Stomach Troubles In Spring Are THAT BILIOUS FEELINO, bail taste in the mouth, dull headache, sleep lessness, poor appetite. No matter how careful you are about eating, everything you take into your stomach turns sour, causes dis tress, pains and unpleasant gases. Don't you understand what those symptoms—signals of distress—meau? j They aro the cries of the stomach for help! It is being overworked. It needs the peculiar tonic qualities and digestive strength to bo found in Hood's Sairsaparilla The best stomach aud blood reme dies known to tho medical profession aro combined in tho medicine, aud thousands of grateful letters telling its cures prove it to be the greatest medicine for all stomach troubles ever yet discovered. Wlioro Jeff Davis Courted. When Gen. Zachary Taylor was in command at.Fort Knox, near Vlncen nes, Ind., Jefferson Davis, afterward president of the southern confederacy, was a lieutenant in the army, and wai with his company at the fort. Tradi tion has It that Davis and Miss Tay lor, whom he afterward married, took •trolls upon the prairie near the fort, and that they often seated themselvel upon a large stone which lay on knoll some distance away. It Is said that while seated thus one day Davii proposed marriage to Miss Taylor and •was accepted. Davis and Miss Tayloi were married at Vincennes, and them selves told of the courtship on tin stone. To commemorate the romantii Incident Mrs. H. J. Rabb of Vincennei has caused the stone to be removed tl the house where it is now to be seea —New York Sun. yWoman'® Refuge when sick Is Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. No other medicine In the world has done so muoh good. No confidence has ever been violated. No woman's testimonial was ever published by Mrs. Pinkham without special permission. No woman ever wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for advice without getting help. No man sees these letters. Her advice Is free, and her address is Lynn, Mass. She is a woman, you can tell her itho truth. No living person is sc competent to advise women. None has had such experience. She has restored a mil lion sufferers to health. You can trust her. Others have. ' rciia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass. What do the Children Drink ? i Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried tho now food drink called GRAIN-O ? Jt is delicious and nourishrag and takes tho pluce of coffee. . Tho moro Grnin-0 you give tho children the moro health you distrib ute through thoir systems. Grain-O is mado of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes liko tlio choice grades of coffee but costs about as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. utid 25c. Try Grain-O! Insist lhat gives you GRAIN-O Accept no imitation. inn v J nil P A It younnvoffottneFlLKH, UB ■ FL- LK you nave not USED DANIELS J I ■ R &CII PILK CLIHK, or von ■ ■ EBB !■ V would not Lave THEM NOW. LHE only r>uttratiu:od Cure. No detention from business, no operation, no opium 01 morphine. BupiK>Mtone6 bUe. 0r24 and bos of ointment |I.(X, postpaid by mail. Send for hook ot valu able information on Hies,FßEE,whether you use our remedy or uot. THE DANIKJLB SURE PILK CURE CO., 284 A.-ylum St., Hartford, Conn. CDP V'C D N. Will, Sams, Ky , ray* |~ W\ C. ¥ O Fiev s Verrmfuj; i tho best Vworin destroyer I linve over found, i lease send me some right away. c D Mrs. B.C. Hvnan. Gordons ville, Va.: R/l * Prey's Vermifuge the very ■ best one I have ever used. I write ■ p you direct as 1 cannot find it ■ || in the stores, and I must have tliis kind and no WB ET other. t w. E. Fowler, kmesbnry, Mass., pays: Plena© send one bottle of your Frey's Vermtfnge-cannot get it here. At druggists or by mail for 26 cents. E. dc H.FItKY, nahimorc, Md. NOADCV NEW DISCOVERY; eivet I JFw vl J ■ quick relief nnd cures worst esees- Boos of testimonials and IO days' treatment FREE. Dr. M. MLKBM'B TOM. LEA B. Atlanta, QA. Beet Cough Byrup. Tastes good. Uso £1 in time. Sold by druggists. CI iTTTfT'iriiklMrßfli A BIT OF HIS OWN EXPERIENCE. The Successful Author'* 01-Ject Lessor, to the Literary Aspirant. Wyndlmm Towers, tho successfai author, bad met Penuington, the lit erary aspirant, at Mrs. Worther spoon's, and hml taken a liking to him. There was something pathetic in the expression of the boy's eyes, and from the pointot' view of tho simple-hearted author there was nothing particularly kind iu his askiug him to dine at the Peumau's Club when he next met him, crossing Madison Square. After dinner, which was more ap preciated by the younger man than by tho elder, they lit their cigars, and Pennington asked Towers the ques tion that had been on his tongue all through the meal: "Do editors buy thiugs from you now that they wouldn't buy when you first started in?" Towers smiled that dreamy smile'of his, and said, "Why, of course, my dear boy. If you have namo enough anything will go. Tho editors don't think anything more of your stuff, but •he dear public thinks it is good if it has a great name tacked to it." "Then did you have trouble at first?" asked Pennington, as if he thought the answer would be no. For Towers looked as if bo bad beou born with a whole set of silver spoons in his mouth—that generous mouth of his. "Yes, I bail trouble, although lean afford to laugh at my troubles now. Indeed, I really think that I was hap pier then, for I was struggling to got somewhere. Now that tho struggle is over, life has lost much of its zest." "You look back on your happiness, and I look forward to it," said Pen nington bitterly. Who is happy to day?" "Perhaps the waiter who is serving us to uight, although Markham might call liiui 'brother to the ox.' But your speaking of selling stuff readily now that went hard at first recalls an ex perience of mine when I was a young ster and fresher at the business than I ever will be again. I had had a run of hard luck that had about winded mc, aud unless I could collect some money due me from a certain magazine it looked as if I would starve to death. In fact, I bad not had auything to eat for tweuty-four hours, aud hadn't a cent iu my pockets. The editor, who was also the cashier, was busy, and they told me to wait. After I had waited an hour he hurried out of his office, and told me he had got to catch a train, and he was gone in a moment. Well, the shock was too great for me, and I fainted. When I came round I explained matters, aud a sub-editor, whoso heart was iu the right place, even if his judgment was poor, com missioned me to write an article ou the ups and downs of Wall Street, anil paid me in advance. The article was badly done, as it was out of my liue, but the check tided mo over for a season. Well, I made rather a dra matic little story out of my fainting— it really wasn't "bad, aud I tried to sell it all over the country, but uo one would even sniff at it, so, after a few mouths of travel on its part, I put tho soiled and creased manuscript away until the timo should be ripe." "And did the limo ripen?" said Peuningtou,with a ghost of a smile. "The time always ripens if you don't dio too soon. Three years ago I made my'first hit with 'A Heart Un fortified,' anil followed it up in tie spring with 'Winter and Bough Weather,' aud then I was flooded with orders, and reporters wore out my electric boll buttou coming to me for interviews. Aud when I had sold 'most everything I hail over written, good, bad aud indifferent, I took this dramatic sketch and turned it into what it was, a bit of my own life, an autobiographical sketch." "And iliil it go?" said Pennington eagerly. "Did it go? Why, man, 'Tho Daily Boomerang' gave mo SSOO for it, and printed it in the Christinas supple ment-. Yos, yes, I remember just how it was headed. I read it wliilo I was dining at Delmouico's with Howard Bronsou aud Greene Clay; 'A Great Author Faints From Hunger While Success is Years Away. Wyndlinm To wore, the Famous Novelist, Tells How Ho Once Felt the Pangs of Starvation in tho Office of the "Lit erary Magazine." Most Dramatic Story of the Century. Fact Once More Proved Stranger Than Fiction.' How Clay and Bronsou laughed when I showed it to them!" "But you didn't laugh at tho time?" said Pennington, soberly. "No, I didn't laugh at the time, but don't you Ree tho dramatic situation all round?" Pennington scemeil about to speak. He hesitated, colored, aud then shut his lips resolutely. A half hour later, when Towers bade him adieu and went uptown to tho opera, Pennington went back to Madison Square aud sat down on a bench, and said half aloud: "Towers went, tweuty-four hours hungry, and but for this chance din ner I would have gone three days. Where will my breakfast come from?" —Charles Battell Looinis, in tho Cri terion. Girl* Remember Rest. In experiments for testing tho mem ory powers of an equal number of boys aud girls at different agos in school and university classes, they were all read a simple story contain ing 321 words anil 152 distinct ideas, after which they immediately pro ceeded to write what they could re member. The conclusions were that tho growth of memory is more rapid in girlß than in boys.—lndianapolis News. Good Wrought by Good Manner*. To smile, to bow, to lift the hat, to beg pardon, to say "thank you," cost nothing. No oue will ever know the vast good that these words aud simi lar cues have accomplished. THE HOMINC INSTINCT; Ability of Various lllrd* and Antmnls to Find Their Way Home. The homing inatinct develops iu young animals almost as early as the desive for food. In tho wild state it is a necessity, since without it the young could never keep in touch with herd or pack. Even after centuries of domestication it is still acute. Witness this tale of little pigs: They were under a mouth old when their owner decided to move. He wanted to fatten and kill their mothers, so offered tho lot of forty at a bargain price. A neighbor five miles away bought the pigs, put them in a big box, hoisted the box on n wagon and hauled it home. There the pigs were put in a closed pen, fed on milk and mush for two weeks, then allowed to run in a small lot adjacent the pen. Three mornings later every one was missing. A small hole carefully rooted under tho gate was the solo explana tion of their disappearance. Their buyer searched high and low for them, sending even to adjacent farms, but could not find them. That afternoon the original owner sent word he had found thirty-nine of the forty stand ing squealing at his gate when he awoke. Tho bnyer going to reclaim tho strays, found tho missing fortieth pig lying exhausted by the roadside, still struggling to follow tho trail of its mates. Upon the same middle Tennessee plantation u four-year-old mare was bought from an Ohio drove. The drove had been brought down on stock cars to the county town, seven miles away. The mare seemed per fectly content in her new surround iugs, so after a week or two she was allowed to pasture with other stock. For a day silo was happy, grazing and frolicking with the rest. Toward noon of the second day a watchor saw her suddenly fling up hor head, cock one ear forward, one back, as though listening intently to a far off. call, then start iu a swinging gallop for the pasture fence, clear it with a flying leap, cross a lield of youug corn, take the boundary fence, a much stiffer one, and go away due north. Nothing more was seen or heard of her for three months. Then by a singular chance sho was discovered, impounded as an estray, more than half way across tho State of Kentucky. She had swum a considerable rivor to get •so far, and had beeu taken up, through breaking into a pasture to graze. She was go ing homo straight as the crow flies, making no accouut whatever of the beuds and turns iuthe route by which sho had been fetched. Ainoug fowls, domestic turkeys are the most porsistent homers. This same plautation's mistress found that out in away at once odd and provok ing. SIO raised a brood of fourteen, which turned out to contain thirteen gobblers. They were fino lusty bronze brown fellows, although this was in the year when brouzo turkeys, so called, wero unknown. She gave away seven out of the thirteen to as many neighbors, to put at the head of their breeding flockß. As a conse quence, almost every day for six weeks she had to go out and help to sepa rate her own turkeys from some other flock. Each of tho gift gobbblers came back home, not once but many times, with his harem at his heels. Cats aro provorbial homers. Piulcrcwfikl'j Fominino Critics* "About a year ago," said a North Side girl, "a gentleman moved into the flat next fo ours and brought his piano with him. Now, I'm fond of music, but that did not hinder me (from getting very tired sometimes of hearing our neighbor practicing, and I would say to Molly, 'Whata dullard that fellow is! Ho will never become a inusicinu!' Then again, he would do so well that I would add repent eutly, 'Beally his touch is quite good.' "The other night ho gave us a gor geous surprise. He played all even ing long—and such music! Molly aud I crept out on tho lauding en tranced. I vowed I was going to get some one to iutroduco him to mo, and then I might implore him to play a little every night. But Molly de murred. She said she quite agreed with 1110 that this was excellent music, but, all the same, tho musician was lacking iu technique, nud it was clearly a caso of special inspiration rather than the result of any great training or ability. "But we did enjoy it all the samo, and I prayed that our neighbor might have his 'inspirations' early and ofton. Tho next morning when I went down in tho elevator, tho boy said: 'D'yon know that Paderowski was here last night?' I gasped, 'Where?' 'Oh, right iu tho flat next co yours,' he said, 'Padorowski is a great friend of that fellow who lives there, and, do you know, ho just stnyed aud played all the eveuing!'"—Chicago Times- Herald. Why Cat* Arcli Tholr Itnckp* It is not anger alone that makes cats arch their backs; indeed, when two cats are preparing to fight they do not assume this attitude, but crouch low, just as they do when nbont to spring on their prey, the body being extended, and the hair not in the least erect. It is noticeable that a cat will also arch its back when in an affeotionate frame of mind, rubbing itself against its master's leg. At tho same time it slightly raises its fur and holds its tail erect. Its whole attitude is just the reverse of that which it assumes when savage. Darwin accounts for this in the following words: "Certain states of mind lead to certain habitual actions which are of no service. Now, when a direotly opposite state of mind is induced there is a strong and invol untary tendency to tho performance of a movement of a directly opposite nature, though it nay be of no ser vioe." WOMAN ON THE BIKB tome Kulea That the Fair Bex Bkaald Follow in Biding, One of the first requisites, whether the rider be delicate or strong, is mod eration. Riding for speed subverts the very end of the exercise—it is like row ing or running or doing anything else for speed, it finally conquers the con queror—and the most sickening, har rowing sight is the continuous race. The association of wheelmen should do all in their power to suppress these public exhibitions of human idiocy. Another essential, especially for wo men, is an appropriate dress, and there Is no law against a gentleman also being appropriately dressed. I never could understand why it was necessary that a man should wear the garb of a circus clown in order to ride a wheel. In the past year or two the women have come nobly to the rescue In the matter of genteel dress. The short hair, tho bloomer, and the chewing gum have well nigh disappeared. Tho plain cloth, medium length, medium width gown is no hindrance, and has the further advantage and economy of being a good rainy day gown for walk ing. Another essential is to learn how to ride. Many are riding without this knowledge. There are few mechanical principles to be observed. One Is to have the gearing so arranged as to have the pedals on a level with the foot when the foot is extended. An other is to have the saddle so placed as to bring the weight of the body di rectly over the pedal when ths latter is at its lowest point. Still another is to lower the handle bars sufficiently to allow the body to bend forward slight ly from the hips —not stooping from the shoulders, thereby compressing tho lungs. Nearly all beginners bend the spine backward from the hips. As a rule, young children, if the gearing is correct, take the normal position. Finally the rider should sit, a3 in a chair, upon the bones or tuberosities of the pelvis, and should, on no account, allow the weight of the body to rest upon the tissues situated between these bony prominences. Indeed, the danger of Bertous injury resulting to children and adults from riding a sad i die constructed in ignorance of cor rect anatomical principles is so great that it is always wise to refer the sad dle question to a competent physician. Besides the very important ruestion of saddle is that of the wheel Itself. It must be thoroughly well made, of tho best material, and it must not be too light. Too light a wheel gains no momentum to speak of, while the Jar ring and vibration are very disagree able, If not injurious. There must bo a certain weight and solidity. Finally, the wheel by its economy of money and time permits the rider to avail himself of new scenes and places, giv ing pleasurable sensations, the absence of which in exercise for the sake of health alone is the reason why health seldom responds to the call of <uch perfunctory exercise. The heart is not in It. —Leslie's Weekly. A Novel Fence. 1 It is said that in Yellowstone park there is a fence which is composed en ! tirely of the horns of the elk, and in cludes over three hundred selected specimens. None of them has less than twelve and very many have fourteen points. They were gathered in June, 11895, by a party of gentlemen who found them during a four days' hunt, all of them within a radius of ten miles of the Mammoth Hot Springs. Yellowstone Park contains nearly three thousand elks. They shed their horns in March, and during this time are very shy and quiet. now ow everything looks. \W \. ou sre com P lctel y discouraged V \ and cannot throw off that terri- H \ HH/ little noise sounds like the roar PJ A of a cannon ; and a little sleep is all || dRk y°u can secure, night after night. £ igjr Nerve Exhaustion 1 Hp The truth of the matter is, your nerves have been £oi- EK H soncd and weakened with the impurities in your blood. Ihe HJ thing for you to do is to get rid of these impurities just as raj You want a blood-purifying medicine,—a perfect £irsapa- I rilla,—that's what you want. You want a Sarsaparilla that H is the strongest and best nerve tonic you can buy, too. w That's AYER'S 1 "The only Sarsaparilla made under the personal supervision ol H three graduates: a graduate in pharmacy, a graduate H in chemistry, and a graduate in medicine." H SI.OO a bottle. All druggists. B " During last year I was suffering from nervous prostration. For weeks I grew BB worst, became thin, could not sleep, had no appetite, and was in a wretched con dition. After taking several kinds of medicines without result, I took Ayer's Sarsaparilla with more than pleating results. My appetite returned, 1 slept soundly, BB my strength and weight increased, and now lam well and strong without the ll slightest trace of my old trouble. Indeed, I would hardly belies eit possible for Hfl medicine to bring about such a change in any poraon."-—CLASS MKALEY, Winter [J Hill, SomervilJe, Mass., Dec. 21, 1899 JHI According to a German newspaper, there are at present in Europe 71 mar tlageable princesses, and only 47 mar riageable princes. How's This? We offer One Hundred Doll<r Reward foi any ca e of Catarrh that cannot b.- cured by Hail's Catarrh Cue. P. J. CHESKV A CO., P. ops., Toledo, Q. We. the undernigued, have known F.J. Che ney tor the la t lf yearn, and believe h ra per fectly honorable in all buainct* t uu actions and financially able to carry out uuy obliga tion in do by their firm. WEST & TRUAX,Wholesale Dtuggis.s, Toledo, Oh o. WALDIKO, KINXAX & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. Ohio. Hall"4 Catarrh t'oie is taken in'ernally, not ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of tli- system. Pi ic-, 76e. pe bottle. Hold by all Duggists. Testimonial* free. Hall's Family Pills are tho be .-A. The great wealth that lies in the quarries of Sweden is at last being de veloped. To Cure a Cold In On* Day. Take LAXATIVE PROMO QUININE TABLETS. All druggists refund tho money if it lalle to cure. E. W. Gaovi's signature is on each box. 26c. British government expenditure is running now $7,000,000 a week be yond revenue. M ro.Winslow'sSnnthingSyrap for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion. allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. At one of her banquets Cleopatra made Antony drink a pearl valued at sio,ooo. The Beat Prescription for Chills and Fever Is a bottle of GitOVE'a TASTELESS CHILL TONIO. It Is simply iron and quinine In a tasteless form. No cure— 110 pay. Price 60c. The Belgian State railways have or dered 12 locomotives from Philadelphia for September delivery. Jcll-O, the Ncur Dessert, Pleases all tho family. Four flavors:— Leinou, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 eta. The Japanese House of Representa tives has passed a bill to prohibit boys under 20 years of age from smoking. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Fuse. A powder to shako into your shoes; rests the feet. Cures Corn*, Bunions, Hwollen, Bore, Hot, Callous. Aching, Sweating Feet and In growing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes now or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and shoe stores. 25 eta. Sample mailed FREE. Address Alien S. Olinsteud, Leltoy, N.*Y. Stone street was the first street in New York City paved with cobble stones, hence its name. The paving was done in the year 1657. What Shall Wo Have Fqy Dcaacrt) Tills question arises in the family dally. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared In 2 min. No boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot water & set to 0001. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. It is stated that coal is leaving Phila delphia at the rate of 1,000 tons a clay for Mediterranean ports, ostensibly for railway fuel. It is illegal in Great Britain for a pawnbroker to accept the Victoria Cross as a pledge under any circum stances. I niR sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved ray life thro-* years ago.—MRS. THUS. ROB BINS, Maple St., Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17,1900 The British and Foreign Bible Soci ety recently celebrated its 96th birthday. The Washington Mutual Mining Investment Co., Mutual Life Mldg., Seattle, Washington, guarantees 6 per cent, interest on all invest ments, and equal participation in profits made in mining in Alaska and elsewhere. Great advantages to small investor*. Write for circular. Highest references. The Chinese arc said to hive used clocks 800 years before the Christian era. Carter's Ink. Good ink Is a necessity for good writing. Car ter's is the best. Costs no more than poor ink. Irish mayors are exempted from duty in courts. Before starting on a " run " a refreshing wash with Ivory Soap gives new energy. It lathers quickly in any kind of water and does not cost more than common soap. The luxury of being clean is not realized without using Ivory Soap. You need not fear alkali,' or other injurious ingredients found in many soaps. Ivory Soap is nothing but pure materials, combined to make a soap that will clean and rinse quickly, thoroughly, satisfactorily. IT FLOATS. A MAN'S PLAINT. ClothMl That Are Injarod by Contact with Bofa Pillows. "Kindly remove the sofa cushion," etld the Man, languidly, as he sat down on the coucli beside the Woman. "The last time I was in its immediate vicin ity it behaved very bady, indeed, filling my coat with a soft, cottony fuzz that it took two hours of good, hard brush ing to remove, so I've determined to have nothing more to do with it. D'ye know I'm getting so that I don't feel at all like putting on my good clothes when I go to call on women nowadays; all on account of these villain pillows, which are everywhere, and which seem to be filled with tiny, fluffy feathers that escape and cling to one with glue like persistency? That reminds me to remark that on account of one of Eve's fairest daughters my dress suit is now reposing at the cleaner's. No, she didn't spill a plate of ice cream on me, nor did she do anything awkward of that sort; all she did was to use in my preeence of those absurd fans made of ostrich feathers that some women affect. It was a pink fan, and, candid ly, I think it was a little moth-eaten, but at any rate she's a nice girl and I like her, so I was a good deal with her at the german. Gradually I noticed that the fan seemed to be losing plum age and I seemed to be gaining it. When I was a fine fluff almost from my head to heels I went up to the dress ing room and got the man to brush me off, but as the needle to the pole those feathers were to me. Back they'd come merrily as soon as he'd cease agitating them, and settle even on my hair and in my mouth. A thousand kind friends came up to me during the evening and told me how funny I looked, and the owner of the fan herself laughed a bit. but, frankly speaking, I wasn't amused. I sent the suit to the cleaner the next day, and I hope he'll be able success fully to pluck it. I don't mind find ing on coming home from a dance that my sleeves are whitened by contact with sundry fair arms or that some powdery substance decorates my lapels, but I draw the line at feathers, hence I —take away the cushion; I'll have ! none of it, an' if my Tuxedo gets full ' of them I'll have to retire to private I life for an indefinite space."—Pittsburg 1 Dispatch. A TIP ABOUT U3INU STAMPS. Something Wliloh A Great IUHDJ People Do Sot Know. "Wait until I have washed oft the j postage stamp on this envelope, spoiled In the addressing," said a man, ac- I cording to the Washington Star. "It ie not necessary to do that," said a law- | yer. "You may take your scissors and cut out the adhesive stamp and stick it fast to your new envelope with muci- : lage, notwithstanding the adhering piece of the old envelope. It does not look nice and may become detached In the mail, but if the stamp is a genuine, ! unused adhesive stamp it is not ques tioned. The government, when it sells an adhesive 2-cent stamp, undertakes for such consideration to transport i and deliver to destination the letter to which it is affixed. The fact that it has with it a piece of envelope to which it was formerly attached, does not relieve the government from executing its part of the contract when the letter is deposited for mailing, the stamp beinu otherwise perfect." MIKE WWH33-&2? Msh a xerie* or twenty illustrated boxing les ions in GOLDEN Horns. 'I his will offer its readers the same privileges as those wealthy enough to iielona to a fashionable dub. Ask vour newsdi aler for GOI.DEN Horns No. Mi), or send $1 for si ial *ui>si'rtptioii covering the les one to Gold- n lion.-, 2-t and Yaiidewut.-r Str. V w y. n . || I Hi A STOPPED FREE M ■ tiL™ Rerminenlty Cured bi I I OR. KLINE'S GREAT I | W NERVE RESTORER ' wViifflinTTM: 1 KH'RR"" 1 Ebl'lli.l..Till... DB. KT.VKLINKUL 831 Arch Street. PtiiladelDhia. ten. u.vioHi.is, nciioiun ■'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. ■ Late PrfnciDal B3i*m!ner US. Penston Bureau. i QSyrsiu civil war. l&adjudioHtiuc ilaiuie.atty t>mc% Helpless. fle—"Would you scream if I were to take you in my arm 3 and kisg you?" She—"What good would that do? Papa and mamma are away, and the walls and floors and ceilings of this flat are all deadened."—Chicago Times-Her ; aid. -Mr- >Mf. v'to .Ate. vMr. v'.V- vW- .Mr. .vr. -Mr. I* HAVE IT READY f Minor accidents are so frequent and such hurts so troublesome £ no household should be with- out a bottle of £ St. Jacobs Oil I mm i n s i unt $ W as the ' \ V now * j* ' I A&tuT PERFECT I ; I * ' PI. PAINS 'l % m'/l •" $ ; M, ACHES I | ALABASTINE"J 1 | base wall coating, i In 5 lb. paper packages, made ready for nso in i white and fourteen beautiful tints by mixing , with cold water. It is a cement that goes i through a process of setting, hardens with age, and canbecoatod and recoated without washing i oil its old coats before renewing. ALABASTINEHS various ku'nouiinos on the market, being durable and not stuck on the wall with gluo. Alabastine customors should insist on having the goods in packages properly labeled. They shonld reject all imitations. There i 3 nothing "just es good." ALABASTINE Prevents much sickness, particularly throat and i lung difficulties, attributable to unsanitary ■ coatings on walls. It has been recommended j in a paper publishod by the Michigan State Board of Health on account of it 9 sanitary I features; which paper strongly condemned I kalsomines. Alabastine enn be used on either j plastered walls, wood ceilings, brick or canvas, | and any one can brush it on. It admits of radi cal changes from wall paper decorations, thus I securing at reasonable expense the latest and 1 best effects. Alabastine is manufactured by the Alabastine Company ofOrand Rapids.ilidii^an. Instructive and interesting booklet mailed free to all applicants. DO NOT SEND US ANY MONEY! I "BEAUTIFUL CDC?; #4°OLD FREE! No. 362, 2 Rubios and 2 Pearls. Thi beautiful Ring will adorn your hand without i any cost to you. Don't .send us any money, Just 1 vour name aiul address. We will send you Postpaid l . of our Large, Handsome Doilies, different de igns. Sell tiieui to your Family anil Friends at 100 -ai h.sei. l us the sl.2n uud we will send you by re | turn mail the beautiful Ring. | We idler EUKE, Sterling Silver Bracelets, Gold I Plated Bracelets, Gold Rings, Nethersole Silver j Rrai elets, Gold Pen and Pearl Handle, fur selling • ■ur Handsome Doilies. MKI I'll Hi'IIK Tit-DAY. 1 (It'll St't'cV.KS is CERTAIN. Is A. UI2KH A CO., Jewelry Dept., W. L. DOUCLAS S3 &3.50 SHOES JJft *3JVVorth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. f 1,01)0,000 wearers, k* ■ 1 P f >U have W. L. jH I \ '35 stam ped on bottom. I no substitute i laimed to be V ~ lor carriage.' State kind ot leather, COLOR tvEiETs L. DdUGLAS >HOE CO., Brockton, P. n. u. le, 'oo.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers