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“ - Wd> Wayiwitt Berl ’ ? - r She was a lady ’with a way 'with her. She stood on the footboard of a car down about 30th street, and sho beamed on the three women in the seat "Won’t you folks please shove along?” said she. It’s such a nuis ance, having to climb over people. Thanks.” She seated herself In the end seat. "I always ask people to move along,” she said. "I Just won’t climb over them.” A curious rigidity settled on the Jaw of the woman who bad been fofeed out of the end sent. Sho had a bas ket on her lap, and there was fire in her eye. At 35tb street she rose, and without a word she climbed over tue lady who had the way with her. She gouged the lady’s trim shirt waist with the basket She kicked the aJady’s trim foot with mallee, nnd she .Jerked the lady’s trim hat away as she parsed. “There!” was all she said, and she looked ns If she meant It.—Chicago Inter Ocean. ACHED IN EVERY BOHE. Chicago Society Woman Who Woa So Sick She Could Not Sleep or Eat, Cured by Doan’s Kidney Pills. Marion @ Knight, of 33 N. Ashland ave., Chicago, Orator of the West Side W e d n e sday Club, says: “This winter when I started to use Doan's Kidney Pills I ached In every bone and had Intense pains lu the kidneys and pelvic or gans. The urine was thick and cloudy and I could barely eat enough food to live. I felt a change for the better within a week. The second week I began eating heart ily. I began to Improve generally and before seven weeks had passed I was well. I had spent hundreds of dollars for medicine that did not help mo, but worth of Doan's Kidney Pills re stored me to perfect health.” A FREE TRlAL—Address Foster- Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all dealers: price 50 cents. MAKES MONEY FOR NATIVES. Mint in Birmingham Coins Metal in the Largent Quantities. Birmingham, England, has a mint which, In addition to turning out mil lions of English coins, does more in the way of supplying foreign govern ments with coin than any other money making establishment in the world. A few days ago it shipped the first in stallment of a huge Egyptian order for 10,000,000 plasters. The consignment weighed five tons, was conveyed in sixty cases and valued at $15,000,000. For well over a century Birmingham has taken the lead in this literal kind of money-making. As far back as 1707 quo firm coined under contract for the British government 4,000 tons of topper coin, valued at $4,000,000. Among the countries and govern ments which have gone time after to Birmingham for their money are India, Tunis, Canada, Turkey, Chinn, Hong-Kong. Hayti. Sarawak, Tuscany, Venezuela and Chili. In some instances, notably in that of China, the coins were not made in Birmingham. As a matter of fact, no Chinese coin has, so far as la known, ever been made outside the celestial, empire. The pride and prejudice of the Chinese have to be humored, so the firm sent out a complete plant with men to operate it, and the coins were struck in China. No fewer than eight separate plants have been sent out to China in this way. For the new kingdom of Italy the same thing was done in 1852, 1,(100 of “blanks” being shipped to furnish the raw material. Again, lu Marseilles, when the re establishment of the em pire under Napoleon 111. rendered nec essary a rfew copper coinage, 750 tons of metal were in this wny turned Into money on French soil. Merit Makes It the World's Leader. Merit, great<*t medicine ever put into convenient form for quick, easy, pleasant use—backed by the right kind of adver tising, has given CASCARETS the greatest sale iu the world among laxa tive medicines. Over ten million boxes a year are now being bought by the Ameri can people. Tliis wonderful growth has never been equaled and it is tue best en dorsement that any medicine has ever re ceived. Great snceesees always bring out imitators and we want to wani our readers, that when it comes to buying medicine the best Is none too good and whenever a dealer offers to sell you something just as good as CASCARETS. put it down as a worthless fake, put your money in your pocket and. go to a store whiwryou will be treated fairly and where, when you ask for CASCARETS. you will get what you ask for. An EaaaylaL The editor of the Creektown Eagle was a young mau with impressive manners. After lie had knocked ut the door of Mrs. Casey’s modest dwelling he waited, hat In Immt, for her appear ance. “Madam,” he said, with a low bow, “I was present at the graduation ex erclsea of theXJreektown Seminary, and was much impressed by the essay of a young Indy. Miss Violet Casey, who Is. I am told, your daughter. Her treat ment of the theme, 'Stern Duties of Life.' was such that 1 hope U> indues her to contribute similar articles to the Creektown Engle. Would It be pmud. ble for me to see bar?” Mrs. Casey's mouth had opened in a slow, helpless way during thia address, but here at last was something tangi ble, and she brightened at once. "Violet?" she repeated. “Sun you can see her. She's out back of the house in the bammick. She'll be glad to see you. no doubt, but If you’ll ex cum mo, I'll run back to me Ironing.” MANCHURIAN HOUSES. I ♦ » « * 11 1 1111 1 : 1 1 1 o^o-o-»o » ♦ a From the dwelling of the rich bank er to the hut of the savage, says the author of "The Long White Moun tain," all houses in Mancjiurh} are alike in four respects, so far as circum stances will admit. First, all face the south, because that is the quarter trom which good Influences come, and It has the Incidental advantage of keeping the cruel north wind at the back. Secondly, Manchurian bouses are all one-storied. Thirdly, the front of the house is tilled with movable window-frames, with lattice panes of paper, not glass. As the summer ad vances the paper can be torn away and the house ventilated: and then, when winter returns, the paper Is very Inexpensive to replace. Fourthly, built up against the wall, there is a k’ang running the length of the Interior, and communicating betweeu room nnd room. The k'ang Is a platform about two nnd a half feet high and five feet broad, made of brick. Inside Is a Hue carried four or five times up and down the whole length of the k'ang. At one end is a boiler iu which the family din nor Is cooked. ■ Outside in the yard Ls a chimney ten or twelve feet high, which creuses a draft through the flue, fhus ail The smoke and heat of the kltchep tire pass backward and forward through the k'ang, warm It thoroughly, and finally emerge through the chimney. The top of the k’ang is covered with matting made of strips of bamboo or the rind of the tall millet. The convenience and economy of the r U'aag are marvelous. Throughout the day it serves as a place on which to sit ami talk. At meal times It is tho dining-room. The food is served on small tables a foot high, round which the family squats. In the evening the beds are unrolled, and It forms the general sleeping-place. In the cold weather. With the ther mometer below zero outside and below freezing point even within, a nice warm kang makes a most agreeable bed on which to sleep. It Is wonderful how little fuel Is re quired to heat It. A boy lights a wisp of straw aud stuffs It In a bole at tile foot of the k’ang. It. seems impossible so insignificant a fire can affect the groat mass of brickwork. Hut in about half an hour a gentle glow pervades the top of the k’ang, and all night long It remains delightfully warm. If in ignorance we ever ordered more fuel for tile k ang, we only made It insufferably irot. OeeaslonaUy In Inna we found k'angs so scorching by rea son of several series of dinners having been cooked or because our beds were too near the boiler that we were im pelled to sleep on the floor or on tables, or else to lay a quantity of straw under our bedding to mitigate tho heat. Voice from Arkansas. Cleveland, Ark., Aug. 15. —(Special.) —Nearly every newspaper tolls of some wonderful cure of some form of Kid ney Disease by the Great Aiuericau Remedy. Dodd’s Kidney Fills, and this part of Arkansas is not without its share of evidence tliat no cn.se Is too deeply rooted tor Dodd's Kidney Pills to cure. Mr. A. E. Carlile, well known and highly respected herer tells of bls cure after nearly a quarter of a century's suffering. Mr. Carlile says; "1 want to let the public know what I think of Dodd's Kidney Pills. I think tilery are the best remedy for sick kid neys ever made’. “I bad Kidney Trouble for 23 years and never found anything that did me so much good ns Dodd’s Kidney Pills. I recommend them to all sufferers.” There is no uncertain sound about Mr. Carlile's statement. He knows that Dodd’s Kidney Pills rescued him from a life of suffering and he wants the public to know it. Dodd’s Kidney i’llls cure all Kidney Ills from Back ache to Bright’s Disease. Men Klllod in War. A French statistician. Dr. Charles Rlcket, has arrived at the following estimate of the number of men who died In the wars carried on by tlie various Christian nations during the last century. The total reaches to the figure of 14,(100.000. It Is made up as follows: Napoleonic wars, 8,000,000: Crimean war, 300,000; Italian war, 30,000; American civil war, 500,000; Franco-German war, 800.000; Russo- Turkish war, 400,000; civil wars In South America, 500,000; various colo nial expeditions in India, Algeria, Mex ico. Tonquin. Abyssinia, South Africa and Madagascar, 5.000.000. For Your Perfect Comfort At (be St. Lonlt Bxpvaltloa, which In ven seven' upon t be feet, reiurmber to take nliiup ir box or two of ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, a powder for Hot. Tired, Achlnx. Swollen. Sweating Feet. 30.000 testimonials Sold by all Ilruggists. Zoe. DON'T ACCEPT A SI'BSTITI'TE. Trial package FREE. Ad dress Allen 8. Olmsted. I.e Roy. N. Y. Spllkins* Character. Rer. Dogood—-No man is so bad that there is not a little of the angel left in him. Bohson—-GueM that's so. Kememlier Spilkins? Everybody thonght he was about tha worst man on oarth. Why, his own mother wouldn't come to hie funeral. Well, sir, I've been told a thousand times a month for tho last five years that Bpil kina win the only real saint that war lived. "My goodness!" “I mnrrirM Spilkins' wMow.” We are never witboat a boule of Plan’s Cure for Cousamptlnn la raw ben sc.- Mrs. E M. Swayae, Wskka, Okie., April 17, 190 L One Minister's Failing, Deapwo Genbluird —Rev. Du Goode says he doesn’t believe In raising money by church fairs, suppers, concerts and lotteriea. » 4" Deacon Pinchttennl —H’m! He's etto-. ■ether too conacientioue for a minlater. FAVORITES I? Little Brown Huhilh. They drive home the cows from the pas ture Up thro’ the long shady lane, Where the quail whistles loud in the wheat field That is yellow with ripening grain. They find in the thick* waving grasses Where the scarlet-lipped strawberry grows; They gather the earliest snowdrops v And the first crimson buds of the rose. They toss the hay in the meadow. They gather the elder bloom white: They find where the dusky grapes purple In the soft-tinted October light They know where the apples hang ripest And are sweeter than Italy’s wines; They know where the fruit hangs the thickest On the long, thorny blackberry vines. They gather the delicate seaweeds. And build tiny castles of sand; They pick up the beautiful seashells, Fairy barks, that have drifted to land. They wave from the tall, rocking tree tops, Where the oriole’s hammock nest swings; And at night time are folded in slumber By a song that a fond mother sings. Those who toil bravely are strongest. The humble and poor become great; And from those brown-handed children Shall grow mighty rulers of state. The pen of the author and statesman. The noble and wise of our laud— The sword and the chisel and palette. Shall be held in the little brown hand. —Anonymous. The “Old, Old Song.” When all the world is young, lad, And all the trees are green; And every goose a swan, lad, And every lass a queen; Then hey for boot and horse, lad, And round the world away; Young blood must have its course, Ind. And every dog his day. When all the world Is old, lad, And all the trees are brown; And all tho sport is stale, lad. And all the wheels run down; Creep home, and take your place there, Tho spent and maim’d among; God grant you find one face there You loved when all was young. —Charles Kingsley. WASHINGTON’S FIRST MISSION. Chosen by Gov. Dinwiddie as an Envoy to the French Outpoatß. Like all Virginians, I was disturbed during this time by the news of the in solence of tlie French on the frontier, and began to feel that my brother’s money, put into the Ohio Company, was in peril, for we were likely to bo soon cooped up by a line of forts, and our trade in peltries was already al most at an end, and about to pass into the hands of the French. We learned with pleasure that the royal governors wore ordered to Insist on the retire ment of these overbusy French, who claimed all the land up to the Alle ghenies, but I did not dream that I was soon to take part in w the matter. j About that time, or before, there bad been much effort to secure the Six Na- , tions of Indians as allies. One of their ; chiefs, Tanncharlsson, known as the Half-King, because of bolding a subsi diary rule among the Indians, advised a fort to be built by us near to the Forks of the Ohio, on the east bank, and Gist, the trader, set out on this errand. A Capt Trent was charged to carry our king's message to the French outposts: but having arrived at Logstown, 150 miles from nis des tination, and hearing of the defeat of 1 our allies, the Mlamls, by the French, i he lost heart nnd camo back to report. I The Ohio Company at this time com plained to the Governor of the attacks i on their traders, and this gentleman, being concerned both for his own pock et and for his Majesty's property, re solved to send some one of more spirit to bear the king's message ordering the French to retire and to cease to molest our fur traders about the Ohio. It was unfortunate that Gov. Robert Dinwiddle, who was now eager to de 1 fend his Interests In the Ohio Com pany. had lost the prudent counsel of Its late head, my brother Lawrence. He would have made a better envoy । tiinn I, for at the ago of 21, a man Is I too young to influence the Indians, on account of a certain reverence they have for age In council. 1 was ignor- 1 ant of what wns Intended when I re ceived orders to repair to Williams- , burg. To my surprise, and I may say to nfy pleasure. I learned that I was । to go to Logstown. I was there to meet our allies, the Indians, and se cure from them an escort and guides, and so push on and And the French commander. I was to deliver to him my summons, and wait an answer dur- 1 Ing one week, and then to return. I was also tn keep my eyes open as to all matters of military concern. Whatever distrust I had In regard to my powers as an envoy, I said noth ■ Ing, for In case ot an order a sokifer i has no alternative but to obey. Had ! 1 been In the Governor's place I should have sent an older man—R. U’clr Mitchell's "The Youth of Washington" In tlie Century. MELANCHOLY OF RUSSIA. UuuU ■ Wuk NiaUm When Viewed frosn the InALle. j The genend Russian life, as I thus Saw It. while Intensely Interesting In many respects, was certainly notches: rule Despite the frirollty dominant among the tipper class and tin- letlab- Ism cvntrollllig the lower 'classes, there was, especially In that purlc.l of cal amity. a • deep ißiderione of ifielan cboly. Melancholy. Indeed. Is a murk ed characteristic of Husain. and, above all, of the peasantry. They seem sad even in their aporta; their Hums al most without exception are hi the mi nor key; the whole atmosphere Is ap parently charged with vague dr. 1 of some calamity. Despite the suppres hlcvi of most of tlie foreign journals, and the blotting out of page .trier page of the newspapers allowed to enter the empire, despite all that the secret po lice could do In repressing unfavorable comment. It became generally known that all was going wrong In tlie Cri mea. News came of reverse after re verse; of the defeats of the Alum and Inkerrmin. and. as a climax, the lo.i of Sevastopol nml the destruction of tlie Russian fleet. In the midst of It all, ns is ever the ease in Russian wars, came utter collapse In the eommis sarlnt department; everywhere one heard hints and finally detailed stories of scoundreHam In high places; of money which ought to have been ap propriated to army supplies, but which had been expended at the gambling ta bles of Jbmiburg or In the Breda <|mir- Fer at Paris. Then it was that there was borne in upon me tlie conviction that Russia, powerful as she seems when viewed from the outside, is anything but strong when viewed from the inside. To sny "nothing of the thousand evi dent weaknesses resulting from nutoc nicy—the theory that one man, and he. generally, not one of the most highly endowed, can do the thinking for a hundred millions of people—there was nowhere the slightest sign of any up rising of u great nation, as, for Im stance, of the French against Europe in 1792. of the Germans against Frame in 1813 and In 1870, of Italy against Austria In 18511 nnd afterward, and of the Americans In the civil war of 1801. There were certainly ninny no ble characters lu Russia, and these must have felt deeply the condition of things; but there being no groat mid dle class, and the lower class having been long kept Ln besotted Ignorance, there seemed no force on which pa triotism could take bold.—From An drew D. White's “Russia In War Thue" In the Century. SOME MODERN ANNOYANCES. Schemes Employed to Get the Money of the Public. A possibly well-meaning habit among people who want your money is be coming a pnbiltr nuisance, says tlie Hurtta! Courant. It has become cus tou j y nowadays when an eniertain niuiit is to be given, especially if It Is a more or less charitable affair, to Blind a bunch of numbered tickets to jdtin Smith or Jolin Jttnen with a note informing him that these are to be sdtd and he la to account for the pro cerds. Primarily tlie notion is to get sonic money, which charities, ~ke tlie rest of us, can always find a place for, aid the idea no doubt prevails that Smith or Jones will sny to himself that It isn't worth while to hunt up buyers mid will Just draw his check for tlie bunch and let It go at that. That served - awhile nnd when the game was new, but now it has taken on chronic qualities and.the public are WHirylng. One sufferer recently rc muked in this office that his Invaria ble rule ns to nil such inclosures wns to chuck them Into bls waste basket on luflval. He hadn't asked for them aid he wasn't going to use them, and they were in the wny. When you come to analyze- it, there is a lot of calm Impudence in the proceeding. Not long ago a widely and most fa vorably known publishing house sent by express to various addresses in oils city unsolicited specimen volumes of a work they were bringing out, with cir culars as to terms. Them" nlso Invited tlx 1 person receiving the volume to ship It back at the expense of the publish ers in case it wan not wanted. Tills involved opening It first for exnmlha tion. then wrapping it up again and finally carrying or sending it to the express office. No doubt different peo ple treated the episode differently, but in one case the book Just lay where It was put on arrival. Successive in quiries about it from tlie publishing house were put with tlie book nnfl at Inst along came the expressman under orders from the publishers to get the book and carry It back to them. Then It went, but It need never have started. Throwing tlillfgs at people's heads Is not the best way to make them attrac tive. A Boom Town in Manchurl i. Kirill province contains the largest and most prosperous of all Russian towns in Manchuria, Harbin. It is only three years old. and yet It had, In December last, a population exceeding flll.OOO people, of whom half were Rus sians. It is splendidly located on the Sungall River, nnd is in about the geograpldcal center of Maochurin. It Ison tlie main Une of the Russian rail way, and tlie Vladlvostpck Une branches off at this point. We are accustomed to boom towns in the Fnlted States, but 1 doubt If we can , uni the Russian record bi tlie con- Iruction of n town with great govern ment buildings, brick and stone bust ncss bouses, great flour mills aud fac tories In 150 We^ks. —Century. An InbaUllant of Alaska. The Rev. W. Bompas, Church of En gland Bishop of Alaska, went to Wln nljieg recently to attend a meeting of the synod. This whs the first time he had lieen out of Alaska In thirty years. You know how selfish you are? Well, you can judge from yourself how self lab othera are W-1 4 W ■ y 1 I 8 I Mrs. Hitghson, of Chicago, whose f letter follows, is another woman in high position who owes her health to the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. “Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — I suffered for several years with general weakness and bearing-down pains, caused by womb trouble. My apjie ' tite was fitful, and I would lie awake for hours, and could not sleep, until I seemed more weary in the morning than wnen I retired. After ^reading one of your advertisements I decided to try the merits of Lydia E!.-Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and lam so glad I did. Noone can describe the good it did me. I took three bottles faithfully, and besides building up my general health, it drove all disease and poison out of my body, and maad me feci as spry and active as a young girl. Mrs. Pinkhan/s medicines are certainly all they are claimed to be.’ — Mrs. M. E. Hughson, 347 East Ohio St, Chicago, 111. Mrs. Pinkham Tells How Ordinary Tasks Produce Displacements. Apparently trifling incidents in woman's daily life frequently produce displacements of the womb. A slip on the stairs, lifting during menstruation, standing at a counter, running a sewing machine, or attending to the most ordinary tasks may result in displacement, and a train of serious evils is started. The first indication of such trouble should be the signal for c^uick action. Don’t let the condition become chronic through neglect or a mistaken idea that vou can overcome it by exercise or leaving it alone. More than a million women have regained health by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If the slightest trouble appears which yon do not understand write to Mrs. Pinkham, nt Lynn, .Mass., for her advice, and » few timely words from her will show you tlie right tiling to do. Tills advice costs you nothing, but it may mean life or happiness or both. Mrs. Lelah-Stowell, 177 Wellington St., Kingston, Ont., writes: “Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — You are indeed a godsend to women, and if they all knew what you could do for them, there would be no need, their dragging out miserable lives in agony. . “ I suffered tor years with bearing-down pains, MU womb trouble, nervousness, and excruciating uead- t ache, but a few bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s 4” -c Vegetable Compound made life look ^4^ *i^ X \ new and promising to me. lam light and KI * 471 1 happy, and I do not know what sickness ziz 1 1 is, and I now enjoy the best of health.” t V v - I ’ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetal>l& ’ I » Compound can always be relied upon to restore ’ health to women who thus suffer. It is a sovereign cure for the worst forms of female complaints, — that bearing-down feeling, weak back, falling nnd displacement of the womb, inflammation of the ovaries, and all troubles of the uterus or womb. It dissolves and expels tumors from tho uterus in the early stage of development, and chec ks any tendency to cancer ous humors. It subdues excitability, nervous prostration, and tones up the entire female system. Its record of cures is the greatest in the world, and should be relied upon with confidence. Ar AAA FORFEIT if »• cannot forthwith prodnoe tb« original Is’ten sad Mfn.tqrM of V AIII It I above taatunonlaU, which will provo tn air abaolnlo gonnin.noa- WUUU V Lydia K. Plnkbaiu Medlclna Co., Lynn. Macs g Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year. 13 & THE FAMILY’S FAVORITE MEDIOINE A M I i ■ CATHARTIC argTg^^ BEST FOR THE BOWELS W The Cow«irl*H Race. No event on the program excites more interest than the cowgirl’s rac aud there is n groat craning of necks when down before the judges' stand tlie contestants trip, each in trim shirt waist and divided skirt, each matter of-factly holding out Uer small feet for the spurs yshich a committeeman is gallantly fitting, each in business like fashion taking a look herself nt the fastenings of her heavy cowboy saddle. A moment more and each has vaulted to her seat and they are Jock eying for place like veterans. The crowd is all upoh its feet now, yell ing like mad when the real start is made, w Then they are away like the wind. They ride to the manner born. | fearlessly, splendidly, each bending low over her horse’s neck and fiercely applying whip and spur. It is a close half mile, and the multitude holds Its iyeath for a second or twp when, on the home stretch, they are seen com ing almost neck nnd neck. Then one forges ahead a little—another gains— and cheer after cheer rends the air when under the wire files a little girl —she does not look to Im* more tlinn 14 years old —with short hair Hying, eyes danqlng and cheeks like roses, ns she looks up nt the judges’ stand with a laugh of triumph, the “Champion Lady Rider of the World,’’ according to the terms of tho contest—Leslie’s Monthly. Wrt. WlwhloWh Xwfyvtm Btbuv for CblMrva (••ebing. •on«D« tha v«mm, radam laßabUaUou. al Ura >aiD. enraa wind aaiia. * a— u a bo«Ua The man who dun t believe in euny ht renfter Iraz a dredpliull cbdap opinion ov bimaelf; he lowura hlmnlf down to th« lev.l ov thw aut—tha ant a leatla ah ad. Avoiding Suspicion. Miss De Style—Horrors! Why have you adopted a grocer's scale and a yard stick as our eoat of nnns? Mrs. De Style—l wish people to know that ovr money was made in honest tiude. Otherwise they might au ect that your father or grandfather had been captain on the police force. Where Women Are Ruled. "Are there clubs for women In this town?” asked the suffragist from the East. “Certainly not,” replied the gallant Westerner. "We can handle women without clubs.” —Chicago Post. A SKIN OP BBAUTY IS A JOY FOWeVUR. Dll. T. FELIX OOURA Pis’ll ORIENTAL CREAM. OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER go JUtsorM Ten. rimplea,rreofclM, — L Moth talebai. Itaab. and Skin Ew*a , a® dlaeanee, and every blamlab 5 ,• I = e-jVPr LeJCs ^\on beauty, and IjtlJfAdr, .ywdlrdea'lelecuon. It w “ B atoo-l the teal g Msu Alo LW | yT'f (ja yearn. and la 11x0 1 eo bar nt I on we L Ei SA T/ bl telle It to be aura az 3 i^l Itlapmrertymade. A 71 Ar eplno < ounter >/ "Th fl fell of almllar aCh a ZTy \ MB r fir. 1. A. Ajf ZU i'AJJ.. \ Sayre atul to a J V Lr<\uV // \ lady of lb- bant. trhvT I Ilin •* patent j: /. tlpr LJ I*A" rou Indies Lz 2AVA r VS^VwUI iio Ibam, I I / 1 111 recommend ' flouraud's Cream' ae Iba treat harmful of all the akin rrensralbms." For aala by all Pmeflau runty Gooda lleau-ra In Iba I'. 8.. Ceuadna. and Europe. HM. T. HOPKINS, Pray'. If S™* l *onea It, H. », S. O. N. U, - - No, 84 — 1004 BEGGS’BLOOD PURIFIER CURES catarrh of the stomach.