4 I'i r TROLLEY CARS AND PILLS. From the Evening News , N'owarkN. , J. Mrs. Anna Burns , of 833 Plane Street , Newark , N. J. , is a de3idedly pretty brunette - nette , twontsix years old tall ' and a loatsant . On the gr0un d nor of her residence so conducts a welt- ordered candy store. When our reporter visited her store , she in response to a question - tion told him : a very Intoreatiug story , "Until about two months ago , " she be- grin , " 'I enjoyed the very best of health and r could 'wotk ' night and day if necessary. Suddenly , andtplthout any apparent cause. I began to surer from intense pains in my bead ; In my limbs and temples. Almost distracted with thisseemingly never ending pain , I tried cure attar cure , prescription after prescription and almost a gallon of medicine of nil kinds. Nothin did me an good. In fact I became worse. The knncklesof myllandssoon became cramped r and the pain lam hips became more and more distressing each da . Business in the store bad to be attended to however , and 1:01 was obliged , suffering as 1 was , to eep moro or less on my feet and occasionally I ( was forced to go out. This was the ordeal I dreaded. Eachiimo Iwentout I trembled when I came near the car tracks , for my pain at times was so severe that I was obliged to stand perfectly still no matter where I was. On one occasion I was seize I in this way while I was crossing the tracks flu Market Street and there Istood perfectly - ly rigid , unabloto move hand or foot while a trolley car came thundering niong. Fortuuately It was stopped before It struck me , but the dread of it all lasted as long as my pain , for I never knew when crossing the tracks , whether I would not drop to the .ground in my agony and bo crushed to , doath. My anxiety to get well grew apace and I had about given u in despair when 1 saw in the Evening News one day. an advertisement - vertisement of 1)r. Williams' Pink Pills. Hera was something I hadn't tried before and I lost no time in getting to thin nearest drugatoro. There I paid fifty cents for u box of these truly wonderful , health restoring - ing pills. Before I bad finished taking bait of the ills I began to feel relieved : the gins id m his gradualy ) disa earedmnd for first time p i the in many felt as it { there was some ho e. I ntanued to take ( the ills and the more I took the bettor I felt. I finished one box not another , .and t10W having taken only a 1ow ? of the scond fifty cents' worth , I am free from all pain I una as happy as the day is long. Since I began to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I hnvo gained thirty pounds and now when I cross ho car tracks I duli't cure if there are a dozen vehicles near by. It is a great relief , Iassure you and sutlerin humanity has a over falling in Dr. 'Williams' t Pink Pills for PalPeople. I know what I 1 am talking about. I speak from exPor- iI fence. " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain , in a con- doused form , all the elements necessary to give now ltfo and richness to the blood and restore shattered norves. In men they elect - ect a radical cure in all cases arising fem mental worry , overwork or exceses of whatever nare. Pink Pills- are sold in boxes ( never in loose bulk ) at 50 cents a 1 box or six boxo ; for 83.50 , and may be had of all druggists , or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Moi Co. , Schenectady , N. Y. Sttirtts of Actresses. Maggie Mitchell once told a ques tioning woman that she always wore divided shirts , although at the time of this conversation the bifurcated garment - ) ment was scarcely known outside the world of the stage. Miss Mitchell said ' that almost all actresses wore this petticoat - ticoat because they found that it gave most fredom of gait and grace to one's Inoventents. She also said that she had her shirts trimmed with lace and embroidery - broidery , put on wrong side out , and that this was another notion prevalent in "the profession. " "Because , you see , " she explained , "in getting in or out of a carriage or a street car it is the underside of the edging that shows , r 'tnd only that. " WONDERFUL WHEAT YIELDS. The yield of wheat and other grains In Manitoba and the other western Ca- nadian. provinces this year has been phenomenal. Tltirtyflve millions of bushels of wheat , thirty millions of I bushels of oats , six millions of bushels of barley , besides large quantities of flax , rye , peas , etc. , have been produced in Manitoba by only 25,000 farmers , some of whom settled on the prairies a few years ago with very little capital , and other almost totally inexperienced in and unaccustomed to farm work. This enormous yield seems .almost incredible - credible , but when one reads of a farmer - er selling a part of his crop for $17,000 and having 4,000 bushels still on hand , it is easy of belief , and that another farmer , a Mr. Pruyn , near Emerson , Manitoba , had 21,000 bushels , and many of his neighbors harvested 10,000 bushels - els and upwards. A Portage Plains farmer averaged 53 1-3 bushels on a 40- acre field , and near Neepawa nine acres yielded 600 bushels - an average of 66 2-3 bushels per acre. Another field of 16 acres on the same farm yielded 800 bushels , while the entire crop of 105 acres turned out 40,000 bushels. A Carman settler was rewarded with 36- 865 bushels off 985 acres-an average of 363 bushels to the acre. In oats , one farmer raised 75 bushels to the acre by measurement , but by weight there were 106 bushels , the grain weighing 48 lbs to the bushel. Of course every farmer has not these phenomenal crops , but ' there are countless instances where the wheat yield was 30 , 35 , 40 ahd more bushels to the acre. Roots and vegetables - bles , too , rivaled the cereals in their i prolific yield. Stock is also largely raised , there being extensive ranches in Manitoba and the vast country to the west of it , and the shipments this year have aggregated 45,000 head , sheep being - ing also raised in large numbers. Dairying - ing is being rapidly developed , and the recent establishment of creameries has brought this new country prominently before the markets. of the world on ac- count'of the excellence of its butter and cheese. But wheat raising is Manito- ba's distinctive feature , fhe soil being particularly adapted for the production - tion of No. I hard , unsurpassed by any other grade , and it is safe to say that there is not any part of the continent where the yield has been so uniformly large and the grade so high as in Mani- toba. The headlights from the locomotives on the Maine railroads attract the deer from the forests , and.numbers of the I animals are being killed by the ear . .4 y Dlnlcu1Uer of Anthorship. Struggling author-"Eldora , can't F von keep that baby out about two mfn- utes His yells are enougkto drive one wild. " 1Vife-"No , I can'tI've got to finish - ish the dishes and knead the bread and mend Tommy's clothes. " Struggling author- " Well , anyhow , von could make .Iohnny and his sis stop their racket and close the windows so there won't be so many smells coming , in from the neighbors , and lock the i doors so those heartless bill collectors can't get in to annoy me. Pin writing an . article on 'How to Be Happy , Though Poor.-New York Weekly c4M1YFAoM. q " , ! 2i eM- . mJI4t1 BYHE/YRYNB6s eo T ! i y r ( livERNATIONAL PRESSASSOCIATIOf/ 6y PERMISSION OF RND. . MSNRLLY & CO. . CHAPTER XII. , I 9 idy OHNSTONE ! " cried Dick , at last , "what does this mean' ? How do you come to be here ? " "From the ilamil- ton , " replied the " ' working man ; "I'm " t out to the Cape. "But they told me GII- name was : ' your dez. " So It was on the barque yonder. You see fry on'u's a bit too famous for general use. But here I'm among friends , and can lY what flag I please. " "Among friends ? " said Dlck ; "what do you mean by that ? " .It seems Ile an old acquaintance with you 10 begin with , " said John- stone , impudently ; "and then I've come a good way with madame and the col- onel. " "Answer me , " said Dick , angrily , "and remember your place' " So I do , retorted the other ; "I'm captain of this ship for the time be- rig : Estcourt Zvas more astounded than ever , and indignant at the brazen face of the fellow. "Come , my man , " he said , sternly , "your tongue's too loose ; you'd best tell me the plain truth at once. " - "You've got it already , " replied John- stone. "I'mn to sail the brig for Captain Worsley until he's on his legs again. " "By whose authority ? " "His own ; he's an old friend o' mine. We've made many a lucky voyage in company before now , and he Imows there's no crew afloat that I couldn't handle. " Dick looked at the herculean frame and fierce domineering face before him. He remembered how the boldness and force of the man had indelibly impressed - pressed him years ago at Copenhagen , and he felt that ' , Vorsley was amply justified in his opinion. And he reflected - ed , too , that it mattered little to him who sailed the Speedweil , so long as ' she was safely carried into port ; in fact , of the two men he preferred Johnstone , for , though he was less respectful than Worsley , he was at any rate beyond comparison more active and coura- geous. "Well , " he said , at last , in a mollified .tone , "I dare say you'll make as good a captain as we need have ; if you don't' , you'll have me to reckon with , you know. " And he was about to turn away , when he remembered that he had had no explanation yet of the locked cabin. "If you'll be good 'enough to unlock ' that door , " he said , "I'11" go in and pay Captain Worsley a visit. " At this moment the colonel appeared In the passage. "And how Is Captain Worsley getting on now ? " he asked , as he came toward the other two. "That's just what I want to find out for myself , " replied Dick , and he held out his hand for the key. Johnstone drew back a step , but seemed uncertain whether to comply or not. The colonel , standing a little behind - hind , frowned and shook his head over Dick's shoulder. Johnstone put the key back in his pocket. "Excuse me , sir , " he said to Estcourt. with more respect than he had yet shown , "but I have strict orders to the contrary , and I dareli t go against them. " Before Dick could speak the colonel , intervened. "I think you told me , " he said to Johnstone , "that Captain Worslcy showed an unreasonable prejudice against Captain Estcourt in particular - lar ? " "Yes , sirhe's ; very violent. " replied the man ; "and if he's thwarted while he's in this state , I won't be answerable for the consequences. And just now he's sleeping heavily after his dose. " Dick saw that it was of no use to press the matter further. There was something odd about the whole affair , but he was really very little interested in the patient or his case , and , having - ing done enough for civility , was quite readyto turn awayto the more attractive - tive society of Camill. and her brother- in-law. But he had scarcely yet recovered - covered from his surprise at meeting Johnstone again so unexpectedly after twenty- years , and made a remark to that effect as he went up on deck with the colonel. "Johnstone ? " said M. de Montaut ; "what Johnstone ? " 1 "Do you remember of my talking to you of a man of that name-a famous t smuggler-who volunteered to steer the ship on which I served at the battle of Copenhageni" "All , yes , " replied the colonel ; "I remember - member the incident perfectly , 'but I had forgotten the mans name. But what do you mean. " he continued , "by saying you have met him again ? " He is our new captain , the man we have just been speaking to. "Impossible ! " e : claimed M. de Mon- taut ; "that was the Spanish sailor Gil- dez , who was in the Hamilton with us" "That's the man , for all that , "replied Dick. "I knew him at once , and he answered to his right name without question. The other was only assumed , for reasons best known to himself. " "Really- , " said the colonel , "you can not imagine how you interest me ! I must have a good look at this romantic - tic figure next time I see him. " "And , perhaps ; " said Dick , "Madame de Montaut may. also be interested to know that she is sailing under the auspices of so celebrated a captain. " The colonel was here again in a dfiI- ! cuity which he had not foreseen. ' "My dear Estcourt ; ' he said , confidentially - dentially , to Dick , "if I were you I shouldn't enlighten her as to the identity - tity of this Johnstone with the hero of your story. " "Why- ? " asked Dick , in astonishment. "Well , you may think me absurdly cautious , but it is only for your own sake I am. You know how' anxious I am for your success with Camilla. " Dick grew hot t'Ith mingled embarrassment - rassment and gratitude. "This man , " the colonel continued , "once tried-as I think you yourzelf tad us-to capture the Emperor by a desperate - perate stratagem ; my sister-in-law has had a particular horror of him ever since she heard this , for she thinks he must have been actuated - uated by motives of personal mal- ice--you know how her enthusiasm - thusiasm runs away with her. If she is not told , she probably h'111 not think of connecting this man with that incident - cident merely because of the name. In any case , if she is to learn of the identity - tity , let it be through me , and not through you , from whom site might think the information in had taste. " "I don't quite see it , " said Dick ; "but no doubt you're right. I'd rather bite my tongue out than hurt her feelings , anti I'm very grateful to you for the } lint. " - Rain now began to fall heavily and they were obliged to go below. The wind rose in gusty starts , sail after sail was reefed , and by the middle of the afternoon the brig was scudding along before the gale with her masts almost bare. She was at all times Unusually - usually fast , but she was now flying along at nearly half again her ordinary rate , and for six whole days she never relaxed her speed. In spite of the rain and the spray , which from time to time swept over her , Dick and Camilla spent a good part of every day on deck , keenly sympathizing - thizing with each other in delight at the swift , exhilarating motion of the vessel and the unchanging 'restlessness and grandeur of the waves over which she passed so lightly. Of the rest of the company on board they took but little heed. The mate never - er came their way. The captain was reported still unable to stir outside his cabin , where Dick , after one or two more ineffectual requests for admittance - tance , was quite content to leave him. The colonel had struck up a considerable - able intimacy with Johnstone , whgnt he pronounced to be not nearly such a ruffian as he looked. When the ship's motion was not too violent he went on tours of inspection with the new cap- tai. , and was even found one morning alone in the hold , examining the cargo with incomprehensible energy and in- terest. "I can't think , " said Estcourt , laughing - ing , "what on earth you can find to amuse you in the sight of all these casks and cases. " "It is the thought of what they contains - tains that fascinates me , " replied the colonel , who was in a humorous mood. "What ! " cried Dick , "stores and tit- tines fascinate you' ! That's a dry taste ! " "Au ! " said M. de Montaut , "but I have the poet's vision ; I look beyond the mere articles themselves to the results - sults they may effect. These packing- cases , you say , are but necessaries for the refitting of your ship. I see more than that. From the parts I reconstruct the whole in imagination. I see , rising from these fragments , an entire vessel , with a fate of her own , and fraught with many destinies.'Nay , who knows , " he added , with mock sententiousness , "but the ship that lies hidden In this despised cargo of yours may change the course of history ! " Dick laughed again. "My dear colonel - onel , " he said , "you see a good deal more than I do ; I find it uncomfortably dark down' here. " "Ah , that's because I'm standing between - tween you and the light , replied the colonel , taking up the lantern. "Come , let's go upstairs again. " And he led the way back to the middle deck. I During the night of the 22d the wind fell to a steady breeze , and on the following morning they saw the sun again at last , standing over a headland that lay on the larboard quarter. The colonel appeared at breakfast with a chart , and Dick , borrowing it from him , explained the position of the. Speedwell to Camilla. "Here , " he said , putting his finger upon - on the map , "is the stretch of coast along which the wind and the Guinea current have been hurrying us so fast. Here is Cape Palmas , which we have just passed , and now we. shall'see no more. of the shores of Africa. You see we have been carried a little too far to the east already , and Ascension lies right below us in mid-ocean there. " "And how far is it ? " asked Camilla. , "Twelve or thirteen hundred miles , " t said the colonel , who was also looking on with interest. "Hardly so much as that ; I wish it were , " said Dick. "But I am afraid eight or nine days from the outside will take us there. " "And from there , " asked Camilla , still poring over the chart , 'how far is it to St' . Helena ? " "I can't say exactly : To the Cape it Is about two thousand five hundred miles , but that is the straight course , by which you go some way outside of St. Helena , and don't even pass near enough to see the famous pigeons. " "What are they ? " "Oh , they're only a kind of pigeon peculiar to. that island ; but they're rather well known for their beauty- and because they're found nowhere else. ) They often come circling around a ship at an immense distance from tae land , and the sailors catch them to take home to their friends , but they mostly die ! before the voyage is over. " "Have you ever seen them ? " asked the colonel. "What are they like ? " "They're small gray- birds eery graceful - ful and light on the wing , with bright pink legs and a curious band of ) yhite under the eye. " "No , " reclled Camilla ; "didn't you hear Captain Estcourt say that they are peculiar to St. Helena ? " "But surely they must have mad- their way across at some time or other' the two islands are not so very fan apart. " "It is curious. " said Dick , "but I as sure you that there are none , to be found anywhere else. If 1 saw one of them , I should know for a certainty that I was oft St. Helena , though ' , moment before I had been thinking my- sell : in the Pacific or the North Sea. " He rolled up the chart and returned it to the colonel , who went off with h to his own cabin and did not appear for some time. Dick and Camilla went on deck , and enjoyed the sun and blue sky after s many dark days. "Do.you know , " she said , "that I ( lid not always enjoy that perpetual rush of wind'and rain ? And If I hadn't seen that you were quite cheerful about it , I should have really been quite alarmed at times. " Dick .smiled. "I was more timid than you , I expect ; I was by no means as cheerful as I looked. " "Then there was danger ? " she asked. "There wan a lee shore , and there were nights in which we could see noth- intr. intr."Then "Then how could the shp ! be steered ? " "She , couldn't ; she drove before the t wind , which happily was in the right directmn ; all the steersman could do was to stand to his helm and be always - ways ready for a sudden danger. " "What work ! " she cried. "Then it was really one man who saved us all ? " "Oh , no , " lie answered , "that's too much to say : let's hope he would have saved us if he had had the chance. " "How can you speak so lightly of him" she exclaimed , warmly. He is a hero , and I shall thank him myself ! " Dick vras silent , and looked away. Johnstone was passing near , and Camilla called to him. "What Is your steersman's name ? " she asked , as he approacned. Dick had made some hasty excuse , and was gone in a moment. "We've been taking the wheel in turns of late , " said Johnstone ; "but on the worst nights Captain Estcourt wouldn't let her out of his own hands. " She nodded and turned away. John- stone passed on with an approving shake of the head. "My word ! " he muttered , "he would be a fool to stick at scruples now : he'll be better paid than me by a long sight. " As for Camilla , this episode brought tea a decisive end the struggles which had been going on at intervals h ) her mind since she came on board the Speedwell. She was convinced , and glad to be convinced , that Dick was Indeed the man she had thought him of old. Whatever - ever had been his reasons for joining in this expedition , they were not , she felt certain , either weak fondness for herself or disloyalty to the colors under - der which he served. With this conclusion , which was rather due to instinct than reasoning , and was but half-consciously present to her mind , her old feelings toward him resumed their place , and the restraint which she had hitherto endeavored to put upon them broke down completely. Eight days passed in great content. The colonel troubled them with his society - ciety less than ever. When he was not alone in his own cabin , he was general- I : , in that of Captain Worsley , of whom he gave reports to the others twice a day. It appeared that the medicines on board were insufficient ; the Speedwell carried no surgeon , in spite of the twelve weeks' regulation , which expressly - ly includes the Cape ; and the patient's condition was , therefore , unsatisfactory , and at times even critical. Hearing this , Dick foresaw that the remainder of his voyage would probably - ably be spent in the sole company of Johnstone , and he began to realize how qulcltly and how pleasantly the last two weeks had flown. Tomorrow Camilla would leave the Speedwell , and with her would go for the present all the sunshine - shine of life. Happily he had discovered - ered that she had no intention of hiding - ing herself again from mm ; she was evidently anticipating a meeting in the near future , though under what circumstances - cumstances he had no means of guess- ing. To his great surprise the next dayy passed without any sign of the Island of Ascension coming in aight. He supposed - posed that the brig had not been kept straight to her course , and in his heart thanked Johnstone for the bad navigation - tion which had given him another day's , happiness. ; 'ro us CONTINUSn.i OUR COUNTRY HOSTS. 'What ; rbey T1Inlr of Us , Our 'Work , Our ways and Our Ambitions. A young friend of mine overheard this conversation between the proprietress of a country farmhouse and her help the other morning : "Banda , have you rung that second bell ? " "Yes , indeed ; but I never see such people ! Eight o'clock breakfast ! Who ever peered o' such a thing ! Why , I'm pretty near ready for dinner now. " "Oh , them folks dunne anything 'bout time. I can't see how they do it. Six o'clock breakfast is late enough. for anyone. " "There's that Mr. Craig , goes in his room and writes three hours a day , an' calls that work. " "Why , Eben'd saw a cord o' wood in that time' ' " Eben would probably get 50 cents for his labor , while Mr. Craig , who is a well-known magazine contributor , earns $25. Bttt let that pass. "Banda , if that Miss Clarke asks for any more stale bread , just tell her there ain't any. I want what I've got for the ! tap-jacks , " "My gracious , if nice hot biscuit ain't good enough for 'em , then I'd like to know ! "Ali' that finiky Mrs. Hall askin' if I mixed up my biscuit with a spoon ! "Weil , if her conscience is as clean as my hands are , then it's a mighty good thing for her ! " "Here they come ! Look out for that = pork steak , panda , an' see that it don't burn. " Sitootizig Stars. Now cloth the glad reporter write These interviews that burn f And boom each citizen die knows ! For President in turn : I 4 , _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ . _ . PROTECTS USERS OF "ROYAL. " Imaking Powder Company Wins Its Case in United Stntes Court. The decision of Judge Showalter in a : event case that came up before him sustains the claims of the Itoyal company - pany to the exclusive use of the name "Royal" us a trade mark for its baking powder. The special importance of this decision consists in the protection which it assures to the millions of consumers - sumers of Royal bakingpowder against inferior and unwholesome compounds. The excellence of this article has caused it to be highly esteemed and largely used almost the world over. Its high standard of quality having been always maintained , consumers have come to rely implicitly upon the Royal brand as the most wholesome and efficient of any in the market. The cupibity of other manufacturers is excited - cited by tins high reputation and large demand. Very few of the hundreds of baking powders on the market arc safe to use If their makerseould sell them under the name of a well known , reputable - putable brand incalculable damage would be done to the public health by the deception. The determination of the Royal Baking Powder Company to protect the users of trio Loyal baking powder against imitators by a rigid prosecution of them makes such imitations - tions of its brand extremely rare. Not ( lulto Fltting. "I see you have a new organist , " said the occasional attendant. "Yes , " answered the medium , "tile other fellow got entirely too fresh. We called up the spirit of Brigham Young last meeting , and what do you suppose the idiot played ? 'Only One Girl in the 11'orld for MeCincinnati ! Enquirer. A Cotton , Coln on Soar. 'I'UROAT requires immediate attention "Brown's Bronchial 'T'roches" will invariably give roief. : The man who loves his neighbor as himself - self will to slow about going to law- . 'rue revlvht „ power' of1'arker'sGinger Tonlc render It 1n Istensablo In every home. Stoartch troubles , colds and every form of cistressyleld toll. The devil secs to it that a grumbler always - ways has something to grumble about. Get Itlndercornn and u e it If you Rant to realica the comfort of bebrz without corns. It takes them out prrecrly. lac , at druggis s. Good or bad company is the greatest blessing or greatest plague of ) fie. FITS-AllFitnstoppedfrecby7)r.laine'sOrrat' Terre Restorer. Ice Fltsatter thu tirstdty's use. Dtarvelouscures. Treatiseaud32trhtibotIlotrt'ti 11 ; cases. Sendto1r.KIIne,931Arch5t.,1'hlla1'a. Good fortune does not always travel in a carriage. f II the Baby Is Cutting Teotn. eosnre andusethatold a11d o'ell.trled remedy , Ucs. I WLCSLOW'S Soorflc o Srncr fur Children Teetbin , - On the day we have done no good we have done much evil. 1 have found Piso's Cure for Consump- ' tiolt an unfailing medicine. F. R. LOT ; 1305 Stott St. , Covington , Ky. , Oct. 1,19'9 { . If all our wishes were gratified how poor we would be. ' "Hanson's Y.Tagio Corn Salve. " Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ask your druggist for it. ! 'rice 15 eeuts. Fill man with whisky and he ( an give the pig points. Coe'a Cough Balsam Is the oldest and best. It will break up aCokl qulck. I erl nanythlnt else. It is always retktble. Try It. Y qRcttL ¶ cllcctfL Some say that the hypo- , phosphites alone are sufficient ' ute to prevent and cure consumption - tion , if taken in time. Without - out doubt they exert great \ good in the beginning stages ; they improve the appetite , promote - mote digestion and tone up ' the nervous system. But they . lack the peculiar medicinal properties , and the fat , found in cod-liver oil. The hypo - ' phosphites are valuable and the cod-liver oil is valuable. t U it t i of Cod-liver Oil , with hypo- . . . phosphites , contains both of ; these 1'n the most desirable . form. The oil is thoroughly emulsified ; that is , partly di- gested. Sensltlve stomachs 'can bear an .emulsion when the raw oil cannot be retained. As the hypophosphites , the medicinal agents in the oil , andthe fat itself are each goad , why not have the benefit of all ? This combination has stood the test of twenty years r and has never been equalled. SCOTT'S EMULSION has been endorsed bythe medial profesioe fortwenty years. ( Askyourdortor. ) This is.becausettisalvrays palatable-always ietbrm-ahvaysarntainrrbcparest Norwrg imt Cod.lrver Oil and 1f } potabospbitel. insist on Scott's fmulslon watt zctde.mark of man and lisp. Put up m So cent and $ r.w sizes. Thesmallsize lnty be enough to cure your cough or help your baby. 'BITE ATRMOTOIt CO. does bale the world's windmill buslne&i , beca uo it has redeCOd the out Of wtsdVowerto 1:11 whet Itwas.e It haS many branch ] looses , and r i ptles its t ; usisand repairs at your door. I t can a0tt duos furnish a taUerarticleturIe tuoneythan otherS. It maL cs Pumphrg and ' e Geared , Sitml , ( ialsantzcd.altcr- Competlnu ! wlndmtils. Tilting and Flzrd Steel 'l'owers. SUel Buzz Saw Frames , Sleet L'eed Cutters and heed Urlnders. On applic.ttot : ltwlI name 0110 of thtso anlcIe that It will nurnhli mtlit January 1st at 1/a ho usual price. it also makes Tatts and PurnpOot alt kinds. Send far catalozun. Factory : 1h , Rockwell aud : Fiilcnre Strczb. CCkata PARKER'S s Y C1eanHAIR BALSAM I" , a tied ti o hair. { - Promotes a lazmiant grolh. Never Palle to Rcttoro Oray d Hair to Its Youthful , Color. = ' Curla scalp di easeeS'balr'a ling. , i - LGc 0nd 3 1.W at Dn : 02 u to EIorplrlna habit Curetl in 10 to 20 da y a. No pay till cured. } DI.J.STEPHENS , LebanonOhio. -uEl1,1 .Fa to S1 ntY TI ) stro iy work Write lt1L.ucFifth Av.Chlc .rgn. St. YES , T0 BE STJRI' IS T0 BE CEPTAIlf , 9S WHEN JaC0b5CCE Eg j 1 _ % , . _ 0 fl r. Th care is certain , sere. TO MARE SURE , USE IT G1D ] ' BE C11ItE9. K TimetWiiiiinj. The great success of the chocolate preparations of ' - ' the house of Walter Baker c& Co. ( established in 1780) ) has led to the placing on the market - many misleading and unscrupulous imitations . of their name , labels , and wrappers. Walter f fyi t't Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu- I t : lit ,1-j. Rfy p facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and ' ! . . ' " Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are ; ' used in their manufactures. f lti C' ; 9 Consumers should ask for , and be sure that they get , the genuine Walter Baker & Co.'s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO. , Limited , DORCHESTER , MASS. S Don't , ' , t © Sw _ makes the nerves strong , and ; ' - brings back ® -j the feelings of . youth to the pre- _ _ mat'u'oly old man. _ _ It restores lost vigor. You may gain ten pounds in ten days. CUA ATE Br Q Ec ( o buy and try a box to-day. It t costs only $1. Your own druggist will guarantee a cure or money ref - f funded. Booklet , written guarantee ofcure and sample free. Address nearest office. THE STERLiNC REMEDY CO. , CH1CAr,0. MONTREAL , CAN. HEY ! YORK. C 6 candy cathartic euro constipation. Purely vegetable , smooth and easy , sold by druggists everywhere , guaranteed to curt.thlly ia. . 1 _ ' "I firrly bulieve that I'iso's Cure bept me from itang i' , rpso's ! cun quick Consumption.-Mrs. Ill I f I' ' H. D. DARLING , Beave : li Meadow , N. Y. , Juno 18 , lfi r - , _ I I : tft - 1I1FO 1 S l 1 I' _ ' ll , II f f Cures Where All Else Fails. BEST COUCH SYRI3P 11,1. TASTES GOOD. USE IN TIME. SOLD i y DRUGGISTS. 2 : CTS. '