The p The b m asters htlH linger in bloom, 1* - bright yellow, tbe sumachs am Iftce torches fifflamn it rhoait if tbe j«y of the Id herald i I'ttUUB'M o ,HN , tbe mma' Tke n»st skilttol f iliost unskilled housewlfe «ae KM! the na« agent. to ASSIST iatha prapurMlbiiol4tener~heat. oookery depends *erenpon tlio ob- Mtt of certain rates titan on tbe .M^hich iliiiniw. Little dishes '.tje- worft tropiMe to prepare than a i Toast, or i^faop, bet they are gene- more appetising, tad are always a rable aiUitlon to tbe dinner tablet ie small details «f kltdfceh and table sometimes appear trivial; bat if we con sider how ranch ef the health and com fort ot a household depend upon a kitch en, rarely- no one can «ay that the details *re unimportant If the mistress of a •household is ansuod. with a thorough practical, not aenetr superficial, knowi ng©, nosh espque can be laved by not purchasing «**!*«? mtensilR which have •only torelty to teoommend them. • BWIBM* Education. • ^ v Educate jvrarJMHieand daughters by send- ln* thewi to the Brywnt gtratton Chisago Business Odt«gn.l>hort-hand Institute, and English Training School, located at the cor ner of VaMiKUa street and Wabash av«- nue, Chicago, 311. This is the Great Busi ness Untnemitarctf America, and the only college with which the world-renowned firm of Cry ant & Stratton are personally con nected. Bencl 10 cents to pav postage on magnificent 012-page catalogue, laches, jprlnted -on -finest enameled paper, and illustrated with 30 elegant full-page vjng ravings. XiAT)rR8, attention t If any readers of this paper are wearing the shoulder cape, mow:in fashion, we hereby advise them to intake dog blankets of them-- or throw them to the dogs--and adopt • more *eensible and safe outer gar ment. These abominable abridgments of bygiehic decency invite intercostal neuralgia, lumbago, pleurisy, rheuma tism, consumption, and pneumonia, mm! already promise to make more business for physicians than any <*the' Jolly or fashion for a long --Dr. Footed Health Monthly. SOME1 of the seas which the telescope irevedlaon the planet Mars have quite suddenly become crossed by straight lines, so straight and parallel that some ; astronomers have thought them to be bridges constructed upon an eaermens »«eiUe by'highly civilized beings. A HANDSOME scarf-pin represents a twisted branch of grape viae, with a cluster of pearls in imitation «f -a buuch •of-srapes. BUFFALO has a firm named Irish •&, 'English. Mr. English is MI Irishman and Mr. Irish is an Englishman. THE. people of the United STATES con- sumo, it is said, 200,000,000 bottles «f pickles annually. 0 Cures| FFKESS* MS"** ft* iim ftoeosn iiffc-Obws . „ ,1 is blowing Ida blast? * dull November la sweeter than May, love is Its sunshine--she maeta Me to* Will the ringdove return to her •he will be at ha Win thecoma! nest t At the stroke of tbe boor gate; A friend may prove laggard-love never earn* late. Do I see her afar In tbe«Ustaneef Hot yet. £?* wjr1 Too t -1 v l She conUl not forget 1 "™a I ofowi the old .bridge where the brook overflowed. She will dath full in sight at the tain ot the road. | paw the tow wett where the try entwine*; X tread the brown pathway that leads through the pines; Iteste by theboatter that lies in the Add, her pnuMiee at parting was lovingly round through Will she come by the hillsiae a the wood? Will she wear bar brown dress, « bar mantle _ or hood? • 1M minute draws wrong: My heart will be to«*J at her watch may go What keep* her so Man if I Why doubt for a OM do! Why question? Why tremble? An angel* more true? She would eone to tha'lover who calls her his own, fbongh she trod ta tihetraok ofa whirling «y- ekaael Icroseed tbe tM Widge an the minute had pnsHOfi, I looked; lo! my love stood before me at last. Her eyes, how they sparaled--her cheeks, how they glowed, we met laoe 4o faceaithe the knu2] -MIohUC Month**. PATIENT HATTIEB RSWAKB. ..4*, M $:*"; m MSA VICTOR OOK how now Hattie, I t»el l you there is no use in your cry ing, for it only makes matters wor»e;; you know 1 ean't Btay at 'home to-night -- and --" "But--^but you promised so faithfu lly last night that you would stay with me to night. Dntft you remember?* "Confound it, Hat! you are always poking my promises at me't "What is a promise any way. especially to a peevish woman like yon ? Yon make my life perfectly miserable. What *ita you of late, any way.?* Charrley T' Charley, tthm'!" And the <door slamed -with such a noise that only an angry husband can make when there is no one in the wrong and no one at fault bat 'himself. No one conld say 'that Hattie Glad- well -ever quarreled with her husband, lor she only pleaded for. him to forsake the evil companions who were dragging him to ruin. Few would -have recognized in Charley Oladwell, the bright, active young lawyer and perfect gentleman that he was formerly when he woed and won his patient, loving wife. It has <been live yean since he brought her to Chester, 'his bright, •blushing bride. The roses have faded from her cheeks now, and her face looks like a piece of delicately carved marble. Her hndband no longer kissed her upturned, pleading face on -his return home:; he generally sainted her with wae -cross words, and wondered why she was so «low. * '"The slowest woman he <ever saw." Dinner was always late or the supper cold--never anything right any more., How disagreeab'le a man can be when he tries! ^s- y •Charley had left the house, angry : at |us wile, himself, and everyone else, and ^ *° seek consolation in a"down- UA mm ^jog-shop:;" but the first one was r.^,e, lRe b0,|irt^ the second too. cold, the third ' ^eat, warm plaoe, was just the [or him. There he would have a time -and forget all his trou- ut of Hat ! Her white pleading at him from every corner. ^Oharley, Charley! How could father in Heaven, ' ^ 8^OQ^ treat in ber Helen's i'jKkiww* And . 'arm at- y to wwm t fast falling CJNl0l<ll5^)^d^r ly- \l0yr * wfcii&Afj- in •jj-xsifjjik ' , ... m 1^8 ft*f-'lajwi. bt Hat- go~ w m s|| W4P iu'..;. %l4»*v t*'N li stoefc oi '*•-% s-essMi. n.&4 gem dying ont grate--the room was gel " fortably cool, but the sad still sat in the chair with b£P tichtly clasj>ed indicative of her mental •gosy. Not a musole moved, but the dark eyes gazed steadily into she looked like a beautiful statue. How long she sat there she could not have told. A sharp eough and a faint call for "Mamma" aroused her from that •ad dream. ; : The room was cold and dark--not a spark of firaeonld be seen in the "Charley, Charley 1 how I have you! How true I have been to yon-~ loyal even in thought--and yon f Oh, Charley r " M-a-ra-na-a?" again came faintly from the nursery, bnt Hattie seemed like sfcona, Had her heart frozen bosom? i "What, Helen, my little darlingf It is too ©old for you here." A little white-robed figure had en tered the room and stolen to her side. "! is sick, mamma." The voice was low and husky. . Hattie lifted the little <omi from the floor Mid pressed the little cheek to her own. ty felt hot and dry. A new sorrow had sprung up for the •chappy wife, for in a few hours Helen grew very ill, Hattie turned on the gaa and glanoed «t the clock. ' Half past twelve! Oh, Charley, why don't yon oome home? What if my little--" Ah! she dared not finish the sentence seven in her own mindpfor the possibility •of such a thing as the loss of her littie •love was too terrible. "P'ease put me in my 'ittle b»«, •mamma. 1 is so cold; don't ky ao, I is sorry to leave ou and papa--but I 'Will soon ave to do to de 'ittle angels." What a burden lay in poor Hatlie's breast as she laid her little one im. the snow-white bed; the little foatmrci were drawn with pain. Each moment she grew worse. One--two and «§ker, and yet no*Charley. uBabv cannot live another boot, I know. God, have mercy, and, if pos sible, spare her to me!" Hattie was now kneeling by the bed- side, holding in her hands iitue fast cooling finger tips. "Oh, God of heaven! forgive enr (err ing husband, and open his eyes to the wrong he is doing, for he is walking blindly down to heli. Forgive and have mercy!" As Hattie's voioe died eway, tibe felt an arm steal softly round her neok. It was not little Helea's, but a strong arm that drew her closer to itg owner. "Hattie, my dear lo«e, look at me once more if you Sban." Those tear staiued eyes obeyed that well known voiee, and gazed into Charley's pale face; her heart was too full for words, but the little head lay on her husband'e bosom, .and rested there. "Charley " "You need tell me nothing, dear, for I see and kuow all; tbeve lies the priee of my sins, lor Helen's spirit ia in Heaven." "Your prayer is answered,dear, patient wife, and with the help uf our Maker I shall live an honorable life the iiest of my days." Hattie's arsaa wonnd ronod Charley's neck and <a Joss eaaled his good resolution. In a few days itibe child's body was laid in the grave. The childless wife felt that the price paid for her hus band's reformation was great; but she knew that Helen's spirit was >in Heaven --and where might <Charley!s have been ? A newly painted law-sign soon graoed the door of Charley GH ad well's office, and in a few years he wae. "ff"'" the leading lawyer of Chester. AmtWtai AmsMtaahno. . Amsterdam, in Holland, « sometimes called the Venkse of the North. It is buiit upon eighty islands, and canals flow through the oeuter of its streets. Perhaps one of the most ob servable features of this queer old city is the fact that the walk <of its houses are seldom perpendicular. They lean outward so that the gables •of the houses on opposite sides of the street are sometimes sever®! feet nearer together than the walls at the base, One is puzzled to know whether the builders designed to have the walls lean forward thus under the strange notion that it is a sign of beauty -or a matter of utility, since a projecting gable p-atecfes the lower part of the house from the weather, or whether the walls, in consequence of resting on insecure I foundations, have settled so mnch out of plnmb as to present this dilapidated condition,: The latter view seems probable, since the houses are built on ,nles driven in the mud, and would be ely to get out of the perpendicular in time, though it puzzles one to " iv they should all lean outward, ntained by some, however, that structure like the tower of hose of Bologna and others Agaslt Wanted The greatest success of the y< thing entirely now in the bow »* Vis. Brilliants Quarto; aisse, 9,^x113*; llnettt -f jw. 3-2# illustrations, 68 • \ &.•$*/• 4* a? 11m Sentncky Liquors type tbem pnntea in nine coure iUO Thousands wilt ' rraMBte. Those firs: harvest. Act q >H>i w-Hi is* FOBSHEE & 9, k ^ ff. •? , J. BarbJM BKOS. fX J F mm mmmw km mm* n exhibition of great skill ^iye ingenuity, and there- Any fool, they say, endicular building, bnt ins to erect one that is d that looks all tbe id fall and yet does the beat authorities leaning towers are tlement and not of so also are the msterdam and Bot* a Fabla. the Orient is to as a pious Mol- yrna on a donkey pecter, who told into the city by ' 11 700 of the invited him to they neared d: "I conjure and by the at thou wilt Lord has took the >•, and at ission of however, ring the visitation. his ap- to depart met him. that thou S'ury, and at thon 709?" "I the Choi All the Panic, fad I" ' ^ I escape fi .a, when tg to get poef- n who stood be- is worth tell- of the 'tween him and ing. It was Btnineh who, with her fanhfnl attendants met at the villa |t*te the horsemen of Arabi, and throw ing aside for a momont her womanly Jmerve, forbade them to enter, aaying -^t Tewfik had i^ady departed Hfer regal tone ctf eomtntaading air over came the persitteae« of the officer who had been sent to arrest the Khedive, trader the pretense of escort, and he -l»nt back to ArabrWithout having ful filled his misiifMii This gave Tewfik required time to lake Ming* with » loyal iieet. Then Tewtik was once *w>re in power at Cldro aad Arabi a prisoner. Queen Bmlieh was an earnest jileader that the fils of the arch rebel jiionld he spared; afeS her plea had IMobably as much influefeice in procur ing the penalty of exile instead of death ^•1 the interference <*f England, She has always kept her single hold upon Tewfik, and the household of the Egyptian monarch is a model of domes tic bliss. He is wrapped up in her tnd to Abbas, his son and heir. The excellent domestic habit* of Tewfik are all the more singular in view of the fact that his father. ex- Khedive Ismail, is a man of very different character. Among his numerous wives Ismail counts not lees than three of European origin. Educated in Paris, Ismail seemed to imbibe tbe vices while he eluded the virtues of Western civil, dzation, and if a woman impressed his fancy she was offered the chance to join his harem. When the harem be- •come too crowded Ismail divorced a certain number, usually elderly ladies, and had them married to his officers. T'he honored official was expected to receive this evidence of the royal bounty with deep gratification, If he did not he heard from Ismail later. One of these gentlemen, Mustapha Bey, who was being rapidly advanced in the sun shine of the royal favor had daring to evince some repnganoe when his se lected wite was presented to him. Mus tapha himself was a young man and presumably had an eye in another di rection. He was soon afterwards ordered to a command in the most sickly part of the Soudan. Goaded to desperation Mustapha attempted a re bellion against ihe Khedive, whose forces, however, soon put an end to the uprising and the young bey, once one of the most promising and brilliant officers in the Egyptian army, pepahed miserably. ; rg'J one- [ere is tion as Ms," hew idea by Ifbnsttng experiment In tyed by the nerves and [ fc ^ehtieinan. "It is not a means, but It tfi good Tha Phonograph at Cltntea. . Among the many uses whictF havfe been proposed for the phonograph one has been found that is likely to become practical. A prominent London hos pital surgeon has lately employed the phonograph to record the characteristic changes in voice sounds which mark a variety of diseases. The experiments were entirely successful, for the ma chine reprodnocd the characteristic vocalization of some diabases with real istic effect. The who6p of the whoop- ingcough and the intervening cries of the little patient, and also the hoarse utterances of those suflferinjr from acuto or chronic diseases of the throat or lungs were vividly reproduced. This near application of the phonograph to tli a purposes of diagnostic and chemical instruction will revotntfoniae chemical fetching in medieal colleges, sinoe it will be possible to pheea s«ries of cylinders in every medical lecture-room, wbich would give students a 1 reproduction of tbe chatscteristic sounds of persons staffsring from the many throat and lung diseases. Cireeley Ate wtth tli« 1'rlnters. When Mr. Greeley received preeerrte of fruit from the "gentlemen" farmers around, says the Tribune, he invariably sent up-8tairs to the composing-room for "Torn" Hooker and had him take some to "the boys." Any remonstrance would be met by the reply; "I can get it; you can't. Take it up and give it to them." During campaign times, when the men were unusually hard at work, Mr. Greeley used to go to tlie composing- room, give a ten-dollar hill to the fore man, and say, "There, let's have « gorge" A piece of clean paper was laid on the imposing stone, the * table" was set and food sent for, and Mr. Greeley would share the improvised meal with the men, laughing and joking with them. He was known as "The Printer'" among them. That name stuck to him after a man .went to the offioe of the New Yorker on some business, and was told by the official whom be saw: "Oh, you want to see the printer; Tm the publisher." An Intricate Qurttisa Some years ago two farmers of Polk 'County lost their wives by death, says the Des Moines Leader. They naturally felt lonesome, and in due time began to think a second wife in each household would be a most excellent addition thereto. They were neighbors and •Mends, and eaoh had a family of chil dren, including one or more grown daughters. After carefnl consideration each took the other's daughter as his second wife. Through these marriages children were born to each. These children now reside in Polk County, What was the relationship between the two men and their wives, and in what relation did the children stand to each other and to the old folks ? The old farmers were father-in-law to each other and also sons-in-law to eaoh other. Who will carry out the relationship of An inotlters and their children ? ofthe Demijohn or Carbof. ' The word belongs to no European language bnt has been adopted, like tea, sugar, ooffiae, and other articles which come from Eastern sources. Demijohn dates from the crusades, and was brought from Egypt, where Such articles were and are still called daman an, What is still more singular is the facfi that the custom of surround ing glass bottles with wicker-work dates from very early times in Egypt Upon frescoes in tombs at Beni Hassan there are not only representations of wine *in glass receptacles, bnt also of oil bottles almost precisely like the flasks from Lucca and .Bordeaux, surrounded with a similar protection made of similar materials, rushes, papyrus, and wicker- work of a fine kind. No picture has been so far recorded of the actual demi john at that early date ('2000 B. C.), but as wo have the finer variety of the article we cannot doubt that the coarser one existed also. Egyptian wine wat- stored in amphoras, and the demijohn was a convenient half way measure be tween the clumsy huge amphora and tbe delicate glass vessel in which it ap peared at the table. So that the be loved demijohn is of the most respect able ancestry, and held its own -M the world's earliest civilization. enough to stiftd repetition. "Let us -hnyfrlt." '.] "If you cross your first and second fin gers," said the gentleman, lifting his hand and suiting the action to the word, "you will find that any object placed be tween the fingers so crossed is reported to the brain by the two opposing sets of nerves. The result is that the single object thus held gives a dual nerve re port, and hence will, to all intents and purposes, be equivalent to two objects of its class or kind. "Here is a silver dollar. I cross my fingers and place the dollar between them. What is the result? By turning my eyes away, so as to debar all knowl edge by any other sense, I feel the sen sation of two dollars. In other words, the dollar becomes two dollars. Clever way to pay debts? Well, try it and Judge for yourself." Aa Equivalent Swr SarioMB. If we allow par bodily infirmities to make away with ns through neglect, have we anch an Immense moral advantage over the lleliherat* snicid®? Scarcely. For example, tha deadly progress of Brighi's disease, diabetes, acute nephltls and gwml is Bure--often terribly swift to tha catastrophe. Moat people of average in* formation know that this is the simple, unvar- niahsd truth in regard to thoae widely prevalent naalartl--. To delay judicious medication is •paola&y snJcid&l in snch cases. Tht» means of mstimlat Is to be found in Hog tetter's Stomach Wttsrs, Give an impetus to the aetion tif the IMsayi with this safe aud reliable dhnette, and Uasiamat ooaapladnt i« shorn at its birth of the tmvtar forevil. Allow it to grow, and anticipate MS wont. The Btttera. which annihilates these growing troubles, also eradicates dyspepsia, maemaWsm. malaria, and liver complaints. tse* sleep, and vigor are also promoted Tha Lant Factory. A clergyman riding on the down train from Boston to Yarinouthport the other day had his attention attracted by the succession of factories as the train was passing through Brockton, the city of shoes. "How many factories are there here?" he asked a neighboring passenger; "has the row no end?" "That's the last factory," replied the passenger. "You're mistaken," satd the Clergy man; "here lis another." "I tell you that was the last factory," said the other impertnrbably. As there was likely to be a hot argu ment a third person pacifically interposed and explained that it was the last fac tory, or in other words the factory where lasts are made.--Cape Cod Item, ^ •lOO Rawsrd. SlOt. "ttre numerous readers of this rrcmpr w!tt be pleased to team that then in at least one dreaded dime as o that science has !»een able to cure In aril Its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now k»own to the tre ifrnl fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional diaeaws, nquircB a « oii- stitndoratl treatment. Hall'a Catsn-h Cure t* taken Internally, aeti::g directly npou the blood and anuoont surface* of the ovHtein, thew»bv deRtroglng the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength bv building up the consututhw and assisting nature In doing its •work. thB proprietors have so much faith in Its cmwtiv* powers that they offer One Hundred Italian tor «ny«a«« that it falls to cure. Bend for list «f tsstftnoofals. Address, > . .T. CHKKEYA CO., Toledo, ©. «T»old by Druggists, 75c. 8tte Thought It. Appropriate. It is customary in some localities to think of a text as they drop their pieces ef money into the contribution box. A -certain little girl at Sunday school re cently saw the bo* approaching and began to search In her memory for a "text. She hesitated for a few moments, dropped the dime into the box, and ex claimed triumphantly: "A fool and his money are soon parted."--Bath Z^mes* Vino Playing Cards. Send ten (10) cents in stamps or coin to John Sebastian, General Ticket and Passen ger Agent CHICAGO, ROCK ISI.ANU & PACIFIC SAILWAT, for A pack of the latest, smooth est, slickest playing cards that over glad dened the eyes and rippled along the fingers of the devotee to High-Five. Seven-Up, Oaaino, Dutch, Euchre, Whist, or any other ancient or modern game, and get your money's worth five times over. Sudden Death of a Public Speaker. A man, whose brother had been hung, on being asked fn relation to the death of tho deceased, stated that, "while he was addressing a large out-door assem blage of people, who were listening to his remarks with the deepest interest, a portion of the platform gave way be neath him, whereby ho was precipitated several feet with such violence as to break his neck. Dr. Austin Bitot the Jfenfm: "I* is probable that a penaon erKh ia inherited tendency to ConsnatptloM WCttlfl never de velop the disease If lie oouM he protected ataliast Infection with the (sbntlt taeOm. ha the light of .modem dtooovedM con sumption can no longer he regarded as an Incurable disease." It is ao szegeeratlon to say that Kemp's Balsam, when liken in time, has saved many from m--Munition. At all druggists'; Me and $L Sample bottle free. _______________ Life Amid Beautiful Snrrauilagi. No one who enters the homes through out the country can fail to notice what rapid strides have been made in beauti fying them. It is not a question of a great expenditure of money, as a small amount will buy a quantity of material, and, as a matter of course, much de pends on the taste of the designer. There has been a marked progress in this, and also an improving one. Who ever lives amid beautiful surroundings cannot fail to be impressed by them, and such influence tends to uplift and elevate. . ~ IT'S A FACT.--if anything In the world Will make a man of common sense feel meaner than anything else, except when he pinches his fingers in the crack of a door, it la when he has had a quarrel with Ms wife. Quarrelsome people usually are bilious, and have a bad liver, and should always keep a bottle of Dr. White's Dandelion In the house as a safeguard against family jars. IT has been stated that since the sun- flowor his been cultivated on certain swamps of the Potomac malarial fever has decreased. At the mouth of the ShcJdt, in Holland, it is stated that sim ilar results have been observed. XAMVA. your little girl arrows more pale and thin eaoh day. Itt needs Ot. Bull's Worm Destroyer. Qet ber some before It is too late. IT IS much easier to get too much of a good thing than it is to get too little of a bad one. FOB a disordered fiver try PELLS. BKKOHAVS STRANGELY enough the woman who is well preserved is frequently not very sweet. BRONCHITIS Is curod by frequent small doses of Piso's Cure for Consumption. Save the Boys And 8»ve the (tirls--from their intense sufferings irom scrofula »nd other foul hnmors In the blood by giving them Hood's Sarsaptrills. Thousands ot parents are unspeakably happy and thousands ot children enjoy good health because of what this great blood purifier has done for them. It thorough ly eradicates all trace of scrofula, salt rheum, etc.. and vitalises and enriches the blood. 'Scrofula bunches in my neck disappeared when I took Hood'a Sarsaparilla." A. R. Kblucv. Parkers- bws.W.Va. Hood's Sarsaparilla The peopfe a§ Dispensary of have a stock-taking time a year arid what do you they do ? Count the nun of bottles that've been turned by the men and who say that Dr. Golden Medical Disco Dr. Pierce's Favorite P tion didn't do what. f/'i' it would <& And how think they One ia tei|F hundred / wH many have to Here are two remedies- one the Golden Medical Dis* covery, for regulating and IDK vigorating the liver and PURIFY^ ing the flood; the Other, hope of weakly womanhood^ and they've been sold for years, sold by the million bot tles ; sold under a positivt guarantee, and not one in fivet hundred can say: * It was not the meclidnife me!" ? > ' V county on* m -IS ULCRE ANY FCSSOHR why you should be the one ̂ And--supposing you are what do you lose? Absolutely nothing / POWDER1^ HOTTONCIER AKBNDAUL. MclNTOSR STEREOPTICONS MAGIC LMTBK. Battery Ik Optical Csa * xfl ' CHICAGO. ILL. PENSIONS Syxsinlaatwar, l»s41ndlcalhig Jshas, PA.MI5! Bold by all drugglots. $1: six for |S. b»C. 1. HOOD & CO., Lowell. Mass. Prepared oaly IOC Doses One Dollar f;? ' -V. .-W • S H I L O H ' S : C O N S U M P T I O N C U R E . The snccfts of this Great Cough Cue h whheot a parallel in the history of medicine. , JOTL • tor forms for applloatl<Mi i WM. W. I>UDKBT, S UXB COMMISWOKBBOTr *** fSSr^DrSfSfto trier HKMTION THIS Mm -- * " AR draggists are authorized to sell it on a itive guarantee, a test that no other cure ca» acessfuliy stand. That it may become known, n anas. s canlnc- k the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If yoar 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 io cts., 50 cts.« and $1.00. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, ase Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 35 cts. RELIEF. Pima soap is white, adulterated with rosin. Brown soaps are Perfume is only put in to hide the presence of putrid fat. Dobbins' Electric Soap is pure, white and unseented, Has beoU sold since 1865. fSowEBODV with plenty of leisure time Atas figured tt out that one journal is published £er every 65,100 individuals in •the world. OOUGrH AND COLDS. Those who are suffering from Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, etc., should try BKOWK'S BBOMCHIA1> TBOCRBS. Sold only in itoxea. Wines a man has to chalk his l»ead and nee a shoe-horn to get his hat on, it is time for him to put on the bine ribbon. "A FOOLISH woman is known by her slovenlv house." Get wit and earn good repute by using 8 Al'OLIO. Try a <«ake In your next house-cleaning." THE GREAT CONQUEROR OF PAIR. For Sprains, Bruises, Backache, Pain In the Chest or Hides, Headache, Toothache, or anjr other external pain, a Saw applications rubbed on by hand act like magic, musing the pain to instantly atop. For Coiucestionii, Colds, Bronchitis, Pneu monia, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neural gia, Lumbago, Sciatica, more thorough aai repeated applications are necossary. All Internal Pains, Diarrhea, Colie, Spsms, Nausea, Fainting Spells, Nervousness, Nleep- lessness are relieved instantly, and qulokly cured by taking Inwardly SO to 00 drops in half a tumbler of water. COo. a bottle. All Druggists. D A D W A Y ' S 1 1 P I I 1 1 P I L L S , An eseellant and mild Cathartic. Purely Vegetable. Tlie Safest and best Medicine In the world for the Cure of all Disorders STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according to directions they will una renew vitality. Iok bold by ail Droggista restore health Price 25 eta a T COLD HEAD , RELIEVES INSTANTLY. IKLY BUUTHEBS, M Warren St5 New York. Price SO ctsj ttsJSZS AX HAAS HEALTH Gl (Exerciser Cohplsts |6) la BEST OF ALL. CIKCULAK Fas*. BOOKS: For "An Ideal tt Complete 1'hjr -Ills 50cts. "Health a Culture." 40 Ills 50 cts. v-i for Dumb Bells ft Pnlleys, •$ cts. Ad. 1N0. E. DOWO'S Vocal * Ph^ical Culture school, ti6 Monroe St. Cbieagt ogth cts. Chut A S T H M A . fepfaM'S MtHSS Ss«Nl|ir Gives fmmsdists It Is believed to be Best ASTHMA known to btuaaalty. •a?- Sett ham, aoax "Down With THIS mm DIRFIIL CHAIR COMBINING 5 ASTICU FURWiTURE mVALIO 'mm AMD WHEEL CHAi We wkolttalt fottory prii and ship c°°d» toba ' 1 for on d«lit«7, 1 stamp for Cat*- . _ /fawtegoojtdemni, X.vnoKS sure, oa, t«£ FOK CATABKU.- A Cold in tfie Head it has no equal DISC'S BEMEDY a Cheapest. Belief is immediate. iit'.st. Easiest to use. cure is certain. For R R H It is an Ointment, of which a small particle Is nostrils. Price, 50c, Sold by druggists or sent by mi Address, 1TK Hi ~ lied to tile HAZKi/nir£ Wairen, Pa. REPAIR YOUR OLD STOVES -AMD- VASELINE A ONE-DOUtAB HII.I, sent ns by ms& we wilJ deliver, free oi ail charseK, to aurperson in " " ^ ^tstes, all of the fclioWiBjf artictes.cara> \ SAVE TOUR MONEY. Tha Ncrtkwsstani StavsR«|uirCo. OF Chisago, M&jtitfacturere and Fura.isb.ers of eke Hardware Trade. V R e p a i r s f o r a l l S t o v e s a n d R a n g e s Manufactured. ALL Irishmen who emucrat* oqght to go to Pat-a-gonia. Ask your Hardware Dealer to oyder for you. V WCUT THIS OUT, ANSWERIttfi THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS! J S T S T O © O F S t o v e » « • • • • • » • • • • • . • • • . • • • . . • • • • « « • • • • Number of . 'V.v Vif'a 4'••••«•» NQHIG of HFLIFLLCCR•••*•«*•«• •!» Latest Date of Patent. . . , . . . Wood O F C O A L . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - . » • • » Is Coal put in on top by removing lids? Is the lining Brick or Iron?. Has the bottom Grate one or more parts?..* Give your hardware dealer the names of parts wanted. BE STJRE to order from your hardware dealer only. He will order what want from us. Don't destroy your old stova bwt n^aj* IV A little money will make it ad gocd am new. « o| Vaseline Camphor Ie. is - Onerake of \aeeline Sjsp, anscented W* One cake of \ astltueSoap.exqmsitelvscented M * UM tiroounce bottle of White Vaseline B * fljS Or, for pqftog* Itentu, <?ny single (trticlt at tAe srkt named. Oa no aocmtHt be persuaded to awjuana Vouriirum/Ut atut Vaseline or r>rri*traKon tAmrifrvm wateat fcawd iria our name. Jem «*« from wili esrtaSa. If receive cm ftaSWtoit 1 cMeh ha t little or ao mJ&c. Cheeabrongh .Hfe. Co.. JState 8a. M.T. FOR SALE] One HOE STOP-CYUNDER PRESS; bed 31x46; perfect running order; $400. • /If * rTr%\\ * -y"'• Address CRAMER, AIKENS & CRAMEL . MILWAUhBK. WlfU *'• w % WKITINO TO