——— Are You Using Allen's Foot-Ease It is the only cure for Swollm, Smart. a ired, Asbisz Burni Bweating Corns and Deaiom. "for Allen's oa a powder to be shaken into the oes. Sold all Dru Grocers and oe Btores, 2 Sample sent FREE. Ad- dress, Allen B. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. X, Love is the balloon th at lifts us heave nward and marrisge is the parachute that lets us slowly dow n to earth again. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No uty without it. C hacarets, Candy Cathop tio clean your blood and it Sead, by stirring up the lazy liver ai iriving all im- Ptities from the bod in to-day to ish pimples, boils, Wenn blackheads, and that aickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug: gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10¢, 25¢, G0¢. world upon trusts Atlas is sald to have he Id the his shoulders. T olay men organize and try to poe ket How's s This We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, F.J. Caexxy & Co, Props. Toledo, O, We, the undersigned. have known F. J. Che ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per- fectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga- tion made by thelr firm. WisTé TrUAXx, Wholesale Druggists, Tolede, 110, WALDING, KINSAN & MARVIN, Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act. ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system. Price, 5c. per bottle. Sold hd all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family fs Is are the best. Wholesale The man who is tion he occupies is for the pos for it not tno large usually too small Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag: netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No To Bac, the wonder-worlker, that mages weak men strong. All druggists, 50¢ or 81. Cure guaran. teed Dookles and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York they tiy simple. wha think perfe Some people perfect are in reality I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs by Piso's Cure for Consumption. Louisa LINpaMax, Bethany, Mo. Janunry 8 1884 INAse & man grown; a A small hoy will l make s man groan scolding wife wil Edueate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10¢,25¢. ILC.C.C fail, druggists refund monoy- No man would be conce ted it himself as others see him Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sve teething softens the gums, redu tion, aliays pain, cures wind coli Ex¢ use is a 0 cover negles To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10¢ or 25¢. UC. C. C. fall 10 cure, druggists refund money. The way some hi in positively av i av y ives talk to their husbands is aw fully positiv Some men work plish useless things. The more ho lie bets ou the ree S078 No-To-Eac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. We, 81. All druggista Al lie is willing always in a hurry, but the Liuth § wait. by Deeds We Do.”’ Decds, not aords, com! in battles of peace as well as in war. I is not what we say, but shat Hood's Sarsaparila does, that fells arch enemy of mankind — impure blood. Be sure to get only Hood's, because Sarsaparill WEE ETT Frightful. Mary Alden had lived all 3 years in the country, far removed from railroads, and when her father accept- her fif: Eds ¥ the great railroad corporation at and settled his family in a house gver- looking the switch yards her filled with terror. On the first ocea- sion of her crossing the yards. a train of cars was being dizconnected end distributed. To her horror, she heard a man at one end shout to an- other: ‘Never mind that jumper! can't walt, the head fainted, ———————— Just Like Them. ne Cut her in tvo, and throw end down here” Mary bit.” “That's unfortunate.” “Yes but that isn't the worst of it. Fhe Insists on cooking a lot."-—Philadelphia Bul- letin. frerrea TO M25. PINANAM NO. 93.384) : “Dear Mus. Pixgkuaxw—For some time I have thought of writing to you to let you know of the great benefit I have received i from the use of | Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegeta ble Compound. Soon after the | birth of my first : ' child, I com- menced to have spells with my spine. Every month I grew worse and at last became so bad that I found I was gradually losing my mind. “The doctors treated me for female | troubles, but I got no better. One doctor told me that I would be insane, | I was advised by a friend to give Lydia Mrs. Johnson Saved from \ Insanity by : Mrs. Pinkham trial, and before I had taken all of the | first bottle my neighbors noticed the | change in me. “1 have now taken five bottles and | eacnot find words suflicient to praise i, ! I advise every woman who is suffering | from any femalc weakness to give it a fair trial. I thank you for your good medicine. "—Mns. Gerreupe M. Joux- sox, Joxgspono, Texas, Mrs. Perking' Letter, “1 had female trouble of all kinds, had three doctors, but only grew worse, [ began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's | Wegetable Compound and Liver Pills pd used the Saoativg Wash, and ean- fiot praise your dies enough,” Erie Pro L, La REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Bubject: The Glories of Heaven—Christ's wa Attractiveness Painted In Glowing Col. ors-From Ivory Palaces to the Agony of the Crucifixion, (Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1680.) Wasmixarox, D, O.—In this discourse Dr, Talmage sets forth the glories of the world to come and the attractiveness of the Christ, who Spans the way; text, Psalms, xiv,, 8, “All Thy garments smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the ivory pal- aces." Among the grand adornments of the city of Paris Is the Church of Notre Dame, with great towers and elaborate rose windows and sculpturing of the last judgment, with the trumpeting angels and rising dead; its battlements of quatre foll; its sacristy, with ribbed cellinegs and statues of saints, But there was nothing io all that build. fog which more vividly appented to my plain republican tastes an the costly vestments which lay in oaken presses --robes that had been ombroldered with gold and been worn by Popes and archbishops on great occasions, There was a robe that had been worn by Pius VII. at the crowning of the first Napoleon. There wis also a vestment that had bean worn at the baptism of Napoleon 1I. As our guide oponed the oaken presses and brought out these vestments of fabulous cost and lifted them up the fragranvce of the pungent aro- maties in which they had been preserved filled the place with a sweetness that was almost oppressive. Nothing that had been done in stone more vividly fmpressed me than these things that had been done in cloth and embroidery and perfume. But to-day I open the drawer of this text, and I look upon the kingly robes of Christ, and as I Jit them, flashing with eternal jewels, the whole house is filled with the aroma of these garments, which “smell of myrrh and aloes and eassia out of the ivory pal- Koes, In my text the King steps forth, His robes rustle and blaze as He advances, His pomp and power and glory overmaster the Spectator. More brilliant is He than Queen Vashtl moving amid the Persian princes; than Marie Antoinette on the day when Louls XVI put upon her the nesklace of 800 diamonds; than Anne Boleyn the day when Henry VIII. welcomed her to his paiace—all beauty and all pomp forgotten perial glory, Klong of Zion, King of earth, King of heaven, Klag forever! garments not worn out, not dust be- draggled. but radiant and jeweled and re- dolent. It seems us if they heaven, The wardrobes from which they have been taken must have been sweet with clusters of eamphor Do you not inbale the odors? Aye, aye, out of the ivory palaces,” Your first robes of Christ are odorous wiih myrrh This was a bright leafed Abyssinian plant, It was trifolinted, high price. The first present that was ever given to Christ was a sprig of myrrh thrown on His infantile bed in Bethlehem, myrrh pressed into the cup of His eruei- The natives would take and bruise the tree, and then it would This gum was used for the purposes of merchandise. One plece of it no larger than a chestuut whelm a whole room with odors. It was put in closets, in chasts, {n drawers, ground beneath, nearit, Sowhen in my text I read that Christ's garments smell of myrrh I Imme of Jesus, Would that you all knew His sweetness! d turn from all other of his path in a frenzy of joy and clapped his bands and rushed through the streets because he bad found the solution of a problem, how will you leaping from the fountain of a Saviour's mercy and pardon, washed clean and made white as snow, when the question has besn “How can my soul be saved?” storm-lashed soul, let the of myrrh and aloes ivory palace.” Your second curiosity is to know why the odorous with aloes, Buffice it for you the world over, and when Christ they suggest to me the bitterness Baviour's sufferings. nights as Jesus lived through-—nights the desert? eoption as Jesus had? A bhosteiry the first, an unjust trial in oyer and terminer an- as there a space on His brow an Auaze where inch foot? Oh, long, deep, Aloes! Aloes! John leaned his head on Christ, but who did Christ lean on? Five thousand men fed by the Saviour; who fed Jesus? The bitter pligrimage! the leper and the naduitress; but who soothed Christ? He had a fit place peituse to be born nor to die, A poor babel A { poor lad! A poor young wan! Not so much as a taper to cheer His dying hotirs, Even the candle of the sun snuffed out, Was it not all aloes? Our sine, sorrows, Lereavements, losses and ail the agonies of earth and hell pleked up as io one cluster and squeezed into one cup, and that reased to His lips until the acrid, nauseat. ng, bitter draft was swaliowed with a dis. torted countenance and a shudder from Lead to foot and a gurgling strangulation, Aloes, aloes! Nothing but aloes. All this for Himself? All this to get the fame fu the world of being a martyr? All this ina spirit of stubbornness, because He did not Hikes Casar? No, no! "All this because He wanted to pluck me aod you from hell. Because Ho wanted to ralse me and you to heaven, Beeauss we were (ost and He wanted us found, Beeause we were blind, ‘and He wanted us to see, Because we | were serfs, and He wanted us manumitted, | Ob, yo In whose cup of life the saccharin has predominated: oh, yo who have had ' bright und sparkling beverages, how do you feel toward Him who in your stead and to purchase your disenthralimens, ! took the aloes, the unsavory aloes, the bitter alos? Your third curiosity {s to know wh these garments of Christ are odorous wih jeassia, This was a plant which grew in t India, and the adjoining islands, You do pot care to hear what kind of a flower it | or what kind of a stalk. It {s enough me to tell you that It was used medicinally, In that iand and In that age, | wherethey knew but little about pharmacy, cassia was used to arrest many forms of } disease, Ho, when In my text we find Christ coming wh garments that smell of cassia, | It suggests to mo the bealing and Sutagive power of the Bon of God, *On” od Lo ‘how you Dave n superfinous ars not sick why do he want a? Wo are atMietie, Our respiration Is pers fect. Our limbs are lithe, and on bright oool days we feel we could bound live a po ih hog to Sifter, my brother, from of you can be oS het Daaten *Beaith han [ am, and yet must sa 1 ha we are nll siok. have taken diagnosis of your ensn atid Baye ssa! | #1 tie best authorities on 1 bo subject, and A A SO A SAO OAS DH AS I have to toll you that you are “hall A wounds and bruises and putrelying sores which have not been bound up or mollified withwointment.” The marasmus of sin is on us—the palsy, the dropey, the leprosy, The man that is expiring to-night in the | next street--the allopathic pnd homeo. athie doctors have given him up apd his riends now standing around to take his last words—is no mare certainly dying as | to bis body than you and I are dying uniess | we have taken the medicine from God's apothecary, All the leaves of this Bible are only 50 many preseriptions from the Divine Physiclan, written, not in Latin, like the prescriptions of earthly physician: , but written in plain English, so that u! “man, though a fool, nead not err therein,” Thank God that the Saviour's garments smell of eassia! Suppose a man wera siek, and there was a phiai on his mantelpiece with medicine he knew would eure him, and he refused to take it, what would you say ol him? He 18 a sulcide, Aud what do you say of that man who, sick in sin, has the healing medicine of God's grace offered him and refuses to take it? If he dies, he Is a sui- cide. People talk as though God took a man and fod him out to darkness and death, as though He brought him up to the eliffs and then pushed him off. Oh, no! When a man is lost, it is not because God yushes him off; it is because he jumps off, on clden times a suleide was buried at the erossroads, and: the peopls were accus- tomed to throw stones upon his grave, Bo it seems to ma thera mav he at this time Anal who is destroyiog Lis soul, sud as though the angels of God were here to bury bim at the point where the roads of life and death cross each other, throwing upon the arave the broken Inw and a groat pile of misimproved privileges, so that those going by may look at the fearful mound and learn what a suleide it Is when an immortal soul, for which Jesus died, put itself out of the way. According to my text, He comes ‘out of the ivory palnces.” You know, or if you do not know I will tell you now, that some of the palaces of olden timo were adorned with ivory. Ahab and Solomon had their homes furnished with it, The tusks of African and Asiatic elephants were twisted into all manner of shapes, and there wera stairs of ivory, and chairs of fvory, and tables of ivory, and floors of {vory, and pillars of ivory, and windows of ivory, and fountains that dropped into basins of ivory, and rooms that had cellings of ivory. Ob, white and overmasteriog beau ty! Green tree branches sweopiog the white curbs, Tapestry trailing the SaOWE floors, Brackets of Jight flashing on the lustrous surroundings. Silvery mate ripe pilog on the beach of the are The mera thought of it almost stuns o Y brain, say: “Oh, if I could only have floors! If 1 could have myself in such a chalr! If I rd the drip and dash of those u shall bave something bet- ter than that if you only let Curist intro. duce you. From that piace He came, and to that place He proposes to trans pe you, “garments smell of myrrh and al and cassia out of the ivory palaces.” W bat The Tuileries of fthe Eng. thrown could have bea the French, the Windsor Castle « lish, the Spanish Albambra, the Hs " ngeons compared with ft! Not so many casties on either side the pssian Rhine as on both sides of the river of God One for the sogels, bright, winged, fire eyed, tea tf ot r the mart with under the altar: one of His palace the | eit ir tha | ous for vou, ye, food red robes from , the steps erown of the church miiit singers, who lead the 144 000; ransomed from sin: one for me, plucked bh, the ivory palaces! To-day 1t seems to me as if windows of those palaces were Hlumined for some climbing f 3 one | fie the stairs of ivory and wa'k in Roors o ivory, somo whom we kuew joved earth. Yes, 1 know father and mother, not sighty-two § they us, but blithe and young as when oo And there are br than when we fare leit their merrier cough gone, Tha cancer cored, erysipeias healed, The heart break Oh, how fair they are in the Ivory pala And your dear little obildren tha out from you-O irist did not jet o them drop He lifted th em. not wrench one of them from ¥ they wont as from one they love to whom they loved better should take your little ehlid and p «oft face acalnst my rough cheek keap it a little while, but when vo mother, came along, It would stro go with you. And #0 you sioo i your dying ehild when Josas the room, and the little on That is all. Your Christian i go down into the dust and the gravel and the m ud. Though It rained all that foneral doy, and the water eame up to the wheel's hab as yo dr out to the cemetery, it made no difference to them, for they stepped from the home hers the home there, righit into the ivory palaces. All is well with them. All 0a ono EET o-oo ow BW Q Ya fo It is not a dead welgh® that vou it when you carry a Christisg out, Jesus makes and “Pat her down here very gontiy. Put that head whieh will never ache again ofi this plilow of hallelujahs. Send up word that the procession Is somiog. Ring the bells. Ring! Open your gates, ye ivory palaces!” And so your loved ones are there. They are just as certainly there, having died in Christ, as that you are here, Indeed, there Is one dbing ia heaven they have not got, They want it. What Is it? Your company. Bat, oh, my brother, un- less you change your tack you cannot roannh that harhas Yon might aswell take that direction to reach Toronto, as to go on in the way some of you are going, and et expect 10 reach the ivory palaces, four loved ones are looking out of the windows of heaven now, and yst you seem to turn your back upon them, When I think of that place and think of my entering it, I feel awkward, 1 feel as sometimes when I have been exposed to the weather, aud my shoes Lave been be. mired, and my cont is soiled, and my hair is dishevelad, and I stop In front of some fine residences where I have an errand, I feel not fit to go fn as I am and sit among the guests. So some of us {eel about heaven, We need to be washed; we nead to bs rehabilitated before we go into the fvory places, Eternal God, let the surges of Thy pardoning mersy roll over us. I want not only to wash my hands and my feet; but, like some skilled diver, standing onthe pler head, who leaps into the wave and comes up at a far distant point from where he went in, so I want to go down, and so I want to coma up, 0 Jesus, wash mein the waves of Thy salvation! Aud here I ask you to solve a mystery that has been oppressing me for thirty years, I have been asking It of doctors of divinity who have been studyiag theology nif on century, and they bave given me no satisfactory answer. 1 have turned over all the books in my library, but got no solution to the question, and to-day I come and ask you for an explanation. By what logis was Christ Induced to exchangs the ivory palaces of heaven for the cruel. fixion agonies of earth? I shall take the first thousand million years in heaven to study out that problem; mean while and now taking it as the tenderecst, mightiest of all facts that Christ did come, that He came with spikes in His feet, came with thorns (n His brow, came with spears in His heart, to save you and to save me, “God go loved the world that He gave His only ton Son that whanouvet foveth in Him should n Beriah t have eoverinst 0, Custat a all one souls with go fom rain mith the. Matvetting shou. of Tuy n wit] o gtacel Ride Jitoug to-da; yee an an) Santa om cassia out of the he frory CHINESE FOUNDRIES A —— Frimitive Methods Which Will Iotorest the Craft in Amerios, The primitive methods employed by the Chinese In their native foundries are set forth in an interesting form io a description of an jron foundry ut Kaun-Kiao (Kan-Kok) by a writer to the Celestial Empire, “The furnace” he says, “was very simple in construc- tion, being made of clay in three sec- tions. The lowermost was what might be called the crucible, and was the re- ceptacie for the molten metal, being made a cuble foot in capacity. The middle section was a ring or the same diameter the lower section, and about eight inches in Ey In this was a hole to receive the blast pipe, the blast being supplied by a native ‘box’ bellows of the usual type. The upper section was another ring about a foot higher. 1 was not fortunate enough,” he continues, “to see the putting together of the furnace; when I saw it, the operation was begun, and 4 man was piling cn of the charge scrap, cast iron and coke One man wag then pumping the blast. 1 waited till I saw the yellow flame be- gin to show above the piled up iron, which gradually sank down as that below melted Hy and by two men pumped the blast: As the process went on 4 still stronger blast needed, so a third man belped £t ..0 bellows, and the pumping grew fast and furious, while one workman, wear- id broad brimmed straw hat to protect hig head and face from the shower of sparks, stirred the glowing mass with an iron rod. In due time the melting was finished. the molten iron having fallen through to the tom section of the The onnected B64 as the last Was ing an o bos- furnace, blast was stopped, the an the the furnace The surface of the skimmed of its slag, it rice husk a: the bellows disc upper and middle taken off molten WAS hes ¥ * tions oi iald aside iron and being well cove This pro- who next the intense i ered with face of handle it from that would otherwise ated from the molten iron uty was arms tected the had heat ital man to have radi- This man's to keep the crucible in his literally hugging himself and to fill the molds previously ar- ranged around in is he was as- sisted by 2a woman who raked the Was it to th back to run this occasion plowshares were shes w Un here the iron result of the operation, the ous charge twenty. following this who took the molds ntents, No pty than the repairing their in. black ready casting Upon inquiry 1 hat about fifty cattle (one iron and constituted one and that ted In a day's a ing sufficiant to casi: about mmediately E another, Bir € ds on workmen set abo ner surface with a another was told t paste, Fom f “4 # nl 1 py % catile equals 3 pound uel urnace, effe i853 of wer ties the ily cat harge for four were I — co — Got to De something. augh! he is of ze can louse, hear-r-r me mash hees hat!” “No, Hear! io eet, Zey vill send you to ge years!” “Ah zen |] smash a hat zat ees like boas!” Clove. land Plain Dealer. Consistent. gamblers “How so? are all nhia North lat allie 0 not for (Our-r-r vill “Bill the always “His queens of hearts” up weddin -Phil- fy date” rile American ger’s Hair Vigor What does it do? It causes the oil glands inthe skin to become more active, making the hair soft and glossy, precisely ss nature intended. Itcleanses the scalp from dandruff and thus removes one of the great causes of baldness. It makes a better circu- lation in the scalp and stops the hair from coming ow. It Prevents and Ii Cures Baldness Ayer's Hair Vigor will surely make hair grow on bald heads, provided only there is any life remain- ing in the hair bulbs. It restores color to gray or white hair. It does not do this in a moment, as will a hair dye; but ina short time the gray color of age gradually disap- pears and the darker color of youth takes its place. ould you like a copy of our book on the Hair and Bp It is free. wed fa pibag ' in dress often comes as the clothing. The garment. with Ivory vor of deli stand MY BEE BY lor that will COPY FREE : AWESOME TREES. How the Glants of the Yosemite pressed a Traveler. We made a side trip big trees 3 the Mariposa group, which are about from the orrespondent of patch Tm- | the to hotel, says a Pittsburg Dis- of these trees the If the smallest planted anywhere in Pennsyl- iroads would run excur- i011 and make money, The 8 in this grove are so large that it takes a good while to fully appreciate ihe facts about the size of the biggest of them. The “Grizzly Giant” is 34 feet through at the base and over 100 feet high This tree would overtop the gEpires on the Pittsburg Cathedral by 100 feet. The trunk of this tree 100 feet clear to the first limb, in 20 feet in circumference. Many oth trees here are very nearly as large a: this one, and there are 400 in the grove Through several tunnels have been cut and a four-horse stage can go through these tunnels on the run and never graze a hub. You get an approach to an adequate idea of their size by walk- ing off 100 yards or go while the stage is standing at the foot of a tree and glancing from top to bottom, keeping the stage In mind as a means of com- parison The stage and the horses look like the little tin outfit that Santa Claus brought you when you were a good little boy. These trees are no ionger to be called the largest in the world, however. A species of sucalyp- tus has been found in Australia as large or larger. Emerson warns us against the use of the superiative but when you are in this region of the globe you can’t get along without a liberal use of it. He himself gays of Yosemite: "It is the only spot I have ever found that came up to the brag.’ And as I stood in the big tree grove 1 remembered that some one called Em. erson himself “the Sequoia of the bhu- man race.” tren ire over f Hind WiCa Ss ss sn III SSL, A Comedy of Errors. There was an accident on a Portland street the other day, and this is how i! happened: A tramp walking up the street saw a benevolent-looking wheel: man riding down, and started to head him off. Just then a dog on the same side of the street noticed a eat on the opposite side and made for it. The dog didn't notice the tramp, and the wheelman took no account of the dog The result was that the dog went he- tween the legs of the tramp and rolled that Individual over on his back. The wheelman struck dog and tramp and took a header over them. The wheel man struck frantically at the dog-and his blow landed on the nose of the tramp, while the dog made an assault on the tramp, and, missing him, made life exciting for the wheelman, A! last they untangled themselves and the tramp and the wheelman trailed bad language one up and the other down the street, while the dog stood and growled at both. Meanwhile the cat emerged from a hole in the lumber pile where she bad taken refuge and watched the three with evident inter est. Lewiston Journal, on of 1 GAMELE CO CAMTINRATS EST] — “RR ont. for 156 uns and address on a postal NEW HAVEN, CONN, A Parisian Necessity. “There is a great deal ment in Paris.” said one French offi- cial. “Yes” said other, “And discontent’ “Pout there isn't nearly much there would bably were nothing fo pet ex¢ Washington Star of excite the calmly. But discontent be if ited tiess BE as oro ¥ there over.’ sco What Gives Him Pause. Confidential Friend-—1f you want lo be States senator, you know, have only 10 say the word. Em inent Public Functionary—1 know, but 1 suspect this is to be a shrewd move- ment on the part of the people and a few of my pol itical enemies get me it of the job I'm holding now.” United you to Lazy Liver “I have troubled a great deal with a torpid liver, which produces constips- tion. 1 found CASCARETS to be all you claim for them. and secured such relief the Brat trial, that I purchased another supply sud was com- pletely cured | shall only be 100 glad lo ree ommend Cuncarels Vamevet we opportunity is presented.” J. NiTH 2020 Susquebanna Ave. Pailaceiphis, Pa. Pleasant, Bulatabip, Pot « Taste Good Good, Never Sioken hens. Grive. ie. Teo. oe «s CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chiongs, Wontroal, Sow York, 500 NO-TO-BAC 550i, Lo evaarisiil ane DONT Tere iin voe ¥osier, tus salt rheum. infants’ sere head, and all jtching skin diseases. Tetterine cures when many other remedies only make you TCH! Dr. M. LL. Felder. Eclectic, Ala. »¥ys: “1 never prescribe anything but Tetterine for eczema and other skin eruptions.” Sold wv Druggists or by mall for J0c. tn stamps by J Shupirine, Savannah, Ga ronived. Bend ow Teste of Wedioiue, 1 Ares Ba, Pristeintis. Pa. JCADERYS for Bayes a Yomg fon tA gs Rar tres, CW, TUAR Media. 1s what Uncle Sam uses, a mA DROPSY x LY SlscovIt Rr Free. Or BN GARE BORE, Bax ©,