"A Thread Boery Day Mikes a Skein in a Year." One small disease germ carried by the Uood through the system <will convert a healthy human body to a condition cf in validism, Do not *wait until you are bed ridden. Keep your Uood pure and life-giv ing all the time. Hoods Sarsapardla accomplishes this as nothing else can. sjOCt£& SertMdHwfifg Conquers (froup without fail. ' I[!M tflfl Is the best for Bronchitis, Grippe, 13 In Hoarseness, Whooping-Cough. nud i* i tfl for the cure of Consumption. bJ Mothers praise it. Doctors prescribe it. Bui Ui Small dose J ; quick, sure results. firs: OomOf First Served. Don't say that you couldn't pet the valuable presents offered with "Red Cross" and "Hublnjjer's Rest" laundry starch; your grocer has them for you; ask him for a coupon book, which will enable you to get one large 10c. pack age of "Red Cross" starch, one large 10c. package of "Hublnger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two beauti ful Shakespeare panels, printed In twelve beautiful colors, or one Twen tieth Century Girl calendar, all for sc. ▼slue of Pictures. Pictures do more toward furnishing a house and determining the status of Us inmates than anything else. If you have a suspicion that you are not wlsa In choosing and hanging pictures, get advice from someone whose taste need aot be questioned, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. Cheap pictures are not nec- j essarily poor, but a poor picture ie usually cheap. To be able to discern the difference is a quality with which j •very one is not blessed. A good plan Is to purchase copies of famous pic- I tures, etchings and engravings. These j are almost sure to be good. In fram- I lng pictures remember that gold frames are for oil paintings and dark pictures, white frames for water col ore, and black enamel or Flemish oak and modern oak for etchings and photographs. A Million Women have been relieved of female troubles by Mrs. Plnkham's advloe and medicine. The letters of a few are printed regularly In this paper. If any one doubts the off Money and sacredly confidential oharaoter of Mrs. Plnkham's methods, write for a book she has reoently published whloh oontalns letters from the mayor of Lynn, the post master, and others of her olty who have made care ful Investigation, and who verify all of Mrs. Plnk ham's statements and claims. The Pinkham claims are sweeping. Investigate them. THIRTY YEARS OF CURES PIMPLES "IVVy wife liad pimples on lior face, but she has bean taking CASCAUETS and they have all disappeared. I had been troubled with constipation for some time, but after tak ing the first Cascaret I have hud no trouble with this ailnont. Wo cannot speak too high ly of Cascarets " FRED WAKTMAN, 5708 German town Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa. m CATHARTIC \g& cam© TRADI MARK RIOISTIREO Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 2ic.M)c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Berlin, H.nrd, CmUft l lilc,o, Mo.irr.l, New York. 114 NO-TO-BAC SI'S. CARTER'S INK litis the largest sale of any ink ►- in the world. W. Lu DOUGLAS S3 & 3.50 SHOES iSgMorth $4 to $6 compared Vw \ with other makes. / 1,000,000 wearers. fiiW The genuine have W. L. 13 ■ s ' am P c< l on bottom. 1 no substitute claimed to be 7 I should lt'ppp thgm —if receipt of price and 25c. w''™ wtwL. wextra for carriage. State kind of leather. DSE and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free. ttSttYBBS w - L DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. DRdPSYJBKffiKraSPift jTlea. Book of testimonials and lOduys' treatment Free. Dr. H. H. QBEIN'BBOKB. Box B. Atlanta, G*. FREE FROM PANICS. REPUBLIC OF MEXICO CON TINUES PROSPEROUS. Free Silver Coinage uud Staple Govern ment Currency Servo to Maintain lln equalctl Activity in All Fields of Pro duction— Bondholders Arc Scarce. A New York banker has Just re turned from Mexico and was inter viewed by the New York Tribune, but the Arizona Gazette insists that the Whitelaw Reid organ was afraid to publish the truth about. Mexican pros perity. The returned hanker did say through the Tribune that the republic Is prosperous, paying off its national debt and furnishing hundreds of thou sands of new laborers with employ ment every year. "There is more money coming into Mexico than ever before," quoth the banker; "banks are being organized all over the country and everything is in a cheerful condi tion. The Americans and English are putting up great sugar mills and open ing up the tropical belt to the markets of the world. Here the Arizona paper takes up the interview and explains why the Tribune cut it short. "There are no panic scares there. The monetary standard is stable. The supply of money is sufficient for the de mands of trade. In fact, it is the abundance of money that starts trade and keeps it up. Every Mexican pro ducer is making money and is happy. While other nations are hoarding their currency, that of Mexico is in circu lation, performing the functions for which it was created. "Mexican statesmen and financiers attribute the prosperity enjoyed by their people and the republic to the unlimited use of silver as a medium of exchange. "They have currency which is not constantly appreciating in value to the detriment of all other forms of wealth; a currency which cannot be cornered, manipulated or controlled by a few to the injury of the many. A currency which foreign financiers can not limit or lock up at pleasure. A currency which enables the producing classes of Mexico to realize from their products more than the bare cost of production—in short, a currency which is satisfactory to and sufficient for the tradesmen and producers and to every body except the usurers and the money changers, who have been scourged from the temple of Mexican progress." POLITICAL BROTHERS. It must be an immense satisfaction to the American citizen, worrying over his financial condition, that William McKinley and Grover Cleveland are in full accord as to the "proper" remedy. Time was when William boldly and anarchistlcally, not to say treasonably, denounced Grover In no measured language for depositing public money In "pet banks." It Is a suspicious sign, however, to now have two such master minds and prominent figures iu the public eye engaged in smacking their lips over the public purse. It is said that "when rogues fall out honest men get their due," but here we have the unsual spectacle of two honest men clinging together like Siamese twins, staying the attacks of a dis honest people. We are all rogues, and we have departed from the principles established by the Immortal Jackson. Grover says so, and William nods as sent What is the ligature which holds these incompatible, inconsistent ele ments together in such close relations? Is there a possibility amounting to a possibility that the next ticket to sweep the country In the interests of the foreign bond holder, the trusts, syndicates, money brokers, banks and other instruments of American pros perity, shall be McKinley and Cleve land, or Cleveland and McKinley? It matters little which way the ticket reads, so far as effects go. True, Grover did Inconsiderately twist the British lion's tail in the Venezuela matter, but William lias been gracious ly apologizing ever since, even to the surrender of the whole country to our British brethren. England would hall such a ticket with its approval, and put up money to secure its election. What difference, therefore, to the American people? The men who own and con trol the people's money also own and control the people themselves. ABBOTT ON HARVEY'S BOOK. After four years, during which pe riod he has at all times been laboring with voice and pen and organizing ability to fulfill the mission of '9G, Mr. Harvey, author of Coin's Financial School, comes before the people on the eve of the new presidential cam paign with a new book —in the familiar style of his former one, but treating of tbe later, though not more import ant, issues which have sprung up since the time that Mr. Bryan was defrauded of his election. "Coin on Money. Trusts and Imperialism" treats of at least one issue—imperialism—which had not raised its threatening head in '96. During that struggle, too, the trusts, though already offering a cer tain menace to the well-being of the people, had not developed into such startling proportions as they now pre sent. To these issues Coin, in his new series of lectures, devotes much of his attention", but the old issue—the issue that will arise perennially until out of the hands of a favored class shall bo taken the priceless privilege of issuing and controlling the money of the peo ple—engages his attention in the open ing chapters of the book. I do not think that Mr. Harvey has ever done anything so well as hlB dissection of the privileges enjoyed and the further onea demanded by the national bank ers. In a clear and slmDle sti he. using as heretofore the dialogue form, he discusses the demand of the banking class that it shall be permitted to con trol the money of the people, am? shows conclusively by figures, the au thenticity of which cannot be disputed, how enormous are the profits they now derive and hope to continue to draw from their monopoly. The profit of the dealer in money is ths "unearned increment" no less certainly than is the profit of the speculator in land who has contributed nothing to the produc tive forces of the nation. Mr. Harvey demonstrates this, though he does not use this particular comparison, and I believe that his logic will prove as ir refutable 33 his language is simple and direct. In my opinion, this new book of Mr, Harvey's—notably better than "Coin's Financial School"—by its thoroughly human treatment of the questions of the campaign, deserves and will attain a popularity and a circulation quite commensurate with his earlier one. It is, like that one, cleverly illustrated by drawings which enforce the teach ings of the text, and is given a certain up-to-date and living interest by the employment of the names of well known men in the course of the dis cussions which it recounts. It is a book that will be read by the millions, and will be a most potent weapon in the hands of the people for their de fense against privileged classes. WILLIS J. ABBOT, Chief of the Press Bureau of the Demo cratic National Committee. EDITORIAL ETCHINGS. While it would be a very beautiful thing to give everything to God, still there are some things which may belong to Caesar without offense to the Cre ator. Indeed, it was Christ himself who said: "Render, therefore, to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, | and unto God the things that are God's." Senator Beveridge, in his re markable conversion of the Ameri can republic into an apostolic propa ganda, does not seem able to draw the line In his anxiety to curry favor with his masters, the trusts, banks and j the Republican administration. Is it not a suspicious circumstance , that all of the trusts, banks, money ; lenders, etc., are demanding McKin ley's re-election, and are contributing j heavily to the Republican campaign fund? Some say we cannot get along ; without the banks and great moneyed i institutions, and therefore feel it ; obligatory to stand in with them. That I is true enough when one wants to bor- i row money, but the difficulty Is, the ! great majority want to earn it, hut cannot because of the hoarding of the money for speculation. We have gone so deep into the world's politics that a great standing ] army is said to be necessary to save the nation. If we had not gone in so deep we would not have required so much army, would we? Gov. Roosevelt wants to know: "Has any individual been injured by the ac quisition of wealth by any man?" Cer- ! tainly, the man who has been robbed, i If the governor had used the word "wronged," the United States treas ury might have been indicated. There is altogether too much argu ment among our grammarians about the proper number of the verb "to be" used in connection with the United States. Ought It to be "the United States is." or "the United States are?" | By and by it will be "the United States ain't." Gen. Alger is about to publish a book defending his administration of the war department and embalmed beef. Secretary Gage and a few others might also write books of explanation under the title, "How I Did It." Owing to the impressive, not to say fierce, demands made by Ambassador Choate, the British government has re leased the American flour seized by it in Delagoa bay. Thus war has been averted by the firmness of President McKinley. .JarkNoii mid Ilryau. Here is something for those who think Jackson would favor McKiuley ism, were he alive, to consider: "He was the first American to em phasize the Democratic doctrine that under the constitution congress alone had power to coin and issue money; and in his veto of the bill to recharter the United States bank he declared that this power was a governmental function, could be exercised by con gress alone, and should not be dele gated to corporations or individuals. He denounced the hank and denied the constitutionality of its creation. Against the advice of Webster and Clay, against the decision of the Su preme court, in the face of friends and foes alike, he took his stand and fought the fight to a finish against the most gigantic monopoly which Ameri ca at that time had ever known." The Republican organs have been eulogizing the memory of Andrew Jackson with fulsome praise. They seem to be afraid of him even in the spirit. But he comes out of his grave on occasions and speaks to the Ameri can people in such clear language that no man can be deceived. Monopolies to tho Front. "Those who studied the trust ques tion In 1896 foresaw that an adminis tration placed in power by the aid of great monopolies could not be relied upon to destroy the trusts, but inauy who could not be convinced by argu ment are now being convinced by ths rapid growth and increased audacity of private monopolies."—W. J. Bryan, at Omaha, Jan 8. 1900. There are many white soaps, each represented to be just as good as the Ivory; they are not, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for Ivory Soap and insist upon getting it. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of | smell and completely dernnge the whole sys i tern when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physi cians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the ffood you can possibly derive from ■ | them. Hairs Catarrh Cure manufactured by F.J.Cheney 4 Co., Toledo, 0., contains no : mercury, and is taken internally, acting dl- I rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of I the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken I Internally and Is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. .1. Cheney A Co. Testimonials free. PF'Sold by druggists; price 76c. per bottle. ; j Hall's Family Fills are the best. j Nature, after making man, found she , had some material left, so she made a dude. Jell-O, tlie New Dessert, j Pleases nil the family. Four flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. I Greece expects to come out with a treasury surplus next year. Bdncate Your Bowels With Csseorets. ' Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c, £6o. If C. C. O. fall, druggists refund money. ! Thirty-six foreign vessels, having an aggregate tonnage of 57.556, met with disaster in American waters last year. What Do the Children Brink? i Don't give them tea or coffee. Have i you tried the now food drink called OntiN-O? It is delicious and nourishing, and takes the place of ooffeo. The more Gbain-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their sys tems. Gbain-0 is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about as much. All grocers sell it. 16c. and 26c. j The New. York Press blames amateur photographers for a large percentage of the water waste in Brooklyn. I Mrs.Winslnw'sSoothingPyrap for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain.cures wind colic.2sc abottle. ! "The Boers have sworn death to all British lancers," says a letter from a i Dutchman. ' low, debilitated or exhausted cured by Dr. Kline's Invigorating Tonic. Free II * 0 f or ** wp eks' treatment. Dr. Kline, j M., 961 Arch St., Philadelphia. Founded 1871. There are critical momenta in every life when we must act and act quick ' ly.—Rev. D. C. Garrett. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Awsy. j To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that mr.kcs weak men strong. All druggists, GOc or 51. Care guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York, | The bank of Spain has outstanding less in loans than it report i ed a year ago. I have found Plso's Cure for Consumption ;an unfailing medicine.—F. K. LOTZ, 13U5 .Scott 1 St., Covington, Ky., Oct. 1, 1894. I There seems to be a veritable craze for some sort of "physical culture" in New I York this winter. | To Car Constipation Forever* I Take Cascurets Candy Cathartic. 100 or 26c. If C. C. C. full to oure, druggists refund money. One year's sweepings of the British mint yielded over $5,000 in particles of gold and silver. Dow Are Yonr Kidneys V Dr. Hobbs'J Sparacus PI lis cure all kidney Ilia. Sam pie free. Add. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N. Y. It is supposed that the average depth r)f sand in the deserts of Africa is from 30 to 40 fect L Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tio 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. The salesgirls in a New Jersey town have started a crusade against the use of slang. H. 11. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer In advertisement in another oolumu of this paper. The last was the greatest year for ' pears that the New Jersey farmers have ! had for a decade. What Slmli W© Have For Deiacrtl This question arises in the family daily. Let us answer It to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 min. No boiling! no baking 1 Simply add a little hot 1 water A set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. I Ostrich Spoiled His Speech. Anybody who heard Senator Alton of Nebraska, deliver his famous fif teen-hour speech against the Mil for the repeal of the Sherman silver Mil . would hardly believe that anything coud stump him. Yet there is an ex perience in the senator's life which shows that, after ail, he is like unto other mortals, says the Washington Post. "I was campaigning in my i state once," said the senator, "when J | had occasion to speak at a fair grounds. The grand stand was full, j and the occasion seemed to be full of promise for an orator overflowing as I was with political gospel. Just as 1 had commenced a man brought out an ostrich hitched to a sulky. I don't know whether you ever saw the trotr ting ostrich in the east, but out west he was a great attraction. Well, as soon as that bird began to run around the track I wasn't in it. The ostrich monopolized the attention of every man, woman and child. When the bird stopped the people listened to me, but when he threw out his long legs again there was a roar of laughter and applause which drowned every word I uttered. Finally, 1 gave it up. I let the trotting ostrich have everything his own way." Optimistic. Prom the New York World.—Angel ; tne —Do you really think, then, that Mr. Softhead Ig Interested in you? Barbara—Yes, that Is, he mentioned flats the last time he called. I I Had a Bad Cough "I hid a bad cough for six weeks and could not find any relief whatever. I read what a wonderful remedy Ayer's Cherry Pectoral was for coughs and I bought a bottle. Before I had taken a quarter of it my cough had entirely left me."—L. Hawn, Newington, Ont., May 3,1899. Quickly Cures Colds Neglected colds always lead to something serious. They run into chronic bronchitis which pulls down your general health , and deprives you of sleep; or 1 they end in genuine consump tion with all its uncertain results. Don't wait, but take Ayer's 1 Cherry Pectoral just as soon as | you begin to cough. A few ! doses will cure you then. But | it cures old colds, too, only it takes a little more time. We 1 refer to such diseases as bron -1 chitis, asthma, whooping-cough, consumption, and hard winter ; coughs. ' !If you've just taken eold a25 cent hot tie is all you'll need. For harder eases a j 50 cent Dottle is better. For chronic troubles, and to keep on liand, tho SI.OO t bottle is most economical. P. N. U. 7 'OO : u h {ThOUipSOITS Ejffl WatOf Save Your Hair with Shampoos of And light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of emollient skin cures. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces, stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment, and makes the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else fails. Millions of Women Use CUTICURA SOAP exclusively for preserving, purifying, anil beautifying the skin, for cleansing tile scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stop ping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and healing, red, rough, and. sore hands, in the form of baths for annoying irritations and chaliugs, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weak nesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, and especially mothers, aud for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. X o amount of persuasion can induce those who have onco used it to use any other, especially for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, aud hair of infants and children. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICORA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compounded is to be compared with it for pre serving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it com bines, in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, viz., TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, the BEST skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet and BEST baby soap in the world. All that has been said of COTICURA SOAP may bo said with oven greater emphasis of OUTICURA Ointmout, the most delicate, and yet most effective of emollients, and greatest of skin cares. Its use in connection with CuricuitA SOAP (as per directions around eacli package), in the "ONE NIGHT CORE FOR SORE HANDS," in the •' INSTANT BELIEF TREATMENT FOR DISFIGURING ITCHINOS AND IRRITATIONS," and in many uses too numerous to mention, is sufficient to prove its superiority over all other preparations for the skin. E/fernal and Internal Treatment tor every Humor, ■ II 1 11) HI I constating of CUTICURA BOAI (25C.), to clounso the skin of cruste und scales and soften the thickened cuticle, CUTICUKA OINTMENT (50C.). A E A* <CI AS tolnttantly allay Itoblng, tollniiimailuo, mid irritation, and soothe ami I flO ©I • *© heal, und CUTICITHA RESOLVENT (60C.), to cool and cleanse the blood A Braau* SET Is often sufficient to euro the most torturing, disfiguring, aud humiliating skin, scalp, and blood humors, with lons of hair, when ull else falls. POTTER DRUO AND CIIKM* Oour., Holo Props., Boston. " All about tho tikiu, Scalp, aud Ualr," free. DR. ARNOLD'S 80UGH Curi'i CoHjlis unci Colds. Mf a | ■ pa Prevents Consumption. Mil I §■ || All Druggists. 25c ImlkkklA ION lO DAYS TRIAL. Separators, sizes 1 to 15 cows, price from *5 to According to size. 15 cows, prices $7 to $lO. They make <i 11 ISON-S'fKWA ill ftl F< ng Co!l GIBSONIA, PA. HOW TO GET OFFICE the Government Ottlce Training Seh<ml, Washing ton. D. O. Women Eligible. Positions Permanent. IIIICCnA UHEIT.nATINIWTAIII.KTS. PosJ. UnCLUH tiv relief, never fails. Sample box. 26C. Address Hector St reel llook Si ore. S. V. thy. VIRGINIA FARMS for sale at rare bar trains. Have a few exceptionally nice farms with poorl now buildings. Send for list. A. T. STKWAHT, Carson, Virginia I Most talked of potato on earth ! nur [ ' up a hbl. Send thin notice and 6c. ra. : y JOHN SEED (°-L ACROSS^] j fagae———e— ———— | |i FOR 14 Ci-fiTS Wo wis^ ( to Kftin thb year 200j000 1 O Pkg.Earl'st flrat-rnldCuetirnberl6c J tt W 'w'll* " La Oroaso Market Lettuce, 16c , I 2 n v\i m)ra 1 " Strawberry Melon, 160 9 MlVuffjßcW 1 " 13Day Radish, 10c ' 1 X iSliillflßl ' " I'-'tr 1 y Ripo Cal>bae, 100 I 1 " Early Dinner Onion, 100 I ; AwnW'lmittff 3 " brilliant Flower Seedn, 1 ;">o | • PWttSl ortli SI.OO, lor 14 cent*. $ l oil { i O | t/W Ma Above 10 Pkgs. worth SI.OO, we will I I 2 mi Ml grent Catalog,'telling nil about i •HI SB SALIERS MIILIOH DOLLAR POTATO | | X JW npn recent oftms l4cj | I • when yon once try Snl v.er'i J 2 Prize* on Salter's IHOO- rat- ( : 2 eat earlioatTomato Giant on earth. \C— j 1 2 JOIIS A. MAI.ZRK SKKOCO., LA CROSSX, Win. , •••••••••••••••••••••MM! frcntiiicnt.iyeo of charge^ of the most remarkable remedy ever discovered. Contains trout Vital Principle heretofore unknown. He. frnctory t uses solii it •1. Confidential correspondents Invited from all, espreUlly Phynlrlana. ST. JAMES SOCIETY, BBt BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Tf CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS 5 ■ Host Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Oso J: _E in time. Sold b.v druggists. ■ sjj| B
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers