T MAN ROASTS 26 DESCENDANTS They Are All Living and Moses Russell Sends Complete List to Former Pres. Roosevelt IS WORLD'S RECORD, HE SAYS Patriarch of Adirondack! Lives at Molra, N. Y., with His Generations Gathered About Him Believed to Be this Country's Largest Family. Mnlonp, N. V. A pntrlnrch of mod ern days ia reported from tho town of Molrn, ft resident of which nn nounron, with no Utile prldo. Hint ho has Just rountcd tip find finds that ho hns 251 living descpiidunts 13 chil dren, t9 grtindehildron, 130 groat- grandchildren and 5 great-great- grandchlldrcn. This father of many living generations Is Moses Russell who was born In St. Kocque, Canada nnd camo to Franklin county In 1837. He lived nt various times In North I'.angor. Potsdam, I'nrlshvtlle nnd Col ton. Forty-five years ago he settled In Molra. lie was married slxty-nlno years ago to Rosa I.nrocque, to whom wero born five children, three of whom are living. After tho death of his wife, Russell married Mary Bar low, to whom wero born ten children, all of whom are now living within a mile of the old home. For several weeks tho Russells have been gathering data on tho numerical strength of the family nnd they have forwarded to former President Roose velt, In the belief that he will be In terested, the following list of chll dren, together .with their living do- scendants: Great Grand- grand Children. children, children. Moses, Jr 4 8 Amelia 9 Carrie 11 Dan ford 11 Addle 4 Elizabeth 0 Ellen 10 Mellnda 11 Levi 10 Ell B George 10 i Ephralm 5 ( William 8 C There are five great-great-grand children, descendants of Amelia. Moses Russell believes he has the largest family in the country. TOOTH BRUSHES FOR COWS. Hygiene Craze Spreads Into All Walks of Life. Paris. France. France has the hy- glene craze very severely; It Is car ried so far as insistent on the neces slty of ;ooth brushes for milch cows, because their mouths are "veritable hotbeds of nicrobes." Fashionable hygienlsts have already prohibited te ., coffee and chocolate on the ground that they encourage gout They now declare thnt pure and harm k s milk hardly exists at all. Even If the cow is not suffering from tuber miosis, its milk has been contaml' nated by tho hands of a milkmaid. iToressor Mcteunikon nas now a large following of French people who refuse to eat fruit unless it has been cooked or washed In sterilized water. 'it Met wcter Is only considered safe utter having oeen boiled two or three times, and o'in bathing water should be boiled. Servants who wait at tujle, say tho hygiene cranks should wear gloves which are boiled after each meal and dried by hot air, In order to avoid all rhk of contamination of the food, and they should, after washing their hands with soap and boiled water, cleanse them in alcohol. If hygiene Is to bo regarded, all anl ir.als even the canary must be baa ished fr-m he house. They are cap:i ble of communicating contagious dis eases. PSYCHOLOGY OF CLEAN SHIRTS. First Inclination to Send Linen to Laundry Must Be Fanned. Chicago, ill. Iu sending a shirt to a laundry nnd repeating the perform ance a man goes through varied psy chological states, according to A. F, Sheldon, of Llbertyville, 111., in a com munlcatton to tho annual convention of laundrynien in session here. "First be feels an interest In send Ing his shirt to bo laundrled," says Mr. Sheldon. "But before he actually does th deed his mind must be built up to the intenseness of desire." This, it is explained, Is the work of the boy who solicits trade. "The desire must blaze up until it tmlts the will." Mr. Sheldon continues, "It Is not until the will is touched that the decision is really made to have the work done." This Is also said to be the business of tho boy." Plant that Prevents Mosquitoes. Washington, D. C. Consul-Gen. Guenther, at Frankfort, reporte that the Director of Fisheries at T3iebrich, iter experiments covering fourteen years, has found that the most relia ble safeguard against mosquitoes In stagnant waters is tho growing of the various kinds of the semi-tropical plant arzolla. The plant covers the water with a layer of about 2.3C2 Inches, which suffocates all the mos quito larvae below and prevents the Uvlng insects from depositing their Mil In the water. THE POWER OF WATER. A Stream from a Fireman's Hooo Will Knock a Man Down. When a man goo3 In rwhmning at the seashore and slaps the wi.,er for cibly with his hand, or i.ikes u back dive from n pier uul lands squarely on his back, ho realizes that the u:i stnblo liquid offers not a little resist ance. Yet, says a writer In the New York Tribune, it would surprise almost anybody to see what water will do un der certain conditions. A stream from a fireman's hose will knock a man down. The Jet from a nozzlo used In plnccr-mlnlng In the West eats away a large piece of land In a day, toys with great boulders as If they were pebbles, and would shoot a man over the country as though he were a projectile from a cannon. There is a story of an Eastern blacksmith who went West nnd made a bet that he could knock o. ho'.o through the Jet of one of these noz zles with a sledge-hammer. He lifted his arms, swung the sledge, and came down on tho ten-Inch stream with a force that would have dented an anvil, llut the Jet, never penetrated, whisked the massive hammer out of the black smith's hands, and tossed it several hundred feet away Into the debris of gold-bearing gravel beneath a crum bling cliff. After this the blacksmith loft out iron when he spoke of hard substances. - There Is also a power plant near Durango, Colorado, where a United States cavalryman one day thought ho had an easy Job in cutting a two-inch stream with his sword, lie mado a valiant attack. Tho result was that his sword was shivered in two and his wrist broken. A little thinner Jet of water descend Ing sixteen hundred feet to a manu factory at Grenoble, Spain, and travel ing at the moderate speed of one nun dred yards a second, fractures the beat blades of Toledo. Of course some people will not be lieve such stories without having seen the thing, and one may think it a proof of the scientific imagination to say that an inch-thick sheet of water, provided it had sufficient velocity, would ward off bombshells as well as steel plate. Nevertheless, many persons, while traveling, have seen a brakeman put a small hydraulic Jack under one end of a Pullman car and lift twenty tons or so by a few leisurely strokes of tho pump handle; and the experience of riding every day in a hydraulic eleva tor tends to remove doubts of the magic power possessed by water hitch ed to a machine. Children's Sayings. Wordsworth's lines of the child at play, "as If his whole vocation were endless imitation," were recently re called by a conversation overheard In the children's ward at the John Hop kins Hospital. A little girl of mine, whose role was that of nurse, rang an Imaginary tele phone on the wall to talk to her com panion at the farther end of the room, who played the part of doctor. "Hello!" said the nurse. "Is this the doctor?" "Yes," answered a deep voice; "thin is the doctor." "This lady is very sick," he was in formed. "Well, what seems to bo the trou ble?" a bit gruffly. "She has swallowed a whole bottle of ink!" said the nurse. The doctor, not flurried, inquired what had been done for the patient; but the nurse, too, was ready in emer gencies. She answered, "I gave her , two large pads of blot ting paper!" Ben, aged 5, was inclined last au tumn to dispute the fact, as taught him by his father, that God gave him all he had. After an incredulous "Even those peanuts from tho store?" he yielded to an older mind, nnd, screw ing his eyes tight shut, continued his evening prayer. After asking a blessing for each member of the family, he said, "Thank God for the peanuts and my express wagon," adding after a slight pause, "but, oh, Lord, you certainly did send baby some wormy chestnuts." Cost of Railroad Ties. The railroads of this country are each year calling for more crossties, and they are rapidly shrinking in number and increasing in cost. The total number of ties purchased in 1907 was 153,099,020, an increase of 50,805,578 over 1906. The total cost of the crossties purchased In 1907 was $78,958, 895, an average of 51 cents a tie. The increaso in total cost was, therefore, $30,139,571. or 61.7 per cent. For 1907 the highest average cost, 59 cents, was reported for redwood ties. Many experiments have been made with metal ties, with a view of finding a substitute for wood, but nothing satisfactory has yet been produced. Several of the leading roads have large tracts of trees growing, and man in a dozen years or more may be able to supply their own wants. Growing trees on railroad lands seems to be the most practical way to provide for the future. Conservation. The resources of the earth are the basis of our national wealth. By means of them alone, in material things, comes leadership among the nations. The conservation movement now fully under way embraces the for est movement as one of its sources and great divisions. Thus the cause of forest conservation throughout tho country hat won a powerful ally and a more effective support for the work that Ilea just before us. Glfford Tin chot In New England Mugnzlne. THE COLUMBIAN, SKETCHES JMPICKPOCKET New York Artist Sends Drawing to Po lice Commissioner Bingham and Crook Cats Eight Years. New York City. An nrtist who has refused to rinke his Identity public, a few weeks iiro r,iw a pickpocket nt work on n Iloboken ferryboat. He quickly sketched the mnn on a pnstnt enrd nnd mailed It to Police Commis sioner Htimlnun. William Springer, an Ennllshninn, wns arrested on the strength of the postal card sketch, and he wns sentenced to eight yenrs In Sins HiiiK for stealing n dlnmond I rim; and from Jacob Schneider of No. ;;l, Went Ifi'Jd street. IfVhnelder'H pockets wero picked when he was a passenger In a street ear in the Bronx on February 27 last, lie c.nve to the police a description of the mnn he suspected of the crime, nnd a few days afterward Bingham received tho postal card. Tho sketch on the card fitted the description giv en by Schneider. Detectives wero sent out and they found Springer in a street car. lie denied ho was a thief, but Schneider afterward picked him out of a long line of men. On the pos tal card tho nrtist wrote he hnd seen the original of his sketch attempting lo pick pockets on tho ferryboat. Springer was convicted, a Jury return Irs,", a verdict after two minutes' de liberation. He denied that he had a polk e record in England. His photo Rraph nnd thumb prints were sent to Scotland Yard, and yesterday caniu the reply that Springer had served fourteen short terms In English pris ons for picking pockets and "other vmuery." Tho Scotland Yard report wan read to Springer, and he said: "Yes, I nm the man." He was taken without delay before Judge O Sulllvan, In the Court of Spe cial Sessions, to receive sentence. He sr.ld he had escaped long sentences in England by pleading guilty before Magistrates whose powers of sentenc ing are limited. Judge O'SullIvan de scribed him as a' "dangerous crook" and Imposed sentence. HER SKELETON FOUND IN CAVE. Woman's Strange Disappearance Ex plained After 20 Years. St, Albam, Vt Having been a mys tery for more than twenty years, the strange disappearance of Mrs. Matil da Moss of Benson, Rutland county, was solved by the finding of her skele ton near the mouth of a cave. The strange disappearance of the woman is remembered clearly by he. former townfolk. who say she and her hus band, John Moss, lived happily for fif teen years, until a man named Isaao Terrlll came between them. Mr. and Mrs. Moss were at a coun try dance when they met Terrlll. The intruder's attentions to Mrs. Moss an gered her husband ana there was a tight that resulted In tho dance end ing abruptly. Two days after the light Mrs. Moss disappeared. Her hus band said she committed suicide by Jumping into the river, but her body was not found. The authorities kept Moss undr surveillance for a time b;it no e: :dence against him was ob tained, and he left the State. George P. Norton and his eon Frank were out hunting when they discover ed a cave near Root's Pond. They struck a match and peered into the cave. Close to the opening they saw a human skeleton, and dragged it out. 1'y the heap of bones was a locket, in wulch was a small picture of Moss. On one side of the lock-t was in scribed "Matilda Moss, 1887." It is believed here that Mrs. Moss was tn'en to the cave, bound, and left in the darkness to starve to death. BIRD THAT CLIMBS TREES. Curator of Bronx Zoo Going to Dutch Gulnana After Him. New York City. C. William Beebe. curator of birds at the Bronx Zoo, is off on a trip with, his wife to Dutch Guiana in search of a little bird said to he called the "hoatslu," Although a painstaking search of several diction aries failed to treo him under that cognomen. Mr. Beebe and his wife will take a canoe and go two hundred miles up the Essequiuo River after that bird, anyhow. Now this small bird is very precocious, Inasmuch as he Is able lo tako care of himself as soon as he's hatched, and upon tho approach of a stranger ho will dive into the water ii J stay there four or five minutes, like a mermaid or a clam. And he has claws as well as feath ers on his wings, so that he can cllnib the trees and bark when the missionaries go by. CAT ABSENT, ELOPERS FLEE. Tabby Had Spoiled Plans of William and Lucretla In January. Mlddletown, Conn. After having spoiled her. plan to elope with her sweetheart by stumbling over the fam ily cat and awakening the household, Lucretla Fopplanl, seventeen years old. an attractive miss, successfully escaped from her home Wednesday night. She was . met by William Kurtz, aged twenty years, her finance, and they drove ten miles at breakneck speed to Saybrook, where they caught a late express to New York. The girl's parents are furious, as they had kept close watch on her since the attempted elopement last January was r.ustrated. Hug Breaks Texas Teacher's Rib. EI Paso, Tex. Miss Bessie Mc- Gowan, a teacher in Baylor University at Waco, sustained a broken rib from an overly fond embrace. One of her girl pupils returned from her vaca tion did It. BLOOMSBURd, Afraid of Ghosts Many people are afraid of ghosts. Few people are alrnid ol derm. Yet the Uhost is a Isncy nnd the Rcrm is a diet. If the (term could he magnified to a size equal to its terrors it would tppcnr more terrible than any firc-brcnthiniJ dragon. Germs enn't he avoided. They are in the sir wo breathe, the water we drink. The germ can only prosper when tho condition of the system ilivcs it free scope to establish it self and develop. When there is a deficiency of vital force. Inniiiior, restlessness, a sallow cheek. a hollow eye, when the appetite is poor and the sleep is broken, it is time to guard against the germ. You can fortify the body against all germs by the use of Dr. Pierce's Cold en Medical Discovery. It increases the vital power, cleanses the system of clogging impurities, enriches the blood, puts the stom ach and organs of digestion and nutrition in working condition, so that the germ finds no weak or tainted spot in which to breed. "Golden Medical Discovery" contains no alcohol, whisky or htihit-forming drugs. All its ingredients printed on its outside wrapper. It is not a secret nostrum hut a medicine op known composition and with a record of 4t) years of cures. Accept no substitute there is nothing "just as good." Ask your neighbors. SECRET 8ERVICE8ECRETIVENEC' No One Ever Heard of Detect a Being Killed. "Funny thing, but can you remem ber ever having heard or read of a Secret Service operator having beea murdered?" It was an old New York detective speaking. "Of course you haven't, and yet they are In a line of work in which men are killed now and then. In spite of the fine way in which all the Secret Service men stand by each other. The fact is that tlie Secret Service keeps the i-Hirde,' of ono of Its agents ju;:t as secret as some important mat ter of State it has discovered. Tho Secret Service man when he Joins knows that If he dies in the discharge of his duty he simply disappears and becomes as one who never lived. His relatives never know. "They are told he has gone on some far distant mission, in which he finally disappears and they begin to receive his pension. Yet, while tho murderer of a Secret Service man !s never arrested or punished for tho crime, never even accused, he is pun ished Just the same. "I remember tho case of a Secret Service man who was stabbed to death after midnight by an infuriated Italian counterfeiter In Mulberry street, not half a mile from Police Headquarters. A Secret Service man drove up swift ly In a cab intended for the captured counterfeiter. The dying man was put in before he had left much blood on the pavement to tell of the murder. He died next day. No one ever heard of it nor of any punishment for this murderer. But the counterfeiter was shortly after brought up for counter felting and got a sentence long enough to keep him in State prison for the rest of his life." Stamp Sold for $7,250. At an auction recently held at Lei cester Square a 2d. blue "Post Office" Mauritius stamp (unused) wa; sold f ir the record price of $7,250. Th? owner of this rare prize secured tJin stamp forty years ago when making r. boy's collection at school. Tho value of this particular stamp results from the fact that by an en graver's error tho words "Post OOm" wero substituted for "Post Paid." This was soon discovered, the Issue recalled, and tho plates destroyed, but meanwhile) a few copies of th stamp had got Into public use. Photography on Ballooru. Tho balloon Is rapidly being graili; rtl from the scientific toy and circus nt: notion class to the more utilitarian nv.'s. Atmotpheric phenomena ol hi.:'.i?r altitudes are studied almost ex c'.iir-.ivel-, by means of kites and bal In in ennipnign the war balloon nffords m inrtl ponsvible auxiliary, and for ev; 'rvatlon purposes and dirigible plrsh'is it hns a field with Immoiu-c rtis'lliilitlcK. One of the most novel 1 m-;.:u-s to which tc has been pro po-ed to employ captive ballons is as tin Ht'.'unet In survey ships to assist Ire-Mrs slnllows and rocks. It. Is f -.:"..; out thit shallow sea waters ;" r ',':; ri'scernaole from a height .. tl.e vrir-ti m in color which iliey - i .. enmi'irod to surrounding '"i.h tho ns'istance of photography . C'v.tlve hilloon, operated from a -"'i' t'icU. It Is declared tortuous v.i "! . and submerged rocks can be ---t'.,t with facility and exactness DR. HUMPHREYS' SPECIFICS. nirattloe, wllk urk Vial la fin Lara uaan. English, German, Spanish, Portuguese and Freneh. No. FOR Price 1. Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations 33 9. Worms, Worm Fever, or Worm Disease. .tIS 3. Coliv, Crying and Wakefulness ot Infants. 2S 4. IHarrhea. of Children and Adults SI3 5. Uyaeulery, Orlplngs, Bilious Collo St T. Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis 3S H. Toothache, Faceache, Neuralgia 9S 9. Headache, Blok Headache, Vertigo 3S 10. Dvspepala. IndlgeaUon, Weak Stomach SB IS. Croup, Hoaras Cough, Laryngitis ..S 14. Bail Kheuin. Eruptions, Erysipelas 2S 15. Rheunintiain, or Bheumatlo Fains VIS ltt. Fever and A sun, Malaria S3 IT. Plies, Blind or Bleeding, External, Internal. 3t IS). Ophthalmia, Weak or Inflamed Eyes US IV. Catarrh, Influenza, Cold In Head ti SO. Whooping Couch, Spoamodlo Cough. ......i)3 81. Aalliiua.Oppreaaed.Dimcult Breathing 4& 97. Kidney ItUeaae. Gravel, CalcuU 8S 38. Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness 1.00 30. Mora Mouth, Fever Sores or Canker f 3 30. Urinary luconllnrnce, Wetting Bed...... .S3 i ...S3 ...... -S3 S3 31. More Throat, Quinsy and Diphtheria S3. Clironta Congestions, Headaches... 77. Crippc, Hay ferer aadSussajcr Colds...-J5 A small bottle of Pleasant Pellets, fits the vtst poukeu Sold by druggists, or seut uu receipt ol prk-e. Medical Book sent free. HUMPHREYS' HOMEO. MEDIfDJE OO., Oorae William and Ana Streets, New York, 15 PA. KXEW HLM AN NATURE. The Wiles of the Wily Medical Fa kir Are Many and Various Two belligerent appearing men faced each other. "You're a liar." "You're a yellow pup." "Fight!" shrieked a small boy. Then a crowd of curious bbgnn to gather in front of the Grant build ing in upper Market street. "If you're looking for trouble 1 guess I can give it to you," hissed the "liar" between his teeth. "You can place a bet that I in tend to see things to a finish," re plied the "pup," striking a fighting pose. "Come around the corner where a cop won't bother us, then," said the first, and, war thus declared, the duo hastened around to an empty lot behind the post-office, while a crowd of bloodthirsty men and boys dogged at their heels. Arrived, the "liar" mounted a wooden platform newly built, while the "pup" dove into a dry goods box and extracted therefrom a bulging suitcase. "While the 'doctor gets out the packages of our magical herbs, guar anteed to cure cancer, bunions, all skin diseases, etc., I will entertain you with a few sleight-of-hand tricks," announced the "liar" in you with a few sleight-of-hand stentorian tones. The crowd then realised that It had been gulled. A few on the out skirts slunk away, but the majority remained to fall victims to the wiles of the wily medical fakirs and tbelr cureall at $1 per package, and a pair of cuff buttons warranted solid gold, thrown in." NO JARRING NOTE. Beartice At the wedding yester day all t-ie attendants were In white, the decorations wsre white every thing was . white. Benedict Including the lie the bride told when she promised to love, honor and obey. The haw and tho Profits. It is always reireshlng," says a Cleveland lawyer, "to hear ot an at torney who will not undertake a shady case. I konw of at least one such, a lawyer In Toledo. . "At one time a chap In business in that town known to be practising questionable methods sought to re tain the Toledo lawyer, and was smoothing over his crooked conduct as well as he knew how, when the attorney astonished him by exclaim ing: " 'I think, you have acted like an Infernal scoundrel, sir!' " 'Is there any charge for that opinion?" asked the man, as he rose to go. " 'Yes, sir; five dollars.' " Wouldn't Take a Chance. A tall man, impatiently pacing the platform of a wayside station, ac costed a boy of about 12. "S-s-say," he said, "d-d-do you know h-h-how late this train is?" The boy grinned, but made no re ply. The man stuttered out some thing about kids in general and passed into the station. A stranger asked the boy why he hadn't answered the big man. "D-d-d'ye wanter see me g-g-get me fa-fa-face punched? D-d-dld bug g-g-gu'd tlnk I was mo-moo-mocking him." Satan Terrled. There is as great genius displayed In advertising as in the higher branches of literature, says Woman's1 Home Companion. No problem daunts the modern advertising man. In the window of a little book store in Eighth avenue, New York, was recently heaped a great pile of bibles, marked very low never be fore were bibles ottered at such a bargain; and abovs them all, la big letters, was the Inscription; , "Satan trembles when he sees BlbUa sold si lav . tbsss." Columbia & irijitdj; tCi. ft. Tt UK TAII t,R tH KKKfSCT June I 1904, nnd until J jrtlitr, lice. Cars leave Bloom for Espy, Almedis.Llss Ridge, Berwick and intemediat e points a (ullowu A. M. t?:oo, 5:40,6:20, 7:00, 7:40, 8:2 9.00,9:40, lo:2o, II:oo, 1 1 140. T. M. ll:io, 1 :oo, 1 :4o, 2.20, J:oo, 3:40 4:20, 5:00, 5:40, 6-20, 7:00,7 140 ,8 -20,9:0c (9:40) 10:20 (11:00) Leaving depart from 1'erwicV one ho r. from time as given above, commencing 6:00 a. m I.enve liloom for Cntaiiu A.M. 5:. 6:15, 7:oc, 8:00, 9:00, flO:oo, 4M: I2:oo. P. M. I:0o, f:oo, 3:00. 4:00, 5:00, fc--o,, t7:Oo, 8:00, 0:00, 10:20, (ll:oo) Carsreturningdeparl from Cstawitsa rniui'teiirom timeaggivenabore. First tar lrnvcs Mnrlictiuare for Iirrwick on Sundays at 7:00 n. m. First enr for CntAwisa Sundnys 7:oon. m. First cur from ik-rwick for U!ocm Sunday leaves nt 8:00 n. m First car leaves Catawissa Sundays at 7 30 a. m. a. . tl'rom Tower House.";' Snturdny nic,ht only. fl. K. K. Connection.', W, TKSWII.LICtt, Su( ei intend tut Eloomsburg & Sullivan Railroad. Taking Effect Feb'y 1st, looS.'iaros a.m :.NORTHWAKI. A.M.' r.M. Bloomsburtr D L ft W... 9 no IS' HlooniHhurg P A It 9 02 2 8V Paper Mill 9 14 8 BH Llfflit Street 9 is 2 55 Ontngevllle 9 25 8 OS Porks 9 HA 8 13 Zaners r.i 40 tx it P.M. t 15 5 17 29 6 84 48 8 ra 57 7 08 7 18 7 17 n 21 7 81 7 7 41 7 45 A.M 00 fi'io 8 25 S 7 08 7 18 7 40 8 ! 8 10 8 Sf 8 40 Stillwater 9 48 1 n wnton 9 6 s 88 Bdsons no fri nit coles Creek 10 08 8 40 Laubactis in 08 jS 4S Orass Mere Park fioio JH 47 Central 10 15 8 52 lamison citr 10 1H 8 fin HOUTHWAKD. 22 A.M. A.M. r.M. A.M. A.M. JamlsonClty.... 5 50 10 48 4 85 7 00 lis Central 5 58 10 61 4 38 7 08 11 M Grans Mere Park f01 fil 00 f4 47 r7 12 JLauoachg. ntos ni 02 n 48 n 11 11 sa Coles Creek f 12 ll 0 ft 58 n 22 13 01 Kasons to 14 (11 09 1 4 58 NM 111 tt. Benton e 18 11 la ft 00 7 isss Stillwater. 8 28 11 21 6 0S 7 88 12 45 zanera r85 Ml 29 to 17 f7 45 168 Forks 8 89 11 JS A 21 74a im Ol .ngevllle 8 50 11 42 5 81 BOO 1ST Light Street..... 7 00 11 50 6 89 8 10 1 41 rarer Mill 70s m B42 sis im Bloom.P&H a 25 2 i( Bloom. BLIW. 720 1210 (00 8.10 211 Trains No. 21 and 22 mixed, second class. t liallv except Hundar. t Dallr I mir,d. only. fFlagbtop. W. C. BNYDER, Uupf. AlV 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Traoc Marks Dcsions Copyrights Ac. Anvnna sendlnc a sketch and deserlntlon ma quickly- aacertaln our opinion frea whether au Invention la prohnbly putentHhle. Comniunlca. tloiiaatrlotlrconOdentlal. HANDBOOK on Patents stnit free. Oltleat nicenor for securing pareuta. 'Hients raaen uirouan nunn s 10. receive metal nntiie. without chares, lu the Scientific Jfttericatn A hanfliomiMy lllnfitrflf 4 weekly. T-nnrent clr cultittun of an 7 ncietitltlo Journal, Terms, 93 a 'ear: rmir ninntug, f u Boiauyaii newsaeaiera. Jtr0 361Bro.dw.,,NPWTDr Branca orace. ea r uu, wnsningtun, u. u iio-iy CHICHESTER'S PILLS t'hl-ehea-bir's Fills la Red I Take a ether. uVva" IT vVi .T VT jvm .nown u DOI, MICH, Alnyt KlUtsf SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM riMmtPt and tM-autifiea the hair. I'ruinutef a luxuriant pruwth. Niver Falls to Restore Gray HiUr to its Youthful Color. Cure, armlp d - .rax, a hair laumg, 6k-, ,nd 1. 1 mat Druppit, 1 Kivt5 ... v? r J 1 A W PSOCUi:,0 ANO nrifiuntr. v-.- li jl i.liij 'f.ULH. LI1L.1 lliulllk Jius'.n.wt direct inik U'uiliiiff;-m tui :i t'tms. Talent ?nt! Inlrlngemtnt Practlco Ec!u3U'y. " i iik ur comb wj ua Mi 633 Nmu Strert, app. ruited Statoa TtUaX Oilliw A R:lia!i!3 Rarnedy FOR 's Cream Balm is oulcklr abtert nt. Gives Roliet at Unca. It cleauses, soothes, , heal an J protects ins aiS'-nseil uii-iii. i . brano rexultius from Catarrh anil drive BWiiy ColJ iu tl;uIlcHl quioHy. Restore the 8i'iii of Tut sua SniulC I'ni; 60 eta. at llrugists or by mail. Liquid Oreum Bnlm for ue in atoini; "'i'S 75 cts. Ely liruiUer.-i, CO 'NViirren Klrwet, New York, i ME 4 nd (.old meulllcVy W piusj IVHHJOtle V mm mm CATAEM2 Ely