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18 Sued For Belling a Rat. Troubled by rats a householder in the Avenue de Neuilly, at Paris, managed to trap one of the 6-warrc, nnd, A bfing of a mechanical turn of mind, Aivniol,^ TtTl' + Vl fi PTIiall Oilppcu lb LUiifti XUlUiOUVU ? silver bell around the rodent's neck and set it free. The result was that the rats disappeared from that special house and migrated to another a fewdoors off, -where a studious man of nervous temperament resided. Wakened in .the night by a curious tinkling sound, -which came fitfully, apparently from every corner of the room, he became convinced that his house was L haunted by day and by night, and lost his health through anxiety and terror. k Having at length discovered the cause, L\ he has now commenced a lawsuit against the man who belled the rat, > demanding heavy damages. ? New York Tribune. f <y> Breeding Bread Made by a Red Bacillus "Breeding Bread" is the name i given to certain red stains, like blotches of blood, which appear on beef, and ?_> on bread, boiled potatoes and other farinaoeous substances. In old times it was regarded as a miracle or omen, but in 1819 it was found by Dr. Settea of Yenice, io be really a microscopic plant. Other naturalists have sinoe studied it, and daring the past summer it has made its appearance on cooked potatoes in England. It is variously identified as the "bacillus prodigiosus" and the "mocrococus prodigiosns," and is of a brilliant carmine. ?London Globe. I Fifty Cents Well Invented. t Economy is wealth; simple incidents have established the destinies of monarchies and of republics, monopolies and individual*. Timelv alliances will often avert great evils; prompt action is frequently required ^ and only a little of that to prevent serious consequences. Take "a otrtd," for example. If not checked in time, like a spark of fire, it may cause great trouble, suffering and distress. To stop a fire in the beginning is comparatively an easy process to that of subduinganextensive conflagration. 80 Had way's Ready Relief taken in time will prevent all of the serious consequences arising from neglecting a cold. For a chill, take from a half to a teaspoonful of Ready Relief in a half tumbler of water, drint it down and repeat if necessary to warm up. Par pains in the chest, side or back rub > freely with Ready Relief, applied by the hand till the skin oomes to a glow: cover well uf and keep warm; one or both of the above appliances will cure ninety-nine cases out ol every one hundred. Deafiteas Cannot be Owed by local application^ as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one 'way to cure Deafness, and.that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in;flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rambling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it io entirely closed jDeafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, bearing will be destroyed forever; nine oases out ten are ieausea by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the muooua surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any i ease of Deafness (paused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. ^ P. J. Chun icv & Co., Toledo, O. e^-Sold by Druggists, 76c. A Child Enjoys The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing | effects of Syrup of Fige, when in need of a laxative, and if the father or mother be costive or bilious, the most gratifying results follow its use; so that it is the best family remedy known and every family should have a bottle. Cocobsakd Colds. Those who are Buffering from Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, etc.. should try Brown's Bronchial Troches. Bold only iti boxes. I A Beautiful Souvenir Spoon Will be sent with jevery ^hottle^of Dr. HoxtWs ' 1/fTKIWI V7VW// va/c. vi ucj cu uj uioii, jn/ijv i paid, 60 cts. Address, Hnxsie. Buffalo, N. Y. Beecham's Pills with a drink of water mornings. Beecham's?no others. 25 cents a box. j? Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup is positively runequaled. Try it. 25 cents at druggists. ' If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle NERVOUS HEADACHES * I have been suffering with dyspepsia and nervous headaches for several years. Aftei using other preparations without success, 1 concluded to try Hood's and am pleased to say I have been benefited more by Hood'* Sarsap&rilla than by all other medicines combined. Jn fact, it has cured me. I have also used it as >a blood purifier with marked success, and ) !Hood'ssPr> Cures V also find Hood's Pills very beneficial." D. Webster Baker, 38 South Penti St..York, Pa Hood's PUIh cure Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. kv THE JUDGES ? WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION , Have made the HIGHEST AWARDS ^ (Medals and Diplomas) to i WALTER BAKER & CO. \On each of the following named articles: BREAKFAST COCOA, . . I, , Premium Jio. 1, Chocolate, |1 ' Yanilla Chocolate, j i. % i German Sweet Chocolate, . . ^ I Cocoa Butter. For "purity of material," "excellent llavor,' ?^and "uniform even composition." ' WALTER BAKER S CO., DORCHESTER. MASS. Swifts specific ?? For renovating the entire system, eliminating all Poisons from the Blood, whether of scrofulous or maiariai origin, this preparation has no eyuat b: " For eighteen months I had an eating sore on my tongue. I was treated by. best local physicians, tWfc Obtained no relief: the sore gradually grew wecate. I finally took S. S. S., and was entirely cal?d after using & few bottles." C. B. McLejiobe, Henderson, Tex. ^ i j: Treatise on Blood and SkiD Dis?*4k ; j eases mailed free. f *^f?f t The Swift Specific Co., SHj- ** Atlanta, Ga. IM BMl Ink feMtac Pencil. Agent* makibg 900pv H . week. Moareir*wlilf.0o.,x70i, L?Crvo?e,Wli AGRICULTURAL. ; S] TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE g TO FARM AND GARDEN. POOK BUTTER. It is impossible to get a good quality r, of butter if dirt has been allowed to 0 get into the milk during the milking 0 process. If butter-making were more 6; particular about this, there would be fj fewer failures. The chief difficulty 8( lies in heedlessness. A little thought oe w"hft+. tTiifi fine dust or "settlinsrs" I v i6 redly composed of would make many ^ butter-makers more careful. It is not fl merely the idea of. cleanliness, how- j( ever, which repays one for the extra p care. The general appearance of the butter, its keeping qualities and its a good flavor are all affected. e, J TOP GKAFTIXG. Many farmers who have good orchards p suffer loss by allowing a few trees t< which bear worthless fruit to remain b year after year. "When this poor frnit a is about to fail the owner resolves to s< change the top next spring by graft- p ing, but before the time comes around a: he has forgotten his resolution and g the tree remains. This may be pre- 5i vented by placing some permanent d mark on them or "blazing" the spare branches. 1 li In inserting the grafts the common o: mistake should be avoided of setting I them out at some distance from the t: centre, thus allowing much of the defective growth to remain after all. ft Select shoots never more than an inch si or two in diameter and make short a: stumps of them for inserting the grafts, a: A round and compact head may thus be given. If a sufficient number of I] grafts are set the fruit may be changed a in a very few years from the useless si sorts to the best by this operation.? u Home and Farm. - ft CAKE FOR THE CALF. *5 Tlie first winter is the trying time in the call's life. It is a mistake to ex* pose it to the weather or to foroe it to run with old cattle, who will frequently gore it and will only permit it to eat ^ the refuse, after their hunger had , been satisfied. A great many farmers have the idea . that this will toughen the animal, but it is far more apt to result in a stinted calf, which will pass most of the spring & trying to make tip for what it lost . during the winter. Loss of thrift or "calf-flesh" is a clear loss in feeding, . j care and shelter, and animals so 11 I nrill of+Om f l)A 019A r\f tXCOV^U TT UU t?KMMU tuv V* . those well fed, no matter what the after care may be. With such treatment there is no- 11 thing to show for what has been consumed during the winter. Care, nu- ? tritious feed and separate quarters must be given the calves, if there'ifl to . be a constant advance in growth and f ripeness from birth to maturity. When this iB done the calf will grow . through every month in the year, and ( give a profit, to the farmer. The & sooner it matures the more money it means to the owner. ?' , b vrrr.TT fob COLTS. ST The value of milk for feeding horseB a] is not generally appreciated. The farmer disposes of the skim milk product a] by feeding it to calves and pigs, but a, sp.lflnm thinks of its valnfi in dflvfilnn ing and growing colts. At this season ^ of the year and after weaning time ri colts are frequently out of condition and unthrifty. Nothing will put them w in order and in growing condition like a moderate allowance of skim milk in ^ addition to the regular grain and hay ration. Without an extra effort of m some kind the colt is likely to give lit- Bf tie return for the winter's feed. No ^ use of the milk will pay better. It needs to be continued only until the jj, colt's progress is well under way. Feed w sparingly at first, and of uniform ai quantity and condition. Remember that milk is a feed that undergoes rapid changes, and is in addition exceedingly subject to varying conditions. These ^ changes in condition will disturb di- ip ivAf+iAn m n TT + iU A aua rnuj uuuuiciati tuc guuu effects of the feed if uniformity in jj, feeding is not observed. Colts or horses may be accustomed to the taste w of milk by vising it first to moisten fa ground feed or by adding to water in ?( gradually increasing quantities for sev- jj( eral days. A little skim milk given at qi the right time often decides the turning point between a good and a cheap cc horse, and consequently between pro- ^ fit and loss.?C. F. Curtiss in Bural u. Life. hi tt CAKE OF TURKETS. i,; liJ It is seldom that turkeys are given "t a place for roosting that is a sure protection against exposure. Turkeys are allowed to roam at will, not so much because they can be kept easier by allowing them their liberty, but ^ because they are self-sustaining. It is known by all farmers that turkeys i will not thrive under confinement; sv but it is not necessary to turn them loose entirely. ti They apparently do well when they are made to take care of themselves, as but the number of young turkeys hatched, compared with the number C11 raised, is evidence that something is wrong, at least so far as saving them . up to the age of two months is concerned. w Turkeys may be taught to come up .. to the barnyard regularly, and to go 11 on a roost that is protected from cold, P( but they must be so taught when young. They seek the trees, not because they prefer being out in the air, but because they desire to be 6afe against their natural enemies. Give d* them a high roost under an open shed U1 and they will thrive better and attain larger weight than if exposed. re A frozen comb or wattle means that d< the bird is severely injured. It is equivalent to the frosting of an arm go with an individual. Until the injury s*, is healed the fowl is incapacitated from service. It is sick and may die. To prevent the freezing of the comb j is important, as upon it depends the production of eggs. Plenty of food to make blood and warmth is a protection, but more dependence must i Pe be placed on the shelter. i Pe The comb will not be injured if the j bird is protected from the winds, but I ne a crack in the wall is worse than out- Li side exposure. One part alcohol and ot one of glycerine, applied once or twice co a kvaoV tn (lis nnmh* onrl ~ +I? " " wV ?V ?MVI MMUWW, iO U I Ui partial preventive, but should the j pc - mIMI omb or wattles becomc frozen, anoint nly with castor oil, adding a tpapoonful of spirits of turpentine to a ill of the oil. ?Mirror and Farmer. HOW TO TIGHT THE BORER. Jacob Faith, of Itfontevallo, Ho., 'riting in the Journal of Agriculture, ecommends the following as a method f protecting trees against the inroads f borer -worms, as well as against, beep and rabbits. A wash is made of resh lime slacked with soft water (old aap suds is best). Make the wash the tiickness as to wash house or fencing. 7here one peck of lime is used, while ot add a half-gallon crude carbolic cid, - costing fifty cents, fv half-g&i>n gas tar, costing ten cents, and lour ounds of sulphur. Stir well. For summer wash leave gas-tar out ad add in place of it one gallon of 3ft soap. "Wash the last of May or une. If the miller has laid the egg which roduces the borer, this wash is death > the egg, and millers, moths and eetles will not deposit their eggs in tree thus washed. The wash de;ribed will prevent both apple and each tree borers. Wash the trunk ad limbs as far as the rough bark oes. A man or boy can wash 200 to [)0 trees a day with a thirty-cent paint rush. To keep rabbits and sheep from girdng wash late in fall or about the time f '-""A * *< * 00 nan roftrtl). L IX KJaVj OO UO uuvj * www-. would not neglect my trees for fifty lines its cost. A weak lye is a very useful and per;ctly safe tree wash. Also old soap id's that stand a few days after clothes re washed will keep the bark smooth nd the borers off, if trees are washed ivo or three times in summer season. E one pint of crude carbolic acid is dded to fifteen gallons of old soap ads or lye it will keep insects off for lonths. Many other washes will keep insects om killing treeB, but some are injur>us instead of beneficial?CourierournaL BEE NOTES. Only good queens should go into nnorfflra lUWi KVAWt Queenless bees nearly always build rone combs. Italian bees were first imported in lie oountry in 1859. Much bee-diarrhcea can be traced to Did, damp hives. Don't let the bees either starve 01 'feeze to death this winter. Stores gathered from decaying fruit 1 a dry season are unhealthy. If honey is overheated the color and ansparency will be affected. Moving bees, only a short distance, lvariably results in the loss of some. During the winter prepare for the pring by making and mending the ivea. Id the majority of cases unhealthy ares are the cause of the loss of the ees. Most bee-keepers prefer the ItaliaD > the black beas, as they are more entle to handle - V?AAft -fvAAvinrv woafliA* XJi IXlUVlJig UCCO m AX ire must be observed, as the comb ecomes very brittle. When bees are to be wintered od immer stands they ought to be packed ad fixed up early. This is the time to plan all changes ad improvements to be made in the piary next spring. The honey of Central and South merica remains liquid longer, as a lie, than that of North America. A majority of the bees that winter ell are kept in a temperature of forr-five to fifty degrees, whit some venilation. In some States efforts have been ade to prohibit spraying ?ft certain 'oanno rm wmnnnt of the liabilitv of le bees dying from poison. Spring dwindling is often caused by iving to many bees to start in the inter on. They die before spring id leave the colony weakened in num3rs. Fault 1b found abroad with encalypis honey, the strong flavor of which aes not please the English taste, he Australians are likely to be disjointed in the market they had aped for. The sting of the bee is more painful hile working on buckwheat. This ,ct is attributed either to a more Dwerful secretion of formic acid or jcause it is secreted in increased aantities. Experiments made to determine the >mparative value of comb foundaon, drawn comb and "starters" rought out the fact that those swarme ived on foundation, as a rule, stored le most surplus; next came those ved on comb, and then those on starters."?New York World. VT* FiRM AND GARDEN NOTES. Badly laid tile drains are useless. Sweet potatoes keep better if dug in :y weather. T"\?? V?/\r4- *%onTrir?n JL/JL v eitl 111 iO biiC UCDI *v* veet potatoes. Liberal rations ancl liberal care are le secrete of success. Cottonseed hulls are recommended i a strawberry mulch. Breeding from immature stock is ire to result in degeneracy. Put away all farm machinery where cannot be injured by the storms of inter. Remember that the comfort of your re stock means money in your )cket. For the green fly burn tobacco stems id strew thickly over the soil about te plants. Well drained lands stand both ought and wet weather better than ldrained land. Too much churning and working is sponsible for the spoiling of a good :al of the butter. Moss roses require good ground and mewhat close pruning to bear rong wood and large buds. If the digestive apparatus of the hog ems to be disarranged giye him a ,ily ration of linseed cake. * Breed only from the befit. Pure eeds have as strong an impulse to rpetuate their inferior as their surior qualities. We now havo bush varieties of arly all garden beans, including mas, and people should not feel liged to have a lot of bean poles to mplete the garden. On moist grounl ere may 'be less danger of rust to da up away from the ground. The Lighthouse Heroine. i m Ida Lewie, heroine and life- | K saver, was bom in Newport. B. I., in 1841. Her father, Captain Hosea B Lewis, was keeper of the Lime Rock j?> lighthouse in the Newport harbor, and || she became in early youth a skilled swimmer and oarsman, Much of her s| time was spent in the boat, which was B the only means of communication be- B tween the lighthouse and the mainland. &S Her free outdoor life gave her great g strength and powers of endurance, and 3 she was at home on the water, in calm B or storm. Her first notable deed in B life-saving was in 1859, when she S rescued four men, whose boat had ? capsized in the harbor. Since that event she has saved many lives. Her fame as a heroine grew, and thousands * ? th( I ecl 1 s IDA liEWIS. sh? de of visitors thronged her humble home he to make her acquaintance. Captain tic Lewis became a paralytic, and Ida was l8 made custodian for life of the Lime ^u: Bock lighthouse. The appointment pa was conferred upon her in 1879 by ??| General Sherman, who paid her a eh signal compliment for her bravery. on In July, 1880, the Secretary of the aD Treasury, William Windom, awarded ho the gold life-Baving medal to her, tjj, and she is the only woman in America who has received that tjj( tribute. Besides these, she has re- co, ceived three silver medals, one from jn the State of Rhode Island, one from te( the Humane Society of Massachusetts, mc and a third from the New York Life fl0 Saving Association. In the Custom He House, in Newport, in 1869, before ftt hundreds of its citizens, Miss Lewis to received from General Grant the life- thi boat Rescue, which she now has. It Bu was a gift from the people of the oity in recognition of her acts of bravery. Ch For it James Fisk, Jr., ordered a boat- ^ house built. Mr. Fisk sent the hero- pri ine a silk flag, painted by Mrs. Mc- ^ Fa?u*>d, 0f New York. After being made a member of Sorosis, Miss Lewis be< received from that body a brooch. It is a large gold S, with a band of blue enameL Across it is the name of the -jei club in Greek letters, and engraved on % t the main part of the pin, "Sorosis to ^al Ida Lewie, the heroine." From the C0I +Trn cnlrliprc frnm the fort, whom she rescued, she received a gold watch, and . from the officers and men a silver tea- |ev pot worth $150. Presents of all sorts, rgc from large sums of money to oatmeal 5f ( and maple sugar, have flowed in to her from all parts of the country. She [ retains and is known by her maiden name, but she was married in 1870 to ju* "William H. Wilson, of Black Rock, ?ar Conn.?Picayune. in ' smi Blood Tells. )ne Fauntleroy Royal Ohatfield Butts? ;ho "I wish I was Patsy O'Brien." jre Mrs. Butte?"Why! What does the int< child mean?" ______ I 1 1 Fauntleroy Royal Chatfield Butts? E "He hain't got to go to school to- I morrow, he hain't. He's goin' to stay home and shovel in ten tons of coal.': s p ?Judge. ^ wa A Big Price Upon His Head. g^, A reward of $10,000 has been offered ? x for the capture of Apache Kid, the In- ^ a dian who deserted from a company of fQr scouts to murder and pillage in the Southwest. cjj. Tt'c ! II .HE "KID." J E:d is a full-blooded Apache, rather I undersized, but wiry and s!,:oag ?.nd onil.e intelligent. In the ?aTnpa:gn ft against Geronimo he was a seigeaM cf R ?pnnts. He is a dead shot short i I. range, skilled in all the arts of tho Ij * savage warrior, with enough know!-. [ edge of the ways of troopers to enable' Kj him to keep out of their leach. HE ? /-r t aKe no-su Royal Baki It is Absol All others contain The First One. A woman got into a suburban car b other afternoon, Bays a writer in a Philadelphia Eecord. She was rrying a sweet-faced baby, which .s not more than six months old. te car was detained at the corner tere the woman got on, and she ifted round nervously in her seat r a moment and then began to toss e baby about. Here is a true deription of what she did with that ild while the car was going 250 rds: Held it upright on one knee r thirty seconds; then shifted it to e other knee. Pulled it up against r and hugged it twice. Tossed it on r left shoulder and then shifted it her right shoulder. JfcLeid it up to e -window and then stood it up on r lap. Made a cradle out of her ms and jumped it up and down six ties. Placed it on her left knee, en put it on her right knee. Laid it its stomach in her lap. Hugged it her bosom and patted it seven oes. Held it up to the window ain, then pulled it over to her left Dulder, shifted it to her right shoulr, and wound up by dumping it into r lap. Tossed it into the air a dozen aes and bagged it four or five times, id it on its back in her lap and then rned it so as to lay on its stomach, tted it for a minute and hummed lush-a-bye, Baby," though the ild wasn't making a sound. Put it her knee and joggled her knee up d down, shook it in front of her, lding it out at arm's length, and an hucrcred it ecstatically three aes. Held it up to the -window for 3 third time, and then, when the aductor came after her fare, laid it a lump on the seat beside her. Patl it some more, joggled it some >re, tossed it some more, and pped it down on its stomach again. :ld it out at arm's length, and gazed it rapturously. Talked gibberish it, and hugged it some more. All is while the car was going 250 yards, t then, it was?her first. anges in the Interior ot the Earth. Dbservations recently announced in ance suggest that changes involving ; displacement of immense masses thin the earth are going on. It has m found that the force of gravita D, or toe weigm 01 uouiets, unuer? 38 daily variations. These are ren ed sensible by placing in the earth abe containing a column of mercnry anced by the pressure of hydrogen itained in a closed vessel connected h the tube, and registering by means photography the alterations in the el of the mercury. After all cortions have been made for the effect shanges of temperature, it appears t certain sudden variations in the el of the meroury are only to be ilained on the theory that they are i to changes in gravitation. These iations last from fifteen minutes to hour. They are, of course, very ill amounting at a maximum to only i-twentieth of a millimeter, but it is ught that they may imply very at displacements of matter in the ;rior of the globe.?New York Sun. f a wart be rubbed -with the pared face of a freehly cut' potato three es a day it will disappear within a ath. B1333BBB13^3 or Severe, Lingering Coughs, "Weak igs, Bleeding from Lungs, Bronchitis, una, arid Consumption, in its early es, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovis a sovereign remedy. It not only s the cough but also builds up the agth and flesh of those reduced below althystandard by "Wasting Diseases." 1 not make fat folks more corpulent. , B. F. "Wiley, of Box Elder, Converse Co., Wyo., writes: "I had bronchitis for twenty years and over, and I r* could not work witb^ U out coughing so bard as to take all my strength Vjeflt rco away. 1 took five botnam tics of Dr. Pierce's Golden Mcdlcol Discovfcflr ery< and P've you my YJ/, JCk word and honor that wltjZps^JI can do any work that MlK?-> JtK there 1b to do on my 4 'ranch'without coughm gffc /\WV log. I have not taken any of the 'Golden Mr. Wiixr. JJ^W-comy' for li J [>^AVq1 B&fl Letters from Mothers teak in inn terms what 1? :ott's jC nulsion wr yf >/A s done ' /\ their del- \ iusands back to rosy health. | icotfs Emulsion cod-liver oil with Hypophos les IS empiuyeu Willi cess in all ailments that rere flesh and strength. Little :s take it with relish. iptred by Scotfc <t Bowdb. N. Y. Ail drnggiste. SBAIMSmTRQi - it rrvrrc mw m I I. . IMC g,LU ^ "can rappty tlx*fnfl Itet of corree U) the lutyolnliiff four ISreJctoc W Yn ?qw . "^tb a proportionate airard fl w correct arawer to aj?t owe of Ux QOOOOOOd mass THoAM \ \ bstitute for I ng Powder. I utely Pure. I c " tl alum or ammonia. I s ? SP^gjEto^steliSiSSlOTHiBHl c MeliUa. J Melilla?called by the Arabs Mlila ? ?has been in possession of the Span- _ lards since 1496, when it was taken by tha Duke of Medina Sidonia. It is ^ situated on a peninsula joined to the mainland by a rocky tongue of land _ about 100 yards wide. The lagoon ? which serves as a harbor is on the I south side, and is dominated by th$ ' fort of San Lorenzo. The town, of about 2000 inhabitants, slopes steeply up to the Kobash, or citadeL It is S surrounded by three walls, the first of A which is fortified and has flanking jf towers. The batteries, Las Cabras, " El Bonete, San Juan, and La Concepcion, are in this wall. Fort Sidi Guaj riach, the building of which brought I about the present hostilities with the )n I Riff Arabs, lies to the south of Fort to Lorenzo. The Hebrews live between d< the second and third walls in the El J? Mantelete place. n Wis h PHYSICAL WRECK. Could Scarcely Ride or Walk. Suffered for 18 Years! Cherry Valley, N. Y. Sept. 5,1883. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingbamton, N. T. Gentlemen:- You may use my testimony with , - - pleasure for I would t* \ like to do what I can lor suffering women. I endured agonies for * eighteen years with | Female Weakness in every form, and as a last resort turned to you for help. I have taken five bottles of your Swamp-Boot, of. cleho/t liavs. p one bottle of Female | Remedy, and used two bottles of U & 0 Anointment. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Cured Mo. When I commenced taking your remedies I could neither ride or walk without suffering 1 intense pain; now I can do both as well as I I ever could in my life, for I am entirely cured / of Female weakness. I con do my own house work, and I feel that I am entirely restored to health. I shall never cease to thank God and ' you for making me a well and healthy woman tl from the physical wreck that I was. ? At Druggists, 50 cent and 91.OQ Sice, <* "Invalid*" Guide to Health" fre??Consultation fre?. Hi Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. T. tl R. R> Ri L DADWAY'S |, U READ? RELIEF 1 Cc CURES AND PREVENTS ^ Colds, Couphs. Sore Throat Hoarseness Stiff Neck Bronchitis. Catarrh. Headache. Toothache Rheumatism ? Neuralgia Asthma. Bruises 8prains * Quicker Than Any Known Bemeiy. ; No matter how violent or excruciating -the rain the I Rheuma-lc. Bedridden, Infirm, Crippled, Nervous, I Neuralgic, or prostrated wlta diseases may suffer. ' RAD WAY'S READY RELIEF j Will Afford Instant Ease. ? INTERN ALLY^A half to a teaspoon- ? ful In half a tumbler of water will in a few V minutes cnre Cramps. Spasms, Sour Stomach, I Naasea, Vomiting. Heartburn, Nervousness, I Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Colic, M Flatulency and all internal pains. 1 There is not a remedial airont in the world jL that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bilious and other fever.', aided by lod RADWAY'S PILLS,soquicklyasRAD-' ?>= WAY'S READY RELIEF. 2i! Fifty cents per Bottle. Sold by Druggists. ~ .?* BE SURE TO GET KAPWA Y'S. $ P I t K K Ei Offers wonderful flue chances for small Investment. $100.00 Invested here now will grow to thousands In the next ten years. For cli culars, maps and special quotations addrc&s CH AS. Ij. H YDE,INVESTMENT BANKEH. Pierre. South Dakota f) II Jt lift r Buggy Pole to shafts in a minute liHAIllir wltb my coupling. By mall, 25c. pair. Uliniim. AGENTS. BRINK. Bloomvllle, 0. _ nATCklTC?THOMAS P. SIMPSON, ? 1#A I Ell I 9 Washington. D. C. >*o atty's fee until Patent obtained.Write for Inventor's Guide Especially for Farmers, Miners, P. R. Hands down to the heel. EXTRA WEABINj Rubber Boot wearers testify this is tli YOUR DEALER FOR THEM and don't When Hamlet Exclaimed: "I Could He Have Ri SAPO BIT | Gere are the Toor Biain-Bnrnisl * .PA. ~ ~ a u ? What man; politicians, po- ? Desirable for i btical or*torn, and oUkts ?a anil especially B I II 1 would LMr to be with plain facc> QllU q 1 ?;R ? S i I Y . .1 That' forVhlch"wo?neD {L DefJred In'th f |9fi|| V food of ahowy attire often I |i,?s n>y puirtiu I PHH spend too much uioney/ ' " Mitchell. Dlioo i . youth or| odn.^ho 'EXPLANATION -TW klark In rvk ttaij t aruraera amlUed Mtanh,, ! aevklac whwlaff aacwero, try U 'Ofd 8tud < wr4s wUrh wb?a AiDy MelM "111 ) Mr a ERICAW PUBLI8HIWC CO. niTUr CLEM *9i German SfhpT -s lourt, Walk^1^' ofthe Superior binks enough c?unt7? Georgia, end us volunta^raan Syrup to ndorsing it. WXa strong letter nd education thus\niea of taxtk lend an article, wl&ud recomrorth the attention tfiy say is t is above suspicion. public. ' | our German Syrup," h^eused ay Coughs and Colds on t\ "for nd I/Ungs. I can recomm&roat liotn 'ic a fl?t^1acc tnA^irMAa ?ake no substitute. . ' |jj IE INK asff III^EVERYMAN | ^SSarber 1 tven 11 you never sq&tcu uuwo ? nposslble to cat the face. It fc specially adapted > the young Jut beginning to ?nave; to the old, 1th trembling band*, to those who lure very t*?- a :r face*, and to all who consider their time of value, i they can shave with ease, comfort and safety to re minutes or leer. . x Every " Home Bafety Razor" la honed and Ml >ady for use, and fully warranted In every respect. If your hardware dealer does noc keep them, w* rill mall you one upon receipt of 92.00. A liberal discount olTered to say responsible party ho wishes to take the agency for their town. Send for circulars and price list. THE HOME SAFETY RAZOR Is an el* mt a??d useful present for the Holiday*. SI BELL ft. HURST, soixowrass, I'M Clmibfii Street, Kew Yo*-k City. XM AS MAMTV m unt i F?R j BoyssGirls :f? ^sasjaes in? JC UWIfOUU ??? MiVUi.V^W H II 1 in ew and taking style. Above /1 Ull. roup complete lot 10 oenU, I II sin or stamps. AOS T8, I . Ilf * OY8 AND GIBL8 are m111&| 1 ll|f?lonsands and coining money. w H017SH h CO,. 504 Exchange Building, Boston, Mass. x* , We have Poets, Preachers, Actresses and residents at same price. ,000,000 tor talc by the men I*ac& A IXnCTH fiAILBOAD murt In BCinscsota. Bend tor lisps and Owotn. j.'bervd:0eM0^>T0a FREE. c* Aaotm HOPEWELL CLARKE. Cnrrmrl Mlormr Bt-Pni wirm^anjioTA yme DTOTITK [digestion follows their me Bold ^ by dmroijtB or sent by maH. Box ? I 1 HIV AS 6 CHEMICAL, (W., Kew Twk. I m Itaor one doobte thai / wecaasnrothoiaortobblood nmlsfthttsss ? specialty. ikssssfflj#^* financial backing1 If ?i00,000. When rnuMIlt}, ide potanium, aarsapaiilla or Hot Spring! foil, we irantee a cur??and oar Uatrio Cyphllene U the only tit tfc&t will care permanently. Positive proof aact led. tree. Coor Rskkot Co.. Chicago. HL ^ weekly ? board wanted; strong youngmechanic wlih tools; reference*. 225 E. 9th St., New York. ^bhehqshJb I ConiDoptlve* and people M who have weak lung* or JUtb> r ma, should use Plso's Cure for H H Consumption. It has eared B thoQnud*. It haa not Injur edooe. It Is Dot bid to take. H It is tbe best cough syrup. H gf Sold everywhere. ?6c. n _ and otbers. Double solo extending i- QUAILITY. Thousands of le BKST they ever had. ASK be p irsuaded into an inferior article lye, There's the Rub!" eferred to >L1Q lersi i EE? TY III niJ womea, i for Ujudt ?? | . .Tou air not mquired toa?d ?pen I or of moo'v with V"Ur an**era. oot IT I *',fn rvtum P?i?rr on Lbr A?anl)ag CouimltlecV siuutn report to you? ?ir" " bu?f" I """ P&y thai Simply wiitroutwhat. it* Cort?-i( n'Urr careful Mudy you Oelieie are U)d others th* otwwcra required to win: and !_ doll //orwMhot if your an?wer*are i ?? | only partuillv rleht you will (till win I , n|rnnt , a just proportion of Ihf full reward J 'iki?k mt Then wnu; your nam* and addrcaa ,, LodfrneaUi your an*wrr? and mm] J . IheuiLou* // gou fail to Kin pou H paaalca. ' j arf 0( ptifed libettt to ft Of. 1 J i, JERSEY CITY, N. J. m 1