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! ; * Hew It May Happen* "Jemlny criokets, she's got the rickets,** whispered one beau to another In the company of a very pretty girl. Truly she was very beautiful, but there was a twitching about the nerves of the face which showed Buffering. "No." said the other, ''It's neuralgia and she's a martyr to it." St. Jacobs Oil was suggested as the world-renowned cure for it. Did she try it? Yes, and was cured by it and?married "one of the fellows" afterwards. The use of the great rvnin tit 111 nr*f hrinir about & TTlRr riage, but In its cure of pain it will bring about conditions of health to make life more enjoyable. No man or woman ought to marry who is a sufferer from chronic pains. We should not wed woe to win only wretoh dness. The robes worn by Louis XIY. on state occasions cost $19,000. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cures ail Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Blnyhamton. N. Y. "Poor Richard's Almaaac" commanded a k the last sale $18. A DwflMH Cannot be Cared A br local application*, as theycannot reach th? diseased portion of the ear. There is only on? way to cure Deafness, and that is by conatitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in. flamed condition of the mucous lining of the ^ Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inMflmned yoQ havqarnmollng sound or imper??rTVct hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will b? destroyed forever; nine cases out ten ar? caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send foz circulars free. P. J. Chesty a Co., Toledo, u. | |dP Sold bv t>rDrelate. 7v. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for chlldret teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottli Karl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the complexion and cures constipation. 25 cts.. 50 cts., SL Alter six years' suffering I was cured bj Piso's Cure.?Maby Thompson, 29x Ohio Ave. Allegheny. Pa., March 19.1894. It afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle Crip-Poison Ivy * A professional nurse, well known la Massachusetts, says: "After a severe cold, followed by the grip, I gave up siok and took to my bed. I employed physicians without relief and determined :o try Hood's SarsaIparilla. I took one tfly' Tfl bottle and I was feeling muoh better. ] j \ J continued with the . / second bottle and In jt A\ ^ the middle of May I staitedfor my home, I or rat^er summer 5gEKPMjig|^ residence, at Brew* ster, Cape Cod. Whll? SHliS-?tiiere j game in con* tact with poison ivy and my hands becama very sore. I continued to take Hood's Sarsaparllla, and in s short time it overcame > my affliction and gave me renewed health, so that after the first of July IwtH able to do my work and now feel in the best of health." 6ahaii J. Chapman, Brewster, Mass. Hood's5^ Cures Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and | ? emcientiy, on tne liver ana poweis. S Y S u?50 iTiy I ! I Them All, | <> 'J j [ ' Every v i> Tom, # ! t Dick 1 11 and Harry's ([ : | > Buckwheat, ]1 i\then ^ | 5 try , I 1 je ( 1 ( *%%%%%%%*%%%%%%* DAD WAY'S " PILLS, For the rare of all (Unorder* of the Stomach, Liver Bowel*, Kidney*, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, "Lorn of Appetite, Headache, Constipation, Costlveneu , Indigestion, Biliousness, Fever, Inflammation of thi Bowels, Plies, and all derangements of the Interna! Viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury. minerals or deleterious drug*. OBSERVE I the following lymptoms resulting from Disease fll the Digestive Organs: Constipation, In war 1 Plies Fullness of the Blood in the Head, Acidity of tb? 1 Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullness of Weight In the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Blnklnz or Fluttering of the Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when in a lying posture, Dimness of Vision, Dizziness on rising suddenly, Dots ot Webs before the Sight, Fever and Dull Pain In th? Head, Deffldency of Perspiration, Yellowness of th< and Eyes, Pain In the Side, Chest, Limbs and Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning In the Flesh. I A few doses of RAD WAY'S PI1.LS will fres I .1- st# all +Ha akAva 1 Price 25 ct*. per box. Sold by all druggist*. RADWAY ?te CO., NEW YORK. WALTER BAKER & GO. r - The Largest Manufacturers oC rUA PURE, HICH CRADK jSL COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES VMn On thli ConUaint, bin rtceirtd HIGHEST AWARD8 from th* frt*t f M Industrial and Food | |M EXPOSITIONS A; JfRli Europe and America. WH fjwjfy if' Unlike the Dutch l'roce?i, no AlktTKStfcWZj4L?Jlllc? or other Chemlc*l? or Djes ?r? " cued In ibt of their preriratloni... Their dellcieui BREAKFAST COCOA ! ?b?oluUly part *nd tolublt, *ad coiu Itu than ens cent a cup, V OLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER&CO. DORCHESTER, MA88. j PHYTOLACCA BERRY TREATMENT I for Fat and Attendant Ills. Our Leaflet on this | iubjeo t Is sent Free and U well worth reading; treat- i l ment Inexpensive and only safe one known. Address Boeuicxe s. Tafel, Pharmacists. 1011 Arch St., Phlltdelphla. Pa. Bualaew Established In 1835. . MM W)R?8 WH?RE Ail ELSE FAILS. |U { ' " The New National Library. The plans of Librarian SpofFord and Superintendent Green, of th9 new Congressional Library building, at Washington, include an ingenious device for supplying books to the Capitol. They expect to meet the demands of Senators and members of the House for literature from the Nation's vast store through an underground conduit constructed between the two buildings. At present the books are obtained bv nersonal application to an assistant librarian. The new library building i is only about 200 yards from the Cap- 1 itol buildings, and it is believed that the obstacle of distance can be overcome by the construction of an underground passageway and the use of a pulley with an ingenious car, which 1 has been invented specially for this purpose. I! A pneumatic tube is also to be emI ployed for the purpose of ordering books. A portion of the books now in the library, about 70,000 volumes of them, will be left in their present quarters for still greater convenience. ?New Orleans Picayune. Don't Fold Tour Arms. One careful mother teaches her children never to fold their arms across their chests. She says it must of necessity tend to contract what should, on the contrary, have everything done to broaden it, says an exchange. Instead of this common practice she in sists that the growing children shall, in standing, contract the habit of crossing the arms behind the back, alleging that as mnch good will come from this habit as harm from the other.?New York World. General (Jourko. General Gonrko, the well-known Rusbian officer, has resigned as Military Governor of the city of Warsaw. GENERAL GOURKO. It is stated that the reason for this action is because General Gourko, who was one of the military heroes of the Russo-Tnrkieh War, is not in harmony with the pacificatory policy of the new Czar. Character Told in Wrinkles. An Italian scientist, M. Montegaz| zo, has written an essay upon the science of wrinkles. He believes one's history can be largely told by the ! lines upon the face. Entering into a description of the different varieties and their meaning, he says: "Horizontal lines across the forehead are found even in children who are rickI ets or idiots, and that being out in the sun with the eyes unshaded will produce them prematurely, but they are natural at forty or earlier. Ver- * tide lines between the eyes denote thought and study, since deep concentration contracts the eyebrows; grief and worry produce the same affect, and, frequently repeated, either leaves a permanent fold in the skin. Arched wrinkles just above the nose indicate extreme suffering, either mental or physical!. The earliest wrinkles of all and the most unavoidabe are tho*e "which ran from either side of the nostril down to the month, and these are produced by smiling and even the motion of the jaws in masti; eating?a warning to gum-chewera 1" ?New York Advertiser. Shark Lore From Hawaii. A tiger shark was caught recently off the coast of Maul, near Kaanapali, Hawaii. Inside it were eighteen little sharks about two feet long. This ovoviviparous characteristic of some species of sharks has probably given rise to many of the Hawaiian superstitions about these monsters of the t>ea. Some years ago a monster female shark was caught near the Island of Kauai. Inside of her were found fifty-two young sharks. It is not known to many that the terrible teeth of the Bhark are flexible and at the will of the fish lie flat in rows, 60 that no teeth are apparent. As it appears tnat tne lemaie protects ner young dj opening her month and permitting them to ran into her body, it is evident that the power to lay the teeth down on a flat surface is a provision of nature by which the young sharks can be taken in and out of the body without being injured by the teeth.? Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Celebrated Team < The accompanying illustration, 6ay lent photograph of the trotting dog Ma uy lUOOlCi XUUiUijr Iiuuu,i/i jJiauMUAU, Major, who is considered one of the be? bought for fifty cents, but his owner ha< been in about forty mces, matchcd acrai and foot runners, and has taken first m second place in those. Major's principal fair, -where he left six of the fastest Inili behind in a half mile, doing the dista and was never known to break. His against any trotting dog with a running ling by Major. t Mrs. Lease in Calilornie. Mrs. Mary Lease, the Kansas Populist and orator, is in California, and if she follows out her present plans she will soon become a resident of a Scandinavian colony near Fresno. She owns twenty acres and will b"" more, MARY A. LEASE. plant the whole to raising grapes, and build a good house. She says she .is weary of politics and -wants to get rest where she can look out on the mountains. Sne can get neither rest nor mountain scenery in Kansas, so she comes to California. Ac Electric Needle. The electric needle is simply a fine needle connected with one of the poles of an electric battery. When used it is inserted in the flesh, a second needle, attached to the other pole, is brought near to the firBt on the outsidA nf thft flesh and the electric cur rent turned on. The current enters the flesh on the first needle and passes through the flesh to the second needle, burning with the eleotrio spark that part of the flesh through which the current passes. The needle is used for removing hair from the face of women; it removes the hair and burns the roots out without much pain at the time, but it is apt to injure the skin finally, and in the case of sensative persons has produced immediate bad results.?New York Dispatch. Millionaire, but Mule Driver. M. Max Lebaudy, the young French millionaire, is now a mule driver in milirorTT I liiO J. uiu uvjuauiua u* vuv ******????. j train at Fountainebleau. He was allowed four days' grace after the ordinary conscripts, and oddly began his duties on Wednesday last. It was reported that he -would escape service, owing to weakness of the heart, but he has been declared fit by the army doctors, and will have to remain in the service for three years. M. Max Lebaudy has hired a house at Fountainebleau, with large stabler attached for his horses and roomy quarters for his servants.?London Telegraph. Odd Names lor Toung Birds, There are some odd names for game birds far down the Chesapeake. A small shy snipe that flies with a twit* tering noise is called the horsefoot snipe, because of its fondness for the horsefoot or horseshoe crab. It is called also the turnstone, from its habit of overturning Debbles in search of food. The telltale snipe bears that name because it always sounds a note of alarm at the sight of a gunner. Chesapeake gunners believe that a single telltale can clear a whole region of game birds. The widgeon is locally called the bald pate, and the willet is so called because of its cry, "Willwill-willet."?Chicago Herald. The Indians called the French Broad River Tockyeste the "Little Roarer." An Interrupted Conversation. ji Trotting Dogs. s the Chicago Times, is from an exceljor and his running mate Bod, owned Out.,who also appears in the picture, it trotting dogs in the country, was i just refused $200 for him. He has in<?t ponies, roadsters, running dogs, " ? ] oney in all but two of them, getting 1 raco was at the Six Nations Indians' iau 1 ian foot-runners from 200 to 300 yards f nee in 1.34. He is a square trotter 1 owner is willing to match his team < mate in the country. Bob is a year- ? 1 < . . . CURIOUS FACTS. Books were printed in Scotland as early as 1509. The Chinese Government levies a regular tax on beggara. A pound of sheep's wool produces one square yard of cloth. The are 9742 locks and keys in the Grand Opera House, Paris. Berlin is to have an international matrimonial newspaper, printed in three languages. Frozen turtle fro* the South Seas is now on its way from Queensland to London as an experiment. Mudie's Circulating Library in London has 3,500,000 books constantly in circulation and employs 178 people. The little town of Parker, Neb., is one place where toeing the line and Bpelling down isn't gone out of tasnion. At an auction sale in London a postage stamp described as "Baden, first issue 9k green, error of color," brought #500. By an Italian law, every oircus which does not perform every act promised in the printed programme is liable to a heavy fine. Dr. Vilicin. of Cincinnati, Ohio, had such a big nose that he could scarcely see over it. A Berlin surgeon has cut it down to moderate Bize. The cap of the "Washington Monu LUG lib JO a yy 1 ULU1U.U1 LUUQO \JL OiULUlnum, weighing 100 ounces. When this was made aluminum was $3 a pound. Captain Theodore Wilkes, of Shelbyyille, Ind., declares that a cat in his family has adopted a half grown rat, and treats it as if it were one of its kittens. A genius in Ashtabula, Ohio, has invented what, he calls "indestructible wedding cake." It looks tempting to the palate, but is not intended to be eaten. It will keep for years. The romantic gorge of Trenton Palls, New Jersey, has suffered a great injury, from the scenic point of view, in the quarrying of limestone at the brink of the cliffs and the casting of the debris, thousands of tons of rock, . into the ravine. Several curious objeots have been anearthed from Etruscan tombs, the ase of which for a long time was conjectural. It was at length aaoertoine 1 that they mast have been the heads of walking canes, probably belonging to the dudes of 2500 years ago. A petition, has been sent to the Turkish Government for the restoration at public expense of the supposed grave of Aaron, the high prieBt and brother of Moses. The grave is on Mount Hor, in the district of Elhadshr, a part of the Turkish province of Arabia Petraca. Near Rockledge, Fla., a farmer discovered a tramp asleep in his barn. He sent for the town marshal to have the man arrested, but when the tramp was being questioned it was discovered thai, ho was & lone-lost brother of the farmer. He was then invited into the honse and the fatted calf was killed for him. Earthenware was not commonly nsed for plates until tha seventeenth century, its place being supplied by wood, pewter or precious meUiS. Wooden or "treen" platters were often merely square boards, a fashion whioh was retained in the dining hall of Winchester College, England,- until very modern times. The Leap of the Salmon. A few years ago I had occasion to say something about the leaping powers of the Atlantic salmon, and what I said was criticised by a well known angling authority. I mentioned that it was reported that salmon in Norwegian rivers had jumped up and over an obstruction sixteen feet high. My friend and critio contended that salmon could not jump to exceed six feet. I then bronchi forward evidence from a number of anglers, fishing inspectors, fish commissioners, etc., in this country and in Europe to show that salmon had made leaps ranging from ten to sixteen feet, and still my critio was not.convinced. Under date of October 23, 1891, Professor A. Land* mark, inspector of freshwater fisheries for Norway, writes me from Christiania about his experiments in marking salmon and sea trout for the purpose of observing their migrations, and he has this to say about the leap of the salmon: "Concerning the height that salmon can jump under favorable circumstances there is in one place in Norway undeniable evidence that salmon sometimes have made a perfectly clear jump of sixteen feet (perpendicular height). No doubt a jump of the said height is quite unusual; but having myself examined the spot where the occurrence had taken place, and heard the evidence of persons who hav< themselves witnessed it, I cannot doubt the fact."?Forest and Stream. The Lucky Mckel Has Begun Well. Fortune has been showering her favors upon the family of Amos Miller, of "Whitneyville, recently, and they claim it is all due to a nickel. The day on which Mr. Miller left home to go to sea he pave his wife a nickel to treasure up for luck for the family, and this is the result in one short week: His eldest daughter has been engaged to teach school, the next one was called to a good situation, n Japanese hen hatched a brood of v- -i-- ?i---i. r?11 l CDlOivB WlilCU UXU 1U.11 Ui ugllb, OUIUC one shot the family cat, and the vessel in which Mr. Miller sailed arrived in Salem one hour ahead ol the storm which split another vessel which sailed at the same time, from stem to stern.?Kennebec (Me.) Journal. lord Russell's Ruse. The Lord Chief Justin was too smart for the jurymau who ou Saturday sought to be excused from serving. 1 'On what ground ?" asked his lordship. Ehe man approached with his hand to biB ear and said: "I'm deaf, my lord, md cannot hear the evidence." "You ;an go," said Lord Russell in a whisper. "Thank you, my lord," replied the juryman, taken off h;-B guard. But the learned judge had not Itnished hi? sentence, and he sternly added, "jutu the box and do your duty !" The man juailed and obeyed in 6omo confusion it the failure of his ruse.?Weotminiter Budget. "WORDS OF WISDOM, Unreasonable egotism is disputing. He is the greatest coward who fears himself. Looking for trouble is one way to make it. Where is the man who lovee his enemies? Praise when you can; censure when you must. Every day you should learn something new. Distrust of others is the result of distrust of self. Ardor in love is the great conquerer of female hearts. Men's follies often cost them more than their wants. The fool thinks his death would leave a hole in the world. It is well enough to be critical, but it is better to be sensible. The woman who tries to be masculine betrays her ignorance. A woman will never confess to thirty until she has reached forty, A Curiosity ot Lunacy, There is a special form of mental disease first described in France, whose definite character is given to it by its periodicity, and hence it is called folie circulaire. In it there are three sections of the mental circle that the patient moves in, namely, ele vation, depression and sanity, and in this round he spends his life, passing out of one into another, for it is, when fully established, a very incurable disease. The patient takes an attack of mania, during which he is joyous,restless, troublesome, extravagant and often vicious. He eats voraciously, sleeps little and never seems to tire. His temperature is a degree or so above the normal, his eye is bright and glistening, he is enamored of the other sex, he shows diminished self* control and no common sense. This lasts for a few weeks, or a few months more commonly, and then he passes sometimes gradually and sometimes rather suddenly into a condition of depression, during which he is sluggish, dull, looking differently, dressing differently, eating differently, fearful, unreliant and sedentary in habits. This state will last a few weeks or months, and the patient will brighten up into what seems reoovery, and is to all intents and purposes in his normal state. This, again, lasts for a few weeks or months, and he gradu ally gets morbidly elevated. Xou find he is passing through every minute mental phase and habit he did at first; depression follows as before, and then sanity; and this round of three states of feeling, of intellect, of volition and of nutrition goes on, oircle after circle, till the patient dies. He lives three lives.?The Hospital, A Big Cedar. G. A. Dyer, of this city, has the largest tree on exhibition ever shown in the State, says the Tacoma (Wash.) News. It is a cedar, cut near Ocosta, Wash. It took eight men twenty-four days to cut and load it on the car. The part exhibited consists of fourteen feet of the butt, together with sections of the roots. The marked features of this tree are that it was solid to the base. After it was felled it was split into sections that could be handled and the centre taken out. It is now set ? /mama iVv a AYNVkAAVifl up, bu LliUt uum mo uu;oiuu IV o^oaxo I in its original state, bnt within it is hollow, into which entrance is made through a door. Mr. Dyer says the tree was 407 feet in height, and that it measures seventy feet in circumference. This includes the "ins and outs" of the base, while at an elevation of thirty-three feet its diameter was fourteen feet It was sixty feet to the first limb, which iB said to be seven feet in diameter. The iirst 300 feet was fifteen feet in diameter at the butt, tapering to one foot at the top. Some one estimated the board measurement at 100,000 feet. If this is correct the tree would have cut 10,000,000 Star A shingles, or 100 carloads. The tree will be taken East for exhibition. Coloring Wood. To produce upon new wood the appearance of age is something upon which a great deal of time, money and thought has been expended. A new dye or stain that promises to be more satisfactory than any heretofore used, is made by adding to one thousand parts of water fifty parts of commercial alizarin. Into this the ammonia is put, drop by drop, until a portion of the liquid taken from the bulk and agitated gives off a distinct ammonia odor. This stain will color maple to a red brown, giving it the appearance of age that is so much desired by lovers of fine furniture. Under the same treatment, oak takes on a yellow A^av.fvnofmflnf. TTifV* /^alrnnm chloride gives a much darker and richer color. The value of many sorts of wood is greatly increased by dark coloring, and asthis stain strikes deep into the wood, it is at once practical and of a good deal of commercial importance.?New York Ledger. Mixed Those Babies Up. A most curious affair recently occurred at Fort Howard. A married woman of that city and her marriec daughter reside in the same house aua one day last week both gave birth to baby boys of about the same complexion, weight and size. Several neighbors were in soon after, and in passing the babies around for inspection they became mixed, and now the mothers will never know whether they broughl up their own child or not. The mothers don't care so much, but the fathers insist the dilemma is serious.? HnVnok /Wio \ \nrfliu'ocforn V^OIXI/OJU I 1 f J -WA VJ_k ?r VMVW* In Olden Time* People overlooked the importance of peJma nently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient t ction, but now that It is generally known tin t Syrup of Figs will permanently cure lialiitual constipation, well-informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally injure the system. A Tlriarlit Eye Is a sign of good health nnd if the stomach is not in the best of conditions the eyes will show It. Uipans Tubules will make the stomach right and keep the eyes bright and clear. Explosions of Coughing are stopped by Hole's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache DroD9 Cure in one minute. ? / . Music in China and Japan. Nations which have the gift of aristic coloring and harmony of design are almost invariably lacking in the harmony of mnaical sound. Chinese and Japanese music is monotonous in the extreme, and their singing has been aptly compared "to a series of monotonous, hich-toned falsetto notes. resembling the sad howling of the wind in a storm or the wail of a banshee." This arises, not from physical incapacity, but from want of knowledge of music as an art. There are no sweet singers among Japanese and Chinese birds. The lark, blackbird, nightingale, thrush and mocking bird are unknown, so the melancholy cries of the gull, the hawk, and the kite seem to serve as models for the wails and shrieks of their uncultured human voices.?Detroit Free Press. A Biff Bear. The largest bear killed in Cambria County for many years was [taken to Altoona by James Campbell, of Dean Township, this county. It is of the genuine black mountain variety, and tipped the scales at 350 pounda Campbell took it to the Farmers' Hotel, where it is on exhibition. It waH a magnificent specimen, and attracted a great deal of attention. Qld bear hunters say they have seldom seen such an animal. The most re markable features in connection witn it is that it met its death at the hands of Mr. Campbell's son, a lad only fourteen years of age. Bear is reported to be plentiful in that section.?Patton (Penn.) Courier. Wembley Park, in London, -will shortly be the proud possessor of a tower 175 feet higher than the famous Eiffel structure at the Paris Exposition. The Greatest ftedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DONALD KENNEDY, Of ROXBUAY, MASS. Got this Letter day before yesterday. T> V XT V OS 7BOA i C/C4 J. Uftf 1T?2?) iTVV* AUt/Z* Tour Discovery has done so much for me I am only too glad to tell everybody about my case. When I began taking it, one year ago last July, 1 had DYSPEPSIA in its iworst form. I was constipated, so much so as to always use injections, and I had a constant PAIN in my STOMACH and LEFT SIDE. My knees were stiff, and I could not sit down on a stool or get down to fix anything on the floor. But now I can sit, or get down on my knees, or do anything in my garden. I , feel like a new person. You must know I was discouraged, as I have lost two... Bisters and an older brother with STOMACH TROUBLE. But I truly believe if they had known of your remedies they would be well, as I am. You can fix up my letter to suit yourself, only do publish it, that women may know what the Discovery has done for me. Yours truly, Mrs. MARY C. AYRES. Send postal card far Or. Kennedy's Book. I ENGINES | \ AND BOILERS r For all purposes requiring f a power. Automatic, Corliss A W A rinmrvMinH Hop. W \ izontafi Vertical Boilers. A r Complete Steam Plants. f ( B.W.PAYNE&S0N8, } f K. v.o?,^lmlrl1 MV- t J 41 JJeydt. \ BEECHAJ (Veg? What The Biliousness indigestion J ^ uyspcjjbia udu taDLt. in sick headache foul breath bilious headache loss of appe when these conditions are cau stipation is the most frequen One of the most imporl learn is that constipation ca ness in the world; and it c; the book. Writ#* tn R P. Allpn C!nn York, for the little book on < sequences and correction); sei reach of a druggist, the pills w " He that Works Easily Wor Easy io Cleai SAPC ( Weak I w and all women who are nursin A ceivable benefits from the nou] | Scott's E V AMiKditii ill i k This is the most nourishing fo 0 riches the mother's milk an< Y makes babies fat and gives r J children than all the rest of th< Scott's Emulsion has been twenty years for Eickets, Marasn # Coughs, Colds, Weak Lungs, Emaci J Sendfor pamphlet on Sc f Scott & Bowne, N. Y. All D ' Ir : , . ' - " ' * ' ' k THE BUSINESS MAN'S LUNCH Hard Work and Indigestion so Hand in Hand. Concentrated thought, continued in, robs the stomach of necessary blood, and this Is also true of hard physical labor. When a five horse-power engine Is made to do ten horse-power work something it going to break. Very often the hardworked mau coming from the field or thfr office Will "bolt" his food in a few minutes which will take hours to digest Then too, many foods are about as useful in the stomach as a keg of nails would be in a fire under a boiler. The ill-used stomach refuses to do its work without the proper stimulus which it gets from the blood and nerves. The nerves are weak acd " ready to break," because they do not get tha nourishment they require from the blood, finally the ill-used brain is morbidly wide awake when the overworked man attempts to find rest in bed. The application of common sense in th? treatment of the stomach and the whole system brings to the busy man the fell enisromont nf 1if>? and hfalthv r1ior??stJon when lie takes Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets to relieve a bilious stomach or after a too hearty meal, and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery to purify, enrich and vitalize the blood. The " Pellets " are tiny sugar-coated pills made of highly Concentrated vegetable ingredients which relieve the stomach of all offending matters easily and thoroughly. They need only be taken for a short time to cure the biliousness, constipation and slothfulness, or torpor, of the liver; then th?? "Medical Discovery" should be taken in teaspoonful doses to in* crease the blood and enrich it It has a peculiar effect upon the lining membranes of the stomach and bowels, toning up and strengthening them for all time. The whole system feels the effect of the pure blood coursing through the body and the nerves are vitalized and strengthened, not deadened, or put to sleep, as the so-called celery compounds and nerve mixtures do ?but refreshed and fed on the food they need for health. If you suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia, nervousness, and any of the ills which come from impure blood and disordered stomach, you can cure yourself with Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery which can be obtained at any drug store in the country, i ? Well People i i i ao not neea meaicme. Certainly not But sometimes they Lave a headache or feel bilious?perhaps a little dizzy. This is the Warning. Ripans Tabules, taken at such times, will keep people well. EASTMAN . /S hnv mnai # > national Business CoJ-^\ / legeand Shorthand/45K*Z & SCHOOL, affords the best preparation X^XJkJTVin BookJteety for business /lnguilBulntM ycmtcmt ShortPni?tiAn^Z /hand andTypewrrt/ #\^fV / ng. Penmanahlp, Earfm^ed/l^^^/il?l?B?nd Modem* EanS8# // guages. For Catalogue, TV across CLEMENT 0. / CU\^ /GAINES, President, 80 Waih/ / lngton St., Foughkeepsle, B? T. //* EASTMAN HALMS^i^Ctiewing Gum O Oures and Prevents Rheumatism, Indigestion, ft, Dyspepsia, Heartburn. Catarrh aud Asthma. . ? Useful la Malaria and Fevers. Cleanses the ? \ Teeth and Promotes the Appetite. Sweetens \ A the Breath, Cure* theTobacco Habit. Endorsed # \ by the Medical Faculty. Send tor 10,15 or 23 T A cent package. Silver. Stamps or Fottal Kote. A V GEO. R. HALM, 140 West 29th >fc, New York. ? m PILLS cmuicj :y Are For i sallow skin | the mouth pimples torpid liver tite depression of spirits sed by constipation; and coat cause of all of them. :ant things for everybody to uses more than half the sickan all Tip nrfvpnted. Co bv lpany, 365 Canal street, New Constipation (Its causes conit free. If you are not within ill be sent by mail, 2^ cents. ks Successfully." *Tis very 1 House With JLIU Mothers i g babies, derive almost incon- W rishing properties of 4 Emulsion I od known to science. It en- m 1 gives her strength. It also A aore nourishment to growing % 3 food they eat. " prescribed by physicians for iu8, "Wasting Diseases of Children, y lation and Oonsumption. + otCs Emulsion. FREE. a ruggiats. - 50 cents and ^\i . !