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Pains and Aches Of Rheumatism Make Countless Thousands Suffer. But this disease is cured by Hood's Sar saparilla, which neutralizes the acid In the blood. It you have nny symptoms ot rheumatism take Hood's Sarsaparilla at and do not waste time and money unknown preparations. The merit of Hood's Sarsaparilla is unquestioned and Its record of cures unequalled. roads free all of To at age tho age a by ! Evcry woman who doesn't under •stand her condition should write to Lynn, Mass., to Mrs. Pinkham for her advice. Her advice is thorough com mon sense, and is the counsel of a learned woman of great experience, Read the story of Mrs. F. S. Bennett, Westphalia, Kansas, as told in thfc fol lowing letter: " Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—I have s.af fered for over two years with falling, enlargement and ulceration of the womb, and this spring, being in such a weakened condition, caused me to l!ow for nearly six months. Sometime , urged by friends, I wrote to you for advice. After using the treatment which you advised for a short time, that terrible flow stopped. "I am now gaining strength and Gesli, and have better health than I have had for the past ten years. I wish to say to all distressed, suffer ing women,'do not suffer longer, when there is one so kind and willing to once Hood's Sarsaparilla IsAmerica'HGreatestMedlclne for rheumatism all liver ilia. 25 cents. Hood's Pills NEW JEWELRY. The Parisian Jewel dealers are ah ways Inventing pretty and novel orna ments to attract their fair customers and one of their latest Is a wide scroll arrangement through which Is drawl the velvet ribbon band, now about the neck. The scroll does nol lie on the folds, but around them, and is sometimes made of two twisted ser pents or again of flower stems, thi flowers forming the central ornamenl of the necklace. W OH! If the doctor is called before the dia ls far advanced, the treatment Is It consists es ease ufiually satisfactory, sentlally In a change of diet, some times even a change to artificial food, If the child has hitherto been nursed exclusively; hut this change Is some thing that needs careful study, since It will have peculiarities of its own In The addition of almost every case. fruit juice especially that of or some anges, limes or grapes, to the new diet Is generally of great value, and some times will effect a cure without other modifications» of the previous diet. NERVOUS DEPRESSION. [A TALK WITH MRS. PINKHAM.] A woman with the blues is a very un comfortable person. She is illogical, unhappy and frequently hysterical. The condition of the mind known ns " the blues," nearly always, with wo men, results from diseased organs of generation. It is a source of wonder that in this of advanced medical science, any should still believe that more age person force of will and determination will depressed spirits and nerv These troubles are overcome cusness in women, indications of disease. ng aid you." Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is a woman's remedy for wo More than a million wo man's ills, men have boon benefited by iL BETTER THAM BUTTER Butterine is. That is, it is bettor than very nearly all butter. 'J ho best butter that can be pro duced is as good ns Butterine. It Isn't better. It 'i be. And the butter is as good only at the es from the chum, it doesn t stay lain on a parity only uiients. The hut-ter begins to deterio moment it c ho. Butter and Bntteri for a few rate immediately. Thu .Butterine doe Whv do you not buy'Butterine ? It Vbecause you art? prejudiced. You have {been told that Butterine is artificial. What does artificial variety of things according to In artificial. So Im but d by a pr ess. One is just _ _ 'he elements of both productd by nature. Both come fr Animal. ,, , , .. . And these elements are practically indentical. Thnt's whv butter can't lie better than Butterine. Pure Klondike gold can't be any better tli Cripple Creek gold. Oold is gold. Certain elements tbe same whether m butter or Butterine— whether in the milk or the lar of a The difference bet wee butter is mostly in the Butterine process is supe ''"xiuFwlth all Its merits Butterine costB less Ilian pound. And at this low press prepaid. mean? It means circumstances. Butte Butterine is manufac Butter is manufactured by as artificial as the other. 'J pr. the s i Butterine and the best process of making. The •lor aud isaguaruntee of >nly 15«*. ]»t* butter price > 10 IS vackngcs ln 1 lb pritits. 3 lb rolls. 86 tb packages 40 lb packages (solid). You are enjoying other modern masterpieces of science; why not this wholesome and economical ? We want you to try it. WILKINS Ä- CO., 208 Otli Street, N. W., WiiMliiiiKtoiiy l>. (t. I*. O. 1*0X 865._ lier race, but wlfo Iiad pimples ehe has beon talcing CASCAltETS and they have all disappeared. I had been troubled with constipation for some time, but after talc Ing the first Cascaret I have had no trouble with this ailment. We cannot speak too high ly of Cascarets." Fred Waktman, 6708 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. CANDY CATHARTIC w mè TRADE MAfW CVECfäTKReO Ploaeant. Palatable. i'<;tont, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 2ac.5Uc ... CURE COWSTiPATIC?J. ... Sterling lUiunly loia|iauj, illifltsgo« untreal, Neiv YorL. nntped by ell dniff* B0-Tß'8SCS Pi l. Tobacco Habit. j _ .»aß WhtliE AU OSÉ FAILS. fej Best Cough Syrup. Tottpa Good. Ueo K,-. in tiiiio. Bind by druggists. feT: ÄIÄ 1 «!ieie(e(©:eieKjie(©!efoieK) GOOD ROADS NOTES. Rural Delivery ami the Roads. It is certain that as long as our roads remain ns they are now rural free mail delivery will often be a physical impossibility, writes John M. Stahl, in the Chicago Record. Some times tho mails cannot, bo delivered at all to farmers or even to the residents of outlying suburban districts; and, asido from this, the roads in most localities are such as to make the daily delivery of mail unbearably costly. To tho other gains from road improve- ; ment may he added the fact that it would permit rural free mail delivery at reasonable cost. In nn address delivered in the Senate Chamber, Springfield, 111., ! March 20, 1892, I said that the aver age cost of wagon transportation in j tho United States was twenty-five ; cents per ton per mile; that the aver age annual wagon transportation I moved 330,000,000 tons, and that good j roads would savo above $500,000,000 a year. As I explained in that ad- ] dress, these figures were obtained i from calculations based on the traffio reports made by the railways to State Railway Commissions and the Inter state Commerce Commission, and on j the statistics of railway, river-boat ; and lake-vossol traffic then furnished j by tho 1800 census. So far as I have j been able to learn, it was the first at- I tempt to do more than guess at the | magnitude of wagon transportation and the saving from good roads. The address was published and widely circulated by the Illinois division of the League of American Wheelmen, and the figurés were at once vigor ! ously assailed. But no one has ever succeeded in proving that they were much in error. Latta, of Purdue University, investi gated the cost of wagon transporta tion, and arrived at practically the same figures. roads Bureau of the Department of Agriculture sent letters of inquiry to IQ,000 farmers throughout the Union, and from tho data thus obtained and from other sources it reached the con clusion that the cost of wagon trans portation is twenty-five cents per ton I per mile; that the annual wagon trans- j portation moves 313,310,227 tons, and i that good roads would save each year j nearly $600,000,000. In the $600, 000,000 were included the loss of per jghablo products for want of access to to markets, the failure to reach markets when prices were good and the failure to cultivate products which would bo a marketable if markets were always accessible. The sum of $600,000,000 is a big fol- annual tribute to mud. It is inequit able to put all the burden of road making on the farmers. Other classes are benefited by good roads. Good the roads must come through some plan of State aid that will secure the proper to participation of all classes and of cor portions in bearing the cost. I Later, Professor of In 1896 the Good 1 Macadam. A Travesty A correspondent of the Arctic (E. X.) Times says that eight inches of stone "is just about half what it ought to be" for a good road, and quotes in support of that view the description of a nine-inch macadam road from the Xj. A. W. Bulletin of August 19th. Apparently, however, he fails to notice the reasons why that particular road proved a failure. According to the j report, a sort of trench was made, a j lot of stone dumped in, some earth ; M spread over it, a roller put on, and I m tlio result called a macadam road. j a Such work is a mere travesty. A i V road made in such a way would be as : § low or lower than tbe earth on i ts O sides; water could not run off its sur- ! face, and it would work m beneath the stones. Ko drainage was provided lor. Neither was the earth bed com pressed or shaped before the stones were laid. Some spots are naturally softer than others and soon yield, allowing the roadway to becomo de pressed in places. This should be anticipated and provided for by a preliminary rolling. Furthermore, | good results could not ho expected from attempting to compress nine inches of stone at one rolling. ' broken stone should have been put j down in two layers and each one thoroughly wetted and rolled; then, if anything more was needed, some stone screenings should have been laid on top, wetted and rolled in. Each binder inevitably causes . a rutty surface, and mud appears with ■ It to . low XllO 1 of every l-aiu. It is quite possible to build n tkor ougbly good road with nine inches of stone, and much less is being used iu some places. Tho advocates of thin j stone roads claim that six inches will j give perfectly satisfactory results, and ■ in some cases even as little as four inches. Within reasonable limits it is 1 not so much tbe mere thickness of stone that ensures a good highway as it is provision for ample drainage and then providing a roadbed which will bo perfectly compact, and, iiually, m stitutiug a system of constant super vision and repair.—L. A. W. Bulletin. ; To get out of old ruts uso wide tires, Good highways promote prosperity. ' of ule. of ilio Cr» Progr Where a road is low, the soil reten tive or tho location wet, under-drain I ing and surface-drainage are both necessary. A law passed by tho Vermont Leg | islature requires that wagons to carry three tons shall have wheels with a j three-inch tire, over threo tons four inch, and over six tons, six-inch. "Cycle Paths" is the namo of the latest publication issued by tbe L. A. W. It is an eighty page pamphlet, liberally illustrated, and contains a variety of information regarding paths, guide posts, bridges, taxation of cycling, license laws aud other mat* ters of interests to wheelmen. Do 1 Keep ; ! j ; I j ] i j ; j j I | of the of to and ton I j and i j coughing JB» _We know of nothing better to tear the lining of your throat and lungs. It is better than wet feet to cause bronchitis and pneumonia. Only keep it up long enough and you will succeed in reducing your weight, losing your appetite, bringing on a slow fever and making everything exactly right for the germs of con sumption. Stop coughing and you will get well. Agers I Cherry pectoral cures cough9 of every kind. An ordinary cough disap pears in a single night. The racking coughs of bronchitis are soon completely mas tered. And, if not too far along, the coughs of con sumption are completely cured. Ask your druggist for one of Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plaster. It will aid the action of tho Cherry Pectoral. If you have ar.y complaint ■what ever and tloslre the baut medical advice you can possibly obtain, write us freely. You will receive a prompt reply that may be of great value to you. Address. DU. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass. The Potash Question A thorough study of the sub ject has proven that crop fail can be prevented by using fertilizers containing a large ures percentage of Potash; no plant can grow without Potash. 1 j _ _ j ; M §*? E Ü. I m jrs VP j a n $ ,. oa t rhÜ"box of our V i V c hoioe vegetable seed? to .any one who > : § SkTTui uÜllfKîLSïSloS'. Write * O à postal stating you accept this offer, and rj ! V tions. Wu Os-nun 50 Hio Premiums for J M.«n,i .«iiinw innimiina Watches. Pistols, ç a | j a We have a little book on the subject of rotash, written by authorities, that we would like to send to every farmer, free of cost, if he will only write and ask for it. QERHAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. SEESS. I ■ \ and Whiskey Habité R cured at homo with fl out paiu. Book of par löS ticularsaent FREES* SR'äl B. II.WOOLLEY, M.D. ijvTT)tllce 104 N. Pryor St Altai good pay mak •k all cut «ci d Hie. ft r particulars and . home kmploy BATH. >115 AY L\DY who Ing neckwear for mnll any distance. ;t for employm 1 WENT CO.* 138 Lincoln Sire Ä bj at home ed co 1U.W DISCOVERY; el»ei quick roliof and cures wont testimonials and lO duyir ent Free. Dr H-H ORSEN'C BOKB. Atlanta. G* DROPSY Chubb. Bend tor book of i \\T ANTED—Case of had health that Brig*A W «*11 uotbenefit Bend f. eta. to Ripans Chemical ïork. for 10 samples ami lowo t est fanon i ils. TELL TH K ADVERTISER you saw it in thlis VNU 2*9. Co., N pap' Embroidery Slllc Kaclr. A very pretty little hanging rack, of made of silver who lu ornamental fll'c- f iu gl - ee shape, with little hooks of bent | j wire, closely resembles a hatrack in j miniature. But this is not a doll ar ■ rangement for hats, only a dainty ail j un ct to the embroidery table. On is 1 eac h little hook hangs still another of B u v er wire arrangement, bent Into a as four-leaved rosette and intended to hold ora broii!ery silks. The silks to be ueed ln any one special design may m- b0 wound upon these silk holders and hung on the rack conveniently near the embr0 idery frame. This smooth ; silver wire may not be as elaborate ns the heavily chased or all filigree silk holders, hut they are hotter for the ' silk, do not fray them, and tho pretty llttle rack keeps them together and tree from the dirt about the t able. ^ a j "Then does post-office mean Information. "Pa, doesn't 'post' mean after?" "Yes." after office?"—Ex. |l m P I 9 WÊÊM 8 1 Û û :- T " Price $1.00. Hair Restorer is a Perfect Pressing 1 and Restorer. La Creole >.» Appearnnc«. "Do you think that women are much influenced by à men's porsonal appear anceî" aBked one young man. "I should say so," replied the youth with a peachy complexion and curly hair. "Apollo was all right in his day. but he'd have to put on quilted trousers and wear a football mask to make an; Impression now."— Er. Battleship Gray Diked. ••Battleship gray" is the newest col The haberdashers have It in tieB, scarfs, hosiery and gloves. It 1 b com ing In on headgear for men and wom In the dry good3 houses It Is' found In ribbons and the other trim mings that delight the feminine heart. The mills are beginning to turn out fabrics for men and women, and the serviceable dull but withal attractive color promises to become a fad for all kinds of wear durin" " '"'ter. or. en nppla tree On a Long Island farm Is which boro two crops of fruit tho past year, and the farmers are taking unusual Interest In this peculiarity of nature. Just as much Interest has been shown In Ilostotter's Stom ach Bitters, which hna tho peculiarity of dyspepsia, indigestion, constipation and l disorders that other remodtes fall to It rarely falls, and Is pdfeslble. Ing blood _ benefit. In chronic c It cures whenever a The more honesty a man has tho less he af fects tho air of a saint. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, bo magotic, full of life, and nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bac, tho wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggist, fiOeor SI. Cures guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. The man whobuilded better than he knew up to-dato contractor. was a cured. No fits or nervous of Dr. Kline'« Great Fits permanently ness after first day'-— . , A ,, . NerveRestorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Ltd., 081 Arch St., Phila, Pa. Dit. R.H.Ki tho wheels of a watch travel kept going, 8,5583-1 miles In Educate Yo Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10c, Stic. If C-C.C. fail, druggist refund money If llowels With Cascarets. your dignity; it will wilt at Don't stand c tho judgment. man attends to it personally. lias nothing to do he always When To Cure a Cold In One T>ny. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet«. All Druggists refund monoy if it foils to cure. 86c. Some people attempt to do others that they dunned by. No matter what you say to a chemist he al ways has a retort. Vo Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c JfC. C. C. fail tocure.druggists refund money Honesty, liko all other politics, often runs out the day before the fire. A title makes a little man great and a great man little. _ Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forohlldren teething,softens the gums, rcduci ng l nflaram tion,Rllayspain,cures wind colic. 33o. a bottla It 25a, Talk is cheap. That's why barbers are giv ing It away with every shave. No-To-Bnc for Fltty Cents. Guaranteed tobao.cohabit cure.makos weak strong, blood pure. 50c. $1. All druggists men An old batehelor says a woman's itongue is an organ without stops. no «tat» oromo, citt or Toledo, j Frank J. Cubnky makes oath that he uthe ffMrÄiÄÄ and State aforesaid, and that bald firm will pay tho sum of one hundred DOLLARS for eacn and every case of oàtarhm tant cannot be curod by the use of 11 ali/r Catatuih LiiRR. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to bofore me and subscribed in my ) presence, this 6t,h day of December, l A. D. 1886. A. W. Gleason. _ ' Nolctnv 2 J ubi ie Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for te«tU vot^iï* 1 h, rrco. F. J. < it bn ey & to., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, i Hall's Family Pills« Tho good points of a good many pcoplo seem to have been broken olf. V > * rj J ç of we of SBAI I this hast. ItaHUty Is Blood Deep. CloRn 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 ten cents. All druj gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 35c, 50c. , work is never done—unless she other woman to do it. Woman's getss I have found riso's Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine.— V. R. LOTZ, 1305 Scott St., Covington, Ivy., Oct. 1.1884. It's hotter to accept some statements than to bother hunting up the proofs. MAKE FLOORS OF PAPER. mak >115 bj Ira German Invention Which Is a Iïardwood. provoment The newest floor Is of paper, and is of German importation. The paper is imported in a dusty, powdery form, and is then mixed with a kind of ce ment which gives substance to the im palpable stuff and a plaster-like ap It Is said that when tho el»ei wont duyir G* ils. thlis pearance. floor is laid, the absence of joints and Beams like those of the hardwood floors rack, fll'c- f j 8 a distinct improvement, and witti bent | out the inconvenience of catching dirt, in q-], e pas te of which tho floor is com ar- pose( j i s laid on and then rolled out ail- with a heavy roller, specially adapted On for t]l0 purp0 se, something like the Btreet roller for asphale. The floor a w ] ien smooth, hard and dry is either to stalned G r painted to match or contrast to uh the woodwork of tho room, wal may t cherry 0 r mahogany stain giving and ' ea r an ce like the natural wood, near there ftre many advanta ges to " lg " per floor> one ot expense not ns eln _ inconsiderable, a disadvantage to silk sensitive is its pliable feel to tho the fect for n o matter how hard it is roll pretty ' always an unnatural sensa and w ho walks over it.-New ^ York Tribune. Newly Minted. ••I've got a new idea." mean mI giit, then, to be a bright one."—Ei. "limb! It i Ç -Hxais vgXT ju: .j— * "1 r y «—A • . sly' "V ■m I if m i Î A i <7. 3 ÎS > / m, V/ \ wife knows how necessary it is that Every farmer's the milk buckets, pans, churns, and other implements of the dairy be perfectly clean and free from taint. A com mon yellow soap that smells of rosin should never be used for washing these. Such soaps are made of materials that you would not use for any purpose. Besides, they are sticky and the soap will get into the cracks and corners and stay there. Ivory Soap is pure, it is well made, and only sweet, clean materials are used. Then it rinses readily. IVORY SOAP IS 99«^ PER CENT. PURE. : Co.. ClnolnnutL î FrocUr * 8»*b Copyright, 180J, 1 A Lesson in Physiology EVERY ONE SHOULD LEARN. It Shows tho Only Mothoü by Which Diseases of the Respiratory Organs Can Be Reached and Cured. I' Fasstiffo of Ch® Nose. Constructed to Hort and Dry the Air before en tering tho Bronchi al Tubes an I Lungs Sons« of smell du »troyed here by strong Liquid Med icines. EuÿnjMan Closed by irritate In g Sprays, Douches Atomisors and Vapors, catling Deafness. % jB u TONGUE. .. Senso of tasto de- I rtroyed by etronj drugs. is Dry air ont'* can enter the Bronchial Tubes and Lu u ga. Through It alone can Diseases of these Organs be reaohed and curoa I.UNG. be EPIGLOTTIS. Liquid medicines In S-yrnys, Douches, Atom!tern and Vapors stop hero. / , a W J f BMtt&mi TUBES.... i r I, f . . 99 sc by to she I» tlio only sormMclo ovor found volatile mon K h to impregnate Dealness, Asthma, Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, and Consumption. IT CURES BY INHALATION. Tlie first nod only mothod of trnntlna these diseases ever endorsed bjr ee. Bond for tho Story of " Uyumei." Mailed i itt E. • eSSEPB a I We will mail to every person semling us 25o. EiWiffiiL yrrE,lsa B ""in stamps or cash, mentioning this paper, a complote "Hyomei " Trial Outfit, consisting of an Aluminum Inhaler, Who D ropper, bottle of Hyomei sufficient to last two weeks, gauze anil full direc tions for using. Wo also semi FREE " The Story of Hyomei " anil a sample box of Hyomei Balm, the wonderful anti-septic healer and cure for piles, bruises, burns, sprains, scalds, chaffing, saddle-sores eczema and a I finrfaco irritations. Send at once to tho MAIN OFFICE AND LABORilOliI ol THE K. T. BOOTH CO., ITHACA, N. Y. than Ira is is ce im ap tho GERSTLE'S > "mC* / j) Female Panacea r?/ m and Cures All Diseases of Women. ANY women are under the impression that the diseases peculiar to their sex arc natural and incurable because, so many suffer constantly from them. Dus is a mistake. Few women ore so badly diseased that they cannot be cured: It is true, that had they taken a remedy that was efficient wlien tin-first symntomsof dis 'N- case appeared, a more rapid cure would have been the result. No woman should neglect herself. When the mont lily pe riod becomes too frequent, painful, pro fuse. obstructed, or irregulär in any way. or if she suffers from fallingof t lie womb, whites, or nny other female trouble.she should ot once resort to the use of dirt, out the floor wal to not to tho roll M ij gS ( \ \ Gerstle's Female Panacea «(C3-. F. P 3 .) WMnh is nlisiiiutcly (lie best female remedy ever offered her. Even if she lias been nei?lS»nt and h Unved disease to fasten itself upon her she should not tle sna r of heiim cured. This medicine is a purely vegetable tome, containing ♦Rose ingredients intended by nature ns a remedy for suffering women. It mat terSnit'ff ot her reinetieOinve been tried and proven failures-Gerstle r s Fe r male Panacea will not fail. If there is any tendency to eostiveness. indt diKestimim-hilimisness. inovc the bowels gently with a few mild doses of St. joionh'sLlvor Regulator. If your druggist doesnot keep these medicines intens und WB will semi them to you. all ch.-iigcs paid, upon receipt of price. Panacea, SÎ.OO pc-r Bottle. Liver Regulator, 25o per Package. Chattanooga, Tenn. L. CiERSTLB & CO., It ,*T'|