"One Year's Seeding, Nine Years9 Weeding." SCjegleded Impurities in your blood tutH Sow seeds of disease of which you may never get rid- If your blood is even the least bit impure, do not delay, but take Hood' s Sa.rs3.p3.rHla. at once. , Jh so doing there is safety f in delay there is danger. Be sure to get only Hood" s, because Ferry' Big Oani. , Commodore Perry had not yet electrified a grateful nation with hia immortal message, "We have met the enemy and they are ours." While the battle was in progress the sound of the guns was heard at Cleveland, about sixty miles away in . a direct line over the water.' The few settlers there were expecting the battle and listened with intense interest. Finally the sounds ceased. They waited for a renewal. None came; the lull was painful. Then they knew the battle was orer; butthe result, ah! that was the point. One old fellow who- had been lying flat with his ear to the ground soon settled that point. Spring ing up he clapped -his hands and shouted: "Thank God! they are whipped! they are whipped!" "How do you know?" the others in quired. "Heard the big guns last!" Perry's guns were , the heaviest.' The Buckeye. Pain Conquered? Health Rc stored by lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. . Ilettm.to HAS. KNXBAK KO. ga.fae. " I feel it my duty to write and thank you for what your Vegetable Com pound has done for me. It is the only medicine I hare found that has done me any good. Before taking your medi oine, I was all run down, tired all the time, no appetite, pains ia my back and bearing down pains and a great suf ferer during menstruation. After tak ing two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's "Vegetable Compound I felt like a new woman. I am now on my fourth bottle and all my pains hare left me. I feel better than I hare felt for three years and would recommend your Compound to erery suffering woman. I hope this letter will help others to find a cure for their troubles." Mbs. Deixa &EMICKEB, EtXSSELAKB, LXD. from neglect of early symptoms. Erery pain and ache has a cause, and the warning they gire should not be disre garded. Mrs. Pinkham understands these troubles better than any local phy sician and will giy every woman free advice who is puzzled about her health. Mrs. Pinkham's address ia Lynn, Mass. Don't put off writing until health la completely broken down. Write at the first indication of trouble. Oar Delightful Language. "Where did the dog bite the plain tiff?" , "Just outside the planing mill."- "I asked you, sir, where the dog bit b-i-t the plaintiff?" "Oh! In the small of the back." "Well, why didn't you sa so in the first place?" "I did say so." "You claim you said 'small of the back in the first place?" "No, I said lumbar region. "Cleve land Plain Dealer On Care For Insomnia. Sleeplessness from overwork, aud especially from literary work, says the Hospital, requires rest and change of air and scene. Of the measures which conduce to sleep, matters oi diet and nursing, and what may b called "management," one cannot b too tudious, for by their aid much may be done to avoid the use oi drugs. An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects . of the well known remedy, Stbup o Figs, manufactured by the Caufobsia Fig Syrup Co., illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste aDd acceptable to the system. It 13 the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the kidneys, Jiver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the Califobma Fig Syrup Co. only. In order to pet its beneficial t-ffects and to avoid imitations, piease remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA HG SYRUP CO. m TALMAGFS SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE Bf THE NOTED DIVINE Snhjects The Flag of Trace Interests of Capital and Labor Are Identical, aud When They Cease to Antagonize Eacn Other Strife Will Cease. Copyright, Louis Elopsca, 1839.. Washington, D. C.In this discourse Dr. rUmajra suggests how the everlasting war between capital and labor may be brought to a happy end. The text Is I Corinthians sll., 21, "The eye cannot say unto the hand, I have no need ot thee." Fifty thousand workmen In Chicago ceasing work la one day; Brooklyn stunned by the attempt to halt its railroad oars; Cleveland in the throes ot a labor agita tion, and restlessness among tollers all over the laud have caused an epidemic ot strikes, And, somewhat to better things, I apply the Pauline thought of my text. .You have seen an elaborate piece ofj ma chinery, with a thousand wheels and a thousand bands and a thousand pulleys all controlled by one great waterwheel, the machinery so adjusted that when yon jar one part of It you jar all parts of It. Well, human society is a great piece of mechan ism controlled by one great and ever re volving force the wheel of God's provi dence. You harm one part of the machin ery ot society, and you harm all parts. All professions interdependent. All trades In terdependent. AH, classes of people Inter dependent. Capital and labor Interde pendent. No such thing as independence. Dives cannot kick Lazarus without hurt ing his own foot.- They who threw 8had raoh into the furnace got their own bodies scorched. Or, to come back to the figure of the text, what a strange thing it would be If tne:eye should say: 1 oversee the en tire physical mechanism. I despise the other members of the body; If there Is any thing I am disgusted with, It is with those miserable, low lived hands. Or, what It the hand should say: I am the boss work man of the whole physical economy; I have no respect for the other members of the body. It there is anything I despise, it is the eye seated under the dome of the fore heal doing nothing but look. I come in, and I wave the flag ot truce between these two contestants, and I say, "The. eye cannot say to the hand, I have no need of thee.' " That brings me to the first suggestion, and that Is, that labor and capital are to be brought to a better understanding by a complete canvass of the whole subject. They will be" brought to peace when they find that they are Identical In their inter ests. When one goes do-vn, they both go down. When one rises, they both rise. There will be an equilibrium after awhile. There never has been an exseptlon to the rule. That whicL is good for one class of society eventually will be good for all classes of society, and that which Is bad lor one class of society will eventually and in time be bad for all. Every speech that labor makes against capital postpones the day of permanent . adjustment. Every speech that capital makes against labor postpones the day of permanent adjust ment. When capital maligns labor, it is the eye cursing the hand.. When labor maligns capital, it is hand cursing the eye. As far as I nave observed, the vast major ity of capitalists are successful laborers. If the capitalists would draw their gleve, you would see the broken finger nail, the scar of an old blister, the stiffened finger joint. The great pub lishers of the country for the mos; part were bookbinders, or typesetters, on small pay. The great carriage manufacturers for the most part sand-papered wagon bodies in wheelwright shops. While, on the other hand, in all our larga manufac turing establishments you will find men on wages who once employed a hundred or five hundred hands. The distance between capital and labor is not a great gulf over which 13 swung a Niagara suspension bridge; it is only a step, and the capitalists are crossing over to become laborers, and the laborers are crossing over to become capitalists. Would God they might shake hands while they cross. On the other hand, laborers are the highest style of capi talists. Where are their Investments? In banks? No! In the railroads? No! Their nerve, their muscle, their bone, their me chanical skill, their physical health are magnificent capital! He who has two eyes, two ears, two feet, two hands, ten fingers, has machinery that puts into nothingness carpet and screw and cotton factory, and all the other implements on the planet. The capitalists were laborers, the laborers were capitalists. The sooner we under stand that the better. Again, there is to oome relief to the la boring classes of this country through co operative associations. I am not at this moment speaking of trades unions, but of that plan by which laborers put their sur plus together and become their own cap italists. Instead of being dependent upon the beok of this capitalist "or that capital ist, they manage their own affairs. In England and Wales there are 813 co-operative associations. They have 340,000 mem bers; they have a capital of $18,000,000, or what corresponds to our dollars and they do a business annually of $63,000,000. Thomas Brassey, one of the foremost men in the British Parliament, on the subject says: "Co-operation is the one and the only relief for the laboring populations. This is the path," he savs, "by which they are to come up from the hand to the mouth style of living, to reap the rewards and the honors of our advanced civilization." Lord Derby and John Stuart Mill, who gave half their lives to the study of the labor ques tion, believed in co-operative Institutions. "But," says some one, "haven't these in stitutions sometimes been a failure?" Yes. Every great movement has been a failure at some time. Application of the steam power a failure, electro telegraphy a fail ure, railroading a failure, but now the chief successes of the world. "But," says some one, "why talk of sur plus being put by laborers into co-operative associations when the vast multitude of tollers of this country tire struggling for their daily bread and have no surplus?" I reply, put Into my hand the money spent by the laboring classes of America for rum and tobacco, and I will establish co-operative associations in all parts of this land, some of them mightier than any financial institutions of the country. We spend, in this country over $100,000,000 every year for tobacco. We soend over 1,500,000,000 directly or Indirectly for rum. The labor ing classes spend theirshare of this money. Now, suppose the laboring man who, has been expending his money in those direc tions should just add up how much he has expended during these past few years, and then suppose that that money was put Into a co-operative association, and then sup pose he should have all his friends in toil, who had made the same kind cf expendi ture, tlo the same thing, and that should be added up and put into a co-operative association. And then take all that money expended for overdress and overstyle and overliving on the part of tolling people in order that they may appear as well as per sons who have more Income gather that a'l up and vou eould have co-operative as sociations ail over this land. I am not saying anything now about trades unions. You want to know what I think of trades unions. I think they are most beneficial in some directions, and they have a specific object, and in this day, when there are va3t monopolies a thou sand monopolies concentrating the wealth of the people into the possession of a few men unless the laboring men of this coun try and all countries band together tbev will go under. There is a lawful use of a trade union. If it means sympathy in time of sickness, if it means finding work for people when they are out of work, If it mfans the Improvement of the financial, the moral or the religious condition of the laboring classes, that is all right. Do not artiste bnnd mzPthcr in an art union? Do band together In press clubs? Do not ministers of religion band together in con terenees and associations? There Is not in all the land a city where clergymen do not come together, many of tbem once a week, to talk over affairs. For these reasons you should not blame labor guilds. When they are doing their legitimate work, they are most admirable, but when they come around with drum and fife and flag from their ecafloldlDgs, from their factories, then they are nihilistic, then they are com munlstlo, then they are barbaric, then they are a curse. It a man wants to stop work let him stop work, but he cannot stop ins from work. But now suppose that all the laboring classes banded together for beneficent pur poses In co-operative association, under whatever name they put their means to gether. Suppose they take the money that they waste in rum and tobacco and use It tor the elevation of their families, for the education ot their children, for their moral, intellectual and religious (improvement, what a different state ot things we would have In this country and they would have in Great Britain! Do you not realize the fact that men work Detter without stimulant? You say, "Will you deny the laboring men this help which they get from strong drink, borne down as they are with many anxieties and exhausting work?" I would deny them nothing that is good for them. I would deny them strong drink, if I had the power. because it is damaging to them. My father said: "I bectftae a temperance man in early life because I founcr that in the harvest field, while I was naturally weaker than the other men, I could hold out longer than any of them. They took stimulant and I took none," Everybody knows they cannot endure great fatigue men who indulge in stimu lants. All our young men understand that. When they are preparing for the re gatta, or the ball club, or the athletic wrestling, they abstain from strong drink. Now, suppose all this money that is wasted were gathered together and put in to co-operative Institutions. Oh, we would have a very different state of things from what we have now. I remark again, the laboring classes of this country are to find great relief when they learn, all ot them learn, forecast and providence. Vast numbers of them put down their income and they put down their expenses, and if the income meets the expenses that is all that is necessary. I know laboring men who are in a perfect fidget until they have spent their last dol lar. They fly around everywhere until they get it spent. A case came under ray observation where aJyoung manwas receiving $700 a year and earned it by very hard work. The marriage day came. The bride had received S500 as an inheritance from her grandfather. She put the $500 la wedding e-juipment. Then the twain hired two rooms on the third story; Then this man, who had most ar duous employment, just as much as he could possibly endure, got evening em ployment so he eould earn a few dollars more and by this extra evening employ ment almost extinguished his eyesight. Why did he take this extra evening em ployment? Was it to lay by something for a rainy day? No! Was it to get a life in surance so that if he should die his w.fo would not be a pauper? No! It was for the one purpose of getting hi3 wife a f 133 sealskin sacque. I am just giving you a fact I know. The sister of this woman, al though she Is a very poor girl, was not to be eclipsed, and so she went to work day and night and toiled and toiled and toiled almost into the grave until she got a 150 sealskin sacque! Well, the news went abroad all through the street. Most of the people on that street were laboring, hard working people, and they were not to be outshone In this way, and they all went to work In the same direction and practically said, though not literally: "Though the j heavens laii, we must nave a sealskin sacque!" A clergyman In Iowa told me that his church and the entire neighborhood had been ruined by the fact that the people mortgaged their farms in order to go down to the Philadelphia Centennial In 1376. First, one family would go, then another family, and finally It was not respectable not to go to the Centennial at Philadel phia; and they mortgaged their farms. The church and the neighborhood ruined in that way. Now, between such fools and Fauperlsm there is only a very short step, n time of peace prepare for war. In time of prosperity prepare for adversity. Yet how many there are who drive on tho verge of the precipice, and at the least touch of accident or sickness over they go. Ah, my friends, It Is not right, it is not honest! He that provldeth not for his own, and especially those of his own household, Is worse than an infidel. A man has no right to live In luxury and have all com forts and all brightness around him, tak ing his family with , htm at that rate everything bright and beautiful and lux urious until he stumbles against a tomb stone and falls in, and they all go to the poorhouse. That is not common honesty. I am no advocate of skinflint saving. I abhor it. But I plead lor Christian provi dence. Some ot the older persons remember very well Abranam Van Nest, of New York, one of its Christian merchants. He was often called mean because be calculated so closely. Why did he calculate closely? That he might have the more to give. There was not a Bible society or a tract society or a reformatory institution in the city of New York but he had his hand in sap porting it. He denied himself many luxu ries that he might give to others the neces sities. He has been many years reaping his reward in heaven, but I shall never forget the day when I, a green country lad, came to his house and spent the even ing, and at the close of the evening, as I was departing, he accompanied mo to the door, accompanied mo to the steps, came down off the steps and said: "Here, De Witt, Is $40 for books. Don't say any thing about It." It is mean or it is mag nificent to save, according as you save for a good or bad object. I know there, are many people who have much to say against savings banks and life insurances. I have to tell you that the vast majority of the homesteads in this country have been the result of such Insti tutions, and I have to tell you also that the vast majority of homesteads of the fu ture for the laboring classes will be the re sult of such institutions. It will be a great day for the working classes of England and the United States when the working man can buy a barrel of flour instead of flour by the small sack; when he can buy a barrel of sugar instead of sugar by the pound; when he can pay cash for coats and hats and shoes rather than pay an ad ditional araonnt for tho reason that he has to get it h charged. I know a gentleman very well who has over 1000 hands in his employ. I said to him some years ago when there was great trouble in the labor market, "How are you getting on with your men?" "Oh," hesald, "I have no trouble!" "Why," I said, "have not you had any strikes?" "Oh, no!" he said. "I never had any troublo." ','What plan do you pursue?" He said: "I will tell you. All my men know every year just how matters stand. Every little while I call them together and say: 'Now, boys, last year I made bo much. This year I made less. So you see I cannot pay you as much as I did last year. Now, I want to know what you think I ought to have as a percentage out of this establishment and what wages I ought to give you. You know I put all my energy In this business, put all my fortune In it and risked every thing. What do you really think I ought to have and you ought to have?' By the time we come out of Jhat consultation we are unanimous. There has never been an exception. When we prosper we will pros per together. When we suffer, we all suffer together, and my men would die for me." Now, let all employers bo frank wltliheir emploj-es. Tak them into your confi dence. Let them know just how matters stand. There is an Immense amount of Virtue of SaM. Water Baths. For a hand bath (a bath given te the body by use of the hands only, oj by sponge or cloth) place a handful ot salt in a basin as ordinarily tilled for washing. Allow the salt to dis solve, or hasten the action by stirrina it with'the hand. The water should be as cold as you have vitality to witustana. use no soap. .Bathe the entire body. Do not neglect the face and neck in the free use of salt water. This bath has an exhilarating influence, tones the entire system, and gives to the skin a healthful con dition that amply repays for the time pd trouble involved. If used in the winter it will be an excellent prevea tive of colds, besides being a substi tute for face cosmetics. No chapping, no roughness of the skin and no clog ging of the cores will trouble the rer- son who systematically and regularly cases a Data ot tins sort. urainary table salt or rock salt will do. but will not do so well. The sea-salt con- tains medicinal properties not found in the others. Whether one exercise or not. the body should receive a daily hand bath of cold or cool water, espec ially in the summer, either upon rising" or before retiring. Ladies' Home Journal. , Saw an Iceberg; Seventy-five Miles Long. The presence of icebergs in the Straits of Belle Isle has given rise to a rumor that steamships would -.leave tnis snorter route to travel tnrougn the south jhannel only. The presence of these icebergs at this time of the year is indeed extraordinary. When first navigation opens in May, and up to the early part of July, or the end of June at least, all ships come through the channel south of the island. But in July the Strait of Belle Isle is usually free from the ice. This year, however, has been an ex ception, and on its inward journey the Parisian encountered several icebergs, one of which was over seventy-fivj miles in length. This ice was not in the Strait proper; but well on its way to the ocean, or some 160 miles east of Belle Isle. Captain Brown has had many ex periences with icebergs. He has seen all kinds, but none to equal the one which met the Parisian on its way through the northern channel to Montreal. This one, the captain claimed, was seventy-five miles long, and rose se veral hundred feet above the water. Montreal Herald. Do Your Feet Ache and Burn? Shake Into your shoes Allen's Foot Ease a powder for the feet. It makes Tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun, ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching and Sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FKEE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeEoy, N. Y. Professional etiquette prevents French' Judges and judicial officials from riding la omnibuses. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- Eurities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. The blood of five races flows in the veins of the Boer. $100 Reward. SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the pa tient strength by building; up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much fa th in its curative Fowers that they offer One Hundred Dollars or any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. There are only 350 miles of'railroad It China. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, SOc or SI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York, There were about 35,000 Japanese in Hawaii in 1398. Ever Have a Do; Bother Ton When riding a wheel, making you wondei for a few minutes whether or not you are to get a fall and a broken neck? Wouldn't you ave given a small farm Just then for some means of driving oft! the beast? A few drops of ammonia shot from a Liquid Pistol would do it effectually and still not permanently injure the animal. Such pistols sent postpaid for fifty cents in stamps by New York Union Supply Co., Vso Leonard St., New York City, Every bicyclist at times wishes be had one, London's city directory weighs eleven and one-half pounds. Piso's Cure f or Consumption relieves tin most obstinate coughs. Rev. D. Buchmuei LEU, Lexington, Mo., February 24, 1S94. Only one person in four in London earns more than 5 a week. to Care Constipation Forever Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic 100 Cf tZo. t C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. In 1793 Eli Whitney Invented the cotton gin. o u lew Does your head ache? Pain back of youreyes? Bad taste in youf mouth? It's your liver I Avers Pills are liver pills. They cure constipatiorf? headache, complaints headache, dyspepsia, and all liver 25c. All druggists. V Want your moustache or bard ft bautiJul thrown rr rich black ? Then ct BUCKINGHAM'S DYE V?A Cleaning up at the shop after a !ong,.dirty run, 'is a severe test of soap quality; The pores of the skin need opening, the oily exudations from them demand instant removal, for health and cleanliness. Ivory Soap meets the severest tests squarely, does what you expect. It floats, produces a copious lather, white and pure. Loosens the dirt and grease, rinses thoroughly and leaves the skin soft and clean. Economical because best. IT FLOATS. COPYRIGHT 1191 BY TH PROCTIfl OAMILC CO. CINCINNATI Holding a Seat ia Arkansas. Here ia a new way of holding your seat on a train when you have occa sion to leave it. The other morning a traveling man of this city got on the train and was walking through look ing for a seat, when he discovered one which to all appearances was unoccu pied. He went to it, and imagine his surprise when he saw a six-shooter calmly resting on the cushion. H passed on and found a seat in another part of the car. He says that people came in and started for that seat, but as soon as they saw what it contained marched on. Try it some time. Ar kansas City Traveler.' Fires on autocars are said to be be coming numerous in France with the increase of automobiles. Many of these fires are due to inexperience, or, for instance, in a recent case, where the attendant foolishly tried to fill the reservoir with petroleum without ex tinguishing the burners. Educate Tonr Bowels With Cascareti. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 22c If C C O. (all, druggists refund money. The fraternities of the United States have over 6,000,000 members. Tits permanently cured. No fits or n ervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kliners Great Nerve Restorer. i trial bottle and treatise free Da. B. H. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arch St..Phila.,Pa. A load of two tons can be readily carried by a full-grown elephant. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothin? Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle; In battle only one ball out of eighty-five :akes effect. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blcod pure. 60c, 1. All druggists. A Rood ironer in a London laundry earns !rom 82 to $2.50 dally. W. L. DOUGLAS S3&S3.S0 SHOES Worth $ to $6 compared with other maket. Indorsed by over 1,000,000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES THE GENUINE fc w. I. Doailas' aaott and prlea itampcd aa bottos. Take no substitute claimed to be aa good. Largest makers of 3 and 3.50 shoes in the world. Your dealer should keep them If not, we will send yon cairon recelbtof price. State kind of leather, size and width, plain or cap toe. Catalogue C Free. W. L DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mati. j&RTE&SflFuK Is what all the great railways use k k k k THE HOUSEHOLD ADVISER. ONLY 25 CENTS. A 200-PAGE ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF INFORMATION AND RECIPES FOR THE FARMER AND THE FARMER'S WIFE, And every other man and woman who is desirous of benefiting from the ex perience of those brainy and patient souls who have been experimenting and practicing the results af those experiments, generation after generation to obtain the best knowledge as to how certain things canbe accomplished until all that valuable information is gathered together in this volujne, to bespread broadcast for the benefit of mankind at the popular price of It treats of almost every- , CENTS ) The low price is only made pos- thtng in the way of House- O f m POSTAOE by the enormous number of hold Matters, including i,J STAMPS. the books being printed and sold RECIPES FOB FAMILY USE, covering all the Common Complaints and aivino the Simplest and most Approved Metlmte of Treatment. f"""' u"u COOKING RECEIPTS, including all kindsof Plain and FancuDtshes for Br eak. fast. Dinner and Supper. CAIkE,0F CHJ.LIlR,E' inMtnnst rational way from birth to the time then are Old enough to Take Care of Themselves. DISEASS,0"0,RSE C0 W SHEEP, BOG, DOQ and POULTRY,vnthmmt MISCELLANEOUS RECEIPTS, comprising almost Everything you can thinh of , from cleani HOME 1 RE A THE NT OF DISEASES. Method of Curina &ymviom$ or eocn uucaae wo the rpoO NUMEROU3 to mention a emergency such as conies to every family not containing a doctor. thi book is worth many times its low price. SENT POSTPAID FOR 25 CENTS IN STAMPS BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 134 VSPA gFr' 14 THE CLEANER 'TIS." WHAT IS 44 1 have used yonr valuable CASCA RETS and and tbem perfect. Couldn't da without them. I have used them for some time for indigestion and biliousness ant am now com- Bletely cured. Recommend them, to every one. nee tried, you will never be without them in the family." Ecw. A. Marx, Albany, N. Y. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. D Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25c, 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterllaf R.m.dy Compiar, Chin, Jtoatrul, Sew Tork. 3X1 MflaTfl.Rifi Sold and jrnaranteed bj all drag-, Ht U'DAW ists to cTuKJE Tobacco Habit. Dr, Bruce's Globules Greatest medicine on earth for chills, fever, asue, and all forms of malurial poisoning. Recommended and prescribed by phvsl clans of the highest Btandinjr. For 25 years sold only to physicians: now placed on sale to th public. , Thousands of unsolicited testimonials at. test their worth. 25o. a package. Send for testt monials, circulars, etc. N. B. BUHiGS, PnAR.MACIST, Clifton Springs, N. Y. ASTHMA POSITIVELY CROSBY'S SWEDISH ASTIl.tlA CUKE does this. A trial a"kage mailed free. Collins Bbop. Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo. . I VTrrffortt U JOHNSON'S MALARIA, CHILLS&FEVEn Grippe and Liver Diseases, na. KNOWN Attpawtm. OOCt I CONTRACT10 cureoT a wumiiiiiui nervetroubleoryii ion Write for testimonials, form of contract mALflltlA 4c, of Blood Food, Rheumatic l ightning, Little Liver Pills, Ilend-ern, Corn lTer. l. P. 8TEDJIA.N', Attica, N. V. DHFHMATRMCURE "-Sample bottle, 4 day' KnCUIllA MOill treatment, postpaid, lO cents, I I Alei amdeb RtMF.m Co. , 124tfcr reen wlch 8t. , N. Y. MPTCTTTHAT this paper when reply LYLLjIN 11U1N ISO TO ADVTS. NYNU-33. QAD6Y NEW DISCOVERY; tW J 9 I floiokraliaf and caral worat eaaaa. Beok ! taatiaeaiala aad I O )?' Waataaaai. Free. Sr. X. S. eiKM'i IOKI, Bex D, AUaata, If afflicted with . sore eyas, use Thompson's Eye Watt r 3 L'UKtii wntUt ALL tLSE fill!;. Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. in time. by drweists. k i & ' i Arranged AlMahrtiraih, KniMt. ciiek,t ',. vzir.z.r'-i veritable Household Adviser. In an 7$ ffi vjf; 'TIS, THE COSIER HOME WITHOUT JWj&yk' CANDY ff ZA Cathartic CURED, zv 1 3 pi Beat r a y tea U

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