Canon Carr may now be aaid to ba~th® •realthlest clergyman in Eogland, ho having inherited tho vast estates of Sir William Evans, the Derbyshire Baronet Who died some weeks since. The Canon was connected with the late Baronet by marriage only. • Hood's Cures My Health is Solid As a Duck's Foot in the Mud Cured of Gravel and Indlgeatto-rx by Hood's Sirsaparllla Mr. Frederick Earn/red Chicago, Illinois. ■I want to aay that I have been made a Slew man by Hood's Saraaparillu and Hood's Pills. I was in a wretched condition and paid to one pbys'cian $43 for attendance and prescriptions, which gave me no re lief. I suffered intensely from {gravel* and think I Lave endured as much mis ery as any man from that complaint. I gave up hope of ever getting well and was -only walking shout to Save Funeral Expenses. Nothing would stay on my stomach. 1 began to take Hood's Sa'isa par ilia, and found that it did me good, so 1 kept on till I have taken fourteen bottles, and now my health is as solid as a duck's foot in HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES the mud. 1 shall keep Hood's Sarsaparilla In the house, as I consider it the cheapest and best medicine in the market. My indi gestion is entirely cured, and all symp toms of the gravel have disappeared." FIUCDKUICK KAUNFRED, No. 04 South Carpenter Street, Chicago, Illinois. |f. B. Be sare-to get Hood's and only HOOD'S. llood'H PI He act easily, yet promptly and effl- Neatly, on the liver and bowels. 25 cents. PNC II 'vHT HOME TACKS j j> YOU ALWAYS NEED 'EM. ? I SOME INSTANCES. 5 • j You null curtain down quick, off It 5 I comes. You need "Home Tacks." 5 . Ghnp gets looso on chairs, otc. You I want"Home Tacks." W r Spring cleaning —yon relay carpets. P I' You must have"Home Turks." w * IN ANY HOME USES FOR TACKS. T. I You u ill always flud just tho right sized # tacks for thapurposo in a box of "Home |? Tacks"— packed in six apartment#— d | i a most eonvenient form. 4 II Mad* solely by tho Novelty Dpt., Atlas Tack Oorp'n. a I W**&•• i. —H'iiLiß, N.w York, fUUdtlpha, Chi;*c*. Btiim.,., Y . VMMOM -Ttin.„, Mat, FUIHATM, KM*. XBLTAMA, UM. I ) iXubmj, kin. rtjmeulb, Uan. A HOflE TACKS \ ; BOLD EVERYWHERE. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS W THOMSON'S JjJ SLOTTED ' CLINCH '-RIVETS. No tools rrqu;red. Only a hammer needed to drive sn<l c inch thni easily and quickly, having the clinch st'so ut' ly smooth. R-quiring n- lx e to bo made in the leather nor burr lor the Rivets. They are alrongr. lougli and <lnruble. Million* now In usu. All tenifth*. uniform ur assorted, rut tip In boxes Aak your Uriel? 4 a- lor lbens, or mu>l 40C. In •lamps tor a box oi 100, assurte l sues. Man id by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., , W\ I.TII ATI, MASS. Cures Con Bum pll on, Coiigh s, Cron p, Sore Throat. So'.d by all Druggists on a Guarantee. VVVVVVVVVtAAAAA/WVVWWVNAA/VVVV*# ROOT* BARK o BLOSSOM file Bcatßtomarh, Llrer, KlilncT art Blood Remedy. Pains tu Hack nud Limbs, Tired, Plugged Out, Ntrvou# Fsellng, Debility and Low Vitality (|ul<-kly ( ured as well ai Dyspepsia. Constipation. BTAH HMMI, Dl/ZL aeas. Rheumatism or Caun li. Sample r ree Cor stamps. AGENT* PAID WEEKLY SALARY. f I hex two months' supply I } H-at by mall or at n..t Tros eve. " one month's supply i 1 gl*ta. 11 ylt and Ho W ell. ROOT. BARK A BLOSSOM, Newark, N. J. A^tAAWVVSAAA^WVVMVVVVVVVWWWWWVV Sl7 SPRAY PUMP §5-50 VI I EXHKB-Wl'niil.liir 1,11 Endorsed by the leading Entomologists of the U. S. •0,000 :u use. Satisfaction guaranteed or money re funded. Illustrated catalogue on spraying. Free. It is a rapid seller. Our farmer agents are making !*•> |o fc'AO PCI- ilnv. If F SFM> VF.noF. Address r.C. LKWfWiUFG.C'Q., H ox A, i'ATSKILI.. N'.Y. r|ENSIONwTJ,uiu"*".r: Successfully Prosecutes Claims. 3yr#iulast war. loadjudkuliiigcluiuia, utty biueo. MIICT UAVE Agent# AT ONCE. Sample 111 U I lIMIC SashhH-k (Pat. *92) free by mall for 2e. Stamp. Immense. I nri\nlied. Only good •ne ever invented. Heats weights. Sales unparalleled Bl'2 a day. Write quick. BKOHAKD, l'lilla., Pa. with Pastes. Enamels and Palnta which stain tho ' v hands, In uro the Iron and burn red. ? The Rlsln? Sun Stove Poliah la Brilliant, Odor lea#, Durable, and tin 4 consumer pays for no tin or glass package who every purchase. THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. Comfort From Hawaii—Why—What k She Did—Blue With Cold—The Course ot Love Too Smooth, lCie. There's a pea esf illness of feelin ; That will couie serenely stealing Oer the minds of those who cjn the newsy page; For Jite there's some endurance Since we're given the as-urunc* That Quien Lili isn't goinz on the stage. —Washington Star. WHY? "What makes Tompkins so stuck up?'' "Oh, because he's well posted, I guess.*'—Truth. WHAT SHE DII). Husband (who married money) "You have made me a poor wife.'' Wife—"That may be true; but.l made you a rich husband."—Puck. BLUE WITH COLD. Young Mrs. Fitts—"This is the bluest inilk I ever saw." Milkman—"Yes'm. it's blue with the cold."—lndianapolis Journal. COURSE OP LOVE TOO SMOOTH. Maud—"Why did she throw him over? Sho liked him well enough, I know." Georgiana—"Yes, but her parents ap proved of him."—Chicago Newi Record. ( HASTIBBMEKT. Mrs. Chessers—"Yes, my daughter i 9 very fond of my piano." Mrs. Caustique—"lndeed? Then why dees she pound it so hard every morn ing?"— Chicago News Kecnad. DIDN'T I.AUGII. "Yes," she said, "I shall marry Harold, for I know he loves me." "How?" "He watched me sharpen a pencil and didn't laugh."—Washington Stur. DIDN'T STRIKE OIL. "Juggins told mc yesterday lie hadn't a dollar left.'* "Ilis money was well spent, though." "How?" "Boring for oil."—Washington Star. FIXED. Crummer—"Vokes is a man of great tenacity of purpose." Gilleland—"Why do you say so?" Crummer—"l have known him to keep the same umbrella through a whole rainy season."—Truth. CHANCE FOR HEROISM. Adorer (anxiously)—" What did your father say f M Sweet Girl—"Oh, he got so angry I was afraid to stay and listen. He's in a perfectly terrible rage. Go in an' appease him."—New York Weekly. TABLE TALK. "I'm the unluckiest dog alive," said the Cayeauc; "somebody's always shak ing me down and leaving rac in the soup." " That's just what makes me hot y " re torted the Consomme.—Puck. A DIFFERENT NAME. "Where arc you living now!* "I'm boarding." "Good bouse?" "Pretty." "Ever have hash?" "My, n:; croquettes."—Pittsburg Dispatch. FAST FLYERS. Boy—"Toe teacher says ducks fly at I the rate of 200 miles an hour." Father—"That's nothing. Pheasants j fly at the rate of a thousand miles an j hour." Boy—"How d'ye know?" Father—"l've tried to shoot 'cm."— Good News. THAT RESTLESS UMBRELLA. "Did you cvej get back the umbrella that you lent Brasher?" "Yes." "Howl" "I borrowed it again." 4 'From Brasher?" "No; from the man he lent it *to. ' Washington Star. IT WOULDN'T BURN. Jackson Park—"How do you do, Pat? how are you getting along in your new business?" Pat—"Forst sthratc; but how do yez loikc me new foire proof safe?" Jackson Park—"All right; but how ! do you know it is fire proof?" Pat—"Faith, didn't I thry it wid a mutch before Oi bought it!"— Puck, | MOTHER AND DAUGHTER. Mamma—"Mr. de Bank asked me to day, daughter, if ha might marry you." j Daughter—"And what did you s.iy, rapmraa?" Mamma--"I said I lxad no objections, if you hadn't." ' Daughter (demurely)--"That's what I told him last night, mamma."---De troit Free Press. PROVING HIS INNOCENCE. Mamma—"What in the world are you makiog such a noise down there for?" Roderick —"To let you know how good I am." Mamma —"Why do you think you are ' good when making so great a noise?" Roderick—"Because you always say ( I'm in mischief when Tin quiet."—Har- ( per's Young People. BEGAN TO ECONOMIZE. She—"As we are to be married in i June, doa't you think you ought to be- i gin to economize?" ] He—"Oh, I've begun already. That * very thought occurred to me this even- j ing as I was coming here." shc-7"What did you do?'' j He—"Pastel the candy store without stopping."-*-New York Weekly, IN DOUBT. Patient—"Well. Doctor, how <lr> you find things to-day?" D.ctor (cheerfully) — u ". feci very much better satisfied." Patient—"l feel worse than ever. What have you discovered that makes vpti feel so assured?" Doctor—"l am satisfied now that the medicine I have been giving you for the last three months ha? not been do ing you a bit of good. I was in doubt about it before."—Life. HIS TEItH! iJI.E REVENGE. "So?" oxe'aimed Harold Vere dc Verc, folding his arms and regarding the young woman with a stern, pitiless gaze, "you have cast me aside, Mabel Featherooue, in order to get a rich widower, have you?" "If you choose to speak of it iu that coarse manner, M r . Vere de Vere," she replied, raising her head and meeting his gazo haughtily. "I have, sir! I have promised to marry Mr. Wagonsel lers." Harold Vere de Vere crushed his hat down 07er his eyes and started for the door. "Mabel Fcatherbone," he said, paus ing with his hand on the door knob, "you have throwu me ovdr for a man , with a bar'l. You will find he is not the only man with a bar'l. I have one at home filled with your love letters I I shall sell theui to the ragman. Good evening I"—Chicago Tribune. CASE FOR TUB CORONER. Mrs.- Irons (matron of the well-known Irons Boarding House) —"Sergeant, I wish you would send a squad of police down to my house as quick as you can!" Police Official—"Calm your excite ment, Mrs. Irons. What is the trouble?" "We've got a burglar locked up in the cellar!" "How did he get iu?" "Through an outside window. We heard him moving about in the cellar and one of tho boarders got up and slipped outside and fastened the shut ters tight, and the only door he can get out is locked. O, we've got him!" "Is there anything of value in your cellar?" "Anything of value? There's a dozen of my best mince pies and some cold meat, and—" "How long has lie been down there?" "Since about four o'clock. Nearly three hodr?." (Moving toward tho telephone) "Madam, this is not n case for the po lice. I will Simmon the Coroner."— Life. A SOCIETY IDYL. "Why is it that women are always so jealous and suspicious ot each other?" asked the Professor in a plaintive voice of the lady with whom he had been dancing. "Ob, because they know each other so well. Now, there's that Kate Law sou. Do you know what she told young Lawson to-night t" "No. Please enlighten me." "3he said she had one of the most eligible young feilow3 in town at her teet. Such a whooper, when everybody knows she never had a single offer." • l [ can prove the truth of Miss Law son's assertion," said the Professor in his cold, calm voice, that sounded hko a brook gurgling over broken glass. "Ob, were you the man?" spitefully. ♦•No"—not iu the least disconcerted j —she was buying her wedding shoes, j and the. man at her feet was the clerk , who was fitting her." ♦•Her wedding shoort You don't I mean to say that that girl has at last caught a husband?'' I "So they say." ; "Who is the unhappy man?" ; "Myself."—Detroit Free Press, | *' liabbits of Many Kinds. Iu America uo game law limits the | sport of hunting rabbits. The ordinary gray rabbit of the fields is shot, trapped, or snared, from the beginuing of the year to its end, except that there is an unwritten law known to schoolboys and sportsmen, that rabbits are not good eatiug in the summer season. In the northern latitude, the hares turn brown j in summer, and change to light gray in ; winter. This is supposed to be a pro- I tcctive providence that helps them to amalgamate with their surrounding*, and so escape slaughter. Rabbits appear to be native to nearly all climes. The rabbit fancier has a list which includes Dutch rabbits, Hima layan?, Africans, the little Polish rabbit, the Belgiar, the Angoras, the silver- I grays, silver-browns, black rabbits, white rabbits and an endless lot of names and nationalities. Besides these there ( are the rabbits with personal cognomens, such as the dew-lap, the lop-eared and the dwarf rabbit. These are all fancy rabbits, not half as good for eating purposes as the wild ones with their distinct nutty tlavor. But these prize rabbits cost all sorts of fancy prices, a single one selling as nigh as sloo. Detroit Free Press. Fir.it Publ c Building at Washington. The White House was the first public building in Washington. The premium of SSOO for the best design was given to James Hohan, a young Irishman, then living in Charleston, S. C. The first funds, $120,000 and $72,000, were furnished by Virginia and Maryland re spectively, and Congress wa9 finally in duced to appropriate the sum necessary to finish it. Up to the present time its total cost has amounted to $2,332,0)0. Of this sum $1)30,000 has been spent iu finishing, furnishing and caring for the building since 1797; $7(52,000 in repair ing it since 1807; $373,000 in improv ing the grounds siuce 1818, and $75,000 in the erection and caro of the green houses aud conservatories. The corner stone was laid October 13, 1792, in the presence of Oeneral Washington and the District Commissioners,— Public 9j>iu. ion, Ths Power of Water. "A Southern Engineer" contributes a valuable article on "Geology and the Mississippi Problcn. ' to the Engineering Magazine. In it be rays: We And in water the only tireless agent that works in the modification of continents; and instead oS being the great renovator of the land, as it is pop ularly conceived, it is tho great de stroyer. The destruction of ancient Rome has been attributed to tirao. But it was due simply to the moisture of the atmosphere working through chemical agencies. It was water, invisible but penetrating even the very stones of the wonderful city, that" caused her to crumble to ruins, and gave to modern Rcme a grade greatly elevated above her ancient grade. But it works not alone in the cities and towns. There is not a hill on earth that has not been shorn of tome of its altitude by this subtle force, and there is not a mountain on earth, if not fitfully renewed by volcanic action, that has not been compelled to lower its peak before this universal levcler of tho exalted. It may be a dreadful thought, indeed, but we do not know absolutely that we are not dependent on the earth quake and the volcano for keeping our continental habitat above tho level of the ocean; for water not only destroys, but it has the persistency and force to carry off to its burial place in the sea all that it has caused to perish. It may take a long time at its task; but working either in its gaseous, its liquid, or its solid form, it seems to be the most per sistent thing on earth, never perishing, and, however divided and invisible at times, always ready to unite its forces for a supreme effort at the degradation of a continent. I'annot Take the lilt. The chief of the Kansas City (Mo.) fire Department has invented a new bridle for horses, the use of which makes it impossible for the horse to take the bit between his teeth. It has no bit to take. It is arranged with a strap over the horse's nose, aud a steel curb under his jaw in such away that a hard pull ou the rciDS make thu animal very uncomfortable indeed. The new bridle works to perfection, it is said, on a practical test, keeping the horse per fectly under control, while giving linn the minimum of discomfort. One great advantage of the contrivance is that it enablea the animal to cat and drink in comfort without displacing the bridle.— New York News. Liverpool has the largest local debt of any town in England. ALL THE SAME, ALWAYS. ;f ! Sr "S. Buflcrod 8 months with One of my workmen fell wX straight- m'cd' two Jf\ I from a ladder, he sprained St. Jacobs Oil, St. Jacobs Oil 18*1 C U I aIU m 3 and was cured in four A PROMPT AND PERMANENT CURE. FREE MURRAY'S CATALOG The grandest and most complete Catalog of Vehicle*. llnrncM. and>llore (<aodii ever pub lished. A regular cyclopedia for any one who owns a horse. WIIBER H. MURRAY M'F'G CO. 13Sw!'"RONT STREET, CINCINNATI, 0. What Brings Release From Dirt and Grease? Why, Don't You Know? SAPOLIO! ITHE KIND B | THAT CURES" ■ JOHN J | Pg Huau.a, N. Y. gj "Dyspepsia for2o Years!" TRIED EVERYTHING, |j Yet 2 bottles ACU R E . NO FICTION, BUT TRUTH. ■ DAN. SABSArAIULLA Co., I OINTB — I have been o great siifTerer for=3 over 0 years with !YSIMI'HI \ Have tried everything I rould hear of. Have nU,SB tried Physicians' prescription*, hut could 0h0.in53 the disordered conditioa of ny digestive orgaui. s I bought a bottle of DANA'S SARSAPARILLAb ;T nELprn ME SO MK H" that {bought the second, llefore that was taken Ink'v ma" T< 1 EA i Massena, N. Y. JOHN KIRK EY, Snd. N To whom It mey concern:—We are well ac-H quainted with Mr. Klrkcy, and know that would not muke any statement thutiitf .VI.. uatrae. BTEIRKS A SNAITII " Alassena, N. Y. Driuuriita. =5 i DANA'S LIVER AND KIDNEY PILLS arc . I worth their weight In Gold. They areH ' jgD. D. D.'s.-DANA'S DISEASE DE-rij| • Try a bottle at our risk. * |j| Dana Sarsaparilla Co.. Belfast. Maine. jgjj . FAUMS;timbek 4 LA N Nd!:V.Vtj j New en talogue Rent free upon application. , i HJL}ras JJICPL, HAWDKLI. $ Co., llanahsua, Va. 1 now to Gutss a Woman's Age. A volume of memoirs has just been published giving tho experiences of a French President of Assizes. It bears curious testimony to tho inaccuracy of women ou the subject of their own ages. As the writer's information is from the calender, he speaks only of the criminal classes. The only instances in which ho finds correct dates givea by women are when they are under twenty-five or over eighty five. At these periods of life, he says, they are to be trusted. At all other periods the sure controlling tendency is to understate. The raagis. trate has been able to give a rule for guidance. He finds that female prison ers invariably state their ages as twenty nine, thirty-nine, forty-nino or fifty-nine and from this remarkable circumstance' he deduces his rule. If their ages aro in the forties, they bodily set them down in Ibe thirties, but conscience asserting itself, they keep as mux tho truth as they cau and fix them at thirty-nine. Whether male criminals do the lame the magistrate does not stste.—London News. England has revived an old law against swearing. i The New Bread. DOYAL unfermented bread, made without j-east, avoiding the decomposition produced in the flour by yeast or other baking powder; peptic, palatable and most healthful ; may be eaten warm and fresh without discomfort, which is not true of bread made in any other way. Can be made only with Royal Baking Powder. Receipt for Making One Loaf. ANT quart flour, i tcaspoonful salt, half a tcaspoonful sugar, 2 heaping teaspoonfuls Royal Baking Powder, half medium-sized cold boiled potato, and water. Sift to gether thoroughly flour, salt, sugar, and baking powder ; rub in the potato; add sufficient water to mix smoothly and rapidly into a stiff batter, about as soft as for pound cake; about a pint of water to a quart of flour will be required— i"MURRAY"HARNESSSS,9S We sold more Vehicles and llainesH last year, direct to . the people, than any other fac tory on earth. Write at once for our Orand Catalog No. 93. and if you don't say it's the finest or most complete you ever saw,we'll I make you a present of a buggy. SBgasßsazafc wc of- The Rest Cough Syrup. Irf I antes Good. Cse In tluui.Kf F/ST* VAII Sold by Drugßistß. |*j J Oil '*n ready made medicine for Coughs, Bronchitis and other dis eases of flie Throat and Lungs. Like other so- I called Patent Medicines, it is well advertised, and , having merit it has attain ed a wide sale under the name of Piso's Cure for ; Consumption. It Is now n "Nostrum," though at (lrat tt was compounded after a prescription by a regulur physician, with no idea that it would ever go on the market as a proprietary medicine. But after compounding that prescription over a thousand times in one year,wo named it "Piso's Cure for Consumption,*Smd began advertising it In a small way. A medicine kuown all over the world is the result Why Is it not Just as good as though costing fifty cents to a dollar for a prescription and an equal sum to have it pu.up at a drug store? Spectacles S Pure llntKlliiin Pebble ftpcrtnclen. with hand some rolled-gold frames and bows. Your number (MMit postpaid, only 50r. a pair. Worth five times that amnunt.lf you don't know the number you need lend us your age. Hteel-rlmmed spectacles 10 cm. 1 At/! ' 111, I •,/.. a; • .L.MI Mr.KMlway, NuwYork. AKllllifl Hornhlno Habit Cured In 10 English Ignorance of America did no! begin with this generation. Goldsmith'i description of Niagara Falls includes thi statement that "some Indians in their canoes, as it is said, have ventured down it in safety.* The Sultan of Turkey has ordered a competitive trial of Krupp and Cail cannon. Tne latter are used by the French army; and the Ottoman army has been using the former. The l'ittsburg Preas. A pbrnomrnal tureen* in pennu journalism— TUB PITTSBURG PRESS, Pennsylvania's pioneer in cheap journalism, has attained an average daily and Sundav circulation of over 41,000, as shown by its last sworn statement. TUB Piutss is sent by mail or delivered by carrier for 2> cents per month for the daily and 8 cents per month for the Sunday edition. Not a person has been killed in a Maine railroad wreck since IHBU. "Remember that in tlarfleld Tea yon hate an unfailing remedy for Indieestion, Sick Mead ache and every attending ill that an abused stomach can make you suffer. Every druggist •elisit. c., 60c. and *l." "I have been occasionally troubled with Coughs, and in each case have used BROWN'S BRONCHI A I. TitocnES, which have never failed, and I must say th-v are second to none in the world."— Felix A. May, Cooler, SI. Paul, Minn. United States has 73,000 paupers. 11 more or less according to the brand and quality of the llour used, 110 not make a stiff dough, like yeast bread. Pour the batter into a greased pan, 4#xS inches, and 4 inches deep, filling about half full. The loaf will rise to fill the pan when baked. Hake in very hot oven 45 minutes, placing paper over first 15 minutes baking, to pre vent crusting too soon on top. Hake at once. Don t mix with milk. "A SUCCESS." F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., Gentlemen I have suffered from catarrh for about five years and have tried several remedies without relief until I commenced to use Hall's Catarrh Cure last February. I must say that it is a A SUCCESS, the dropping in my throat disappeared entirely after the first bottle. It increased my appetite, so that I now weigh eight pounds more than my cus" tomary weight. I have recommended it to others a nd all who used it have been greatly relieved and speak highly of it. One of them-was in my store yesterday and expressed his wish to peddle it this winter. Will you please let me know the lowest terms you could furnish it for, as I would like to keep it in stock. Hoping to hear from you soon, I remain, Yours respectfully, R. C. HAUSWEDELL, Lake City, Minn SOLD BY DKUGCHSTS, 75c. L. DOUGLAS SHOE GENTLEMEN. sewed shoe that will not rip; Calf, durable than any other shoe ever of high standard of money. Econoialzo In your \WV lootwoar by purchasing W* K Tu|C? f C TUC \ !• Douglas Bhoes, wtiloh WY- jnID 13 Inn DrST ill n 1 represent the best value *SPiI "C, 'rik at the prices advertised %a, . v ' OHftr* " : es thousands can tes nt en t sTUv r 1 ™, ?? 1 ®i r J?)* £?, d ®* ,e . r " ttl d senrrnMi^HS^^^S^Uirtveiia Garfield Twa tilllaK Harnple free. UutusuiTtu to. , 818 W. 46th8U?N*.Y. Cures Sickfjeadache 'August Flower" " I am ready to testify under oath that if it had not been for August Flower I should have died before this. Eight years ago I was taken sick, and suffered as no one but a dyspeptic can. I employed three of our best doctors and received no benefit. They told me that I had heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me so that I had to throw it up. August Flower cured me. There is no med ! icine equal to it." LORENZO F. SLEEPER, Appleton, Maine. ® r N u 11 '3 JUMBO, the A'exnndra improved Cream Sep arator; capacity 2500 to4ooo pounds per hour ; two horse power will run it.- Also lew model HAND SEPARATOR for the ea!c of which AGkNTfi arc WANTED in every section. Munulactureri of every tn ug in line of machinery and euppllcafoi butierand cheese factoiie*. Send for catalogue, 1) WIS k KANKIN BUILDING AND MFO. CO, 2 10 TO 254 WEST LAKE STREET, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS ja WANTED to sell Pntcnt Door Check | goods sell • ■ W# a , s| K ht: HgiMUHinaklngblg money. I'. A. I'.UXTKR, Pntentee, Titnsvtllle, P% SHORTHAND BY .11A IL. Thoroughly Uuighl by reporter*. 'nt. and tlrst los-on free. .I.U.Hcndan -on. l'i tn. I'ott sMiorthnnd Collogo.Willianmport, Pa. ! NITRILTO THOMAS P. SIMPSON, Washington, rl\lrNl\ I'. <'• No ;ti t> - f.'.' until I'iK.lll .lb -11l I Lll I U tulued. Write for Inventor's Guide. riHo'i Remedy for Catarrh Is the jjM bold Oy ihugglata or asm by aiHlU® I 01 Wo. K. T. JiartKlne. Warren, Fa. J0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers