fhibet is a much larger country than most people suppose. It has an area of about 760,000 square miles and a popula tion of about 8,000,000 souls, according to the New York Mail and Express. The example of Pittsburg, which lost its old pre-eminence as the smoky city upon the introduction of natural gas into general use, is likely, predicts the New York Commercial Advertiser , to be contagious. Canadian papers complain that their country seems to be regarded as a sort of penal colony by England. A young man who was convicted of larceny before a London magistrate a few days ago was let off on his friends promising to send him to Canada at once. The Cincinnati Enquirer rolates that when one Charles Weber stood up in a court in that city the other day for ex amination as to his qualifications as a juror, he was asked how many children he had. He declined to answer what he considered an irrelevant question, and appealed to the court . He was ordered to answer, and said he was the father of five pairs of twins, all alive and healthy. He was accepted as a juror. One of the most lamentable features of the Concmaugh disaster is the fact that such a great number of children have been left orphans. When the im mediate wants of the .sufferers shall have been supplied and avenues of work opened up, the Philadelphia Telegraph suggests that whatever money there may be left could not be better applied than in the creation of a permanent fuud to help maintain and educate these helpless waifs—the flotsam and jetsam of a flood of death and ruin. In September, 1690, the, first paper mill in America was erected in Rox- ' borough, Philadelphia. The first paper- ( maker was Wilhelm Rittenhousen, now 1 anglicized into William Rittenhouse. It is now proposed to celebrate the bi- \ centennial of this event in September, j 1890, and the paper-makers and the print- | ers of the United States are asked to send delegates to a preliminary meeting, to be held in Philadelphia next Septem ber. On the advice and with the ap proval of Mr. G. W. Cliilds, Horatio Gates Jones, of Philadelphia, has sent u j circular embodying these facts to mem- j bers of the trade throughout the United j States. Says the New York Tribune: "The j Governor of Maine on one occasion j signed a bill and then changed his mind, erased his signature and wrote a veto instead. This gave rise to an interesting controversy over the question whether, when a bill was signed, it was not a law, - which could only be annulled by the action of the Legislature itself. The matter was carried to the courts, which j have just decided that tho veto was authoritative. The right of a woman to ! change her mind has long been conceded by common consent. We believe this is the first case on record in which a man's right to do the same has been declared j with the sanction of law." Tt is a memorable fact that the United | States, where there is a doctor for every aggregate of 600 human beings, show the lowest death rate in the world. The average life expectancy in the United States is now fifty-five years. In Eng- j land, among the inhabitants of towns it is | fifty, and among the rural population | more than fifty-four. Russians and ! Chilians have a life expectancy of but twenty-eight, years. In Home the aver age life expectancy is now forty years, whereas it was but eighteen in the time of the Coesars. In the England of Eliza beth it was only twenty. This great and progressive improvement, is ascribed to better drainage and diet, greater per sonal cleanliness, to vaccination, better medical knowledge, the use of ana?sthe tics and febrifuges. It is estimated that quinine alone has added two years to the average life of civilized man. The amount of money now in course of expenditure for experimental work in agriculture amounts to no less than $720,- 000 annually. Of this §595,000 is ap propriated by the United States Govern ment, the remainder, $125,000, being given by the States. This is 1n addition to the very large amounts which have been given to agricultural colleges, in all equaling twenty-five or thirty million dollars, the interest of which is used in tho maintenance of these institutions. Capitalizing the $720,000 spent yearly at three per cent, would give $2-1,000,000, so that the funds now in use for the bene fits of agriculture in the way of education amount in the aggregate to $50,000,000. It will be the fault of the farmers, de clares the New York Timet, if this pro fuse expenditure is not made valuable to them. At present, however, not one fanner in a thousand gets any ndequate value from it, and it is somewhat diffi cult to determine just how it can bo soado as uteful u it should be. ODD OCCUPATION. RIDDING PARKS AND CEMETER-, IKS OP PESTS. An Expert Who Destroys Small Anl-< mats by Thousands —His Methods , and the Results of His Work —A Unique Employment. In these times when the cry goes up on every hand that all callings are over crowded, it seems unlikely that there should be a man who has a monopoly of a particular occupation, yet Frederick Wcgner is such a person. His business is the trapping of moles and other out-of-: door enemies to beautiful lawns and gar-, dons. He was until two years ago em ployed in Greenwood Cemetery at his specialty, but having rid the place of pests now does work for any one who is willing to pay for his services. He has within the last two years been employed to clear Woodlawn Cemetery, part of Central Park,the estate of William Rock fellcr, near Tarrytown, and those of A. H. Kfng and H. L. Hoyt, of the Victoria Hotel, at Great Neck. L. 1., and a ceme tery near Troy,of moles and other obnox ious burrowers, and in every case he has been completely successful. In Central Park he was hired to work from Pifty-ninth to Eighty-second streets, and while not a mole can be found below the latter street, above it-they arc numer ous. A Tribune reporter called on this nineteenth century Pied Piper of Ilame lin recently at his home, and learned something about his history and methods of work. He is'a German by birth,rather small in stature, somewhat bent from age and much stooping at his work, anil his face is deeply bronzed from the out-of door life that he has led. Apparently he is not over forty-five years old, although he is really nearer sixty than forty-five. When asked when he first went into the business of trapping, he said: "Why, I began when a boy. When I was about ten years old the country around Roed lnnd, Bavaria, where I lived, was so overrun with field mice that it was al most impossible to raise any crops. Every remedy was tried, but the little pests seemed to increase until the farmers were at their wits' ends. Finally the board of aldermen, as you would call it here, of Roedland, and several surrounding vil lages, passed laws compelling every farmer to bring the bodies of forty dead mice to the council chamber every day, tinder penalty of a gulden, or forty cents, for each failure to do so. The number was afterward increased to 100 and the fine to a dollar. Many did not know how to catch them, and to escape paying the penalties were glad to buy tho mice. I got a number of old-fashioned traps and set to work, catching forty or fifty of the creatures at first and gradually increasing the number to nearly 1000 a day. I made a good deal of money for a little fellow like myself, j\nd pretty soon the neighborhood was cleared.of the pests." Wegner came to this country some thirty-nine years ago, but did not en gage in trapping. In 1876 he was made a watchman in Greenwood Cemetery. The place was then simply overrun with chipmunks, moles, field-mice, snakes, muskratß and skunks. The ground was furrowed in every direction by tho in dustrious creatures, and the roots of the plants were eaten, so that it was difficult to keep any flowers or shrubs growing about the graves. Efforts were made to trap tho beasts, but so few were caught that there was no abatement in the nifis ance. Recalling his youthful feats as a trap per, Wegner set to work to exterminate the harmful breeds. It took two years of hard work, but at the end of that lime few moles or field mice troubled the sward of Greenwood. In this time 2882 moles fell victims to his trap, and nearly 1000 garden snakes were cut into by his spade. Not until 28,000 chip munks had been killed was the place clear of these pests, a*td in the first sum mer, Wegner trapped 5080 field mice. For each kind of prey a different kind of trap is used. The mole trap is the in vention of the trapper himself. It is a hollow block of wood with two wire loops attached to a spring on tho inside. In the centre of the block is a plug, which is tied to the spring in such a way that when the plug is disturbed the spring flies up, and the animal is caught in the wire noose. The trap is buried ex actly in the course left by the mole, which invariably travels through its old hole again and is lassoed. Field mice, the trapper said, require a quicker trap than moles. They breed so rapidly, however, that it seems impossible to ex terminate them with traps, so Wegner experimented with various poisons until he learned one that was largely eaten by field mice and snakes, but let alone by all other animals. This poison he strewed with a liberal hand, and in a few months every mouse was gone. Chipmunks were even more numerous than field mice and equally destructive to the work of the landscape gardeners These little striped creatures not only destroy the roots of plants, but honey comb the toll with their hole*. Unlike the moles, which burrow just beneath the surface, chipmunks dig straight down for a distance of five or six feet * and have number of their holes con nected. In one yew Wegner trapped i 14,000 of these rodents, but they con tinue to multiply, so he tried various kinds of poison until he discovered one which they relished, and in not many months few of them were left to disport themselves. The bonks of the lakes of Greenwood also contain the subterranean castles of a few muskrats, twenty-four of which were captured in the steel claws of Wegner's traps; seven skunks met a similar fate. The snakes were dispatched either by poison or a spade with a blade as sharp fts a knife. Wegner has killed any number of snakes In this way, in cluding some dangerous big black snakes but he has never been bitten yet. After he had cleared Greenwood of its colonies of "varmints," Wegner was em ployed as a watchman, but two years ago he gave this up to become a professional trapper. new calling has been a pay ing one, as his services are in great de mand and, as is always the case with a man who has no rivals in business, he has only to ask his price and it is cheerfully paid. There are, of course, men em ployed in every cemetery and large parks to trap moles and other obnoxious ani mals, but none of them makes a business of it and all of them are so much less suc cessful than Wegner ffeat lie does not even regard them as trappers. "Call them trappers," he said, sneeringly, "why, I caught more moles at Wood lawn in two days than all their men trapped iu two years. I love tho business. I would rather be out setting my traps or cutting snakes in two with my spado than do anything else I know. ' There's lot's of men that would like to learn to be trappers, and one of them of fered me $4(10 last year to let lirni go with mo for four months, but 1 said no. I won't sell anybody ouc of my patent inole traps, and nobody but my son knows what kind of poisons I use for field mice and chipmunks. When I get too old to work he will take all my traps and go into the business, because I dou't want to see it get out of the family." Wegner u'lways keeps account of tho animals lie kills each day, and estimates that in the few years that he has devoted to trapping, he has rid the world of nearly 100,000 moles, chipmunks, wood chucks,.snakes, field mico and other pests. —New York Tribune. An Indian Romance. An interesting romance has just come to light at White's Indian Manual Labor Institute, near Wabash, Ind., where Indian children are being educated at Government expense. It has been dis covered that Lizzie Carlow, a half-breed Sioux Indian maiden from the Pine Kidgc Agency in Dakota, has rich and influential relatives in Baltimore and at Zanesville, Ohio. Her father, John Carlow, left Baltimore twenty years ago for the Black Hills, und he has not since been seen by his Eastern relatives. Years ago Carlow married an Indian woman and the little girl now at the institute here was the re sult of the union. Recently Carlow,who is still in the West, sent Lizzie's photo graph and one of her mouthly merit cards given by the institute to his relatives, which was their first intimation of her existence. They have become greatly intcre-sted and have written to have Lizzie pass her coming vacation with them. The girl went to Zanesville to see her aunt, whose husband is Superintendent of the Water Works at that place.— Qlobe- Dcmocrat. Proprietor and Reporter. They tell in Chicago a story about Uncle Joseph Medtll, the owner of Jthe Chicago Tribune, and a new reporter of that paper. The reporter Was sent the other evening to write up a reception, lie got along all right until he met a tine looking, gray-bearded old gentleman, the center of a group of iitdies and gentlemen. As is customary, apparently, in Chicago, the reporter entered the group and got the names of thoae present, but when he asked for the old gentleman's he was un swered by a loud and exasperating "Eh?" "I should like your name, please." "Eh? What? Speak louder!" yelled the old gentleman, putting his-hand to his ear. The reporter tilled his lungs with air and then yelled: "I am a reporter and would like your name!" "Oh, re porter, eh? "What paper?" "The Tribune; will you please give me your name?" The old mail looked at the young man kindly, stroked his beard, and said, quietly, "Joseph Medill." A movement is on foot in Austrian military circles to establish army and navy stores on the English system. A similar society in the German army has been very successful. In 1870 the total assessed valuation of real and personal estate in New York city was §1,047,521),224. In 1888 the total had increased to? 1,553,442,431. In New York they have coined the term "Dorothy apartments" to designate the femipine of bachelor apartment*. The Interviewer In England. Allan Fonnan, editor of the New York J&urnalitt, writes as follows from Lon don: "American newspaper men often won der at the absence of the interview in the London papers, and attribute it to lack of enterprise on the part of London jour nalists. This is not so, as any American newspaper man in London would soon find out. The secret of the difficulty lies in the fact that English prominent men refuse to be interviewed, and as the big fish fight shy the sprats and minnows of English society and politics follow their example. The English nobleman is, so to speak, 'elected' from birth. He has nothing to gain from the press and he has a lofty and not altogether an unjusti fied contempt for the reporter who lives, nobody knows how, taking stenographic notes at a pound a week. When the re porter sends in his card and requests an interview the nobleman resents it as an impertinonce and refuses. We know t.lmt it is a matter of comparatively little trouble to secure an interview with the President of the United States. Try the same thing with the Prince of Wales and you will be met with a polite, extremely courteous, but none the less firm, refusal through Sir Francis Knollys, who will inform you, that 'lt. IB contrary to the practice of Ilis Royal Highness to grant interviews unless he has the pleasure of being personally acquainted with the ap plicant for one; I have, therefore, to ex press His Royal Highness' regret that he is unable to have the gratification of complying with your request.' This is of course very gentlemanly and soothing to the feelings of the applicant,but when you think how difficult it would be Tor the average newspaper worker to gain the personal acquaintance of the Prince you realize what a large and emphatic 'no' is conveyed by the pleasing cloak of high-bred courtesy. "I am convinced that should the Prince once throw open the door and allow him self to be interviewed the example would be followed quickly enough by other Eng lishmen of high rank and position, and a revolution in English journalism would follow in a week. The English papers would contain opinions of leaders in English life instead of the conclusions of the editors. The verbatim reports would be cut down to give place to what we know as'live news.' The machine report er would disappear nnd the shrewd, en terprising interviewer would take his place. That the English like to read that sort of thing is proved by the avidity with which they follow the writ ing of Labouchere, Sala, and a few others who are able to write interviews because they have the 'pleasure of a personal ac quaintance, of the interviewed. That the barriers are slowly being broken down there is no doubt, and that an English Duke or Prince will be as accessible to newspaper men as an American President is within the range of possibility in a very few years." A Foolhardy Indian. Until a few years ago the Arikara Indians living at Port Berthold, on fhe Upper Missouri (Dakota), held a series of interesting ceremonies, conducted by their medicine men. These ceremonies, says a writer in the Philadelphia /Ve#s, usually occupying about seven weeks, were attended by Indian visitors from all directions. At the conclusion of them one day was generally set apart for an extraordinary display of what might be termed allegorical exhibitions, which took place in the open air around the vicinty of the sacred or medicine lodge. It was customary, at _such times, for one of.the medicine men to 'display feats of courage—though they were in reality conjuring—and one of the tricks was for the medicine man to stand up and allow a confederate to shoot at him with a rifle, the principal to catch the ball between his teeth. It happened upon one of these occasions that the "fellow"' made a public challenge, as usual,for any one to step forward and discharge a gun at him. At previous times the medicine man Would load his own gun in the pres ence of the tribe, but on account of a slot filed in the barrel of the rifle the ball escaped, and there was no harm in the charge of powder; the ball itself was hidden under his tongue, and would be seen by the Indians after the discharge, of course, between his teeth. In the last instance, the reservation (compelling the challenged man to use the medicine man's gun) was omitted. •! a Cree Indian, from the Northwest Terri tory, who, by the way, had a drudge against the Arikara, immediately accepted the challenge and stopped back to fire. The Arikara was fully aware of his dan ger, as his enemy was armed with a Win chester, but rather than be designated a coward he stepped back to receive the shot. The Cree fired, and the Arikara (ell, the ball having passed through his forehead. In England check reins are now en tirely out of use, being forbidden by law. Among the American Indians there are 28,663 church member*. "That man who just went out had a head so large I hadn't a hat in the store that would fit him," said the hatter, a# he put away a hat nearly as big as a coal scuttle. "Who was he?" "I don't know. He is connected with Police Department. I think. Did you evwr notice," he went on,."what large heads these policemen have? Nearly •very one of them wears a hat larger than the average. The Irish as a race have enormous heads. There are some Ger mans in town who have large heads, but their bodies are correspondingly mam moth." "What is the largest size of hat you keep?" "A 7*. There are 7$ sizes made; that is what the man who just went out of here wanted, but I didn't have it. Post master Sackett wears a 7{s hat. He has one of the largest heads in town; you might not think it, but he is a big man and well proportioned.— Buffalo (N. T.) Courier. Insurance for Physical Wrecks. The newest thing in the way of life insurance, or, more properly speaking, death insurance, has within a few days established itself in this city, and the peculiar feature about this company is that it gains more by the death of its policy holders than by their prolonged existence. Under the plan upon which the scheme is operated, the insured pays a certain amount per year up to five years. If lie dies within that period, his heirs receive the amount he has paid in without interest. If lie lives beyond five years, his heirs fare better, for they receive what he has paid in with interest. If he is so fortunate as to survive ten years, he is entitled to the full face of his policy, pro vided the company survives. It is not necessary to say that no medical exami nation attends the would-be insurer's ap plication and that complete physical wrecks arc in demand.— St. Louis Star- Sayiligs. Nose-Boring. Another case of nose-boring has re cently come to light. This time the nasal appendage was the property of Charles Knapp, of Delanco, N. J., which was knocked oil iu a railroad accident about three years ago. A couplo of skillful sur geons soon succeeded in replacing the severed member, but their substitute lacked a nostril, and breathing through it was an impossibility until after several applications of an electrical cauterizing needle, by which the obstacle was over come. In all other respects the nose was as good as new.— Times-Democrat. A Piece ol* Her ill I ml. A lady correspondent has this to say: "I want to give a piece of my mind to a cer tain class who object to advertising, when it coats (hem anything—this won't cost them a cent. I suffered a living death for nearly two years with headaches, backache, in pain stand ing or walking, was being literally dragged out, ot exist.ence.iny misery increased bv drugging. At last,in despair,! committed thesLn of trying an advertised medicine, I)r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and it restored me to the blessed ness of sound health. I honor tho physician who, when he knows he can cure, lias the moral courage to advertise the tact." Tho medicine mentioned is guaranteed to cure those delicao diseases peculiar to females. Head printed guarantee ou bottlo-wrapper. For all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels, take Dr. Pierce s Pellets. One a dose. THE total consumption of rubber of all trrades in tho United States last year was IA).- 000,0U0 pounds, the total value 01 which was $15,000,01)0. There are people using Dobbins's Electric Soap to-day who commenced its use in 1865. Would this be the ca«e were it not the purest and most economical soap made. Ask your grocer forit. Look out for imitations. Dob- 1 mns's. O. W. OriiLDs offors a SSO prize to the man i oassing the best examination for entrance to I Princeton's next fres.imau class. , "For seven long years I struggled away farmiug, running a mill, Sic., until I was for tunately introduced to H. F. Johnson & Co., ! Richmond, Va.. hy mj brother, and 1 went to work at once, and in #cven month* I had made more clear money than 1 had made in the seven years before. They took me right by the hand from the start and seemed to l»e very glad of the chance to hhow me how to do it. This is about what a young man said a year or so ago of the above-mentioned firm. Since that time he has been steadily at work for them, and is now one of the happiest men in America. If you need employment, it would l»e a good thing for you to follow this young man's example. Oregon, the Paradise •!" Farmer*. Mild, equable climate,certain and abundant crops, lirst fruit, «raln, grass and stock coun try in the world. r\ill information free. Ad dress Oregon Im'igrat'n Board, Portland, Ore. A Pocket Cigar Case and five of "TansiU's Punch," all for 25c. Mafflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp •pa's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25e.per bottle Make No Mistake If .you have made up your mind to buy Hood's Sarsapariila do not tie Induced to take any other. Hood's Sarsapariila Is a peculiar medicine, pos sessing, by virtue of its peculiar combination, pro portion and preparation, curative powers superior to any other article of tho kind before the people. Be sure to get Hood's. "In one store the clerk tried to Induce me to buy their own instead of Hood's Sarsapariila. Out he could not prevail on me to change. I told him I knew what Hood's Sarsapariila was, I had taken it, was perfectly satisfied with it, and did not want any other."—Mrs. Euj A. Uoff, CI Terrace Street, Boston, Mass. Hood's Sarsapariila Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD ft CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar N Y N U—2o w w ho have used Pise's Cure for Ponsumptloa SNUr U OF ATX. Bold everywhere. 35c. I)U. KOKII liER'S FAVORITE COLIC MIXTURE for all domestic animals, will our© 99 oat of every 100 ruses of colic, whether flat- ZmA i' - ' 11 ",ulent or spasmodic. Rarely more thau lor 2 doses uecessary. It does not con- Mti.'"' »!stipate, rather acts a» a laxative and is entirely harmless. After 20 years of trial /' 112 in more than 9000 cases, our guarantee is worth something. ('•lie mast b# J ' treated promptly. Expend a few cents and you have a cure on hand, ready r' when needed, and perhaps save a vr.luable horse. If not at your druggist's, en r '■jJBWSgfcBMMHEWI close 50 cents for sample bottle, sent prepaid. IfiHEwHH Address DK. KOEHLEIt A CO., Bethlehem. Pa. 1 ti.se lvr KoeMer's "Favorite Colic We cheerfully recommend Dr. Koehler'M wifA AUCCM*. It i* "Favorite Colic Mixture." Would not be tfir >e ' t colic medicine I have ex *r seen, without it as long as we have horse*. ISAAC MOOO, Horse Dealer, ISAAC MOSES 4b BRO., S Brooklyn, New York. Sale, and Exchange Stables, East on. ftl. JOSEPH H HUNTER, SsSS EEKtm WfcrnY&J/" -* |J A Farm School for Street Arabs. There is a queer "ttle school on an' island down Boston harbor, known M 1 the farm school, and it is truly a Bo«- tonian institution. Over fifty years ago it was organized for "idle and morally exposed" boys, and Thompson's Island! was bought. The school is not a reforma tory, however, and now admits no boy! objectionable from a moral standpoint. Over 1600 boys have been educated' there, and have gone from their water surrounded alma mater to positions of honor and trust. Reading, spelling, writing, arithmetic, geography, gram-, mar, history, drawing, instrumental and vocal music are taught. There aTe shops in which they become skilled in the use lof tools and learn trades. A few days ago the friends and relatives of the boys \ went to the island on a special steamer to. inspect the school and have a grand time.. It was the first visit since last November. I Veto York Star. Gull's Eggs. Gull's eggs are among the curiosities of the San Francisco market. They are twenty-five cents a dozen, and are brought chiefly from the Farallones in the fishing schooners. The handsome eggs of the murr bird will also be introduced into the market within the next two or three weeks. The gull's egga are said to taste a little fishy, as might be expected, but the "murr" eggs are as great a delicacy as the plover's of the Old World, which they greatly resemble. PTJACOBSOn Pf TRADE WAIIK^i Remedy^aijJ For Stablemen and Stockmen. CURBS Cal». Swallitfa. IrtUiei, flfir%ias, falls, Stralaa, Contraction*, flash Wound*, Strlaghalt, Sera* Thraat, Dlatamyeiv Oplie, Wfeltlow, .112 oil BvU, Fl«tal>, Tamors. fioUhta, K}nfftafeaa uflpMla la lfta aarlyßtaya.-pjry ttyna wltl and botUa. AT AND Dialer*. THE CUARLffS A. VO6ELCHCO., ••WJmort. Mi. GOLD*»?SILVER FOR 25 cts. R.T'i'./ni ; handsome Cabinet of Beautiful Ore Specimen# i from 20 different mines in Colorado. Address Rocky Mountain Specimen Co., Denver, Colo. JONES iie L; P *X, BT W E|P KEICHT. jMby. «r 5 Tan \\ aaan Scales Iron LeTara Steel Beat-lag*, Bran ■A4s«aKsi»k Tare Beam and B«ujd Box far aeo. VNr-. v* Every si ze if air. For free pr,oa I tot "VrfSlgyr ' uientlon this paper a«d address 112 S. ' JONES OF IINGHAIHTON, ■IMQHAMTOW, If. T. NORTHERN PACIFIC. i II LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS * FREE Government LANDS. BULLIONS of ACRES « 112 each in Minnesota. Nortli Dakota. Montana, Idaho. Washington *nd Oragon ccun CAD Punlications with Mapsdesoribingtha otnU run be-t Agricultural,Graatn* and fu»a ber Land* now open to Settlers. Kent free. Address cms. B. LAMBOBN, \S\ -*nt/vra£li ea y Pi*o's Cur© forCon- I BO ATl)}{% aumntion laTH£ BEST mftiu vfljji tuic# F'PUIi 1 Lar «° MARRIAGE PAPER [VI J] J and particulars of our aasoclatioii that pay* over SJ1.0(10 AT 1IAI(RU«E. Ad dress THE CORRESPONDENT, Toledo, Ohio. #DUTCHER'S FLY KILLER Makes a clean sweep. Every sheet will kill a quart of flies. Stops buzzing around ears, diving at eyes, tickling jour nose, skips hard words and se cures pence at trifling expense. Send "iH cents for 5 sheet* to F. DUYCHKR. St. Albans. Vt. FRAZER S^ ■est in tiie world U It Lflvl b ttr Get tha Genuine. Sold Everywhere. AP lo $S u dny. Samples worth 9*2.15 Free. Lines not under horses' feet. Write Brew- IPW NterSulety Rein Holder Ca.. Holly.Mloh pner An elegant piece of music. The "Opera* BallCC Waltz s<>ng. Send uame and address ou I postal card. Peek & Son, 216 W. 47th St., New York. Agents wan t«*d. $1 anhour.so new ariicles.CatTgua and sample free. C. E. MAIISHALI.. Buffalo, N. Y. IS YOUR FARM FOR SALE If ao address CrßTia & WKIGHT. 23S Broadway. H. Y PEERLESS DYES So" rt'SawwSm Abaltio for Cancer la the only nucceM*tul treatment. After re moving the cancer wo prevent reformation by erad icating cancerous poisons from the system. Write for circulars to Holland Medical and Surgical Institute, 4*4 DELAWARE AVE.. RI KKALO. N. V. Female Weakness is successfully treated by our eminent specialist, after all others nav* 'ailed. ■b m mm After ALL olut'S Dr. Lobb, 3 55 Twenty years' continuous practice in the treat ment aud cure of the awful effect* af early vice, destroying both mind and body. Medicine aud treatment for one month. Five Dollars, sent securely sealed from observation to any address. Book on Special Dlweaaea free. M 1 prescribe and folly as* dorse Big U as tfca only A&gr c«r«» ta specific for the certain care 4KBr* & of thia di*«aae. aoi Ml O. H. INGRAHAM.M. D. # aasaatttrtotara. « Aaaaterdam, N. Y. EI urintf kftk* W. ha*. MM Blf G Olseieaat'jSwßp™ (actlnn. D.R.DYCIEACO..^