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r:-'V New York City.?Drop yofces cut in 1 fleep points are exceedingly smart ami ullow a variety of combinations. The May Manton waist showt incluileb one ITCCKJKD BL,OTTSB. ?! the neWcst 'Sort and is made ol iwtte fclue crepe de chine, with yoke of >in nHc r\f thf material held by 'fagot jug and trimming of lace medallions, but all tbe season's materials are appropriate -and the yoke can be of lace, f of embroidery or of bands, as illustrated. Tbe full length bos pleat at tbe b?ck is -a feature and gives a becoming long line. while tbe tucks in front and sleeves provide fulness below tbe -stitching. Tbe waist is made over a smoothly fitted foundation and closet, invisibly tha Vinot hprrpjitli Tite edce of tbe box pleat. Tbe front is tucked to yoke depth, the back Tor its entire length -awl the -sleeves r.bove Jte elbows, nil the tuckfr being stitched with cortieel. li silk. The yoke is free at its lower edge, but is joined to both waist and collar at the neck. The sleeves are nug above the elbows, form soft, full puffs at the wrists where they are gathered into straight cuffs. .'The quantity of material required IJor the medium size is three and threequarter yards twenty-one inches wide, lilhree and one-half yards twenty-seven ' iaches wide, or two and one-eighth yards forty-four inches wide, with eight and one-half yards of banding I A Late Design J ^ p M il ^ ^ ^ ^ tuti two medallions to trim as illustrated. Lace (irenadiihc. . , Elderlj women are wearing evening gowns of a beautiful fabric called lace rreaadine. which looks like a fine, silk I ace. It comes in blaek. white and col?r?, with printed designs of flowers in uiturai colors. Thus on a cream-white ground is a careless design of huge ?ses and foliage in reds, pinks and ale yellows. The same design ap>ears on a black ground." T^be material b rather expensive, bat is so rich and tandsome that it requif^e little trimaing. The. flowers a^e printed in astel tones and blurred into a softness ever seen in cheap materials. Thf F>d For Iacm. The fad for gold lace still lingers, and bows in many of the trimmings. A ride gold, ribbon ba6 a band in the entre of solid embroidery in pastel reen. The same with violet, blue and id, is also shown. An eighteen-inck nitation crochet lace for yokes, or ther trimming of waists, is insjt over Is surface with open medallions orked with colored silks, 6bowy, but eautiful. Fashion* in HonrniDC. The fashions in mourning ? change fry much indeed with the succeeding >ars. The custom of being enveloped crape after the death of even a near lative is being abrogated. Very few main in seclusion for more than a w weeks after death in the family, ' Id although black i6 worn, it is perK*ole to go to theatres and church ?ddings. New Petticoat*. [*he best material for every day severable petticoats is black twilled tafa. It is firm and noiseless, and in te of the craze for checks and fancy ipee, there is nothing more servicele or more lady-like than black. For girl who does not have to consider jense the rose-oolored skirt is the west and prettiest kind to choose. IJJecorateu ibhi. eweled and embroidered cuffs now >rn many coats and wraps. The broidery and jeweling are in rich' ; subdued tones of color. Women. 0 embracer should take Jbe hint,; <4?OSU4JS*<lS <$> " * ? ?. ano enrich Hie appearance of IhelT coats and bodices. Knelling* of Tulle. Tulle in very plain tints is one of the newest shapes assumed by the popular ruchings. The most delicate of tea greens, pinks, blues and violets are employed for the purpose. The Latest in Night Robe*. Id night robes the popular taste turns to the heavily ruffled effect. Lf.ee is sometimes used on the ruffles, but embroidery seems to be the most important decorative feature. Xb? valance is also in evidence. Chenille Trimmings. Chenille trimmings would :.eem toTe growing in favor if one can judge by the number of innovations appearing iu this line. Something which the busy woman may have overlooked in this line is chenille embroidery worked on net. The N?w Old-Fashioned Reticnle. Silk worked in pastel tints and drawn up with ribbon makes a lovely reticule. Old brocade is also modisb and docs not require embroidering A Sort Silk. A fine silk as soft as cbiffon and nearly as tbin as Cbina silk, but with more substance, is known as messelice. It is to be bad in plain colors. Pfarl Kn%foroi<lery. PeaTl -embroidery is always a desirable trimming and cannot well be copied in tbe cheaper qualities or |>earJ irouuc. Ortricli PlHmen. Three full, half long ostrich pluioee nre seen on some of the ruost beautiful hate. Kern Lace. Ecru lace in bold design, interwoven with gold, appears upon tsoxoe of th?' rich velvet costumes. M?ire Cloth. Moire 'doth shows a beautiful watered effect upon the satiny surface o 1 the finest, softest broadcloth. >v May Mantoa. W LoiiDfiDic or Steamer G?wa. The necessity for a lounging gown that means perfect rest and relaxation is apj?arent to every woman whether she travels or remains at home. This May Manton one is eminently simple and practical and serves Its purpose well, being adapted both to home and steamer wear. As shown it is made of French flannel, blue and white, but Scotch flannel, flannelettes and ail similar materials are equally appropriate /VAtwno K)a ffi. IUI liltr mti Jivniio, TT?j"?wit ?u brics for tlioee of warm weather wear. The gown is made with fronts and back, al] of which are tucked to yoke depth and stitched with corticelli silk. At the neck is a turnover collar and the sleeves are full and wide, gathered Into straight cuff*. Below the tucks the gown is comfortably full. The fronts are finished with hems and lapped one over the other, the closing being made with buttons and buttonholes. The quantity of material required for the medium size is six and three liOCKGING OK STEAMER GOWN, quarter yards twenty-seven inches wide, six yards thirty-two inches wide, of fotir aod one-eightl} yards forty-foDr lucbee wide. A Multiple Liquid Measure, *\ Wbnt a stalling array of measuring cops one often encounters io his visits e to the grocer's, to the dairy and to all those other places -where liquids are dealt out! The gill, the pint cup. the i THE MULTIPLE MEASURE. ' ? . a quart cup, etc., are all lined up ready B for the use of the dealer iu disposing of his wares to his customers. ^ Aud what a wonderful lot of figur- g ing the unfortunate dealer ha6 te re- t soil to when he finds that somebody ^ wants a pint arid a pint and a half of j! his wares at the moment that the pint J cup has been mislaid and the gill has v been smashed shapeless under the heel J of a careless delivery clers. Now, then, he is offered b" a young c Inventor an affair that necessitates t his having but one measure, and that ? so constructed that a glance tells just c the amount of liquid it contains. e This multiple cup has within its b walls a spiral rood, to the top of which 8 is affixed a disc and a movable hand 0 Ac fhn linnul ricoc in VI aUUl\.(UVX. ?0 IUU MAJU4U *?WVV * > ?-i? cup a rotary motion is imparted to the <5 rod and as it revolves the hand indi* ; rates on the disc the amount of the contents, just as the hand on a cyclometer indicates the number of yards a bicycle or 'ttiotor carriage has traveled. Rocking Chair Foot Rest. The familiar presence of the hassock, footstool and floor cushion in the American home indicates that the conventional chair design is not altogether satisfactory. Evidently a foot rest Is seeded by a large proportion of the community. Especially is this the case with rocking chairs, as the tattoo FOOT BEST ON HOCXER. { played by the feet of the streDuoui tock?r is very trying to nervously dis- l. posed persons. As Indiana man hat , patented a foot rest attachment foi j rocking chairs which he is 6anguint > will supply the long felt want. Notched * ?jde plates attached to the arched f framework of the chair, engage with spring plates, so that the horizontal * foot rest can be adjusted to any heighl j desired. The adjustment can be made t with the foot when the height i6 to be f raised, but when it is to be lowered ( the notched plates nave to be distend t ed by hand. c \ The Ear. j There is no reason why aged people * should become deaf other than neg | lecting their ears. Deafness is oftei i caused by catarrh of the bead. If the t ears are examined by a specialist ererj ? year or two there would be but little \ deafness. It is possible for deafnest i 4o creep on so gradually as to be unob- * served until the diseased condition is < so far advanced as to prevent a cure. Never pour oil or other remedies into vour wir. If anvthinrr i? wrnnir witl) them consult a competent physician. rz The ear is a marvelous piece of mech- '0 anism. It wHI gather all the tones pf; t a piano, or of an orchestra, and com- j 1' raunicate each wave of tone to your ? brain. It is more marvelous than the f piano or the orchestra. n a fiincnlai .Birth Mark of a Family. Mrs. Belle Harvey, of Bower's Mill, * is one of a family of four living at that ^ place, each of whom has a curious c birthmark. The family consists of a three sisters and a baby two years old. ^ Each has black hair, with a large lock v of pure white hair beginning over the y ioreneaa ana running backward.. The flesh nnder this hair also is white, and ? the white mark runs down upon the j forehead. The entire mark i6 said to a look like an ostrich plume laid over the T head of the learer. The three sisters a are twent.v-three. twenty-one and nine- j, teen years old. The mark is said to be v hereditary in their family. ? Kansas e City Journal. (. Corrosion by Sea Water. The corrosion of metals by sea water Las been investigated by a German en- v gineer named Diegel. Alloys of cop- t per nickel are not very readily cor- * roded, and are rendered morp immune J! by adjacent masses of copper alloys, e iron or copper, these protectors being u then more rapidly corroded. Copperzinc alloys are corroded either by a uniform snlntion of tlio nllnv from (ho surface or when the zinc exceeds twen- t ty-foar per cent, by a leaching out of 1 the latter, but by the addition of fifteen ^ per cent, nickel this; action is prevented. A Carious Strike. ? M No one would have supposed that a i company of girls would go out on u wtrike because there were too many mirrors in their workroom, but this has r' happened in New York. The troubJe g was that the foreman had arranged c the mirrors round his desk so that * without seeming to notice fce could see whether or not the girls were working steadily. When the device xyns noticed by the proprietor he sided .With the e firlg and the strike ended. v ["HE GREAT DESTROYER] 10ME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT THE V!CE OF INTEMPERANCE. 'he Pity ri??1 the Penalty of UrnnlHnnrii ?Tne Jovial uap roast* rate, wmje Crime and Disease Attend the Banquet ?Drinking a Sigu of Mental Weakness The drunkard is a burden to himself and o the community. How to lighten the ioad ,t both ends is the problem of the hour, ["he jovial cup toasts fate, while crime and lisease attend the banquet. The start and he finish involve only a question of time, still, there is enough of pi^re .-pity for the rictim to give humanitarianism a fair nance to do beneficent work. The latest evidence of proper influences n such direction ie offered in the recent eport of the State Commifeioner of Prising. The plea is very justly made for Teater discrimination in punishments not inly lor mere intoxication, but for crime lue to drink. The penalties inflicted are markedly unqual. The man of means who takes the irivilege of being "as drunk as a lord" lays the fine and suffers no inconvenience, chile the poor man, whether he pays or ;oes to prison, brings actual privation tfb lis family. This certainly should not be, .lthough the law as it stands can make no pecial distinctions to suit individual cases. The question of equity is, however, dealt rith from another point of view, which leserves due consideration. The commision claimB that the offense should not be reated as a crime, bi\t rather as a disease, ['he idea is by no means a novel one, but s widely entertained by the medical exlerts. The report 4.ruly says: '/Habitual IrUnkenness arises largely from mental veaitiiegs, unu ilb uetuiuaub buuuju paiake of the characteristics which the State ias deemed wise in other cases of mental berration." The man, also, who periodially indulges in his sprees ie virtually in he same category. Imprisonment or fine, ir both, does not cure either class of vicime, nor has any form of punishment for aere drunkenness any strictly deterrent ffect. On the contrary, the offenses gainst society are as constantly repeated .9 are those dependent upon more prolounced and more easily recognized forms f insanity. When crime is directly associated with Irink it must be proved that the criminal vas actually insane at the time the deed vas committed, and yet who could prove hat an intoxicated individual is in any ense a rational being? Tri^e, he should lot place himself in such a position, but, onritkring that he is suffering from mental veaknesst, is he not rather to be pitied as a ick man than blamed as an actual crimnal? In any event he should not be jailed vith thieves and murderers and be forced o consort with all other kinds of depraved nalefactore. The worst offense of drunkinness is on no such level. The commision very wisely suggests that some better nethod of dealing with these distressing ases should be ascertained and adopted. Much good could also be done in presenting drunkenness by educating the pubic concerning the purely physical penalties if drink. Suffice it to say in this connec,ion that no vital organ is exempt from its avages?kidney, brain, heart, liver, stomich and arteries all-suffer in the long run, tnd there is no disease, chronic or acute, hat does not owe its increased mortality ,o strong drink. Even the steady, meth)dical tippler, whose saturation limit ia lever reached, is in more danger in this regard than the reckless and periodical demuchee. No one, however, is ever an eximple to himself.?Editorial in the New fork Herald. Serious Joking, A writer in the British Journal of in>briety points the moral that the habit nost people have of treating drunkenness is a comic incident has much to do with naking the drunkard feel that Le is not tuch a bad man after all. The alleged unny columns of the newspapers, the perormances at our theatres, even our books eem with allusions to drink and drink:rs as something purely humorous. In the same way domestic friction, disrust and unfaithfulness are a chief atoc? n trade for the professional joker. Witn are exceDtions we keep jokes on such subects out of tbe Pathfinder, but our readng of hundreds of periodicals every-week shows us that a large percentage of "cur ent humor" finds its "point" in some alse relation between husband and wife. TVipta to nn mipctinn tViAt. thpsp thincfl io great harm. When people are used to ;ecin<5 and hearing divorces constantly oked about, they in time actually come o regard the idea as nothing very serious, ind no wonder that with our proverbial rreverence for all things we have made iivorces so common in this country that he matter has assumed the importance if a distinct "evil." , "Anything for a laugh" is the watchrord of the professional wits, and nothing s too sacred for them to use as the butt or their maudlin ribaldry. It msy be rour funeral, but it is their "wake. So lardened are the men and women of the vorld to these coarse. Dlays on the frailiies of human nature that thev ignore the icrious side of the matter: and so a public lentiment has been worked up which nothng can shock. It behooves each'one ofis -as individuals to keep out of this nox0U8 atmosphere as much is we can if we vould nreserve that greatest of all boons, cplf-rponppt. Liquor* Add to Exbinttion. An interesting phase of the Marathon Uns conducted by the B. A. A. every Lpril 19 as the careful medical examination f the contestants, both before and after he run. No man is allowed to start un58s physically fit, so far as a physician'? xamination can determine. Au the data bserved at both ends of the race are careully recorded, and not merely assure Sny tiedical attention that may be needed, but t ffcrd to science a fund of information on \ he physiology of physical endurance in aan. In ti)e medical report of the last larathon'fpn the doctors state: "Contestfuhts were examined as usual lefore the start and after the finish, speial attention, being paid to blood pressure nd to reflexes. The results shows that 10th these were, in a majority of cases, liminished. The hearts, pulse rates ana /eights were affected much as in previous eare. "Two cases of severe exhaustion were ob- | erved, in both of which alcohol in excess I iad been given by trainers and friends, t is questionable whether even small mounts of alcohol are beneficial to tht unners, and it is certain that large mounts-'-more than one or two ounces? I re distinctly harmful to them; instead of J nereasing their strength, the free use of ' frisky or brandy actually aaas to tneir xnaustion and depression." The examiners were Drs. Knapp, Thorn,s, Faulkner, Larrabee, Emerson, Storrs, I. Blake and B. Blake.?Boston Herald. Difficult Subjects. Excessive drinkers and smokers make cry difficult subjects for the administraion of anaesthetics, says Dr. Hewitt, of England, anaesthetist to the king. The rorst alcoholic subjects may require enornous quantities of the anaesthetic, and in xtreme cases nitrous oxide (laughing gas) aay be practically useless. Business a Temperance Reformer. All the- railroads that centre in Chi:aeo have prohibited the use of liquor or obacco by employes when on duty. Pracically aii the important railroads aow oneur in this prohibition.?From "'With he Procession/' in Everybody's. A Shameful Record. The total amount of bushels of grain ised in the distilleries of Illinois, last year, eas 8,3U4,yi?, ana me numoer 01 uu&neig ised in all the States, including Illinois, ras 24,487,351. Illinois ha# nineteen distileries in operation, although twenty-six are egjstered. The amount of distilled spirits auged during the fiscal year for the whole ountry was 412,684,909.1 gallons, of which Ilinois produced 94,708,585.3 gallons, or learlv one-fourth of the total amount proiucea by all the States. A circular has been issued by Paris phyicians taking the radical ground that aloliol i8 never and never can be of any ise wbalevtr t? the organism. r?dlcuriBf an Elephant. The tools for trimming elephants' 1 feet are a carpenter's drawknife and | a rasp for the soles, and a borsesboer's * knife and sandpaper for the toe nails. The operator places a beer keg or a / 6troug box behind one huge hind foot, ^ lightly prods the thick aukle with his elephant hook, and commands the beast to "Hold up!" Up comes the mighty foot, slowly and heavily, but obediently as the velvety paw of a kitten. The fnnt in rocto/1 an tho hnT nr the Itpc where it remains while the fxpert j! works on it much as a horsesboer pares |! the hoof of a horse. Great slivers of \\ the horny sole are 6lieed off until it is !! cut nearly to proper thickness, when It the rasp is used to smooth off. Similarly, the toe nails are treated !? with the knife and the sandpaper, !? while the big patient stands with !? swinging trunk and an occasional wag <[ of an ear, too fuJl of satisfaction for ![ utterance. When the turn of the forefeet comes, the great beast is made j; to lie down on its side and the hoofs are propped up and treated.?McClure's. *jj Little Men si Soldi erg. ^ It is announced that the United, j; States recruiting station here will con- ? tinue to accept young men five feet j four inches high as recruits and will J not for the present re<ruire them to J touch the mark at five feet seven. It i is pleasant to know that three inches 5 makes not the slightest'difference in a man'6 ability to discharge a Krag-Jor- | gtriiseii, anu UUUJ uiutr ILUUJ^lliuii?i ^ hasn't it been maintained that a little $ man is more pugnacious than a big t one? Little men are more high-tem- j pered; they will fight quicker and J longer. J It is easy to comprehend why they 5 do it. It is because they won't be "put * on." They fear that you labor under 5 the impression that because they are * small they are not as likely to main- j tain their rights with the same firm- J ness as a bulkier man; and they mean J to undeceive you.?Globe-Democrat. J We Are All " Ju?t Folks." J "My boy," said a man of the State J A# Tftrnc +A Kit? c/\v* *? K A wn c r f n xt! n r* 0 ui A cauo iv uio ovu, nuu nuo oiui uu(, i out for a career in an Eastern city; J "my boy, let me tell you something \ which may be of help to you. You ; get up there, and ydo may see a heap J of people who have got more money :j than you have; a heap of people who ;( have got more brains than you have, 1 and more success. Some of them may ^ even be better looking than you are. f Don't you worry about that, and don't ^ you be scared of Knybody. Whenever 1 you meet a man who allows he's your superior, you just look at him and say to yourself, 'After all, you're just folks.' You want to remember for yourself, too, that you're just folks. My boy, after you have lived as long ' as I have, and have knocked around J the world, you will come to see that t\ that's all any one of us is?just folks." 01 ?Field and Stream. B "Where They Differed. ? Barbour Lathrop, the champion ? talker of Bohemia, has left for the T East Indies and will not be back be- 81 fnva th^ ciimYriar TTic Ioqyoc *uiv iu& uuujluv.1i ijlio uvj^ui ivu i vg an aching silence in the Bohemian fj Club. At the last low jinks Abe Hur cl said to one of the minor characters: *j "Stop talking for a minute, can't you? Do you think you're Barbour La- T( throp?" This was not the first refer- ?i ence that had been made in the club c< to Lathrop's chatterbox proclivities. At one of the club Christmas trees he c" was presented with the jawbone of an J] ass. to which Lathrop instantly replied t] that the difference between himself n and Samson was that while Samson slew his thousands with the jawbone c] of an ass, he (Lathrop) had slain thousands of asses with the jawbone of a j man. And it was decided that Lathrop ] had scored one.?San Francisco Town * Talk- . s Snakes In the Moonshine District. We infer from the following .that ! cold weather in Georgia has not af- mi fected the snakes in the moonshine pi< district: so "You kin set it down fer a fact that gi the snake season ain't ended in wi Georgia. I woke up t'other mornin' an an' found two big king snakes quoiled th up by the fireplace in my room. There au wuz al6o a blacksnake sleepin' peace- ce ful at the foot o' my bed. I ain't no A] drinkiu' man, fer L've got a throat in trouble, an' can't git?no whisky down th me."?Atlanta Constitution. su FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great ' NerveBestorer. ffctrialbottleandtreatisefree Dr. R. H. Klixe, Ltd.. ?31 Arch St.. I'bi]a.,Pa ^ Stuttering children are numeron6 in Ger- of many, and it is thought the ailment is contagious. a Millions In Oats. 1 Salzer'e New National Oats yielded in 1903 in Mich. 240 bu.; in Mo., 255 bu.; in N. D.. 310 bu., and in 30 other States from 150 to 300 bu. per acre. Now this Oat if be generally grown in 1904 will add millions of bushels to the yield and millions of dol- to, lars to the farmer e purse. Try it for 1904. Largest Seed Potato and Alfalfa Clover growers in America. [A.C.L.] Salzer's Speltz. Beardless Barlev, Home Builder Corn, Macaroni Wheat, Pea Oat. Billion Dollar Grass and Earliest Canes A are money makers for you, Mr. Farmer. J JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND IOC. I in stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co.. La 1 Crosse, Wis., and receive in return their big catalog and lots of farm eeed samples. A marked increase is noted in the number of triplets and twins born in Berlin of late years. j Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup foi;ebUdren *Jj teething, soften the gume, reduce* inflamma- Gn tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle The flounder is an industrious fish and Al lays 7.000.000 eggs in a year. Money refunded for each package of D Putnam Fadeless Dyes if uusatiafactory. ? There is one peculiarity about camels. ] They are the only animate that cannot swim. \ g Tbere is a way of trifling that costs Lumbago an. and it may put you on crutches, wi St. Jacol will cure surely, promptly. 1 ? FOR THJR1 Congressman Meeki Catarrh-Head I of Pe-i CONGRESSMAN JUEI Hon. David Meekison is well known, no bnerica. He began bis political career by t if the town in which he live*, daring which t; ounder of the Meekison Bank of Napoleon, Jongreas -by a very large majority, and u t lis section of the State. Only one Haw marred the otherwise con Catarrh, with its insidious approach and t> be. For thirty years he waged unsuecesafu it last Peruna came to the rescue, and he < nan as the result: A* "I have used several bottles of Pe thereby from my catarrh of the head if I use it a short time longer I will I of tJUrty years' standing. "?David J rHE season of catching cold is upon us. The cough and :'the sneeze ana nasal vang are to be heard on every hand. The rigin of chronic catarrh, the most comton and dreadful of diseases, is a cold. This is the way the chronic catarrh gen- j rally begins. A person catches cold, which angs on longer than usual. The cold ] enerally starts in the head and throat. . hen follows sensitiveness of the air pas- , iges wnicn mcune one 10 caicu cum ?ci? ( Lsily. At last the person has a cold all , le while seemingly, more or less discharge om the nose, hawking, spitting, frequent J tearing of the throat, nostrils stopped up. ] ill feeling in the head and sore, inflamed ( iroat. The best time to treat catarrh is at the i ery beginning. A bottle of Peruna prop- i ply used never fails to cure a common i aid, thus preventing chronic catarrh. While many people have been cured of 1 bronic catarrh by a single bottle of Peuna, yet, as a rule, when the catarrh beDmes thoroughly fixed, more than one botle is necessary to complete a cure. Peuna has cured cases innumerable of cairrh of twenty years' standing. It is the est, if not the only internal remedy for bronic catarrh in existence. But prevention is far better than cure. Iveyr person subject to catching cold boufd take Peruna at once at the sliehtst symptom of cold or sore throat at this | ;ason of the year and thus prevent what i almost certain to end in chronic catarrh. Children Gain Weight in Antoinn. Some curious experiments have been ade at one of the royal philanthro- l c institutions in Copenhagen. For t me years back the seventy boys and i rls in the place have been carefully l eighed every day in groups of fifteen i ,d under. Thereby it is proved that l e children gain weight mostly in t itumn and in the early part of De- i mber. From that time to the end of i )ril there is scarcely any increase t weight. More remarkable still, t ere is a diminution till the end of j mmer.?Chicago Tribune. ] A Russian Library. a rbe Russian University, of St. Persburg, has the most complete of all ?raries, with the exception of that Oxford. ?nnr Qtnmanh JUIII UIUIIIUUII I I Tiled Caaearets and feel like a new man. I bare en a snfferer from dyspepsia and sonr stomach r the last two years. 1 have been taking mediae and other drurs, bnt could find no relief only r a abort time. 1 will recommend Caacareta to ^ r friends aa the only thine for indigestion and t nr stomach and to keep the bowels in cood con n lion. They are Tery nice to eat." Harry Btuckley. Manet Chunk, Pa. f Th? Bowels ^ pcomi CANDY CATHARTIC 'leasant, Palatable, Pot?nt, Ta*te Good. Do Good, er Sicken, Weaken or Gnfce. lOe. 25c, 60c. Nerer Id In bulk. The genalne tablet atamped CCC. aranteed to care or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Cbicaco or N.Y. 599 INUAL SALE, TEM MILLION BOIES lE>tf"%DOV*EWDI8C0V?RY;m>?? ' It \J I ^9 V qnisk relief and caraa worn h. Send far book of teatimoaiali aad lO days' ' tt??at Free. Dr.M.M.Ctsm'l toai. AtUaU, iCilCI AMJORTV w.noRRis, Ibrrldlvll Uanblngton, D.C. J yr? la civil war. 16 o?uccatiac claim g. atty since a heap of money. Neglect & Sciatica th loss of time and money. bs Oil j Price. 25c. and 50c. RHnanMuJ * x fY YEARS son Suffered With 1 lis Endorsement m ru-na. 2KIS0N, OF OHIO. ^ t only in his own State bat throughout lerving four consecutive terms as ilayor ' -< ime he became widely known as theOhio. He was elected to the Fifty-fifth. 1 be acknowledged leader of his party ia> lplete success of this rising statesman. enacious grasp, was his only unconqueredl 1 warfare against this personal enemy.. lictated the following letter to Dr. Hart-- s *?? MIHM .'. T; runa and 1 feel greatly benefited ? !. I feel encouraged to believe that { wfully able to eradicate the disease { feekison, ex-Member of Congress. 2 Mre. A. Sncdeker, Carteraville, Gt^. writes: "I saw that your catarrh remedy, Penina, was doing others so much good ^"*1 ' I thought I would * ? try it and see what ST it would do for me. JBUiw * My case is an old J Mrak one, and I have gn J none of the acute ? &&&& MU symptoms now, be- fffT.. J cause I have had ^ 4C* V the disease so long $ W ^ ww 9 J that I had none oi \a jJJ) P J the aches and pains, 2 \ T_ /' m OS down oondition of * sorenoeeand throat i?ga\ andatomach. I had S"^^B S i good appetite, ^frvr' a but my food did Mrs. A. Snedeker. Jnot nourish my sys tern. I had come down from 140 to about 75 pouDds in weight. I now feel that I am well of all my troubles."?Mrs. A. Snedeker. ' ' Send for free book on catarrh, entitled ' . "Winter Catarrh," by. Dr. Hartman. "Health and Beauty" sent free to womca only. - If you do not derive prompt and aatisfao* tory results from the use of Peruna, writ* at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a fuD statement of your case and he will be pleased t? give you his valuable advice gratia. Address Dr. Hartman, President of Tkt Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. A Kpted Engl ih Hoatlery, The Peacock Inn at Rowsley, which ias the reputation of being the pcet- ) ; :iest and most comfortable hostelry in Sngland, is frequented by . travelers rom all over the world, and many ; ?? ?? In fVi a Ol. I .. auiuus uauitre are pie&eivevi m iu<; ??.)um of signatures. Among them is the raveling name of the Emperor Max!nilian, who slepc there on his last . light in England before be sailed ?n hat voyage to Mexico which was to erminate in his own death and th? jermanent insanity of his consort.? London Chronicle. rhe FREE Homestead V;S3 LANDS OF msgreERri IVaaiatii ra?S*5| VVOdlCtll mtid Canada : Ire till STMITTMOTIOHS For ISM. lilllons of acres of magnificent Grain aud Grazinf anda to be had as a free gift, or by purchase from Railway Companies, Land Corporations, etc. THE GREAT ATTRACTIONS. iood crop*, delightful climate, splendid cbool system, perfect social ronditiani, xcrptionaJ railway advantages, an* realth and affluence acquired easily. he popiUaMon of Western Canada Increased 138.00* y immigration during tbe paat year, over 80,00f ping Americans. For a descriptive Atlas and other Information I'plyto Mr. W. D. SCOTT. Superintendent of luiruixratioo. Ottawa, Largest growers of ONION t,?uu ocuuwu Pkfoc/^See^^widi each oanaT)rd?r. 20c. 6t>f,r P**4***John A. Salzer Seed Co., u cfrs?sg* iiP WUIflttM AU US? BmB4? Coosa Syrup. Tastes Good. U?3 M la mmj. awu wy smmiuv. A ft 1