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r 1 1II WIFE'S HEWS = [ Are weak and she suffers fcerribl]' from nervousness, headaohe anld loss of e leep. Such is the testimony of many a man. The poor, tired woman is eufferting from Impure and Impoverished blood. I Her food c oes not digest. She is living! on hor nerves, her *v TTuiv nnrvpR ntld muscles ' / DAINTY BODICES. THEY ABE THE IMPORTANT FEATURE OF COSTUMES. Two Waists and One Skirt Are Enough?A New Semi-Masculine Hat?Proper Coats for IMICllKiu u 6VUV< | NEED STRENGTHENING By the use of Hood's Saraapar 11a which makes pure, rloh blood, creates ai r appetite, . and gives tone to all the organs of the body. This is not what we saw, It is what Hood's Baraaparilla does. " Mhr wife began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla abopt three months ago. She has been in poor health for 115 years. Hood's is doing her Roid. Her appetite is better, she looks better land therefhas been I Improvement in every J. W. Eobrb ok, Greenfield, Tennessee. Hood's JL .!.%%%%%% parilla Be Sure to get J1(*gS V - Hood's Hood't Pills are th? best after-dinner Pills, assist digestion, prevent constipation. j 1 ? ^Turned the Tables oi His Batcher. A wild hog belonging to1 John Holmes escaped from Daniel H^wley'e \,V slaughter pen at Dianondale, Mich., and started to swim tin Grand Hirer. When it reaohed the middle ihe i beast turned, and, swimming to shoire, at' taoked Hawley. The mn fonghrt with all the rigor he possess?, but anally - turned and ran for his Ife. Twice tha I brute overtook iiAWiey,xne nreci nme tearing his trousers ui( the second time throwing him dowi The smell of blood seemed to makethe hog even ,^-more furious and he would have StilledHawleyhad not hlf a dozen men, armed with pitohfoks and e Hovels, come to the butcbr's rescue. Hawley escaped with a fey brui#d*.? St. Louis Globe-Democra. {: * Amulets now born by n?ble families in India are believed to have been handed down 2000 years. 'Tit Strange But Tine. We read of strange happening and retain sometimes, like that of a mm wlio nras caught by a revolving wheel and so threiheil against floor and celling his bodytnraei bine from the braises. A doctor writes If a man who fell from a ladder and' was covfad with braises. He, the doctor, applied St. Jacobs Oil; in the morning, he says, ail the bine spots had disappeared. ^There is inother way of feeltng oJne all ovter, and tiat 'i? afrnr th? Anrlnmnim or nnfnft ai?d acheS or a long time without relief. Up e the g*at \ remedy for pain at once; It will cure ad I -change the color of your woes. ? Blabber, the fat of sea animals, costs pn cents a pound in Lapland. _ Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cures . ; all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Blnghamton. N. Y. In 1542 Italian oranges were sold in Bone | for twenty cents a thousand. Thb Grip of Pneumonia may be warded of II With Hale's Honey or Horahtrand and Tar. r Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute br Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for ohildrel ICOmillKt WiVCllO WJC ? IWUW3 laiUUllWIft ? Hon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 21c. abottl< Brings comfort and improvement and lends to personal enjoyment when . lightly nsea. The many, who live betk ;ter than others and enjoy life more, with Ii ten expenditure, oy more prompuy ! adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest . 1 the value to health o? the pure liquid ' laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Svrup of Figs. ' \!. * Its excellence is due to its presenting i Jn the form most acceptable and pleas* ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly ) beneficial properties of a perfect lax. j stive: effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers > ana permanently curing constipation. i It has given satisfaction to millions and : (met with the approval of the medical r profession, because it acts on the K5d* neys, Liver and Bowels withont weak* f ; ening them and it is perfectly free from ' every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all draggists in 60c ana $1 bottles, but it is main* ufactured by the California Fig Syrmp Co. only, whose name is printed on every ?i oVbim a!m> tViP namt ficmn nf Mnls and being well informed, you will cd)t ; accept any substitute if offered. | '"""^" wdRLD'S-FAIR "* P X HIGHEST AWARD S a "SUPERIOR NUTRITION-THE LIFE:' i 1 ^P|)| 0REAr 1 ^wjE>rDictir<rAi^ I FOOD Has justly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for S ?^The-Aged. I An Incomparable Aliment for the g Growth and Protection of INFANTS and II children i A superior nutritive in continued Fevers, I And a reliable remedial agent 1 in all gastric and enteric diseases; I often in instances of consultation oyer ^ patients whose digestive organs were re- '** duced to such a low and sensitive condition s that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was | the only nourishment the stomach I would tolerate when LIFE seemed E depending on its retentiona And as a FOOD it would be difficult to j conceive of anything more palatable. 3 5o!d by DRUGGISTS. Shipping: Depot, 1 JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. i n lUKjr If cat. PESPITE tbe fact tliat textures are costly and modish trimmings are expensive and that elaborate details seem to be absolutely necessary adjuncts of stylish costumes, those who have that enviable and desirable gift of economy ?that has a certain element like real genius in it?may dress handsomely, becomingly and appropriately this season with comparatively little expense. The love of dress, of color, of ohoioe fabrics, of ornament is not to be despised as muoh as some philosophers would have us *11 believe, for in dress can be expressed just as muoh as in other things, high ideals of beauty, grace and exoellenoe. The lavishneia and splendor of the toilets of this jay stimulate even the most righteous woman of limited wealth with a desire to dress somewhat in the mode of her richer sister. Glass distinctions seem to be more easily recognizable by dress this year than heretofore. In the beautiful time? perhaps, nearer than most people think?when courtesy, kindliness, mental and moral wealth will be the chief olaimB to distinction, splendor of raiment will be subversive to higher attributes of face and form. But until that period reaches its noontime, it behooves the prideful woman, who knows whM. extraordinary value the Mi f 1 t Ri? j TOR THE CONCKBT. majority of people place upon dress? to look well to the ways and stays and material and cat and trimming of her bodice. The bodice is the masterpiece of the costume this year. In all years a beautifully hanging skirt is desirable?and there are many who will consider this season's full skirt worthy of more than a passing note. But fine skirts, like good manners, should be, and let us hope are? "such a matter, of course," as to need no word to distinguish them. But the bodices! In tnem is victory or aeieat. xne won a belongs to the wise. One black skirt and three bodices?even two- will en| able a woman who understands herself j to Appear perfectly well dressed and with the ease that always comes with the consciousness of being well dressed at any of the numerous social functions of the winter. v j No. 1, in the double column illustration, is a charming bodice adaptable also for demi-toillette or full ei ening dress. It is composed of soft gi een silk draped around the figure so asjnot to reveal the seams. The yoke an d undeiv sleeves are of bright cyclamen pink velvet outlined back and fr< nt by Bruges lace, the color of old ivt ry. It is peppered with tiny jet bej ds and is draped very effectively in a cascade at the right side, ending in a bpw and single scarf end. The yoke ami sleeves of velvet may be removed al/taAnva on/9 +i?o triaifinrr nnflfrimo be thus instantly transformed into a concert dreBs or dinner gown. The folly puffed upper sleeves are of green silk jadorned with lace. A chiffon yoke and Innder sleeveB of yellow might also be used with artistio results. This bodiro could be appropriately worn with! a black, a green, or cyclamen pinkltirt. Ncl 2 is distinctively an evening bodi? but an economical genius can adapw* easily to afternoon requirement! if occasion requires. It is white? chesse satin. The insertions of wlBjace that trim the corsage in diagoBrV bands are brought out in prexty relief by the pale green silk over vhioh the insertions are made. The decolletage is finished with an ex quisita berthe of tulle and lace. A most artistic touch of color is given to thete pale tints by the clusters of velvet dahlias toned from pale pink to deepest purple?which decorate the corsage. A neckband of velvet, tint of the dahlias which oruament it on | either title, is a pretty adjunct ot tnis 1 bodice. SEMI-MASCULINE HAT. the new semi-mascnline hnt H^Bow so much in vogue. Really. BBMBw, it can't be called "pretty,: HS^^Layhap, it has a pretty face RHH, and even then it is more make the pretty face look j^^^^Han to be enhanced by the ^9h|H All the same, it is la mode, SB^Hends it. It is of black silk BS& shining as a silk brush can H^^^^Rnd has a wide reaching bow velvet, with a plain silver Si - V ^Inted squarely in front, and s *KBack ostrich plume standing b H H'u the crown at the side. & V or may not be a band of the B Hut the crowD, and likewise -.A,'. . . ; .. Ml yon can lay some lace over the velvet, but the strict idea is to leave it entirely masculine, except for the bow in front The collarette is one of the newest SEMI-MASCUTJJTS HAT. designs, with a delicate little silver throat buckle, through which a threeinch ribbon is run, with two loops of the same standing out at the sides. FANCIES IN FCTE. Muffs are enormous, and the retloule bags are now made of sealskin or fancy velvets. Boas are decidedly short, to replace the idiotic little sables, whose numberless legs and tails we have grown so tired of. Victorines in quaint new shapes are being made in sealskin with borders of grebe, or vice versa, in chinchilla, skunk and caracul. Very large capes fof fur are greatful to matrons who prefer comfort to smartaess; they are to have slits, to let out the arms, which, if not V A / J .2..' A NSW CKEPON GOWN. pretty, are at least practical. High for collars, with - a little cape attaohed, are also much worn and are nhftrTmnDF finishing tonfihes to a vel vet cape or a plain jacket. Long pelisses of the ulster type, but muoh befrilled and trimmed, and all split open at the side to allow for width of skirt will be much worn. These coveralls are undeniably useful, as any old skirt can be worn with them if it has a fair amount of respectability left Some will be made with a cape and armholes instead of sleeves. Jackets arq all more or less of the coaching or reefer type, out steel and other elaborate buttons entering into the design. PROPER COATS FOB WINTER. A plain tailor finish is preferred for all cloth coats, the only garniture being velvet or fur, if any kind iB used at alL But for the coats of richer laoricD, almost anytmng in xne -way 01 garniture is permissible. So it is that COAT FOE "WINTER 'WEAR. fur and lace, pcold, silver and steel beading and passementerie, feathers, velvet and moire enter into most unique combinations, forming wrapa tnat would seem to be out of their j sphere off the 6tage if used with any , other than a masquer's costume. EVENING SILKS. i i Evening silks in the style of thirty 1 ye.-ir* sm,'o are the height of modern i!> ' A _1 _ 11 i ijisiuoii. a puun coior, yeuovv, rose or biue, is covered in the 'weaving with a delicate pattern which resembles honeycomb, and over this are chine flowers. An imported white silk gown displays the styles that wore worn in the fifties. The skirt has lnce tunic drapery in front, caught up on the sides with large bows of green and blue shot velvet, while at the back two breadths of white moire with wreathes of roses in chine pattern represent sash ends. The back of the bodice is of green velvet and the full front of the chine moire. f CALENDAR FOR 1895. PMllliliiii ; J?a. ... ... i * 3 4 5, J??y - * ?i 3) 4 5 6 ( 7 I o 10 ii n 7 8 9 IO li 12 13 13 14 1516 17 18 19 1415:6(17181920 ao 31 23 33 34 Q 36 3ij? 23j24 35 26 27 27 jg 30 3* . ^ ^ 3* ! Feb i a Au* i a| 3 345??? 9 4567# J? 10 it 13 is 14 15 IB " ia 13 n IS *6 17 17 it 10 30 ai ia 13 il 19 $ at ia 33 34 ft 35 36 37 38 as 36 37 38 29 30 31 Mar 1 a 3 4 5 ? 7 8 9 8ePL 1834567 10111313141516 8 01011131314 17 1819 30 II 331*3 15 10 17 O 19 ao 31 a4 as ft 37 38 39 30 32 3 j 34 35 38 37 il 3i - *9 30 Apr. ... 113456 Oct 1 a 3 4 5 7 8 010 11 ia 13 6 7 8 9 10 11 ia 14 is 1617 18 iq ao 13 14 15 1? 17 6 '9 313333? 35 36 37 ao 11 33 33 34 35 36 383930 ? 1788393031 May 1 a 3 4 Nov is. 5 6 78 0 10 11 3456789 ta 13 14 15 161x7 18 10 11 ia 13 14 15 ft 19 30 II 33 33IO 35 17 18 10 30 31 33 33 ' 363738393031... 34353637383930 ^ai> 3345678 Dec. 1334567 9 10 11 ia 13 14 15 8 9 10 11 ia 13 14 16 17 18 n ao 31 ? 15 ft >7 1819 ao 31 33 34 35 a6 37 38 39 33 33 34 35 20 3718 30 l~l 3930.31I Eclipsed In 1895. Five Eclipses occur In 1895?two of the Moon and three of the Sun?as follows t I. A Total Eclipse of the Moon. March ? Mil i.ii.1 _ 1 mm A Qniifh I JUCD-liCD. VISIOIO in nunu (liiu uvmu America, Europe and Western Asia. This Eclipse will recur March 21st, 1913, whan It will also be total and visible on the west coast of North America and.Asln. II. A partial Eolipse ot the San. March 26tb. Not visible In the United 8iates. Visible in Arctic America, northeast of Hudson's Bay and Greenland, England and Northern Atlantic Ocean. This Eclipse will recnr April 5th. 1913, when it will be larger, and visible In British America and Alaska. IIL A Partial Eclipse ot the Sun, August 20th, invisible in Amerlch; visible In Northwestern Asia and Northeastern Europe. This lEollpse will recur August 31st. 1913, .but smaller, and visible in British America and Greenland. IV. A Total Eolipse o! the Moon, September 3d-4tb, visible in North and South America and Western Europe and Africa. This Eclipse will recur September Utb, 1913, wh?n u will hp fntnl also. the Moon setting eclipsed. It will be visible also in Asia. V. A Partial Eclipse of the 8ud, September 18tb, visible In "the South Pacific Ocean and North Australia. This Eclipse will recur September 29th, 1913, when it will be larger, and visible again in the South Pacific and New Zeland. % The Seasons. Winter begins December fll (1891) and lasts 88 days, 28 hours and 58 minute?. Spring begins March 20 and lasts 92 days, 19 nours and 55 minute?. Summer begins June 21 and lasts 93 days, 14 hours and 27 minutes. Autumn begins September 23 and lasts 89 days, 18 hours and 28 minutes. "Winter begins December 2L Morning Stars. Evening Stars. Venus, after Sept. 19. Venus, nntil Sept. 19. Mars, after Oct. 11. Mars, until Oct. 11: Jupiter, from July 10 Jupiter, until July 1( to Oct. 12. and after Oct. 12. Saturn, until Feb. 5 Saturn, from Feb. I Knd after Nov. 9, I to Nov. 2. Note.?Planets are considered Evening Stars wheh they rise before midnight, and Morning Stars when they rise after midnight. Fixed and Movable Festivals. Epiphany, Jan. 6. Easter Sunday, April Septuagesima Sunday, 14. Feb. 10. Low Sunday. April 21. SexageEima Sunday, Rogation Sunday,May Feb. 17. 19. Qulnquagesima Sun- Ascension Day, May day, Feb. 24. 23. * Shrove Tuesday, Feb. Whitsunday, June 2. 26. Trinity' Sunday, June Ash Wednesday, Feb. 9. 27. Corpus Christ), Juno Quadracesima Sun- 18. day, March 3. Miohaelmas Day,Sept. Mid-Lent Sunday, 29. March 24. Advent Sunday,Dec. X. Palm Sunday, April 7. Christmas Day, Dec. Good Friday, April 12. 25. A BANK DEFAULTER, The Cashier Takes $30,000 F rom the Central National, or uome, ?. *. John E. Bielby, the cashier of the Centra) National Bulk, of Borne, N. Y.. Is a defaulter to the amount of nearly $30,000. The discovery of the defalcation was made by United States Bank Examiner J. Van Yranken, of 8obenectady. Tiro 01 three weeks ago Mr. Van Yranken came through Borne on a regular trip and made examinations ot all the banks, as : usual. At the Central he found what he i thought were indications of crooked work and an attempt to cover np the traces ot the crime. The oulpable man was John E. Bielby, the trusted cashier of the institution. He confronted Mr. Bielby with the proofs of bis guilt and the cashier broke down. He admitted that he had speculated in stocks. He got caught in a downward ' market and used the bank's funds to save j himself. A large part of these were lost. It is said that Bielby has speculated in Cordage I stocks and Manhattan Elevated. Bielby confessed that he had taken aboat $27,000. TTJ? *QA AAA JUJ9 UUUVW (UO 1 Ul V^VfUVVi Mr. Bielby's peculations 'have been going t on for about a year and a half. His method ' of covering up the defalcation was to receivc funds from depositors and conceal the record of such receipt from the bank examiner, making the liabilities of the bank seem to be less than they really were. This was done largely through certificates of deposit. Mr. Bielby has been a trusted employed! the Central National Bank for many years. He began as messenger and was promoted from time to time till he became cashier. He was arrested by Deputy United States Marshal P. D. Condon and taken before Uniiec States Commissioner E. A. Rowland. He eave bail. JOHN CRONIN HANGED, First to Be Executed on Connecticut's Automatic Gallows. John Cronin was hanged in the prison at Hartiord, Conn., at exactly 1 o'clock a. m. The new automatic gallows worked without | a hitch. This wa3 the first execution unaer xne new law requiring that they take place in the 8tato prison, making the warden the hangman. Warden Woodbrldge perfected a new automatic gallows from the Colorado machine, by which the prisoner hang* himself. In this Invention he does not, but the mechanism is at all times under the executioner's control. A system of levers enables him to spring the weights or stop the machinery under way. When Cronin had been seated in the chait and made fast, a signal from the executioner indicated to the man who had charge of the lever that he was ready. Th3 machinery was then set in motion, there being r.o visible evidence of anything unusual. The adjustments of the machine were made so perfect that the weight of 80G pounds made no perceptible noise as it was released and fell to the ground beneath. Instantaneously the victim was jerked in the air. falling backward to within two feet of rhc floor. John Cronin's crime was the murder of Albert Skinner at South Windsor, Conn. l>oath Caused by a Pimple. Lawrence W. Hooker, aged twenty, a senior in the Yale Law School, died at New Haven, Conn., from blood poisoning. Four days ago be complained to bis room-mate that a pimplp on his hip bothered him very much. The next day the pimple became more painful, and he went to a Jocai physician, who covered it with court plaster and told the young man it would be all right in a few days. The trouble increased, however, and he was sent to the Yale infirmary, where an Incision was made. The trouble then took on a horrib'* aspect, as his face turned black and he grew rapidly worse until his death. Hooker was a grand nephew of the late Professor YF? D. Wwtney, the noted linguist and authority in sansc*lpt, and a son of John B. Hooker, of Los Aiv^es, CrU r. - . 'v.,-;.---, v , .- sjis;-.;. KENNEDY'! c D;jar Ser, Mb. Kemttoy t?In '64 pain till I used to call some one to si then began with yonr Medical Discove "Keep on, till you see it spring the jo milea. Had not done it for six or sevi today, for 1 take it instead 01 aocton widow 74 years of age, and a well won Donald Kennedy, Roxbtjbt, Ma She was five years old the 2nd of last ] her necfc. I aBked the best doctor wl and run which it did, and I tried ever Aubrey, Texas, where I saw the presei the canse and how he got it cured. I would get some for my little girl it wo white lumps out of her neck as big as like burnt bone crumbled up. ^ In less it, but apparently she is as wall as ev< Donald Kennedy, Deab Sis:?] I had the Catarrh in my head and thr three bottles, for which I am thankful Dr. Kettctbdy, Dear Sir:?I ha^ three months old is, and has been, in and sore mouths, Our attending phy Donald Kennedy, Dear Sib T neighbor, after four or five good doct< Dr. Kennedy, Dear Sib I mi lady who was much afflicted with a c< tirely cured in a few weeks, and this ii ; ' i ' Donald Kennedy, Dear Sir I pecially for the Kidney Trouble. Ac 1880,1 "was troubled with my back, wh cines?and I might jnst as well have took it according to directions as giv< PRICE, $1.50 PER BOTTLE, L SOLD EVERYWHERE AT LOCA flANUFACTURED BY DONALD SEND POSTAL CARD FOR BOl Pisa's Leaning Tower. I wheeled round and roond the tower, gazing up its rusty-looking shaft, and then struck oat into the country. Nflxt morning we went over to the Campanile and tramped to the top. I more than half expected the thing would take that very time to complete its fall. The sensation while climbing it is very queer?something as on shipboard when the level changes and you ldroh forward unaccountably and ungracefully, and fetch up suddenly where you didn't intend to. So xne ueau sea ui America. The dead sea of America or Medical Lake, as it is called, because of its medical qualities, 1s situated on the great Columbian plateau in Southern Washington. It measures a mile in length, and from a half to three-quarters of a mile in width, and has a maximum depth of sixty feet. It stands at an altitude of 2300 feet above the level of the sea. The chemical composition of this lake is r.early identical with that of the Dead Sea of Palestine, and like its eastern counterpart, it is almost devoid of life, and no plant has yet been found growing near its edges.?Scientific Ameri can. ' Jflfc D0 Y0U EXPECT To Become a Mother? If so, then permit us to *V 1 say thpt Dr. Pierce's Ccj \ Ftvorite Prescripts \ IS ^E. A tion is indeed, /j1I, M Mother's Friend," / ^\v7j[wski\ lrr\7m f0r it makes >^^KMllChildbirth Easy preparing the system for parturition, thus assisting Nature and shortening "Labor." The painful ordeal of childbirth is robbed of its terrors, and the dangers thereof greatly lessened, to both mother and child. The period of confinement is also greatly shortened, the mother strengthened and built up, and an abundant secretion of i nourishment for the child promoted. Send 10 cents for a large Book (168 pages), giving all particulars. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. PAINLESS CHILDBIRTH. Mrs. Fred Hunt, of Glenville, JV. V., says: "I read about Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription being so good for a woman with child, so I get two bottles last September, and Deccmber 13th I had a twelve pound baby if girl. When I was did' not suffer^ any r?V' " tik\) pain, and when the ?k. "r^r / child was born I walk- si w / ed into another room ^ and went to bed. I keep your Extract of y Smart-Weed on hand all the time. It was "*-sl j very cold weather * and our room was Mrs. Hcnt. very cold but I did not take any cold, and never had any after-pain or any other pain. It was all due to God and Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and Compound Extract of Smart-Weed. This is the eighth living child and the largest of them All. I suf fered everything that flesh could suffer with the other babies. I always had a doctor and then he could not help me very much, but this time my mother aud my husband were alone with met Mp baby was only seven days old when I gat up and dressed and left my room and stayed up all day." ??a & I i MEDICAL D JHBONIO RHEUMATISI 11 began taking yonr Discovery for 01 t on my limbs to deaden the pain. I ry. The first bottle went to every joint into." So two and one-half bottleB c en years. I have kept it in the hous< ng. I have never had a doctor since aan. Yours to SCROFULA. s3, Kdtd Fbiend :?I will now give yc May. When she was less than a year ol lat to do, and he told me to grease it vi jrthing, but it kept running for nearly fr it postmaster at Anbrey. I noticed his le said Scrofula was the cause and Ktnn old surely cure her. I got one bottle peas, and almost as hard as a bone, a than a week the,swelling was gone, anc jr, and as gay as any child. ^V^OAT^RH. i know the worth of your Discovery, fo oat very bad, and my mother, who al' to God, for it cured me and many othe Mrs. Eij FOR MOTHERS. re taken your Medical Discovery all thr perfeot health, while we have three oth sician speaks very highly of your Disco Yours since DROPSY. onr Medical Discovery has made a wo )rs told him he could not get welL Bu MALARIA. Sn ist inform yon of the good effects of i instant Malarial Trouble declared hen s only one of many. Yours grat KIDNEY TROUBLE. a using yonr Medical Discovery I find id the reason I can speak for it is this ich the doctors claimed was Kidney Disi drunk cold tea?I bought two bottles >n in your book, and my kidneys have 1 Yours with thanks, f Ch/ icriun im ncr.i 11 AD nnCPC f| on to tne steep aiae 01 tne ww?r we went laboring on round the winding way till the upper side of the spiral reached, we would have to walk in that disagreeable way. Indeed on the sharply descending side I sometimes feared I would ran right out of the openings in the sides. I would find myself going faster and faster toward the opening, holding back all I could, aud just getting my balance in time. But after you get pretty well up it is not so bad, as the upper part is not so much inclined aud the last story is level. It is a queer old structure, and the wonder is that?though it settled bo much (thirteen feet out of perdendi* cular) after they began building it? yet it never cracked.?St Louis GlobeDemocrat. AS11HU III lyuuvunn, t/vwu^i L STORES AND BY EVERY WHO KENNEDY, ROXBURY, MASS. 3K. Australia is sow refrigerating its rabbits and shipping them to the London market, where they bring a good pricea. There !a more Catarrh in this section of the mnntw than all nt.hnr diseases DUt together. ami until the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many yean doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatmont, pronounced it incurable. Science has proveu catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore required constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 dropa?to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials free. Address * F. J. Chzitxt & Co? Toledo, 0. I^Sold by Druggist*, 75c. Earl's Clover Hoot, the great blood purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the complexion and curea constipation. 25 eta.. 50 cts., SI. We have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for twenty years.?Lizzie Febrki* Camp St^ Harrisburg, Pa., May 4.1694. Treat Your Stomach Well; It's the driving wheel of the human machinery. Good wholesome food is what the Stomach wants?nothing else. A suggestion for to-morrow's breakfast, 4keHk/t& BUCKWHEAT CAKES. Readv for the table at 0 moment's notice. LIGHT, DAINTY, DELICIOUS. PHYTOLACCA BERRY TREATMENT for Kat ana AttendantllU. Our Leaflet on this subject Is seat Free and is well worth reading; treatment Inexpensive and only safe one known. Addrea* Boe&icXe & Tafzl, Pharmacists, 1011 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. Binlnew EstablUhed In 1835. Aaprospsiarib M CURE8 WHERE ALL ELSt FAJLS. Q U Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use B| C3 In time. Sold by druggists. n % A ai i \<*l 1 KrLJfi /jIA t \ #,Rpwcm V/L/' CA1 n never peddled, and if yours " Cleanliness is Kae Pride, men Sence Die I . ISCOVERY, i Mohbob, Iowa, Not. 25,1891 ironic Rheumatism; suffering 10 mw% had doctors for six years. No use.. I ; and gave me pain. My husband said, tired me so that I was able to walk tw? a ever since. I opened the 22d bottle I have taken your Discovery. I am a raly, Mbs. Elizabeth Hills. . Llotd, Texas, Oct. Stb^^Si. >u the particulars about my ifee girt i a kernel came under her rightom ith old bacon grease, and it mighvriM wo years. I came to Texas, and wea at face had a bad scar, and I asked him edy't Medical Discovery cured itandif I and she was soon better. I picked .nd after being mashed up they iootea I had quit running. She is still taking Tours truly. S. L. Jacxsok. Chicago, Oct 15, 1894, r three years ago, before I was married, way a g2?e it to all of us, made me tak* >rs that we n??s recommended it to, i?n SkbtjEy, 217 39th Bu, Chicago, EShiba, N. Y., Oct 25, 1894. ough my Pregnancy, and onr boy, nwW er children, all of whom had eczema very. irely, Mns. G. W. Hammond. Hatjghviliib, Iiro., Not. 21, 1894. nderful cure in a oase of Dropsy of my t your Discovery fixed him all right fours truly, Samubl Ncgenx. I ; f \ X r. Xaveer, Most.. Nov. 12, 1894. four famous Medical Discovery, una self relieved in a few days, and was eoefully, Sisteb M. Magdalen. New Tobk City, May 9th, 1894 it good for the general system and e* : After coming from South America, is sase. After using many different mediof Kennedy's Medical Discovery, and lot troubled me since. is. W. AxiLxn, 26 East Fourth Street NE MONTH. LESALE DRUGGIST IN THE U.S. ' THE FAJRQVr&JLH,' ENGINES iCsjKt-g. 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A Sample Collar and Pair of Cnffs by mall far Ss Cents. Name style and sixe. Address .< REVEB8IBLE COLLAR COMPANY, , ' 77 Franklin St.. New York. K Kilty Bt.. Bot?J EASTMAN ssss W1W I llinil bestedncationaladTMftMai attbelowest cost. Healthful; best Influences;eiMMnv studies. Superior Instruction. Departments otBodt. keeping and Butintm Studies; Shorthand and Xfcgo writing; English, and Modern Languages; Uma ship and Drawing; the elementary branches, eta NO VACATIONS. Portions obtained fu competent stndents. Address, for Catal'voa CI^EMENT C. GAINES, Pres- A fl I I f IhW* Ident, SO Washington Street, I. II I I Lh Puoghkeepale, Kew York.. W wlihlsBUi |lENS10WJ^,?^Sfg5 1 jralaiaat war. 15 adjudicating claim*, atty liica U/AII CT NEWS LETTER Of value ?Mi WALL 0I( FREE to reader* or tbls paver. C'harlei A. Baldwin >fc t o.. Mffall3i.vS. VI Be on Guard j t'? gainst imitations of Peartm* >Vhen they are not dangerous they are worthless. Tfiey% ^ are usually both. PearliM does what nothing )e^se can- ^ saves ;] ^ } labor in washing, and C 4t inciirpc ciitptv tr? what Y is washed. It is cheapo thorough and reliable. Noing else will " do as well;" it a st as well to have nothing elSi-/fy. Peddlers and some unstrapulousgrocers vil d tell you " this is as good as " or " the saint ^ as Peariine." IT'S FALSE?Pearline; b jr<->cer sends vou something in place of Pearlifcn . <*U ' PVI Kew Dirt's Nae Honesty." Com* ifaies the Use of II IO