Sullivan republican. (Laporte, Pa.) 1883-1896, November 15, 1889, Image 4

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    THE HUMAN EYE.
PECULIARITIES OF NATURE'S
PHOTOGRAPHIC CAMERA.
Dangcra in Obtaining a Spectacle Pre
scription— All Persons Need
Classes Lite in Life—Points
About Nearsightedness.
"It takes years of hard study for an
ophthalmic surgeon to learn how to lit
glasses," said an oculist to a Washington
Star reporter. "No two persons' eyes
are quite alike, and few patients have
both eyes the same: in each case a dozen
different possible defects have to be
looked out for and remodled by glasses
ground in special ways if they exist. It
is apt to take an hour or more for a skilled
oculist to find out just what glasses you
require, but the confident optician will
call your attention to a few rows of dif
ferent sized letters at the other end of the
shop, ask you what rows you can read
and sell you a pair of spectacles accord
ing, off hand. Of course it is always a ]
more or less wild guess on the optician's !
part, infinitely more apt to be wrong than |
light, and if you will consider that every j
bit of error as to fit in the glasses means i
just so much continual strain upon the
eyes of the wearer, you will see what an i
immense amount of harm must be done in
this way. The thing to do, if you need |
glasses, is togo to the ophthalmic surgeon >
for the prescription, as you would goto j
any other physician if you had a pain, |
and then take the prescription to the op- i
tieian, who is the eye-doctor's apothecary,
as it were, to be filled. The glasses are 1
prepared for you—if need be, specially
ground—and you have the satisfaction of
knowing that they are precisely what
they require.
"Were people afflicted with near sight -
edncss in ancient times?" Inquired the
reporter.
' 'Oh, yes, was the reply, though pro- j
bably not to the same extent. We read,
write and study more than the ancients
did, and for this reason near-sight is
more common with us, for it is the ex
cessive use of the eyes at the near point
that propagates the troubles. In old
times troubles with the eyes were re
garded as afflictions sent by heaven, for
which there no cure. Nero, who fiddled
while Home was burning, was so near
sighted that, although he had the very
best seat in the amphitheater at the
gladiator shows, he could not see what
was going on. One day he discovered
that a certain concave emerald in his col- :
lection of jewels aided his vision material
ly, and from time ho always carried the
emerald about with him and, when he
wanted to see anything at a distance,
looked through it. He regarded the
stone as a talisman and supposed that it
properties were magical."
"Is it true that every person needs
spectacles at some period of life?"
"Decidedly, if the person lives to be
forty-five years of age. At that age, or
at any rate before fifty is reached, the
crystalline lens, which is of the consis
tency of jelly in childhood, has gradually
hardened to the consistency of wax, so
that the muscles which change the focus
of the eye for various distances, by al
tering the shape of the lens, find it diffi
cult to do their work. You will perceive
that after looking at an object across the
street, to examine your finger attentively
requires a distinct effort of the eye. You
have to exert the muscles that control the
shape of the lens in order to make the
focus right for the near point.
If the lens has got hard, through
jidvancing age, a continuous ef
fort of this sort, as in reading, becomes
tiresome, and thus it is that the middle
aged man or woman rinds the first indi
cation of what is ignorantly termed 'fail
ing sight' in the blurring of the letters
in the book or newspaper. Now, the
fact is, of course, that the ocular organ
is just as good as ever, save for the fact
that it needs a little help in the way of a
glass lens to make the focus right for
reading and thus save the muscles work.
The sight for distance, under such cir
cumstances, still remains as good as ever,
because the lens in its natural focus and
shape is adapted to distant vision. But
the middle-aged person, as a rule imag
ines that the blurring of the letters signi
fies impaired sight. lie or she is aware
that glasses will make reading easy again,
but hesitation is felt in adopting them on
account of the widespread saying that,
once taken up, spectacles can never be
done without again. The truth at the
bottom of this lies in the fact that, when
one's sight has once been restored by ar
tificial means, one is not disposed to
throw the help away again. Not reali".
ing the middle-aged person keeps on
straining the eyes until they become some
what damaged, for want of artificial aid
in reading or sewing, and finally the
glosses are adopted—bought, in nine
cases out of ten, from the ignorant opti
cians, to cause more trouble, very likely,
later on. And all the distress might
have been saved by simply going to the
or ulist when the annoyance first began to
be felt and procuring the proper glasses.
This is what every person at forty-five
vears of ane oueht to do. for there is
one that arrives at the age of fifty, at th«
utmost, who does not need assistance foi
close vision."
"Is it true that near-sighted eyes im
prove as they grow older?"
"Pah! That is another popular dc
| lusion. Near-sightedness may grow worse
with age, but not better. Likewise, it
is nonsense to suppose, as is so commonly
asserted, that the near-sighted eye is
unusually strong. How should the ab
normal egg-shaped eye be stronger than
the spherical eye? The near-sighted eye
is not necessarily weak, but it is a sick
eye, in the sense that it usually belongs
to a person who is imperfect constitution
ally. The reverse of near-sight is over
sight. which is occasioned by flatness of
the erb of vision. It is the case of nearly
all cases of 'weak eyes,' and of nine out
of every ten cases of 'squint.' Any child
afflicted with either of these troubles
should betaken at once to the oculist and
have glasses prescribed for it. Thou
sands of people £?o through life without
half the use of their eyes,when the whole
trouble is simply due to a slight malform
ation which proper convex glasses would
remedy at once. In the case of a con
firmed squint it may be necessary to cut
the shortened muscle of the squinting
eye, which removes the difficulty and
sets the organ straight again. Let me
add, while I think of it, that there is
nothing against which the ignorant
| should be warned more carefully than
j the 'eye waters' sold at apothecaries'
j shops, which almost invariably contain
! sugar of lead. This chemical applied to
a sore eye makes an opague deposit on
, the cornea, which may soon render tho
unfortunate purchaser of quack eye reme
dies permanently blind."
Uses for Old Shoes.
It may be a surprise to some people to
learn that the old shoes cast into the
ash barrel are liable to reappear in the
i boudoir and parlor. An inquisitive re
porter who saw a couple of rag pickers
quarreling over a lot of worn out and
1 seemingly worthless footgear interviewed
one of tho chiffoniers and found that
they sold them to the manufacturers of
wall paper. He followed up the clew,
and on questioning the foreman of one of
these establishments, elicited the follow
ing bits of information:
"We buy." said the foreman, "all the
boots and shoes that the scavengers can
bring us. "We pay different prices for
the different qualities of leather. A pair
of fine calfskin boots will bring as high
as fifteen cents. Wo don't buy cow-hide
boots. The boots and shoes are first
soaked in several waters to get the dirt
off from them. Then the nails and
threads are removed, the leather is ground
up into a fine pulp and is ready to use.
"The embossed leather paperings
which have come into fashion lately, and
the stamped leather fire screens, are realiy
nothing but thick paper cover with a
layer of this pressed leather pulp. The
tiner the quality of the leather the
better it takes the bronze and old
gold and other expensive colors in the
designs painted on them. Fashionable
people think they are going away back
to the medieval times when they have
the walls of their libraries and dining
rooms covered with embossed leather.
They don't know that the shoes and
boots which their neighbors threw into
the ash barrel a month before form the
beautiful material on their walls and on
the screens which protect their eyes from
the fire.
"We could buy the old shoes cheaper
if it were not for the competition from
carriage makers and bookbinders and
picture frame makers. I don't know
how many other trades use old shoes and
boots, but the tops of carriages are large
ly made of them, ground up and pressed
into sheets. Bookbinders use them in the
cheaper forms of leather bindings, and
the new style of leather frames with
leather mats in them are entirely made of
the castoff covering of our feet."—AVir
York Herald.
Tenement vs. War Life.
According to statistics recently made
public, 1,113,254 privates and .'53.101
officers crossed the German frontier into
France in 1870-71: of these 113,521
were wounded and 475,000 were taken
sick. There were killed in battle 17,255.
or only one and one-half per cent., and
11,023 died subsequently of their
wounds, making 28,278, or about two
and one-quarter per cent., who died by
the arms of the French, while .14,048
died from diseases. "Considering that
the war lasted nearly two years," ob
serves the Amcritmi Architect, in refer
ence to these figures, "the total mortality
of about forty in a thousand docs not
seem very frightful, since many a civilized
city keeps tip a yearly average of twenty
two or twenty-three di aths to each thou
sand inhabitants. It is, at first sight,
rather startling to discover that the mor
tality incident to the most important wa
which perhaps ever took place in Europi
was apparently no greater than wouh
have resulted from putting the troops to
live during the same space of time in
Xew York tenement houses or in the
■ret uuarleri; of Paris,"
The Madern Sea Revere.
A correspondent of the New York
Herald, writing of the people of the
Faroe Islands, says:"l imagined I
could see a resemblance to the early vik
ing boats in their buoyant, high-bowed,
cedar crafts of to-day. The dress of the
boatmen was primitive but picturesque;
homespun knee trousers and long home
knit stockings; coats also of homespun,
with button holes worked in red worsted;
caps of native manufactuie, consisting of
a deep band of cloth gathered at the top
after the fashion of the masculine night
cap of former days or the toboggan cap
of the present. Under this simple head
tire were features unmistakably Norse;
flaxen hair, light blue eves, florid, sun
burned skin, and reddish, frizzled beard.
This was my first sight of sea king
progeny on their sea girt isles. Jiv them
1 was soon landed among their dwellings
ou a ragged beach, slippery with the
putrid refuse of fish and redolent of dry
ing cod.
The whole shore was a panorama of the
codfish industry. Men do the fishing at
night and the women, girls and boys
cure the 'catch* during the day. At the
edge of the water on boards and stones
they are busy at the different processes of
curing. Some behead and eviscerate,
while others are engaged in washing the
split and flattened bodies. After being
thus cleaned they are spread over the
stones which line the shore, and huu. l .
upon poles and lines until the entire
beach is occupied with their savorv stock
in trade in the various stages of drying.
The boys arc attired like their fathers,
and the irirls and women in short woolen
gowns, with scant red shawls about their
shoulders and handkerchiefs in lieu of
lints. Formerly the drying of fish wa
dependent altogether on air and snn
now artificial means are adopted; woodci;
buildings heated l>y steam have been
erected and are now used fortius purpose,
especially in the winter season.
Let epicures who gloat over a many
coursed menu think of a family group in
the Faroes, under a turf roof, around a
turf fire, partaking of a meal of barley
bread and milk, whale steak and fat, or
maybe a single dish of boiled sea fowl,
and learn the secrets of eupepsia, con
tentment and longevity! After their
evening meal, which is usually a pot of
sea birds, the long winter evenings are
occupied in spinning, weaving, knittinir
and teachino-
Held by Feudal Tenure.
Byron Island, one of the, Magdalen
group 011 the Canadian coast, is still lid
by a feudal tenure. The ancestor of oiv
Captain Coffin received by royal favor in
early times, when little value attached to
the gift, a title to the whole domain.
The landlord lives abroad and manages
his estate by a resident agent. The rents
are small and often uncollectable. Evic
tions are not common, and there is no se
rious quarrel over the land question, but
the fact that the occupants of the soil
' cannot own their own homes is a serious
; hindrance to enterprise and improvement
J in developing the resources of the island.
! SOME of the inconveniences of having
j two wives are exemplified in the case
! of William Williams, late of Osage
I County, Kansas, now no more. Even
| if a man can manage to keep the ladies
quiet during his life, directly he is dead
they begin to light over his will.
Would Yon Believe
The Proprietor of Kemp's Balaam gives Thou
sands of bottles away yearly? This mode of
; advertising would prove ruinous if the Balsam
was not a perfect cure of Coughs and all
Throat and Lung troubles. You will seethe
excellent effeo*. after taking the first dose.
Don't hesitate! Procure a bottle to-day to
j keep in your home or room for immediate or
; future use. Trial bottle free at all druggists.
I Large size 50c. ami sl.
! FRANCE has 81,130 'public schools and 5,000, •
| 000 pupils.
Don't \VuMtt> Your Time
! And money experimenting with doubtful
; remedies, when Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
j Discovery is so positively certain in itscuia
• tive action as to warrant :ts manufacturers in
! supplying it to the public, as they are doing
through druggists, under a duly executed cer
tificate of guarantee, that .'twill accomplish
all it is recommended todo, or money paid for
it will be promptly returned. It cures torpid
liver, or biliousness, indigestion, or dyspepsia,
all humors, or blood taint}, from wnatever
< ause arising, skin and scalp diseases, scroful
ous affections (not excepting consumption, or
lung-scrofula), if taken in tune and given a
fair trial.
Thousands of cures follow the use of Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Reined v. oO cents.
THE production of soap in Kngland is about
4f>,000 tons per week.
There is nothing (unless it be the sewing ma
chine) that ha- lightened woman's Jal>or a?
much a Dobbins's Electric Soap, constantly
sold since 1804. All grocers have it. llavej/ou
made its acquaintance? Try it,
\YORK on the new building for the library of
Congress at Washington is mating rapid pro
gress.
Oregon, the Paradise of Favmero.
Mild, enable climat .certain and abundant
crops. Best, fruit, grain, grass and stock coun
try in the world, t'uil information Ad
dress Oregon Im'igrat'n Board, Portland, Ore.
Many imitate "Tansill's Punch" 6c. C'gar.
Scrofula Humor
"My little daughter's life was saved, as we i>e-
Heve, by Hood's Sarsapat ilia. Before she was six
mouths old scrofula t«> appear ami In a short
time she had 7 running sores. On© physician ad
vised the amputation of one of her lingers, to
which we refused assent. We began giving her
Hood's Sarsaparllla. A marked improvement was
noticed after she had tuken only one bottle, and by
j a continued use of it ber recovery was complete,
j And she is now, being seven years old, strong and
j healthy. The other members of my family have
j been greatly benefited by Hood's .sarsaparllla."—
1 U. C. JONKS, Alaa, Lincoln Co., .Me.
1 Hood's Sarsaparilla
.Sold by all druggists. $1; fix for s">. Prepared only
I l>y C. I. HOOD Ac CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maw.
IOO Doses One Dollar
PMllDta Hkonld ba Laftii,
Ymmg pullpta ought all to be laying this
month. Later hatched onea If not laying by
December, will probably, if left to them-
Folvm, not lay before spring when eggs are
down to IB cents per dozen. Therefore get
the pullet* to laying early when price* are
hlglnwt. Hev. S. W. Squires, of Franklin,
Man*., snysi "Last winter for twelve hen#
I used four large cans of Sheridan's Con
dition I'owder. I believe it is the best pre
paration known to Increase egg production.
1 saved part of the eggs for hatching after
forcing the hens four months for sill they
were worth with the Sheridan's Powder, and
I never had a greater per cent, of fertile eggs
or more vigorous chickens. Ido not believe
1 can afford to be without the Powder to
give health and vigor to young hens." Six
cans of Sheridan's Powder will pay a good
dividend in eggs. I. S. Johnson & Co., 22
Custom House Street, Boston. Mass. (the
only iuakersof Sheridan's Condition Powder),
will send for 50 cents, two packs of Powder;
for SI.OO five packs- for $1.20 a large 2% can,
postpaid; six cans for 10.00, express prepaid.
A copy of the best Poultry paper for 5 cents.
Send stamps or cash.
Fish have been caught in the Gulf of
California at a depth of 1400 feet.
rmnfi Y n. t ..CATARRH
CREAM
Cleanses the
Na«al Passages,■ 1
Allays Pain and mJK&ojSfLy,^fADi
Hea fl .:rrs^;WFEVEßf|^
Restores tlio A
Senses of TasteV /
and Sincll.
TRY THE CURE, fi
A particle Is
Into each nostril anil IsU
agreeable. Price 50 eta. ™
at Druggists; by mall, registered, 60 cents. ELY
BROTHERS, Druggists, 56 Warren St., New York.
112 F YOU WISH A r» , , ■ -^
..K*V»"vk»
purchase one of the cele
bruted SMITH & WESSON »_i* i
arms. The finest small arms
ever manufactured and the )/ Wju)
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Manufactured in calibres*B And 44-100. Sin- MHf/
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ity wrought *teel. carefully inspected for work
manshlp and stock, they are unrivaled for flntiili,
du nihility and accuracy. Do not be deceived by
cheap innllenble rant-Iron Imitations which
are often sold for the genuine article and are not
only unreliable, but dangeroua. The SMITH A
WESSON Revolvers are all stamped upon the bar
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and are sua ran teed perfect In every detail. In
sist uppn having the genuine article, and if your
dealer cannot supply you an order sent to address
below will receive prompt and careful attention.
Descriptive catalogue and prices furnished upon ap
pik-atiou. SMITH & WESSON,
fyMention this pafter. Springfield, Mass.
a INDIAN mmtsssat
jfwi ■ Oregon Small Qem I'oints
Mgk of Semi-Precious stone, Sioux and Apache
Jgflfe Trappings, 100 varieties of Minerals, l'ol
ished Agates and Agate Jewelry, Fossil
1 ecth. Fishes. Shells nnd Leaves of the
Kjl Cretaceous and Tertiary. Large Illus
tratad l'rice List for stamp.
\V. STILWKLIq Dead wood, S. Dak.
II HIT. Only ('ertniu and
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w I I W 111 J. 1,. STKPHKNS. I.H,annn.w
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Ilr'jiiiiiC ollege, 4.17 Main St., Buffalo, N. V
I ThEYfaCTftitMfftifinN I
A National Family Paper—Two Millions of Readers.
792
The volume of The Companion for 1890 will be unsurpassed by any previous year in the variety of entertaining anil Feet j
instructive articles. The full Announcement of Authors and Articles will be sent on application.
' « i
Ten Serial Stories ; |
fully illustrated, and among the most attractive ever published.
ISO Short Stories —Thrilling Adventures —Sketches of Travel Health and Hygiene »
Biographical Sketches l,OOO Short Articles—Popular Science * ~
Natural History —Outdoor Sports —Anecdotes £
Etiquette—Wit and Humor-Poetry. ; «.
——— ! s- Oi
Illustrated Weekly Supplements : ||
Were given with nearly every Issue during the last year, and will be continued. They give an increase of ! "g .§
nearlv one-half in the matter and illustrations, without any increase in the price of the paper. » 2
v 5
Eminent Contributors. ■ j|
Articles of great value and interest will be given in the volume for 1800 by 5
.. <
Rt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone, Hon. James C. Blaine, Justin McCarthy, M. P., .§>B
General Lord Wolseley, Senator Ceo. F. Hoar, Hon. John C. Carlisle, g
Sir Morell Mackenzie, Prof. John Tyndall, Dr. Wm. A. Hammond, r S®
Eugene Schuyler, C.A.Stephens, Lt. Fred Schwatka, tj* £•*
And One Hundred other well-known and favorite writers.
Four Double Holiday Numbers r J
Are in preparation, and will be exceedingly attractive, filled with the special work of our favorite fl* »
writers, and profusely illustrated. They are published at S| g
Thanksgiving—Christmas—New Year's Easter. &
These Souvenir Numbers are sent to Kaeli Subscriber. B
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IF- Feet
$5,000 Prize Stories. A ( |
Nearly Six Thousand Stories have been examined. The titles and authors of those which will IS B a
receive Prizes cannot yet be announced, but the successful Stories will be published during the coming year. Evj ijv i
The Girl That's Wanted, i The Backward Boy, i't] 112 |
Practical pnpers full of suggestions to girls, as to new And How to Develop Ills Powers. A series of.'arti- H "?| ( B, 4
occupations, and what is best to do in life, by Marion clcs by the Presidents of three leading L'niversi- _
llarland aud other well-known writers. | ties which will interest boys and their parents. '"ufejFF "7 ~
The Kditorials give comprehensive views of Important current events at homo and abroad. jjffA
The Children's Page contains charming Stories, Pictures, Anecdotes, Rhymes and «rdj| \
Tuzzles, adapted to the youngest readers. iSfSßS**® '
Household Articles will be published frequently, giving useful Information In Art
Work, Fancy Work, Embroidery, Decoration of liooms, Cooking, and Hints on Housekeeping. i
" " —» ® "
TIIIC FREE TO JAN. 1 9 1890* WITH
I ill V To any New Subscriber who will rut out ami send u§ this slip, with name anil WW II H
Pout Office address and 51.75 for a year's subscription, w© will send "The Youth's
£| | 111 Companion" FREE to .lan. I, 1890, and for a full year from that date. This offer In-
H eludes the FOIJK DOHRLR HOLIDAY NUMBERS, the ILLUSTRATED WKKKLt Sfc I /£%
W "" BB SIPPLKMENTS, and the ANNUAL PREMIUM LIST, with 500 Illustrations. W ■ ■ » W
| Send money by I*ost-Ofllee Money Order, Check, or Registered Letter. 45
THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, Boston, Mass.
r?jAcoßs<m
SURE JML CURE
CURES PERMANENTLY
NEURALGIA.
Intense Pain In Face.
Little Rapids, Wis.. March 2,1889.
My wife suffered with bucq interne neural
gic pains in the face; she thought she would
die. She bathed her face and head with St.
Jacobs Oil, and it cured her In four hours.
CARL BCHEIBE.
AT DnrGoisTs AND Pealees.
THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltlntsrs, Mi.
N Y N P—43
HOW TO IJKT AN OFFICE BY MERIT.
A Pamphlet on Civil Service Examinations.
Full information. '2.1 cents. Also "The civil Service
Law; a Defense" Sl. Pamphlet free. Address
W. 11. CI.AKKE. I'. O. Box '-'liir., Xcw York City.
MISSISSIPPI LAND ■ an<f Timbered Land, I
mostly bottom land, instate of Mississippi, for salo
by I'EKK V NOGKNT. Salem. Vn.
OR. KOEHI.EB'» FAVORITE COLIC MIXTURE
/W 'lllftkliiN. 'or all domestic animals, will cure 'J'j out of every lUO cases of colic, « hether flat
jt&ti 'ii iii "lent or spasmodic, ltarely more than lor sj doses necessary. It does not con
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p'nrllihtl! In more than 8000 cases, our guarantee Is worth something. < ellc must be
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I w hen needed, and perhaps save a valuable horse. If uotat your druggist s.eu
close SO cents for sample bottle, sent prepaid.
V Address I>R. KOEIII.ER A CO., ll.tlilekrni, I'n.
\ J vie Dr. Koehler's "Favorite Cotii■ We cheerfully recommend Or. Koehters
Mixture" right alono with suerrnK. It is "favorite Colic J/iXurr." It on Id not be
\ >IL ? 'WKSW/ the best colic medicine J have ever seen. without it as long as ue have hones.
\ ■ TI. ISAAC MOOQ, Horse Dealer, ISAAC MOShS liHO.,
' Brooklyn, Sew York. Sale and Fyhangr Stable *, haston, la
■ "DISO'S REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best. Easiest ■■
1 to use. Cheapest. Kelief is immediate. A cure is MB
certain. Kor Cold in the. Head it has no cquaL B8
■ It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied HRh
to the nostrils. Price, 30c. Sold by drujcjnsts or sent HMM
by mail. Address, K. T. Uazelxixk, Warren, Pa. WBM
Walcrtrssl
S>ww<f»orClin>tnrtsrf Ff*. A> J-Towtr. Hcxtttn.
S3O PWtTRAIT FREE
while introducing our fine work, If you send us a
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ily, we will make you a full life-size I'rnyon I'ur
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back of photo to secure its safety. We guarantee
Its return. Our offer Is good for a few days only,
and the sample portrait is worth S3O, being as flue*
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AMERICAN FORTH AIT CO..
Went 2.'ld St., NEW YORK CITY.
Largest Ltfe-tttse Portrait Hon— In toe World.
DAOTD k 11 Chadwick's Manual.
DAULI DA Li LI 7 ,n ' * •' '•ph™ i
unMIJ U " IJU 111 ii niiiiateil I over.
Btiwm tipT"P on application rncloKliiK mm
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THF.ODORE HOLLAND, P. O. Box Phlla., Pa. j
t- I |
rc..u»uu i.4»• i - A, W. Url tilt SIC k U
0 llnlmti It i * waskuvlwii u. t MmiUoa Uii .
jCOjTAN HOUR JFf.lr
WfcV MEDICAL CO., Richmond. Vn. |
if THEwoHPtßrut I
_U BUR GICHAIR
rnnMITIJRE. /1Q
vUol—nl* factory vricM,/? /77M|MlL < rHrr
udablp loodiubo 112! waBKLrHiIM
P.lJlfor on Msn. IHirEVrnl TO HIKE.
Seod Hup for 0«U- V.l*-W FUI
lof«*. Itvm IIUTUI,
Lrom««,<^lttH.WliH,niUM»
THE EDWARD HARRISOK
aciijXi 00.,
M»uufiictnr*ri ot
Harrison** Standard Rnrr E^Pi^
Stoae Grinding aud^Flouriiig
p jsaeoalng great^capao
responsible parties.
Lutv Price*. Write for
New Illustrated Cata- ,
luguf and mention this paper.
Tixs Eriward Harrison Mili Co.,
How llavou. Coan.
PEER LESSb YES a »ld i*Drt wuni
m mm After ALL others
Dr. Lobb, 3 ™-
Twenty years' continuous practice In the treat
ment anil cure of the awful effects of early
vice, destroying both mint! and body. Medicine
and treatment for one month. Five Dollar*, sent
securely sealed from observation to any address,
llonk on Special Diseases free.
dorse Big 42 as* the only
In specific fur the certain core
1 TO 5 of this disease.
jflßOoaraotocd noi toW G. 11. 1M( JKA 11 AM, M. D ,
o»u«® BirtoUiro. * Amsterdam, N. Y.
|Cj| yraonly byth* We hare sold Big G for
many years, and It na»
I CataiOil wO. .ript.n the best of sstli-
Oioc'.nntti.llffiSi ruction.
TBFK D. It. DY^CHK-UGO°ILF
.00. Bold by Druggists
B B 9 tt J9 find Whiskey Slab*
K§& flj il out pain.
LU^ZKJJJI HJM.WOOLLEY. M.DL
FBIZIOE
BEST IN Til K WORLD UHtnwf
J |F" a et the Genuine. Bold Everywhere.
| Gold Hunters' Adventures
IN AUSTRALIA, by WM. h. THOHES; l3mo»
sfi l Pages. *IO full-page Illustrations. A stirring
{ story of A «lyenture among Bushrangers and out
-1 laws. Largest and best Books ever m»ld for price,
: only 25 cents, postpaid. Address ALKX T. LOVU
& Co., Lakeside bidg., Chicago. 111.