Why Rabbet Are Considered ''Good Worm.' " There "was a time, not so many years back, when it was not quite fashionable to appear too robust. A little languor was considered rather becoming in a young woman. But that day has passed. The pale, droop ing, indoor girl has given way to the riding, walking, golf-playing girl. Health has received the seal of fash ion. And everything that conduces to health is now good form. For instance, in the matter of wearing rubbers. A few years ago a good many women ob jected to wearing rubbers, "on the ground that they detracted from the trim appearance of the foot. But everybody knows that nothing else ruins the health as quickly as wet feet, and the only possible way to have dry feet especially in winter is to wear rubbers. So rubbers have come back into style as indispensable to good health. The added fact that rubbers are now so much more shapely and graceful in their lines than they were a dozen years ago, and that they are now made in such infinite variety, has served, of course, still further to increase their popularity. Harper's Bazar. Known French History. A curious character in Paris is a man who makes his living by stroll ing along the boulevards and making wagers at the cafes that he can an swer correctly any question that re lates to the history of France. He is very successful. London Spare Mo merits. It will do you to take Hood's Sarsaparllla Is beyond estimation. It will give you warm, rich, nourishing blood, strengthen your nerves, tone your stomach, create an appe tite, and make you feel better in every way. It Is a wonderful Invlgorator of the system and wards off colds, fevers, pneumonia and the grip. The best winter medicine Is Hood's sS,a Sold by all dealers in medicine. Price, $1. Hood's Pills cure biliousness, indigestion Indian Espionage. Every camp of white men in the Cocopah Country is watched by an Indian. Captain Newton H. Chitten den, the famous traveler and Indian archaeologist, said that all the time he was on the desert an Indian or two re mained with him at night. , He did not notice the coincidence at first, but after five or six nights he took note, and invariably, near sundown, an Indian would appear. Generally it was a new Indian, one he had never seen before. He would ask for sup per and tobacco, and, after partaking f the white man's hospitality, would curl up in his blanket and sleep. " The unfailing regularity with which the Indians appeared, and always with the same excuse, that they had been hunting deer and were belated, ex cited Captain Chittenden's suspicion; but, as the Indians did not harm him, he did not molest them, but good naturedly accepted their espionage during his stay in their country. New York Sun. TWO GRATEFUL WOMEN Restored to Hsalth by Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Can Do My Own Work." Mrs. Patrick Daneiiy, ' West Winsted, Conn. , writes : f" "Dm Mrs. Pinkham: It is with pleasure that I write to you of the toenefit I have derived from using your Wonderful Vegetable Compound. I was Xery ill, suffered with female weak ness and displacement of the womb. " "Icouldnotsleepat night, had to walk the floor, I suffered so with pain in my side and small of my back. Was trou bled with bloating, and at times would laint away; had a terrible pain in my heart, a bad taste in my mouth all the time and would vomit; but now, thanks to Mrs. Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound, I feel well and sleep well, ean do my work without feeling tired; do not bloat or have any trouble whatever. "I sincerely tEank you for the good advice you gave me and for what your medicine has done for me." "Cannot Praiso It Enongh." Miss Gertie Duxkix, Franklin, Neb., writes: " I suffered for some time with pain ful and irregular menstruation, falling f the womb and pain in the back. I ried physicians, but found no relief. " I was at last persuaded to try Lydia S. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and cannot praise it enough for what it has done for me. I feel like a new person, and would not part with your medi6ine. I have recommended it to several of my friends." TryGrain0! TryGrain0! ; g Ask you Grocer to-day to show you a package of GEAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the pla?G of coffee. , 2 The children may drink it without ? w injury as well as the adult. All who I try it, like it. GRAIX-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it J without distress. the price of coffee. 15 cents aiul 23 cents per package. Sold by all g-ocers. Tastes like Coffee !' Looks like Coffee . Inm.t that yocr grocer gives jon QRAlN-O " Accej.t no Imitation. The CoocS DR. TALMAGES SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: "Different Modes of Measuring the Flight of Time" Life Should Not Be Wholly a Span of Years .The Curse of Wealth The True Gauge. Text: "How old art thou?" Genesis xlvii., 8. The Egyptian capital was the focus of the world's wealth. In ships and barjjes there had been brought to it from India frankincense and cinnamon and ivory and diamonds; from the north, marble and iron; from Syria, purple and silk; frotn Greece, some of the finest horses of the world and some of the most brilliant char iots, and from all the earth that which could best please the eye and charm the ear and gratify the tasto. There were tem ples aflame with red sandstone, entered by the gateways that were gunrded by pillars bewildering with hieroglyphics and wound with brazen serpents and adorned with winged creatures, their eyes and beaks and pinions glittering with precious stones; there were marble columns hlooralng into white flower beds; there were stone pillars, at the top bursting into the shape of the lotus when in full bloom. Along the avenues, lined with sphinx and fane and obelisk, there were princes who came in gorgeously upholstered palanquins, carried by servants in scar let or elsewhere drawn by vehicles, the snow-white horses, golden-bitted and six abreast, dashing at full run. On Xoors of mosaic the glories of Pharaoh were spelled out in letters of porphyry and beryl and flame. There were ornaments twisted from the wood of tamarisk, em bossed with silver breaking into foam. There were footstools made out of a single precious stone. There were beds fashioned out of a erouehed lion in bronze. There were chairs spotted with the sleek hides of leopards. There were sofas footed with the claws of wild beasts and armed with the beaks of birds. As you stand on the level beach of the sea on a summer day and look either way, and there are miles of breakers, white with the ocean foam, dashing shoreward, so it seemed as if the sea of the world's pomp and wealth In the Egyptian capital for miles and miles flung itself up "into white breakers of marble temple, muusoleum and obelisk. It was to this capital and the palace of Pharaoh that Jacob, the plain shepherd, came to meet his son Joseph, who had be come prime minister iu the royal apart ment. Pharaoh and Jacob met, dignity and rusticity, the gracefnlness of the court and the plain manners of the ilold. The king, wanting to make the old country man at ease and seeing how white his beard is and how feeble his step, looks familiarly into his face and says to the ngod man, "How oH art thou?" On New Year's night the gate of eternity opened to let in amid the great throng of departed centuries the soul of the dying year. Under the twelfth stroke of" the brazen hammer of the city clock the patriarch fell dead, and the stars of the night were the funeral torches. It is most fortunate that on this rondof life there are so many milestones, on which wo can read just how fast we are going toward the journey's end. I feel that it is not an in appropriate question that I as'i to-day when I look into your faces and say, as Pharaoh did to Jacob, the patriarch, "How old art thou?" People who are truthful on every other subject lie about their ages, so that I do not solicit from you any literal response to the question I have asked. I would put no one under temptation, but I simply want this morning to see by what rod it is we are measuring our earthly existence. There is a right way and a wrong way ol measur ing a door, or a wall, or an arch, or a tower, and so there is a right way and a wrong way of measuring our earthly existence. It is with reference to thi3 higher meaning' that I confront you this morning with the! stupendous question of the text and ask, "How old art thou?" There are many who estimate their life by mere worldly gratification. When Lord Dundas was wished a Happy New Year, he said, "It will have to be a happier year than the past, for I hadn't one happy moment in all the twelve months that have gone." But that has not been the experienoe of most of us. We have found that though the world is blasted with sin it is a very bright and beautiful place to reside in. We have had joys innumerable. There is no hostility between the gospel and the merriments and the festivities of life. I do not think that we fully enough appreciate the worldly pleasures God gives us. When you recount your enjoyments you do not go back to the time when you were an in-, fant in your mother's arms, looking up into the heaven of her smile; to those days when you filled the house with the uproar of bois terous merriment; when you shouted as you pitched the ball on the playground; when on the cold, sharp winter night, muffled up, on skates you shot out over the resounding ice of the pond? Have you for gotten all those good days that the Lord gave you? Were you never a bov? Were you never a girl? Between those times and this how many mercies the Lord has be stowed upon youl How many joys have breathed up to you from the flowers and shone down to you from the stars and chanted to you with the voice of soaring bird and tumbling cascade and booming sea and thunders that with bavonets of Are charged down the mountainside! Joy! Joy! Joyi If there is any one who Las a right to the enjoyments of the world. It is the Christian, for God has given him a lease of everything in the promise, "All are yours." But I have to tell you that a man who esti mates his life on earth by mere worldly gratification is a most unwise man. Our life is not to be a game of chess. It is not a dance in lighted hall, to quick music. It is not the froth of an ale pitcher. It is not the settlings of a wine cup. It is not a ban quet, with intoxication and roistering. It is the first step on a ladder that mounts In to the skies or the first step on a road that plunges into a horrible abyss. "How old art thou?" Toward what destiny are you tending and how fast are you getting on toward it? Again, I remark that there are many who estimate their life on earth by their sor rows and misfortunes. Through a great many of your lives the plow-share hath gone very deep, turning up a terrible fur row. You have been betrayed and mis represented, and set upon, and slapped of impertinence, and pounded of misfortune. The brightest life must have its shadowB and the smoothest path its thorns. On the happiest brood the hawk pounces. No es cape from trouble of some kind. While glorious John Milton was losing his eye sight he heard that Salmasius was glad of it. While Sheridan's comedy was being en acted in Drury Lane theater, London, his enemy sat growling at it in the stage box. While Bishop Cooper was surrounded by the favor of learned men his wife took his lexicon man uscript, the result of a long life of anxiety and toil, and threw It into the Are. Mis fortune, trial, vexation for almost every one! Pope, applauded of all. tne world, lias a stoop in the shoulder that annoys hfin so much that he has a tunnel dug, so that he may go unobserved from garden to grotto and "from grotto to garden. Cane, the famous Spanish artist, is disgusted with the crucifix that the priest holds be fore him because it is such a poor speci men of sculpture, and so, sometimes through taste, and sometimes through learned menace, and sometimes through physical distresses aye in 10,000 ways troubles come to harass and annoy. Again, I remark that there are many peo ple who estimate their life on earth by the amount of money they have accumulated. They say, "T'le year 18G6 or 1870 or 1898 was wasted.' Why? "Made no money." Now, it is all cant and insincerity to talk ngninst money, as though it had no value. It may represent refinement and education and ten thousand blessed surroundings. It is the spreading of the table that feeds the children's hunger. It is the lighting of the furnaoe that keeps you warm. It ia the making of the bed on whioh you rest from care and anxiety. It ts the carrying of you out at last to decent sepulcher, and the putting up of the slab on which is chiseled the story of your Christian hope. It is simply hypocrisy, this tirade lu pulpit and lecture hall against money. Bet while all this is so, ho who uses money or thinks of money as anything but omeans to an end, will find out bis mis take when the glittering treasures slip out of his nerveless grasp, and ho goes out of this world without a shilling of money or a certllloate of stock. He might better ha?u been the Christian porter that opened his gate or the begrimed workman who last night heaved the coal Into his cellar. Bonds and mortgages and leases have their use, but they make a poor yardstick with which to measure life. "They that boast themselves in thotr wealth and trust in the multitude of their riches, none of them can, by any means, redeem his brother or give to God a ransom for him that he should not see corruption." But I remark, there are many I wish there were more who estimate their life by their moral and spiritual development. It is not sinful egotism for a Christian man to say: "I am mirer than I used to be. I am more consecrated to Christ than I used to be. I have got over a gretit many of the bad habits in which I used to indulge. lama great deal better man than I used to be." There is no sinful egotism in that. It is not b"se egotism for n soiuier to say. "i Know more about mili tary tactics than I used to before I took a musket In my hand and learned to 'present arms' and was a pest to the drill ofllcor." It Is not ba-e egotism for a sailor to say.'T know better how to clew down the mlzzen topsail than I used to before I had ever seen u ship." And there is no sinful egotism when a Christian man, lighting the battles of the Lord, or if you will have it, voyaging toward a ha-en of eternal rest, says, "I know more about spiritual tactics and voyaging toward heaven than I used to." Now, I do not know what vour advan tages or disadvantages are. I do not know what your tact or talent is. I do not know what may be the fascination of your man ners or the repulslveness of them, but I Know this: There is for you, my hearer, a field to cultivate, a harvest to reap, a tear to wipe away, a soul to save. If you have worldly means, consecrate them to Christ. If you have eloquence, use it ou the side that i'aul and Wllberforce used theirs. If you have learning, put it all into the poor box of the world's suffering. But if you have none of these neither wealth nor elo quence nor learning you at any rate have a smile with which you can encourage the disheartened, a frown with which you may blast Injustice, a voice with which you may call the wanderer back to God. "Oh," you say, "that is a very sanctimonious view of life!" It is not. It is the only-bright view of life, and it is the only bright view of death. Contrast the death scene of a man who has measured life by the worldly standard with the death scone of a man who has measured life by the Christian standard. Quin, the actor, in his last moments said, "I hope this tragic scene will soon be over, and I hope to keep ty dignity to the last." Malesherbes raid in his last moments to the confessor: "nold your tongue! Your miserable stylo puts me out of conceit with heaven." Lord Chesterfield In his last moments, when he ought to have been praying for his soul, bothered himself about the proprieties of the sick room and said, "Give Dayboles a chair." Godfrey Kneller spent his lost hours on earth in drawing a diagram of his own monument. Compare the silly and horrible depar ture of such men with the seraphic glow on the face of Edward Payson as he said In his last moment: "The breeees of heaven fan me. I float in a sea of glorv." Or with Paul the apostle, who said in his last hour: "I am now ready to be offered up, and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought the good fight, I have kept the faith. Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will give me." Or compare it with the Christian deathbed that you witnessed in your own household. Oh, my friends, this world is a false god. It will consume you with the blaze in which it accepts your sacrifice, while the righteous shall be held in everlasting re membrance, and when the thrones have fallen and the monuments have crumbled and the world has perished they shall ban quet with the oonquerors of earth and the hierarchs of heaven. This is a good day in which to begin a new style of measurement. How old art thou? You see the Christian way of measuring life and the worldly way of measuring it. I leave it to you to say which is the wisest and best way. The wheel of time has turned very swiftly, and It has hurled us on. The old year has gone. The new year has come. For what you and I have been launched up on it God only knows. Now let me ask you all, have you made any preparation for the future? You have made prepara tion for time, my dear brother. Have you made any preparation for eternity? Do you wonder that when that man on the Hudson River in Indignation tore up the tract which was handed to him and just one word landed on his coat sleeve, the rest of the tract being pitohed into the river, that one word aroused hia soul? It was that one word, so long, bo broad, so high, so deep "Eternity." A dying wom an, In her last moments, said, "Call It back." They .said, "What do you want?" "Time," she said, "call it back." Oh, it cannot be called back. We might lose our fortunes and call them back; we might lose our health, and perhaps recover it;(wo might lose our good name and get that baok, but time gone is gone forever. Now, when one can sooner got to the cen ter of things Is he not to be congr.ulated? Does not our common sense feach us that It is better to be at the center than to be clear out on the rim of the wheel, hold ing nervously fast to the tire lest we be suddenly hurled into light and eternal felicity? Through all kinds of optical in struments trying to peer in through the cracks and the keyholes of heaven afraid that both doors of the celestial mansion will be swung wide open before our en tranced vision rushing about among tho apothecary shops of this world wondering It this is good for rheumatism and that is good for neuralgia and something else is good for a bad cough, lest we be suddenly ushered into a land of everlasting health wherethe inhabitant never says, I am sick! What fools we all are to prefer the cir cumference to the center! What a dread ful thing It would be if we should be sud denly ushered from this wintry world into the May time orohards of heaven, and If our pauperism of sin and sorrow should be suddenly broken up by a presentation of an emperor's castle surrounded by parks with springing fountains and paths, up and down which angels of God walk two and two! In 1835 the French resolved that at Ghent they would have a kind of mu sical demonstration that had never been heard of. It would be made up of the chimes of Uells and the discharge of cannon. The experiment was a perfect success. - What with the rixiging of the bells and the report of the ordnance the city trembled and the hills shook with the triumphal march that was as strange as it was overwhelming. With a most glorious accompaniment will Clod's dear children go into their high residence when the trumpets shall sound and the last day has come. At the sig nal given the bells of the towers, and of the lighthouses, and of the cities Will strike their sweetness into a last chime that shall ring into the heave.ns-.and float off upon the sea, joined by the boom of bursting mine and magazine, augmented by all the cathedral towers of heaven the harmonies of earth and the symphonies of i the celestial realm mnkin up one great triumphal march, fit to celebrate tho as cent of the redeemed to where ihey shall ..i i . .j.. . .. . j . DLii-uo aa mo siurs lurwvur auu ever. TflB EXCELLENCE OF SYBUP OF FIGS Is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the California Fig Stbup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cali fornia Fig Symup Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and -bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, Cat tOCTSVIM.K. Ky. NEW YOKE. N. Y". 'A tape worm eighteen feet Ions at least came on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This I am sure has caused my bad health for the past three years. I am still taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy of lotlce by sensible people." uko. w. .bowles, uaira, Mass. CANDY CATHARTIC TRAGI MARK (M-CiSTIWED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. To 3ood, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 2ic, &0o. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Iterllng Remedy Company, Chicago, Kontml, Kew York. S13 tJn.Tfl.R ! fi Sold and punrantped by all drng BU" I UU4il alsts to CIKE Tobacco Habit. "soyli 2? Thompson's Eye Water An Argument. It is the part of every householder, or any one in authority, public or pri vate, to carefully consider orders be fore they are given. But after they are issued it would be suicidal to all government to argue out the matter with employe, servant, or child. From the nature of things, they cannot judge the necessity or worth of the com mand it is their part to carry out. Many funny stories are told of fresh ly trained soldiers and sailors, to whom the thought was new that their first virtue was implicit obedierre. One such tale dates back to our Civil War, and is told for truth by one who over heard it. A sailor of one of the big gunboats of the time was notorious for his lazy habits, as well as for his in genuousness in finding excuses for his careless ways. While seemingly hon est, he was often hauled up for repri mand or punishment. The captain, a passionate man, and a believer in stern discipline, lost pa tience with Tom, and when the fellow was brought before him for the third time in one week for some neglect of work, he said, angrily, "What again, Tom?" "I'm not here of my own will, sir," began simple Tom. And poor Tom, finding his efforts to speak were cut off, at last said, resign 'edly: "Well, captain, have it your own way. I didn't come here to argue with you, sirl" And after that Tom's unsympathetic comrades called on him every day in his imprisonment, which he may have deserved, but scarcely understood, and told him that they "did not come to argue with him!" And while Tom's story sounds ab surd, it is true that many of us are just as foolish; and take just as long tc learn the beauty and strength of obe dience. Harper'B Bazar. Japan with a population of 45,000, 000 has 220 towns that have more than 100,000 inhabitants. ITlakes the Spot Vanish. A slight rap may cause a bruise, or a slight blow a black one, sore and tender. But it is easy to cure a bruise by the use of St. Jacobs Oil, and make the spot vanish and the soreness heal. The salmon catch In the Columbia foi 1898 was 6,018,022 pounds less for 1897. Coughs Lead to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your drufjglst to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dan gerous. Typewriting is to be taught in the public schools of New York City. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic 10c or 25a II C C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. A pneumatic corset, for the use of women learning to swim, has been invented. Take IBoxsie'e Dinks, The great Homoeopathic remedy forcoughs, colds and bronchitis. They will check any cold when used promptly. 25 cents. The first marine Insurance was the Eoyal Exchange, founded in 1720. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cebts. Guaranteed tohaceo habit cure, maltes wesa; Wen strong, blood pure. 6Uc, SI. All drursisu. J. STE41 Mit STJ MM Ayj X.l Feel the Influence. Cold and beat alike aggravate neuralgia, because the nerves feol the cold and heat sensitively, but nerves are sensitive to treatment and feel the influence of St. Jacobs Oil, which cures the ailment promptly. The city of Besancon. Franc6, will erect a monument to the memory of Victor Hugo. Beacty lm Blood iJeep. i 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 purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for tea cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. ' The island of Cuba has an area about that of the State of Ohio. Dcnfncstt Cannot lie Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed eondition of the raucous liningofthe Eustachian Tube. When this tube Kets in flnmed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is tne result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Xinecases outof ten p re caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed rendition of the mucous surfaces. U'e will plvo One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Cue vet & Co., Toledo, O. Sold bv Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. to Eleo is equal to Long Island In le,,.a und ia twice as broad. Lane's Family medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Aots gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. Price 25 and 50o. It is estimated that 3000 marriages are daily performed throughout the world. 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 6trotig. All druggists, 50c or fl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co , Chicago or New York Eight thousand carrier pigeons are kept for use in the German army. Will Oct Down To It. It is certainly true that as deeply imbed ded as the sciatio nerve is, St. Jaooba Oil will get down to it and cure it. It is a proof of how penetrating and efficacious are its curative powers. Fruit trees are being exported from Georgia to South Africa. Knock! Coiirh and Cold. Dr. Arnold's Cough Killer cures Coughs and Colds. Prevents Con8umption.Alldru40jists.2.1! Blind men outnumder blind women by two to one. Educate Tonr Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, driieglsts refund money. The population of London increases by about 100,000 a year. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle Ninety thousand men in the British Army have good conduct badges. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an A No. 1 Asthma medicine. W. It. S illiams, Antioch, Ills., April 11, 1W4. There has been an alarming increase of arsenic eating in the Austrian army. To Cure n Cold in One Bay. Take Laxative Broino Quinine Tadleta. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 2oc. Amateur photographers in Russia are obliged to secure licenses. Tho advantages of Sulphur as a purifier Glenn's Sulphur Soap places within reach ofal Hill's Hair 6c Whisker Dye, black or brown, 50c. The skeleton measures one inch less than tho height of the living man, Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $a trial bottle and treatise free Du. R. H. Klime, Ltd.. 931 Arch St..Phlla..Pa. The world use3 over 3,500,000 steel pen9 a day. HeaiithyrippyGiTls often. From no apparent cause, become languid and despondent in the eaTly diys of their womanhood They drag along, always tiTed, never hungry, breathless and with a palpitating heart after slight exercise so that merely to walk up stoirs is exhausting. Sometimes a shoTt.dTy. cough leads to the fear that they ici &tc going into consumption! They are anaemic, doc tors tell them, which means that they have too little blood ATe you like that? tUve you too ..ale blooa? MoTe anaemic people have been made strong. hungTy. cncTdftic men and women bv the use of Dt Wiiiiac. i5 Pink Pills foT Pale People than by any otheT means They Miss Lulu Stevens, of Gasport, Niagara Co.. N. Y., h.d been a Tery healthy girl until about a year ago, when she grew weak and pale, she lost her appetite, was as tired in the morning as on retiring, and lost flesh until she became so emaciated that her friends hardly knew heT. The doc tors declared the disease ansemia.and gave her tip to die. A physician who was visiting in Gasport prevailed upun her to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. She did so, and was benefited at once. She is now well and strong the very picture of health. Buffalo N, K) Courier. 0 The genuirte 6Te sold only n packages, the vfApptT always bearing the full name. For sale by all drug, gists or sent, postpaid, by the. Dr Williams Hedicine Company, Schenectady. N.Y. , on receipt of price, fifty tents per bo. Book of cures free on request. "Bsiier Work Wisely Than Work Hard." Great Effort are Unnecessary in House Gleaning if you Use JB1I OH Not worth paying attention to, you say. Perhaps you have had it for weeks. It's annoying because you have a constant desire to cough. It annoys you also because you remember that weak lungs Is o family failing. At first it is a slight cough. At last it is a hemorrhage. At first it Is easy to cure. At last, extremely difficult-,. quickly conquers your little hacking cough. There is no doubt about the cure now. Doubt cornea from neglect. For over half a century Ayer's Cherry Pectoral has. been curing colds and coughs and preventing consumption. It cures Consumption also if taken in time. Eee? m of. Dr. Jigtr's Cfierri Fectorsi Plasters ever psr l3cgs II cos csnX Shall we aend yea book on this subject free? Gup Rladiozl Capxrimont. If yea hare any complaint what ever and desir tbe best medical adrice you can poMlbly obtain, write the doctor freJly. You will receive uromnt replv, without coit. A&drent, Dll. J. C. AVER, JUoweu, Mats. Ssnd Postal for Premium List to the Dr. Seth ijnold Medical Corporation, Woousocket, R. I. ft NEW HAIR MATTRESS FOH M YOUH OLD FEATHER BED. We will Rive yon your choice, a new full-sized, 40 pound curled hair mattress, upholstered by union workmen, covered in best hair lickinp, or a pure down quilt, or cash for your old leather bed. If you are not satisfied, tend back your mattress ot quilt and we will retnrn your feuthers. Established i'O years. Dank references. CANADA EXl'OKT CO., 53 Berry Street, Brooklyn. f VirEWDISC0VERY: SAi IT 3 I qaiok relief and carat won, om. send far book of tastimonialu nd IO flnya treatment lre. Dr. H H OREEM 8 IONS. AtUnta, 0 2) ET flf rRlTP . l's" 'MiJIAX, Patent kl5 I rT i d i J ari oa r streot, Wellington iilchent reference!). AGENTS WAHTED wGeTi.9, Irk needed at once. HOWARD UROH., Buffalo, N.Y. RUniMATRM lTKEI)-One bottle-Positive nCUHlA I lOhl relief in 24 hours. Postpaid. 1 Of Alexandeb Remkdy Co., 46 Greenwich St., N.f WANTED Case of Dad nealtli that Itri-A'N'H. will not benefit. Send 6 cts. to Kipous Chemical -Co., New York, for lo samples and lonu testimonials rl n WMHi-w MiiL.ni. fMj. ti.OC rniLO Ui& Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. CJae , ... . 5' Or U "d..'-v

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