WW &?rv Flower ' ; Cg TKa WwUrn S«tH*r*a Chann Specific. With ewy advance of emigration Into tha far West a new demand is created for Hostet- ter'B Stomach Bitters. Newly peopled regions are frequently lest salubrious than older set tled localities, on account of the mtum» which rise# from recently cleared land, partlcn- vhsfessfes Of rl70TS thit mo Subject tO7" freshets. The agricultural or mining emigrant Moil learns, when he does not already know, that the Bitters afford the only sure protection, •gainst malaria, and those disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels, to which climatic changes, exposure, and unaccustomed or un^ healthy water or diet subject him. Conse quently, he places au estimate -upon this great, sou Heboid specific and preventive commensa-' rate with its intiinaic murits, and is careful to keep on band a restorative and promoter of bsalth so implicitly to be retted upon in time ot ««]. There is one good thing about the man that is too full for utterance--he doesn't slop oyer. f • Give your children Dr. Bull's Worm De ri Btroyers. These little candies won't do them any harm and may do them much ^ood. By mail. 25 cents. John D.Park, r> ( i? ' S;-1!' lati, Ohio. Kkvf.b sit or sleep with cold feet. Let's reason together. Here's a firm, one of the largest the country over, the world over; it has grown, step by step, through the years to greatness--and it sells patent medicines!---ugh! " That's enough!"-- Wait a little-- This firm pays the news papers good money (expen sive work, this advertising!) to tell the people that they have faith in what they sell, so much faith that if they can't benefit or cure they don't want your morifey. Their guarantee is not indefinite and relative, but definite and absolute--if the medicine doesn't help, "your money i% "on call" •f Suppose every sick map and every feeble woman tried these medicines and found them worthless, who would be ^the loser, you or they ? * The medicines are Doctor Pierce's "Golden Medical Dis covery," for blood diseases, and his " Favorite Prescrip tion," for woman's peculiar ills. If * they help toward health, they cost $1.00 a bottle each! If they don't, they cost nothing / r SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cure b without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos itive guarantee, a test that no other cure can suc cessfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home m the United States and Canada. If you have • Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for It will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief Is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH'S CURE, Price Jo cts., 50 cts. aiid fl.oo. If your Lungs are tore or Back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. JOHN BARINCER. Her*, Baring from my fatm-house par Ifv fertile acres o'er, My memory travels back awhile V- .For fifty years or more, ~ When often with John liarringer I rode across the hill, , * *»•?*»• Along the narrow, stoney md V *' * ---Thftt ~ We boyB all laughed at quiet Jolja, We thought him half a fool. A laggard somewhat at his play. Though head of cla^s at school. He kept apart from all the rest. And no one dreamed there lay A hope to rise in life beneath Pis shy and quiet way. Bis mother'sTarm was next to ours. The acres were but few; The soil was scarcely more than And scanty crops it grew ; - But John toiled ou as earnestly. From dawn till set of sun. As though by patient labor there Great riches might be won. His mother died, and then there nut An uncle old and gray-, Who grimly saw the funeral, And took the boy awav. John pass'd from sight, "and newer thing. Arose the blank to fill We talked no more of him when wis Brought grist to Sinker's Mill. That was just fifty years ago; The boys have changes found, Bome dwelling here, some over seas. _Acd some are under ground. Sinker jg dead; his tou remains -• i'o run the mill-wheel now. And here I sit, a worn old man, t With wrinkles on my brow, '••••. 'Our local paper pays tli:s -week. And prints it plain and st raight, . Tfcut they -will make John Barriajut A great man In the State. It says he stands the llrat of melt _Fcr brains and iron will-- The very John that used to ride With me to Sinker's Mill. The country is no more the same, But to the dogs has gone. When they propose for Secret'ry A ragged boy like John. ' At least, he was a ragged boy, - And as it seems to me. Another man could fill .the place As easily as he. They say he's coming here some t Before election day; They'll cheor him when he makes & speech-- 1 know our ireighixirs' way ; But if ho be the same old John, And wants my vote, ho will Get on a raw-boned horse once riioro. And ride to Sinker's Mill. GOING TO LEAVE- THE FARM. D A D W A Y 11 READY REI '8 RELIEF. THE GREAT COHQUEROR OF PAIN. For Sprains, Uralses, Duckaohe, I'aiu in the Cliest or Sides, Headache, Toothache, or any «ther external pain, a lew applications rubbed on by liHiid act like causing the pain to instantly stop. For Congestions, Colds, Bronchitis, Pneu monia, Inflammations, Rheumatism. Netiral- Sia, IiUinbaifo, Sciatica, more thorough and repeated applications are necessary. All Internal I'aius, Diarrhea. Colic. Spasms, Mansou, Fainting' Spells, Nervousness, Sleep lessness are relieved instantly, and quickly eared by taking inwardly iJO to 60 drops in bait' a tumbler of water. SOo. a bottle. All Druggists. D A D W A Y ' S n pii 1 < PILLS, An excellent and mild Cathartic. Purely Vegetable. The Safest and best Medicine In tho world for the Cure of all Disorders Of the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according to directions they will restore health and renew vitality. Frice 25 cts. a Bn. bold by all Druggist* VIAAIII $100 U 11,000 Cinfiillr limM k«r« IftftO I AuUImW briBjr AXMUU.Y tr*m TWESTY to IVUf Test us. TACOSU UiVE&TMEXT CO., TACOftA, WASH. HE work of the farm house was over for the day; the children--with the exception of the eldest son, who had gone to the village, w<?re n bed, a'id in the big comforta ble kitchen Farmer Ifftrewocd, his wife, and his wife's sister, Mra. Lucas, were sitting aroupd a center-table. The farmer was reading a paper, his wife was putting a patch on the knee of little Harry's diminutive knickerbockers, and Mrs. Lucas was crocheting a hood of blue and white zephvr for a small niece. TWe was a silence in the kitchen save for the snapping of the fire in the stovo, the ticking of the big, eight-day clock in the cornqr, and the rustle of the farmer's newspaper, and when Mrs. Harewood sighed deeply, both her sister and husband looked up in surprise. "What's the matter, Sarah?" asked the latter. "That sigli was the loudest I ever heard you give. Has anything gone wrong? You look as though you had a big load on your mind." "I have," answered the wife. "And it is a load which you must share, Eli; I have borne it alone as long as I can bear it. There is great trouble in store for us, husband--George is going to leave the faVm." The newspaper fell to the floor, and for a moment the farmer looked at his wife, too much surprised to utter a word. "Going to lefcve the "farm!" he re peated at last "Sarah you must be dreaming." 16 FAT FOLKS REDUCED lbs. per month by harmless herbal I ] remedies. iso sburvine. no i uronvenienc* » 'uiul 110 bad oiTectP. Stj-ic! iy confidential, end 6c. for circulars and testimonials. Addresa L, W.F. S.Ni"L>EK, State street, Chicago. 11L E LIZABETH GADY STANTON' PKOPHKCY verified. l'ainless Childbirth Assnreil. Send f-ta,ti> lor circu.ar Dub. Mary Mflekui & Lywia Alma. Indiana Av., Chicaso, 111. 8 lAff I I I liT WHOS.ESALI PRICEL mmm •• • • If you use wall paper do not • falltosend lOcforsampIesof v T H L L springpatterns, igunrantoe Ito save you money. White Wanks to 6c per roll. !M B 0% HHI wilts 8c per roll. Em- B B JB B B 1L EJ jossedGiIts 10c pt>r roll. *B BV Hi K finest parlor papers® JpB • m • • Vith 18 inch frieze to • I ••• • • Bateb locpcr roll and upward. ALFRED PEATS, Wau Paper Merchant, 14J-I19 VV. Madiaou-st. Chiouco. The Soap that Cleans Most is Lenox. r sus- xre to tell Ell He is eighteen years old, and has •worked faithfully for you ever since he could talk plain. He has had his food and lodging, and two suits of clothes a year, to be sure, but all he actually owns is that collie dog which is always at his heels. You even sold the onlv horse you had that was fit for the Baddle. And George was extraordinary fond of Vixen." "It seemed a pity to keep a horse no one but George ever rode," said the farmer, and she was too light for work. I'm a poor man, Hester, and can't afford playthings for my children." "You can better afford to keep an extra horse than to have your son leave you, Eli. Whom could you get who would take the interest in the work that George has? You have thought it only right that George should do his share toward running the farm, and have con sidered your duty done in giving him a home. You are disposed to think him ungrateful because he wants to leave you now that every year makes his ser vices more valuable. But the boy is ambitions, and is not satisfied to travel in a circle. He wants to make some headway. And it is only natural." The farmer leaned bis head' bn his hand, a look of deep thought on his grave weather-beaten face. His gentle Bister-in-law's plain speaking had given rise to thoughts which had never before entered his mind. "1 believe you're more than half right, Hester," he said at last "I'll think it all over to-night, and make up my mind what to do. I'd be lost here without George, and he shan't leave the farm if I can help it." % Hirtfintr'j WITH ONE BOUND HE WAS BY THE SIDE OF THE BLACK MARE. * "Force won't keop him, Eli, remem ber that," said Mrs. Lucas, feeling that she had eaid enough, folded up ter work, and taking up a lamp from a shelf, by the stove, went upstairs to be* own room. Just at daybreak she was aroused from a sound sleep by the sound of horses' hoofs' in the yard, and looking 0(11 of the widow she saw Eli trotting away on old Roan. "Where can he be going at hour ?" she though. „ When she went down st o'clock George was standi kitchen table, having just with two full pails of mil wore a discontented, unha| he merely nodded in aunt's cheery "Good m A few minutes la' tered, but Georfjp, en- e to iooking ce up. said Mrs. ay at day- ge oh a mat- ild Vixen, papa, Harry, and Mrs. pass over George's "WHAT'S THE MATTER, SAliAl Mrs. Harewood shook her lie "I wish I were," she said. ' it is true. George has mad mind to leave us. I have no months past that he seemed dit and restless, and since you soli he has grumbled a great deal work and the dullness of his to-day I heard him say to Jas; that he would not be here a now; that he bad had enougli life, and intended to leave; ani fused our consent to it he away, and take his chances. ~ We'll see about that." farmer angrily. "Consent rather think not! I won't < for a moment. What woi worth a year from now if I He'd fall in with all sorts of the city, and get us all iqj Besides, I need him here. years, at least before Harry elSFfafieftis place, and he's got to stay, if I liave to tie him down." " Why don't you make him want to stay, Eli ?" asked the gentle voice of his sister-in-law. "If he's got the city fever on him all the talking in the world wouldn't do any good," rejoined the f&rmei. "He wouldn't listen to a word." \ "Don't talk. Don't let him e pect that you are aware of his d leave you. Try anew plan, Eli, I have been thinking of all day. The best plan I know of is him my mind freely, without any beat ing about the bosh; and the sooner it's done the better." ' "Now, Eli, don't be above taking a woman's advice. Let me tell' youVliow to deal with George. I have been" three months now and ha1 deep interest in the boy. I his dissatisfaction, and rec cause. I have overheard h to Jasper Fliut more than only yesterday I heard him sa] went to the city what he earl be his own, but that here h from dawn to dark and was off at the end of the year tlx beginning. He said that To who is in a grocery store in gets $12 a week, and Tom is on teen. Now, if you want Geori on the farm, give him an inter Mi one of the windo out dejectedly, "Yon were out Lucas. "I break." "Yes, I ter of bu "That's isn't it ? Lucas saw aqu face as the child spoke, "Yes, my boy, I «?Id Vixen to Law yer Stanley. George," turning to his son, "I've made up my miud to part with th»t fifty-acre lot by the river. What do you think of that?" "Of course you are to get a good price for i4", sir," said the young man indiffer ently. "It's ,the best piece of laud you hitfe." "Bat I haven't sold it. I am going to give It away." "Give ic away!" repeated George, roused out of his indifference, and star ing at his father as it he thought he had not heard aright. . "Yes, deed it over, every inch of it, to some one I think a great deal of, and who deserves it," laying his hand on his son's shoulder, and his voice break ing a little. "I am going to give it to lay son, George Harewood, to have and £0 hold, as he sees fit, without question tor advice." "Tome! You intend to give that fifty acres to me, father!" " Yes, my boy, and with my whole heart. You've been a good son, George, and I only wish I were able to do more for you. But I am not a rich man, as you know, and I have your mother and the three little ones to provide for, too. Still, I want you to have a start, and this fifty-acre lot will yield a handsome profit. You can have three days a week to call your own, and that will give you a chance to work, and if you choose to break that pair of young oxen I bought the other day from Bagley, you can have them for your trouble." "This--this seems too much, sir," stammered George. "I don't know how to thank vou." "Too much! Then I don't know what you'll say to this," and the farmer took his son by the arm and led him out on the porch. "There's another present for you. my boy." " V i x e n T h e w o r d c a m e f r o m George's lips with a long sigh of joy, and with one bound he »was at the side of the little black mare he had thought never to see again, and had both arms about her neck. "Oh, father, I'd rather have Vixen than anything else in this world!" And he buried his face in the pretty creature's mane, and in spite of his eighteen years, fairly broken down and sobbed aloud. That ended George's desire to leave the farm. He was never again heard to mention the subject, and he grum bled no more about the hard work and the monotony of his life, but in every way tried to show his appreciation of his father's kindness. In fact, Eli Harewood was wont to say occasionally in confidence to hi$ wife, that he had reason to bless his sister-in-law for her good advice, and that iia owed it to her that he had a stalwart arm to lean on in advancing years. But George never knew to what he -owed the change in his fortunes. Miss Dogood--M* dear little boy, U you want to succeed in life, always take pains with -everything you do. Boy-- <Oh, I do, mum. I took seven this morning with this'bean-shooter. TRUMPET NOTES. «9tam*s Horn" Gives Ita Weekly atest*. SMALL temptations are extra dangerous. Love is alwayr the gainer by be ing tested.es Ifo one can, know Christ who is not like Christ, Failure is al ways next door neighbor to sue* oesa. Ood alwayr rns to meet the Binner who repents. If you look wrong you will be sure to step wrong. • Nothing scares the devil like amove- to the front. Hearsay religion is never very at tractive to anybody. No m ax can be truly brave who is not trying to be truly good. Walking backward toward God is a matter of impossibility. \ No man is true to God who is false to himself or his neighbor. A good many people would say more if they didn't talk so much. No man can ever forgive himself ifor having been untrue to God. No man is a real hero until he is will ing to stand alone With God. Whenever God lifts a man up he gives him something to stand on. The moment a Christian qnits look ing right he quits walking right. If we hai to be judged by one an other no sinner would go to Heaven. The Christian religion is the only re ligion that sends out missionaries. God is continually looking for people who can be trusted with prosperity. The time when we most need faith is when things look biack all around us. The devil nipver has any power to scare us as long ate we keep him behind us. God's work is most hindered by tlM people who are- unfaithful in littW things. "Cold as ice" is nice for lemonade, but not a good thing for a church mem ber. Light was the first thing God created, and it is His first gift to every heart. God will not give any aoldier am munition who is not willing to go into battle. Poor digestion has a good deal to do with the devil's succeas in some places. If it wasn't for its light nobody would ever find out that the sun 1 has spots on it. A discouraged man is one of the sad dest eights that angels ever have to look; at. A great many people are gloomy be cause they believe all their joys are be hind them. Thk man who can not respect himseli has only one more'step to take to fall tho pit. d end Mamie on the Hehring Sea Dispute. Their faces were radient with the springtime of life as they strolled down one of the paths past the capitol. "I think it's real mean the way Eng land is acting aboat sealskin sacques," said Maud. "So do L:' replied Mamie. "Humph; I suppose yo« know a great deal about it ?" "Well, I know that Mr. Blaine wants England to stop fishing for seals in the Behring sea; he's threatened te build a fence or something around it so as to make it a closed sea, and England is going to get an injunction from the Su- £1-9111 e C<>urt to stop the fence. It's wonierful how much trouble fences make when they get into court," said Mamie thoughtfully. And Maud looked at her in wonder ing admiration and exclaimed: "Hon estly, Mamie, I don't soo how you man age to keep so well posted."--Wax/1- ington Post. Baneful Rainbow. The "bow of promise" is to the peo ple of some parts of China a harbinger of evil. An English traveller relates that he was once on the road with a company of native followers, when there came on a shower. As the rain ceased, a brilliant rainbow appeared. At this all his ser vants covered their mouths with their hats, to escape the poisonous vapors which, as they declared, are always given forth by rainbows! The Englishman, as a matter of course, laughed at their foolishness, and kept his hat on his head. The curious feature of the adventure was that, when he had gone only a few hundred yards, he was by some coinci dence seized with a sudden fit of vomit- ing- He received no sympathy, and with out doubt his misfortune will long be cited in that neighborhood as fresh proof of the rainbow's baneful influence. Got Things Mixed. The Utica Herald tells a good story of a young preacher of Auburn Theo logical Seminary who started on a re cent Saturday to supply a church in another towu. At a poirt on the route he had to change cars, and in his haste, seized the gripsack of a man who was traveling with a wife and baby, instead of his own. The mistake was discov ered too late to be corrected, so the theolog was landed in a country town with a lot of infants' supplies, and an anxious mother had only two sermons and some copies of the "Family Advo cate and Guardian" (which the student intended to distribute among some poor families) with which to make her own and baby's toilet. Comets. Several comets visible to the nakf d •eye have been seen in the past score of years. There has been no falling off in tm» respect,- so far as we know, as compared with the average twenty-year period of the century thus far. Some comets have regularly ascertained periods, and the dates of their return to the vicinity of the earth are known. Mostol the comets, however, appear without warning. One may* be sighted somewhere or other to-night or to-mor row night. And then again none may come into plain view within the next year or two. We have to take our chances in this respect. Somewhere in the neighborhood of 500 comets visible to the naked eye have been recorded as appearing since the beginning of the Christian era, or an average of about one every four years.--St. Louis Globe- Democrat Aged Millionaire--And you Nrf«we me ? Miss Beauti--I am sorry, sir. but I cannot be your wife. "Is it because I am too old?" "No^it is because you tie not older.* 0 The Beauty Of . ; " Is that Hood's Sarsaparilla gives V ,r ~ '~^such~ perfect satisfaction/' writes~a7~~ prominent druggist recently, after speaking of the large sales of this excellent medicine. We fjrmly believe there is nothing equal to Hood's Sarsaparilla to purify the blood and make the weak strong. If you have That Tired Feeling, or if your blood is impure, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is the best ring Medicine How many people thete are who regard the coming of winter as a con stant state of siege. It seems as if the elements sat down outside the walls of health and now and again, led by the north wind and his attendant blasts, broke over the ramparts, spreading colds, pneumonia and death. Who knows when the next storm may come and what its effects upon your constitution may be ? The fortifica tions of health must be made strong. SCOTT'S EMULSION of pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda will aid you to hold out against Coughs, Colds, Consumption Scrofula, General Debility, and all A ncemic and Wasting Diseases, until the siege is raised, ft prevents wasting i n c h i l d r e n . Palatable as Milk. SPECIAL.--Scott's Emulsion is non-secret, and is prescribed by the Medical Pro fession all over the world, because its ingredients are scientifically combined in such a "manner as to greatly increaso their remedial value. 2AUTION.--Scott's Emulsion is put up in salmon-colored wrappers. Be sure and get the genuine. Prepared only by Scott A Bowse, Manufacturing Chemists, New York. Sold by all Druggists. How does he reel?--He fed# blue, a deep, dark, unfading, dyed* in-the-wool, eternal blue, and b#; makes everybody feel the same wajf , ^ --August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel?--He feels a|^; headache, generally dull and con-'*'" •stant. but sometimes excruciating---- August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel?--He feels 4y? violqpt hiccoughing or jumping •• thte stomach after a meal, raising^ bitter-tasting matter or what he ha^..# eaten or drunk--August Flowea^'C'l the Remedy. How does he feel ?--He feel* " the gradual decay of vital power . be feels miserable, melancholy^ 3 h o p e l e s s , a n d l o n g s f o r d e a t h a n q E ' . peace--August Flower the Rem-- . edy. , How does he feel ?--He feels s^.'^ full after eating a meal that he cax$ hardly walk--August Fiower tin* Remedy. 4* '9 6. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, A >> Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. JL , "grateful-comfortino. EPPSSCOCOA ^ BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural kw Which govern thfe operattjns of digestion aad nntaft- tton, and by a careful applio atloti of the fine prupar lies of weii-sf looted Cocoa, Mr. Epos ha» provttatf our breakfast t»hles with a delicately flavoured •rage which msy aavo us maay heavy doc tort" biUa. It toby tha judicious use of such articles of that aeoascitntton may Do gr duallr built Strong enough to resist every tenoeoey t Hundred* of subtle maladies are floating i ready to attaek wherever there Is a We may escape many a fatal shaft by •elves well fortified with para blood aad a ] service Chsmtte," . Made simply with bolllas water or milk. SoNI •nlv la half-Bound tin*, oy Orocera, labelled that: JAiM.ES EPFS A: CO.. Homoeopathic London*. Knolasp. it '3«. /,}- 'VAt: 0$ -VASELINE- FOR A ONE-DOUAR B1U sent vlvHfe: So will deliver, free of all charges, to any person ii le United States, all of the following articles, car* fully packed: 8no two-ounce bott'e of Pnre Vaseline lOctjk. bp two-ounce bottle ot Vaswline Pomade-- 15 "J. » 8ne jar of VaHeline Cold Cream IB 2 « no oake of VaKeline Camphor Ice - 1# 5 f.; , One cako of Vaseline Soap, unscentod W Oni'oakoof VnnelinB Soap, exquisitely scented 311 y.'.< One two-ounoe bottle of white Vaaeliae 25 "r / >. #ij* Or, for t»*9taoe tutmp*. any tingle article at tha jrrllB' , . named. On no (Krvunt be pernnadeil to ar- 'ptf • pour dr»jj'7ixt, any YaseUne or prrtitration tl-rrifrM*- «tnletK labeitd with our name,beatnxt yon tci.'.'ci1 'IfHi iy recrlre tin imitation ichkh Aas little or no Clieselirousli Mfg. Co., 34 State StrN.V CUX IHli- OCT."-" GraMPafcHotf . 81 to 103 N. Clark St* CHICAGO. Pair-Four minutes trBjfc . v Conn House. Roonn pa weekly. Transients Slto up. American and ropeim plane. Etuev THISt' NEW. . • • V Tins country has 1,000,000 miles of telegraph wires--enough to reach forty times around the globo. The Ladles Delighted. The pleasant effect and the perfect satoty with which ladies may use the liquid fruit laxative. Syrup of FigB. under ail conditions make it their favorite remedy. It ia pleas ing to the eye and to the taste, gentle, yet effectual in aoting on the kidneys, liver and bowelB. Fbcit is said to bo rotting in Oregon orchards. Small boys are ; scarce oat there. • " " How's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any ease of catarrh that cannot bo cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENKY & CO., Props, Toledo, Ohio. We, tho uuderaigtied, have known F. .1. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their nr ji. Wfst & Tbcax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Waldino, Kin-nan & Marvin, Wholesale Drug gists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Core i* taken Internally, act ing directly upon tlffe blood and' mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Vrice 75 oents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. The best and safest toothwash is tepid water. No Matter How Hard A n y d r u g g i s t t r i e s t o s e l l y o u h i s o w n c o u j r h medicine, remember he does it because he makes more money on It. Insist on having Kemp's Balsam for the throat and lungs, for there is no cough remedy so pure and none so quick to break up a cold. For in fluenza, soreness of the throat and tickling irritation, with constant cough, Kemp's Balsam Is an immediate cure. Large bottles 50c and $1. At all druggists. From ro.ooo to 100,000 hairs grow in a human scalp. • Do tou wish to know how to have no nteam, and not hnlf the usual work on wash day? Ask your grocer for a bar of Dobbins' Eiectric Soap, and tho directions will tell you how. Be sure to get no imitation. Don't heap coals of tire upon your en emy's head. Remember that coal is Si Der ton. Economy is wealth. A SLIGHT COLD, if neglected, often at tacks the lungs. Brown's Bronchial Troches give sure and immediate relief. Sold ofUy in boxes. Price 25 cents. A liveryman baits his horse to eaten a customer._ Beecham's Pills care Bilious and Nerv. ous ills. How can a mac follow a calling and yet be at the head of his profession? A Symmetrical Fact.--The world is full of people who go abopt fighting windmills and wasting efforts in struggling with Im aginary evlis, but the man who attends to his own business, pays cash for his groceries and uses Dr. White's Dandelion when he is out of sorts is the one with whom pros perity likes to dwell. Try it and see if it does'not prove true. Advice free and big bottle of Dandelion for a dollar. At your druggist'^ •Knowledge is folly unless put to use." Tou know SAPOLIO. then use it! Sapolio is a solid cake of Scouring Soap used ior ioleaniag purposes. wiVhou Wibhouh^B! ~ ihould:ma.kemeir houses.took fair with SAPOLIO = Try & c&lse i'nyour nexh ho.use-cle&riin£ '*• • SENSE OF DECENCY Constrains many people to hide the dirt of their kitchens, TfieyinfeSfcA the kitchen a secret chamber, into which it is forbidden to enter; but half the trouble which they take to hide the dirt and the disgrace which it est- tails, would keep the kitchen clean, and all its pots and pans bright afc a dollar, that is, if they uso ft S A X > O Z i X O -- ' * HiSGRUB^STUIVSPiii* Workson either standing timber or stumps. Will pail an ordinary Orub In 1H- minutes. MatEtsael' sweep of Two Acres «i m altttiut. A man^a boy and -• ^ x " ,f,j horse can operate it. No heavy chains sir The crop«n afew"acresthe Br>t year wlJl_pa^^ortj^MachHie. portalc rods to handle. The crop on a few acres the Brut year will pay fc. _ ttlast'd Catalogue, glriacprle*.Ima aadtaitlsMBlals. JAKES MILKS * EON.Sol* M'fre, Scoteli Grove, ,« i , ÊXMJa i : ijri RELIEVES INSTANTLY. ELY BKOTHBRS. lie Warren St. New York. Price 60 cts. M Best Coug'Ii Medicine Cures wher< taste. Children take it without objection. ecomraeniied by Physicians. fails. Pleasant and asrreeable to tho By druggists. Ladles, box All pill 4e. in 4t»r 10,000 Testimonial!). A'aw P\tp«r. Bold bj all LoeiU UrtggUlfc u pasteboard boxes, pink wrapper*, arr daafffroifs eoanterfelta. At Draggirt*. * for particulars, testimonial*, »ndl "Relief for Ladle***" by _rela CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO., MADLAOA Thb best cough medicine is Piso's Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25c. MEN TO TKATBI. W« par SOO to SlOO a month and expenses. Ad orn * Wxixixeiov, Madison, wis. w« Tuff's Pills enable the dyspeptic to eat whatever he Irishes. They cause the food to assimilate B~l nourish "the body, give appetite, and DEVELOP FLESH. < Office, 39 & 41 Park Place, New York. Nerv< Fit cases. tWnd to Dr. Kline, StJL AxcU St, Phila, Pa. For fure bF \SfrLtii$ Curftf TRVMV STIFFNESS- StOatS"** Tax HlTcml flavor a»- eorded Tilling UAST's.i'ue** BOUKD Cabburo SEEDS leads m to offer a 1*. S. Gaow* Omlon, ill ineU yeiUw ffUl itkexutmet. To introduce it and show its capabilities 1 will pay $180 for the best yield obtain ed from 1 ounce of seed which I wi li mail for 80 cts. legrsae free. Isaac F. Tllllnghas*^ La Plume, P«- Secretaries and Or- Iganizers by an As- 'sessuient Order pay ing $100.00 in six months at an estimated cost of $4*. Reputable men and women can secure liberal eom- pensation. Address M. McIKTYRE, Supreme Manager, No. 1028 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. ILLUSTRATED PUBLI CATIONS, WITH MAPS, describing Minnesota. Dakota. Montana. Idaho incton aud Ore- aon. the Free Gov- erumeut and Cheap NORTHERN PACIFIC R. R. Best Agricultural, liraziug and Timber Lands noa open to iM ttlTs. Haile t FREE. Address out. >. UMMU, Uad Cm. *. f. & lUl. Mia. : tsms No. 13~»a C. H. U WRITING TO AD yoa law the paper WHEN VB1 » t please amy la this aavrr. ntana. Idaho. Wash- LINOS " my WORK SHALL BE PERPETUATED The perpetuation of Mrs. Piukham's wt>rfc Ituardetl by her foresig'tt iroru t!ie r*"1 suffering woman applying to her received p»*r attention, aud the details of every ease w,'r<. ' corded. These recorvl# are to-dav tha laT$est#||:> the world, contain facts not lbuna ebewiwrej^:: now open to all women. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'Sco! is the onlv Leiritiinste and Pojlthe Keasedr those peculiar a'eaknesses and ailments to women. i'ip*-'- b»niia«i ai»»a>m. -- Vytfla C.mnklw<n .. ...i