* Do Bees Eat Fruit? Are not bees injurious to sound, ripe fruit? sound fruit in years of honey scarcl. ty? During the fall ol 1870 there was a great complaint made of the bees on that score, in this vicinity, especially In the matter of grapes. These complaints induced us to make careful experiments on the matter, and I ascertained and will say now, not that 1 believe that bees cannot injure sound fruit, but that 1 koow that they may be starved to death upon it Some four or five years ago, a doubt of this assertion having been ex. pressed in our public high school on this question, by the lady principal of the school, 1 offered to make a public test of this matter before the puplls, and this offer was accepted. The bees were attracted from neigh. boring hives to a table in the school yard, and damaged fruit offered them. After they got fairly to work upon it, the damaged fruit was removed and sound fruit put in its place, and in the coarse of fifteen minutes the bees had all abandoned the spot. 1 earnestly request those who doub: my assertion on this question to make such a test fur themselves. It is not difficult and is conclusive. Most of the bees is done by birds ants, and hornets do their share, but as the little honey-bee sometimes gath. ers the remnants so nothing may lost, she is often accused as the lead- | Journal. se -__L ALP L Qualified to Speak. “Now, then, who is this case:” was called. the plaintiff in this the court, “I don’t know anything about plaint- iffe ” replied a mun in the corner, as he slowly rose, “but if you are asking for the chap who was chased a mile and a half. and then mopped all over his own barnyard by two desperadoes, I'm your man.” asked his Honor, as a case No reply. “1 ask who is case?” continued £35.000,000 Tobacco Bill Saved. CHICAGO Chicago ment, deseribiz of No-To-Bae, Mr. H. L. seen to-day a and in talk it was hard idly increasing advertised N He said strength of the sands of an absolute gu funded.” Tha merit very sh the user from joss, “Why, make 100.009 ing will ave or a gran going fo-Bae, i nen Tes jn fest the ie ons ref wy . phivs: miraculous, Prominent Bae as a great «al and ten ompared with the de saving io a money r fed, A few exira o¢ plement (eight pages ors, have been for the asking, iressing the Remedy Co, Rand street ;: New York esi Laboratory, Indiana ore Rupe Ocean Rup ifteq in five ani be mailed SMeriing Dt SE 10 34 i Springs, Mmmeral One of the | we gre made ( other folks, js that i clay as ardest t of the san How's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for pny case of Catarrh that caunot be cured by Hall's Catarrn Care, F.J.Carxsey & Co., Prope., Taledn, 0, We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che. ney for the last 16 years, and believe him per. fectly honorable in all business transactions and financ'ally able to earry out any obliga. tion made by their firm, West i Tetiax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Olio, Wartoiso, Kiwvay & Manvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Oho, Ha'l's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act. fng directly upon the blood and mdeous sur. faces of the system. Price, Ti, per bottle, Sold by ali Droggists. Testimonials free. The present is wade up of of the past the fragments Free, one of our readers times! The are giving Fine Pictures Here's good news for any who are pinched the Woolson Spice Co. of Toledo, O AWAY many fine pictures Coffee in exchange for Lion Heads cut from Lion Coffee wrappers Besides pictures they also mall valuabie books, a knife, game, ete. It surely pays to drink Lion Coffee, which is by far the finest sold for the price, and has a beautiful picture-card in every 1 ib package. If you haven't an «llustrated Pre. snium List, ask your grocer for a copy. or send your name & address to the firm above named, hard by to drinkers of nRrge Man's good opinion of himself is a great sthinuniant, Dr, Blimer's Swane-Roor enrms all Kidney and Bladder troubles Pamphlet and Consuitation frea laboratory Binghamton, N. ¥. By the sunshine of pre eperity many people are gunstruck, Karl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier, fire freshness and clearness to the complex. on and cures constipation, 25 cia, W cts. $1 A locomotive lasts fifteen years and earns about $500,000, Mrs. Winslow's Seothing Syrup for children teething, softons the gums, reduce « inflamma. tion, aliays pain, cures wind colic. 2. u bottle High strung the suspension bridge, Headache Dyspepsia Indigestion are caused by bad blood, und by a run down, worn out condi tion of the body, Rememuer parille Be sure to get Cures Hood's Ane “Wood's Pills are goncie, mild and effective. REV. DR. TALMAGE HL tv rs The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon. Subject: “The Rescue," Texr: ‘‘Balieve on tha Lord Jesus Christ, and thon shalt be saved,” —Acts xvi, 31, Jalls ara dark, dnill, damp, loathsome ninces even now, but they were worse in the apostolic times, I imagine te-lay we are standing in the Philipnian dungeon, Do you not feel the chill? Do vou not hear the groans of thosa Incarcerated ones who for fen years have not seen tho sun- light and the deep righ of women who remember their father's house aud mourn over thelr wasted estates? Listen again, i= the cough of a consumptive or the strug. zie of one in the nightmare of a great hor ror. You listen again and hear a culprit, his chains rattling ss ha rolle over in his dreams, and you say, ‘God. pity the prison. er!" Dut there fa another sound in that pricon, It is the song of joy and gladness, What a place to sing in! The music comes winding through the corridors of the prison, and in all the dark wards the whisper is beard: “What's thnt? What's that" It is tha song of Paul and Slins, They cannot sleep, They have been whipped very badly whipped. The lone gashes on their backs are bleeding vat, They lia fiat on the cold ground, their feat fast in woo len rockete, and of course they eannot sleap, But they oan sine, Jailer. what are you do. ine with these neople? Why have they heen pat in here? Ob, they have boesn trying to make tha world better, Is that all? That fe all, A nit for Joseph. A lion's eave Daniel, A blazine furnaces for Rhadrach, Clas for Join Wesley, An anathema Philiop Meiancbthon, A dungeon for and Silas, But while we are standing in the gloom of #4 nr for Paul mingling volees of 80h and groan phemy and halislnjah, suddenly an earth. quake! ‘The iron bars ¢f the prison twist, tha piliars erack off, the solid masonry he. ins {9 heave, and all tha doors swing open, and hiase in his pagan honorable. » bef hand Kita anes, suicide to be . killed himself, and Cuto d Cassius kitled sin hime. himself—nut his tation. Dnt stop! Do thyself no all here I Then I see the jailer running sea him throwing himself de re, What shall I do st out of this wi at the fest ervinz o “What sha? earthquake, No wor ing, throug the 1 sn woe have all road of the eartho , in Lima, in Alsopo and t we live atitude wh v thera ins no + disturbance, wirt hatab on sr 1 AARES, all the 1 all an. foent business « & man w His dsucht the sefpiuary witl f His sons ha nest, temperate and pure, When there isa hap family circle. Bat rident down at Long The young man ventarad too far in the surf, The telegraph hurried the terrer up to the city, An earthquake struek he joundation of that beautifal Aes ouni the « piness and unbroken there has been au ae Bran out | he . 1 Hte = at al Venine Ngnis are siracs tuder Lome, Tne piano closed dropp the laughter hushed, Crash go alithos mestic hopes and prospects and tions, So, my Iends, we have all fol shaking down of some troubl thers was a time when we wero as mu cited as this man of the text, and we out as he did + “Wha! shall I do? What shall 1 da?" The same reply that the ap made to him is appropriate to ne, ‘Believe on the Tord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved” There are some documents of so portance that the curtains great "i OX. ried ation tise! £ siftie 3 put az last name under them, of even your initisls, but thers are some docu. you do not eareto Bo the Saviour in somes and in other parts of the Bible He is called “Jesus,” and in other parts of the Bible He is called that there might be no mis Now, who is this being that vou want mas Men sometimes ¢ makes me know that I shall be cheated if | confide in them. You cannot pat your heart's confidence in a man until you know what staff he is made of, and am | unreason- able when I stop to ask you who this is that sou want me to trust in? No maa would think of ventur.ng his life on a vessel going out to sea that had never been inspected, No; you must have the eartificate hang amidships, telling how many tons it carries, and bow loag ago it was built, and who built it, and all about it. And you eanant expect mo to risk the cargo of my immortal interests on Loard any craft till you toll me what it Is mande of, and where it was made, and what it is, When, then, I ask you who thisis you want me to trust in, you tell me He is a very at tractive person. Contemporary writers de. soribe His whole appearance ss being re. splendent, There was no need for Christ to tell the children to come to Him, “Safer little children to come unto Me” was not #poken to the children. It was spoken to the disoiples, The children came readily enouzh without any invitation, No sooner did Jesus appear than the little ons jumped from thelr mothers’ arms, an avalanche of beauty ani love, into His lap. Christ did not ask John to put his hoad down on Ils bosoms, John could not help but put bis head there, [suppose a look at Christ was just tolove Him, How attactive His manner! ¥by, whon they maw Christ coming along the streel . (hoy run into their houses, ond they wrapped ap their invalids as quick as they could and brought them oat that He ‘might look at then, Oh, thers was some thing 89 plogsant, vo inviting, so cheering in overything He did, in His very look! When theas siok ones wore brought out, did He ‘say : "Do not bring bators Mo this sores, Po not trouble Ye with these leprosies 7 No, no ; there was a kind look ; thero was a gene tle word ; there was a healing touch, They contd not keep nway trom Him, “I think ther» are mane under the inflo. ence of tha Spirit of Gol who ars saving, Sf with tenet Mim 1f you will oaly tell me how.” Ant the great questing raliel hw many 8, How, how? And whils | answer vorr qaestion 1 lon an and nites ths neaver which Rowian! Hill san atten eters! in tha milder af his sermon, “Master, holp I How are von to trastin Christ? Jnst we yoo trast any ons You (rast your partner in hma'ness with important thine, Ta commarninl houas gives vo 8 note pave nhis these montha hense, von sxnset the povment of that pote at the ent a tees wonthe, You haven narfest confiensan in their worl and in thelr ability, Or, again, you vo home to- Tay, Yan exnset therm will he food on the table, You have confidenss confidenca in the Lord Jésus Christ. Ye says, ‘You believe; I take away your sine.” nnd they are ali taken away, “What I" you say, ‘‘befors I pray any more? Bee fora I read mv Bible any more? Be'ore I ery over my sins any more?" Yes, thiamo- ment, Belleyn withall your heart, and yon ares saved. Why, Christ is only walting to get from you what you give to scores of peo. ple every day. What isthat? Confidencr, If these people whom vou trust day by day ars more worthy than Christ, if they are more faithful than Christ, if they have done mors than Christ ever did, than elves thom tha preference, hut it you really think that Christ is aa trustworthy as they are then deal with Him as fairly, “Oh.” savssoma ona in a light wav, 1 believe that Christ was born in Bethlehem, and I believe that He died on tho cross * Do vou balleve it with your he4q or your heart? I will illustrate the Aiff:rence, Yon are in your own house, Inthe moming you open a newspaper, and you read how Captain Braveheart on the sea risked his lilo for the salvation of his passen pers, You soy + “What a grand fellow he must have been! His fam- ily deserves very wall of the country.” Yon fold the newspaper and sit down at the tabla and perhaps do not think of that ineldent again, That is historical faith, ut now yon are on the seq and it f= night and you ares aslesp, ant vou are awakened by the shriek of “Fire™ Yaa rush out on the deck, You hear, nmid the wringing of the hands and the fainting, the ery: *‘No bop», no hope! Wa ars los, we ure lost!" Then sall puts out its wing of fire, the robes burning ladder in the night heavens, of wracis hisses in the waves, and the with ‘Down with “aptain, “Down 1 into them, The for only ons standing on the deck dargnoess, 'erind the yale Peo about full, man, Ion are be«ide the captain. Who shall ft Yon he captain says. “You. ™ + Hestands th believe that Captain himsel! for his le with IHlebonts the life re OTE More be or the eapiain? You jump ani id dies, Now, Braveheart saori- passengers, | you we, with wi fot exciamations, with at your dolivaranes, saving faith--in other words, what ith all hear: and believe voursaeif, On this ‘hinge turns wl ! yor re ar va It re continual grief nt his loss and joy 13 believe w the sermon ive, the my BR yéu about, know nothing Knox who you nid gaa ms throngs rt. the earth he stars may be bi ment hare and her th urthe: an that, Hemans, eo sald bandsor There is nothing beauti! those whom we love, and 3 swering pressure of the band an turning kiss of the lip, we anybody postizing round abe athsomen ess aud and the wringing of the heart uf in the torture conless to with me. I a eave of wild unless Christ shall be would rather go down into unless Christ goes with me, Will yon from my bright home and put away ia the darkness? At the first coming and the farther on in life I get the more 1 like to have my friends round about m And aml to be put off for thousands of years iu a dark place, with no one to speak When the holidays come and the gilts 1 add no joy to the Yenr?" Ab, donot point down to the bole in the ground, the grave, and oall I* a beau 1 nlessthere be some « ral illumination 1 shudder bask fro whole nature revolts at it. But row this glorious lamp is lifted above ta? grave, and aul tte way is 1 look into it now without a single shudder. Now my anxiety 18 not about death ; my anxiety is that I may livearight. What power is there in anythicg to enill me in the last hour if Christ wisps around me the skirt of His own garment! What darkness can fall upon my eyelids then, amid the heavenly daybroak? © death, [ will not fear thee then, Back to thy cavern of dark. noss, thon robber of all the earth, Ply, thou despoilor of families, With this battieax I how then in twain from helmet 10 sandal, the voles of Christ sounding all over the earth nod through the heavens © “0 death, | will be thy plague. © grave, I will be tay destruotion.” To bo saved Is to wake up In the presencs of Christ, You know when Jesus was upon the oarth how happy He mado every house He went Into, and when Ie brings us np to His house in hesven how great shall be our giea!l His voice has more musio fn it than is to be heard in all the oratorios of Mernity, Talk not abou: banks dashed with efflor- escense, Jesus fe the chief bloom of heaven, We shail see the very face that beamed sym pathy in Bethany and take the very hand that dropped its blood from the short beam of the cross, Oh, I want to stand in stornity with Him. Toward that harbor [ stesr, Toward that goal I ran. I shall be satisfied when I awake in His Jikenoses, Oh, broken hearted men and women, how sweet it will pe In that goo | land to pour all of your hardships and bereavements and losses info the loving sar of Christ and then have Him exolain why it was best jor Jou 19 be sick, and why it was bast 10 you 10 be widowed, and why ft wan best for you to bw ersecuted, and why It was beet for you to vo tried and have Him point to an clevation proportionate to yoar disguietude Liere, say ing, ‘You suffered with Mo on earth (coms up now and be glorified with Me in heaven.” Some one went into a house wher» thers Bad been a goo deat of troahis an { sald to the woman there, “You seom to be lonsly, “Yeu,” she said am jonny,” “How many in the family.” ““Oaly myself,” HHave you had any ce wldeen?’ 1 bhnd seven entldesn,” Wiis aes they!" “Gone! CAH pone?” YAILT “Al dead? VAL" Then she Lresthed a long sigh nto tho on Tienes ard said, “Oh, wit, I ave been a good mother 10 the grave.’ i § 4 i And so there ars hearts hero tha: are ute torly broken down by the bersavement of lite, 1 point you to- lay to the eternal balm of heaven, Ob, aged men and women who have knelt at the throne of grace for three score years and ten will not your decrepi- tude change for the leap of a heart when you come to look face to face upon Him whom having not seen you love? Ob, that will be the Good Bhephord, not out in the night and watching to keep off the wolves, but with the lamb re. elining on the sunlit hill, That will be the Captain of our salvation, not amid the roar and crash and boom of pattie, but amid His disbanded troops keeping victorious festiv. ity. That will be the Bridegroom of the church coming from afar, the vride leaning upon His arm while He looks down futo her face nnd says “Behold, thon arc lair, my love! Behold, thou srt fair!” Wms nn ity A MOHAWK INDIAN. Dr. Oronhyatekha Stands First in Frater- nal Societies in America, Dr. Orognhyatekha, who holds the position of Supreme Chief Ranger of the Independent Order of Forestry, is a splendid speci- men of the Indian race. He is a full- blooded Mohawk, and was born at the Six Nations Reser- vation. near Brant. ford, Ont. in 1841. He has a fine edu- cation, received at Toronto University and at Oxford, pr. onoxnrarexaawhere he studied medicine, time to his order—Forestry- this sacrifice has the standing first in fraternal in America. He Is a Mason, having long since attained the highest de- gree in the order. He is also a Good Templar, holding the highest posi tion in the organization. But, de- societies from the white race, he has kept his intact smcss—— i ————— When Are Mingle. A blue dress or necktie intensifies ‘the blue of the wearer's eyes, should they be that A woman with remarkably red lips clad in dull heliotrope, with amethysts, has all the taken from her mouth, which wears instead a light heliotrope tint, and with this the pink of her cheek is also touched. An ordinary or even sallow cheek never looks so beautifully white a white dress, which seemed threaten to darken And beautiful as the “wsthetic” colors were their day, they quenched and dimmed thelr wearers to thelr own tone This not to be easily explained by known chromatic ru Nor can say why turquoise blue darkens dark eves and adds to their brightness. The fact remales that it is so, and of this fact the wise will take advantage. lle . MARKETS, —— BALTINORE, Colors of COIOT. Coral 88 over to is ils in fa is on, one CRAIN, ETO LD UR-Balto, Best Pat.$ High Grade Extra. . WHEAT—5- 2 Red..... COKRN-No. 2 White 5 4 UATS-8outhern & Penn. a RY E-No, Sensuns 48 HAY Choice T imothy... 1450 Good to Prime. ....eeee. 13510 STRAW Hye incar ids... 90) Wheat Blocks.csevssese BU) Unt BlockS. coconvvsenses 600 CANNED GOODS No. . .e PEAB-Standards........ Seconds CORN—Dry Pack..... Moist..ocovunnse 16 CITY BTEERB......ccss 8 City CoWs.vasineesvsnns Southern No. 2...00000e POTATORS 4 VEGETABLES, POTATOES—Burbanks..8 40 GY 6h @? PROVISIONS, HOGS PRODUCTS-shide$ Clear ribsides. MAMA. covonsscsussrsnses Mess Pork, per bar..... LARD—Crude.. Ta Ate refined. cocina sinn BUTTER BUTTER-~Fine Crmy....8 Under 300... .000 00000 Hollusssso assess Crass nen SARE BE any CHERSE, CHEESE—XN.Y. Fancy...$ N. Xofiatw..oovsinsinine Skim Cheese. oo... caran RGGs, EGOS-State...cvovivived North Caroiing. ... oo. LIVE POULTRY. CHICKENS-—Hens.......53 11 Ducks, per B.ocviiicnss 9 TOBACCO, TOBACCO-MA. Infer's.$ 130 Sound common. ........ $00 Middling.. ccocovvierees 800 FROCK seesssvevssnerene 1000 LIVE STOCK, BEEF--Best Beeves......0 450 Good to Failr.....oooeee 857 BHEEP...cccocoevsivnine 10) Hogs 6.5 FURS AND SKINS, MUBRKRAT...:.ccouus. i 8 Raccoo Blessssnsesssucues Bot POXwousvncisnisnren Bkunk Black... ..cc000 ink. FERRER ERR. Otter PERERERNR NORE FR eee KEW YORK, Sm ——— FLOUR~8outhern.., ...$ WHEAT--No. 2 Red....... RYE-~Western.........c... CORN«No, | "ON shnnanner an OATB--No, B...convvimniss sn BUTTER--8uuate.............. EGGR-Ht Burris vi sini Rviiiiinirnm PHILADELPHIA, 1 LOU R—Ranthe Sawa nn : om Ra 9 Red::1 B® $4 on ht % FEAR ANA E Ate, uvuim Fsennan ¥ The Vopular fastitution Ffias een Existence for Hondreds of Years From t me immemorial, says All the Year Hound, bookselier's shops have been the favorite resort of all touthed with the love of letters, and in advertising was practically unknown, it was only by frequenting the shops where sold that possible purchasers were able to learn what was going on in the publishiog world, to know what new books were in course of publication and to hear and exchange the latest literary gossip. These early book lovers one may be quite would be certain to while away many a leisuie bour “sampling” the wires on their hosts’ counters, and would read, orat least dip into, many volumes besides those they actually purchased for more leisurely sumption at home. And hence might arise, very naturally, the custom of formally lepdipg out books to reas for a monetary consideration. Thas, at the end of Kirkman's ‘Thracian Wonder,” published in 166), the bookseller makes the following an. nouncement Jf any gentleman piease to repair to my house aforesaid they may be furnished with all man- ner of English or Freuch histories, romances or poetry, which are to be sold or read for reasonable considera. tion.” It is not quite clear from the iast few wards whether the books might taken away to be read, whether the readi wus to done the shop. But that home Is evi. a character Scholar,” printed Kselier's, sure, by COL 3 * r i or ng be in bookseller's books might be taken remark of n Nevi “Poor in 1662, BAYS *¢ i 4 Lio thisangel, the use aged Lit lately lish't 0 a week Their twelve pound. When you | ir study, invite you 44 " ! pie ang give ui 1 ‘ end you or wany-lang ty isp £8 an und the but 18 doubtiul, whether the lending into practice Lo any great extent set sescen— Progressive Minnesota, Minnesota is not a very old State, but she has already more than 85,- 0 puts ic building her acres of ee aiter was pul aii AvVsiem school 1.000.0 Wi land yet unsold. EE. cmu——— SOME neyer marry men would ITY a grass widow ould not marry tends to personal enjoyment when rightiy used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy fife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the n of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax. ative ; effectuslly cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation, It has given satisfaction to miilions 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. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug. gists in 50c and §1 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 and bei accept any substitute if well informed, you will red. annie —— Yo NEW YORK +i MILES «O° Boston the Highest and Lowest. “Boston, the highest city in culture, the lowest in morality,” was the strik- sentence uttered by Rev. Isaac J, Lansing, at Fark Street Cosgrega in that city, Sunday “Itie in this conneciio: | am led to speak of a ‘moral sevival® If for teven days we could have such a re- vival thie a moral revolution pace. The apathy exist vice which are way to energy, ving vices be sup- in city, wou soui-gestr give this “There is a gr finod of Eweeping with almo: fore throughout Divorces are multipiying with rapidity, and numbers are | ing lives t> which death is far prefer- able. |] have he'd hand within the past wesk a li ghty pla Gx, ighty privcipally on th street, where these The proprietors of have no hesitancy in infamy jocation of these dens pub- the 16806 immorality restrainable miaet untoic jv- my ut of «© eo Vite fXIsTE, making CURES OTHERS Bap Cova, Brit TF BLOOD, CONSUMPTION. K. C. Mclix, Esg., of Kempsville, Princess Anne Co. Va. writes: “When | commenced faking your ‘Discovery’ 1 was very jow with & : Bl times spit 1 was to do the least work, but most of the time was in bed. | was } run-down, very , oy head wes Gin. and | wes extremely despondent. The first bottle 1 took did not seem fo 40 me much good, but 1 bad faith in itand continued using it n fifteen ow 1 do feel like rt Mn K.C. Mclaox People are . his time 1 would not ving now . the sur aston TRE ODE Fear nee und Tareil ast Yen: thought that you wouia ix thank! y red a dis ease which, bat Tor r wor ul * Disc ery. wou ¢ resulted in oy denth WHY NOT YOU? WE WiLL MAIL POSRTIAID a "en led TION " Large Lion 1 can aired of Ser? G Lav "MEDITA swiks, u knife oi Woolson Brice CO ¥ =t.. Tots 3, CHRIO, W.L. DoucLAS Sa SHO IS THE BEST, NO SQUECANING $5. CORDOVAN, FRINCHA ENAMELED CALF 4.3550 FINE CALF EAGAN $ 3. 2°POLICE, 3 S0LES. PVA $e. WORK! ENS wpe TRE 2 “fe Fain Loy 4 3 AD 2.71.75 BoYSSCHOD SHOES, EDIES- aad i é $=" ThEAS i, “TWD FOR CATALOGUE WL DOUGLAS, y BROCKTON, MASS. You can save money by wearing the W. 1. Douglas £2.00 Shee. Because, ve are the largest marulscturers of this grade of shoes in {ho workd, and guaranies thelr value by stamping the name snd price on the Bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middioman’s profit. Our shoes equal cusiomn work in etyle, easy Siting and wearing qualities We have them sold everyohere st lower prices fon the value given than any of “er make. Take no sub stitute, If your dealer cannol SUNPLY FOU. WE ORR. Raplnel, Angric, Kuiwes, Tasso o YLINENT® are the Beat and Mont Beonorni- eal Collars and Cofls worn: they sre made of fine cloth, both sides finished alike, and beng reversi- ble, ne collar is agoal to 190 of any other kind, Thew ot well, wear weil and look well, A box of oilers or Five Padre of Cufls for Twenty-Five Cents A Sample Collar and Pair of Cuffs by mail for Bix Cents, Name style and size, Address REVELSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, 7 Franklin 8, New York, 2 Kilby 81., Dostem, prem ums to good gusssers, Bases $1000 bell Hooters, cntch on, See offer in HOME AND COUNTRY MAGA ZINE. Price, icests Sample Magazine can be see 1 aed fall partion ars obtain 4 at ths office, Al Newsdealers, or 53 East 100s Sorent New Y rk Oty, Posltivaly (URED p / with Vegetable Remalion. Jove cored many tha. a seamed heneless, Prom feet Acte fn money heddes other valus' ie send rapidly dnarpes of rein Cuivre Bent 1 | Stickers, your name and address, only 19, Tun aakile, vo, 160A, Lum ot, Yhiia., Pa A 555 aw ans BX USY It's really constant methods. point. or "the same as And if y Break away from Use modern Pearline saves at every i oe hia Leas good wit : = gins fer re
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers