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A WOMAWS MEVES TUE STORY OFA WOMAN TO WIM c NOISE WAS TORTURE. Prsevrated by the Least Excitement Physiciane Baftled By Her Case. (Froen We Gate City, Zeokuk, Iooa.) W Mrs. Helen Meyers, whose home is at 3515 a Vernon avenue, Chicago, and whose visit to V Keokuk, I., will long be remembered, was b at one time aff!cted with a nervous me.lady t which at times drove her nearly to distrao- C tion. "Those terrible headaches are a thing p of the past," she said the other day to a e( Gate CUy representative, "and there Is qaite b a story in connection with it too. "My nervous system sustained agreat shock o some fifteen yers ago, brought on, I believe, t, through too much worrying over family a matters, and then allowing my love for my C books to get the better of my diseretion b whero my health was concerned. Why, i] whenever my affairs at home did not go S along just as I expected, I would Invariably v become prostrated from the excitement and Vi I would consider myself fortunate indeed if the effects of the qttack would not remain a for a week. I was obliged to give up our i pleasant home not far from the Lake shore a drive, because I could not stand the noise in t that locaity. I could find no place in the 0 city which I deemed suitable to one whose t nervous system was always on the point of C explosion. To add to my misfortunes my complexion underwear a change and I looked so yellow and sailow that I wag V ashamed to ven: nro from the house at all. S 'Madam,' said my doctor to me soon after 0 jn unusually severe attack of the malady, V 'unites you leave the city and seek some place of quiet. you will never recover.' So d 1 concluded I woni I visit my uncle, who lives in Dallas County, Iowa, and whose g farm woul-I surely nuo a good p!ace for one in my pitia'lte con-litton. I picked up the Gate City one day and happened to come across an interestlng recilal of the recov-ry I of some woman in New York State who was C afflicted as 1 had been. This woman had becneured by Dr.Williams' PinkPills forPale People. I thought that if Pink Pills cured that woman they might do the same for me. ( I began to take the pills according to direo tions and I began to feel better from the start. After I had taken several boxes of , then I was ready to go back to Chicago. My < nervousness was gone and my complexion 1 wa as fresh as that of any sixteen-year-old 1 girl In Iowa, and Pink Pills is what put the color in my cheeks. No woader I am in such high spirits and feel like a prize fighter. And i no wonder I like to come to Keokuk for If It 1 bad not been for Pink Pills bougat from a 1 Keokuk firm I would not have been alive now." laughnzly conclu-1ed the lady. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the 1 elements necessary to give new life and rich ne&s to the blood and restore sha~tgred nerves. Thy are for sale by all dru"4i-,ts, or may be Md by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., fot 1 50 cents per box, or six boxes for $2V.L RAM'S HORN BLASTS. 1 Warning Notes calung the Wicked to a, pentsnce. HE man who UA 11'gets to Christ has to overcome some difficulties himself. Tmis world is too small to >. make a grave deep enou'gh to hold the truth. Ir pays to be a worker In any cause that wIll '' make men wiser a&nd netter. THE man who buries his talent il1ls himself. EVERY good deed Is the child of a spamnmeng...w..gg.th A soFT answer will win where a club would fail. A FOOL empties his head every time he opens his mouth. TRUTH is always our friend no maatter how warlike it may look. - THE real man of God is always showing people how to be like his Master. THE~ man who worgs purely for the glory of God will always get his pay In advance THE devil can't run fast enough to( keep up with the man whom Christ i h.as rested.1 THE only people who are not made better by giving are those who do not give enough. THE devil stands a good chance of getting the man who loves money and bates work. THE heart that fully trusts God can sing' as sweetly in the dark as it ian In the light. N~oMAN can ever be much of a Christian who does not devote his whole tlne to it. THE man who succeeds in any call ing Is'the one who takes a stand t;hat mneans something. THERE is no such thing as doing right in the sight of God until you 1 have ceased to do eviL. IF' you have any doubt about a whether a doubt is right or not, have C nothing to do with it. JoH.s the Baptist had no trouble about reaching the masses, because t his theme was Christ.t MANY a man who is anxious to re form the world has a gate that is hanging by one hinge. THE more treasure we have laid up in Heaven the more power it will give us for good on earth. THE man who is doing nothing to help suipport missions is hindering God's work in his own heart. A DoZENr men are ready to tell others how they ought to walg to oneC who can show them how. IF' God had to have perfect in- t atruments with which to work, his i 'kingdom would never come. i THE world is not dying because there is not more preaching, but be cause there Is so little practice. AT least one woman in fiye believes that if she had been in Eve's place , &dam would be in the garden let.t THER.E is a great deal of preaching being done In these times that thei tdevil is not finding any fault with. THE devil would never get a fol- I lower if he couldn't make a founda-r tion of sand look as safe as solid rock.< THERE IS power in the relig'Ion 2 that can praise God when toere is j nothing but the devil's face in sight.s t BETTE~R find out what kind of a foundation you have under you before you spend your whole lire in trying to Muilda house An' Knew What Would Be Acceptable. Pacer-So you write your wifey .Jaithfully every day? Binks- Yes.1 Pacer-What's the first thing you i ;ay? Binks-Pay to bearer, etc.---Town WOODCOCKS AND WORMS. trious Discovery Made by an Obecrvant Naturalist. When the moon arose I took a po tion near one of the moist places, here the borings were the freshest ad most plentiful, and awaited de. lopments. For a long time the right light of the moon fell upon ie spot I wished to observe, and 1 uld see everything with the utmost ainness. At about 8 o'clocr a wood )ck dropped down silently beside the rook. Presently another birdwalked out. the shadow and joined it. Both gan to "bore' for worms, an oper. ion I had never seen before, and a rious performance it was. The irds would rest their bills upon the ud and stand in this position for veral seconds, as if listening. Then ith a sudden swift movement they ould drive the bill its entire length to the soil, hold it so for a second, nd then as quickly withdraw it, rites a correspondent of the Forest nd Stream. Though I watched the irds carefully with the glass I could ot detect the presence of a worm in heir bills when they were with. rawn. But the subsequent process gave e the clew to their method of teed g. After having bored over a con. iderable piece of ground-a square r more-they proceeded to execute vhat looked comically like a war ance upon the perforated territory. hey also occasionally tapped the round with the tips of their wings. 1y intense curiosity to know the pos. ble utility of this process was at ength gratified by seeing a worm rawl, half length, from one of the orings, when it was immediatly )ounced upon and devoured by one f the woodcock. Presently another vorm made its appearance, and so on ill the two woodcock had devoured s many as a dozen of them. Then he "ven" seemed exhausted, and he birds took their leave. I have subsequently studied the hilosophy of this method of digging )ait, and have come to the conclusion hat certain birds are a great deal viser than certain bipeds without eathers. If you will take a sharp ned stick and drive it Into the round a number of times, in a spol vhich is prolitic with worms and then ap on the ground with a stick for a ew minutes, you will find that the vorms will come to the surface and at they will come up through the ioles which you have made. I account for it by the supposition hat the tapping of the stick some iow affects the worms the same ae ain, and it is a well-known fact thal orms come to the surface of thf round when it rains. The antics of the woodcocks attei Jhey had made their borings, then, vere simply mimetic, and Intended o delude worms into the belief that was raining in the upper world. Ihe worms being aeceived, came uj Lnd were devoured. All this may Leem ridiculous, but if It is not true, ill some naturalist please state how woodcock can grasp and devour a formu when its bill Is 'confined ina od, tight-fitting tunnel of soil, and is' how It is enabled to know the ~xact spot where It may sink its bill ad strike the worm? A1d further, i all those - ho- have seen la wood ~oci7feeing, how many ever saw it ithdraw a worm from the grounr rith its bill? For a Rainy Day. He lived in the suburbs, and had ot provided himself with an um rella. As he istepped from the de ot into the street. he perceived i:e ore him a person whom he took for n acquaintance, and who had a fine tew umbrella hoisted over his head. cunning up to him, therefore, he lapped him on the shoulder, saying ,s he did so by way of a joke! "I'll ake that umbrella, If you please.' he individual thus addressed looked ound and disclosed a perfect tranger, but before the other could pologize, he said hurriedly: Oh, it's 'ours, Is it? Well, I didn't know hat. Hlere, you can have It," and roke away, leaving the article in the Lands of the first party to the con ersation. This narrative, which is rictly true, affords a valuable hint o persons who may be caught out rithout protection from the rain. . Interesting Use ol YfloC grapmy A French photographer lately invented process by which a bit of ordinarj aper-the leaf of a book, for example -can be made sensitive to light without ifectig the rest of the page. Acting a this hint the French War Minister has egun to take the portraits of conscripts ad recruits on the paper, which gives eir height, complexion, age, etc., and be cheapness and swiftness of the op. ration, which is already in use in the t~nch army, is something remarkable. t costs only one cent to get two copies f a portrait of Jacques~onhomme--oue r his individual register and the otherz r his muster roll; and so rapid is the rocess that in a few hours a whole regi ent can be so photographed. The ldiers file along, one by one, and each its for three seconds in the photographic hair and the thing is done. They eveu mark the maa's regimental amber on his breast with chaik, and us get a complete identification of him s case of desertion or death, or wheni s iseharged soldier presents his claim (or ny or a pcnsion.-Boston Advet tiser. War Ship's tGuns Disabled by Frost. Up to the present we have not felt ble to advocate the general use of elec ic motors in place of hydraulic gear or xiliry steam engines on boar d ship; ut the effect of the recent frost on Her ajesty's ship Benbow discloses a weak oxt in hydraulic machinery which has o parallel in electrical work. The gear ff the heavy guns has been not only dis bled, but has suffered such serious in ury that it has been found necessary to te the greater portion of it to pieces d to forward it to the manufacturers ;r recostuctionl and repair.-Londor liectsan. R:ather seve-~e. Fogg (dreamily)j-d wondcr why It that a married man pa~ys so much ttention to women? Mrs. Fogg [e robably thinks bccause one oman was fool enough to b~eliere all ee said that all other women swal > as gospel truth everything ho I sCity- Out i-n.~ City children snro"ld no- be al:owed too much of the "runnin wiud" 6,1si ness durina their summer outilin. People have an idea that in the country one may do anything or eat anything with imlpunity. Laws for healthful living op;erate as nuch under the pines and by ? he sca as within the city limits. but not miany realize it. Nothers o~tn conipa ii that they bring their children back in the autumn thinner than when they went away. They may do that and still have them stronger, but many times children are allowed to run too incessautY. Ittakes a strong child to thrive on continuous exer cise, and city children are not used to tramping up hill and down and over rough roads and ltelds. Nake them stretch out under the trees or on the river bank an hour every day, and more if you can, and they will gain by it. THE MOST PLEASANT WAY Of preventing the grippe, colds, head aches, and fevers is to use the liquid laxative remedy Syrup of Figs, when ever the system needs a gentle, yet effective cleansing. To be benefite I one must get the true remedy manu factured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For.sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles. The Carrara marble quarries in Italy are practicably inexhaustible. About 160,000 tons of marble are an nually exported, most of which conies to America. Catarrh Cannot 1o Cured With local api-icatiols, as tiw e:tnnot renel. the seat of t he dise:nz. Catarrh is a blood ol constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you mus:. take internal retmedies. Hall's Catarrh t.ure is taken internally, and acts di reetly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by ono of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regilar prescription. It iS comitposed of the best tonics known, com bined with the best blood purifiers. acting di .rectlv on the mucous surfaces. The perfect rombination of the two ingredients is what p)rodluccs such wonderftl results in curing ca tarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHVNEY & Co., Props., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, price 75c. In temperature New Zealand resem bles France and North Italy, but the humidity is considerably greater. Rapid changes are a notable feature of the weather. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces intiamma tion. aflays Dain. cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle Umbrellas were introduced in Amer ica in the latter part of the eighteenth centnry, but their use at first was con fined almost exclusively to women. What to Tou Take edicine for? Because you are sick and want to get well, or because you wish to prevent ill ness. Then remember that Hood's Sarsaparilla CURES all diseases caused by impure blood. Purely vegetable-Hood's Pills-25c. A book has been published in Lon don givmng seven hundred and odd different ways of cooking and serving the humble potato. 1(arrs clover Root, the great 11.dft ives freshness and ceamcstt. ,,upxestoa and cures consm..C -. 50 cts., di. It is well to remember that young partridges havp black legs and yellow bills. White bills and blue legs indi cate antiquity. Dr. Kilmer's 8 Wa Me-R O oT cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles, ~Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Binzhamtonl. II i. Every Japanese soldier taking part n the Korean campaign was vaccin ated before being sent to the front. A Gloomy Outlook thatofthe dyspeptic. but his face will brIghten then he knows that Ripans Tabules cures that trrible disorder and will make him a cheerful and happy man. It is held to be gastronomic heresy to eat any but current jelly with a roast saddle of venison. I believe Piso's Cure for (Consumption saved y boy's life last sumnmer.-M11:. MLIUE DocU LAss, LeRoy, Mlichb., Oct. b,. '9i4. The tusks of the largest Siberian mammoth ever dug up weighed 869 pounds. JIfafilted witn soreeyes use Dr. Isaac t'ho'np son'sEye-water. Drugastssell at25c. pet Doctie WATTs-I wonder how this world will get along wvhe?' you and I have left it? Potts-You'd better be won derig how we'll get along. A Louisville (Ky.) merchant adver tises that be will give a pistol free with every purchase in his hat and shoe -department. A Gentle Corrective is what you need when your liver becomes inactive. It's what you get when you take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets ; Sthey're free from the violence and the griping that come with the ordinary pill. The best medical - authorities agree that in regulating the bowels mild methods are pref erable. For every de rangement of the liver, stomach and bowels, these tiny, sugar coated pills are most efiectiv'e. They go about their work in an easy and natural way, and their good lasts. Once used, they are always in fa-n i'or. Being composed of the choicest, concen trated vegetable ex tracts, they cost much more than other pills found in the market, yet from forty to forty four are put up in each sealed glass vial, as sold through druggists, at the price of the heaper made pills. " Pleasant Pellets " cure biliousness, sick and bilious headache, dizziness, costive ess, or constipation, sour stomach, loss of appetite, coated tongue, indigestion, or dys pepsia, windy belchings,. "heart-burn," ain and distress after eating, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. Put up in sealed glass vials, there fore always fresh and reliable. Whether as a laxative, or in larger doses, as a gently acting but searching cathiaruc, these little 'Pellets " are unequaled As a "dinner pill," to promote digestion, take one each day after dinner. To relieve the distress arising from over-eating. noth in qasone of these little "Pellets." They are tiny, sugar-coated, anti-bilious granules. Any child readily takes them. Accept no substitute that may be recom mended to be "just as good." It may be belier for the dealer, because of paying him a better profit, but n'e is not the one wwho needs help. A free sample (4 to 7 doses) on trial, is mailed to any address, post-paid, on receipt of name and address on postal card. Address WORLD's DIsPENSaRY MEDICAL AScOrIATIrN. Buffalo, N. Y. UOUSEHOLD AFFAIES. PLATDLE SOUP MEAT. ,k Al ogh sou- meat is eteeme I n a very nutritious food, it certain would be more palatable at the table sa- served with a hot or cold sauce, as is in many well-to-do French hou! and holds. A hot sauce, good for the so1 seo meat, or other boiled beef, is ma ays from a cupful of stock, thickened wi ine flour and butter rubbed together, ai ralk seasoned with a tablespoonful of vi ieu- egar, and salt, pepper and fine her :h a to taste. -New York Post.. irer -7 -- rel. I to cELERY SOUP. Pa- Pat a veal bone to boil in one qua bot- of water. After skimming it well p Pe- in one pint of celery, cut up very fin the t% o tablespoonfuls of rice, one onio one one teaspoonful of celerysalt. Let tl the boil until reduced to a pint. Take o my the meat and pass the soup through 2ow colander, mashing and extracting bot- much of the puree as possible, passii veil the stock through it two or thr had times. Boil a quart of milk separatel nue rub two tablespoonfuls of flour in Leve half a cup of butter, add this to t boiled milk. After cooking it a fh minutes add the milk to the cele: as,. puree and serve at once, mixing mi and puree well.-New York World. tess BAKED MACARONL One-quarter pound of macaroni, on quarter pound of .grated cheese, on half cup of cream, one tablespooni of butter; salt and pepper. Break t] macaroni in convenient lengths, put in a two-quart kettle and nearly f the kettle with boiling water, add teaspoonful of salt and boil rapid twenty-five minutes (the rapid boilii prevents the macaroni from stickii together), drain in a colander, th< throw into cold water to blanch f< ten minutes, then drain again intoC colander. Put a layer of the maoaro: in the bottom of a baking dish, the a layer of chsese, then a sprinklingi salt and pepper, then another layer < macaroni, and so continue until all used, having the last layer macaron Cut the butter in small bits, distribu them evenly over the top, add t cream and bake until a golden brov (about twenty minutes) ina moderate quick oven. Serve in the dish in whi< it was baked. -New York Telegram. .:Sw. Two pounds of beef, the round, flai or any cheap part (if there is bone ' I it, twc and a half pounds will be r quired), one onion, two slices of cA rot, two of turnip, two potatoes, thri S tables:ooonfuls of flour, salt, pepp od and a generous quart of water. C all the fat from the meat and put it i a stew-pan; fry gently for ten or f teen minutes. In the meantime ci the meat in smll pieces and seas< -ell with salt and pepper, and th< sprinkle over it tv o tablespoonfuls Sflour. Cut the vegetables in very smi to pieces and put in the pot with the fa .. Fry them five minutes, stirring we) 2 to prevent burning. Now put in tl &Y meat and move it about in the pot u til it begins to brown, then add ti quart of boiling water. Cover; let: ~boil up once, skim and set back whe: - it will just bubble, for two and a ha Shours. Add the potatoes cut in thi Sslices, and one tablespoonful of flot _which mix smooth with half a cupfl .x of cold water, pouring about one-ti -- of the water on the flour at first, asi =adding the rest when perfectly smootl Taste to - see if the stew is seasone enough, and if it is not, add more sa igo and pepper. Let the stew come tc the boil again, and cook ten minutes ; the >ur add dumplings. Cover tightly ai he boil rapidly ten minutes longer. Mu ick ton, lamb or veal can be cooked in th :am manner. When veal is used, fry o or. two slices of pork, as there will not1 to much fat on the meat. Lamb and mu of- ton must have some of the fat pi re- aside, as there is so much on the: ged meats that they are otherwise vez brer gross. -New York Ledger. E OUSEHOWD HTs. roi) A cloth wet in cold tea and la across the eyes will allay infiammr tion. For bread and pastry have an ovi nal that will in five minutes turn a pie ate of paper dark brown. be Butter put into clean pots and we is surrounded with charcoal will ke< rho good for twelve months. uic- In baking bread or rolls put a sane il- pan of boiling water into the ove: an The steam will keep the crust smooi en- and tender. ms Peroxide of hydrogen will light. obs the hair. Put a few drops into a smt ese quantity of water and apply thoroug are ly with a sponge. Much of the heavy cake and bre: nis the result of the oven door beit dbanged when closed. Close the do ver. as gently as possible. Nearly eve: one opens it gently enough. Half a dozen onions planted in ti cellar where they can get a little ligl will do much toward absorbing ax r correcting the atmospheric impuritie co- that are so apt to lurk in such place; ter A pinch of sulphate of ammon: 1l, dropped in the water in a hyacini al- glass just when the flower spike is ri: od ing will make the flower6 come larg< .de and more deeply colored than withot 1- it. n For frying always put apound ltwo of fat in the pan. This is z ewaste, as the same fat can be used ov4 to and over by pouring it through en strainer into a crock kept for the pt ice Vaseline is growing in favor as5 a t- emolient for shoes. Take a pair nd shoes, especially the shoes worn b be ladies, and when they become har m and rusty apply a coating of vasehn< :ed rubbing well with a cloth, and il nt leather will at once become soft az 5,. pliable and almost impervious bis water. el' In the west of France a cord is p1 his round the neck of geese, and to th es cord is suspended horizontally in froi t of the breast a long and heavy stic] ek (.oats in the same region are bridle is --if, in deed, we may call it bridling i exactly in the same fashion. The ol wject in both cases is to keep the an ewmals from passing through the hedg4 and eating the grass of neighbors. A tree that smokes has been di >2 covered in the Japanese village e Ono. It is sixty feet high, and aft !d sunset, every evening, tihe smo] r~ issue from the ton of the trunk. if . - it BEECHAM'S (Vegetable) What They I n, LIE ul Biliousness indigestion aE dyspepsia bad taste in the mout '8 sick headache foul breath y, bilious headache loss of appetite a when these conditions are caused I ' constipation is the most frequent < One of the most important tlb to learn is that constipation causes e. sickness in the world, especially of all be prevented. Go by the book, it gist's, or write B. F. Allen Co., 36, i a York.. Pills, ioc. and 251c. a box, ly tg Annual sales more than 6,oo< | When You Want to look on the Bri Use i ie 01 A ly Ways of a Captive Wildcat. Everybody has heard of Nic Arend's fildcat. The est was given Nic some months ago, and ever since has been living on the fat of the land. The L ,kcook, a colored woman, at Nie's place n feeds the cat, which has manifested a e- great fondness for her. Wheni she ap r- proaches the cage he purrs in the most ,e pleasant manner, but if anybody else Always er comes about him he.~ immediately Perectly at growls and shows his wicked locking reguiate, pu in fangs. The cat is perfectly satisfied WAY'S IILl f- with his home. Two or three times DiseasDiz at his cage door has been accidenially )n left open, but he never even walked Sick H '3 outside to see what the rest of the of world looked like. However, whenever Fp-n all it occurred that the cage door was left t- open, Nic always missed a chicken. Li, The other day he saw the cat catch I n dig el ie one. He simply crouched down by 1- the door and waited until the chicken, eB oblivious of danger, came along, and it then he shot; out his paw and had the *e chicken by the head. After he catches if and kills the fowl he picks all the' a feathers off it almost as carefully as a All D jg ir cook, and uses his-mouth in the opera- Obret ii tion while holding the bird between diseases oft *his paws.-'Florida Times-Union. - aur piles .. . food, fullne 1. eructations, d 'sae chocking or ing posture. it Y'Jrst Mythological cnaracter- foe te ig a Haven't you something better than and eyes, p1 mf the sun to offer me? Second Mytho- -den fluslies< id logical Character-.What's the mnat-. sfen" os *ter with the sun? First Mytbological r'rice25e. is~ Character-Well-er-you know it's it got spots on it. Send to Dl eNew York. S Slightly Different. it Police Magistrate-Have you ever A sseen the prisoner at the bar? Wit- . y ness-Never, your nonor; but I've' seen him when I strongly suspected he'd been at' it. -Tit-Bits, aSea water is said to conta~n all th. " a oluble substances that exist on earth se The Greatest fledical Discovery of the Age. 11 KENNEDY'S e.MedicalDiscovery, . :- O3%!.0 KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS. All OUrsh h ot this Letter day before yesterday. They-eu Pena4 2'an, N. Y., Nov. 28,21894. Thefr weart af you'r Dsoeyhas done so much Th proce o 11 teI a olytoogld t tlleveryb~ody Ifrourdeal Li. abou~t mny case. When I began takin:1 it. one year agc ,ladt Jrlu. 1 ha(d DYrSPEPS1A in its S O9 ,a s'oist foi. 1 wcas constipated, so much 8g so as to alu-ays use injections, and I had )I a constant PAIN in my STOMACII SO y ard L E FT SID E. My knzees were stif, and I could not sit doten on a :tool 0r has~ been get downt to fix anything on the floor. Fity Yc$ l But notw ican sit, or yet dwen on my g:i.al it knees. or do anything in w y arden. I - W ad feel like a new person. lou must knows ~s I t.sas discouiraged, as I imtve lost tweo sisters and an oldrr brother tceithL LIE i STOMACHI T ROUBLE. But 1 truly e rs:evers ina Sbelieve if they had knoten of your Iterms. SAL.E h remedies they wcould be cll, as 1 am. - Tou can y x up my letter to suit yourself, ~r only do publish it, that trom:en may it know rek'at the Discouery has done for -es: me. Yours truly, ~i Mrs. M A RY C. AYTR E S r Send a postai card ltr Dr. Kennedfy's book~. nScott's Emu aof Cod-liver Oil, with d~ypophosphites .is a constructive food tha~t nouishies, L cretates solid flesh, stops watn and ziv c for al . likeConsumption, Scrofula, Anomi, - r r: d Colds, Sore Throat, Branchitis, Wet - General Debility. Sois Eauuina I. Nourishment for Babis ar Bay only the genuine puQt up i :) s -Ssend for pamplet oen S / , Scott & Bowno. N. Y. All Dr-. - Could Not Wall Rheumatism in Hips and Ba Eyesight Affected but flood's Sar parilla Cures All. "I was troubil with paina in my back hips My e-e siled so that I could not for two or three at a time. I bec so I could not v attimes. Ther] matism had su hold on me I ni expected to get v At last I decide< try Hood's Sara rilla. The first ile helped my al tite and before second was all I my back wvas aL g deal better and pains had left hips. I have Uirs. r.Iarion A. Burns taken over five West Gardner, Mass. ties and I am as ever and as free Irom rheumatism as if I uievec been afflicted with it. I shall conti to ue Hood's Sarsaparilla for I bel Hood'sVCurel I owe my life to its uce." fMis. 31. A. Bt West Gardner, Mass. Take only HOOD'S. Hood's Pills cure all liver ills, biliousi jaundice, indigestion, sick headache. 25c. "WHITE AS A SHEET." 1;1ANY eople look like 'pale death " from ANzxIA povprty of blood. M's most often claused by gen eral debility from lack of Nutri tion. A remedial agent of undoubt ed efficacy is RIPANS TABILE They "put the house in ord r by restering the digestive fune tions. Those who use them ju diciously are properly nourished and son RUDDY WITH HEALTH! WALTER BAKER & CO The Largest 3anufacturers o PURE, HICH CRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLAT[ On tibs Continent, have receiv HIGHEST AWARDI *oM thegreat EXPOSITIONS non~ciizens. sandfo arotr. h ~u rs.oAro . H o tica Chicane yc.a Michgandiin nvof the Brpoig Road, baul BAA i COCO residence, downn thue su ov ep tan oer th a c HAe ae& . upDbtRtconSTied fHLw.PA overothe ooraoen dee rlroad ticilzns m ad anr inestation wh~eas oih itHeohiney ding h Cho e at ad mabeash large qantt fe days wich hen the atualmaste outre o Mcigdan dson ofthe Big.Det Froed bPlraes eish.reiene Te pojec of strhe NtickyraguiCa dowben hebtoepip nde the S.Se emceaneed itubout t coliatedi deah mad anms envetigatoriner wh goease thate an swarmorerbesecadlod cum Ith cimne uringha the hotamaat rand made a lfafrer atity.o Whot ich, ofhpan anthes uals irei tene. Itrs s lu ocrlsn Telae pro idted iaraSt.Ja Oiasu bee deamed gainU.St Stb eryuls Men'rosly muses thereul rememed aoth hatcinmate, ti deht alm ost.every'foretigherco toes there this laoerig eely < cdmo itbet work sadTahe feafulmah isoveryosuch lie orer ie.kbn Wha 'ea t of soade is n his tececortisg tl u to c ruarelsi Encery lbre poidedountry St.aly Jaf Olwould e armed00 aganst ofm toubttempt Men' ules ftouref io her ha saceias e edy m4 doxtc et woprk.ThmenauA alw ih eos veymcwierte beak-one fee inonthti frt of A rionjhny. a bea 4and00 okns maeof cottonsep yiour.n o~ank unimin uimen ofx Theattemptur, butlz is flur has bf isfor oodma racae has t bem neded publie istitutio an aBrook] :>the anby wrhte warsteve tnoneeae ofchrg sold tohnny ctten ehkend. cotosemae for cttns poduced t raess ihn haftrie pest cot f heat flour, t it everlcula1 taeetd Thenre is proucing bufndei ctonseed cake soto filefgrd, tl 00000ibrens. ottnse flour can t yerproedates than,000,000 pbus ndt fgwring flour, and it ishalc ush atseeuivae to afbrl, if roud t would yield about 83,300,000 barr< I we run short of wheat we need2 o hungry, for we can still fall bi n our cotton fields. Wonderful the cotton plant that gives us clothi: il and food for man and beast.-N York Mail and Express. PILLS re For sallow skin h pimples torpid liver depression of spirits )y constipation; and ause of all of them. ings for everybody more than half the women; and it can free at your drug ;Canal Street, New i,ooo boxes. ght Side of Things, d2O DWAY'S PILLS, Reliable. Purely Vegetable. tasteless, elegantly coated, urge, ify, cleanse and strengthen. RA .,S or the cure of all disorders ot the >wels, Kidneys, Badder, Nervons riness, Vertigo. Costiveness, Piler eadache, iale Complaints, Biliousness, tion, Dyspepsia, Constination orders of the Liver. efolowing symptoms,resulting from 2e digestive orgn: Constipation, in illnssof bloo in the head, acidity ach, nausea, heartburn, disgust ot i of weight of the stomach, sour sinking or fluttering of the heart, sufocaing sensations when in a ly dimness of vision, dots or webs -be t, fever and dull pan in the head. 'perspiration, yeiwness oft te skin in in the side, chest, limbs, and sudo if heat, burning in. the flesh. - of RtA DWA Y'S PILLSi will free ths the above named disorders. s Box. Sold by Druggistu, as sent by mal. .RADWAY & CO., Lock Box 3S1. >r Book of Advice. DaOUCLAS hJtIS THE BEST. FIT- FOR A KINA* 54 comDovANC FRINCIHADIN.LED CAL. $3APOUCE,3soL5.s. - $2WORKING *9 EXTRA FINE *LADIE~e DaocIeroN,;Mase: n Millon People wear the aug 3&$4SOes >esareequallysatisfactory se best value for the moe. ustom shoes In style and ft ,g qualties are unsu psed.~ ro uform,..-tamfO on solei' ;3 saved over te makes. ir cannot supplyyouiwecan. .FIFTY YEARS I .S. WINSLOW'S T HING SYRUP ved by Millions of Mothers s'o14et he eth n or sor s nll paneures wind colic,and rem'd for diarrnea. tyive Cents a. Bote .ke SS 00 per day sellin SILVER'? LST ENEii; a bonanza fr dressm k will buy send 10c for sample ant i NOVELY CO., Salem,e ~cJersel ;EES Wii!! ALL ELSE FAUtS. ogh syrup. Ti'ases Good. Use. t me. Sold by druggista. of Lime :md Soda, mrichesi the blood, s strength. It is