ail his broth ft wives, and pi- EJ WYPWYRR BUIHIJII • FTT THE |, i, '..*a^,«ilir In fit. Belens, England. I»#. ^ho lay wagcnj hatch flteap- ' its.,. A QiW KutiEcn i Coosa. ^ HOKE* OS> HO&KHOCW> un 1)MM Cure in innate. ®as S«S "ttttit'-'TOU " twsh _I pasteboard bona. They're pat up in a better way, and they ad In a better yay^ffcaa ttoJbrcgyokHMh- iMMd pUk. No griping. so •iolecoe, no naetkn after* ward that atmwtluma leaves you won*, off tfean before, la that way.tfcey care per- it' tfm^lKflift OimirtliT *m9 At- IWHWfc UMSSmhouw jiti* Uv*rx stomach, and nnttd, relieved, find coxed. Nnr-cfam grannler, a •v----.--~ -- .oSsita and oocoeafamted tm»- table extracts to smallest la alee, the easi- mlb to tain, and the cferapet* pill you con limy, for they're guaranteed to give satistac- Tjjttqik, or TOOT money is returned. You nay Treating Ailing Women by Letter Most cases of Female diseases can be treated as well ^feowtfaam] They're t_ compoocd of: f. t ||>y us through the mails as by .personal con- I V»\' ..Sulfation. In writing for 5;y pdvice, give age and "Symptoms of your com- .-plaint, state length of v;c;- GU{ ^ ;fering, and what means you have tried to obtain "Relief. ^.. Mrs. Pinkham fully and •'^carefully answers all let- # f" -ters of inquiry, and charges 3* .'nothing for n€r advice. All correspondence is ^yv ,; treated strictly confiden- \ \ , ./tial. Your letters will be received and jji: Answered by one of your own sex. Address* LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICAL CO, ;. Lynn, Mass. It Cores CeUs,Courha,8or* Throat, Crwip.Infiiten- M,Whooping Con(h, Bronehitisand Asthma. A certain ears for Ceasesaptim infest stages, and a ran nlitf in advanced stages. TJse at onoe. Ton will see the excellent effect after talcing the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. X.arga bottle* 60 cents and $1.00. P S.S.S. SCROFULA Mrs. E. J. Bowall, Medford, Han., says her tiother baa been cured at Scrofula by tba use itffonr bottles of KK|3fl| ***** had grach other treat- SMBBSI ment, and being Qeduced to quite a low condition of hcsltb, as it tu thought she could not live. jRMRjl Cured my little boj^r oCtmedi- fgEU taiy scrofulawhich ap- " fMue^a^ver Ma fee®* For A year I had givcnupallhope •f hi* recovery, when finally I was W^"*^ Induced ta use KSHSKSB few bo "^ttles cured him, and no ES9b$B Symptoms of the disease remain. Mas. T. L. MATHEBS, Matherville, Miss. • ' '> OathMkn Blood and Skin Diseases lBalled free. SWi*TS«C»lC CO, Atlantic*. € JLESSQK MH-MSORB UFETt ftoUFEel MOTHER aad MILD. ' Trieirf'^0' having Mothers 5 'little peJjvvras stronger in one hour tthan in a week after the birth of her ? ^former child. J. J. MCGOI/DRICX, i- j. Beans Sta., Term. 0. M«OMr*s PHe«(S f obbed pain ot Its ^rror • and shortened labor. 1 have the healthiest ~«hild I or«r •*<?. V ( Mas. -L.M. Ansa*, Cochran, Oa. , - -f. BitADrmLD neauLATon co., : ' -(I For "le *>T •>> tHnnWL ATLANTA. OA. .a'.;,:'* Small. jGuaraitteed to cure Bilious Attacks, ' che and Oonetlpatioa. 40 la «"h MQB 35C. For sale bjr LI3M IN THE WORLD.) rlctare 7,17. 70" and sample dose free. A CO.. Proprietor*, MEW tORK. E POLISH stea, Enamels atid Paints which •tain the hands,Injnre tho iron, and burn Off. The RisingStira 8tovo Polish is Bril- liant, C idorlcss, Durab!es and the con- anmorfpays for no tin or glass package "With efery purchase. mm. sue or 3.000 TOWS. »S: m Wtmtr Than alfij aiMm to dutr^, ' floor: ji Ift&f Rtt |M to know that "Pussy" Mow* a Mghtened at the -wooden cow: i tor "Dolly 's" broken head, WBoo the latch,-- ; Mt to match; housemaid gone, "vy . „ i tonteet alone. in'f It matters not at all, yea see, . Wm X 1MNW SAtfiy, ana Betty has me. V When I ait and bold hex little band. , My Betty, > all tbe pretty, foolish nursery Mlk Grows wfeo Rnd witty. % *•>' ,rn to know t hn Y» _ X mourn > And for tbe sawdust she has shed; Itake with joy the cups of tea Vxptn Wooden t®a-pot poured for ma And all goea well, because, yoit I play wish Betty, and Betty with When I walk and hold her little >««i.. ̂ ' My Betty, . V Then every humble weed besi;io the : *;• Grows pink a>i«l protty. ^ „•' »" *' The clover never was eo red, ^eir purest white the daisies spread^ TO buttercups begin to damccy »-< A': JJe reede salute with lifted lunee, •>;,, The vary tallest trees we pass Bend down to greet iny iiltic lass ; '* •" . " And these things make my }oy, you aflty|t95f£$ For 1 love Betty, and Betty loves me,' •-St. Nicholas. SLIT® ENDING IN SMOKE. I have only one thing against Brit tany, which is that it grows all the vile tobacco used by France. I under- stauu tiiat the KOVERIIIUEUB of France supplements the Brittany supply by buying up refuse lots of • tobacco in America--stuff that the lowest down gatmn in IJfew York would refuse to smoke. I doubt this, however, be cause i f any tobacco were bought in America one would sometimes come upon a French packet less bad than the rest When a smoker accustomed to the American article first comes in contact with the French brand he wants to crawl into a corner and die. The worst about the French stuff is that a man may smoke it and still live. Providence never intended Brit tany, the most northern portion of France, to raise tobacco. It has neither the soil nor the climate. Then the peasantry of Brittany are about the uiost IGNORANT ami superstitious people now in Europe. Of course a man may L e superstitious and vet grow GOAD tobacco or even wheat, but the Brittany people are a stiff-necked generation, whose faces are set against learning anything and if a man puts all his energies against the acquire ment of knowledge he can count with reasonable certainty upon remaining ignorant. The other day when I took a journey through rural Brittany I saw tons of tobacco freshly cut hang ing by the heels from apple trees,get ting alternately soaked by the rain and boiled by the sun, and this is the material that the enlightened gov ernment of France insists we shall ftinoke. Perhaps you think that if you pay a high price you can get good tobacco in France and that it is merely a question of settlin/ enormous and ex orbitant duties. This is not the case. With the exception of three govern ment depots in Paris and a few in the Riviera, American tobacco cannot be obtained in France. A tobacconist in France is a government official, who has also the rhrht of seliimr post age stamps, and the government will not allow him to order American to bacco from the depots in Paris with out a special permit which it refuses to grant except in places where so many English and Americans reside that a special pressure is brought to 'bear upon it, as is the case in Nice, Can ues and a few other Anglicised towns. . On the northern coast of France are many picturesque spots which the English make their own during the summer months. There is Etratat. Trouvilie, Grenvifle, Parame, Din- ard, Mount St. Michel on the Nor mandy and Brittany coast, which are very popular in summer, while in Avranches, Caen, Dinan and other inland towns English families live all the year round because living is sup posed to be cheap and educational facilities good. The second reason for residence stills holds, but the flrst is merely a legend. The double ays- tem of protection which France adopts, first charging great duties on everything that comes into France, and secondly, the octroi duties which are charged on articles brought from the country into any town, has made living exceedingly expensive every where. The English reidents of the Northern towns of France have tried to get the privilege of buying the kind of tobacco they want, but with out success. France, however, seeing that it was losing residents by this unenlightened policy, as people moved to the channel islands or to Switzer land, in the flrst of which there is no duty on tobacco and in the second scarcely any, made grudging conces sion in the law of English . residents. The law is this: You are allowed to import twenty pounds of tobacco a year, paying a duty of seven francs fifty centimes a pound, which impost is more than the original price of to baccos, even in England. The of ficials take care that in getting this tobacco you are put to the greatest inconvenience and expense, but then, of course, that IN what custom of ficials are for, all over the world and especially in the United States. The twenty pounds thus imported you must swear in for your own use solely, and you must enter into an agreement not to sell or even give away a scrap of it. All this exposition of the law brings me to the story I have to tell and which was told to me in St Mala In tho flrst place I may say that twenty pounds of tobacco a year IS utterly inadequate for one able-bodied man. I smoke fifty pounds myself without .half-trying, and no doubt a man like the late Gen. Grant smoked much more. I am well aware--read it in A track, I think--that if I put the money thiw expended in a savings bank at compound interest for 500 years or so I would at the end of that time hive.A competency to retire on, but I always was one of those im provident people who like to take their fun as they jog along through life, and so "bang goes the saxpence" for tobacca "Have a good time while you are alive," says the philoso pher Bill Nye, "for you will be dead a long while." There arc several residents in Brittany who look with contempt on twenty pounds of tobacco a year, and who supplement that supply, but not with Frenc'A tobacco. Some daring take- - ' • " ' ' •' My'-' ' -1 :• ' ' wiif Witi A splendid servieir ere from St smuggle in as mnch tobacco as the? can. This, however, is a very RIISRY business, as the customs'examinfttltaa of those who come in by the Jersey boat is exceedingly strict This brings me to Brown's plan. 1 need scarcely to sav that Brown is not his real name and that Smith is not the name of the friend who was sacrificed for him. I merely use the wierd, un usual name of Brown and Smith to conceal identity, and if a real Brown and Smith live on that coast I beg to say that I do not refer in the least to them. Brown could get along on forty pounds of tobacco, but even at that he bad to exercise some self-denial. Smith, his friend, did not smoke at all. He hated tobacco, and even the smell of good tobacco, *which, to a smoker, is the most delightful aroma in the world, was exceedingly distaste ful to him. Now Brown persuaded Smith to import twenty pounds of prime American tobacco from the Island of Jersey. Smith was shy of the perjury involved, but Brown earnestly showed him that there was no perjury. In fact he doubted i f an Englishman could perjure him self in the French language--he usually spoke it so badly. things sound so much milder in French than in English. Witness the innocuous fu t i l i t y o f an oath i n French compared with »ita sturdy Anglo-Saxon equivalent Mind, I'm not defending1 Brown at all, although I am able to forgive a great deal to A man unjustly deprived of his pipe. I am a tobacco smuggler myself every time I enter France. It is therefore not for the pot to call the kettle black. I fear that the smoking of tobacco tends towards a certain lax ity of conscience. Have we not the authority of that smoking Oxford poet Calverley for - believing*'that those who indulge in the weed--- "Go mad and beat their wif|g|^ t \ % Piunce. nft er horrid lives, • R**orn and carving knives11 ~ ' "*•- ' . . Into their gizzards." I quote trom memory. tain not to have quoted with verbal accuracy, I say this right here, not having the poems by me, so that, cor respondents may save their postage stamps in writing to correct me, which thpy usually do when •! make a quotation. ^WELL, Brown, the immoral smoker, persuaded Smith, the moral non- smoker, by the following kind of logic: The French law was bad any how and no Englishman who ruled the waves should be bound by it Then Smith was entitled to twenty pounds for his own use. trheclKi|r^"ti^le sl&W-bari lng, sulphurous French matches AND Rased with a triumphant look at the Englishman over the sputtering blue flame. Smith lighted the cigar with slow diliberation. The Frenchman went on with his Writing. The smoker flrst became deathly pale and then his face took on a greenish hue. He fought down the feeling he had before ex perienced while crossing the channel in a gale. The Frenchman glanced up at him now and then but said nothing, keeping on with his writing. The victim frequently took the cigar from his lips and drew in rapidly two or three times quick breaths of fresh air untainted with tobacco smoke, and these gasps seemed to keep him from dying on the spot He remem bered that his countrymen bad on one or two occasions stormed St Malo, and he wished the fleet were outside at that moment dropping shells on the custom house. After conquering the flrst awful qualms, he resolutely kept on smoking. ^ Had not the Englishman once owned that section of the country and was it not an Englishman who first introduced tobacco into Europe? Nevertheless, between whiffs he cursed the memory Besides. ! of Sir Walter Haleigh. The official was somewhat taken aback to see the cigar slowly con sumed and he wondered if he had made a mistake in his man. Finally he handed ovef* the papers. Smith walked in a rathe^ uncertain manner to the door, which he held open for a moment to let the cool air encircle him. Holding on to the handle, his body swaying siightiv, .he turned his pallid face toward the officer at the desk and remarked slowly: "I--I say--you couldn'T--oblige roe --with another of those American ci gars^--could you?' --Free PREY. other uses for tobacco than smoking it Smith might use the gold and crimson colored packages for decor ating the shelves of his bookcase. He did not need to give it or sell it to Brown. Oh, no. Brown asked no such sacrifice. Brown would do the rest He would steal J»he tobacco from the book shelves pound by pound as he required it Thus Smith would not have per jured himsel f ,--even i f the whole transaction were done in English. And so the unfortunate Smith consented. The flrst twenty pounds were got through all right They decorated Smith's shelves and Brown regularly stole them and every thing was lovely, although Smith had always vague twinges of conscience regarding his oath to the French Gov ernment Tp to this point I expect the article I am writing to be interesting chiefly to those who smoke. Now I confi dently claim the sympathy of non- smokers for Smith in the disaster which overtook him. There was an entertainment at the Casino at St Malo and Smith was there As he walked along the cor ridors, back and forth, dnring the in- j termission he was pleasantly accosted by a French gentleman whom be dimly remembered to have met some where, but he could not place defin itely. He did as most of us do under such aggravating circumstances. He pretended he remembered tbe Frencn- man and they walked up and down together, chatting pleasantly. The Frenchman was smoking and Smith was not of course. The smoker, after a few turns, pulled out his case and politely offered Smith„a cigar. "Thank you, no." said Smith. "I never smoke." The Frenchman seemed astonished and looked at Smith. "This is an English cigar, sir," he said. "I never smoke at all," answered Smith; "English, French or American cigars are quite the same to me; I loathe them all" "You astonish me," said the Frcncnman, quietly returning the ci gar to its case, "I thought every Englishman smoked.". After a while they separated, Smith still wondering where be had met the affable French gentleman before. When the time came around for Smith to get the next twenty pounds of tobacco tor ,his friend Brow^, he was shown into the ofllce where the alleged perjury was usually accom plished. His heart gave A lump as be recognized the bland official at the desk of TH^ gentleman who had of fered him the cigar at the Casino. Here, then, was where he had met him before "Please sit down, Mr. Smith," said the government man in a kindly tone; "it will be some minutes be fore the necessary business is com pleted." Smith sat down and mumbled something about not being in a hur ry. The Frenchman opened a drawer and pulled out a large and black ci gar. "We don't object to smoking in our offices here as I understand they do in England. Pray light this cigar. It will console you while you wait" •'Thank you very much," said the doomed Smith, "but I do not care for French cigars. That is why I im port all of my tobacco." "But this Is a prime Havana taken j from the luggage of an American who foolishly thought he could cheat the French customs department" "Really? Well, you see, under the circumstances I hardly like to takp the property of another man without his permission, even if he isan Ameri can." "But it is not his property; he has forfeited it It is tbe property of France, who now insists on your ac cepting it through my humble instru- Ancient Ring*. Once there was a peculiar signifi cance attached to rings. They were regarded as a token of authority. The AN9 am cer- j Emperor's signet ring placed in the hands of an official invested him for the time with his master's power. Rings arc flrst mentioned in the Bible in Genesis, chapter 41st and 42d verse: "And Pharoh took his ring from his hand, and put it on Joseph's hand, and made him ruler over all Egypt" When the Israelites conquered the Midianites, they "took all their rings and bracelets^ and offered them to the Lord." Ahasuerus gave the ring from his . hands to the Jews' worst enemy-- There are thus giving him unlimited control to do with them and their property whatever he pleased. * The father received his prodigal son joyfully, and sealed his forgive ness by putting a ring on his hand. The Egyptians regarded their rings both as business vouchers and as or naments. The signet rings being al ways used for sealintr documents, and however used, their rings were al ways buried with them--and in later years are often found in their tombs. The signet ring was usually of bronze or silver; but among the rich gold rings were used for ornaments Ivory or blue porcelain were worn by the poor. Plain gold rings, engraved with some motto or the head of their dieties, were much prized; and three or four were often worn on the fingers, and also on the thumbs. Among the Jews no one was in full dress without the signet ring, and ladies had their rings set profusely with costly gems-- rubies, emeralds and chrysolites being the most valuable--Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher in Godey's. Weed-Map*. The ' Germans have some educa tional ideas which we in this coun try have borrowed with profit, and there are still others which we might be wise to adopt Among them, no doubt, are the wall maps of different species of pestiferous weeds, which hang in schoolrooms where the chil dren can see them as long as they go to school. A practical idea underlies the dis playing of these maps. It is well known that farmers are prone to treat all weeds alike and hardly to observe anv difference between them; whereas the natures of weeds differ as much as the natures of any other plants do, and the sort of treatment which will exterminate one will sometimes increase and multiply an other. It is important, therefore, that the farmer and gardener should under stand the weeds which they are try ing to exterminate It is here that these German wall- maps come in. They show colored pictures of the most pestiferous weeds, in all stages of growth, and also the ways in which they scatter their seeds and propagate themselves. By learn ing them thoroughly, through seeing them day by day on the walls, the child grows up with a knowledge of the best way to exterminate them. it has been proposed that our agri cultural societies offer prizes for the best labelled collections of weeds-- not for the purpose of encouraging their cultivation, but in order to ex tend a knowledge of them, aud thus contribute to their extermination. Written by a Mingle Womiua, Probably. Man in his arrogance rises up ever and anon to harrangue on the vanity and foolishness of woman's dress. Well, let him. Who cares, anyway9 asks a writer in the Detroit Tribune. Certainly not the woman for she goes on her way serene and smiling, know ing in the depths of her wily little heart that it is the very conceits he condemns that take his eye and en snare his fancy. Woman without her frills AN& furbelows would be a sorry sight indeed, and man, tbe sinner, would be the flrst to tell her so. Man's dress, I must admit, is in general very sensible, but there is one thing about it that for uselessness discounts anything that woman ever wore or thought of. I am referring to that little flap that is placed just below* the bosom of the shirt and which is supplied with a button-hole, but tor what reason nobody has ever been able todiecover. It seems to me that to be consistent man should remove that flap before he makes any criti cism on the apparel of his better half, and I am sure every woman in the land agrees with me PHILOSOPHY is just as desirable if YOU rail IT common «AM,.. nee of and were , , . but now thai It is generallr known that Syrop of will permanently cure habitual constipation, well-informed people will not "buy other laxatives, which act for a* time, but finally injure the system. A Boll Get* tlt» Beet of a Locomotive. The locomotive does not always get away with the bull without Injury. The fiery untamed steer who tried to hold up a freight train near Vicksburg lost his life, but he killed the engineer and fire man just the same.--New 1'ori^Adyer- ". A Canal Keopeatd, Health is largely dependent upon a regular bablt of body. The bowels act as an impor tant canal for the carrying of waste matter of the system. They, together with the kidneys and pores, are outlets for debris whose pres ence is fatal to the body's well-being. Hostrt- ter's Stomach Bittera is no violent purgative, but a gentle laxative admirably adapted to the wants of the constipated. It never gripes and vrenchcB the intestine* as all drastic cathar tics do, but produces an action akin to that of an effort of nature. B.Housneas, indigestion, with their assoolate manifestation, oostive- ness, are speedily and completely remedied by this fine corrective, which also conquers mala ria, sick headache, kidney and rhenmatlo trouble, and checks premature decay. Albumen Taper. Tsrsfr factories lu tue TTnltwd States consume nearly 2,000,000 eggs a year in making the peculiar kind of paper used by photographers known as albumen paper. 8LOO Reward. SIM. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at le«st one oreaded disease that science has been able to cure In ail its stages, and that; ie Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Curais taken internally, acting directly upon th-> blood and mucoue surfaces of tho svetero, thereby destroying tbe foundation of the disease, ana giving the patient strength by building np flu constitution and nasi sting nature inaoing its work. The proprietors have BO much falUi in itM curative powers that they offer One Hundred flDollars for any case that lt'falla to cure. Send;: for list of testimonials. • Address, F. J, CHKNEY & CO., Toledo, 0. 49»Sold by Druggists, 78c. V", ' ^ The Oldest House. t A doctor in St. Augustine, Flft:, #frns: the oldest house in America, and lives in it, to. It was built In 1560 by a Frenchman. All for 85 Cents. , The Koaon Route has addad to «a al ready splendid equ pment two brand-new dining cars, which ate now in daily service on tho fast day trains letwoen Chicago and Louisville. Thesa cars are models of convenience comfort, and beauty, and are op. rated on the a la carte plan, which means that a pas senger can get anything he wants and pay onl/ for what he get'-. An elegant steak, with bread, butter, coffee, or tea, with cream, is served for only 55 cents. , Watch for the Monon'B new schodule to Florida > SOME of the people who are the most anxious about theo-ecognition of friends in heaven are the ones who shake haifds with two fingers in church. Have Ion Aathma? Mk R- £ciurrM&N!f. St. Paul, Mian.. Will mall a trial package of Schlffuiann's Asthma Cure ftce to any sufferer. Gives instant re lief in worst eases, and cures where others tall. Name this paper and send address. Fine Playing cards. Bwl It cento In stamps to John Sebaa- ttau, Gen'l Ticket and Pa^s. Agt, C., R. L & P. R'y, Chicago, for a pack of the "Rock Island" I'laviug Cards. They are acknowl edged the best, and worth five times tba cost. Bend money order or postal note for fiOc. and will send five packs by express, prepaid. Important to Fleshy People. We have noticed a page article in tba Boston Globe on reducing weight at a very small expense. It will pay our readers to send two-cent stamp for a copy to Betina Circulating Library, EL Washington street, Chicago, I1L EDWARD II. waaf murdered, in a shamelessly indecent manner, by ruf fians employed by his faithless wife. A BORE THROAT OR COUGH, If suffered to progress, often results in an incurable throat or lung trouble. "Brown's Bronchial lixtches" give Instant relief. STEAK elevators were 1857. first used in Mrs. A. A. William* Lynn, Mass. For the Good of Others Mr. WUHdtttm JfMM-TT/y IM*tm Hood'a Sarampmritta. We are pleased to present thia from Rev. A. A. Williams, of the Sillsbee Street Chris tian Church, Lynn. Mass.: "I see no reason why a clergyman, more than a layman, who knows whereof he spe hesitate to approve an - speaks, should Article of Merit' - . and worth, from which he or bis family have been signally benefited, and whose commenda tion may serve to extend those benefits to oth ers by increasing their confidence. My wife bas for many years been a sufferer from severe Nervous Headache for wbleb she found little help. She has tried many things that promised well but pel formed little. Last fall a friend gave her a bottle of Hood's Sarssparilla. It seems surprising what simply one bottle could and did do for her. The attacks of headache decreased in number and were less violent in their intensity, while lier general health has been improved. Her appetite has also been better. TFroin our ex perience with . Hood's Sarsaparilla I have no hesitation in indorsing it* nerl's,** A. A. WILLIAMS. HOOD'S ntU are the best family cathartic, gentle and effective Ttrsbox. Price 25c. Eli's Cream B?im WILL CURE CATARRH [ Price SO Cents. ] Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY BBOS. M Warren St. JT. Y. A «lL The AMeaaHotsHant. flCTn Val7a discovered in Congo, Wuat »••••• U Africa, is Nature's .Sure Care for Asthma. Core Sssrante«4 er Ka Par. Sxport Office. 1104 Broadway, New York. For KmmTrial Case. RBEby Hail, addr<>ie SOLA UCroaTXlte CO., ISS viae at. .ClBclnaati.OIUeii MENTION THIS PAPEH no wmtri»« to nrlEiifM AND HEAD NOISES CORED UE^^BPbjPeck'sfarlrfbfcEarCQihion*. Whteperaheattfc SeeoeeBful when all remedies fall. Sold rnfB N 9. HMOOL8MB*WU»»Y* WRITE for bookef proofal MENTION THIS PAPER WHW wxmxa TO KTIKTOIU. AVlllliaMorphine Habit Cored in 10 MENTION THIS PAPER •III VUT1M TO iDfRSTIHM. Pbo's Remedy tot Catarrh Is the nest, Esslest to Use, and Cheapest. C/VT/V R R M Sold by druggists or aent by mail, • ».ST-*"*""* * P PILLS, iHimiiOlk OOBIpteks lOfOrpnOll bstlthflll nan LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, • INDIGESTION. § DIZZY FEEUN6& BILIOUSNESS, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. f-, *va PERFBOT moESTIOX -sill bo ftF "HV taking Sadway's Pills. By Uj.-ir ASfl-BILIOCA properties ibev stimulate the iivei- iu the secretion of the bile and its discharge through the billarf (ills in doses of trom two to four will. of tfte liver and t-e« the ^.5,-- . tr. One or twocf Had# way's Pills, taken dailv by those mjbiect t > bilious pains aad torpidity of the livr. will keep the sykteni regular and secure health? digest ion. Pries, ate per box. Sold by all druggists. ducts. These pills in doses < quickly regulate the action c patient from these dlsord RADWAY * CO.. NEW YORK. It is better to take Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil when that decline in health begins--the decline which precedes consumption -- rather than waii for the germ to begin to grow in our lungs. "Prevention is better than cure;" and surer. The say ing never was truer than here. What is it to prevent con- isumption ? Let us send you a book 90 CAREFUL LIVING ; free. , f SCOTT & BOWN-K, Chemists, 133 South 5th AVEAIMT New York. Your druggist keeps Scott'* Emulsion of cod Jivsr cQ--all druggists everywhere do. f 1. THeBest ffaterjraor Coat In the WORLD I SUCKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER Is warranted wstcr- proof, and will keep ymi dry in the hardesutorm. Tbe now !*OMllEL SLICKER Is a perfect riding coat, and Covers the entire saddle. Bewareof imltaUons. Don't buy a coAt If tho " Fish Bra mi" Is not on it. Illustra ted Catalogue tree. A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. MENTION THIS PAPKR warcn WBLIT1H. TO innrnni. (Saccharine. Saccharine is the new product that Is 223 times sweeter than sugar. It is a product of common coal. Besides this. there are some fifteen other substances all obtained fi'om this commodity, all useful in the arts or the sciences, run ning from ammonia and common pitch to naphthaline. Most of our colors are derived from this source. In fact, the product is being analyzed from day to day, and every week almost something new is discovered/or some new use found for an old one. A few. years ago people used to say that there would shortly be nothing left to discover. Since that time the whole domain of electricity has been opened to the use of man and the industrial methods of our fathers have been revolutionized. Among these discoveries is that of BEID'S GERMAN COUGH AND KIDNEY CUBE. Formerly our fathers thought that it would be impossible to have a cough remedy without the use of opium in some form. But modern science has shown that not only is opium unneces sary, but it is positively injurious, in treatment for colds, or maladies that arise from colds Get this great remedy of any dealer. The small bottles cost 36 cents, the large ones 50 cents. . SYLVAN REMEDY CO., Peoria, 111. •OA $40,000,000 •srned by the Beil Telephone Patent in 1891. Yotir Invention may be valuable. Yon should protect it by patent. Address for fall and Intelligent advice. Ass afcaorv* W. W. DUDLEY & <x>.. Solicitors of Patents, Fsclfio Bldg, B f Bt. S. W„ Washington. IX Ok Mention thi* paptr. Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did tne no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds of medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green'!# Aug ust Flower and took it. I airitD~day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Defiance, O. • ; |w \ jfJ V nnunui ~ THI NEXT MORNING NSW AND Mr COMPLEXION IS BETTER. FEEL BRIGHT AND *y. doctor xaya It acta gently on the stomach. Hvsr and kjdaeyi. aad.lsapleaaaat hucattra. Thia drMc is mads from herbs, and Is prepared for use •• eMtr as tea. It Is called LAKE'S MEDIGIHE A!! 4rs«Ftei aril M at Mr mhI t' !>•<***•- BiwiMSaS' H, totd wr iMMI Mr * fat tun pic. Lu*"t hah Mkb Mt* Uw kmk ml tu. la to to toaHky, all Is MM£ A iinm O SATO HP. WOODWARD, LaKor, N. T. f ' '• « r*T!ON THIS PAPSH wiss wgffiM I. *bts y-m-: PRINTING OFFICE OUTfflS at reasonable rates and. upon liberal terms. Warta FOR P-AMicTTi-ARg. CHiCAtiO NEW8PAPBB UNION, 03 South Jefferson Street. CUtBga E inri- lllB'trated PSMMIIMB, ITTH* BEEIASRIRALTOTJ.QRMJRIAGAADTTPTIA Ida tuua. *. LASI MENTION THIS rAFKR ip tr the blood, ate 1 tnebeet medicine wan warn-- *• *• Tk* OUnt Mtdicint tm th* WarUittreimNf DB. ISAAC TBOMWofrj- sorlptloa, and has been taooanaat use fQr Beam a eentury. There are few dtaeaaea to whloh iinnlhi are subject more teaming thaa sose eyes, aai' of the eyes it * an iafW{)ibie npifda^. - ,4, "JH, UKNTION THIS PAPSR Sm4 bf VMS taafi. •» as was 4Mb SMt •*• WAMON THIS rsrsa -i R. I. A P. R. R., Cl geiTj>sck'or the slickest cards you e*er sh wtNTioN THIS ranta MMTBLB •7.60. RIFLCSK. WATCMPS UKNTKMt THIS fin VR m -•list: : .,•># Bend for Inventor's Bend tor Digest of fATKlCKO'f laorrtoN THIS raraa de.or u w >0. 40--0S V. N. V. w -tr WHEN WRITING TO ADVEBTISKUL lstlMpsp«rV 7°* MW ^ adyerttbeiaeal "If? * a JOHN WANAMAKER, Postmaster-General of tkt "UntiedStmits, Is usually considered, and rightly so, one of the brightest business men in America, and when he writes to the Editor pi ARTHUR'S NEW HOME MAGAZINE as follows: «fi' OFFICB <W PoSTKASTBB-GSXlB^Bfc WASKixaTON, D. C., Feb.17,1881, HY DEAB MB. BEID: As your Magazine gets thicker, It geta brighter. Like the big wood fire on the hearth in my library when I pile more logs on. I knew Mr. Arthur very well from way back, but I doubt if he would know his old monthly siace you've pat oat the dead wood, and put in so many more pages and departments, and taken on ao many young and sparkling writers. If yod keep on giving such good pidturea you'll have 200,000 subscribers. I fear advertisers will crowd you (for some things can be well advertised in magazines), but don't drop any of t|M" reading pages, and don't let a dry or dull Une oreep fn. ' Don't raise the price either, if you can help it, even if it la half the price of other no-better magazines. I congratulate you oa doing what no one else has done in putting out two copies at the price that others charge for one. The old homestead and the young daughters' new home can each have your Magazine without paying moEs thaa others charge for singlacopies of their publications. ., Your old friend, JOHN WANAMAKER. ,-f > It should indicate to the average American citizen that under the new management it is at least awake, and when we know that they have more than TREBLED their circulation within the year, and that among the very best people of the land, we may admit, without further argument, it has been the journalistic success of ^Building BusinessBoston* •VIM -• -u •':0m* f t : ' U : , . r'f -,'U V- One Dollar a Year. Sample Copy Ten Cents. Earh ropy cuniales cn order fer 85 eents worth of Recall's CHajjjp. Fitting; Pattens, so that every anfcserther fer a year gets fl.it wailfr •T Patterns Free. Send ire two-eent stamps forgone. THE UTHD1POMM COMMIT, PbilL,h. , >• 'V • , - s f ' . , ^ ^ * ->• s s' * T»; -.y " .t . SrjT 1 *