A CARXIVAL. BALL IN" CUBA. Scene la the Casino Expand A La byrinth of Artificial Grottoes. The orchestra Lave taken their seats on a miniature stage built in the corner which faces both of the large rooms stretching out at right angles to each other, and whose tloors of white marble were covt-red with ihtsous, most of whom were in domiuos or fancy cos tumes and masked, promenading up and down.. - Tlie few men who were not marked wore ordinary afternoon or business suits, only one dress suit being visible, and few of the ladies, even those not in domiuos, wore low-necked dresses. After an introductory overture, the orchestra at the Casino Kspanol on the night in question struck into the first dance of the evening in " Vals Tropi cal." The Cubans have two kinds of waltzes, that ju.-st mentioned and the "Vals Strauss," which last more nearly resenildes our own American movement. The "Vals Tropical' consists of one movement, a soft, melodious one of about two hours in length, played over and over again. The time is very slow and the air is languishing and euticing. Hardly had the first notes sounded when the room was tilled with dancers, and in a moment it seemed as it a hu man wave rose and fell with the same voluptuous measured cadence us the strains of the orchestra. The step taken was the waltz, but the movement was so slow tliat the dancers really only walked to and fro in it. Without the exchange of a word and with ierfectly immovable faces, a '-ouple would see saw back and forth for fully ten min utes, then suddenly stop, walk around or sit doft-n, and as suddenly go at it again. A typicid Cuban family were my near neighbors. The fi.ther. a short and very stout gentleman, who was evident ly an officer of the club from the defer ence that w;ls jaid him, was nearest inc. Then came two daughters, aged, re spectively, aliout 17 ami M years, and both very pretty, with the blackest hair and eves, iarlv teeth, and delicate com plexion their faces for a wonder not cou-red thicklr with. the white Casca- rilhi iiowdrr which disligurestlie majority of the Cuban women; and. then the mother, a iine-liHkiug, gray-haired wo man of about 4 ). 1 ne daughters were dressed very plainly in high-necked col ored lawn dresses. I hey wore gloves, but no jewelry, and carried handsome fans e.Miuisiteiv painted by hand. The mother wore plain black silk and vel vet. with Hue old lace trimmings, and her few diamonds sparkled with an un mistakable lustre. Kvcry now and then the sob. a young man of about 24, would come up, vnsper a few words to his mother, and go away to join some comjunu.ns. The party watered the dam-ins intentlv. but did not converse much, the daughters casting glances around from under their long eyelashes once in a while that would make the average American want to leave at once, unless he could know the fair archers, but as quickly and demurely dropping their eyes again if they found themselves observed too closely. As the lancers neared its conclusion and the 'nmiti-iddleum' of tlie grand chain began, Haus K-gan to arrive, at first singly, then by Twos and threes. Thest youths, all well dressed and well man nered, invariably sjK'ke first to the father, then shook hands with tht daughters in turn, and then, after bow ing to the mother, sit down and talked with the latter. In a few minutes, con sequently, the good lady was surround ed with Leans, all talking and gesticula ting, while the fair daught'-rs still sat alone. This continued until the next dance, a "Vals Tropical," began, when suddenly two of the youths left tht mother "and, evidently by previous ar rangement, offepi their arms to tlu daughters, and were soon with the Iattei treading the slow measures of the, to us. curious dance. After enjoying some delicious ices brought in we decided to leave this bal for one at another club some blockf away. 15y this time it was nearly mid night, and the waning moon only hall lit the streets still thronged with mask ers all shouting and laughing, but. Strang e to say. in very few instances intoxicated. As we walked along a tall, ungainly negress, fantastically clad in sacking, strode by us muttering tc herself and with a crowd of gamins fol lowing and hooting at her. The lady ol our party drew back in affright. "Onlj a crazy woman," said our Cuban com panions. "They allow them to roan about the street here." Coming to a block w here the sidewalk was under at arcade we took the middle of the street, and to my wondering query as to tht reason fur this procedure I was told that there had ljeen several persons stabbed of late under these dark archways, and hence the precaution. So through the narrow streets of tht city we pursued our way until a cor ner turned, revealed a wider street filled with people in front of a low building brilliantly illuminated and tlirough whose windows floated out again on the warm air the strains o1 a '.'Vals Tropical." It was tlie club house whither we were bound ant wher a second bail was in progress. A delay of a few minutes at the door way while our invitations were careful ly scrutinized ensued, and we then en tered the lirst of a labyrinth of rooms made to resemble grottoes, the walls and ceilings K-ing covered with ji-apier-maehe, corrugated and painted. At irregular intervals there projected from the walls huge scn-ents of papiermache holding in their moutlis vari-colored lights. The orchestra was concealed, but to its strains the dancers, here all masked, moved slowly round, the lights falling on their rich costumes and bright colored dominoes with weird effect. Threading our way through these rooms we di-scended some steps through what appeared a large cavern and found ourselves in a large ball room again filled with dancers. Look ing back, we saw that our entrance had been through the mouth of an im mense demon's head, whence streams of maskers continually issued, or through which they continually disap peared. A Disappointed lawyer. An ambit:ou3 young lawyer received a pointed lesson from a countryman re cently. The latter who was a dealer in milk, was ii jured by a butcher's cart colliding with his wagon. His vehicle was wrecked, his milk was spilled on the street, and he w&s carried in a bruised condition to a neighboring drug store. The young disciple of Black etone, happening to pass at the time of the accident, did the good Samaritan act for the farmer, and after healing ointment had been poured on the wounds, remarked as he was about to depart: "The butcher ought to pay for this. Here's my name, 1 am a lawyer and shall be glad to do anything I can for Ton." A day or two later the law yer was delighted to see the milkman enter his office. Warmly greeting him and offering him a comfortablo chair, the barrister expressed pleasure that be had decided to sue the man who had Injured him. '-What do you know about the accident!" asked the milk man. "Oh, I know everything," en thusiastically replied tho lawyer, and then ho proceeded to state In detail all tho circumstances of the accident. "I am Tciy much obliged to you," said the farmer; "Mr. H. will subi csna you as a witness for the prosecution. Good morning." As shouts of laughter carco from hU partner's room, the bril liant young lawyer grabbed his bat and was not seen again for nearly a week. n."-,,,...-...'.!. . ' ,r n " 1 1 in 'im , nr M.n nri"'H"n .rrvvKrt'rt SCIENTIFIC The following Lvanother new and delicious English recipe for maccaroni: Make a smooth and stiff paste with 1 lb. of fine flour, 5 oz. of fresh butter, two or three yelks of ggs, 2 oz. of sugar, a pinch of salt, and tepid water, qiiant. tirf. Roll it out to the thickness of one-eighth of an inch, and line with it a plain mould previously buttered, uniting the joints carefully with white of egg. Have ready some pipe maccar oni ready boiled, and dressed with Par mesan cheese and tomato sauce made with gravy; some very small fillets of breast ot chicken, just cooked with butter in a covered tin in the oven, some cooked ham or ox tongue cut in dice, some trutlles, mushroom;, and cockscombs cut in convenient pieces, and cooked in the cravy used to dress the maccaroni. Fill the lined mould with alt these things in judicious pro portions.letting the maccaroni of course predominate, and adding during the process a little more sauce or gravy and a due allowance of Parmesan cheese. Cover up the mould with a dish of paste, unite the edges carefully, and bake in a moderate oven for about an hour. Turn out of the mould carefully and serve. There have been selfish husbands and exacting wives ever since there were husbands and wives at all, and there have also been and will continue to be, couples who are truly one; where, whether the wife earns nibney or not, whatever they may possess belongs as much to one as to the other. Prob ably neither husband nor wife Is per fect, lie has long ago learned that she has her little tempers and petulan ces; that her opinions on many subjects diller radically from his own; that she is very likely governed by her feelings rather than by her reason, but he loves ber through all. And on her part she has found out that many things which enlist her warmest feelings, do not ap peal to him at all; that he does not care a Cg for her favorite poem, and char acterizes as "bosh" the story over which she has shed tears. And yet she knows that no one else could make him so happy, and in making his hap piness she finds her own. And they love each other too well to ever truly clash. To free your uouse from summer flies, a writer in Lend a Hand recom mends to kill, in May, all the an cestors of the coming flock. Every morning in the spring, when the few flies seek the sunny window panes in each room, let somebody go around with a wet cloth and kill them then and there. "Each of the large torpid flies which comes out from Its hiding place, in window sash or book case may lay two thousand eggs." so the impor tance of destroying the head of the fam ily In May, rather than go anxiously flapping after the whole tribe all through July and September, can easily be seen. Six hundred eggs to each brood, how ever, is quite a liberal enough allow ance. Empty bottles, uniusifM window cords in the sash, and all undisturbed books are favorit hiding places for tha first families of the flies. A cover for rugs and umbrellas Is made as follows. Length, I yard 13 Inches; width 30 inches; two straps outside attached to a handle, by which, when rolled and strapped, it Is carried. Inside at one end, there is a pocket i'0 inches deep, fastened with two straps, and next to this three narrow grooves made of the same thick twilled linen as the pocket for holding the sticks and umbrellas. The so-called "Holdall's" have, in addition an outside pocket for time tables and guides. They are made in checked waterproof tweeds. Potted Chicken and Ham. Take the white meat off the bone of a cold fowl. Free it from skin and gristle, and to every pound weight allow three slices of cooked ham, in equal propor tions of fat and lean, and one .Cam bridge sausage. Pass the chicken and ham through a mincing machine until it is very fine and smooth, mix the sausage meat with it. and add a quar ter or a pound of butter, with pepper and salt to taste. Stir all well togeth er, press into a potting-pot, and cover with a quarter ot an men ol ciariuea butter. Steamed Bkowji Bread. For a small loaf take one-half pint of rye meal, unsifted, one pintof sifted Indian meal, one pint of sour milk, one-half gill of molasses, one teaspoonful of salt, and one large teaspoonful of soda. Mix all the ingredients, except the soda, dissolve that In a little boiling water, and add last, stirring the mix ture thoroughly. Grease a brown bread tin, or a pail having a cloee lid, and having put the bread In it, set it into a kettle of boiling water. Boil it four hours. Remove the lid, and set the pail In the oven a few minutes to dry the top of the bread. m . Mock Exite. Cut very thin slices of fat salt pork about the length of your miadle finger and twice as wide; drain every drop of the liquor from large oysters; bind each about the mid dle with a slice of pork, skewer to gether with a wooden toothpick thrust through both and fry in butter or drip ping to a nice brown; drain off the fat and serve without withdrawing the toothpicks; laid within an edging of watercresses, the sharp points of the skewers give the dish some resemblance to boiled snipe. Eat hot. Sweet Omelette. Beat the whites of six eggs until they will stand alone. Beat the yelks thoroughly, adding four tablespoonsful of powdered sugar, a ht tle at a time, until they are thick and smooth. Heat two tablespoonfuls of butter in a frying-pan to the boiling point, add one tablespoonful of vanilla to the omelette, and cook very quickly. .Run a knife blade under it frequently .to prevent its catching to the frying pan. Turn out into a hot dish and sprinkle with powdered sugar. Serve immediately. A useful cushion for the verandah or summer house settee is made of Tur key red cotton. The cover is of gray .linen canvas, and is worked with con ventionalized design of fuchsias. It is 'edged with broad torchon lace. In making cushions for outdoor use it is iweH to have two sorts those that are 'stuffed very firmly, and those that are 'stuffed full but are yielding and may ,be crushed into any shape at the pleas ure of the persons using them. i Brown Betty. Cut into thin slices several large apples; have ready a butter ed pudding dish; put into this a layer of grated bread crumbs, then a layer of sliced apples; over these sprfnkle sugar, and so on. alternately, bread, apples, sugar, until pudding dish is full, letting the top layer be of bread crumbs; on this place three large lumps of butter; put in oven and bake brown. Serve hot, with butler and sugar sauce. i Revenge is a barren victory at best; its spoils are remorse. '- In June. 1783, Stephen and Joseph .MontgolOer sent up the first balloon. ' Professor Grater of Czemorwitz, Austria, has made along senes of ex periments concerning the "skin vision" of animals, and has proven that certain species having uo visual organs proper j such as the earthworm are not only 'able to distinguish between different quantities of light, but also manifest a j decided preference for light of certain I colors. I FARM NOTES.' The Valce of Beak. IU feeding value consists in its nitrogen and Its fat Of the former we have already spoken; of the latter two and a half to three pounds is contained in one hun dred pounds of It.' Its theoretical money value is estimated at one dollar and seventy cents per one hundred pounds as compared with the best hay at one dollar per hundred. Rye bran is thought to be richer in nutritive ele ments than wheat bran, and in our con siderably long experience we are strong ly inclined to believe this to be well founded, having found rye bran ground with corn and oats to be more produc tive of milk and butter than wheat bran. In our practice bran is largely used for horse feed in the form of a warm mash made of four quarts of bran and one quart of pure linseed meal scal ded and left to steep and cool until slightly warm to the hand. It loosens and opens the skin, encourages the shed ding of old hair, and supplies the hair follicles and the oil glands of the skin with fatty mat er, thus giving the coat a softness and glossiness which no other means can so well secure. It is a con stant food for cows, being ground three hundred pounds of corn and one hun dred pounds of oats to two hundred pounds of the coarse kind of it. This grinding together is preferable because the bran is made very fine and more di gestibleiind the materials are evenly mixed together. Ticks on SnEEr. Ticks sometimes occasion losses among the flocks when the shepherd little suspects the cause, and this time of the year is the time when they draw most heavily on the vi tality and strength of the sheep. If the sheep do not seem to improve for the quantity of food given them, and often are found biting andrubbing them selves, it is a sign that ticks are drain ing tho blood from their veins, and some remedy should bs employed im mediately. Sulphur is almost a certain remedy for these pests, and a little of It should bo given in bran or meal to all tlie flocks occasionally. If this rem edy does not prove effectual, as soon as it becomes warm enough the sheep should be sheared and then dipped in tobacco juice, or other dip that will an swer the same purpose. The great scourge, the pear blight, has so far baffled all attempts to pre vent its ravagas. If the remedy used by Mr. G. Wilson, as stated in the Journal of Agriculture, be true, it is very Important to all Interested. lie says: -1 think the progress of the dis ease may at any time be instantly and completely arrested. The remedy is to pour boiling water on the diseased part of the tree, allowing it to run down on the unaffected part. In the summer of 1S3 I treated one tree with half ot its top dead at the time. It is now a good tree, and has borne fruit annually since, with its dead top still standing. I also treated another tree in July of last year with its top dead, and that also was saved." The French Government Commis sion on the phylloxera and the remedies to be applied to it has just made its an nual report, following which it has been decided that none of the remedies dis covered during the year are or suffi cient value to secure the prize offered by the law of 1374. It is therefore re commended that, as In preceding years, the following remedies, which still ap pear the best to the Commission, be continued. These are: First, submer sion; second, sulphuret of carbon; third, s ilphocarboLate of potassium. To have a One crop of large, rich cur rants enrich the ground, make it clean and mellow and thin out the brush. Cut away the old stunted wood and leave the vigorous young shoots. Let mem occupy equai aistances from each other, and give the bushes in some de gree a regular form. So fruit is more neglected than the currant, the bushes being allowed to become enveloped in weeds and grass, and the enfeebled bushes allowed to grow into a mass of brush. The difference in the size ot the berries raised by the two modes is about as one to four. Strawberries, when grown in hills the most laborious but the most pro ductive method of growing them-should have runners cut off as they grow, and the surface soil kept loose by shallow hoeings occasionally. Short litter, half rotten, as mulch, is also beneficial. Lawn mowing3 are often applied, but with little benefit. Where they are frown in beds they should not be too thick as they starve one another, and the crop next year will be poor. A good judge of dairy stock will se lect from heifer calves those likely to prove good for roilk and butter. The ari of selecting can scarcely be explain ed on paper, but a little experience will soon snow the novice the qualities de Fired. The head should not be over large, the neck thin rather than thick, and tlie skin possessing a soft fealingthat caa only be judged by an expert. Look to the escutcheon and milk veins. These are as good indications of char acter as the pedigree. Diversified farmhig means fields of grain, meadows and pasture; a kitchen garden and orchard; a lawn with trees and flowers; breeding mares and milch cows; sheep, swine and poultry. Live stock is the groundwork, and will hold the soil fertile. To economize space in the garden: When you sow your dwarf peas for suc ce&9h drop sweet com in the drills fJtjrJfc.0 six inches apart. The corn doesnot grow much until the peas are ouflof the way, and both crops are cul tivated simultaneously. Molasses and a teaspoonful of flour of sulphur will relieve a sheep troubled with constipation. A quarter pound of the sulphur to one pound of salt placed where the sheep can lick it will prove a valuable factor in removing this sort of trouble from a flock. Some eggs will invariably hatch a little sooner than other. Remove the young chicks at once and keep them from the hen until all are hatched. If you do not the hen will .be likely to quit the nest with the first comers, leav ing the unhatched chicks to chill and die. The Ulustrxrle Garden-Zeitung says it U the easiest thing in the world to fcre tell the weather by observing the com mon American white pine Pinus Stro bus). If we are to expect rain or snow within a reasonably short space of time, the branches ot the last two seasons' growth will be pendulous. If such weather be a long way off, the branches will be raised rather than dreoping. After a series of interesting experi ments in Paris, M, P. P. Deherain has concluded that while the radiation from an electric-arc lamp may maintain mature plants in vegetation for a consi derable time without aid from the sun, the light is not sufficiently powerful to cause the growth of germinating seeds, or to allow of the maturing of fruit on fie older plants. St. Bernard Vegetable Pills. Tbe bet cure for Liver mad iJiifMU CompUinf, CogGTcow. HetfUoh Lhzzmeaa and Uyspepau. Aa a Blood Purifier and Hpouir Medidj Uiey liav do equal. No familf aUould be without a box of the at. liernard Yrvruui PUia in the boom, lr.oe i cuts at Onwffltta. or by mall attiDleaaent rut. k(iirm UJL GIAJU X&tt COi.&Uorotff Jitv XgU T Ti T BADWil'S xi.li.Jii BEUEJ CURES THE WORST PAIS In from aa twenty mJnotL NOT ON B IlOU It alter M IhU advertisement aaed any one SUFCEK vi i u PAIN. t BOWEL COMPLAINTS. Ixwseness, Diarrlioea, Cholera Mortuv or fc'n'ui Discharges from the Bowels are Mopped In is ' tU minutes by Latin Kadwav 's Ready Kels- congest Ion or infltmnutuon, do weaknM tude, will follow the ua of tM R. K Keliel Thirty to ixtT dropt in half s lumb'.er ol win, in a few minutes, cure Vraran, ripii.!r btooitcH, Heartburn, Naue, Ytmltlng, lnl neat, Palpitation of the Heart, Nerroaiieiep leasnest. Sick JleadacUe, CoUo, Flatulency Old au Internal palna. '. . mere la not remedial agent ta thewof'O tnat will care Fever and Ague aadau ooif a buiou. BlUoos, and otner fevers akld D7 KadwaylHUa so quick ai KaJway's Bek Be lief. ' Externally It int'aollr relieve! M aooa carej Cods, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Plenru ln Keck, all congestions and inllammaUoos, wtetner f the Lar, Kidneys or Bowels. ' RIIKlMATISn,XElIlALI4, Headache, Toothache.Bitea of Iniecu,6nn tarns. Weakness or I'aln In toe Back, Chest or limba, by one application. Fifty cents p.T bottle. Sold by Druggists. TWENTY YEARS IN USE. !). Radwit A Co : I hare used your levly Relief for many years In my family with rrat ef fect. For the last twenty years I would bare nothing else to expel pain inwardly or Iron any part ot the bod r oatwardiy. 1 hare used t for rheumatic pains and always found great relief when applwd to the painlul rurt of the body. Your Fills are indeed excellent, as you represent them In the papers. Yours truly, ROBERT OUOXNEU. 47 Ktst Lake sL, Chicago. lit. Sept, I, IsM. UK. KAUWAI ft U). N. V.. ' Proprietors of lta! way's sarsaparlllian Keolvent aid Dr Kadwaj's Pilla, SCIENTIFIC. Professor Frederic Siemens Iras hit up on a device to get more light out of gas than is ordinarily obtained from bur ners, having found a means by which the air which mingles with the gas at the time of combustion is heated by con tact with porcelain conductors at a white heat, while at the same time the flicker caused by imperfect combustion at the edges ot the flame is donetway with by causing the flame to double up on itself in such a manner that combus tion is complete and the flame perfect ly steady. If the flame of an arand gas burner, after reaching nearly to its natural height, were turned inward, and drawn by suction down through the tube of the burner, it would fjllow about the same course as the flame in a Siemens burner. The vacuum which draws the flame down is caused by the rush of the heated air which goes to feed the flame. Siemens burners, now in use, give twice the light thittbe same amount of gas burned in an ordi nary burner of the best construction would give. So far no burners ol this pattern hare been made of less power than five hundred candles. In these burners the flame is so large and hot that the porcelain is heated to a degree not possible in a small burner for do mestic use. A protective wrapper to prevent silver plate from tarnishing Is made in this wise: "Caustic soda is dissolved in wa ter until the hydrometer a very simple instrument shows 2U Beau me. To this mixture is added oxide of zinc un til the amount reaches about two-thirds the quantity of caustic soda, and the mixture is boiled until perfect solution is effected. ater is then added grad iially to reduce the solution to 10 Beaume, Into this solution summer calico, muslin or paper is dipped, and wnen dry it is ready for use." Ificroscojcs have been tried with the swan incandescent lamp instead of the ordinary oil one, and with marked suc cess. A small lamp ot two or three candles in power is rigidly attached to the microscope, and then the current is sent through at will, giving a pure light without any ot the drawbacks of great heat, smell, unsteadiness of any kind or any necessity for cleaning. . There seems no end to the uses to which paper is to be put, the latest not able one being to the making of pulleys which are said to have the reuuislte strength with only 2o per cent, of the weight of iron pulleys. It la also claim ed that belts do not readily slip on these pulleys, and hence may re run much slacker than on iron. 2Ir. EUaer, in the IUvus Industrielle, gives the following simple method for testing leather to be nsed for belting: "A small piece is cut out of the belt and placed in vinegar. If the leather has been perfectly tanned, and is there fore of good quality, It will remain Im mersed in the 'vinegar, even for several months, without any other change than that of becoming a little darker in color. If, on the contrary, it Is not well im pregnated with tanning, the fibres will promptly swell, and after a short time become converted into a gelatinous mass." Tlie Scientific American says that a non-conductor of electricity has yet to be found, for all substances hitherto discovered are conductors to the force under certain known conditions, but those which offer a great resistance to it serve the p ji pise of non-conductors in practice, although they may be all classed as good or bad conductors. The best conductor known at present is sil ver, the worst is solid parafline. Important, When too visit or care New Tort City, tare baggage expreaaaire and 3 carnage Hire, and stop siuie OntiMl L'nlon Hotol, opposite 4rand Cen UsJ Depot. cu elegant rooms, fitted np at a rout of ons million dollars, 11 and upwards p-r day. European Plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the be. Horse ears, atages aul e.evate 1 railroad to ail depots. Kamlies caa live better for leas money at the Urand Union iiofax than at any other artlass hotel in tha cur. It is much easier correct to be critical than Satisfactory Kvldaaca. J. W. Graham, Wholesale Druggist, of Austin, Tex., writes : "I have boen band- linK DR. W1L HALL'S BALSAM FOB THE LUXG3 for tha past year, and have found it one of the most salable medicines I bare ever had in my house for Conghs, Colds, and even Consumption, always giv ing enure satis taction, riease send me another gross." To die live well. well one must first learn to Whea Fogg was asked regarding the latest addition to the English laugwige, he said he v. ould ask his wife, she al ways had the last word. Mrs. Fogg said that Carboline -was not only the latest but the best. Conceit may puff a man up, hut never prop mm up. ir yea feel as though water was gathering around the heart (heart-dropsy) or have heart, rheumatism, palpitation of the heart with suffoca- lon, sympathetic heart trouble Dr. Kilmer's )CEa!f-WiED regulates, corrects and cares. Public sentiment in the far west is jeginnlng to be against large herds of jattle. Small ones thrive better and receive better care. Why go limping around with your boots -un over, when Lyon's Heel Stiflenera will teep them straight? rut cold tea into the vinegar barrel. Ton can a'.so color a very good drab vith it 'ITS: All Fits stopped free. Treatise and t; trial nuieof Dr. Kline'aUreat Serve Keitorer frse to fli uses, bend to Dr. aUine,U Arch SL, PhliaPa, Gardeners plant onions for seed in the all They freeze and stay In the round all winter, and sprout In the prlng. Bronchitis is cored by frequent anal .oaes of l'iao's Core for Consamption. . That Tired Feeling The warm weather bas a debilitating effect, especially upon those who are within tloors most of Use time. The peculiar, yet common, omp'alnt known as "that Ured feelins." Is tit result. Thia feeling can be entirely oveicome by taktof Hood's SarsapariUa, hl;b gives new life and strength to all the functions ot tie body. "I eould not sleep; bad no appetite. 1 took Hood's Sarsaparilla and soon began to sleep soundly; could get np without that tired and languid feelins; and my appetite Improved." B. A. Sam-obd, Kent, Ohio. Strengthen the System HoooTf Barsapartna Is cnarartemed ty three peculiarities : 1st, the combination of remedial agents ; W, the proportion; Sd, the process ot securing the acUve medicinal qualities. The result Is a medicine of unusual strength, effecting cures hitherto unknown. Bend for book containing additional evidence. Hood's Sarsararllla tones np my system, urines my blood, sharpens rov awirtite. and seems to make rue over." J. V. XuoxrsoK, Jteglsler ol Deeds, Lowell. Mass. Hood's Sarsaparilla beats all others, and Is worth Its weight in gold." I. Babbuiutox, 190 Bank Street, Ken i'ork City. Hood's - Sarsaparilla aid br all druggists. 1 ; six for SS. only by a L IIOOD A CO., Lowell, Has. 100 Doses Ono Dollar. NO L A DYI S jlfA L lYBE AjJTIF V C Without a Clear. White Ccpiexiogj. T..IS Great Anurruan Lotion for bfautifu (ng Vi CompUrTlon and Uealing tl cii To a large extent con ceals the evidence of jge. A few application viii make the akin beau tifully soft, smooth, and white. It is not a paint or powder that will 111 up the pores 01 ine aiu, rwt hv so doing create lisease of the skin.tuch as r"iniplca.eic., but Is a perrecuy clear uqmu: valmlilfl discovery that caunes the cheek to glow with health, and nvai 'he Illy In whiteness. It is Impossible to detect .n the hesuty It confers. ii nreOilv sdiln. Fim- plea, Frecxles, Face urai, oiaca uw Sunburn. Chspoed Hands and ace, Bers Itch, etc. Jt frees the pores, oil glan.ls, and lubes of the sKth from the Injurious effects of pow'Iera and cosmetic wathes containing sedlment,whlie It beautlO.es the skin, glvln It that healthy, natural and youthful appearance which it is Impossible to obtain by any otaer mean. It l conceded by con nolsfceurs in the art to be the best and safest beao tiDerthe world ever produce.!. For sale by Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers. Send for Circulars, with Testimonials and Beau tiful Ficture, free. IV. M. SCOTT & CO., FIIILADELflll. r.v. ORBAflS ifiSS psiaaesiii dcuu rr aiauofija. a QdrvM aarir Drzaa a Piano Co.?;.' STOPPED FREE Inssns PsnoM Rsitored Dr. KLINE 8 CKEAT NerveRestoreh r?BAtWNvsInisss. OSysur, cure ft Xrrvt Jffettfl. t.fuff'y. r-f. T .l trial bonfat.w Fit tatwiUJ. T t"TUWC "l'mfk"",E"r3 Vfflictrd toI.KUNE.on Arrii St.ltade!pi.fa. Palm.' Baslnmrnllore. Phlla1lPh'.s. Terail oul- IU altuauoni f uruuh 4. Wrote for circular a't Elfljtric Belt an I 8unp-n-icy fw Kidney. Pa n. V .. 1. . - II . .1. III. I .mill W fj.l 1J Bart M IrrM, M.I n( Nr. rM'mta. Mutl. kjcui&s. u. asmu mi m .au. rrW-Boomai.i...n o. IIItlorllMliUar VasaiLiTI SWrriaLi atsfCS COtmi lasHlCti tafVa 0OOII OJ an em r nr.a, Or. WARD 4 CO.. LOIISIAXA, SO. 77 IVAPORATING FRUIT -u.rMr.iaaa. AMER I Z a ua-SL AUCPriN M-r'A TO. C CO. ua as otto. Pa. An experiment is soon to be made in New Orleans to adapt mosquito-wood, a native of Texas, very durable and iw-auiy as luiii us iruu, rut oUcct thai lug purposes, "As Is the bud bit with an envious worm," so is many a youth cat down by the im. inz worm con.oiunnCion. But it can be made to release its bold and stop its gnawing. Dr. Tierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" will if taken in time, effect permanent cares, not only In consumption, but in all canes of chronic throat, bronchial and lung diseases. Swaxsdown nisy be washed In soap and water: after ashing shake it out, and when the down is somewhat raised shake It before the fire till dry. "Good deds," once said the celebrated TUchter, "rinj clear through Heaven like a bell." One of the bast deexls Is to alleviate human sufferings, "Last fall my daughter was In decline, says Mrs. Mary llinson. of Montrose, Kansas, "And everybody thought sue was goinz Into consumption. I got her a bottle of Dr. 1L V. Tierce's 'r a yorite Prescription," and it cured her.' Such facts as the above need no comment. Tije yellow stains on the margin of engravings may be removed by a solu tlon of hydrochloride of soda. Being entirely Tegetable, no particular care is required while nslnj Dr. Tierce's "TIeasant Purgative Pellets." They oper ate without disturbance to the constitution, diet, or occupation. For aick-headache, constipation, impure blood, dizziness, sour eructations from the stomach, bad taste in mouth, bilions attacks, pain in rezion of kidneys, internal fever, bloated feeling about stomach, rash of blood to head, take Dr. Tierce s "Pellets." By ilru-gtats. In this world a man must either I e anvil or hammer. VUnaCJCPTIOIl CUBED. An old physician, retired from practice, having had placed in his hands by an hast India mission ary the formula of a sunolt vegetable remedy fut the speedy and permanent curs of Coe sumption. Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma, and all 1 hruai and Lour Affection, also a positive and radical cure lor ervoua Debility and all Nervous Complaints, after having tested Its wouderf ul curative powers In thousands of cases, has feit it his duty to make a knows to aM sullering fellows. Actuated by una motive and a deslie to relieve hnmaa suffering, 1 wlU send free of charge, to all who desire It, this recipe, m German, tien.il or English, with full oireciions ior preparing ami using, cent by mall By aaureasing wnn stamp, naming tnia paper, w, A. jNot, lay tmoefs btuclc Muclieuer, S. Y. Taken rest; a field gives a bountiful crop. that has rested fob orsrsrsia. nroiOssTiow; depression or spir its and genenu debility in their various forms; Lta asa preventive against fever and ague and oihtr f It'Vf-11?. ,eyV' the "'rrr3'hoeporate.i. tililrof Utflsaya"made by CaswelL Uaaard AOn. New tort, and sold by ail Druggists, is the bete tonic; and for patients reooveriog from fever or Other sickness, a has no equal. The plant wliicti is often transplanted does not prosper. A Most Liberal OfTor! The Voltaic BeltCo., Marxbail.Mich., offer to send their Celebrated Voltaic Belts and Electric App'.ianc-s on 'thirty days' trial to any man atllictetl with Nerv ous Debility, Loss of-Vitality, Manhood, &c Illustrated pamphlet in sealed en velope with full particulars, mailed free. Write them at once. An investment in knowledge always pays the best interest. That feeling of extreme debility Is entirely over come by Hood's Sarsaparilla. I was tired all over, but Hood's Sarsaparilla gave me new Ufa and strength," says a Pawtncket, B. I., lady. Hood's Sarsaparilla is sold by all druggists. $1 a bottle, or six bottles for tv. Fut a few potatoes In the hot b"U and sprout them for early use. Fraser Axle Urease. The Frazer is kept by all dealers. One box lasts as long as two of any other. Re ceived medals at hTorth Carolina State Fair. Centennial, and Pans Exposition. Good yeast can be kept in excellent condition if it is twice well washed with ice-cold hard spting-water and then dried .and well-pressed. This mass is Afterward to be well mixed with malt dust and stored in closed jars In Ice cellars, ft 1 ITS FACETLrE. TriE other noon us a Michigan avenue erocer wa3 carefully sorting over a lo ot apples to hide the soft spots from the public, a man with a pencil in one hand and a piece of paper in the other hurriedly entered and said: "Sayl you know about that old say ing about a bird In the hand being worth two in the bush?" "Yes." L "Well, whereabouts in the Scriptures is it? Teller down here wants to bet me it is in Genesis, and I'm dead cer tain it's in Luke. Say! help me out aud I'll whack up with you!" "Well, ow," slowly answered the grocer, "I've read it a hundred times, but Just where it is I can't say." "Try and think." Ue puckered his mouth, drew down his left eye arid carefully passed an apple from one hand to the other, but couldn't get there. "I know It isn't In the ten command ments," "but IU be hanged it I can locate it" "Sorry very sorry, said the other. "I'll have to take the bluff.and let the fellow pass on." lie went off and had been gone about ten minutes when the grocer discovered that two smoked bams which had been hanging near the alley door were miss ing. It was plain enough that he had been "worked" to keep his attention attracted, and when he realized this the way he began at chapter first ot the good book and banged things clear down to the last page was so awful to hear that a policeman bad to disperse the crowd which gathered. A yotjxq physician moved from an Eastern town to Kansas, and hung out his shingle. One day a neighbor called on hmi, and during the conversation Inquired if be bad ever opened an office In the East. "Oh, yes, I had a very nice office In deed," was the reply, with more or less pride in the tone. "Did you have much practice?" "Well, no, not exactly.". "That's strange, for you seem to be a well-posted man. What was the matter?" "Ileally, I dont know, but somehow my patients all seemed to die before I could practise on them very much." School board vistor, while examin ing a scholar "Where is the north pole?'' "I don't know, sir." "Don't you? Are you not ashamed that you don't know where the North pole is?" "Why, sir, if John Franklin and Dr. Kane and Captain Nares and Mark man couldn't Cnd it, how should I know where it Is?" WOMEN IwetlMff PBsMWal erOe talrnmllic gnlM BRQM5, l.BrrjalliM imlln L. their n SaM try This medicio eeabiaaa Iron with pa fictab! trUCA, sUld ! stlVaUaaVbtW fur IbMM psSCulLftT u YVoiursw. nd ail bo Wtwi awevfiLarj liv ItEtv lirhe o4 Parlte th Rlo4t Htiualat tbm Appetite, Mrea.ril.eH tb .!-lea a4 lSerTetwn fact, tborucichl laytiMrate. llmra the eamvlmsMta, aad tmattaa ti sain amenta. Ctaar the cpsatsiio. It daM aut btackaa tha taaUt, eaw prod oca coDatii UPltma-afl sVAsrr iron Mu. Wh U. Wood Lahitrbtoa. Pa., amy: "I aaad btwa'a Irxm BiUeia fur kaa atraewta tna itroM hfiJtii bai'K I CfmUi rv da mj uai vasnavsw a H1b , BMaaa tJlsTUlsmUJ I Ma. L Dattb. m Xrnth Bx. Lrnchbaca. Va lay: "Mf ifa haa auffarad fraa faaula woaksaaa lor i tiaa racalvwd ao oaoatit frnan doc ton, and h avarT aTaiaAbs MwaatsUlnn nnsnirrif i 4nlO novar. natal ao oaad Brown Iron BiUrra. umim rwaM Mf ta umielI hi. II n. faw bas aboTrvd. Mark aaderosrwrl tmi hum on mppr TakrilMtrr. Mt-onljbr UUOU lUEXUCAL to, UALTiUVUt. aim. A California widow who put her all Into a deal in stocks and was shrunk out. called upon her broker and said: "When will this thing probably come out In the papers?" "To-morrow, doubtless." "now long can you suppress It?" "Why, I might keep it out two days, but not longer." "Only two days? That's pretty short notice, but I'm a hustler when I get my bonnet on. I'll depend on the two days." On the third day the papers chron icled her loss and her wedding on the same page. "What is that kerOumldoodle that you have on your hat, Mary Ann?" aid a father to his would-be fashion able daughter. "Oli, that Is an imitation of a straw berry, father." "The divil take the stvles " said the old man, "you'll be wearing imitation cabbages yet." "We have nearly arrived at the cab bage point already," replied the miss. "And how near have you got?" "We wear a little tum-uD on the side, now." A FBEXcn lady is showinz a visitor the family portraits in the picture ml- lery. "That officer there In the uniform.' she says, "was my great-great-grandfather, lie was as brave as a lion, but one of the most unfortunate ot men he never fought a battle In which he did not have an arm or leg carried away." Then she adds, proudly: "lie took part In twenty-four en gagements." "What is the DrftS of Raswe!!' Life of Johnson?' " asked a man with a long nose and a linen duster, of the keeper of a book stall on Ilanover street "I notice you have a copy oat side." "I can sell you that copy for fifty cent3," said the dealer. "I think l will take it." said he of the nose. "I am engaged in making a collection of the lives of our Presidents, and this nf the successor of Lincoln will make it nearly complete. You sell very cheap." l es, we sell very cheat), sometimes said the dealer. Little Johnny had been unrlniv familiar with a rorbidden jam-pot, and had consequently Indulged in grief and lamentation when Retribution with a large and rolling "B" had Swooned down upon him. lie sat smarting and tearful for a long time in silence broken only by an occasional sob. Then he looked up solemnly in his mother's fa and said with emphasis, "Mother, I'm sorry yon ever married my pa." Turpentine is regarded by manv oer. sons as an antidote to poisoningly phos phorus. It Is not the ordinary turpen tine which should be given, but the acid French turpentine, or old turpen tine which has been exposed to the air long enough to have become ozonized Dy aosoroing oxygen, ir this be admin istered while the phosphorus is still in the stomach it changes the poison into an inert substance which resembles spermaceti. After phosphorus has en tered into the circulation the only rem edy is transfusion of flesh blood Into the veins. The beneficial results produced by the use of Hall's Hair Benewer are wonderful. Ayer's Ague Cure is warranted a sure core for all malarial fllaorclera. LJ Ul ZU " BEST TONIC riRE D.170RU Waking in tlu wumtngunrtrnn!Cflen with rar.-rar Ul Mpailt l t4 back.-But ttsra d a Unj .,.,' -So, UrlltThtbodganiminilackrirtngthi-ArteuwilKntrotdimii prrf,,,,,, '""'ssaiT.1 YOU WANT A SPRING MEDICINE To remove) impurities from the Blood-undigested and decaying matter from the system. To prevent or removo Blotches, Pimples. Rashes, Boils and all kinds of SKIN ERUPTIONS. To protect the system from Bil ious attacks andremoveall malar ial taint that may be lurking In tho by-ways of disease. To fortify tha system ogainst'the approach of diseases peculiar to the weather, tone the Stomach and remove all refuse matter from the system. Restore Lost Appetite, removo Blotches and Skin Eruptions and give a Clear, Healthy glow to tho Skin. Remove all Malarial Symptoms and insure good health. Burdock Blood Bitters Is not a BEVERACE nor a prepar ation of which the fundamental principle Is the "Purging Aloes," but a purely Vegetable Medicine, particularly adapted to SPRING COMPLAINTS. -- . Fortify. Strengthen and TVT A Tt T T1T Magazine Tm brr T mrnXl f"! ,11 rJwn. Ti. atnitfrrl ihooUmr mmy ruamlrM, feud IA on . j ismIbW. j mtm r.e, BALLARD cmrET. sporttvo .r T(P;rT rrnts -. IhiKKlUi, MAKLIX FIRE pish mi& HAMMOND'S SMlHtui,.W'i . r ! r.oi drrtrnu tortahlta ami h. u1 .Itk .,r.tr .fflr'lrncr ril..h...nJ..IJ K- . L. . ' I "Mrs. IIexdeicks," said Dumley to hi3 landlady, "will you please add a little hot water to my tea? It Is too stronjr." After supfer Damley asked Mrs. Hendricks if she would mind wait ing; until "the following week for Lit board money, and she gracefully re plied: "Certainly not, Mr. Dumley." "Xo, sir," remarked the Irate cus tomer, banging the bottle down upon the drug store show case; "I don't want any more of Tott's Liver Cure." "It's a very good remedy, sir," suggested the clerk, timidly. "Yes; maybe it is for Pott's l.ver. Probably It is. But It wasn't worth a cent for mine." A fkisky young widow, about to mairy a very old man was remonstrated with by a friend, who said; "Why, the old fellow bas one foot in the grave." "Well." retorted the widow, "what oc it? Isu my l etter h;ilf there, too? ' A Cincinnati mau claims to lave a wifct, so hot-tempered that lie can light hit cigar with a flash of her eyes. He made a good match when he mar ried her. Job has beeo marked down in history as the patient man The fast is, that at one time lie was just U)i!ing over. EPITHELIOMA! OR SKI.V C.1XCKU. Fsjven jea-s I Kin-T t wit'i a cancer 01 mv race. Ewut m att a a f n-n I rrainltl Un ii"ofwi,r)Hp3.nrl.aalld..te.-rum) t- m an MTort to pricur-1 It, In shit I wn suo-wfnu an 1 bwranlumw. Th in9 tnf if t"i mi dicme at firs tojiwrrlit vrviw ta, ,r3; butoatlw)0 n"fi? """vl. .i 1 I b itimpru arwr Ihr Orst few txutlai Mrfw-, Imlljiii sraiUv UuitovwI. I aiu tr nr. an I a n ','t, 10 d anv kwdnrwiirk. lheciriroa rur h;bn to dv crrran,l u ul tui M . u. nntil thr l n a UgeoT uleJt-ooly aUtt! r miri, th' p'a.. ... . Ma.4oiciB A. McUjsiLn. Atlanta. Oa.. Anira.it 11, imK Tr.vtiw.nn H'nr.1 ,n 1 ukHn niu n. . l"J8,wrJf"',.r,i0-Irwjr a, Atlanta. Oa. TKTOFSpTaYJOOTHPOWDER KrfUlas Tffth Prrfrct and (; llralthr. RloIr'C riiijr trcal English oui and Uidil dlliid-r Rheumatic Remedt Ual Ham. !., t raaaa. iO rta. PeMlonsSSI lhCal?S st that clA sW MliBaK axl atas fiww imet assaasafry j GXbmhi tti uvo of puMic Ufl stow ranks fcraofic ttv Icsdiaic Mti Ciasts of thm Idotm. A. L. SMITIt. B.-swliorvI. rW OPIUHesSHs! w Uaaai.TCoaraB' -klr and ratalMa. rorrespoaairarri n-tal of tun. vn. nitm. Tarn 11.-. Co Mi-am t. Lataistle. ia4. I Pia,ala f I aasi CbbbbIcxIbb Beaatlflesl fcy BeeSB.to!i.lInfflSn!nIinrSn)iri 52 ?JZ?Z?lC'Jnt "a "IP. at 33etats by WM. DRtVDOPPEL, SI a... -.,. SWS Son. Front st. KlpaiVX in BOttlBS earn for A7v ,i I WrailS..,r fail ,rU J u. aaiais. BcfSinrtMS air, SIS hmi irl i.r fori J 1 1UIA MUUtltl HAS I LIES, rrtc.tt byo,.,,. Uinnr n .. . . ar iai Sru'JTKLL A ca r s v n aaaa bs ihrlail8wn,BialsV I JSP!!' 1 5 i-P X?W H I - C fr-B rfiLMffrfS CO.. I S M f TO OaT9.J 3 mchtjig bontt-Hat taa. . "fia.r" Last sr prin!; I I.n,i . .. ... out aU over mjlK,J7. Tbers.J large as a p,ny v ' i dollar. TwouUap., and wouM itch anl bum ha f J everything I eouli think of ' I grew worse and , '.. . Hl tti " " I"1"1? and somas :! I grew worn an worvuntU I . K A fri.r,,l ..!;. . . 1 IH.i me to p , ---1 Bitten I card tlw J had tatea .llo: the firn boS?! another p,rn. I wa; 1 ft, I bad taken tLre, Tt aerim medicine arvl 1 1 'Olllll il.tr I Jan. ' .... """c """"I"'"""' "'.- '.,!: ;";, vm, Last srrrri B? tthl; I La.1 no a.pet:te an i mv I al several wl-W, was finally rwowm,!! to trv " Blood Bitters. Thl, mMi. ec Kov.9,11 B,-atkTt:XT. B. IS B. i. a ya ..rto, . , rn, a-,, or ,.-.w. ,.,, ' J'' I have hai a uTrTn b, broke out in tl.o skin, aa,l thi ,r. ""-,lu'S! -rit.Ut relief. Atlasttriel ,,.., ;""'P5 ten Ibave taken but two IkA'V mast say I am cured an-J am fC 7 1 .w new man. or. lk Eran;-, e. Jodit """too, Invigorate wiili B. B. I BEST IM Tur Rifle. r'.t.t mda. t:.a uim AB.ll.S (I), cw ilatto, Coaa. SL.lCT.KUim wimva! . . u TUs PUMMEL jttJflLtu:. . evldlaa. sVwwa-a of liclUt iota. SLUG SHOT fTourrj. bin'-.. 11 . .. u . paasj IsUKlLION-lll lov !' ISTEPIM ovtcr r-nicr "Sn.Tt CLUES rti .t tij tt manu.awtnr-r n.t mechanics in itiu w.-r. L t liamiin 4rvon A Hunni c. fr ait kimd "f I" w-ir-i. At th New rl-:an-i fcs'i ti'"'n, iat ir.sle mtli ii en ili:rf ft lsti straui of ov: 1600 Pounds TO A bQCAUE IM'U. TWO GOLD MEDALS. If roar dt'alr f!oi not kr it eoa r a r i (inn p. rx-jiv- lOTMm 'a. fXTl. ""nr .wtsvt tv sa iio ujriU- m or t-.y :pu a tsoi at u' dnMitoC cuTfyK Mat. oa-a.' :l wi. i, ttu-i from A. M. to 4 . M at S7U SorJx ji, iu P. m-sui 1 San !-. PENNYROYAL PILLS CHICHESTER'3 ENGLISH" TIM Original aail only tsmalaa. niitat-ona. In l;it!iniil tj LilUKi urn 1'rm.v-st fnr -C!uch-.'r, F. :rjf Kii u: other. unnd'He c (t-nr-i M:n f .p ryanuM s iBUerttj nstura nia:l. N.HI': HVEi t hkhMrrl lirinlrd fs. 3I3 WaSiqrr. Phlla4. Pa, bolunv lru.r.n''tev-r'urii--r A. i ir "t-c-juutt ticl:ll', i'oaajr r fan. oix. ! Frco Farms 4a SnviTIT SAX LUIS. Snrrouii.le.i by ithi.:'.m:u n iu nu". ifo ra-WmlMV Tnirtsisoy ttr.ofj-yKasttn LAi.iii-j-vtt)i.r'--n:-iinvil 2--ii'4irL LkIi f'rnIet...-tu-a!sj:ta-T a: $ -iir vt watra Park irn-riti by rii:a:i- CAtiii. t'ii: ixlmi rau-s. Kwry :-i;ia (:i-.v.i r. fr ami 1-aiuphIetM.ft. ,i lr-s t fKl LNIUai CO.. Oln ii JO.J IU jci lc:ivcr. C m. 1j1 iM. PATENTS iaSSa "ZSrl Bison a v. !a:ant Li - Miinrt.i IX iS. QREYDOPPEL'S w BORAX SOAP g Clraasr, pariSes andmakf, rlsihrswlits ana swreu Excellont for Balk ass Tllrt. Fall b.db. Bar. .nlr. For.alrrvrrrwkrra jams vjiir JELLY Urtlr. l amp, rrnrrm t aaalBSSM K raul-niak Inn : r t-tru.frV : .. s. r-i.i-1 t airheverv .tine t-fc.'f Kill Tu-rv.p t-A Ir-HmRlifVlVTH; tl.LlTt lHilN IS JISU II tSLl:V. S.d on.acr. MtB. A SUREGU3E T l)Vl'r.i'S..i.Sil iK.S rMN- llrnai HiLLV.i"ar ot.S.i) FACE, HANDS, Fin, Ml ,T1 lmr'tjm. "f Hrwir.-nt, :-ril. ' " la, .M. r.il". . B!-k IT..H. !-.!! r "",71? n. .muu u WOOOBUB't. 87 a rari St. a.to.. s. t. Eav i ir. rw COwSUfci'TIOH tlintsaDrit of rmse f t" .rt k i. l ) f -t W. feeta emi. In tM -iroa-- ie my :wta ;a Utt 1111 MtvJ TWO JUiTfl-H rr-.iE, toet.1wT wttft CABLB TREATIK Ifctn d. . to aru-v- "r IrtMaSd P a.Mt.lrrw. I. T A -1.-TK ' "-w i.lGHFHLSE HABIT CURED. nt M FTHOD. DR. J. VAHTED t :-:iaM ntlnmn f VT and oil n t !s 'rl' " isiv kraii-d t'liara, TaBBCCS ConmlMluS-'adirMii mnir I.a'Tr. SKVV VOSB L 11 AVA!A I'll. Alt (..JfiloliiJLI: f i . . mi.,.1 n Pft-arra No "opt to fut C3 Hais-V sum Olahratrd KI'I.IP-' IIU.TFIt aaa BUIDI.K t mbini.l, ba Slipped br any li .ro. Mm?i Halter to any Dart of i fr . oq racalptoffl. Siild b all a-;dierjr narrjwara ana iuium i " '! Bpacisl dlseoaat to u Tradr. d lor rnrr I 'r j. c. LiGiiTiinrsE. KarhBatrr, N. . 4 w flour 'W t, ih, ssV.41 FtET MILLS- I Srra. FRAZER "AXLE GREASE nvfiH Y THE 1TAR1.D ' tW Qet tins Genuiae. hlTcrywhtJfc T3An' a M-.wa-'w't: -lVTF.Dfor PLATFORM ECKOtS . a : n BK 11a I T lalV 13 U T KIT 11 9 rUK Ut.l " 7in.TnJ.il IL (lOUfW: . .. t ,.n M tkn!i:M l M. kutnor and BU3. Brunt. pru- "H-f-f-, f u.l t -InrhHUll rm. " it T- ml t.jUUf U. n Aa. th Lif and Drain of Mr. Gooca. M Kr. I atilra to t9 . noath b. e Cu""M'ail"M' A. B. WvJtXJLUwXOX s tO Bart- u 'tsar ' a, nl MB-lvJ "T. V-sTla Bl I Stsmp tan &? aaBBSBii 'fl FULL PSVICULAHS.ir25X5 Beits BROS. A CO.SjrJisssBBiJ NEWARK, N. J. tST LEPAGES Ea r" hTjTb All (IStiAai. H 0PIU1 mi s -w
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers