yjptwgif' -mm? <£ ' <ir*r*- Mr* WraiOc jrc.t»a*t*r 7 YAH Run Down V'" Jf " •Marty and Well 81 no* Taking Mood's 8ar*aparllla. *l%eoame enfteeblod Kid run down from 172 to '1*1 poanda. I than oommenoed taking Btod i Bkisapulllt, and now I im beirty cw work hard and eat my meals • wllih, which I conld not do prevlooa- '" Jy* Formerly my food distressed me, now caneat heartily. \ Hood's Hals Cured Me, " teflt «P my system, given me renewed tMth. and increased my weight to 168 ponnda. I Hood's^Cures praise Hood's Sarftaparllla highly to all." PRANK MCALLASTEB, Rich Hill. Mo. Mood's Pills eure all liver ills, bilionaneaa. Jaandioe, Indigestion, sick headache. 25c. |h- P i- pe r : ^»v-i /' - U-. Lillian Russell placed another triumph to the long score which she has made al ready when she appeared in "The Grand Duchess" at the Chicago Opera House last Monday night. One of the most mag nificent audiences ever seen in the Chicago Opera House assembled to welcome the queen absolute of comic opera and the splendid organization with which those princely managers, Messrs. Abbey, Schoof- fel and Grau, have surrounded her. The production accorded "The Grand Duch ess" was beyond doubt the most sump tuous ever given one of the lighter works of opera in Chicago. The dresses worn by Miss Russell were dreams of loveliness, and those injtvhich the other members <>f the company appeared fell little short in magnificence of the costumes of the star. As the Duchess of Gerolstein, the sump tuous Lillian was seen at her very best, both personally and artistically. She in vests the role with an attractive person ality, and she sings the music as sne only can sing. The scenic and incidental ap- EOintments are perfect. There are four fg full stage settings and all the proper ties and appointments were on a scale of elegance commensurate with the scenery and costumes. The company numbers 110 people. There is an excellent chorus of sixty-five picked voices and a magnifi cent orchestra of twenty-four solo instru mentalists under the baton of Paul Stein- dorff renders the orchestral music as it is seldom given outside of grand opera. The engagement of Miss Russell at the Chi cago Opera House is a limited one, and the advance sale of seats aijd boxes for the second week, which begins Monday night, Feb. 11, is already eiSormous. Dur ing the third and last week of the engage ment Miss Russell will doubtless make n sumptuous revival of "La Periehole." The only matinees given during the Rus sell engagement will occur on Saturdays, and no Sunday performance will be given. How to Gain Riches. Urn Wanamaker has spent over ),000 in advertising and still keeps it up, advertising in all sections of the country, although no house in the coun try is better known than his. Mr. Wanamaker is the man who recently refused a $50,000 presidency of a rail road because he didn't have time to spare from his business. John has been called a psalm-singing hypocrite, bu< he knows how to bring trade to his store. He advertises in papers that are read by the class of people he wishes to be customers, and they come to him.--New Orleans Picayune. 94 Working Girls. " Are you troubled with Back ache, Faintness, Dizziness, Irreg- * " > " Are your cheeks pale ? f«Your eyes dull, and step heavy? Does your back and side ache sometiroes ter ribly f " " Are you at times faint and dizzy, with pain in the lower part of your stom ach? " If so, lis ten! Standing all day, week in and week out, you have slowly drifted into woman's great enemy, displacement of the womb. "That or some other derange ment of the organ, causing irregu larity and other troubles. " Take warning in time! Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the surest and safest remedy in the world for you." -- Miss Sallie Palmer, Juniata St., Nicetown, Pa. MLUE The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. \ KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, MIALD KENNEDY, OF RDXBU8V,-MASS., Has discovered In one of our common Easture weeds a remedy that cures every Jnd of Humor, from ths worst Scrofula, down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, ail within twenty n.iles of Boston. Send postal card for book. _ A benefit is always experienced from the first Dottie, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. ' When the lungs are affected it causes' Shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being Stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. 1 If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tabiespoonful Jn water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. CURE YOURSELF PECIKIC nev«r tells to core *11 ) urinary ormna, either sex or I directions with each bottle: price 10. Sold by K. L,. STAHL Drufiiat. iWVais n Street. center Fifth Avenue, Glilcaeo. lUinola. br express on receipt of price. BE A U TIFIE R • • FACE 8. N. U No. 7-95 ow# SOOTBWS Bratrr for Childrea mttem the gums, iwaooaa lnflammettoB. wind o»lie, B oentt a bottle. TWO VFEW£ w HJB. OUU) l ife rare - that when yon a smile So sweetly op at me Twas not a wom an's wicked* wile From which my soul should flee; Conld I be sure t h a t a l l y o u r grace, Tour dainty form, your radiant face, Bore, in their loveliness, no trafe* . ,r Of artful coquetry; ' ^ , Conld I be sure that, day by day, - Your thoughts on me were bent; ^ | That, were I near or far away, Your life with mine was blent; Could I be sure that through the years, Your faith would cling 'mid fortune's jeers, Nor discontent, nor doubta, nor feats v Be in your bosom pent; "v - Could I be sure that in your eyes , 7 * Naught but the truth conld shine. And only woman's love arise „ •- *' To graze from them in mine; ' - / Could I be sure that tongue or pM i, t Might never err in praising when You were the subject, then--vtfhy, then I'd be your valentine. SHE. If I could know that your soft Words of praise Touching my eyes and hair Wfere not culled from some poet** tender lays And used but as a snare; If I could know you really had a heart; And that you'd find it out if Cupid's dart Should penetrate unto that callous part And stick and quiver there; If I could know that men sometimes were not, Despite the stories told, ? i Quite such a desperately wicked lot, Sinful, conceited, bold; If I could know that you, for instance, would Make some small effort to be fairly go6d And treat me as in decency yon should . When I grow wan and old; If I could know that yon would always be The oak nnto my vme; That you'd repay my trust stancy-- Be just and wise, in fine; If I could know you were a man of men. And that no mortal tongue nor meddling pen Might make you cease to lore me, then-- why, then I'd be your valentine. con- MY VALENTINE. Y valentine wasn't a beautiful card with some pretty lines written on it in gilt letters. A valentine does not always mean that, but it s o m e t i m e s m e a n s , and that is a really true valentine, a person who promises on the 14 th of Feb r u a r y t o b e y o u r sweetheart and friend and to protect and love you through all the year, and this is the promise Fred gave to me, which I accepted very will ingly, for I had known him a long time. Indeed, I think I was one of his very first friends when he was a wee ball of a baby, and a very good baby he was, too, crow ing and playing with his fat little Angers all day IOIIR, never crying except when he was made to wait too long for his dinner. Then I knew him afterward, when he was 7 years old and had his first pair of trousers and started to school, and I thought he was very much of a ;nan to be only 7, as I watched him walk down the street with his hands in his pockets. His cheeks were so red and his eyes as bright as buttons, but never so bright as when he came home and found cranberry pie for dinner; then there would be a great shout of "Hurrah for mother, hur rah for cranberry pie!" For of all good things to eat I think he liked cranberry pie best, so the mother put her wits to work and thought of all the things that could make a cranberry pie better, and nobody in the world, he thought, could make such pies as she did. But it was four years ago when I came to know him best when on the saddest of all St. Valentine's days he pledged his faith to be my brave and true valentine 111 his life and sealed the promise with a kiss. A great sorrow had come at this time into his home, and the good kind father was taken away by a fearful ac cident, leaving my little valentine and his mother very sad and troubled and without protection or support in' the large city. "Do not cry, mother dear," he salfi, putting his arms tenderly about her and choking back his own sobs. "I love you and I will work hard for you as father did." And although he was not yet 10 years old he accepted the care of his mother as a solemn and tender charge, and his faithfulness ever since has proven to me what a noble, manly heart a very small boy can have. A friend of his father's took him into his store as errand boy, and, besides, ev ery evening you could see his shining face on the street corners and hear his cheery voice crying evening papers--"Times, Star and Post"--but though he worked hard, and always cheerfully, his earnings were not enough for them both, and the mother had to work hard, too, and the days were often long and sad for her, only when Fred came home at nights with his gay: "Hello! little mother," and a warm hug, her face would brighten into a smile and she would forget how sad anM tired she was. Delightful long evening^ they had together around the lire, when the tea things had been cleared away and the books brought out, for the lessons were kept up at home now that he could no longer go to school, on account of his work at the store, and he used to declare that they were the best part of the whole day, and his mother the very nicest teach er in the world. When the cold weather came the little mother was very anxious about her boy, but he was as bja^evjjs ever, never ac knowledging hew, half-frozen, he had been trudging through the snow with his papers, until one colder day rhan usual he came home shivering, his face as white as the snow, with a bright red spot burn ing in each cheek. All that night he tossed and tumbled and moaned,, and by morning he did not know the frightened mother bending over him arid talked in distinctly about a lot of things she could uot understand. When the doctor came he said it was a fever, and I knew that Meant my little valentine would have a long, weary struggle for the life which so many had learned to love and which would leave his mother so desolate if it were taken from her. You may be sure he had the best of care, for his friends were filled with sor row to see him suffer and felt anxious to relieve the mother, who never left his side, sad ev?*n the good St. Valentine kiaoaatt vatched over him sometimes, I' at my particular rsgn'--t, and per- that is the reason one Wight day, when Ohcistma* hid em* and gone and we tret* all standing by*ltls bed almost diwiMag what might happen uext, he opened his tired eyes and said "Little Mother," very slowly and in a voice so changed and weak you could not have recognized it as the one you had beard crying papers on the street corners. The tears even came into the doctor's eyes as he heard him speak, and I cried as if he were going to die instead of get well, my dear little valentine, so pale and help- lee*. It was a long time before he woald as much a* sit up, because yon know ft 1* a great deal easier to go down a hill than it is to climb up again, and he had to creep along very slowly, being so weak, so it was not until St. Valentine's Day that he could stand at the window and watch the school children as they went by, with their heads held close together over mysterious envelopes addressed in unfamiliar handwriting. "I had forgotten it was St. Valentine'* Day," he said aloud, though there was ne one in the room. "I'm afraid I haven't been a very good valentine all this time, but I love her more than ever, and she knows I couldn't help being sick, it was so cold." "Here is a present from your valentine, my dear," said his mother, appearing at the door with a magnificent cranberry pie made in the shape of a heart, with "To my valentine" on it in letter» formed of foaming white of egg that stood up like snowy peaks on a bed of crimson berries, "and best of all the doctor says he thi&ka one piece, if it is not too large, will make you quite a man again." His eyes brightened and then the tears came into them as he threw his arms about her and said: "I haven't been a very good valentine, mother dear, but I would like to try over &gaia this year, if she will let me; but do yon think Bhe knows how much I love her, little mother?" Yes, I was quite rare I knew how much he loved me and I loved him even more than he loved me, so the happy vows were made again and sealed with many kisses, and have never been broken once, as I know very well, for he is my valen tine and I am his mother.--Detroit Free Pre**. . ~ • St, Valentine'* Day.. Ah, yes, I see-- These roses, wet a* with the morning dew, And rivalling your dimpled cheeks in hue, Convey to me Some hint of what your happy heart read From out their sweetnesa. Nay not your head-- i' Nor any maid * Need blush at lover's token. Since the day That Adam saw his Eve it's been the Way To love and love again. So brief a space It seems since I bent down my girlish face To catch the perfume of some blossomed a thing-- A sheaf of lilies, breathing of the Spring And bearing Love's own message--it were mine To bless that day, the good St. Valentine. And yet to you, Sweet maid, it seems it hardly can be true Hhat this old woman, with her locks of snow And thoughts that linger in the long ago. Could e'er have loved as you are loving now * While yet no care has lined your pretty brow, But time--ah! time will teach you,maiden mine, That even old hearts love St. Valentine. --Good Housekeeping. eart has f , drooi? ST. VALENTINE'S DAY. How It Was Celebrated Tsar* Ago and How To-day. For more than three thousand years it has been usual for young people to in dulge in sports of a peculiar kind in the middle of February, some faint shadow of which still survives. We are assured that nothing lasts so long as an amusing custom. Accounts differ concerning the origin of St. Valentine's Day. In the earlier ages of Rome February was the last month of the year, and for that reason it was much devoted to the service of the gods. The Latin verb feb- ruare means to purify and to expiate, and hence this month was called by the an cient Romans Februarius, or the month of purification. The old Romans doubt less felt at the end of the year very much as we do, and said themselves: "Let us clear off old scores, make up for neglected duties and start afresh." The most singular religious festival was held on the 15th of February in a place called the Lupercal, where Romu lus and Remus were supposed to have been nurtured by the she-wolf. There was a grove near by, in which there was an altar to Lupercus, the god of fertility, and hence the festival was called the Lupercalia. In most of the religious celebrations of the Romans there was a great deal of jol lity and merriment, and perhaps no festi val was celebrated with so much boister ous fun as this. Young men, half cov ered with goatskins, ran about the city, striking all the women they met with thongs of goatskin. As time went en, and the gods were held in less, reverence, the Lupercalia be came more riotous and the whole people gave themselves up to extravagant fes tivity. But what of St. Valentine? How did his name become connected with a pagan festival? This is a point npon which " commentators differ." t" St. Valentine, according to the old Christian records, was an eminent bishop, or presbyter, who lived in the reign of the Emperor Claudius, about the year 270. He is described as a man of great talents and greater benevolence, who, after a life of zeal and good works, obtained "the crown of martyrdom." He was behead ed at Rome during one of the last periods of persecution. The day dedicated to the memory of this eminent saint was the 14th of February, upon which for a thou sand years the people of Rome had been accustomed to prepare for the Lupercalia. Presents of gloves, jewelry, flowers, sweetmeats, sandals and garters flew abont in ail direction*, and the young men and maiden* wegTfiill of expecta tion. Now, the fathers of the church were Sa their. generation. They found that they could not prevent the sports of the Lupercalia, so they did the next best thing--they purified and permitted them. The ancient indecencies and riot* ous burlesques of the heathen festival were abolished, and in their stead were practiced the innocent gayeties of St, Valentine's Day. This at least is the best explanation that can now be given of the peculiar usages to which we are accus> tomed on the festival consecrated to the memory of a beloved bishop and a Chris* tian martyr. : HEARTS ARE UPPERMOST, They Play an Important Part la tlte Decoration of Valentine*. Hearts, it is needless to say, play an important part in the decoration of this year's valentines as they have ever since •the, manufacture of love-tokens §m$-- J** came a recognized and established busi ness. In every possible form and fashion they are introduced; in every possible key the changes are rung upon them; in the high tragedy and low comedy of love alike they figure. A valentine calendar, with a vivid red heart by way of a cover,' is something of a novelty. Pleasantly suggestive are the lines inscribed npon it: "Although this heart but pasteboard be There beats a warmer one for thee?* A bright set of "comics" have fuzzy darkies' heads looking out of banjos, sweet potatoes and watermelons--the va rious artices that one associates with Southern pickaninnies. A magnolia blos som belonging to this series Itears upon its back this verse, a trifle oversentimen- tal, perhaps; but fortunately people who give and receive valentines aren't hyp*, critical: See what a dusky center s This fair magnolia shows, Though 'tis the sweetest blossofL, A That in the Southland grows; Woald that I thus within thy heart- As thou art e'er in mine-- Enthroned amid its sweetness O! fairest Valentine! Decline of the Valentine. In olden days Saint Valentine Sought every heart to please, And put in every happy line Such tender words as these: "The rose is red, the violet's blue; Honey is sweet and so are you." The welcome missives then exchanged All told of earthly bliss, And for the faithful were arranged Such pretty things as this: - 4 "If you love me as I love you, I No knife can cut our love in twifc^ But lover* were untrue be time* And a* a reprimand Saint Valentine some little rhymes About like this one planned: "False heart! I cannot call you mtns| You shall not be my valentine." Then things went on from bad to Alas! till, by Sarcastic couplets, bluiftyand terser Like this one met the ey< "You've got a phiz so fearfuf^pjain 'Twill sidetrack any gravel traiifft Now pictures awful to Accompany the lines, And happy truths like this are told In comic (?) valentines: "Your face would a chimpanzee *hoek| It's warranted to stop a clock!" Where are we drifting: Who can **y f Unless these paper foes Put co&ic (?) valentines away They'll by and by inclose With every valentine they writs A neat tfig chunk of dynamite. Papa Caught. First Little Boy--What are yon lang|*> in' at? Second Little Boy--Papa is scoldin* everybody in the house 'cause he can't lay a thing down a minute without some one piclcln* it up an* losln' it--he,' he, he! "What's he lost?" "His pencil.*' "Where is itf "Behind his ear."-Oood News. It is pointed oat that the century plant is a good indicator of climate, as It often flowers in fifteen°years in warm latitudes, and may exceed one hundred before flowering in greenhouses of cool countries. JojtfTof Arc was undoubtedly the vic tim/of insane hallucinations. Her "voices" were to her the most absolute realities. V Highest of ail ia Lssvssag ?ow*r.--Latest U.S. Cov1! E^ort Baking Pretender* to European Throne*. Among the many pretenders who congratulated the new Emperor of Russia on hi* ascending the throne Were the ex-King of Naples, who lays claim to tho throne of Italy; the Duke of Parma, now a grandfather, and who was deprived of his sovereignty at the early age of K; the former Grand Duke of Tuscany; the Duke of Cumberland, who claims tho sovereignty of the Duchy of Brunswick; the various Princes Karageorgevlcs, each of whom claims to be the de Jure King of Servla; Prince Couza, who has pretensions to the crown of Roumanla; Don Miguel, of Braganza, the legitimist pretender to the throne of Portugal; Prince Vic tor Napoleon, the Duke of Orleans, the soi-disant Duke of Normandy, and General Francis de Bourbon, self- styled Duke of Anjou, each signing himself as sovereign de jure of France, While from Spain's pretenders there Were missives from Don Carlos, his Son Don Jaime, and last, but not least, the Duke of Medlna-Coeli.-- cisco Argonaut I&ke a Sieve. The chief function of th« kidneys Is to separate from th« blood, In it* passag* through them, certain Impurities and wat ery particles which make their final exit through the bladder. The retention of these. In consequence of Inactivity of the kidneys, Is productive of Bright's disease, dropsy, diabetes, albuminuria and other maladies with a fatal tendency. Hostetter's Stoiunch Bitters, a highly sanctioned diuretic and blood depurent. Impels the kidneys when Inactive to renew their sifting function, and strain from the vital current Impurities which Infest It and threaten their own ex istence as organs of tho body. Catarrh of the bludder, gravel and retention of the urine are also maladies arrested or averted by this benign promoter and restorative, of organic action. Malaria, rheumatism* Con stipation. biliousness and dyspepsia also yield t/i the Bitters, which Is also j4>eedlly beneficial to the weak and nerv Convio* Domestic*. Hawaii is not the only place when prisoner* have been known to be hired out for domestic service. It was dis covered some years ago that long-term convicts In jail at New Castle, Del., were commonly sent on errands about town, and even life prisoners were •lightly watched. A murderess was employed In the jailer's family and per mitted to go about the streets. The Modern Invalid Has tastes medicinally, In keeping with other luxuries. A remedy must be pleasantly acceptable in form, purely wholesome In composition, truly bene ficial in effect and entirely free from every objectionable quality. If really ill he consults a physician; If consti pated he uses the gentle family laxative Syrup of Figs. c* Frnits. Fruits, to do their best work, sbonld be eaten either on an empty stomach or simply with bread--never with veg etables. In the morning, before tbe fast of the night has been broken, they serve as a natural stftnulus to the di gestive organs. Missouri Texts. In the Missouri village^of Ivbokwond recently a Kansas divine Wphched in the morning on "I'll Be IWrmiod if 1 Do, and I'H Be Damned It l Don't," and in the evening on "Seven Miles to Hell." Back with Rich Trophies. .i<ast spring we made notice in these columns that Mr. Henry .A Salxer, of the John A. Snlser Seed Company," La Crosse, Wis., America's leading 15eed Growers and Merchants, was in Europe in search of rare seeds and novelties for the American farmer and citizen. Judging from their new catalogue, his trip was an eminently successful one. It is brim full of rare things. Of especial merit we name the Bismarck Apple, bearing the second year; the Giant Flowering Star Phlox; the Ger man Coffee Berry; and for the farmer the Victoria Rape; Germanica Vetch; the Lalhyrus sllvestris; the Giant Spurry and Giant Incarnate clover; Sacaline; and dozens of otner rare things. This wide-awake firm is in the van, and their catalogue, which Is sent for 5 cents postage, would be cheap at fl per copy. Varnish. A water varnish is sometime^ manu factured by dissolving shellac in a very dilute hot solution of ammonia, potash, op soda. The varnish produced is, how ever, aq inferior one. Beware ef Ointment# for Catanti that Ceataia Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system • surfaces 263 Bn. Danver* Yellow Onion* Were grown by John L. Rath, East Saginaw, from one pound of seed. This tremendous yield, at the rate of 1,048 bushels per acre, Mr. Rath says was only possible because he used Salzer's seeds. We understand that Mr. Sal- tier's seeds are the earliest In the world, especially his beets, carrots, cabbage, cucumbers, onions, peas, corn, radishes, tomatoes, etc., and that he sells to mar ket gardeners and farmers at lowest wholesale prices. If Yon Will Cnt This Out and Send It with $1 money order to the John A. Salzer Seed Company, La Crosse, Wis., you will get free thirty-five packages earliest vegetable seeds and their won derful catalogue, or for 13 cents in stamps a package above Prize Danvers Onions and their catalogue free. CNU * - Rats. A littip bit of cheese and an electric wire form the latest rat 'trap. The cheese is fixed to the wire, and the In stant the rat touches the cheese he Is shocked to death. A Pertinent Paragraph. "Our country, if right, should be kept right; if wrong, should be put right," is a political maxim which, paraphrased, ap plies to othei*conditions of life, thus: our health, if right, should he kept right; if wrong, shouJt be put rignt, especially in boflily ailments, such as pains and aches, which St. Jacobs Oil promptly cures. Many out of work should heed to give it a chance to cure and it will give them a chance to go to work cured. Another adage is: "He doeth best who doeth well." Weil, of course, you want to be Well from all sorts of aches, and the best thing to do is to use the great remedy. He who does ao is doing well indeed. when entering It through tbe mucous surfaces.1 for Jlonsumpti Suoh articles- should never be used except on 2HTW. 22d St., New York, Oct. 2*J, 1894. prescriptions from reputable tjh^siclsxisras prescriptions damage they will do Is tenfold to th^good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Tole do. O., contains no mercury, aud is taken inter- nslly, aoting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system. In buying HUH'K Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken Internally, and made In Toledo, Ohio, b>' P. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. , . CVSold by Druggists, 76c. per bottle. Schumann, the composer, was long the victim of melancholy hallucina tions, and finally became hopelessly in sane. Before his confinement in an asylum he tried to drown himself in the Rhine. r Would Have to Learn Over Again. "I believe it would be harder to learn to use the weed again than It was the first time. I shall always be ready to say a good word for No-to-bac; I have no more desire for tobacco," is the text of a letter written to the Sterling Rem edy Co., of Chicago, by D. J. McMullen, of Larkin, Kansas, after taking No-to- bac, purchased of his druggist, and be ing cured of the tobacco habit. At Washington there is a list of all the known anarchists In the world, and their place of residence when last heard from. The French Government has a similar list \ Bv TE.IFI.INO WITH A COLD, many a one allows himself to drift into a condition fa vorable to the development of some latent disease,which thereafter takes full possession of the system. Better cure your Cold at once with Dr. i». Jayne's Expectorant, a good remedy for Throat-aik aad Lung ailoo- ttons. • A Clark Corinty, Ga., couple recently celebrated their golden wedding in the house In which they were married and which has been their home continuous ly-since.^ r" 1,000 Bo. Potatoes Per Aore. Wonderful yields in potatoes, oats, corn, farm and vegetable seeds. Cut ' this out and send 5c postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse. Wis., for their great seed book and sample of Giant Spurry. ' CNU A bad reputation is a hard thing to lose. » - " , Pope was irritable almost to madness. The least criticism of any of his writ ings infuriated him nearly to distrac tion. ^ A' Bright Bye is the sign of good health atii alert mind. Strange that it should almost al ways depend on the state of the digestion, but it does. A Ripans Tabule taken after meals gives the little artificial help most grown people need. The man who lives only to please him self will soon find out that he has a hard master. I CANNOT speak too highly of Piso's Core for Consumption.--Mns. FHANK MOBBS, ARM* of snowy whiteness; neck pure aa alabaster; complexion like the blush of a rose. Bhe patronlced Glenn's Sulphur So*Ik Dr. PIERCE'S PLEASANT- PELLETS 1 - SICK HEADACHE BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION* INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, POOR APPETITE, amd all derangements oj the Stomach, Liver amd Bomeix. Of all druggists. ONCE ALWAYS IN FAVOR. if YOUNG SPIRITS a vigorous body and robust strength fol low good health. But all fail when the vital powers are weakened. Nervous_ debility and loss of manlv power result from bad habits, con tracted by the young through ignorance of the»r riiirtous con- lequences. Low spirits, melancholia^ impaired memory^ morose or irritable temper, fear of impending calamity and a thousand and one derangements of body and mind, result from such pernicious prac tices. All these are permanently cured by improved methods of treatment without the patient leaving home. A medical treatise written in plain bat "chaste language, treating of the nature, symptoms and curability of such diseases, sent securely sealed in a plain envelope, oa receipt of this notice, with io cents in stamps, for postage. Address, WORLD'S DISPRN- SARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION,. Buffalo, N.Y. CURES PAINS OF M A N & M MT BE BEGEIVIfi with Phtf**, Knunela, aad Pahrt* wUeh st*ia th# hands, injure «h* inn. sad him The Rising Sun Store Polish fa Brik Want, Odoriew, and Durable. Seefe packiMn eoatain* six ounce*; when SMfatened will make several boxes of Paate VoHdt. US JUIJUDIOAL SALE OF 3,000 TMfc * WORLD'S-FAIR * . I HIGH E ST AWARD 2 'SUPERfOm NUTWTION-THE LIFE!* M E Q I I I S T A J L ^ I ' Has justly acquired the reputation of The Salvator for JUM VALIDJST < he-Aged. N Im INCOMPARABLE ALIMENT for the ' 3 GROWTH and PROTECTION of INFANTS and C H I L D R E N A Superior nutritive in continued Fevogt. And a reliable remedial agent In all gastric and enteric diseases t often in instances of consultation over, patients whose digestive organs were re»l duced to such a low and sensitive condition * that the IMPERIAL QRANUM wa». the only nourishment the stomadi' would tolerate when LIFE seemed! depending on its retention;-- ; And as a FOOD it would be difficult to*. conceive of anything more palatable. 1 tut by DRUGGISTS. Shipping! JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. At • V'.J ' Li i GDOMCHFin LL Gft BEST in the world. 1 centi well filled ptgs. Send names tar '. Itat Free Catalogue eve Bte lot of EXTRAS ii&B With even oafta »L H. 8HUMWAY, Rockfovd, It. MKMTION THIS F A PER DIRECTIONS for using j CREAM BALM.--Apply a particle of the Balm awn up Into the noetrtfe. AfUr a moment draw (tronff breath through the note. Urn three time* a day, af ter meals preferred, and before retiring. | CATARRH the Sore*. ProUeta tbe Maubfim teanfi* •tonitbf Bepaw of Taato aad 8m«U. Dim aniduy abaovMd aad sms i«Ua( at ease. JHiT BBOTHCBS, M Wima Biwi. Kavtacl W.L. sash *&VMUCE.3 r»<c •£.•17? LAOIBS S test OvarOo* J w. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Steel AD our shoes arveqoallyMtfelKteqr Tbay give the beat valeo far the Man. TbeyaqoelCMtoei ab*«* testy la aarfM. - fhwnn--lBg M*nt>-- -- mmmummmmtrn • Tha *rica* *r* aaHfat--ya*----*^ -' . FMMB f • te $3 **vai ever ether main*. ' , If yoor dealer caanot mpply yoaeacaa. Rafter DINNER. Bis dinner laat nfchs) XI waa, indeed. Plenty to drink, toot Wall, I should say ao. Headache in coi Oh, no. do you manage it? RipansmTebuhk Wttl that do lit f Kvery time ; ^ .r rfi »• ! X l .-1 4 It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Sa^ "Woman's Work Is Never Done-,? - m"5"et«spoultry iuuim l.pcsitimy «k*amt <n>t «f Um kiai mt t>« *mmt f>»> kw ao*r*a* Uy«w»»Mi«1HIM«|»>«iBhir«a MATED II KTRWWR KNW Mtnr, m wlM pi H hT«a« nat«£ttu I raOVBiUULX CLAIM. G«».r. rauaeta^Mk r*., •!*«» iMnln It eoottlu eaiors, pholo «a(rmT<Bg( oftfc* targm Alto other IM Mntifan tfm Bml id«g|. Ohn - _ . rvmilW 6 t nlans with illustration* ta Ho 'Mr «• •BNltMK'- Uhtriltiin »tm*t *ia teadiag vtriMtM ef fur* Brwi Fowl* with Ml awMta ' pri«s oftb«a, »nd OhMtwa<|ttoa»lMl«Kwa iition roml^r, «ur« rvHwdi?* for all k&Mratf* " an<i|r Condi! r PATENTS Sent ta RTIV 1* TEATFE . C. SHOEMAKER, BOX MluU erUll!u.TB TRADE-] Examination and Aitvieo M to Patentability mention. Send for Guide. orHovtotj £ Patent PATBica Washington. 0. No. T-«& S. X. c. IN to A»t*mrMaer». please do iaotfck* to mention thl» gwper. AdW" tt> know what BMHIIOW pay tlMMBk .... /aaiTjs'iJ .1 * V{ „ i ^ i J v \ ^