Evidence of a Wonderful Age, A steamer that sailed from New York this week for a 14,000-mile excursion in the Orient carried, among others, 75 clergymen, 100 Bible students, 75 bank clerks, and 179 spinsters, young and not $0 young, It is a wonderful age, and we expect to live to go to church pic- nics in Hawaii and Kaffirland. The Egg and the Lawyer. “1 have one great advantage vou,” said the egg to the lawyer. “I don’t suppose you know when you are beat,” said the follower of Coke. “Pooh!” said the egg. “And I know when I'm addled, too.” And there the subject dronped. over Deafness Cannot Le Cured bY local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear, There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies, Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in- flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper- feet hearing, and when it is entirely elosed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam- mation can be taken out and this tube re- stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine eases out of ten are caused by catarrh which {s nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surface, We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Cir. cularssent free, F.J.Cnexey & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 750. Hall's Family Pills are the best, Japan now possesses the heaviest and finest battleship afloat, the Mikasa, of 15,200 tons displacement, Best For the Bowels. No matter what ails you, headache to a can- cer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right, Cascaners help nature, cure You without a gripe or pain, produce easy uatural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Casocarers Candy Cathartio, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imjtations, A girl of sixteen is apt to think her soul is yearning for something when what really is the matter with her is that she’s hungry. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in the Children's Home, in New York. Cure Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disor- ders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 80,000 testimonials, At all druggists, 25¢c. Sample mailed Fas. Address Allen 8, Olmstead, LeRoy, N. Y. . During a busy time the twenty leading hotels in London accommodate about 18,400 guests every night, Purxan's FApELEss Dye produces the fast- est and brightest colors of any known dye stuff. Sold by all druggists, Algeria the native population has al- doubled in less than fifty years, rising 2,307,000 in 1858 to 4,071,000. In most from FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ness after first day's use of Dr, Kline's Great NerveRestorer.#2trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. R.H. Krixe, Ltd. 991 Arch St. Phila., Pa. Out of twenty blind people eleven are men, nine women. Ohio Knows Tetterine, W. C. McCall, Granville, O., writes: “I find your Tetterine to be a marvelously good thing for skin diseases.” 50c. a box from J. T.Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga., if your drug- gist don't keep it. Lord Breadalbane is the owner of the finest vine in Europe. Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs. — Wa, O. Expvsrey, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900, Conquer the conquerable and submit to the inevitable. *“1 had a terrible cold and could hardly breathe. 1 then tried Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im- mediate relief.’ W. C. Layton, Sidell, Ill. How will your cough be tonight? Worse, prob- ably. For it’s first a cold, then a cough, then bron- chitis or pneumonia, and at last consumption. Coughs always tend downward. Stop this downward tendency by taking Ayer’s Cherry Pec- toral. Three sizes: 25¢c., 50c.,’51. Al druggists. Consult your doctor. If he says take it, then do as he says. If he tells you not to take It, then don't take it. He knows. Leave it with him. We are willing. J.C. AYER CO, Lowell, Mass. CAUTION? The genuine | | i | MAN HAS A LION TO FIGHT| Dr. Talmage Says When Contending Agalast An Evil Habit You Stand in a Circle of Sympathy. Clouds of Witnesses Blessed Are They Whe Put Their Trust in Him.’ Wasminaron, D. C~This discourse of Dr. Talmage is full of inspiring thoughts for those who find life a struggle, and shows that we have many celestial sym- pathizers; texts, Hebrews xii, 1, “Seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses;” 1 Corinthians xv, 32, “I have fought with beasts at Ephesus.” Crossing the Alps by the Mont Cenis pass or through t we Mont Cenis tunnel, na, Italy, and in a few minutes begin ex- amining one of the grandest ruins of the world, the Amphitheatre. The whole building sweeps around you in a circle, You stand in the arena where the combat was once fought or the race run, and on til you count forty elevations or galleries, as I shall see fit to call them, in which sat the Senators, the kings and the 25,000 ex- cited spectators. At the sides of the arena and under the galleries are the cages in which the lions and tigers are kept with- out food until, frenzied with hunger and th.rst, they are let out upon some poor victim, who, with his sword and alone, is condemned to meet them. I think that Paul himself once stood in such a place, and that it was not only figuratively, but literally, that he had “fought with beasts at Ephesus.” The gala day has come. From all the world the people are pouring into Verona, Men, women and children, orators and Senators, great men and small, thousands upon thousands come, until the first gal lery is full, and the second, the third, the fourth, the fifth—all the way up to the twentieth, all the way up to the thirtieth, all the way up to the fortieth, Every place is filled. Immensity of audience sweeping the great circle. The time for the contest has come. A Roman official leads forth the victim into the arena. let him get his sword with firm grip into his right hand. The 25000 git breathlessly watch- ing. I hear the door at the mide of the arena creak open, Out plunges the half starved lion, his tongue athirst for blood, Silence, to their he rushes against the of the combatant Da you know how strong a stroke a man will strike when his life depends upon the first thrust of his blade? The wild beast, lame and bleeding, slinks back toward the side of the arena; then rallying his wasted strength he comes up with fiercer eye and more terrible roar than ever, only to be driven back with a fatal wound, while the combatant comes in with stroke after stroke until the monster dead at his feet, and the 25.000 clap their hands and utter a shout that makes the city tremble. Sometimes the audience came to see a rege; sometimes to see gladiators fight each pier, until the people, compassionate for oh fallen, turned their thumbs up as an vanquished be gpared, and combat was with wild 108 feet 18 To one of the Roman amphitheatrical audiences of 100.000 Paul refers when he says, “We are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses.” The direct reference in the last passage is made to a race; but elsewhere having discussed that, I take now Paul's favorite idea of the Christian life as a combat The fact is that every Christian man has a lion to fight. Yours is a bad temper. The gates of the arena have been opened, and this tiger has come out to destroy your soul. It has lacerated you with many a wound. You have been thrown by it time and again, but in the strength of God you have arisen to drive it back. I verily be lieve you will conquer. 1 think that the temptation is getting weaker and weaker You have given it #0 many wounds that the prospect is that it will die, and you shall be victor, through Christ. Courage, brother! Do not the sands of the grena drink the blood of yaur soul! Your lion is the passion for strong drink. You may have contended against it for twenty years, but jt is strong of body and thirsty of tongue. You have tried to fight it back with broken bottle or empty flask. Nav, that is not the weapon one horrible roar he will eeize ti} throat lin from Take this sharp and keen up and get rom (God's armory t. With that thou may- est drive him back and conquer! But when every man and woman has a lon to fight? If there be one here who bas no besetting him speak out, for him have I offended. If you have not fought the lion, it is becanse have the lion eat you up, This very moment Lhe contest gocs on The Trajan celebration, where 10.000 gladiators fought and 11,000 wild beasts were alain, was not so terrific a struggle as that whichat thiamoment goes on in many a soul. The combat was for the life of the body; this is for the life of the soul. That was with wild beasts from the jungle; this is with the roaring lion of hell. Men think, when they contend against an evil habit, that they have to fight it all alone. No! They stand in the centre of an immense circle of sympathy. Paul had been reciting the names of Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Rarah, Isase, Joseph, Gideon and Barak and then says, “Being compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses.” Before I get through I will show vou that you fight in an arena, around which circle, in galleries above each other, all the kindling eyes and all the sympathetic hearts of the ages, and at every victory gained there comes down the thundering applause of a great multitude that no man can number. ‘Being compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses.” On the first elevation of the ancient am- phitheatre, on the day of a celebration, sat Tiberius or Augustus or the reigning king. So in the great arena of spectators that watch our struggles and in the first divine gallery, as I shall eall it, sits our King, one Jesus. On Hie head are many crowns, The Roman emperor got his lace by cold blooded conquests, but our ioe hath come to His place by the bro ken hearts healed and the tears wi away and the souls redeemed. The Ro. man emperor sat, with folded arms, indif- ferent as to whether the swordsman or the lion beat, but our King’s sympathies are all with us-—nay, unheard of conde: scension! I see Him come down from the gallery into the arena to help us in the fight, shouting until all up and down His voice is heard: “Fear not! 1 will help thee! I will strengthen thee by the right band of My power!” They gave to the men in the arena in the olden time food to thicken their blood, #0 that it would flow slowly and that for a Jonger time the people might gloat over the scene. But our King has no pleasure in our wounds, for we are bone of His bone, flesh of Hie Tesh, blood of His blood. In all the a of our heart The Man Shguish of bore a part, Once in the ancient amphitheatre a lion with ome paw caught the combatant’s sword and with his other paw caught his shield. The man took his knife from his rdle and slew the beast, king, sit gallery, said: “That was n must be slain by a sword.’ were tu out, and the r a Aa cas meanness. ng cane Ay brother, He will see that we ve fair play. He will forbid the rushing people let and rend thee i reach the weapon it | Why speci) gin let let out of more lions than we can meet. He will not suffer us to be tempted above that we are able. Thank God! The King is in the gallery! His eyes are on us. His heart is with us. His hand will deliver us. “Blessed are they who put their trust in Him.” I look again and I see the gallery of the martyrs. Who is that? Hugh Latimer, sure enough! He would not apologize for the truth he preached, and so he died, the night before swinging from the bedpost in perfect glee at the thought of emancipa- tion. Who is that army of 66667 They are the Theban legion who died for the faith. Here is a larger host in magnificent array, 884,000, who perished for Christ in the persecutions of Diocletian. Yonder is a family group, Felicitas, of Rome, and her children, While they were dying for the faith she stood encouraging them. One son was whipped to death by thorns; an- other was flung from a rock; another was beheaded. At last the mother became a martyr. There they are together, a family group in heaven! Yonder 1&8 John Brad- ford, who said in the fire, “We shall have a merry supper with the Lord to-night!” Yonder is Henry Voes, who exclaimed as he died, “If 1 had ten heads, they should all fall off for Christ!” The great throng of the martyrs! They had hot lead poured down their throats; horses were fastened to their hands and other horses to their feet, and thus they were pulled apart; they had their tongues pulled out by red- hot pincers; they were sewed up in the skins of amimals and then thrown to the dogs; they were daubed with combustibles and set on fire! If all the martyrs’ stakes that have been kindled could be set at proper distances they would make the mid- night all the world over bright as noon- day! And now they sit yonder in the mar- tyrs’ gallery. For them the fires of persecution have gone out; the swords are sheathed and the mob hushed, Now they watch us with an all obsprving sympathy. They know all the pain, ail the hardship, all the anguish, all the injustice, all the privation. They cannot keep still. They ery: “Courage! The fire will not consume; the floods can- not drown; the lions cannot devour. Cour- age down there in the arena!” What? Are they all looking? This hour we answer back the salutation they give and ery, “Hail, sons and daughters of the fire!” I look again and I see another gallery— that of eminent Christians. What strikes me strangely is the mixing in companion- ship of those who on earth could not agree. There is Albert Barnes and around him the presbytery who tried him for hetero- doxy! Yonder are Lyman Beecher and the church court that denounced him! Stranger than all, there are John Calvin and James Arminius! Who would have thought that they would sit so lovingly to- gether? There are George Whitefield and the ministers who would not let him come him a fanatic. ers Toplady, Montgomery, Charles Wes- ley, Isaac Watts and Mrs. Sigourney. heaven had had no music before they went up, they would have started the singing, Aud there the band of missionaries— av and John Scudder, of India saved; and David Brainerd, of the aborigines geiized; and Mrs. Adoniram whose prayers for Burma took beaven by violence! Al these Christians are locking into the arena. Our struggle is nothing to heirs! Do we in Christ's cause from the cold? They walked Greenland's mountains. Do we suffer from the heat? They sweltercd in tropics. Do we get fatigued? They fainted, with none to care for them but cannibals. Are we per. secuted? They were anathematized., And as they look from their gallery and see us falter in the presence of the lions I seem fey COMMERCIAL REVIEW, Genera! Trade Conditions, R. G. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of trade says: : “All the Atlantic coast business con tinues temporarily checked hy the storm, ind some interior points are suffering from unfavorable weather, but consump tive demands give no evidence of abate ment. Prices of perishable goods vanced sharply, and the whole range staple commodities tended upward “Jobbing trade in spring lines of wear ad aa of ing apparel is of ample proportions, and ull heavy hardware and products of iron feel the pressure in that industry “Prices of pig iron have made decided advances, despite the opposition of lead Ing interests Railway supplies and tructural material are still the most cagerly sought of finished steel prod acts. Cotton added a small fraction to its price and ruled quiet during the week it the highest position of the crop year. thus far reported for February ARR gated $6,607 881, of which $3,404,627 were in manufacturing, $2802,142 in trading, and $401,112 in other commercial lines "Failures for the week number 250 in the United States, against 253 last year, and 31 in Canada, against 30 last year.” i anada, LATEST QUOTATIONS. Flous st Patent, $400; H Extra, $4.40; Minnesota Bakers 3 Grade $3.25 3 New York No 2. BOaRGL Ad 2, Br 2a dvi evies y DAILIm No sally York 6% Corn—New ES | “ \ delphia No. 2, 2, 04 Cats New Yi No delphia No. 2, 50%4« $0849 2¢ Green I Western Ma packed, wr i ii York, bage—New Y $16.00a18.00 ¢ 1 TK reset russ assorted i HNestic, do, Danish, per ton, $22 124.00. Larrots joagsc; do, per flower—Florid Celery ‘ ox) berries A $1.580a4.00 box, fancy, ket, $1.00a1 1.30 do £: 2541. fling vels, per NATIVE Florida iit o:d hymn, only a little changed: Must you be carried to the skies On flowery beds of ease While others fought to win the prize Or sailed through bloody seas? Topiady shouts in his old hymn: Your harps, ye trembling saints, Down from the willows take; Loud to the praise of love divine Bid every string awake Vhile Charles Wesley, the Methodist, reaks forth in words a little varied: A charge to keep you have, A God to glonfy, never dying soul to save And fit it for the sky! I look again and I see the gallery of our departs i Many those in the other galleries we have heard of, but these we wow familiar their faces! They A of Ion, company. Have the ¥ for. fathers and mothers be road of life. Are they ha comes of us? And with stolid FORE remember the remember the agony farewell, Though years in heaven, they know our faces. They re- member our e They speak names. They watch this fight for heaven. Nay, I sce them rise up and lean over and wave before us their recognition gnd en couragement. That gallery is not They are keeping places for us. After we have slain the lion they expect the King to call us, saying, “Come up higher!" feirae 3 lonk of the ast ITTOWSE > > Provisions rib sid clear on tiptoe, reaching up my right hand to clasp theirs in rapturous while their volees come ringing down from the gallery, erying, “Be thou faithful unto death, and you shall have a crown!” But here | pause, overwhelmed with the majesty and the joy of the scene! Gallery of the King! Gallery of angels! Gallery of prophets and apostles! Gallery of mar tyrs! Gallery of saints! Gallery of friends and kindred! O majestic circles of light and love! Throngs, throngs, throngs! How shall we stand the gaze of the uni verse? Myriads of eyes beaming on ual Myriads of hearts beating in sympathy for us! How shall we ever dare to sin again? How shall we ever become discouraged again? How shall we ever feel lonely again? With Ged for us and angels for us and prophets and apostles for us and the great souls of the ages for us and our glo rified kindred for us—shall we give up the fight and die? No, Son of God, who didst die to save us! No, ye Angels, whose wings are spread forth to shelter us! No, ye prophets and apostles, whose warnings startle us! No, ye loved ones, whose arms are outstretched to receive us! No; we will never surrender! Bure I must fight if T would Be farthinl to my Loud FiBny And bear the cross, endure the pain, Supported by Thy word. Thy saints in all this glorious war Shall conquer though they die; They see the triumph from afar And seize it with their eye. When that illustrious day shall ries Th Fine Armies Shing. © skis n of vi oy The glory shall be Thine. ait ears shall we die in the ators n our 8 in Through Christ we ma ay? A goldlier dying in the hospi. in 1 the la skin here a pillow and shouted “Here!” “Oh, 1 call of heaven, and I was on to my name!” 1 this battle of ed ed im ipa an ven Jreaking upon our souls, in “ ere, (Copyright, 108, L. Kiopsch,) hrea st hams, 83 vased if awe: Virg Western, West dozen, ajo. CERES, : dozen 20¢ ; fer cozen 1a “irginiin and Rina ang i hern 1 QozIcn, ncaa per doz ck Jaz Dressed Poultry—Chickens young, per Ib, —a13c; do, mixed. young and old, do, 11a12: do, poor to fair, do, 1oat1c. Turkeys, choice, small hens, per Ib, 16a17¢; do. mixed and big gobblers, do, 13a15¢c. Ducks, choice, fat, per Ib, 13a15¢. Geese, choice nearby, fat. per b, 12a13¢; Capons, 7 to B Ibs weight, per 1b, 15a16c;: do, smaller, per Ib, 14a 15¢: do, slips, do. 11212 Cheese—New Cheese, large, Go Ibs, 11l4c to 1134¢c; do. flats, 37 Ibs. 11%4a 114 picnics, 23 Ibs, 11%4c to 1134c Hives—~Heavy steers, association and salters, late kill, 60 Ibs. and up, close se- lection, 10at1c; cows and light steers, Sage. Jressed Hogs— Western Maryland and Pennsylvania lightweights, 7%a7¥c per er Ib; Virginia and Southern Maryland, best stock, 714 per 1h; medium hogs, 64 aye, and heavyweights irregular at from 5 to 6%c per Ib. Old boars less—sasiie. K mall, Live Stock. Chicago. — Cattle — Receipts, 39.000 head ; steady, good to prime steers, $6.50 47.20; poor to medium, $4.00a4 80; stock- ers and feeders, $5.50a580; calves, $2.50 a6.55; Texas-fed steers, $4.50a5.55. Hogs Receipts, 2.000 head; market active and sc higher ; mixed and butchers, $5.00 26.40; good to choice heavy, $6.25a6.45; light, $580a6.00. Sheep—Receipts. 7.000 head; sheep steady: lambs weak and { lower; good to choice wethers, $4.735a $5.25; fair to choice mixed, $385a4.60; native lambs, $3758650; Western lambs, -$5.25a6.50. LABOR AND INDUSTRY Toronto letter carriers have demanded Fhe Uni The United Mine Workers spent $300, 000 in strikes last year, Toronto stenographers and bookkeep- ers will be organized, The Kansas Supreme Court has sus. tained the eight-hour labor law. Railway machinists are making ready for a general demand for thg nine-hour CRT NINNRVRPRRNRRNIPP PROP OPINION 000 Sees evecseneenee day, i Pittsburg machinists donated $300 tc help their striking fellow-workmen at San Francisco. He Mad a "Meter Penter.” “This,” said a trampy-looking indi- is an ordinary magnetic coil with a screw base to fasten to an electric light socket, thus So saying he adjusted it deftly in place on an electric lamp and looked around for further encoragement. “You now bring the coil into the mag field the meter, thus,” and he from the place the hand “and you will observe that the the meter turn backward each time in their fight That just what they doing, and they were buzzing at a tremendous speed at that “When 1 began on your meter,” said the electrical tramp, “you were in debt to the company for about $16. Inside of five minutes the company will be owing you money. Price two-fifty. No? Some what surprised at you. I have been in twenty places today and this is the first one where 1 haven't made a sale.” Of oa around ; hands of Were Between Whiff A philosopher is a man without feel- ings and without regard for the feelings of others. An idealist is like a baby crying for the moon, but it is noticed that a large, round biscuit is generally an acceptable substitute, A maker of epigrams is one who seeks to clothe the wit of others in his own language. The result is sometimes called original. Seware of the man who prides on his tact and of the woman wi she is logical. The former is dishonest and the latter never employs logic any good end. A cynic is a man t since he sneers at things as are ithout helping to make them as they ld be yc ' for without Ww thi tan ilv a arn wie wife ually a man whose wile hose best friend is nded, whereas careless ‘ tan risk giving cigar.—Smart Set. $41 $115 1300 r Not to His Advantage. Skinner, crowded bn “these cars ‘replied hardly for vou. man think worth Jacobs Qil 0000000000000 0000000000000000008 RE words familiar throughout the civilized world, words that stand wr all that is pure and effective in medicine No power on earth has been able to bar its progress, because it did ite pointed work In every clime it has worked pain Its cures proached the mis Its int sic value is the secret success—of its world-wide popul of its wonderful sale—of its con stant growth Its virtues are stamped on the heart of the onee crippled and torture everywhere—never to be effaced while life lasts Such in brief is ST. JACOBS OIL the pain killing marvel of the century PENNE ORONN0NEOETINENNOENIORORE IT ACTS LIKE MAGIC, CONQUERS PAIN. SEPP PR PRP NONIITNNGONO GORI OOOORTS a 7 HL ap and with every people wonders in alleviatin have ap » removes from the soil large quantities of Potash. The fertilizer ap- plied, must furnish enough Potash, or the land will lose its pro- ducing power, Read carefully our books on crops—sent Sree. GERMAN KALI WORKS, $3 Nassau St, New York, — ITIO THE BRST ol EB Soa OAT SLRVICE RRs N RRs RRR et RRRIR tele eeeeRORORRES i MRS. J. E. O'DONNELL Was Sick Fight Years with Female Trouble and Finally Cared by Lydia E. Pinkham's Yegetable Compound. “Dean Mas. Pisgnasm:—]1 have sever in my life given a testimonial before, but you have done so much for i me that I feel called upon to give you this unsolicited acknowledgement of MRS. JENNIE F. ODONNELL, President of Oakland Woman's Riding Club, the wonderful curative value of Lydian E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Come pound. For eight years | had femals trouble, falling of the womb and other complications. During that time] was more or less of an invalid and not much rood for amything, until ope day I Pood a book im my hall telling of the cures you could perform. I became interested ; I bought a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Come pound and was helped; I continued its use and in sevén months was cured, and since that time 1 have had perfect health. Thanks, dear Mrs. Pinkham again, for the heslth I now enjoy.” — Mrs. Jexwxie O'DoxyeLL, 278 East 3ist 8t., Chicago, Ill. — #6000 forfeit if above testimonial is mot genuine, Women suffering from any form of female ills can be cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta~ ble Compound. That's sure. Mrs. Pinkham advises sick wos men free. Address, Lynn, Mass. Beardicss Bariefd fs prodipaily protic * baa fag is IW for Mi Oriesas Os, Few York bushels por acre. Does wet everywhere. Theat pare. 20th Century Oats. eile oF seodvoe grest * Ag mec— Three Earea Corn. #5 10 26 bus, per sore, be exirenely profisabie wt pres opt prices of ive. Balinese spi (rol une vvery where sm Marve! Wheat Fielded iu U0 Plates leet Your ever 40 bur. per neve. We gine hace be seit nied Macon. reniW heat. which vicided on out armed bus. Jer sore Lf pore smn: Speitx. Orratest soreni fool on onrihB80 bas grails sod 4 ens = ifoont hay pov sore. That pars — Victoria Rape maker i posite 1s grow bags, cheep asd ontiie si» oost of bel les ib Narvel ously prelific does we everywhere. That pays. es— Bromus inermis. Bou wonderful grees of the reutury. Proadeces § sone of Bay sad jote snd ioe of urage hesidme per more, ews wherever a ie fond. Salzer’s seed ie warranted. Theat pars. rec $10.00 for 10c. We wish you to try our great Tarte sends benee wlfer 0 send 10 farm seed samples roulaining Thousand Headed Kaw, Toouinie. Maps, In, Speiin, sae (fully wend $10.0 so get 8 rsarth togeiber wiih Pur grea catebeg. for Te postage SALZER'S MAGIC CRUSHED SHELLS. ton earth, Sell ot $1.88 per 200 1b tag: $5.75 for B60 Tbe. $5.50 for 1.000 Ibe EMPIRE, BROADWAY AND 63d ST., N. Y. CITY. ABSOLUTELY FF MODERATE FIREPROOF. RATES. From Grand Osntral Btation take oars marke] Broadway snd "th Ave. Seven manutes to Empire, On crossing any of the ferries, take the Mh Avenne Yievated Rall way to Mth 81, fromm which it is one winnte's walk to hotel ol Bon restaurant is noted for ity en ng. dent service and moderate price, Within ten minutes of snusement and shopping ontres. All cars - the Empire. Send to Empire for descriptive Booklets MORTINER 3 RELLY, Senne. Lead the World. Are You Sick? Send your name and P. 0. address to The R. B. Wills Medicine Co., Hagerstown, Md, SOPERION CLOVER, La Crosse Prime win tt 100. $0.1 Salf- Threading Sawing Machine Needle | DRO PSY Jr corey: eve re Po EAR ed AT ee 5 500 5 AL AI. A330 i i ge ‘se HR EE MCILHENNY'S TABASCO PRYERTISE IN TW IT PAYS VERTATA Thompson's Eye Water
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