women in France. They number 20,000. and their object is work among the poorer classes. Mrs. J. Ogdeu Armour has harbored mania for boxes ever since childhood, and has two hundred, among which are big and little, new and old ones. A Kansas City telephone compauy has decided that all girls in its em ploy must have long arms, and that their height must bo at least five feet six inches. The Governor of New Mexico has selected Mrs. Laferriere, a French teacher in Minneapolis, to represent the New Mexico turquoise regions at the Paris Exposition. One of the newest inventions made by a woman is the aluminum and sheepskin shield, which tho inventor, Miss Helen Stormout Murphy, has re cently scut to Lord lloberts. Not many persons are aware that the wife of the notorious General Mercier is an Euglishwomau. Her maiden name was I'eun-Symous and she was a first cousin to tho General Svmons who was killed at Glencoc. Tho only womau oil operator in the country is Miss Jane Stone, who owns 180 acres in Texas which have pro duced oil. Miss Stone superintends the drilling of her own wells and has a thorough knowledge of the way to run an oil plant. One of the first letters of sympathy reoeived by General Roberts after the death of his son iu South Africa was from the ex-liinpress Eugenio, recall ing how the General had given her a sprig of flowers from the spot where the Prince Imperial fell in tho Zulu war. Miss Minnie Swarts, of New York City, who refused to accept a purse made up for her in recognition of her services to the firemen at a fire a few weeks ago, has received numerous of fers of positions where she can earn her living. She has also been offered free instruction iu stenography, type writing and bookkeeping in two dif ferent business schools. lSltn of Femininity. White cloth turbans are considered extremely smart. Ostrich feather fans are again much affected of fashion. The newest models in waists show a little more blouse effect in front. Light pink corals, set in diamonds, are .he newest thing iu jewelry thai Pari 1 offers. The heads of small fur animals, mounted for hat pins, are a charming adjunct to the fur-trimmed turban. Fi 10 kid-finished cloths in ivory white, opal gray, turquoise blue and old rose are in marked favor for "dressy" frocks. It in rumored that sage greeu fou lards, figured with white, will take tho place this spring of the ever popu lar bright blue ones. Tue new pliable silk-back velvets are tucked, quilted, kilted, accordion plaited aud machine stitched exactly like silk or woo! fabrics. The outlook for tho summet season indicate cveu a greater rage for ele gant diaphanous materials in black than existed last summer. Hilk warp heuriettns, all-wool India cashmeres, and fine French mohairs in black will be among the most de sirable cloths for early spring wear. A beautiful peacock tail feather trims a toque of white tulle, which is worn with a gown of gray crepe de chine, with which is combined ecru lace and sky blue'tho ire. Great numbers ot blaok tulle blouses, beautifully embroidered in. jet, are seen. One of these, slightly cut out at the neok, iaworn with long, transparent sleeves of white lace, which are circled with bands of black velvet ribbon, fastened with tiny steel buckles. FOR BOYS AND GIRLS. SOME GOOD STORIES FOR OUR JUNIOR READERS. A Juvenile Phenomenon —A Little Hero —An Ostrich Policeman A Florida Bird Keeps Watch Over the Farm Hearing: the 111® They Had. A Juvenile Phenomenon. He can't be got to stop up late. Whatever folks may say; At half-past seven every night He puts his toys away. He puts his toys away, remark— He doesn't leave them all About the floor where "grown-ups" may Trip over them and fall. He keeps his collar and his clothes Immaculately clean; He wipes his boots upon the mat When through the mud he's been. He learns his lessons with a will. And never skips them—no! He never plagues his sisters, and That's why they love him so. When with his trumpet and his drum He innocently plays. If he is told to "stop that noise," He instantly obeys. A sullen brow he never wears. He never says, "I shan't!" Nor does he ever cry, "I won't!" Nor does he whine, "I can't!" He's ne'er been seen to tease the cat. And when his dinner's o'er, He doesn't, as he leaves the room, Contrive to bang the door. That I can't quite give you his name I am obliged to own, But he is Madame No-one's son. Who lives in Nolandknown. A Little Hero. "Maric-e-e! Marie-e-e!" It was the black kitten that said it. At least, it sounded like the black kitten's voice to the little girl who had started up to listen, In her bed upstairs. She was alone and the house was dark. "Ma rle-e-e! Marie-e-e." came the call again, plaintively, as the shivering kit ty sat on the window sill, wondering why his little mistress had let that new servant sweep him out on such a cold night. On other nights little Ma rie had carried him down cellar to his nice bed of shavings by the furnace, and there he had slept, all warm, until morning. He did not know that little Marie had hunted for him upstairs and down, and had gone to bed very un happy because she feared that he might be suffering somewhere out in the cold. He called again: "Marle-e-e! Marie-e-e!" It may have been only a common meauow. It certainly did not sound like any common meaouw to the black kitten's little mistress. She knew that he was calling her, and reproach ing her; and as she heard the wind whistling around the corner of the house, and thought of her darling little cat, shivering outside in the cold, she could stand It no longer. She sprang out of her bed and started down the hall. She soon found that she could not go so rapidly; so carefully waving one hand In front of her, with the other she felt her way along until she came to the stairs. She bravely took the first step, and then stopped short, for up and down the hall window some thing was waving its long black arms. She turned and went scurrying back to her bed and drew the bed clothes over her head. She lay very still for several minutes; but then there came plainly through the blankets, the call, "Marie-e-e! Marie-e-e!" The little; voice was full of reproach now. She thought her kitty knew that she had been a coward, and that she was not going to come to him, even when she knew he was suffering in the cold. He called again, again, until little Marie could endure it no longer: "Marie-e-e! Marie-e-e!" "I'll just run past the window," she whispered to herself, and once more crept out of bed, and felt her way along the hall. But at the first stair step she stopped again. Shi could never, never, never run past that window, and she stood clinging to the newel post and shivering. But "Ma rle-e-e! Marie-e-e!" came plaintively up stairs. Marie took another step slowly, clinging close to the banister. ! Her eyes were fastened on the awful window, as step by step she crept down. When she came opposite it, she was afraid no longer; she laughed softly, for she could see that the "wav ing arms" were the branches of the apple tree. The rest of the stairs were quickly past, and she felt her way on through the library. Once she stopped and kept hold of the back of a big chair for a long time, for just in front J of her the floor creaked loudly. But it was only a little further now; and soon, gathering up all her courage, she went forward. She knew just where to find her kilty, for he always came to the same window when he wanted to come in. She drew up the curtain and there he was. In a moment she raised the window, and he sprang into her arms. She put both paws around her neck, and together they went up stairs. She was not afraid now, for the furry little body that rested so lovingily in the hollow of her shoulder, was a com fort and a protection to her. She could laugh at the waving arms and the creaking floor. Together they cud tiled down in the bed, and her kitty sang her a loving song of praise for her courage. Together they fell asleep, and in the morning when Mamma found the little cat's black head close to the sunny curls, aud heard the story of his midnight rescue, she won dered that her little girl had not been afraid. "I was awfully afraid, Mam ma," said Marie; 'but I did It anyhow." "That's what makes heroes," Mamma answered.—clfiferlotte W. Eastman, la Little Folks. A Wor<l for the Sparrow* j Why should the English sparrow he considered such a pest? Any one that takes the trouble to study their habits# will see that much that has been said about them is untrue. They are not so Quarrelsome as the petted canary! and much less greedy. They are con siderate of their fellows, and ready to help them when in trouble. And they; are so cheerful and active—always on the alert, no matter how gloomy the day—that a group of the bright-eyed, chattering things is a practical illus tration of the beauties of Sparrows should be protected, not onlyj for the good they do, but for pleasure they bring even to the of great cities, enlivening even the gar rets of the sick with their gentle chir rup. They are undoubtedly the scaven gers of cities, clearing away waste from every corner, and they have brought Boft and loving feelings to the heart of the roughest prisoner, who from his stinted pittance of bread and water will save no small share for the sparrows at his window grating. They are the best of insect destroyers; they have attached themselves to man most confidingly; they are beings with flesh and blood and brains, and most affectionate in their own way to those that love and care for them. Therefore let us care for and protect them in summer as well as in winter. For ah though the farmers may have good rea son to object to their presence' about their grain stacks, there are many rea sons for encouraging them to thrive in our cities. Au Ostrich Policeman. On a Florida ostrich farm one of the birds acts as watchman. This ostrich, who has been dubbed Napoleon, pa trols the camp, giving at intervals a cry which may be said to mean "AU'a I well." If anything alarms him, he at once communicates it to his compan ions by a series of yells as he ad- j vances to the attack. Napoleon stande nearly ten feet high, and weighs up- | wards of four hundred pounds. He is a savage bird, of unusual intelligence. At night he Is unusually ferocious, and often his keeper is obliged to stand off To see the keopeV force Napoleon back to his pen in the morning, with a large fork, is one of the sights of tba ostriph farm. The enormous bird screeches with rage and strikes out with his feet, but all the while slowly giving way. One night the farm hands were awakened by the roars oi Napoleon and the agonizing shrieks ol a human being. Rushing to the pens, they saw the ostrich chasing a negro. The negro made an effort to get over the fence, when the bird struck him a glancing blow on the thigh, which ripped it open and exposed the bone. For a time it was thought the poor pheasant thief would bleed to death. The fame of this episode has naturally caused the pheasants' quarters to b shunned by other depredators.— Brooklyn Eagle. Bearing the Ills Thejr Had. In the Laccadive Islands in the In dian ocean the food of the natives con sists almost wholly of palms ami fish When, therefore, a number of rats took to living in the tops of the trees and eating up the young nuts, black ruin seemed to stare the people in the face. They appealed to the Madras govern ment for help, and a small army of eato was sent to the island. Pussy, how ever, finding fish plentiful, did not see the fun of climbing up trees seventy feet high for food, and so remained be low. Then tree snakes were sent to th islanders, who thought the remedy worse than the disease and killed thr, serpents without delay. But they still complained. So government sent them mongooses, which not only re fused to climb the trees but also con- 1 sumed the natives' fowl. Government j next decided to send owls. Here, | again, the people objected. In their 1 eyes the birds were "devil birds," that j would terrify the bairns and set every j old wife prophesying evil. The folk j accordingly made up their minds to | bear the ills they had rather than fly tc others they knew not of, and so as soon as they could, packed cats, owls and mongooses into a boat and rowed them to an uninhabited reef, where the creatures were left to their own sweel wills. Tli® Captive Thrush. One day a Locliaber lad caught a thrush and took it home. No cage was to be had, so the bird was placed is a basket with a lid. The boy's mother having told the Rev. Dr. Stewart o; the capture, the minister —a naturalist well known throughout the Western Highlands of Scotland- came to see the bird. Whilst they were all talking about the prisoner, the lad spied a similar bird on an elder bush, and Dr Stewart at once noticed that this was the captive's mate. He persuaded the boy to put the basket outside. This was done, and by-and-by the male bird flew down and began caressing the prisoner in many pretty ways. Then he attacked the basket lid furiously hoping to peck a hole in it big enougt for his consort to escape by. This sc touched the boy's mother and even the boy, that the latter agreed to let the captive free. Taking the basket back to the spot where the thrush hac been caught, the lid was opened and the bird flew off with a wild scream ol joy, its mate joining It in the wood both thrushes, no doubt, haopier far than kings. n®ra Good Fisherman. The Boer is no mean fisherman. Giv en a pipe and u goodly supply of his favorite weed he will sit for hours angling. Very fine sport, indeed, may be had in any of the streams north of the Orange river. The bright polish of parlor furniture is dimmed in time, even if you live far from the smoke and soot of the city, but a thick suds of Ivory Soap in lukewarm water and a soft cloth will make it bright again with small labor. Ivory Soap is so pure that it is fitted for all such special uses requiring a soap that is known to be harmless. A WORD OF WARNING.—There are many white soaps, each represented to be " just as goo<l as the 'lvory';" they APE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities uf the genuine. Ask for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting it. All hluilvn Product. Simplex—How is It we hear so much Df automobiles but meet so few of them on the streets? Duplex—Must be the manufacturers are turning ihem out so fast that you can't see them with the human eye.—Automobile Magazine. Tlc Way lu Wake Woiiey Is to save it, and that is what you can do by securing from your grocer a coupon book, which will eunblo you to get op" large 10c. package of "Rod Cross" starch, one large 10c. package of "llublngor's Best" starch, with liio premiums, two Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful colors, or one Twentieth Century Girl caleudur, embossed lu gold, all for sc. The quicksilver finds in Brewster, county, Texas, have already proved the most extensive in the United States. Jell-O, tin* Nrw Dcmert, Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 et. There is a movement in the Malay States to send a mounted volunteer corps to South Africa. To Cure a Cold In On* Day. Take LAXATIVE HROMO QUININE TABLETS. All druggist* refund the money if it falls to cure. B. W. (JUOVB'B (denature Is on each box. 25c. ()ne hundred wounded Germans were found in the hospital at Jacobsdal. in South Africa. I cannot speak too highly of Piso's Cure for Consumption. Mrs. FIIANK MO mis, "15 W.IKd St., Xew York, Oct. 29, 1894. Last year there were .1,846 fires in London, and 101 lives were lost from that cause. Mrs. Winslmv'* Southing s*yi up for children I teething, softens the gums, reduces iiitlumm.-i- 1 tion. allays pain, cures wind colic.&V a bottle, Berlin lias 14 persons whose annual I income exceeds $250,000. The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of (iuovK's TASTILFM CHILL TONIC. It Is simply iron and quinine In a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price SOo. ! Sonic of ilu- Knglish towns are being l infested In fraudulent collectors for the! war fund. How * Thi 11 T We offer One Hundred Dollar l * Reward for my c;i** of tt.-Uarrh that cannot be ourel by Hall's Catarrh t Jure. F. .1.1 F.y A- Co., Toledo, O. We. the undersigned, have known F. .I.t'he- I ncy for the last !"• year*. :n 1 believe him per- 1 fectly honorable in all business truiwu-tion* 1 and linanitiully able to carry out any obliga tion made by their ilrm. WEST 6c TIUIAX. Wholesale Druggists.Tolodo, Ohio. WALIMNU. KINNSN A MAKVIN, Wholesale Druggists Toledo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is t.-iken internally, ant ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 7fc. per bottle. Sold bv all Druggista. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Ronmania is to have three new rail ] way lill e~ eonsliiute<l at a cost of $H>. 1 546.000. exclusive of rolling stock. ALABASTINE SrVSSS ings, made ready for use by mixing with cold ! water. It is n cement that, goes through n pro cess of setting, hardens with ago, and can he coated and rerouted without washing off it* old coats boforn renewing. Alobantineia made in while and fourteen beautiful tints. It is put up in flro-pound packages in dry form, with complete directions on every package. ALABASTINE ss •omines. as it is entirely different from nil tho various kalsomines on the market, being dur able and not stuck on the wall with glne. Alubastine customers should avoid getting cheap kalsomines under different names, by lußi.stinv °u having tho goods in packugos properly labeled They should reject all im itations, There is-nothing "just as good." ■ ALABASTINE Prevents much sickness. partictilarly throat and lung difficulties, attributable toun/anitary : coatings on walls, it has been recommended in a paper published by the Michigan State Board of Heultb on account of its sanitary features; which pnpor strongly condemned kalsomines. Alabnstiue can lie used on either plastered walls, wood ceilings, brick or canvas, and any ono can brush it on. 11 admit* of radi cal changes from wall paper decorations, thus ( .Acuring at reasonable expense the latest and besteffocta. Al.ubasliue is manufactured by tho ALABASTINE COMPANY, of, GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN, from whom all special information can be oh- J tained. Write for instructive and interest ing booklet, mailed free to all applicants, j A (iannlne Seal Leather Pocket-Hook (La- j ** *1 r (ieuts'i with your name embus led 011 it in gold tor ootliing. Write Progres live Purchasing Co., 49.7 Klllcott, Square, Buf falo, N. Y., ami enclose stamp for particulars. ller Mlitakr. Horrified mother—l should like to know how you happened to let young, Simpkins kiss you. Daughter—l—lJ thought no one was looking.—Stray Stories. Love ha 3 no worse enemy than love. i! A KNOCK OUT j| ] > There is more disability and * * ( , helpless 11 eps from ] * ;j LUMBAGO :: ( ► than any other muscular ail- < ► < ment, but < || St. Jacobs Oil || ( , has found it the easiest and ' , , promptest to cure of any form * * , , of :: LAME BACK ' ' AAAAA . A at > * ' | FOR 14 CENTS I S Wn w '" h to gain thiayear 200,(HU 9 1 V new customers, and hence offer 0 0 Pk * L"rl'at finer.ilcl" 'nrumberir** X •• ettace 'o ® " ® r ' biwur beeda, l'.e X #if EH 10 Pk " B • worth SI.OO, wo will 9 LL I *S AL: F* H"S "MI L L I'O H' 001 LA R "PO TA T 0 . qUI M npmi recp'pt. of t his notice A l-lc- X X M M Btanipe. We invite yourtrnde, and X il,,n y ° U | ° !lC '* tl ~ Sa> •/ er , w J X eat earliest Tomato l.iaut on earth! C'*"— f 2 9 JOIIS A. 541.7K1: SKI !M U.I A L HOSM-. WIS. X W. L. DOUGLAS S3 & 3.50 SHOES JJ,N io J\! \ with other makes. f > 1,0U0,0U0 wearers, fe N&. # | The genu hie have W. L. r*vr N£jgf s ' Z( '. and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free. IOLORIYEIFTS I- DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. AGENTS! AGENTS! AGENTS! Thegrandest au\l fastest arlUnu )>ookever published DARKNESS i DAYLIGHT or LIGHTS and SHADOWS Or NEW YORK LIFE WITH INTRODUCTION nr it /•; v. LYMAX AHBOTT. Splendidly illustrated with 5>.0 superb engravings IromflitAh-!ifthtphoto<n-avh* of real life. Ministers say: "Owl ape.ntl it." Hveryonolaughs and cries over ir, and Agents arc- selliiie.lt bp lh:ni*nntl.<. 11*~ I (too more Agents wanted nil through the Mouth-men and women. * ||>() t.. **<lO a month made. Send for Terms to Ar*nts. Address IIA ICTI-'OK ID PUBLlwmNfl Co., flarrford,"own. ItQIIIBB STOPPED FREE JH X Permanently Cured br 1 A JB, 01. KLINE'S CHEAT 9 1 W NERVE .RESTORER Si tTilAi? mWrLR I, KniTr.'" 1 tiat.cn'A wl,o pay rxpreaaax* onlr ,m .l.snrr* /ermanmt Cttrt, uoi iinif icmtiorarv rt-llc' for all %-> wiwa J/tior,im. Ftll'ie'v S:>aiD. St Viou Dan . JabtUiy.KibauaiiAß IR. It. II.HI.INK. 931 Arch street. Philadelohia. Voaadea nci. W II began ia hnlf done. Sow well y-"i would reap well. Sow | GREGORY S SEEDS and reap ttieb-Ht results ttie earth p. x. r. 12, 'oo., DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH j I ure C oughn HUII Colds. 1# 11 I P"oa I'reveiits < onauuiptlou. Jf 11 | §■ D All Drugglata,'jffc- lIVakkll ma ppEarfh 1 CURES WHERE AIL ELSE FAILS. Bl ■ Best Oough Byruii. 'Fast en good. Dso 4 in time. Hold by druggists. pof I \ M^'iUßpi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers