XY \ UPERSTITIOUS TRAVELERS A Vjteran Passenger Conductor Talks of 3 the Whims of Tourlsts. No one but the experienced pas senger conductor kpows just how whimsical and cranky the traveling public really is, says the Pittsburg Post. A traveler may have some peculiar fad or notion when he is on the road, but he never dreams that there are thousands of others just like him, or perhaps worse, In years of experience the conductor rubs elbows with all sorts of people, and in spite of himself becomes a mind and face reader, who takes a back seat from no one except the professional. “Yes, travelers are superstitious and cranky,” said a veteran knight of the punch yesterday in response to a query. “I think the average pas- senger conductor deals with more oddities daily than the curio collec tor of a freak show. As to supersti- tion, I think there is more of it crops out on trains than anywhere else. Last week, just as the train was ready to pull out for Chicago, a weli- dressed man came out of the coach on the platform and in an agitated manner asked me what day it was. “i told him it was kriday, and without another word he re-eutered the coach, and in a moment returned with his luggage, and by way of ex. planation stated that he never began a journey Friday and would wait un- til the next morning. That only a sample. The much-mooted un- lucky thirteen perhaps the cause of more worry and incooveniece to tourists than any other sign wh'eh they deem of illomen. Ihave known passengers to begin at the head of the train to see if they could find No. 13 anywhere. “If the engine happened to be thirteen they would resignedly wait for the next train, and if they ceeded in finding number thirteen on any of the coaches they would hold up their hands in holy horror. 1 have seen pa-sengers refuse to ride in a coach that held thirteen . piste u- gers, and if sou will ask ar tic) ket man he will tell vou that of all tions in a sleeper thirteen is the difficult to d spose of. “Then from the superstition which prevails among the traveling public there are countless passengers who are cranky, and if lose a chance to are in bad humor for a week afterward. They Kick for a seat in the center of the coach: because the train goes too slow o fast: Kick because they are in a draught or because it is too hot. And the worst of it all is that when they kick 1 am individual who is called up to h t as if I were responsible » whole busin “About ¢ when fellows don't is when ti on their houeymoon. goes on as smoothly ordered so, but let the en ride on the train five years ate: and the chances are they'll kick themselves into exhaustion.” is is ste. aside they kick v 18 sme are Everythi ng had been same nu i JOY - 5 is as if it sdie i IIIs History of Gotham. At one of the annual dinners of the New Engl New York, at which and the late Governor Van Zandt, of Rhode Isl- and, were both guests, a little god natured chaff was induiged the relative influence of the Holland: ers and Yankees in the settlement and development of New York. “I can give you the history of New York in a sentence,” sald Van Zaadt, io whose veins coursed both Dutch and Yankee blood. “The Dutch settied New York. and the Yankees settled the Dutch.” I ind society of Mr. Blaine in as musical instrumest is the outcome of many years of bard thinking by a Swedish electrician and musician. There is a frame and on it are hang a score of tuned bells, a series of steel bars struck by me- tallic hammers. a row of steel strines of necessary tension, a xylophone and a fraudulent bagpipe. of a bar of steel, and an electric cur- rot. A new tq The Best Men Wanted. “Yes we want the strongest and hest men among the readers of your paper to represent us in their respective Jocalitive, either devoting ail or any part of their titae to our business, exceptional opportunities for profitable work.’ That is what B. F. Johnson & Co... Richmond, Ya, say in reference to their advertisement, The highest peak of the Rocky Mountains is Mount Brown, British Ame rien, 15,900 feet, 4 afflicted with sore eyes tse Dr, Isaac Thomp. full bloom. Overcome by the heat or extraordinary exer. tion, the physical system, like a machine, fiseds 10 be renovated and repaired. The blood needs to be purified and invigorated food's S Sarsa- parille and the perves and muscles strengthened Cures €S by Hood's Barsaparil- appetite, removes that tired feeling Yen Ia, which creates an fives sweet, sound, refreshing sleep, Hood's Pills cure all liver his. 5c orth and TYrewhITInG with an bor be 1anzht you in the horthand Col a " the world for YT Shen why hy par #07 Mf youthink send for er alar, Allien ave ONE STATE $ COLLEGE," a ey 1 besides other valua' lo $k; to hua guesssre. Bases contol on, o Rind COT "sarmole Nagas a tatiA. Ld at ' a Hes ho offen, AN particulars a a tat ew ¥ rik Oty, REV. DR. TALMAGE The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon. Subject: “Suicides’ —————— Text: “Heo drew out his sworl an wonld have killed himeelf, supposing that the pris oners had been fled, Bat Paul eriel with a loud voice, saying, Do thyself no harm." Acts xvi,, 27, 28. Here 18 a would be sulelde arrested in his deadly attempt, He was a sheriff, and ac. cording to the Roman law a balliff himself must suffer the punishment due sn escaped prisoner, and if the prisoner breaking jail was sentenced to be endungeoned for thre 0 or four years then the sheriff must be en. dungeoned for three or four years, and it the prisoner breaking jail was to have suf- fered capital punishment then the sheriff must suffer eapital punishment, The sheriff had received especial charge to keep a sharp lookout for Paul and Silas, The government had pot had confidence in bolts and bars to keep safe these two clergy- men, about whom there seemed 10 be some- thing strange and supsrnstural, Sure enough, by miraculous power they are free, and the sheriff, waking outof a sound sleep and supposing these ministers have run away, and knowing they were to, die for preaching Christ, and realizing that he must therefore die, rather than go under the exeentioner's ax on th srrow and suffer public disgrace resolves to precipitate his own jut before the sharp, keen, glittering dagger of the sheriff could strike his heart one ot the ur ooseuad prisoners arrests the hls ado by the command “Do thyself no harm. In olden time, and whera COhristianity had not interfered with ft, suleldn was cone eidered honorable and a sign of courage Damosthenes poisoned himself when told nesador hal demanded of the Atheninn orators, himself rather than sure ato, rather took his own iis wounds had de cense, surrender He, been and after three times } dressed tore them open and perished, hir rather than ngqueror. Hannibal his poison from his ring, lifo unbearable, Lycurgus a Brutus a suicide, Afterthe disaster Napoleon always carried with 3, and whi X-00 Peror arise, put irink it, and soon tendants, sil» MI DAY, suicide, one ni after the groans mo it was only arouse all the at throush uta vat medic plate, es have changed, in toned v nth Have you seen a papet Bo ER Arigparbicd ag pe wn funk ot 3 ot a 4 conssienos new snicide, in the last n to 203th th % ure, Men of the worl arthi $ view font yn sfed ie dyspe if : ape quit life precipitately. fortunes go out eannot en od affection, d«¢ impatience anger, destitution, misanthro “tent for by nnse they Frastrat Lie JEaiousy tire » re sufll HUSES Paris los ar he abutment More ense of * ars of the world's existe we spreading agO expressed here was really this life some any. when it besam respe 1» whieh shall shov suicide is the worst of Hit a warning unmists early part of this th ever lived bave comn but always in de 1 have no mo felicity dies in his bed in fever, While thes! very peent, I oh erin ut some of tha fans that have i destruction, . and not resp their tisihile eternal wk of marge nil the Christian frie tinder of atep off th x ¥ # 2 doubt their } them right t re zied state into | : fety. How ieels toward then may Km the kind way he treated the den Gardaras and the child lunatie, and tency with which hashed the t either of sea or brain, Beotlan 3. ¢ the land prolifle of ier than Hoh Miller, great for science and great for God. He came of the best Highland! i, and he was a descendant of Donald Roy, a man eminent afd the rare gift of second sight, His attainments, climbing up as he did from the quarry and the wall of the stonemason, drew forth the astonished ade miration of Bueckiani and Murchison, the scientists, and Dr, Chalmers, the theologian, and held universities spelivound while he told them the story of waat he had seea of God in the old red sandstone, That man did more than ' miae Of the po. i BY Eugnat 10 npests { tart nl nu ectonl ING Eran oO any being that js the God of the Bible, snd he struck his Cromarty until His two books, entitled and the *“Testi- mony of the Rocks,” proclaimed the banns On this latter book through love of sleep, and his brain gave war, and he was one for bim and the other for the gunsmith who, at the coroner's inquest, was examin. ing it and fell dead. Have you any doubt of brain had ceased throbbing that winter night in his study at Portobelio? Among the mightiest of earth, among (io mightiest of No one ever doubled the piety of William “Oh, For a Closer Walk With God I” “What Various Hindrances We Meet! “There Is a Fountain Filled With Blood" who shares with Isaac Watts and Charles Wesley the chiaf honors of Christian hymnology. In hypochondria be resolved to take his own life and rode to the river Thames, but found a man seated on some goods at the very point from which he expected to spring and rode bask to his home and that night threw himself upon his own knife, but the blade broke, and then he hanged himself to the esfling, but the rope ried, No wonder that when God merci Iully delivered him from that awful demens tia be sat down and wrote that other hymn Just as memorable ; Gol moves in a mysterious way His wonders to perform, He plants His footstsps in the ses And rides upon tae storm, Bint untwilef is sure to ery And sean His work fn vain, God 1s His own Interpreter, And He will make .t plala, Vhile wo make this merciful and righteous alicwanocs in regard to thoss who were plunged into mental Insoharenes, [ declare that the man who in the use of his reason, by his own act, snaps the bond between his body and his soul goss straight Into Dipl tion, Saal I prove it? Revelation x37, # “Murderers shall have their pare ia the Inka which burneth with files and brimstone Revelation xxil,, 15, “Without are dogs and Then perhaps you believe the Ten, Conan lent, "Thon shalt not ki)" Do yo these passages paler to tha taking o of tha of others? Then | ask gon } Aare not ns zee ousibhia as for ithe life of ot Buss? A special trast weapons with whiei to defen it two arma 10 strike hack assallants, two eyes ta watel for invasion and a natural love of lite which ought ever to be on the alert, Assassination of others is n mild erime compared with the assassination of yoursel! becauss in the latter case ft is treachery to an especial trust, it is the surrender of a castle you were especinlly appointed to keep, it is treason to a natural law, and it is treason to God added to ordinary murder, To show how God in the Bible looked upon this crime I point you to the rogues’ pleture gallery in somo parts o. tha Bible, the pletures of the people who hava eom- mitted this nonstaral erime, Hers i= the headless trunk of Saul on the walls of Duathe shan, Here is the man who chased litle David—toen feet in status chasing four, Hers is the man who consulted a clairvoyant, witch oi Endor. Here is 8 man wno, whipped in battle, insteal of surrendering his sword with dignity, asks his sorvant to siay him, and when the servant declines then the giant plants the hilt of the sword in the oarth, the sharp point sticking upward, and he throws his body on it and expires, the coward, the suicide! Here is Ahithophel, the Machisnvelll of olden times, betraying his best friend, David, in order that he may bes eome prime minister of Absalom and joining that fellow in his attempt at pareicid ie. Not getting what he wanted by change of politics he takes a short cut out of n disgraced life into the suleide’s eternity, Thera ho is, the ingrate ! Hero is Abimelech practieally a suleide, He Is with an army bombarding a tower, when nn woman in the tower takes a grind- stone from its place and drops it upon his head, and with what life he lins left in a eracked skull he comman Ishisarmor bearer, “Draw thy sword and lest men say a woman slew me.” photograp in the bo hero of this group Jadas a Donne says he was a martyr, our day apologists for him, der in this day when ing Arron Burr as 3 pattern in this day when we une George Sand benaia ture, and In day whe travals of Christ on the part o pretended ag trayal makes the intamy of Judas Is Yet this man by his own hand 1 the exeeration of all the All the good men and joft to God the decision of minus, nod they could ba had a right to comm gicidas man ever had--what property, and h slay me, There is his p ok nf Samus ost mortem But the ariot, Dr, and we have in And what won have a book reveal of virtue, ani er nn stntus to tress of litera bag is As ths this thers are sf His 80 ble ek it white] une up for ias [seariorn, sf the Bible Hy dar. said with Jo if a destroyve insu! osties—a b Mri [hissir oar who his flame with evervthing ge forabie © mineles, 0 § f 31 £1 from his home exeept the chief curse « post iferous wile nd four garrulous peo. fortioss talk while ahing his un yYerse 4 ont rot] yes where there are nd tions to suffer, Iu will land here gioru i nothing lo pay for iy givtays § as belt apo bate After To mp aine’s “Age of was published an ' widely read 1? marked increase of self-sisughter Rousseau, Voltaire, Gibbon, ther certain circumsian tio for self immolation, to bar to ople’s rushing out from th worid into th ¢ next, They teach us it doe ot make any difference how or go out of this world, io an oblivious nowhere or a glorious somes where, and infidelity holds the upper end of the rope for the suicide, and pistol with which a man blows his i. and mixes the strychnine jor swallow, If inl there us an wed io Boason”™ t Lire Was a Monts wern 1 ou, infidelity puts up pret ie of here you will land sitter nes He Jou ave ou the last elity could carry the day does not made any aiff rence how you go aut of the world you will Jani safely, the rivers would be so full of corpses the jerry. boats would be impeded in their prozross, and the erack of asuicile's pistol would be no more alarniog than the ramble of a street Car, Ah, infidelity, stand ap and take thy sen. tence In the presence of God and angels and men, stan i up, thou monster, thy lip blasted with blasphemy, thy cheek scarred with Just, thy b reath foal with the corrap- tion of the ages! Stand up, satyr, Altay goat, buzzard of the nations, leper of the Sentisies } Stand up, thou moaster infidel. « part man, part prather, part reptile, part d ih stand up and take thy sentence ! Thy hand is red with the blood in waich thon hast washed, thy feet crimson with the human gore through which thon hast waded, Stand up and take thy sentence! Down with toee to the pit and sup on the sobs and groans of families thou hast blasted, and roll on the bed of knives which thou hast sharp ened for others, and let thy music be the everlasting miserere of thoss wnom thou bast damned! 1 brand the forehead of infil. delity with all the erimes of sell immolation for the last century en the part of those who had their reason, My friends, if ever your life through its abrasions and its molestations <hould seem to be unbearable, and you are tempted to quit ft by your own behest, do not consider ourselves as worsas than others, Christ imself was tempted to east Himself from the roof of the temple, but ss He resisted so resist yo, Christ came to medicine all our wounds, In your trouble I prescribe life in. stoad of death, People who have had it worse than you will ever have it have gone songfal on thelr way, Remember that God keops the chronology of your life with as much precision ns He keeps the ehrovology of nations, Why was it at midnizht, jast at midnieht, the destroying angel struck the blow that got the Israelites free from bondage? The 430 years wore up at 12 o'clock that night, The 430 years ware not up at 11, and 1 o'clock would have boen tardy and too late. 430 yoars were up at 12 o'clock, and the de- stroying aneel struck the blow, and Israel was free, And God knows the hour when it is time to lead you up from earthly bondage. By his makes not the worst pe og od the test of them, If you must take the pills, do not chew them, Your ever rewards will accord with your earthly jena fons, just as alu gave to Astipra a chain of gold as heavy as had bean h chain of fron. For your seking you _ have the same grace that wis given to the Italian yr, Algeriue, who, down fa the daricest of dungeons, Sata fils fetter from “the nechard of the Leonine pris 3 world, anl It is sa a sorrowless uit he a he novtiday sia te Sui) the up our northern heavens, confounding ns- tropomers as to what it can be, is the wave ing of the banners of the procession come to tnke the conquerors home from church militant to church triumphant, and you and I have 10,000 reasons for wanting to go there, but we will never get thers either by self immelstion or impeniteney, All our sins slain Ly the Christ who came to do that thing, we want to go in at just the time divinely arranged, and from a couch divige- ly spread, and then the clung of the sepul- chral gates behind us will be overpowered by the clang of the opening of the solid pearl before us, O God, whatever others may choose, give me a Christian's life, a Christian's death, a Christian's burial, & Christian's Immortality ! ———— rs DANGERS OF FACTORY DUST, — Hazard from Fire Being Continuslly Io- creased hy Improved FProcessios. Each development of manufacture appears to augment the fire hazard, not meerely by reason of the New and also to the but especially to the greateramount dust t rown off by the more rapid speed of operation, says Yurk Journal of Commerce, to the concentration due manufacture. The com- parison of the readiness of ignition of the shaving to that of the log holds good in all combustible material, greater the facility of ignition and of combus- tion The severe accidents occurring in those lines of s;ecial manufactur ing using powdered wood and pulver- that these subs*™ances issedsas explosives under such iliustrate the urrences from such changed condi would be trite to make to the expiosives of touring mills f hop ction with the manu- facture of walt, but they are Sinuails wrring iostances of eipios on of materials not ordinarily inciuded in the list of explosives and which a e made su account of rapid combustit entirely due to subdivision A Tew days ago an curred in that portionof a works where the cloth was received into the establishment “in the gray” directly from the mills without any treatment, and was being wound into large rolls preparatory to the p cesses carried on in that est ment. The short, fine were shaken out of the cle i rapid wit ized cork, can be cli cond iti res Lions ey grain d 80 His, occ iting it references SL An dust in «onne or « COl- 0c the solely on ally explosion oc. priat ro. abil CoLiOn ith as d uy the na tent that it becun a sent ng hoo An electrics 8011 st. and it pro explosion which blew off ul wrecked t with such jure five me With th and pit biown into re numero {1 ing oo such DeCessar 4 over the mac at the . 1 ib par 12 of the du ie the convents of the Vigienoce 45 vo seriot Bat wark in the 1 old method of ton Ly wh a ge 3 fs An 3538 KiDI « RAauze room, ancesj cf exj g in con nw wn that class of accidents has ¥ much reduced by eut method of lapper pi wind the ootton into a compact criinder The «¢ cotton fibers in naj of frequent occ recent years a tl cardroow of a cotton an expiosion which violent, and urin but nect iths the wh ch elatively jires- cKers osion of ping-rooms ar. grrence Within starting in Lhe mill produced was exceedingly spread the flames to an extent beyond the pe of the fire apparatus and compassed the destruc tion of the milk ‘Lhe explosion from dust in the various forms of ous driers used in textile been such as to require the utmost precautions by way of construction and continuous cleanliness in order to secure conditions of safety. When the facing dust accumulating on the trusses of a foundry was being washed fire hose, when the works we eshutdown during an enforced vacation, such as has occurred during recent times, the dust filled the bullding and was ignited by the fire at the portable where repairs were undet still 1» ure S00 conting- mills have way. fut such fires are not by any meant confined to the dust of ordinarily combustible materials occur in the dust of iron thrown out from the tumbling barrels used for polishing tacks by their attrition on each pther, Owe form of the well-known parior fireworks, which produces such a bright fulguration, is merely the combustion « f finely divided steel, whose temperature of igoition is so low that the hand can be held, not only with fropunity, butalso without any sensation of heat directly in the scintillat'on of the fireworks finely powdered zinc, known auxiliary,” which is used in connec t on with the rejuvenation of the in- digo dye vats in the coloring of cot. ton, is so rapidly oxidized by a small amount of moisture that fires pro. duced in that manner are of frequent occurrence, and the danger is so well known that many lines of water transportation refuse to take this material under any condition what. soever, Sms II sss Aphorisms and Maxims, 1750, “For one poor person, there are a hundred indigent.” “Many have been ruined by buying good pennyworths® “The eye of the master will do more work than both his hands.” “Buy what thou hast no need of, and ere long thou shalt jsell thy necessa- ries. “A plowman on his legs is higher than a gentleman on his knees.” fild and a fool imagine 20 shillings and twenty years can never be spent.” e second vice Is lying, the first running in debt.” “Creditors have better memories than debtors.” “Those have a short Lent who owe money to be Joi oy ay Pastel. {tors are observers bh FEAT keepers making a trial of takes the place of tartar, 1s nomical, Those who take finest food say sable therefor. Jo 3F Yo ow Ed } ty yA y r Jv $4 ny Fem BY ae. 5 a 5 5 NE AR arc any housec- wal making the juite 1 ndispe n- 106 WALL 67. poh a Fan, A Burgeon’'s Terrible Mistake. “A few vears ago.” said Charles J. Patterson, of Philadelphia, “I learned of a man who of a tury with had been a and on casi an injured eye in order other eve.and prevent total blind The night befo the opera- tion he had drinking with some friends, and, althe following morniog he was Wis ady and unstrung. “After a im in futnr mite a Rare ey physician one oc a4 Smue and su had to remove to save the On been ugh the his nerves sober, + Uns his fatal and well mistake. aud thus counsigning 1 is patient to wlindoess, The moment he man to 4a competent deeded thing he him, and hurried fro n the ne hood like a conv ed thie mainder of his life was un if nurse, and cont ft ins Giscoversd his err aver "1 SUrge every POSSCESE a gh bur I'he (ifie oOonsta he - mea rapidi misan- 1ife was of people, reveag lo and mad hawever biunder, wh : of COUTse repentance baracter.” tery. for than a cri the n ri York Hecorder. Ost -¥ en sn Ethan Allen's Sword, sword of han Allen, the National Museum at isan old-fashioned 1 inches in length The served Washington, about twe nty- and slightly curved The made horn or bone, seven inches long. of silver. marked with go'd, but the latter Is partially worn oft. A dog's head of sily forms the end the handle runs a ver | ern pro ade SEVEN of and is some he mountiog is of silver chain. ands of the venerable ard is the name “Ethan len” engrossed in large letters: another band, *E. Brasher, N. York:” while on a third pears the pame “Martin Vosburg, 1775." Philadelphia Ledger. £100 Reward, R100. The readers of this paper will be pleased” fo learn that there is at Jenst one dreaded disease that science hase been able fo cure in all ita stages, sod that is catarrh, Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known feo the modionl frternity. Catarrh being » con. stitwuonal disemse, requires a constitutional treats aout. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken in. teraally, acting directly upon the blood and mt ry 8 surfaces of the system, thereby On one of the sil leath- scabt on maker, band he patient strength by building up the work. The proprietors have so much faith in { case that it fails to cure. Send for 1 4 of testimonials, Address J. Cuexey £0 0. Toledo, O $F Bold by Druggists, Tc. In given, stamps, 1862 It f= snid that a book, woe printed from vulcanized rubber Pure and Wholesome Quality Commends to public approval the California liquid laxative remedy, Syrap of Figs, It is pleasant to the taste and by acting gently on liver and bowels to cleanse the system effectually, it promotes the health and comfort of all who use it, and with millions it is the best and only remedy. The © dest university in South that of Chile founded in 1743, America is Dr, Kilmer's Sw amp-Roor euros sil Kidney and Bladder troubles Pamphlet and Consultation free, Laboratory Binghamton, XN. X. Peabody houses for the poor were opensd in London in 1864, Bouvard. one Af well as brusqu ivsicians Lines, Was one cay alled to the Archi nost learned of his attend who was iolent colic. “I am said uvard, who, how “Yor the love of sod, r, aid the messenger, “do Monseigneur is the damned Bouvard, jul 4 # »§ Tri & S000 61 246 5, ” like fL.ove, nt Locks, Willis, Laughs, iohn manne ruments PIERCE Oe OR MONEY IS REFUNDED. ATIOUS 43% GUAR ANTEES A svstesn Wilh his Yi ry Ke fax, of 618 B. Biro New York # as follows: ¥ LR 0 at 1 bad a run- Te upon my d bad it oper. 0 three times, war Dot also run much, decided ge after using * Dr. v's Golden Modicsl Discovery,” 1 took a few bottics and was goon cured, A my - bust i had a lum Murs. KURN. behind his ear: he tried your medicine, and one bottle cured him, shall always recommend your medicines. Cold Watch Free. should dris r. Pierce's Golden Medical 7 —ar Mrs . Writs me was a tr vy ew eied awe 74 k. gold waich, filed wk i Cimazx Nickie val In a5 PeR ane watch, end yom ¢ Bud ad and i » introdece our cig rs we will send you bi sl! Havann Per rs for 87.7 OF. We fed pi cigars and watch bs ex « 0. DD. 87.95 withent any devosit, After examingtion. if astis factory, fay oxXpress agent ; if pot, don"t take them, Pertecto Clgar Co, 149 West 41h Street, New Yark, AS W; kL, DoucLa: ress, 0 fecto Ces Bowem § tous NO SQUEARING $5. CORDOVAN, FRENOHE ENAMELED CALF. 34.5355 FINE CALFEKANGATOL 13% POLICE SoLes. oll LW RRND S 2.5. 73 BOvSSOHB SHOES. (5125872 SE os BesT DONG, SEND FOR CATALOGUE You can save money by wearisg the W. L. Doaglas £3.00 Shee. Beeause, wo are the larpest manufacturers of this gradecf shoes 1a the world, and guarantee thelr value by stumping the name and price on the bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middieman’s profits, Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy Biting and rT Gualities. We have them sold everywhere nt lower prioss for the value given than any of Ser make, Take no sub gives froshness and clearness 10 the complex. iu and cures constipation, 26 ots, 00 cts. $i A locomotive lasts fifteen years and earns about &300,000, Tux Herat, Nas, TEAM, baum St. Phila, pe, Pa, 5 Xx vd Consnmptives and people who have weak lungs or MONEY IN CHICKENS tPF YOU ENOW: How
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