Straight Road To Health Is by the way of purifying tho blood. Germs and Impurities in the cause disease ami sickness. Expelling these im purities removes the dlseuse. Hood's Sar- Biiparllla does this and it does more. It makes the blood rich by increasing and vitalizing the red globules and giving it power to transmit to the organs, nerves and muscles the nutriment contained in digested food. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Best Medicine Money Can liuy. At a recent sale of seal fur skins in London extraordinary prices were real ized. What Do tlac C hildren Drink 9 Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called GIUIN-O? It is delicious and nourishing, aud takes tho place of coffee. The more GRAIX-0 you give tho chlldron the more health you distribute through their sys tems. ORAIN-O is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice gra le9 of coffee, but costs about us much. All grocers sell It. 15c. and 25c. Ihe South African winter begins to ward the end of April and lasts until September. What Shall Wo Have For Doeeert? This question arises In the family daily. Let us answer it to-duy. Try Joll-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared In 2 min. No bollligl no baking! Simply add a little hot watordk 9ot to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. Eleven millions of men are said to belong to the great Chinese Society of Boxers. Are You Using Allen'* Uoot-Ease It is the only euro for Swo'len, Smarting, Tired. Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet, Corns a'nl Dunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to bo shaken into tho shoes. Cures while you walk. At ull DruguUts and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Lelloy, N. 1". It will require over 52.000 men to take the 1900 United States census. Throw 1 hyslc to tho dogs—if you don't want the dogs: but if IOU want good diges tion cbew Beemnu's Pepsin Gum. Smoking tobaco >s practically un known in Cuba. Piso's Cure cannot bo too highly spoken ot as a cough cure.—J. W. O'BUIEX. 322 Third Ave.. N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. i), 1930. A Moscow hospital employs 900 nurses. Carter'* Ink I* Used Exclusively by the schools of New York. Boston ami many other places, and they won't use any other. Switzerland has 60 maccaroni fac tories. Mrs. Winslow'sSoi thlngSyrup forehildren teething, softens the gums, reduces iutla muta tion. allayspaiii.cures wind colic.2sc a bottle. On the 110 square miles of London's area 1,000 tons of soot settle yearly. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All druggists refund the money If it fall* to curs. B. W. GROVE'S signature Is on each box. 26A, Sir C. Warren's liath. There is something extremely Eng lish in the story of Sir Charles War ren "doing trimbic3," as Bouncer ex pressed it, in the open air on the bat tlefield of Vaal Kranz. Sir Charles, under no circumstances, Intermits his morning bath. On the occasion of Bul- last effort to relieve Ladysmitb Sir Charles found It impossible to leave his post, so when day broke on the battlefield he ordered his servant to bring his bath with sponge and towel, and then and there, in the open air, Sir Charles Warren, commanding the Fifth division, proceeded to take his bath, sublimely indifferent to tho fire of the enemy. The enemy were, perhaps, too much astonished at the British eccentricity of bathing at all, much more of bathing in this extreme ly public fashion, to attempt any vio lent interruption.— London Daily News. The Turn of Life This is a critical period in the life of every woman ami no mistakes should be made. The one recognized and reliable help for women who are approaching and passing through this wonderful change is That the utmost reliance oan be placed upon this great medicine is testi fied to by an army of grateful women who have been hefped by it. Mrs. Pinkham, who has the greatest and most suooessful experience In 'the world to qualify her, will advise you free of charge, Her address is Lynn. Mass. Write to her. SSBFIMH* Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use Q In time. Sold by druggists. CI EGEBHEQuOsiaegll PERILS OF THE MINES. THE CREATEST DREAD OF THE ANTHRACITE COAL REGION. Deadly Nature of the Cave-lu—Heroic At- 1 tempts to Uescue Entombed Comrade* —Some Extraordinary Instances ot En durance—Why Hope Endures So Long. TV COOUNTS of the terrible ex / \ plosion in a Utah coal tuine have brought to mind forci bly the precarious existence that the miner leads beneath the earth. But of all the accidents which threaten tli9 life of the anthracite eoal-miner, none is more feared than j the deadly cave-in. It is far more liable to cause death thau explosions or Hoods, runaway cars, or falls down the abaft. Dozens and dozens of men are crushed to death every year by it, aud the reports of the mine in spectors show that a large majority of the fatal accidents of the year are duo ,to it. Witness the great accident at the twin shaft, Pittston, Penn., a few years ago, when fifty-nine men were Bhut in or crushed to death; and the fall at No. 11, Plymouth, Penn., when thirteen men were killed. None of these victims were ever found, nor is there much probability of any trace of ! them being discovered. Suddeuly and horribly fatal as they are, the caves give warning of their approaoh. A short time ago the writer was in an affected gangway. There was a constant and menacing noise, which is almost irflescrib able. It was like the distant mur mur of a thuudor-storm or the deep rumble of far-awny breakers. For hundreds of feet above aud around, the rock aud coal was "working." BURIED ALIVE. But with all tho warniug it gives, the cave too often proves the death i bed and grave of the miner who is rash enough to try to save for his ! eompauy what nature is reclaiming as her own. So it was in the two great accidents previously mentioned. Val uable chambers of the mine threat ened to cave, and thousauds of tons of coal would he lost. At Pittston Superintendent Langan started on a Sunday night with sixty-five meu to place massive timbers under the af fected roof, hoping to avert the threat ened destruction. So awful was the noise and so near did death appear iu those trembling passages that seven men, Superintendent Langan's sou among them, refused tor work and went back. The Superintendent and the fifty-eight labored for an hour or so, then suddenly many tons of rock | and coal fell, and in an instant na | ture had constructed fcr them au im penetrable sepulchre. Whether they were instantly crushed to death, shut iu and suffocated, or slowly starved, will probably never be known. For weeks men as brave as the fif ty-nine labored at the work of rescue, a great, but unavailing struggle. Torn, shaken and trembling from the shock of tho first fall, which dragged upon tho other portions of the mine like massive ehaius drawn by a mon ster, working after working collapsed, hour after hour, for some days, before it all settled quietly, and the dangers of the rescuers wero fully a3 great as those the entombed meu had confront ed. There was hut one practicable way of getting at the victims, aud that was | down a long slope at the foot of which it was expected the unfortunates would he found. Four hondred feet was clear space; tho romaining four hun dred was blocked to within a few inches of the ioof by the fallen masses of rock. It was through these four hundred feet that the rescuers had to force their way. Volunteers were numerous, the most able miniug ex perts iu the region directed the opor ! ations, and the work went on day and : night. At first good progress was made, and then, as they advanoed foot by foot, the danger aud the diffi culties increased. Borne days thoy would gain twenty or thirty feet, aud then be driven back some distance, only to attack the living mass again with maguificeut courage aud en ! durance. FUTILE EFFOKTS AT RESCUE. It was iu the midst of this work that the writer saw them. Some ninety feet had been gained through the fall. The whole slope, some nine feet in width, had not been cleared, hut a narrow passage four feet wide had beeuajriveu through the centre of it. This was .propped and strength ened by great timbers, for there was constant danger of the roof coming | down. Tho gas was heavy and safety lamps had to he used, so the light was dim and uncertain. Tho monuing of the mine was still to he heard and | had a most weird effect, as if breasts and gangways were mourning for their | victims. The men worked in shifts | of half-a-dozen each, three hacking j and pecking at the "face" of the fall | with their picks and three shoveling ! hack the debris to others behind them, who passed it out in a line. Great masses of rock had to ho shat j tered with drill aud hammer, for it was uot safe to ÜBe powder, and the progress was distressingly slow. As soon as one shift became tired an | other took its place, aud the work i went on. Inspectors and foremen j stood about directing the work and keeping a careful eye on the danger ous roof. As the writer watched there was a cry of warniug, the men came tumbling hack from the "face," and a rush was made up the slope. There was a crash, a roar, we were blown off our feet and dashed against the sides of the slope by a concussion J which extinguished the lights. An ! investigation revealed the fact that twenty feet, gaiuod by hard work dur ing tho last twenty-four hours, had been filled up again. "We must keep at it, boys," said one of the foremen cheerily, and at it they went. But in the days that followed, falls came frequently, and the 1 men de* spaired. Tliey were ready to give np their seemingly hopeless task, when, one night, they were cheered by rap pings. The news was quickly sent to the surface, and women's eyes were dry with hope for the first time since the dreadful tidings were heard. The rappings continued at intervals, and everybody was sure some of the entombed men were alive —everybody except oile boy of eigh teen who day and night was in the slope with the workers. The rap pings were heard on the iron pipes through which water had been pumped from tho bottom of tho slope. It was evident that some of the entombed men had reached an open space there and were hammeriug on the pipes to encourage the workers. Work went on with renewed enthusiasm, and young Laugan, the entombed super intendent's son, performed as heroio an act as is recorded in the history of mining. Between the top of the fall and the roof was a space of a few inches, and with wonderful daring he dragged himself along over the fall. At any moment he might have been crushed by the roof, but he returned. He was gone three hours, and in that time crawled nearly three hundred feet and back. His clothes were torn to shreds, and his body was covered with blood from soores of cuts and bruises. He had found no opening and learned nothing of the entombed. For three days the rappings contin ued, aud then one night, in a dark and obscure corner of tho slope, one of the foremen came upon a water boy hammering the pipes with a piece of rock. It was au awful discovery, the hope that they had cheered the men on for three days was dispelled, and despair replaced it. The poor boy, when arraigned before the mine of ficials, confessed that he had been rapping on the pipes during the three days, aud he said, in extenuation of his act: "I've got a father and two brothers in there, and I was afraid the men would quit work, so I rapped to encourage them, because I want them to find my father and brothers." The work was kept up for months, but no trace of the entombed men was found, and the attempt of rescue was at last abandoned. WHY HOPE ENDURES SO LONG. The accident at Plymouth, Penn., was caused in alike manner. As may well be imagined, the conflict between hope and rescue and fear of death, in the hearts of the victims' friends, is terrible. Hope died slowly at Pitts ton, and it is the same elsewhere. This is due to the absolute uncertain ty. Some argue that the victims may be hemmed in an open chamber with a plentiful supply of air and water, aud quote the well-known cases where, at Sugar Notch, a number of men lived two weeks, eating a mule entombed with them, and were finally rescued; where at Jeanesville, Penn., rescue was effected after nineteen days, in which the meu had nothing to eat except the leather of their boots—ow ing to their ignorance the life-sustain ing fish-oil in their lamps was un touched—and again, of the two meu who at Nanticoke were rescued after sitting astride a log in flooded work ings tor nine days with nothing to eat. Other accidents affect only the mine and the miners. Caves affect tho sur face, and many property owners in this region have cause to regret the day when tlioy bought land which was undermined, because it was cheap. Recently a large section of street at Wyoming, Penn., weut down, with several buildings, and instances are numerous of houses being swallowed up by the greedy earth, of cattle en gulfed and suffocated. People are sometimes caught, but not often, for the earth generally siuks slowly, and there is usually plenty of time to es cape. A peddler was driving slowly along the road leading to Plains, Penn., when his horse suddeuly sank, dragging the front wheels of the wagon after him. When the driver recovered from his surprise aud terror, the wagon body was on the edge of a hole thirty feet deep. Some time later, near the same place, au old woman was sitting near her doorstep shelling peas. Her husband coming over the hill saw her suddenly drop out of sight, ran up and fouud her busy picking up her scattered peas forty feet below tho surface. She was un injured aud was quickly rescued.—P. S. Ridsdale, in New York Post, Never Admit Defeat. Never admit dofeat or poverty, tUouqli you aeem to bo down aud have uot a eeut. Stoutly assert your divine right to be a mau, to hold your head up and look the world IU the face; step bravely to the frout, what ever opposes, and tho world will make way for you. No one will insist on your rights, while you yourself doubt that you possess the qualities requis ite for success. Nover allow yourself to ho a traitor to your own cause by undermining your self-confidence. There never was a time before when persistent, original force was so much iu demand as now. The nam by-pamby, nerveless man has little show iu the hustling world to-day. In the twontieth century a man must either push or he push ed. Every one admires the man who can assert his rights, aud has the power to demand and take them if denied him. No one oau respect tho mau who slinks in the rear and apologizes for being in the world. Negative virtues are of no use iu winning oue's way. It is the positive man, the mau with original energy aud push that forges to tho frout.—Success. World'* Oldest Olfy. Damascus is said to be the oldest eity iu tho world, dating hack 4000 years. Its present population is 200,000, a tenth being Christians, mosques are numerous, there being more than fifty. CURIOUS FACTS. At thebattleof Hastings (A. D. 10G6), the weapons being swotds and battle axes, 500 fell fatally wounded out of every 1000 soldiers. The difference between the tallest and shortest races in the world is 1 foot 4J inohes, and the average height is 5 feet 5} inches. On November 8, 1899, Sydney, iu the colony of New South Wales, was for a time overwhelmed with red dust, and presently a light shower of red rain fell. Of churse the Government astronomer was immediately inter viewed for publication. "In the early days of Borne," be said, "this red rain was regarded as a terrible thing. I find that there are only sixty-nine! cases of red rain recorded. The first historic instance occurred fourteen years after the fouudatiou of Rome, | iu 738 B. C." The autopsy held by Coroner's Phy siciau Morton ou the body of James j H. Coleman in Philadelphia, revealed I a most peculiar anatomical construe-1 tion, so far as the internal organs are concerned, for they are located on the opposite side from where they are situated in other human boiug3. Dr. Morton said that it was a most re- j markablo case. Coleman's heart isou the right side, his liver is ou the left, his spleou is ou the right, aud that part of his stomach that should be on | the left side is on the right. The j organs thus situated on the reverse ! side of where they should be were of the normal size, the physician said, ex cept that the liver was somewhat large. He was thirty-six years old, of medium height, married, aud the father of a family. It may be difficult to belieTe iu the existence of a lake of sulphuric acid, but there is such a lake iu the centre of Sulphur Island, off' New Zealand, It is fifty acres in extent, about twelve feet iu depth aud fifteen feet above the level of the sea. The most re markable characteristic of this lake, however, is that the water contains vast quantities of hydrochloric and sulphuric acids, hissing aud bubbling at a temperature of 110 degrees ! Fahrenheit. The dark green colored water looks particularly uninviting, i Deuso clouds of sulphuric fumes con stantly roll off this boiling caldron, aud care lias to lie exercised iu ap proaching this luke to avoid the risk of suffocation. A rare nervous disease is being in vestigated by the French Academy of j Medicine, to which the present case has been reported by Dr. Marinesco, | of Bucharest. The patient, a young Roumanian, is given to what is known among savants a3 "mirror-writing." That is, the letters which he naturally forms with his pen are all written backward, so that they appear iu their proper arrangement only when re flected in a mirror. The hands of the patient when unoccupied are affected with a nervous trembling which gen erally ceases when they are used to a definite purpose. Tho writing is per fectly accurate, and it appears iwpos- ' sibie for the sufferer to do any other kind. Although cases of partial mir ror-writing have been observed be fore, the present is said to be by far the most perfect. Shooting minus. The Australian emu is described as a yellowish brown bird, seven feet iu height, with wings so rudimentary that it makes no use of them for flight. It is so swift of foot, however, that only the very fleetest horse can over take it. Like the ostrich, the emu feeds upon whatever comes under its beak. Wood, pebbles, scraps of iron, or anythiug elso that it cau swallow, | will auswer its purpose, although it j shows a marked preference for bread ard cooked meat. A French explorer describes his experience iu shooting one of those birds. He was accom panied by a white companion, aud by a native who acted as guide. "I am going to bring them up," said our savage companion. "You will ; have to shoot while they are ou the run, but take your time aud aim well. They won't get off this time." So saying he began to whistle as if he were calling a dog. The emus lifted their heads, listened for au instant, then started to run. It is strange that this was not to get away, but rather to circle about t without stopping, all the time uarrow iug the oircle so as gradually to ap proach us. When they were not more than forty yards distant, still running with in credible swiftness, we brought them into line aud fired. One foil with a ballet iu his heart. The others tied, j all the time in single file, and present ly they disappeared. In reply to a question, our guide told tis that the emus always acted in this way whenever they heard a whist ling, and that one cau call them by this means from far away. "I think." he added, "it is because they believe their little ones are call ing them." As tho little emus do uot whistle, this explanation doe 3 uot seem to me conclusive. But who will suggest a better one? Knclarnnco of Japanese Miners. Four miners were entombed for twelve days in the Matsuyasu colliery lately. Thoy did without food all the time, and for most of the time without light, aud were uoue the worse when dug out. One of ihe nieu said that J for some time after the oil was ex hausted they felt a bit low spirited, i but that in a few days they became accustomed to the darkness aud were able to get along pretty well. The in cident exhibits in a striking manner j the powers off endurance possessed by • the tittle Jap.—Tokyo'Coi'Vespondeuce I iu Chicago Record. < BORROWING THE BABY. "Good mornio'. My ma seat me To ast you how you wa9, An' hope you're well—you know if Th' way she alius does. My ma—she 9ez, you're strangers, But then she kind o' thought Bhe'd like to borry th' baby 'At you folkses 'as got. My ma sets by th' winder Au' watches you and 'im, An' kind o' smiles an' crie3 tc wunst, 'Cause he's like baby Jim. Who's Jim? He was our baby We named him after pa. Say, c'u we borry your baby A little while fer ma? "My ma 9he sez she wouldn't Mind If your baby cried. She sez't'd be like music— Since little Jim has died. She sez she'll be good to him, An' she'd like a whole lot, If we c'u borry the baby 'At you folksee 'as got." —Josh Wink, iu Baltimore American. PITH AND POINT. ] Blobbs—"I understand tbat don j tists now not only extract teeth but j insert them." Slobb3 "Humph! | My dog can do that." j "Have you and your neighbors | called on each other yet?" "No; but I heard our cooks calling each other I names over the back feuce." "Did you have any trouble select j iug a uauie for the baby?" "None at j all; there's only one rich uncle in the i family."—Richmond Dispatch, j "I haven't seen yon out lately," j said the walking stick. "No," 10- ' plied the umbrella, "I am stilt keep ing lent."—Philadelphia Bulletin, j Two souls that to a single thought give birth. Ah! How they ho agree. She thinks lie's nil thorn Is on earth. Alas! aud so does he. —Philadelphia Tress, j Poeticus—"There are no geniuses in attics nowadays." Cyuieus—"No, most of them soem to have got down to business and are running eleva tors." Tommy—"Dad, I have smashed a French plate window. Will you foot the damages?" Dad—"You young scamp! I will begiu by footing the damager." "Jerry Pontoon, tell U3 something about Oliver Cromwell." "Which j version, ma'am?" "I don't under stand." "Magazine or history?"— ] Chicago New 3. J Jack—"There must be something | terrible about a paint-box." Ida— "Why so?" Jack —"Because it 13 \ the only thing that will make some j girls turn red." ] Stella —"I was awfully nervous ' when Jack proposad." Maude— j "Was it such a surprise?" Stella— | "No; I was afraid some one would I come in aud interrupt him."—Chicago News. "That woman is a shoplifter," said the floorwalker to the detective; "she | will take anythiug she sees." "I spotted her the other day," re sponded the detective; "I saw her take the elevator." "My wife doesn't seem to bo pro gressing, doctor," remarked the anx ious husband. "No," retained the physician. "When she gains a little strength she uses it all up telliug people what's the matter with her." "I want to marry your daughter," said Foxey." "Have you spoken to her yet?" asked the father. "No," j replied the suitor. "You see, I want to get your refusal, so that I will have somethiug to work ou."— Philadelphia North Amoricau. Hobo—"Hev yer got any kind of a job you want done, lady?" House keeper—"l'm sorry, poor man, to have to disappoint you." "Dat's all right, lady. I jest wanted ter find out if I could take a sleep iu de next lot here widout beiu' worrid by offers of work." Penance For UiHcourtesy. Nicholas I, Czar of r.ussia, was tho type of au absolute aristocrat. The succession of terrible wars which clouded his reign did not teud to soften his disposition or to render liim le3s imperious. But, rough aud harsh as he was, Nicholas had a meas j ura of chivalry iu his disposition. He would not tolerate, under auy | circumstances, au insult offered to a woman. As the Czar was driving through the streets of St. Petersburg he caught sight of au officer of bis household iu the act of upsetting an old beggar woman, whose hands were raised iu a j prayer for alms. Tha official was quito uumiudful of the august wituess of his act, aud was rather pleased when, a few hours later, ha was summoned to the impe rial presence. Nicholas soon undeceived him, aud in the presence of a dozen courtiers j cut him to the quick with hi 3 iadig | nant reproof. "Euough!" said Nicholas finally. "You will walk up aii'd down that cor lidor all night, aud every time you taru you will say, in a loud voice, 'I jsm a puppy! I am a puppy!'"— j Youth's Companion. SRprifglaises. Strange to say the sandglass is still used to measure varying periods of j time. Tha size depends upon the purposes to which they are to bs put. The hour glass is still iu uso iu the sick-room and iu tho music-room, in both places affording a sure aud eileut ' judication of tho progress of time, ] Half-hour glasses are used in schools, aud fifteen-miuute glasses are used for medical purposes, aud tho sand glass also goes into tho kitclieu as au j aid to exact cookiug. There' Kfe also teu-miuuto glosses, Uvo-myUitid glasses aud three-minute glassed,- thd two latter being used to time tbo boil; ing period ol eggs. The throe-mibnto sandglass is called an "ogg boiled." j Sandglasses arc'also used for scientific purposes and off shipboard', being' I more Convenient thamliolfliilg a'watch; I BARRIE IN POLITICS. James Matthew Barric, whose repu | tation as the author of "The Little I Minister" has become world-wide in : extent, is a candidate for election to parliament as the representative of j Edinburgh and St. Andrew's universi j ties. Though Mr. Barrio is chicfiy JAMES M. BARRIE. : known through the work of his pen in the field of letters, he is not without | peculiar gifts which specially qualify ; him for participation iu public affairs. He began his career as political editor I and leader man on a Nottingham paper. Then he became a London | journalist, and was a keen student of I politics and parliamentary activity for some years, trumpeting his views on I political economy and legislation ! through the columns of St. James I Gazette, the National Observer, the ; British Weekly and the Speaker. He j wrote his first book in 1887, and that j was not a novel, but a satire on Lon don life, entitled "Better Dead." The creator of "The Little Minister" is not j a tyro in politics. Besides, he is said j to be very popular with the university I commons. Of late Mr. Barrie's repu | tation has been considerably en | hanced by his two recent creations, "Sentimental Tommy" and "Tommy and Grizzell." SITUATION OF WHISKERS. The Mustache Is an Ancient Orna* From "Robinson Crusoe:" "My beard I had once suffered to grow until it was about a quarter of a yard long, but as I had both scissors and razors suf ficient, I had cut It pretty short, except what grew on my upper lip, which I had trimmed into a large pair of Mo hammedan whiskers, such as I had seen worn by some Turks at Sallee, for the Moors did not wear such, though the Turks did; of the mustach ios, or whiskers, I will not say they were long enough to hang my hat upon them, but they were of a length and shape monstrous enough, and such as in England would have passed for frightful." From Wilson's "History and Antiquities of the Dissenting Churches:" "Joseph Jacob, an inde pendent preacher at Turner's hall, 1 Philpot Lane (in) the beginning of the last century, made a church of his own. He passed an order obliging the whole of the congregation to stand dur ing the time of singing. This, though by no means an uncommon thing in the present day, was then looked upon as a great novelty. In this reformed , church all periwigs were discarded, the men members wore whiskers upon their upper lips, in which Mr. Jacob set them an example." From "Hunt er's Travels in 1792:" "They (the Hun garians) shave their beards, except the upper lip, which is generally adorned with a pair of huge whiskers." Jcll-O, llie New I>c*crt, Ploase9 nil tho family. Four ftavor3:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry ami Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 eta. Inoculations for the plague are made in Bombay at the rate of about 5.000 i I a week. The Beat Prescription for Chills and Fever Is a bottle of GUOVK'S TASTHLKSB CHILL TONIC. It Is simply iron an.l quinine in a tasteless form. No cute—no pay. Pries 500. Cuba's postal service employs 750 peo-! Pie. Fits permanently cured. No fit* or nervous ness after first day's use of I)r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. §2 trial bottle and treatise tree. Dr. R.H.KLINE.Ltd.'J3I Arch St.Phlla.Pa. Vienna's municipal railway is in oper-; ation. ; (|3£) A 200-Page Illustrated Book ot Information , g% m CEMTS and Recipes for the Farmer and > / H.v- r f |jj| the Farmer's Wife. S /.tl' sffiiw? ((% I And every other mnn and woman who 13 desirou3 of benefit us from the experience of those brainy and patient souls- ff*® ;. * | i who have been experimenting and practising the ro- I Hsoß\ ITU En I suits of those experiments, generation after generation, j I I|ll Ito obtain the lAst knowledge us to how certain things {fcffaj) | 1 I I Sm| can be accomplished, uutil all that vnluable information i i 9 K n together in this volume, to be spread broad- Cft9t tor tho benefit of mankiud at the popular price of j J @ M CenU ... Postage St„n,„*. ~ Ofr The low price is only made pos- >KinP (SRI j sible by the enormous number of /j \j § J™ Mr .sjjjfc I JS' the books being printed and sold. g a^FflsnliXw (g® It tronts of almost ovorything in tho wnv of Household Matters, iuoludim; Ak. RE0t?B8 FOR FAMILY IJSK. |j DISEASES OF THE HORSE, W* of Life, or Self-Preservation, 303 pages, with enuraviugs, 2 cts., paper cover; cloth, full gilt, sl, by mail. A book for every man, young, middle-aged or old. A million copies sold. Address the Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bulflnch St., Bos ton, Mass., the oldest and best institute in America. Prospectus Vade Mecum free. Six cts. for postage. Write to-day for these books. They are the keys to health, ▼lgor, success and happiness. It is estimated that the people of England spend £250.000 a day in furni ture-moving. J. F. Parker. Fredonla. N. Y.,says: "Shall not call on you for the SIOO reward, for I be lieve Hall's Catarrh Cure will cure any case of catarrh. Was very bad." Write him for par ticulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Turkey bought $243,325 worth of American flour last year. STREAK! y m V=°r'i : older than you are? 4 'J Yet it's impossible to ► J look, young with the ► A color of 70 years in 4 the hair. It's sad to 4 % see young persons ► look prematurely old ► / in this way. Sad be- / 4 cause it's all unneces- 4 > 4 sary; for gray hair % ► may always be re- !:;> najr : : i"g- : visor / For over half a cen- f. 4 tury this has been the *4 standard hair prepara ► tion. It is an elegant 4 ► dressing; stops fall- ►. i ing of the hair; makes ► 4 the hair grow; and < ► cleanses the scalp i / from dandruff. . "I have hern using AVer's Hair .^ ™ Vigor for over 20 years and I can f r heartily recommend it to tho public 4 4 as tlio best liair tonic in existence." b Mrs. (I.L. ALDERS, >N, R April 24,180). Ector, Tox. 1 ► If you do not obtain all tho benefits 4 A you expected front tho Vigor, write ~ the Doctor about it. Address, r V Dr.. J. C. AVER. i Lowe'.l, Mass. y y ▼ "V T 'V "K T' 1 -A. / ■>. My neighbor's child was 5 t. X Riven up, the faimily haul eon / \,\s. \ eluded it would m useless to f \ make any further efforts to ' Abu v I sulSml"' Uiey"'adiul"&t.ireJ 1 25; #1 PREY'S VERMIFUGE, ,C-A ]|IIJJ. T. the imrents' joy 1 X-v / r lie e'.atld recovered.—CAl.EU . - A. lllrene rti, Near Zanesvtlle, - >l.j'. .*> eent^at v Di-URRi,ts. A i itlVv! II nl lin ore, Hid. Jgk YOUR COW'S PRODUCTION fn* will I e increased 20 percent, by using p ||3 cur aluminum Cream Separators ana t n 1 up-to-date churns. $4 tip. 10 dava KIIa trial. Catalogue free. Address, CJib- CcEp b.u-81e\vurt Mlg. Co., Oibsoulu, I'a. fIENSIONAV^.V.^ri^ * Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lttto Principal Exftminor U.S. Pension Bureau. jyrai't eiv il war. 15 adjudleutina claims, utty s'.uoa P. k U. 14 'OJ. RHEUMATISM positively cured by "Rheumatol" $1.26. BHIUM ITOL C 0.,00 W 1041 fi Bt.. New York DROPSY yjJSßffiTSiS'iSs i ennoß. B >.H Ot tufitimonialii atnd 10 days' treatment l Free. Dr. H. 11. QUEEN'S 80NS, Box II Atlanta. Qa.