(iggpmMl A NEW PROFESSION. 4. V /er Woman Who Cleans nnd Re pairs Jewelry For a Living. * 'ly little leather bag contnins all tl materials and implements neces sary to clean and repair jewelry," a New York woman explained. "I go from house to house and have all the Work that I can do. "You have no idea how many sensi ble women there are who will not al low their favorite pieces of jewelry to be repaired by the best houses simply because they fear that some of their stones will be changed. 1 hnve many customers who watch me closely the whole time that I am nt work on-their property. It was the discovery of this peculiarity in a friend of mine that gnve me the idea of my work. Before actually beginning my work I entered a good establishment as an apprentice, where I learned not only how to clean and repair jewelry, but also old watches, of which I make a specialty. "I had absolutely no trouble in get ting work. My method is very simple, I call, ask for the lady of the house, explain my business nnd, as a rule, get some work. By this method I soon had as many regular customers as I could manage, nud now I have many calln that I am bound to refuse simply for lack of time. Nearly every woman of liberal means has a good supply of jewelry aud few of them keep it in such good condition that it does not need repairing nnd cleaning nt least every six months. Few of them are willing to trust the cleaning of their finer pieces to their maids and as It Is more convenient for them to let me come in to clean It than it Is for them to collect it and send It to a jeweler, I get the work. These are my regular customers. Those who fear to allow their treasures into the hands of any one where they cannot watch them belong to another class. As a rule the articles they prize so highly are of little value to any one besides them selves. "My charges are less than those of a regular jeweler, and I am particular to have my work as good. 1 average ¥5 a day, above the cost of all ma terials used and my transportation ex penses. That I consider good earnings for a woman doing, as you might say, mechanical work in New York City. No, I never take work home. My evenings are all free and so are my Sundays. I need rest, particularly my eyes. I often buy articles of my pat rons and also act as agent In bringing purchasers to those who would like to sell. Many women admire only the latest fashions In jewelry just as they do In gowns. When an article is no longer what they consider stylish they become very anxious to get rid of it in order to use the money to get some thing more of their taste. Knowing that I keep in touch with the tastd aud desires of my patrons they appeal to me to act as agent. The majority of these women keep the jewelry boxes In which they buy the nrticles nnd when they are cleaned aud snugly wrapped in their colored cottons it Is hard to distinguish them from new. 1 have sold many such as wedding pres ents nnd I cannot see the slightest ob jection to their being used in this way. They are always just as represented nnd cost about half as much as they would if brought new from the jew eler. Of course, I have many bar gains, for, as a rule, such ultra-stylish women are exceedingly extravagant. As they wear only the latest designs and the most fashionable stones they are often g'.ad to let things go for a much smaller sum than they originally cost. "My regular customers are, as a rule, of two classes, collectors or persons hunting bargnins. The collectors have a fancy for some particular style or some article of all styles. They are al ways on the alert to add to their col lection, and nre willing to pay good prices. On the other hand, the bar gain hunters do not care what they get so long ns it Is chenp. Then there Is another class who I cannot call regu lar purchasers. They are women of means nnd generous impulses. When my patrons meet wi. reverses and call on me I look their jewels over, put them in thorough repair and take them to some of the women I think will buy. I tell the circumstances, never the names, and It is seldom indeed that I do not make sales. All of this I do on a per cent, basis, and last year I al mos* doubled my earnings of ¥5 a day. "My work is pleasant, I might al most say dainty. There is nothing - heavy or laborious, so X cannot see ■ why other women should hesitate to undertake it. I am the only one in the field, so far as I can learn, but I am sure that there is room even here In New York City for many more."— Washington Star. Women Who Cultivate MuHhrooml. One of the latest fads of well-to do people Is mushroom growing, and many women ore said to hnve started small mushroom farms In the cellars of the houses in which they live, nnd intend thereby to add very consider ably to their pin money. It is esti mated that a fifteen-foot bed should give about ninety pecks of mushrooms In three months. The cost of the bed is about $lO. The mushrooms sell or dinarily for seventy-live cents a peck, bringing $67.50, thus making a gain to the farmer of $57.50 on the undertak lug. An expert sayH tlint the things necessary for success in mushroom growing are, first, the cellar in which they are to be grown, which must be so arranged that the plants can be • kept at a temperature of from sixty to seventy degrees; second, good ventila tion, as plenty of fresh air is essen tial, and, thirdly, arrangements for keeping the soil constantly moist Good mnuure, rich in phosphate, should form the foundation of the bed, which if possible should be built on a damp floor. A bed fifteen feet long will require two loads. The mush room spawn can be had in bricks from the florist or nurseryman. The tem perature of the bed must be tested and no planting must be done until it is below ninety-five degrees. Then the bricks can be broken in half-inch pieces and distributed evenly over the bed. In about ten days, when a white, thread-like growth begins to appear, the bed must be covered to a depth of one-half to three-quarters of an inch with sandy loam. A frame of six-inch boards may be used to keep the bed in place. Women's Friendship. Friendship between women Is not necessarily built upon early acquaint ance. My dearest friend mny have been unknown to me a year ago, yet time and education nnd circumstance and environment may have been bring ing us together for a score of years. The friendships into which women drift during a summer in the moun tains or when idling about Europe are sometimes not mei'e ephemera, but have the permanence of the house built upon the rock. Your friend must to some extent nt least sympathize with you in pursuits and nims. Your point of view and liers must not be alien, lou may disagree In opinion, but iu sentiment you must meet or you can not coalesce in friendly relationship. For friends must neither be like Ivory balls, smooth and polished and de tached, nor like soap bubbles, irides cent, ethereal, and volatile, nor like thistles, bristling with needle-thrusting points on every side. Somewhere there must needs be the reciprocity of con genial wish nud acquiescent word, the bond of union which unites and grows even stronger as two go on the road of life together.—Margaret Songster, in Harper's Bazar. Blaclc Taffeta a Fad. The black taffeta costume Is the present feature of Interest in the pan orama of fashion. The costume in cludes a coat and skirt of rich, lus trous black taffeta", so well suited to many occasions. There will be long coats in taffeta, lined with taffeta, nnd taffeta jackets satin lined. These garments will be variously trimmed. Long coats of taffeta will be lavishly garnished with lace applique, guipure, embroidery iu black velvet and satin, velvet and gold, In set pieces for pockets, cuffs, collars and Empire bands. Many of the taffeta skirts have two and three ruffles five to nine inches deep. Again they have medallions of rich laces set in cut out effects, with velvet ribbon strappings, while others are shirred, gathered and otherwise treated, according to the fancy and de sire of the wearer. While cloth cos tumes arc naturally the foundation of the wardrobe, nnd will contribute the substantial wear, a silk vogue is upon us. A Favored Triple Alliance. A triple alliance that has never in the annals of modes been known to fail in the favor of fashionable women, is velvet and fur and lace. As a re sult, the evening gown in its most re gal form has a train of velvet, open ing over the petticoat of satin, which is enhanced with jewelled and se quined embroidery and bandings of fur. There is n bolero or bodice of rich old lace, finished at the back in long sash ends of the same material. Black evening gowns are much in vogue and they are us becoming as they are useful. An extreme novelty in veiling is the chiffon veil of black and white, with dots of gold and black. One of the prettiest imaginable flan nel wnists has a bolero and upper sleeves of a fnucy flannel and uuder liodlce and undersleeves of plain flan nel to mntch, or vice versa. The corselet skirt is seen once more. It is really a princess, with yoke ef fect, being made to reach almost to the bust line, over n silk shirt, the top being pointed back aud front. The revival of chenille Is not univer sal in in toques we have some very pretty specimens. The toque of the moment is BO large that It should more properly be called a small hat. The demand for fancy stockings, especially lace ones, has brought tc the market a great variety of those dainty articles, which are very reason able in price. This grade of goods is also found with silk Inserted In the in step. Some of the new lace gowns shown in the shops nre exquisite. One, for instance, is of creamy net, inset with white lace figures, outlined with black chenille and embroidered with jet. Floral sprays iu raised work of gold run between these lace figures. A model of black net is accordion pleated from waist line to hem, and is stitched down about the hips in scal lops excepting directly in the back, where the fulness is not confined. The bodice Is of the pleated net, and over it is a bolero of Jet, with jot bands forming the sleeve. The belt is also of jet Pe and the Hall of Fame. It Is barely possible that Poe, could he have foreseen the building of that wonderful Temple (the Hall of Fnme), would 1m ve begged to be excused from being immortalized in its very mixed company.—Boston Pilot hdl® i DOUBLE ENCOUN : ter. close to a Hunt4t& \ VESSE " About five hundred yards apart two massive bodies occasionally broke the bright surface up into a welter of white, then disappeared for two or three minutes, to reappear at the same furious rush. Behind each of them, spreading out about twenty fathoms apart, came two of the boats, leaping like dolphin from crest to crest of the big waves, and occasionally hidden al together by a curtain of spray. Thus they passed the Mlrzapore, their gi gantic steeds In full view of that awe stricken ship's company, privileged for once in their lives to see at close quarters one of the most heart-lifting sights under heaven —the Yankee whale-fisher at handgrips with the mightiest, as well as one of the fierc est of all created things. No one spoke as that great chase swept by; but ev ery face told eloquently of the pent up emotion within. Then a strange thing happened. The two whales, as they passed the Mlrzapore, swerved each from his direct course until they met in full career, and in a moment were rolling each over each In a hor rible entanglement of whale-llne amid a smother of bloody foam. The buoy ant craft danced around, one strong figure erect in each bow poising a long slender lance; while in the stern of each boat stood another man who manipulated a giant oar, as if it had been a feather, to swing his craft around as occasion served. The look ers-on scarcely breathed. Was it pos sible that men, just homely unkempt figures like these, could dare thrust themselves into such a vortex among those wallowing maddened Titans? In deed it was. The boats drew nearer, became involved, lances flew, oars bent,and blood —torrents of blood —be- fouled the glorious azure of the waves. Suddenly the watchers gasped in ter- London Telephone Rates Cut. The telephone will no longer be an expensive luxury in London. The new scale of charges will bring it within the reach of all, so that in time the house without an instrument will be the exception rather than the rule, says a London newspaper. There will be alternative methods of get ting the telephone installed. In the one case a lump sum will be paid an nually for the inclusive use of the whole metropolitan system. This will no longer be £2O. but a rental which, although it has not been finally de termined, will not be greater than MISS CAROLINE HAZARD. The election by the trustees of Miss Caroline Hazard to the presidency of Wellesley college on the Bth of March in 1899, was a marked tribute to one of the foremost women in American educational circles today. Miss Hazard was inaugurated on the 3d of October last year. She is about 43 years old, and is not alone known for her lit erary work, but because of her mem bership in a family which for many generations has been prominent in af- ENGLAND AT SEA. Maritime Commerce of Clreut llrltaln Shown In lUir Figures. Gigantic though the maritime com merce of flreat Britain is, it is still rapidly increasing. At present that country's foreign trade is equal to one fifth of that of the whole world in value. According to Lloyd's Register of shipping for 1900-1, no less than 7,020 steamers, aggregating 11,513,759 tons, and 1,890 sailing vessels, repre senting a tonnage of 1,727,687 tons, are owned by various companies through out Great Britain. Then the various colonies own 910 steamers of 635,331 tons and 1,014 sailing vessels equal to 384,477 tons between them. Therefore, it will be seen that the grand total for Great Britain and her colonies is as follows: 7,930 steamers, aggregating 12,119,090 tons; 2,908 sailing vessels, aggregating 2,112,164 tons; grand total, 10,838 vessels, aggregating 14,261,254 tons. According to Lloyd's, the whole of the world's over-sea traffic, with the exception of the smaller insignificant states, is carried on with 28,422 vessels of all kinds, representing a gross ton nage of 29,043,728 tons. Therefore, it will be seen that Great Britain and her colonies own about one-third of the world's vessels, amounting to nearly half the world's gross tonnage. The magnitude of potentiality of the marl time prosperity of Great Britain has been graphically illustrated the past few months, owing to the state of af fairs in China. "When Great Britain went to war with the South African re publics the whole of her 230,000 troops were dispatched from British soil in their transports without any appre ciable interference with her mall ser vices to the various parts of the world. True, some of the larger, more oom modious, the fleeter vessels Were "com mandeered" to accelerate the passage of the troops to the seat of war, but their places upon the mail services were easily filled by other boats, and the international traffic has been car ried on in its usual manner. Indeed, ror, and little crie? of pain and sym pathy escaped them. A boat had dis appeared. Specks floated, just visible in the tumult —fragments of oars, tubs and heads of men. But there was no sound. Which made the scene all the more impressive. St/ll the fight went on, while the spectators forgot all else —the time, the place; all senses merged in wonder at the deeds of these, their fellowmen, just following in the ordinary way their avocation. And the thought would come that but for an accident this drama being enact ed before their eyes would have had no audience but the screaming sea birds hovering expectantly in the un heeding blue. The conflict ceased. The distained waters became placid, and upon them floated quietly two vast corpses, but recently so terrible in their potentialities of destruction. By their sides lay the surviving boats — two of them, that is; the third was busy picking up the wrecked hunters. And the old ship, with an easy adapt ing of her needs to the light air that hardly made itself felt, was gradually approaching the scene. The passen gers implored Captain James to lower a boat and allow them a nearer view of these recently rushing monsters, and he, very unwillingly, granted the re quest. So slow was the operation that by the time the port lifeboat was in the water the whaler was alongside of her prizes, and all her crew were toll ing slavishly to free them from the entanglement of whale-line in which they had involved themselves. But when the passengers saw how the life boat tumbled about alongside in the fast sinking swell, the number of those eager for a nearer view dwindled to half a dozen —and they were repentant of their rashness when they saw how unhandily the sailors manipulated their oars.—Cornhill Magazine. £lO, and may be rather less. But probably the more popular way of subscribing will be on the "toll serv ice." Under this method the subscrib er pays a small Initial sum—about £3 —and then a penny per call for every time he rings up, and nothing, of course, when he Is rung up. One effect of this method will be to make the majority of shops Into public call of fices. For the tradesman, paying a penny per call, will probably permit customers to use his Instrument at, say, 2 pence per call, making it pay for itself possibly two or three times over during the year. fairs. Miss Hazard succeeded Mrs. Julia J. Irvine, who had been at Wellesley's head since the death of President Shafer in 1894. Curiously enough. Miss Hazard is not a college bred woman, but in her student days enjoyed at Providence —her father be ing then a member of the Brown cor poration—the semi-collegiate privi leges there granted, particularly under the inspiring tuition of Prof. Dinman, whose memoirs she wrote in 1886. it was difficult to believe that the coun try was at war, since every thing was accomplished so smoothly and without the slightest hitch. But the same can not be said in connection with the maritime commerce of other nations. The transportation of the troops from Germany to China was such a tax upon the young country that its ordinary maritime traffic was in danger of be ing absolutely dislocated. The solu tion of the difficulty was the chartering of British vessels, which were readily obtained. Russia was placed in the same dilemma, and when France was embroiled with Madagascar, the French of operations in British ves sels. Stntne of Robert Morrl,. The Fairmount Park Association of Philadelphia has decided to erect a statue of Robert Morris, to cost $15,- 000. His home was a meeting place of the celebrities of colonial days. From friends and from his private funds he raised over $1,000,000 to up hold the supremacy of the confedera tion. After establishing the Bank of Pennsylvania and the Bank of North America, through which Institutions he lent to the government $400,000, he failed in a great real estate scheme in 1798, and was imprisoned in the oid Prune street jail for debt. His per sonal honor, however, remained un sullied to the end. Cliry.ftnl hemumK. From the flowery land of Japan there is a wrinkle to be learned about the keeping of their national flower. The chrysanthemum is with us in profu sion now, and will be during the next three months. So let us take the ad vice of our little Jap friends as to the keeping of the cut flowers. Light a piece of wood (not a match, because of the sulphur in it), and with it burn the stalks. Flowers thus treated will last fresh for several weeks—no small consideration when the beautiful blos soms are dear. Entertaining Royal Visitors. At the time of the historic visit of the Prince of Wales to the White House, in iB6O, President Buchanan had to va cate his own bedchamber and sleep in the public ante-room on the office floor. Even then five members of the Prince's suite had to be turned away from the executive mansion and taken over to the British minister's house. The Prince occupied what is now Mrs. McKinley's boudoir.. The Duke of Newcastle, his state advisor, slept in the President's room, and General Bruce, another of his courtiers, was placed in the room opposite the library.- Thirty Years of the Rhine. Augustine Birrell begins in the De cember Century a series of papers on the Rhine. In the opening pages he moralizes on the changes since he first knew the river, before the Franco- Prussian war: "In 1868 the Rhine was at least an open question, a theme for the public ist no less than for the poet. But now the difference! At Kloblenz itself does there not now stand on the quay, a sight for all the world, a copper monu ment, 45 feet high, of the Emperor Will iam I.? Truthfully does the useful Bae deker observe, ill one of those new issues of his which r#?ord so impassively the mightiest changes, that it (the monu ment) dominates the landscape in all directions! In another parf of the town is a monument to the Empress Augusta, that faithful spouse and sympathetic correspondent. Needless to add. Kob lenz has its Bismarck Strasse. La no ble et sainte patrie de tousles penseurs forsook in 1870 the lecture room for the tented field: and on the 16th and 18th of August, on the plateaus of Gravelotte, bought with a huge price of German blood the right to call both banks of the Rhine her own. What are two-and-thirty years in the history of the Rhine? Celts and Ro mans, archbishops and princes, kings and emperors, she has known them all. What is it to her to whom the spire of Strasburg belongs? Nay. to whom in any real sense docs it belong now? But to the east and west of Metz lie the bleached bones of a hundred thousand men, Frenchmen and Germans, who were ready to forswear the pleasant sun and to go down into Hades before their day for the cause symbolized by th" Rhine. How horrible it would be could a river be ironical, could its waters sneer! The charm of nature is her ir responsivtness. She answers you back never a word." Good Farm Hands Scarce in England. The decay of agricultural skill has gone too far. Men who can trench and drain, quick-fence and sink a well are becoming few; farriers and thatchers are rarities, indeed, and the minor, but still important, arts of husbandry linger only among the dying generation. Moreover, an impression is growing wide and deep that for the better type of laborer, now that he is equip ped with some education, has a wider outlook and has learnt to adapt himself to new conditions, the provision of small holdings, whether under the act or independently between landlord and tenant, may prove his industrial salva vation. For while it is recognized that many must be unequal to the special de mands of the life, two or three of the best men in every village in the coun try could do well with holdings of from 20 to 30 acres. They could still give their skilled labor in those times of pres sure when the farmers only demand them, and they would rear healthy fami lies with a growing desire to remain on the land.—London Daily Mail. Tuberculosis has been placed among the diseases which arc subject to quar antine. The commissioner of immigra tion has so decided in the case of a Japanese who arrived at San Francisco from Japan ill with this lung trouble. It was decided that the patient could not land, but must return to the port from which he sailed. Thirty minutes Is al! thotlme roqulredto dyo with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. Sold by all druggists. Cincinnati is now claiming to be the greatest whisky market in the world. The wholesale trade there announces that the year will be the heaviest the city has ever had. Headaches and Nervous Depression are quickly relieved by using Garlleld Head ache Powders,which are composed entirely of herbs and are harmless. Paris has a population of 3.000,000 persons and only 40,000 arc Protest ants. Uncle Shiii'h Soldiers Will eat Libby's Plum Puilillng for Christmas dinner. The U. S. Government lias just pur chased a large consignmentot Libby, McNeill & Libby's famous plum pudding, which will bo supplied to American Soldiers in the Phil ippine lulunds and t üba. The loss through drought in Western Queensland during the last seven years has been about £7.600,000. The Best Prescription for Chills and Ferer Is a bottle of GliOVß'e Tabtblksb Cmii.lTonio. It is simply iron anil quinine lu a tasteless form. No curs—no pay. l J rioa Goo. The land where the city of Hannibal. Mo., is now located sold in 1828 for $640. A dyspeptic Ip never on good terms with himself. Femetbipg b always wrong. Get It right by chewing Beeman's Pepsin Gum. France has twenty-two organ manu factories. I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.— MAS. Thos. Bob bins, Maple St.. Norwich. N. Y.. Feb. 17. 1900. Nearly £300,000 worth of articles are pawned in London weekly. Mrs TVinslow'sSortntngFyrur) for children teeth in •. s 1 tens tlio gums, reduces in fla tnrm> tion. allays pain.cures wind colic.2sc k buttle. More tbtn half the population of the rarth hr J direct access to the Pacific. fatigue of mind and body take Gar- Headache Powders; they bring Im mediate relief and no reaction follows their use; they are made from herbs. In a mile of railway there are more than 2,000 sleepers. To Cnre Cold In One T>y. Take Laxativk Bromo Qoinisk TaBLBTS. All druviflHts refund the m uey if it falls to cnre. B. W. Uiiovb's signature Is ou each box. 86c. The number of suicides in the Ger man empire last year was 10,700. Losses Aro Carefully Guarded. You never see Monte Carlo referred to in any of the newspapers of the soutfc of France except when somebody hat won a large sum of money at the tables. These papers are bribed to insert reports of big gains by the players, and to keep out news of big losses. The suicides ire also not reported for the same rea son. When an English paper contains a disparaging reference to the plact it is forbidden, for the time, to be sold in Monaco, and is removed from the pub' lie reading rooms.—New York Tele gram. Poland is the only conquered nation in this century prior to the present events in South Africa, whose con querors have offered no terms but an nihilation to the vanquished. SIOO Reward. *IOO. The readers of this paper will bo pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to :tiro in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive euro now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cureißtaken inter* nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy** ing the foundation of the disease, ana giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faitlx in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Hollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills aro the best. The latest quotation for a chicken in Manila is $1.25, and for beef $1.50 a pound. Best For tho Bowels, No matter what alls you, headaohe to k eancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. CABCARKTB helf nature, cure you without a gripe or paizu iiroduce easy natural movements, cost yof ust 10 cents to start getting your health aok. CABCARETS Candy Cathartic, th# genuine, put up In metal boxes, every tab* let bus 0.0.0. stamped on It. Beware of Imitations. Thus far in 1900 England has import ed 12 per cent, less foreign grain that in 1899. Feeds the Hair Have you ever thought why your hair is falling out? It is because you are starving your hair. If this starvation cort tinues, your hair will continil to fall. There is one good hair food. It is Ayer's Hair Vigor. It goes right to the roots of the hair and gives them just the food they need. The hair stops falling, becomes healthy, and grows thick and long. Ayer's Hair Vigor does another thing, also: it always restores color to faded or gray hair. One dollar a bottle. II your druggist cannot supply you, send us SI.OO and we will express a bottle to you, all charges prepaid. Be sure and give us your nearest express office. J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. Send for our handsome book on The Hair. D. .119** Safest, surest cure for Lyr-QIJII S alt throat <i lung r troubles. People praise Cough Syrup Refuse substitutes. Get I>r. Bull's Cough Syrup, 0 We make a specialty of mince I fl meat —employ the best skill use I fl the best materials. |] V We stake our fame on it. We I B use it to advertise the many other B pV good things that we make. |LIBBY'sI 1 MINCE MEAT J fir A package makes two large fl Your grocer will furnish it if you ■ ask him. You will find it better fl than home-made—better than any fl mince meat you ever tasted. You'll fl eat Libby's foods thereafter. h Lfbby, McNeill & llbby, Chicago B Our book, "How to Make Good Things to Eat," sent free. FREY'S VERMIFUGE f/ L 1 The children's tonio, I I cures or WORMS. Removes I I them effectually and with- k out pain. CO years' record N C, c-x V°' Buccesß * " ,fl Me re- VI / J medy for all worm troubles. V _ * / Entirely vegetable. 25cts. -'x • at druggists, country stores - '— or by mall. K. W. i'liliV, Baltimore, Md. njj*S 1 DR. bnrtftß y \!l • " (\\ ater cy* the niosi complicated clnonlo H'ont It successfully by mail! Bf\s Bend 4 cents for mailing case for ixi ino. Consultation, anal- I> H1 S of urine; report and book IT. Ave, First Floor, i'litsburg, l'a. r. N. U. 51. 1000. DROPSY MIM Book Of teinmonixli *nd 10 days' treatment Free. I)r. H. H. OttSKJI ■ SORB. Box B. AUtiti, oa. A£ lr .VrulThompson's Ey Watir
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers