WHAT TO DO WITH DAUCHTERS. They Are AUvlhcil to Seek an Occupation and to Think Lett of Marriage. "It Is a strange fact, disputed by a few, but generally corroborated, that, while young men are looking askance at matrimony, young women, who are supposed to find the responsibilities of marriage the more irksome, are ap i— parently as much inclined to it as ever," says Kate Upson Clark in Les lie's Weekly. "Indeed, women with any pride of sex must feel their blood boil at the cartoonist and the para y grapker, who vie with each other in depicting the agonizing efforts of the Mays and the Angelinas to coax a proposal out of the unwilling Claudes and Algernons. "The mothers of the young women seem to share their wishes. In con sequence of the trend of the popular joking these fond parents are placed In a most unenviable position. They scarcely dare to invite a young man to their houses. Since affairs are in this state, we must train our daughters aceording'y. In order to retain their self respect they must occupy a perfectly Independent attitude. They must be taugiit that ideal marriages are rare, and even an ordinarily happy union is none too common. Therefore, since either one of these desirable boons may not come their way, they must be ready to grasp some other. There are many good things besides matri mony. Therefore, while holding one's y self toward marriage" in a proper posi \ tion of tentative acceptance, it is worth while to look over the field and find out what blessings, in the line of life work, are within the reach of the average woman. "Many mothers discourage the de sire of their daughters to go to college. To those who intend to teach a col lege diploma is now a nccessity.lt is also a substantial help in securing the constantly multiplying positions as cashiers, floorwalkers, proofreaders, in surance agents—in fact every business in which highly trained intelligence Is required. Naturally, professional success is also nearly impossible with out it. All this is settled. It is no longer a matter of opiniou. f "it is true that the college girl some times becomes slangy and careless, and occasionally loses that sweet longing for homo which has been counted one of woman's most alluring attributes, but these are usually mere surface and temporary manifestations. The 'eter nal womanly' is there, just as it was £ in Eve and Rachel and Jezebel—and with much better morals, you may be sure. And what Is the use of being the dependent, clinging, adoring crea ture of the sentimentalist when there is no man at hand to depend upon and cling to and adore? Therefore, while retaining unimpaired the faculty for depending and clinging and adoring (the poor girls caunot lose it if they would!) let us teach our daughters that it is contemptible to bo hanging around, idly awaiting the attentions of a lot of impudent young men, who are as likely as not to chaff at the way in which the girls 'make eyes' at them, and who poke fun at the fran tic efforts which are pu* forth to en trap them by some of these meu-covet- Ing maidens." Til© Woman Beliiml the Veil. The custom of wearing face veils among the women of the Orient is a very ancient one, and undoubtedly . the wedding ami widow's veils of our JF day are remnants of that Old World I fashion. The Oriental woman prizes lier veil above any other article of her wardrobe; rather than have a strange man look upon her uncovered face she will snatch a curtain, counterpane or her petticoats in nor haste to con ceal her features, utterly regardless of other parts of her anatomy which may be exposed by the action. This need not seem so very absurd when wo remember that It is a part of most Oriental religions to keep the women in exclusion and that Mohammed of blessed memory made the command a binding one. Turkish dnmes of high degree wear dainty squares of white illusion co quettishly wound about their heads aud faces which cover but in no wise conceal their beauty. This style has been growing smaller and more diaph i a nous until now the Turkish woman's face is less concealed than the Euro pean woman's who clings to the close square of tulle. The Algerian women wear yards of soft gauze about their heads and shoulders; when coming in contact with European men these are grace fully draped so as to leave but the up jjer portion of the face visible. The live yard sarong of the Parsee wotoen makes a dress skirt, covers a greater portion of the body, leaving one arm and shoulder free, and is then most artistically arranged about the head. The Nautch girls who wear the curious nose rings and expensive Jewels on their feet and heavy anklets, make use of the sarong In their gliding dances, but they seldom use them for face covering. The married women and widows of the Basque provinces use a combination clonk and hood similar to that worn by the women of San Miguel. Mohammedan women have a variety J of face veils, modified by climate and * the country in which they live. The yasmak of the Turkish and Egyptian women is unknown to the women of folds of long, narrow guaze veils or shroud themselves in their beautifully embroidered sarongs.—New York Sun. Women as Philanthropists. Few realize how much the cause of education and the various philan thropic enterprises owe to the women of the United States. The Chicago Chronicle publishes the following list of some of the gifts recently made to women's causes: Mrs. Joseph L. Neweombe, of New York, to Tulane University, §3,000,000; Mrs. P. D. Armour, of Chicago, to Armour Institute, $1,250,000; Mrs. Ed na J. MePherson, of Newark, N. J., to Yale College, $750,000; Mrs. H. E. Schley and Mrs. B. P. Flower, of New York, Jointly, to the town of Water town, N. Y., $300,000; Miss Helen Gould, of New York, to various chari ties, $100,000; Mrs. Vhughan Marquis, of Ashland, Wis., to religion, $300,000; Mrs. J. F. Ryan, of New York, to re ligion, $250,000; Mrs. Eugene Kelly, of Buffalo, to religion, $250,000; Mrs. Em mons Blaine and Mrs. Cyras McCor mick, to the University of Chicago, $250,000; Mrs. A. S. Greenspau, of To pelca, Kan., to various charities, $200,- 000; Mrs. Louise Sebor, of Middletown, Conn., to religion, $175,000; Mrs. Mar garet J. Bennett, of Baltimore, to vari ous charities, $150,000; Mrs. Mary Shannon, of Newton, Mass., to various colleges, $123,500; Mrs. G. S. Burbanlc, of Fitchburg, Mass., to various chari ties, $120,000; and Mrs. H. F. Alms, of Cincinnati, to the University of Cincinnati, SIOO,OOO. Besides these several Chicago women have given various sums to the Chi cago University, the total aggregating nearly $500,000. Chicago's Petticoat Isrnfs Band. Chicago now has a woman's brass band of twenty pieces. There are but three brass bands in the country composed of women entirely. The other two are in Boston and San Jose, Cal. There are several women's or chestras and many women cornet and trombone soloists, but only three bands in which everything from the clarinet to the big bass drum and bass horn are played by women. The organizer of petticoats' band is Professor Charles S. Horn, professor of comet in the Chicago Piano College. During the winter months the women will meet for rehearsal weekly and will give a few concerts in the small towns near Chicago. With this training It is believed the players will soon be in condition to compete with the veteran members of the older bands of the country. When the sight of a brightly uni formed band becomes familiar to citi zens of Chicago the band will start on a tour of the United States. The leader expects to arrange a series of contests with the other two women's bands, and have it determined whether Chicago can produce as good or better musi cians than Boston or the Pacific coast. Uniforms have not been decided on yet, but it is probnble that they will bo distinctively feminine and not savor of the "emancipated" woman's dress in any detail.—Chicago Chronicle. Freucli Lingerie. rettlcoats fit very smoothly and closely around the hips, but some of the very newc3t have a little fulness just at the back, a row—or, rather, three or four rows—of fine gathers, or two or three inverted box pleats, which do not in any way interfere with the sheathlike effect and yet per mit enough fulness being added to hold the skirt out a little from the figure—a most desirable addition in these days ol' many exaggeratedly tight-fitting dress skirts. These petti coats open at the side, are circular in shape, and have one or more llounces, or one deep flounce with many ruffles. It is the fad of the mo ment to have different silk llounces that can be buttoned on to the upper part of some one silk skirt, and in this way it is possible to keep the fresh, dainty appearance that Is so requisite to being well dressed and so difficult to attain with the length of most of the dress skirts.—Harper's Bazar. M&JiP The modish ulster is belted in. Changeable or two-toned broadcloth Is something new. Lace wiH be used for trimming all but the corduroy waists. Panne velvet, plain and fancy, is used for entire waists, as well as for trimming purposes. On the dressy coats shown this sea son for children silver knob buttons, richly chased, are among the novel ties. Heavy white silk embroideries are let into the thick, white scratch wool which is Used in some of the smart hats of the season. Long, narrow, oval-shaped dots of black are to be seen on neckwear. One stock has a large, white lace bow, with these dots in black velvet as much as a quarter of an inch long. A big tulle bow has smaller dots of vel vet the same shape. Oak leaves which are monstrosities from the botanical standpoint, but charming from the milliner's, are to be seen In all colors of velvet One hat is formed almost entirely oC these oak leaves in white velvet veined with pink, and with a delicate pink fruit of some kind. There seems to be an increasing bril liancy in the coloring of ornaments of jewels. One beautiful opal brooch has a Jarge opal In the centre, one of un usual brilliance, and around this is a row of large rubies, and outside the rubies a row of larger diamonds. The pin is ovaL I COOKS A SICK MAN WELL PUT INTO A HOT STOVE AND BAKED UNTIL CURED. Tim Theory of the Dry-Hot-ilr Proceßß is to Intensify tile Benefits of the Turkish und Si in i Jur Hatha hauler of Boasting the Patient. English publications are giving some space to what they call the "baking cure," by which a sick man is described as being "put iuto a stove and cooked until he is well." A hospital devoted to this treatment has just been estab lished at London, and the idea seems to be wholly novel over there. In this city, on the other hand, where it is known as thc-rmaerotherapy—a word etyinologlcally unimpeachable, but to be found only in the newest dic tionaries—also called the treatment by superheated air, Eellevue has used the process several years, and a private hospital on the west side of the city practices it almost exclusively. An other such institution exists in Phila delphia, and still others in Cincinnati and Chicago. The theory of the dry-hot-air cure is to intensify the benefits of Turkish and similar batlis. The patient's head being outside tile machine, and in at mosphere of ordinary temperature, his body can stand much more heat than if the exposure thereto was complete. As the treatment is essentially local, provided nothing is the matter with his head, there is no need for a man to breathe other air than he is used to. There is nothing startling in the gen eral conception of calorific therapeu tics. The hot-water bag is one expres sion of the principle, and the homely mustard plaster another. The ruins of Athens, Alexandria, Bagdad, Cairo, Constantinople, Damascus, Hercuia ueum, Pompeii, and Rome contain the remains of hot-air baths unequalled to-day. Among the famous baths of (he Eternal City, those of Agrippa, Caracalla, Diocletiau, and Titus, none was without its caldarium, or hot-air chamber. Hippocrates, Celsus and Gaien extolled hot air as a therapeutic agent. The Turkish hath is really a Roman revival. Constantino intro duced it into Byzantium after his con quest. The introduction of the thermaero therapic apparatus at onee raised the temperature to which it is possible to subject the human body from 170 to 400 degrees. Of course, neither the whole body nor any vital organ can be put to any such heat. Between 275 and 280 degrees is tho hottest that is safe for the trunk. To discriminate among beneficial temperatures, three machines are used—the body, the leg aud arm and the locql styles. The body and the leg dud aria machines differ only in size, shape aud a few minor de tails. The walls consist of three con centric cylinders, separated by spaces of an inch and a half. The outermost cylinder is of nickel-plated sheet cop per, lined with asbestos to minimize the external radiation of heat; the middle cylinder, of sheet steel, also nsbestos lined; and the third of brass, with cork ribs to protect the paiieut from burning. Bunsen burners, as many as may be required, supply the heat to the space between the steel and copper cylinders and the products of combustion pass off through three flues. The steel cyl iuder radiates the heat through ruauy perforations in the brass upon the body of the patient. Fresh air is con stantly fed into the second space, or circulating jacket, and escapes into the fiues after it has been vitiated. The patient lies upon a mat of fibrous magnesia, covering a layer of asbestos. The cylinders are mounted upon massive metal legs, aud at either end of the body machine are wooden extensions for the head and lower limbs to rest upon. The apparatus looks like a combination of bed and stove, which indeed it is. It weighs about fifty pounds and the leg aud arm machine 400. The latter has a glass door through which the attendant may watch the limb. The local device Is a cork-rimmed instrument with various attachments for the application of a swift current of hot air to the ear, all sorts of common sores, and other pain ful spots. The attendant manipulates the contrivance and regulates the tem perature. The air comes from a tank where it is stored under pressure, aud is boated as released. The treatment is employed to reduce obesity and relieve writer's cramp, for rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica and gout, pueumouia, asthma and pleurisy, boils and ulcers, but not tumors and cancers. The great danger is of literally roast ing the patient to death, although no such fatality is on record. Iu addition to the protection afforded by the mag nesia mat and the cork ribs of the h:as3 cylinder, each patient wears a bathrobe of outing flannel, and must satisfy his physician in a physical ex amination not only of the nature of his ailments, hut of his ability to endure the process. His temperature, pulse and respiration are taken, and if his heart and lungs aro not nil right, the usual treatment is modified according ly. If they ure radically wrong, he will have to seek some other remedy. The average stay in the body-machine is from fofty-five minutes to an hour. Nearly every organ is affected in some way. The skin becomes first flushed and then mottled, and prickly heat may appear. The secretions of the sweat, sebaceous and lymphatic glands are greatly stimulated. Epi thelial cells increase, especially in the neighborhood of former eruptions. Af ter a few treatments the entire epider mis becomes much softer and smoother. The heartbeats quicken from ten to twenty-five a minute over the normal, unless the action of the heat ts allowed to continue more than an hour und a half, when they become very rapid and feeble. From a couple to half a dozen more breaths than usual are drawn every minute, but the effect of over-exposure is the same as upon the pulsations. The blood becomes more alkaline, and the number of red cor puscles temporarily multiplies, but anaemia may follow excessive ex posure. The temperature of the body is likely to rise from two to five de grees above the regular ninety-eight and a half. The sensory nerves are soothed and the patient may fall asleep. Leave him too long in the oven, and you may expect muscular twitching and general irritability. Some patients say that after a limb has been heated awhile the release from pain causes a sensation of the loss of that member. When the heat is first turned upon the man in the stove-bed he feels ouly a mild and genial warmth. Below 150 degrees no inconvenience Is experi enced. Then he becomes thirsty, and the nurse gives him a sip of water not too cold, which modest draught is re peated whenever he signifies his de sire. At 180 degrees he becomes aware of many tiny streams of heat like so many . sharp needles impinging upon his body, but still he does not suffer. He is drenched with perspiration, and his feet seem to have "gone to sleep." Some of the sweat Is actually turned iuto steam, and may be soon issuing from the funnels atop the machine. At 200 degrees one becomes dreamy, and for the remaining eighty degrees to which it is safe to subject a man functionally sound, the experience Is said to be not unlike some of those described by De Quincey. If the pa tient slumbers he is easily restored by the rubbing that closes each treat ment. Then he rests an hour or two, and upon going abroad, should bis complaint permit, feels an exhilaration. Suppose a man has a bad leg and takes, say, 350 degrees of heat. It Is hard to convince him he is not being roasted alive. His heart thumps fran tically, and his bleed seems ready to boil. Bags of ice are applied to his head, one after another, until the or deal is over. He does not get all the water he wants, but only a mouthful for the asking. Such heat would kill sooner or later were it not very dry. Its humidity is practically nothing. It was the humid heat that made this city so unpleasant this summer. Massage and electricity are applied subsidiary to thermnerothornpy, if deemed expedient. An interesting ad junct to the hospital in this city is an adjustable staircase for the use of partial cripples, who constitute a ma jority of the patients, in determining their progress toward recovery. It is a wooden isosceles triangle, with sliding shelves along the equal sides, the third resting upon the floor, pulling out a shelf furnishes a step, and the steps .may be as near together or as far apart as seems fit, or at irregular in tervals, within certain limits. The pa tient can thus discover exactly what he can do in the way of climbing and descending stairs, and when he has ascertained may utilize the framework for practice aud exercise. A woman who said she had not walked for thirty-two years learned over again, just as she had in the first place in childhood, and has experienced no subsequent difficulty, according to the head nurse. Another achievement claimed for the concern is the reduc tion of a well known public man in fifteen treatments from 218 to ISO pounds, which weight he has retained ever since.—E. B. 8., in New York Evening Tost. Thought Ho Was Mail. The late Count de Lesseps was trav eling on one occasion in a French rail way train, in a compartment with two commercial travelers. "I beg your pardon, sir," said one of them, fancying that he belonged to their fraternity, "are you not a trav eler?" "Certainly I am," said the Count. "We thought so! What is your line?" "Isthmuses." "Wh-wh-what," asked the puzzled commercial, "what are they?" "I nin introducing ship canals," said De Lesseps, gravely. The commercial travelers feared that they had fallen iu with a lunatic, and were making their preparations to es cape, when the Count handed them his card, and put them at their ease.— Penny Magazine. A Cat Saves Seventeen Lives. Seventeen persons owe their lives to the action of an old pet cat. At day light Ituxton Terrace Hotel was de stroyed by fire. The flames were dis covered by Jerry, the hotel cat, which rushed in frantic haste to the bed of Mrs. Annie Menninger, the landlady. Springing on her face the cat awoke her, and by frantically scratching away the covering aroused the woman to her danger. Then the cat rushed through the house, caterwauling aud scratching at doors until the last guest was out. Al! had to dress running, wrapped in blankets. Two babies 'were in the house. Jerry will b> re membered with a medal.—Manitou (Col.) correspondence iu tho Chicago Kecord-Herald. How Are Hcclnimcd. In the Western country, where the farmers depend mostly on stock rais ing, a tract of five, ten or twenty acres can be irrigated by means of wells pumped by windmills or engines. This small tract gives a large yield per acre in the form of vegetables, fruit and alfalfa, enabling tile farmer to keep pigs and cows sufficient for home use. In some sections, such as the region about Gordon City, Kan., Irrigation is practiced on a large scale.—Review of Reviews. LAW OF WEDDING GIFTS. Though Kent to the Bride's Home They Mny He the Husband's. The case of William H. Moss vs. Charles aud ills wife Etta, Bass was tried in the District Court at Woon goeket, and judgment was given the de fendants for costs. It was an action of trover and conversion. The plain tiff alleged that certain wedding gifts which he gave temporarily into the possession of the defendant or the parents of his wife (Nina Bass Moss), from whom he has separated, are be ing retained by the defendants in spite of the fact that he is their sole owner and Ims made demands for them. Witnesses for the defense claimed that Moss, after separating from his wife, had made the latter p. gift of the articles at issue. Mr. Bass acknowl edged that the plaintiff had made de mand of him for tho goods, but Mrs. Moss denied that she had been visited and requested to give back the wed ding gifts. Both maintained that they belonged to their daughter Nina and were not for them to control. The wedding gifts were taken to the Bass home when tho daughter returned there. Several friends and relatives of Mr. Moss appeared in court, and testified that they had sent presents, including oil paintings and silverware, at the time of the wedding, but the presents, they say, were intended for Mr. Moss alone. Elizabeth Owens, of Hills grove, William Moss., Jr., Clarence Os borne and Robert T. Collinge, the lat ter of Lincoln, were the witnesses who appeared for Mr. Moss. The prosecu tion denied that Mr. Moss had ever made a gift of the articles to his wife after their separation, and hinted that their relations were so strained that such a gift was out of the question. Charles H. McFee, who appeared for the defense, asked that the plaintiff be non-suited, claiming that his wit nesses had failed to show that there was conversion of the goods. Mr. Mc- Fee said that the presents belonged jointly to Mr. Moss and wife. At the time of the wedding they were sent to her home and they bore no cards stating that they were for the groom alone. It was easy, the lawyer said, for friends of Mr. Moss to stand in court and claim that they intended to give to him alone. Judge Feely then had something to say concerning the ethics of wedding gifts. He maintains that if one sends a present to a person about to be married, the gift belongs exclusively to the man or woman for whom it is intended, and not necessarily to bo*h of the contracting couple. Conven tion declares that the gift be sent to the bride's home, and for the sake of delicacy no distinction is made be tween vise bride and grooru, but, nev ertheless, the title to the gift rests in the person remembered by the donor. Mr. and Mrs. Bass and their daugh ter Nina were the only witnesses for the defense. Mrs. Nina Bass Moss affirmed that the articles in question had been ten dered her as gifts by her husband when the separation came. Mr. and Mrs. Moss have been married only a short while and they separated last summer. The goods claimed by the pair are valued at nearly SSO. All the testimony in, Mr. MeFee maintained that no conversion had been proven by the other side. The plaintiff had failed, Mr. MeFee said, to show that demand had been made of the proper person, and this being the case no conversion could be proven. The counsel for the defend ants maintained that it was very lia ble that Mr. Moss made the gifts, as it made possible (he separation without much other outlay. Johu 11. Ileffeman, counsel for Mr. Moss, argued that effective testimony had been introduced to show that the presents belonged solely to the plain tiff and that the evidence in relation to the making of the gifts was insuffi cient. The testimony of tile defense was criticised by Mr. Heffernan. Judge Feely, before giving a verdict, said that the plaintiff should have asked Mrs. Bass for the goods. Mr. Bass, it was said, was not a party to the conversion, and if Mrs. Bass had not been requested to restore the prop erty, conversion could not be alleged against her. No evidence had been given to show that the piaintiff had di rectly demanded the presents from Mrs. Bass, and thi3 being the case, judgment was given the defendants for costs. In the afternoon, several hours after judgment for the defendants had been given. Deputy Sheriff Landry visited the Bass home on Reservoir avenue, and replevined the goods for the pos session of which William 11. Moss un successfully sued in tho morning iu tho District Court. Mr. Moss is plaintiff in the new re plevin case and his wife, Nina (Bass) Moss, is the defendant. John J. Hef fernan represents Mr. Moss. The re plevin suit is a sequel to the suit brought by Mr. Moss for the securing of the wedding gifts which he gave into the keeping of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bass a few months ago, when, he and his wife decided to separate. After they separated she went to live with her parents, whom Mr. Moss sued for the gifts and lost.—Providence Journal. More Opinion. The world never gets a very high opinion of a mau who doesn't think a good deal of himself. Few of the great men of the world were horn in palaces. Woman will never become so busi ness-like in her habits as to consider it a waste of time to look in the shop windows. Only the man who fails looks hack on his college days as the easiest time of his life.—Chicago Record-Herald. PRAIRIE DOGS DOOMED. Inability to Find Suitable Poison Ha® Deferred the Fate. Prairie dogs are becoming an unmiti gated pest In the West, and their ex termination is ardently desired but difficult of accomplishment. Professor Lantz of the Kansas State Agricultural College, in a communication to Gov ernor Stanley, says that the prairie dogs are destroying the ranges in Western Kansas and Nebraska and Eastern Colorado, cattle preferring to go without grass to eating that which has been run over by the dogs. In Kansas alone the prairie dogs occupy a million and a quarter acres. Pro fessor Lantz, who had charge of the expenditure of $5,000 appropriated by the last Kansas Legislature to be used In finding some means of killing off the pests, has experimented with poi sons for six months, but as yet has failed to find any that is successful. A Turk holds that the day begins exactly at sunset. At that time he sets his clocks and watches at the hour of 12. A watch which could run for weeks without gaining or los ing a minute would be of no special value to the Turk. Naturally people want to be Well for Christ mas for nothing so promotes happiness and good chorr. Therefore, take Garfield Tea new; it cures all derangements of stomach, liver, kidiu-ys or bowels ; it cleanses tho sys tem and purificß the blood, thus removing tho cause of rheumatism, gout and many chronic diseases. It is good for young and old and has been held in the highest repute for many years. Physicians recommend it. If you write thirty words a minute your pen is traveling at the rate of 300 yards an hour. PUTNAM FADKLEBS DYES do not stain the hands or spot the kettle. Sold by all drug -1 gists. The largest element in American popula tion is Celtic. £IOO Reward. £IOO. The renders of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that scienco has been ablo to cure in all itH stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the oniv positivo cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon tho blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy ing the foundation of tho disease, and giving tho patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. Tho proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any caso that it fails to euro. Bend for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills aro the best. Conscience is a good deal like an alarm clock. We get so used to it that we don't mind. [Zongr Hm'r\ J " About a year ago my hair was jj I coming out very fast, so { bought B ] a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor. It S j stopped the falling and made my jj J hair grow very rapidly, until nov/it g J is 45 inches in length."—Airs. A. 8 | Boydston, Atchison, Kans. i (There's another hunger 1 than that of the stomach. | Hair hunger, for instance, jj I Hungry hair needs food, | needs hair vigor— Ayar's. | 1 This is why we say that jj " Ayer's Hair Vigor always | restores color, and makes | the hair grow long and ij heavy. JI.OO o bolfb. All drarelst.. jj cannot supply' you, ■ send us one dollar and wo will express u you a bottle. lie sure nnd givo tlin name jg of your nearest express office. Address, fv J.C.AYER CO., Lowell, I ——ft—mnuiMHimiiHmiliar ssvaamanMMaa TOOTHPOWOESt Yha best that Keney and Experience can produce. fi v At all stores, or by mail for tho prtoa. HALL & RUCKEL, NEW YORK Capsicum VaseliiiO Put up In Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for and Superior to Mustaivl or any other plaster, and will not blister the mo9t delicate ekin. The pain allaying nnd curative qualities of this article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. We recoil)mend it as tho best and safest external counter-irritant known, nlso as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach audall rheumatic, aouraljdc and trouty o mploints. A trial will prove what we claim for It, and it will bo found to be invaluable in the household. Many people say "It is the boat of nil y.'Ur preparations.'* Price, 15 cents, at all druggists, or other deal s, or by sending this amount to us In postage stamps we will send you a tube by mall. Mo article should be accepted by tho public unless the same cornea our label, us otherwise It Is not genuine. CUELSEBSOUGII ttANUFACTURING CO., 17 St-te Street, Kw York Oiiyi SB.OO one of BUYS best mai!e Y Lb. Platform Scales |!j ever Sold. Well made. |(i "WILL LAST A LIFE TIME. FULL l Bizo Platform, Catalogue free, Tffi* JONES (HE PAYS THE ELLEIGHT), IUN'GHA.MTUX. N. V. DROPSYSSEra cniioß. BiH.k of teatimnniald nnd 10 do v* treatment 1 roe. Lr. n. 11. ORCEN'a UUIld, Uux 0. Atlanta. Go. Gold Medal nt Puflale exposition. fiIcXLHENNV'S TABASCO P N U 51. 'Ol ii
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers