Wain se oo am A SA SAN AA HS The World's Wheat Enters. The Department of Agriculture gives the following interesting sta- tistics of populations in different countries. as estimated for May of the present year, and also the annual per capita consumption of wheat in each country in bushels: Popula- tiou May, 180, anus ass ss 9,500,000 cerns 385 0,000 . 80 800,000 Consump- tion pe: capita. 6.11 9.18 440 United Kingdom (y Portugal........... Turkey in Europe. ......... Jenmark.............. Boshin.,...........ccooivnn Bouth Africa. ..... Japan... United Ftates............. Rus ia, all India co 2 290,000 C00 Roumania sas raasannenee SRNR ONG Austr a-Hungary........... 42,400,000 Bulgaria ............... 8,300,000 Bervia . 2,200,000 Arg ntinas........... 4,800,000 alii. co vinns ss 2,870,000 Urazuoay. TOO, 000 Australasia 4,000 000 Canada. .... 4,900,000 L160 Algeria. ..... 4,200,000 4.50 It will be seen from the above ta- bles that the French people consume most wheat, and the people of India the least. After the French come the Canadians, Australasians, Bul- | garians, Belgians, English and Amer- | icans, in order named. In explanation of the comparative ly low average American consump- tion of wheat it may be said that the people of the middle West and throughout the South consume a vast amount of corn; not so much by rea- son of its greater cheapness perhaps, as from inclination and habit. Pri- marily, corn was the food of the negro population in the days of sla- very owing to its lesser cost, and the | negro cooks in white families no | doubt were instrumental in intro- | ducing the palatable corn “pone” and other creations of like sort to the tables of the average Southern plant- | er. This custom still prevails | throughout the South and has gained also a strong foothold in some of the | Mis:issippi Valley States, thus re- | ducing below several other countries our per capita consumption of wheat. Historical Names of Kings. Some of the early kings of Franie | ruled over Germany at one time when there was no division, but when there was a separate German nation the rulers gained many curious titles ‘“‘Fat” was one and "Blind" another Also the Child” the "Fowler." then *‘Blood,” ‘*Red,” ‘'Black,” *‘Superb,” | and “Sharp,” while vne king par. | ticularly described as the *‘Holy and Lame.” The rulers of the provinces that now make up Spain had a number of | kings called Great and Catholic Then they also had the Monk and | Gouty, and included others who were infirm— Bad, Noble, Strong, Valiant, | Gracious, Sickly, lmpotent, Bene- ficent, and Ceremonious Ferdinand | 111. of Leon and Castile was the | saint and Holy. Hungary has her ruiers described as Saint, German, Thunder, Venec. tian, Great, and a King Mary, who was probably the only woman w held a title Over Portugal reigned the Fat, ldie, African, and Great and Periect The people of Russia ally had a hard time of ize this today, and the to their kings show the for. None was good, wise, or just, though the e was Peter the Great who did all he could to help his coun. | try. But how could a nation pro. gress with rulers who gained the title of Terrible, Imposter. Proud, Light. feet, Grim, Fierce, and Lion? is no line have gener. itt We real names given reason there. | A Dreadfully Stack-Up Eagine. Smithville, in sounty of Lee, Ga., has a brass band of some years’ standing. And this is the story which the village newspaper tells of it: “A flagman, almost out of breath, rushed into the Academy of Music here the other night while the Smith. ville Brass Band was practicing and asked to see the leader. He said that | when the south-bound passenger train, which is due here at 7:15 p. m., got near enough to hear the band the en- gine pulling the train suddenly became unmanageable and stopped dead still, listened a moment, gave a short and | unearthly shriek, reversed itself and | took the back track for Macon in regu. lar Nancy Hanks style. As soon as it got out of hearing of the band it stopped, and a flagman was sent ahead | to ask the boys to cease playing until | they could get it through town. Now, | any engine that won't pass through the city while our brass fo is play- ing isa freak of the first water and should be sidetracked and left for the rust to devoux. For sweet, heaven! music give us brass bands and bull frogs.” the live and liberal Just So; Just Se. The subtle line dividing genius and insanity is so delicate that in many ine stances it cannot be defined, it can only be felt, Even the deep researches of physiological-psychology are unable te designate principles on which the judg. ment oan depend for logleal deductions on the subject, and the searching analy« ses and arguments of many erudite students and philosophers are as incom. prehensible and meaningless to the or- dinary mind as the valo vaporings of a mind unhinged.—New York Mali and Express, No Pen Can Describe Bh Tho mein | nud pepaia. |iried almost every medicine and a LT St. Pit Hood's*=* Cures Meood's Pills act easily, yet promptly. ——————— A ROH The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun. day Sermon. Subject: “A Great Woman" Texr: “And it fell on a day that Elisha passed to Shunem, where was a greal wo- man," 11 Kings iv,, 8, The hotel of our time had no counterpart in any entertainment of olden time. The vast majority of travelers must then be en- tertained at private abode, Here comes Elisha, a servant of the Lord, on a divine mission, and he must find shelter. A bal- cony overlooking the vailey Eadraelon is of- fered him in a private house, and it is es. This woman of the text was only a type of thousands of men and women who some down from the mansion and from the cot to do kindness to the Lord's servants, 1 snp pose the men of Bhunem had to pay the bills, ut it wasthe large hearted Christian sympa- thies of the women of Shunem that looked after the Lord's messenger, Again, this woman inthe text was great in her behavior under trouble, Her only son had died on her lap. A véry bright light went out in that household, The sacred writer puts it very tersely when he says, “He sat on her knees until noon, and then he died.” Yettbe writer goes on to say that she exclaimed, “It is well!” Great in prosperity, this woman was great in trouble, Where are the feet that have not been blis. tered on the hot sands of this great Bahara? Where are the shoulders that have not been bent under the burden of grief? Whereis the ship sailing over glassy sea that has not pecially furnished for his ocoupancy—achair tosit on, a table from which to eat, a candle stick by which to read and a bed on which to to a great and good woman, Her husband, it seems, was a godly man, but he was entirely overshadowed by his wife's excellencies, just as now you some- times find in a bousshold the wife the centre of dignity and influence and power, not by Any arrogance or presumption, but by superior intellect and foree of moral nature wielding domestic affairs and at the same | time supervising all financial and business | affairs, the wife's hand on the shuttle, on the | banking hous», on the worldly business, | You see hundreds of men who are successful only because there is a reason at home why | they are successful, | If a man marry a good, honsst soul he makes his fortune, If he marry a fool, the | Lord help him! The wife may be the silont partner in the firm, there may be only masculine volees down on exchange, but | there oftentime comes from the home circle | a potential and elevating influence, i This woman of my text was the superior of | her husband, He, as lar as I can under | stand, was what we often see in our day-—a | man of large fortune and only a modicum of | the same place without moving hand or foot responding “yes” if inane, eves | : beesuse he has a | large patrimony. But his wife, my text says, | Was A great woman, Her name has not come down to belonged to that eollection of distinguish us, Bhe | people who them. What be to this woman of my text, who, by her intelligence and her behavior, challenges the admiration of all ages? Long after the bril- Hant women of the court of Louis XV have been forgotten, and the brilliant women of the court of Spain have been forgotten, and the brilliant women who sat on mighty thrones have been forgotten, some grandfather will | dren the story of this great woman of Shu- | s0 kind and courteous sad | Christian to the good prophet Elisha, Yes, 800 Was a great woman, In the first place she was great in her hospitalities, Uncivilized and barbarious nations honor this virwme, Jupiter had the surname of the hospitable, and he was said exnited ore, Homer it in his verse, and among some of their tribes it is not until the ninth day of tarrving that the occu pant to ask his guest, “Who and If this virtue is so hon- ored even among barbarians, how ought it to be honored among those of us who believe in the Bible, which commands us to use hos. ing? Of course I do not mean under this cover grant class who go around from place to place ranging their whole lifetime perhaps under the auspices of some benevolent or philanthrople society, quartering themselves on Christian families, with a great pile of trunks in the hall and earpetbag portent ous of tarrying. Thers is many 8 country parson- age that ooks out week by week upon the ominous arrival of wagon with creaking wheel and lank horse and dilapidated driver, come under the auspices of some charitable inditution to spend a few weeks and canvass Let no such religious tramps take advantage of this beautiful vir- Not so much the sumptuousnes of y diet and the regality of your abode will fm- press the friend or the stranger that steps across your threshold as the warmth of your greeting, the informality of your reseption, by look and by a thousand attentions, insignificant attentions, of your earnestness of welcome, Theres will be high appreciation of your welcome, aithough you have nothing but the brasen candlestick and the plain chair to offer Elisha when he eomes to Shanem, Most beautiful is this grace of hospitality when shown in the house of God. I am thankful that I am pastor of a church where strangers are always welcome, and there is not a State in the Union in which I have not heard the affability of the ushers of our church complimented, But I have entered churches were there was no hospitality, A stranger would stand in the vestibule for | yar long aisle, No door opened to him until, | flushed and excited and embarrassed, he | while the ocoupants glared on him with a “Well, if I must, | Away with such accursed in- | Let every | church that would maintain iarge Christian | Sabbath this beautiful grace of Christian hos- | pitality, | A good man traveling in the far west, in | storm, and he put in at a cabin, He saw fire | arms along the beams of the cabin: and he | feit alarmed, He did not know but that he | had fallen intos den of thieves, He sat thers greatly perturbed. After awhile the | man of the house cama home with a gun on his shoulder and set it down in a corner, The stranger was still more alarmed. After | awhile the man of the house whispered with his wife, and the stranger thought his de struction wus being planned, Then the man of the house came forward and said to the steanger : “Stranger, we are s rough and rude people out here, and we work hard for a living. Wa make our living by bunting, and when we come to the night- fall we are tired, and we are apt 10 go to bed early, and before retiring we are always In the habit of reading a chapter from the word of God and making like such things, | ; the door until we get through I'll be greatly obliged to you.” Of course the stranger tar- ried in the room, and the old hunter took hold of the horns ot the altar and brought down the blessing of God upon his house. hold and upon the stranger within their ; o but glorfous Christian hospi- Again, this woman in my text was great in her kindnoss townrd God's messenger, Elisha may have been a stranger in that houshold, but as she found out he had come on a divine i after awhile been caught in a evelone? Where is the garden of earthly comfort but trouble of disaster? Under the pelting of ages of | heart of the world has | burst with woe, i Navigators tell us about the rivers, and the | Amazon and the Danube and the Mississippl | have been explored, but who oan tell the | depth or length of the great river of sorrow made up of tears and blood rolling through | all lands and all ages, bearing the wreek of | families and of communities and of empires | foaming, writhing, boiling with the agon- | Etna and Cotopaxi and | Yesuvius have been described, but who has aver sketched the voleano of suffering reach- ing up from its depths the lava and the seoria and pouring them down the glides to whelm | the nations? Oh, if I could gather all the heartstrings, the broken heartstrings, into a never sounded, Mythologists tell us of Gorgon and Cen. taur and Titan, and geologists tell us of ex tinet species of monsters, but greater than Gordon or megatherium, and not belonging of an extinct hoofs walking across the nations, tory and poetry and sculpture, in their at. to sketeh if and describe it, have seemed to sweat great drops of blood, i But, thank God, there are those who ean | and his. | “It is well! Though my property be gone, though my children be gone, though my home be broken up, though my health be sacrificed, it I well, it is well There is | no storm on the sea but Christ is ready to rise in the hinder part of the ship and hush it. There is no darkness but the constella- tions of God's eternal love can fllumine it, and though the winter somes out of the northern sky you have sometimes seen the | northern sky sil ablaze with suroras that | seem to say © “Come up this way, Up this | way are thrones of light and seas of sap- | phire, and the splendor of an eternal heaven, | Come up this way.” We mar, like the shige, by tempest be tossed On perilous depths, but cannot bw lost Though satan surage the wind and the Cde Ton promise assgres gs the Lord will provide I heard an echo of my text in a very dark | hour, when my father lay dying, and the old country minister said to him, “Mr. Talmage, how do you feel now as you areabout to pass | the Jordan of death? He replied and was the last thing he ever sald] feel well I feal very well ; all Is well,” lifting his hand a benediction, which I pray God may go down through all the generations, It is weil! was well Agsin, this woman of my text was in ber application to domestic duties. Every picture Is 8 home pleture, whether she is entertaining an Elisha, or whether she is giv. ing careful attention to ber sick boy, or whether she Is appealing for the restorations of her property every picture in her case is a home pieture. Those who are not disel. les of this Bhunemite woman who, going out to attend to outside charities, neglect the duty of home the duty of wife, of mother, of daughter. No faithiulness in public ben efaction ean ever stone for domestic pegli- gener, There has been many a mother who by in. defatigable toll has reared a Inrge family of children, equipping them for duties of lite with good manner: and large intelli gence and Christian principle, starting them out, who has done more for the world than another woman ner hime unded through all the # and all the centuries it spenchiess great the - name nn when Kowsuth e there were reputations by presenting fully with bouquets of fic easions, but what was all that compared with the work of the plain Hungarian mother wh gave to truth and civilization and the cause universal liberty a Kossuth? Yes, this woman of my text was great in her simplicity When the prophet wanted to reward her for her hospitality by asking some ment from the king, what did she say’ declined it. She sald © “1 dwell among own peo as mush as fo say Iam satisfied with my lot, All I want is family and my friends around me, I dwell among my own people.” Oh, what a rebuke to the strife for precedence in all agox ! How many there are who want to get great architerture and homes furnished with all art, all painting, all statuary, who have not remember wns ladion who got YEIY RIraoee wore on public os. in this Wee of romped prefer. Bho my ie ;|ay and byzantine, and who could not tell a figure In plaster of Paris from Palmer's “White Captive,” and would not know a boy's penciling from Bierstadt’s “Yosemite men who buy large libraries by the square foot, | buying these libraries when they have hardly | enough education to pick out the day of the | simanac! Oh, how many there are striving | to have things as well as their neighbors, or | better than their neighbors, and in the strug. gle vast fortunes are exhausted and business firms thrown into bankruptey, and men of | reputed honesty rush into astounding for- geries, Of course 1 say nothing against refinement ness of diet, lavishness in art, neatness in ap- | ral-~there is nothing lible or out of the Bible. God does not want us to prefer mud hovel to English oot - tage, or untanned sheepskin to French broadeloth, or husks to pineapple, or the gentleman. God, who strung the beach with tinted shell and the grass of the fleld with tinged morning sloud and robin red breast, wants us to keep our eye open to all beaati- fal sights, and our ear open to all beautiful eadences, and our heart open to all elevating sentiment. But what I want to impress upon ou is that you ought not to inventory the uxuries of life as among the indispensables, and you ought not to depreciate this woman of the text, who, when offered kingly prefer. ment, respon ¢ “1 dwell among my own people.” Yea, this woman of the text was great In her piety, faith in God, and she was not ashamed to talk about it before idolaters, Ah, woman will never appreciate what she owes to Christianity until she knows and sees the d jon of her sex under paganism and ommedanism. Her very birth considered a misfortune, Sold like cattle in the sham. bles, Kiave of all work, and at last her body fusl for the funeral pyre of her husband, Above the shriek of the fire worshi in When 1 come to speak of womanly infin. ence, my mind always wanders off to ons model the aged one who, 27 years ago, we put away for the resurrection. About 87 years ago, snd just before their marriage any, my father and mother stood up in the old meeting house at Bomerville, N. J., and took upon them the vows of the Christl Through a long life of viclssitude she lived harmlessly and usefully and came to her snd No ehild of want ever came to her No one in sorrow came to her but was comforted. No on# asked her the way to be saved but she pointed him to the eross. When the ange! of life came to a neighbor's dwelling, she was there to rejolee at the starting of an- other immortal spirit, When the mngel of death came to was there to robe the departed for the burial, We had often heard her, family prayers fo the absence of my father, say, “O Lord, I ask not for my children wealth or honor, but I do ask that they all Her 11 children brought into the kingdom of God, she had but one more wish, and that was that she might see her long absent mis. Tne reason that an can always bury himself in the busi- UPRR Erare or Onto, Crry or ToLEDO, im JUOUAR COUNTY, $1 4 senior partner of the firmofl FF, J. Cagney & County and State aforesaid, sand that said firm LARS for each and every cane of Cuarreh that cannot be cured by the use of HALLS CATA Cone, FRANK J. Cussey. sworn to before me and salweribed In my presence, this 6th day of vecembor, A. DD, 1586, ‘ A, W.Greason, ! v Notary Pulte, Hall's Catarrh Cure istaken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Bend for test moniale, free, ¥. J. Caesey & Co,, Toledo. O, $2 Sold by Druggists. The, i a 1 BEAL ¢ EAL ¢ The best opals are obta'n»d from Hungary patesun} home she said, “Now, Lord, lettest eyes have seen the salvation,’ WAS Boon answersd, It was an autumnal day when we gathered from afar and found only the house from which the soul had fled forever, She looked very natural, the hands very moch as when they were employed in kindness for her children, Whatever else we forget, we never forget the look of mother's hands, As we stood there by the casket we could not help but say. ‘“‘Don’t she look beautiful?’ It was a cloudless day when, with heavy hearts, we earried her out to the last resting place, The withered loaves crumbled under hoof and wheel as we passed, and the sun until it looked Hke fire ; but more eslm and beautiful and radiant was the setting sun of that aged pil- No more toll, no more tears, no more sickness, no more death, Dear mother! Beautiful mother! Bweel I= the slumber beneath the sod, While the pure spirit rests with Goo I nead not Zenobia the woman The prayer go back and show yon to own picture galiery of memory, and well, and arouse all your holy reminiscences, asocration to God by rn — Medicine in the Middle Ages, In sn entertaining article in the Nineteenth Century on medimval med- icine, given. some curious prescriptions are A person whose right eve was to *‘take the right eye of a Frogg, lap it in a piece of russet cloth, and bang it about the The skin of a ravens heel was prescribed for gout, Diffident young men will be interested “If you would have a man be- neck. in this i come bold or impudent, let him carry about him the skin or eves of a lion or will be fearless of his nay, he will be very terrible them The tendency to reti- which 1s so 3 { cock, and he ene unto cence, parliaments, might be cured by this treatment you would have him talkative, him tongues, and seek water frogs and ducks, and such cres- tures notorious for their continnal noise making.’ If a man had a “sounding or a pip- ing in hos ears,” he was recommended to put oil of hempseed, warm, into them, ‘and after that let him leape upon his upon that side where the discase then let him of that syde, if haply any moysture would issue out.” The remedy for nose bleeding was to “beat egge shales to ponds FY them through a linnen cloth, them into hys nose ; if the shales were LL common s fault of municipal councils, ete, ““1f give ¢ ott those of legge is; ine hye eare one bowie d« s na and blow git hatched, it were so much the better Powdered earth worms mixed with Wine were recomine nded for Jaundice of of the “little frogges,” “grave worms breathing nnder wood or stones, hav ing many fete.” Frogs and toads were favorite remedies, especially when greene or manner. Popular prejudice against medical science to-day is declining, will probably disappear alto- gether; but in the Middle Ages it seems to have had avery rational basis, Toronto Globe. Saved by a Blotter, A commercial traveler writes to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat : “The snin— saved me from very considerable lose with ink marks that the whole presents the appearance of an Egyptian hieroglyphic. But on this oceasion, absolutely new and clean and could be examined very closely. The last man who had been using it was also the first, and as he used rather a liberal supply of ink and wrote rapidly he re- produced almost the entire letter upon the blotter before folding it up. 1 knew him to be the representative of a large Eastern house in asimilar though not rival eapacity to our own, and without intending to do so, I found myself glancing at the reproduction of his letter on the blotter. I was struck at once with the name of the house from which I had the previous day taken an Sxbeptiontlly large order, and reading on I found that he had notified his firm that, acting under advice from a very reliable source, he had decided not to earry out his in. structions and sell this firm a bill of goods. I went out at once and made 3 peIsik If your Back Aches, or you are all worn out, Boos for nothing, it Is general debility. Hrown's Iron Bitters will cure you, make you strong, cleanse your liver, aud give you a good Appetite lunes Lhe nerves. The Buitan of Turkey has the richest ection of gems and regalia in the world, We Cure Rupture, No matter of how long standing, Write for free treatise, testimonials, ofc, to 8 J, Hollensworth & Co, Owego, Tioga Co, N.Y. HilLot B chnir known 1o addition Mr: has a re old, and still in good « f.. W. Moris bee 1tt des Wis ing Yur Ladies needing a tonie, or children whe want buliding up, should take Brown's lron Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malar a Indigestion, Miliousness and Liver Comp .aints, lood rich and purs. fan, The Booval Bal signed by the P 1 tured only for moral {a wh rinee Consort, is he Queen of Eng and, Heecham's Pllls correct eating. Beecham's tad effects of over. no others. ZDoents a box Uncle Silas Got Even, «1 tell you,” said Uncle Silas, “city 1 0' their jokes an’ things, uncle Keep uj folks is ful yer Kin with "em most o the time.” “Somebody been joking with you? asked the new boarder. “Yes Thetis to say, a feller thort he was. He was out yistl. day an’ missed his dinner, It was purty dusty, but that wasn't any ex- cuse fur his bein’ about the neighborhood.” “Hut what did he say?” “Wal, I asked him where he haa an’ he I've bin ourin’ the country.’ ‘Hin scourin’ IL? says 1 ‘Yes' savs he ‘Wal.’ says 1. ef yve'll step into the Kitchen maybe ma'll give ye a towel, 80's ve Kin go hack an’ dry it ofl’ ™ Washington Star. " rOunY young sarcastic ee ns, “Avs ut Ra out rh ii The skin of an elephant shout Hve yous 10 191 GE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly oS The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to feaith of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its ites is due to its presenting ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- stive ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers oy permanently curing constipation It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Byrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in Hic ans] bottles, but it is man- ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. He Vound Japan Grossiy Immoral Clement W. Beott, the well-known London dramatic critic and author, has been in Chicago some little time lately from a tour around the world. In speaking of Japan he ad- vanosd wholly opposite to the rosy ones of Bir Edwin Arnold. He said: “I found Japan to be the most grossly immoral country 1 have ever vind te " women are treated like erg sings of no intelligence, and they are bo and sold like cat- tie, poetical side of and other re- Fdwin Arnold dreams of elegant them tawdry and extreme, not 10 say was very much dis Japan, as | saw it, and it pretty thoroughly. [I never was s0 happy dus the whole of my tour as when, having shaken the Jap- anese dust from off my feet, I was safely landed in genial San Francisco.” on his return opinions The ir ds 4 ught Regarding the Japan, the tea palaces sorts described and other writers as snchantment, | found miserable in 1 Yes, 1 i4% he ioathsome, BPpPointed w 1 did ro A verse may find him whom a sermon flies CS ENE to CY 2 AAAAN A SR NLAN greatest of helps. 1 oe - - 5 of fest flavor, | # TWHWR WHERE ERE RWRTN s V August Flower” My wife suffered with indigestion and dyspepsia for years. Life be Physicians After reading I purchased a It worked My wile received im- 1atled to give relief one of your books now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat anything she desires without any deleterious results as was formerly the case. C. H. Dear, Prop't Wash- ington House, Washington, Va. @ 1 amy one doubts thet we oun cure the mol ob slinate ones in #0 080 dares, jot him wr te for pac theniary and investd wale our rellab yy. Our Bnsnelial 3 on rmanently. IT Co, that will enre wailed, tres. Cook FRAZER AXLE ii se GREASE N IDEA AMILY MEDICINE Ra ve Munattiund How wo Pick Out a EnoW imperfe Borse ¥ Good One 7 tions and so Uoard agai" Freud? Detect Disease snd Effect a Cure when sane is pouaibie 7 Tell the age by the Teeth ' What to call the Different Parte of the Animal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly © All this and other Va gable Inforisation can be obtained by reading our 106-FPAGE ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will foreand poss, paid, on receipt of only 23 cents In stamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, i34 Leonard St., New York City. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS THOMSON'S Bla SLOTTED Fo tools required, Only a hammer needed to drive and cinch them easily and goickiy, saving the cimoch sie ately sooth, Requiring no hoe 10 be made bn ihe loaiter Bor burr tor the Rivets. They are tough And durable. Miless pow in use. anctbm, entform or assorted, pet 5p in bones, Ask dealer for them, of wend a In lasnps a box of 300, assorted sizes. Men'td by JUDSON L, THOMSON MFG. CO., WALTHAM, MASS, BRU 35 A RA Rl Ta END RWOUR Xn Por Cures eside -:- MR etrea t. Faaran teed, for oe
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers