Sullivan republican. (Laporte, Pa.) 1883-1896, November 21, 1890, Image 4

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    A BIG ENGINEERING FEAT.
GREATEST BRIDGE IN THE WORLD
TO SPAN THE HUDSON.
A Forty Million Dollar Steel Struc
ture Will Connect Jersey City anil
New York. *
The greatest canti-lever bridge in the
world is to span the Hudson River from
New York to New Jersey, says a letter
from New York to the Chicago Herald.
It will be bigger and longer than the
enormous structure in Scotland which
crosses the Firth of Forth and is the
most extensive structure iu existence
built on the cantilever principle: It will
be one-third longer ami much wider than
the suspension bridge which unites New
York and Brooklyn, and will cross the
water at a greater elevation by twenty
feet than does the East Kiver bridge.
Its cost will be about §40,000,000 and
five years will be required to construct
the work. As the new acqueduct is the
marvel of the nineteenth century in hy
draulic engineering, so iu bridge con
struction will the proposed structure be
the wonder of the age.
The engineers, Thomas C. Clarke and
Charles B. Brush, have practically deter
mined upon the location of the approaches
on the opposite shores, but of course they
decline to make that knowledge public
m yet.
The law says that the bridge must
land in the metropolis between Tenth
and 181st streets, on private property, to
be acquired under the right of eminent
domain. In New Jersey it will prob
ably start from the lower part of Palisade
Ridge in Jersey City, where the ground
is 100 feet above the level of the Hud
son, and a natural grade to the ap
proaches of the bridge would be secured
■without the building of au elevated via
duct. If this proves to be the site se
lected the most reasonable assumption
would be that the New York terminus
will be in the region of Broadway and
Forty-second street. Thus passengers
from the South and West will be
whirled into one grand union station.
Into this will also run the trains of the
Long Island Railroad, which will cross
the East Kiver by a tunnel that will be
continued under Forty-second street to
the Grand Central and also to the great
union station, similar to that of the
Northwestern Railway in London.
Being built upon the cantilever prin
ciple there will be but a single span
over the river, with a tower ou either
shore. Grain storehouses will be under
the bridge and also under the tracks
along 'lie Palisades. The freight cars
will unload by chutes extending to the
tops of these warehouses. The bridge
will be of steel, and 2400 feet from span
to span.
It will have six railroad tracks, its
bottom will be 150 feet above the
river's surface aud its top will be fifty
feet still higher. After the granite pier 3
and approaches are constructed the
bridge will be put together section by
section, the steel being brought to the
spot on floats from the mills as needed.
The latter part of the stupendous un
dertaking will be the easiest of accom
plishment.
When the Herald correspondent called
at the office of the bridge commissioners
he found ex-Judge George W. Green, the
father of the bridge project, with Secre
tary Swan both busily engaged in the ex
amination of a mass of pi ins and esti
mates. Judge Green said: "The cost
of the bridge itself will be about $15,-
000,000 and the total cost including ap
proaches and stations about $40,000,000.
Of this sum §10,000,000 will be raised
by sale of stock and $30,000,000 by the
issue of bonds. The passenger stations
will be built of steel, aud large enough
to admit all trains that now enter New-
York, New Jersey and Brooklyn. It
will have twenty tracks, side by side,
aud be 1300 feet in length. The grade
Sn and out of the city over the bridge
will be forty feet to the mile The roads
accommodated by the bridge are the
Pennsylvania; Central Railroad of New
Jersey; Delaware, Lackawanna and
Western; New York and Erie; New
York and Greenwood Lake; New York,
Susquehanna and Western; New York,
Ontario and Western, and the West
Shore, with the smaller roads operated by
or having connection with these corpora
tions. The roads enumerated reach
every section South and West. Their
passenger traffic is about sixty ipillions a
year, and the freight reaches the enorm
ous sum of 80.000,000 tons yearly.
When this bridge is constructed the dis
comfort and delay passengers now ex
perience in crossing to New York on
ferryboats will be at an end, and the cost
of transportation of baggage and trans
shipment of freight will no longer exist.
"It is evident that New York is reach
ing the limit of its resident population.
While the latter can extend north and to
Long Island, it will also naturally ex
tend to the west of the Hudson, where
is an inviting field for residence. While
this territory in New Jersey will grow in
population it will not take from New
York any of its population which it can
more favorably accommodate. There
will have to be provided a system of
rapid transit over the bridge to accom
modate those living within a short dis
tance of the metropolis. Within twenty
years the beautiful region all about the
Palisades will contain the homes of thou
sands of those who will seek this quar
ter to avoid the high rents and excessive
cost of living in this city. In every as.
pect the bridge will be a blessing to the
metropolis and to the commercial inter
ests of the nation."
A Ball of "PadHj Long Logs."
A curious natural phenomenon was
seen at Plainfield, N. J., a few days ago.
A gentleman walking through his gar
den saw a living hall of "daddy long
legs," as they are commonly called.
There were hundreds of the ins"ots in
the lump, which was fully half a foot in
circumference. Their long legs were
tanoied in a seemingly inextricable muss.
The animal warmth of their tiny bodies
probably induced the insect; to huddle
so closely together. York Tdt
gram.
PECULIAR INFATUATION.
Different Methods of Following the Inlune*
tlon ••LOT© One Another."
Do men ever fall In love with each other?
Women do. Not long ago a young woman
in New Jersey was married to a youthful la
borer on her "father's l'arm. Sometime after
ward it was discovered that the husband was
n female; the young wife refused, however,
though earnestly entreated by her friends, to
give up her chosen consort. The strangest
part of the discovery was the fact that the
Dride knew her husband was a woman before
she was led to the altar.
If men do not exhibit this strange infatua
tion for one of their own sex, they at least
oftentimes give evidence of thefact that they
love one another. There are many instances
on record where one man has given his life
lor another. There are many more instances
were men have given life to another.
It is a proud possession—the knowledge
that one has saved a precious human life.
Meriden, Conn., is the home of such a happy
man. John H. .Preston, of that city, July
11th, 181(0, writes: "Five years ago I was
taken very sick, I had several of thebestdpo
tors, and one and all called it a complicatiou
of diseases. 1 was sick four years, taking
prescriptions prescribed by these same doc
tors, and I truthfully state I never expected
to get any better. At this time, I com
menced to have the most terrible pains in
my back. One day an old friend of mine,
Mr. It. T. Cook of the firm of Curtis & Cook,
advised me to try Warner's Safe Cure, as he
had l>een troubled the same way and it had
effected a cure for him. I bough! six bottles,
took the medicine as directed and am to-day
a weH man. lam sure no one ever had a
worse case of kidney and liver trouble than X
bad. Before this I was always against pro
prietary medicines but not now, oh, no."
Friendship expresses itself in very peculiar
ways sometimes; but tb> true friend is th€
friend in need.
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
CHOCOLATE MERINGUES.
Six ounces sugar, two and a half
ounces choeolate powdered, three whites
of eggs. Whip the whites very stiff,
then lightly stir in the sugar and choco
late. Hake them on a sheet of thin white
paper in a moderately heated oven.
CABBAGE SALAD.
Boil the heart in salted water till
tender, but not too soft. Then drain
well, and set in a cool place, or on icc,
first pulling the leaves apart so that no
wet lurks within. Make a dressing with
the raw yolk of an egg, a tablespoonful
of salad oil, two tablespqonfuls of cream,
two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, and a
saltspoonful each of mustard, salt and
pepper. Chop the cabbage, add to the
mixture, and garnish with slices of to
mato.
GIBI.ET soup.
Ingredients—Four sets of chicken gib
lets or two of turkoy, one onion, carrot,
turnip, a little parsley, a leaf of sage, a
little lemon juice, two quurts strong
chicken or beef broth. Cut up the veg
etables, brown them in a stew-pan with
a piece of butter thu size of an egg.
When they begin to brown add a tea
spoonful of flour and the giblets. Fry
them quickly for a moment, watching
them carefully that they do not burn.
Now cut the giblets and put all into a
soup kettle, with salt, pepper and the
stock. Let the soup simmer for four or
five hours, then strain it. Thicken with
a little llour, aud add one of the livers
mashed. Season highly and add the
lemon juice. Pour into tureen over the
yelks of hard boiled eggs, one for each
person.— Cincinnati binquirer.
BIRDSNRST PUDDING.
Corn and peel enough tart, well flav
ored apples to cover the bottom of a
round porcelain pudding dish. Put
about half au inch of boiling water in
the dish with the apples. Cover them
with a plate and set them in a hot oven
to cook for twenty minutes. At the end
of this time the apples should be tender
ard nearly cooked and the water en
tirely absorbed. If any water remains it
should be gently turned off, but so as
not to break the apples. Prepare an un
sweetened custard of live eggs and a
quart of milk which has been brought
to the boiling point. Add the eggs to
the hot inilk, carefully beating them in.
Season the mixture with a saltspoonful
of salt, .and pour it over the apples. It
should cover them. Replace the pud
ding dish in the oven without a cover,
and bake the custard and apples till tlie
custard is firm in the centre. The oven
should not bo too hot.— Boston Culti
vator.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Powdered ammonia is considered ex
cellent for cloaning silver.
Butter is tainted by any strong smell
ing odor. Therefore it should be kept
by itself.
Have coffee pulverized. A third less
will be required and the quality much
improved.
There is no economy in cheap soap.
Get the best; when half the quantity will
be needed.
To cleanse knit and crochet articles
rub in a pan of flour until clean and
shake thoroughly.
Camphor ice is made of one ounce of
lard, one ounce of spermacetti, one ounce
of camphor, one ounce of almond oil,one
half cake of white wax. Melt all together
and mix thoroughly.
To set delicate colors in embroidered
handkerchiefs, soak them ten minutes
previous to washing in a pail of tepid
water, in which a dessertspoonful of tur
pentine has been well stirred.
Creamed sweetbreads, creamed fish,
chicken in cream sauce, and hot crab
meat may all be served in paper cases.
Each case should be placed on a pretty
dish and served immediately after being
filled with the hot mixtures.
Newspapers soaked in water, then
squeezed quite dry and torn into little
bits should be sprinkled over a dusty
carpet just before sweeping it. The pa
per collects the dust, and tncre is no dan
ger of it staining the carpet.
-V gargle for sore mouth and throat i>
to take four large spoonfnls of good
cider vinegar, four of fyatov, a teaspoon
ful of common salt,and a very small por
tion of red or black pepper; gargle every
hour. It is worth more than all the
chlorate of pouish ic tha couutry and il
cannot harm you.
A Norelty in Bookbinding.
A novelty in bookbinding is announced
in the employment in it of metal as a
substitute for cardboard. A special
preparation is first necessary, and the
leather may be bent and straightened
again without perceptible damage, a
course of treatment that would destroy
cardboard covers. The metal is covered
with any material that taste may dictate,
and the finished book shows no differ
ence in appearance, excepting in a
greater thinness of the cover, which is
always desirable.— Picayune,,
The China Sea and the Bay of Fundy
are the two roughesi seas in the world.
Pure soap is white. Brown soaps are adul
terated with rosin. Perfume Is only putin to
hide the presence of putrid fat. Dobbins's
Electric Soap is pure , white and unscented.
Has been sola since 1865. Try it noiv.
A TOWNSHIP is thirty-six sections, each a
mile square.
A Pretty Severe Test.
We refer to one that has withstood the most
rigid adverse criticism lor a period now ex
tending over forty y«ut| «nd whioh lias oi>-
tained for l)r. Tobias's Venetian Liniment the
proud distinction that by its intrinsic value
alone it has won the esteem of all who have
ever used this valuable preparation.
Truly it can be said of it: "Tried and not
found wanting," and 110 wonder to-day it is
regarded as the most wonderful pain destroy
er ever offered to the world, and that it is
adopted everywhere as a standard remedy for
the relief and cure of the numberless ills to
which humanity is subject.
Clean, quick and ettlcacious x it has never
1 ailed to accomplish that which for many
years it has been warranted.
The word humbug cannot be applied to "Dr.
Tobias's Venetian Liniment," as it has proved
itself, and by its good works assuredly fixed
itself in public contidence.
Never b * without a bottle of it; vou will find
it more than worth its weight in gold, for
whom is there amongst us at all times free
from the ills that tiesh is heir to.
Lee Wa's Chinese Headache Cure. Harm
less in effect, quick and positive in action.
Sent prepaid on receipt of SI per bottle.
Adeler & Uo.,f>£i Wyandotte st.,KansasCity,Mo
FITS stopped free by Dit. KLCXF/S (JURAT
NERVR RESTORE it. No tits after iirst day's use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise and J'i t rial ij )tlle
free. Dr. Kline, Ml Arch St., Phil a., Pa.
Reecham's Pills cure Sick-Headache.
Life Is Misery
To thousand* of people who have the taint of scrof
ula in their blood. The ascoales caused by the dreai
ml running sores and other manifestations of t.ils
disease are beyond description. There is no r. medv
equal to Hood's Sara iparilla for scrofula, salt rheum
and every form of uloo 1 dUoai ). Wo know that
has cured the severest easea and it will Oone.it all
who give It a fair trial.
"Scrofula bunches In my neok disappeared when
Hook Hood's Sarsaparllla."—A. K. KELLET. Parle
ershurg, W. Va.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Propared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mans.
100 Doses One Dollar
RELIEVES INSTANTLY.
EI.Y UIJUTiIKHS, 66 Warren St., Now York. I'riro CO I HHT 50e l
N Y N C—44 .
IIHUC f»TUI>Y. Book-Keeping, Business Forms
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Bhlpntn Bngina Mlk* i 0., R-oebeatfr. v. Y.
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ljf| "-Vo other FTiW.-.'y Paper girts surh a Variety of an t lnstructivt Reading at so lenr a price." ij)
SPECIMEN COPIES AND PULI. ANN'OUNCEMENT WILL BE SENT OS APPLICATION. (F)
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Tho Serial Stories engaged for tlic year will be of unusual interest and Finely Illustrated. jfj
j Through Thick and Thin ; by Molly Elliot Seawell. Li,
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I Latest Discoveries in Science. I
T' This Scries of Papers explains In a simple manner the recent researches of tho greatest Specialists in Science. yl
|J) The Stars ; by J. Norman Lockyer, F. R. S. jjj
jj The Moon; by Prof. E. S. Holden. The Earth; by Prof. N. S. Shaler. 1
j The Ocean; by Camille Flammarion. The Sun ;by Prof. C. A. Young. j
| College Athletic Sports. How to Choose a College. j
' By Harvard, Princeton and Yale Captains. Pour Articles of great value to any young man considering V
if) College Boat-racing; by R. W. Herrick. a College Education; by (jj
i|j Foot-Ball at Princeton; by E. A. Poe. Pres. Seth Low. Hon. Andrew D. White. ifi
jj Base-Ball: Matches Lost and Won; by A. A. Stagg. Prof. Goldwin Smith. Pres. Merrill E. Gates. /A
J Important Articles. j
l|j The Success at the Bar of Famous Lawyers; by Lord Coleridge, Chief Justice of England. jfj
|\ Incidents in the Lives of Famous Surgeons; by Sir Morell Mackenzie, M. D. *
J' Railway Stories by Railway Men; by Prominent Railroad Officials. $
'jj Jules Verne's Boyhood, telling how he became a Story Writer; by Jules Verne. (Ji
Among the Highland Peasantry; by The Marquis of Lome. Illus. by The Princess Louise.
j: The Girl with a Taste for Music. Thrown on Her Own Resources. I
ijj) How can She make the most of Her Voice ? What can a Girl of Sixteen do ?
I A remarkable series of papers written expressly for A Scries of Four practical and helpful Articles, which [i
] THE COMPANION by the following famous singers: will prove suggestive and valuable to any girl; by J
Madame Albani. Miss Marie Van Zandt. Amelia E. Barr. "Jenny June." (ft
Miss Emma Juch. Miss Emma Nevada. Mary A. Livermore. " Marion Harland."
J Madame Lillian Nordica. And other Favorite Writers. *
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'Ji Weekly Editorials on Current Events ut homo and abroad. A Charming Children's Page Every Week. fjfi
/iv Household Articles will be published frequently, giving useful information in the various departments of home life,-
< Art Work, Fancy Work, Embroidery, the Decoration of Rooms, the Care of Plants, Cooking, and Hints on Housekeeping. ! |
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I THIS FREE TO JAN., 1891. WITH '
ffl To any New Subscriber who will cat out nnd Mend UM thin slip, with name and ® li
PoHt-Ofßce nddrcNN 11 ml 91.75. we will send The Youth'* Companion FREE tom
I Ol ID •! nil miry 1* 1S»1, nnd for n Full Venr from t lain Date. Thin offer include* the tfl
iii oLIr FFVE HOLIDAY NI >IHERS nnd nil the ILLFSTRATKD WEEKLY 2k I 111
HUPPLKM FATS. .Send Cherk, T\>sl-4>fllee Order, or Registered Letter. 45 ■ W
I THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, Boston, Mass. |
Comes Every IfVeJt. - Finely II lu titrated. Read in 460,000 Families.
Woman, her diseases and their treatment
72pages, illustrated; price 50c. Bent upon re
ceipt of lOc., cost of inaillng,etc. Address Prof.
H. H. KLINK, M.P., 981 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Oklahoma Guide Book and Map sent asy whera
on receipt of ISO c ta.Ty ler A Co., Kansas City, Mo.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle
SPRAINS.
Ohio & Miss.Rallwav.
Office President and
General Manager,
Cincinnati, Ohio
"My foot suddenly
turned and gave mi>
a very severely
sprained ankle. The
application of St.
Jacobs Oil resulted at
once ink relief from
pain."
WW. PFABODY,
Trcst. A Gen'l Man'Er.
BRUISES.
746 Dolphin Street,
Baltimore. Md..
Jan'y 18, 1890.
"I was bruised bad
ly in hip and aide by
a fall and suffered se
verely. St. Jacobs Oil
complete!y cured
me." WM.C. HARDEN
Member of State
Legislature
THE CHARLES I VOfiELER CO.. Baltimore. Mf
Nothing On Earth Will
MAKr
HENS
i.
LIKE
Sheridan's Condition Powder!
It is absolutely pure. Hlsrhly concentrated. In quail,
tity It costs less than a tenth of a cent n day. Strictly a
medicine. Prevents and cures all diseases. Uood for
yotinsr chicks. Worth more than crold when hens moult.
Sample for 26 cents in stnmps, five packages HI. 2 1-4 lb
enns, by mall, 11.80. Six cans. $5.00, express paid.
"TIIE BEST POULTRY MAGAZINE," sample copy free.
Poultry Jtnitino Guide free with SI.OO orders or mem
LS. JOHNBOJt& CO., 22 Custom House St.. liostou, Muss.
___ 13ISO'S KK-UKIIY FOH CATAHRi.—Best. Easiest to use.
H| i Cheapest. Ketief is iminediatt'. A cure Is certain. For MR
Kg.* Cold In the Head it has no equal.
BBIHYALI TPJRAW —-A —W M WBI
TOB It is an Ointment, of which a small particle Is applied to the jj^B
HH nostrils. Price, Hoc. Rold by druggists or sent by mall.
HI vifii I*'" l ' V T i nvr- Warren. T*n.
LEND YOUR
1... UEIIKIN IIIC'TIO.MHI \
pubiinhed, at tho remarkably low price /JUk m
of only sl.oo, pout paid Thi* Book con- IK' {II ■)
tains u-2i finely printed page* of rlear |»» m'
typo on excellent paper an-l U haul
homely yet Hervleeanly bound iti cloth. U mMm '\V- V
It gives fcnglith word* with the German V
equivalent* ami pronunciation, an 1 )
German word* with Rnglish definition*. \
It is invaluable to Germans who are not • » v
thoroughly familiar with English, or tow J
Americans who wish to learn German V. .Jf
Add re**, with
HOOK ri'H. IIOIS. 134 l.roa.tpj SI.. New YorkCUf
PATENTS!
■ B tBR K w ■ ■ hand-book of In
formation. J. 11. < K A LI.K A; CO.,
Waahliigf n, P«Q«
PATENTS G^SJS
The Bees Won the Brush.
Maryland hunters were recently the!
witnesses of a very singular occurrence!
during a fox chase. They started thoi
fox in a short time, and soon the bounds
were in full cry. The fox kept up for
several miles and then,being hard pressed,
took to a hollow tree in the woods.
Axes were procured and the tree soon
felled. The surprise of the hunters can
be better imagined than described when
they discovered they had captured a dead
fox.
Further investigation showed that
beea, which were in possession of the
tree, had stung the fox to death in the
time it took to fell the tree. When the
dead fox was withdrawn from the hol
low the bees began to, come after and
made it warm for the hunters and their
horses. They decamped as speedily as
possible, some of them being badly stung.
—Nete York Journal.
A Planning Sense
Of health and strength renewed and of ease
and comfort follows the use of Syrup of Ftm
as it acts In harmony with nature to eff ectnal
ly cleanse the system when costive or bilious.
For sole ill 60c. and $1 bottle* by ail leading
druggists.
Money invosted in cuolce one unndred dol
lar bull'iing lots in suburbs of Kansas 'ity will
pay from five hundred to one thousand ]>or
cent, the next few years under our plan.
rash and $5 per month without interest con
t rois a desirable lot. Particulars on application.
J. 11. Baueriein «fc Co.. Kansas <Htv. Mo.
Do You Ever Speculate 112
Any person sending us their name ani ad
dress will receive information that will leal
to a fortune. Benj. Lewis iSr- Co., Security
Building, Kansas Uity. Mo.
Guaranteed live year eight per cent. First
Mortgages on Kansas City property, interest
payable evory six months; principal and inter
est collected when due and remitted without
expense to lender. For sale by J. H. Bauerlein
& Co.. Kansas City. Mo. Write for particulars
Timber. Mineral, F arm Lands and Ranchos
In Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkansas,
bought and sold. Tyler & Co., Kansas City, Mo.-
fDu NCH'soys*
done ?•
__ • Ought-standsfor nohhing*!
The house oughh t-o be cleaned
wlfh Sapolio.Try&c&ke inyour
nexb"house-cled,nin£3ejid be convinced
"IGNORANCE of the law excuses no
man,"and ignorance is
no excuse for a dirty house or greasy kitchen. Better
clean them in the old way than not at all; but the modern
and sensible way is to use SAPOLIO on paint, on floors, on
windows, on pots and pans, and even on statuary. To be
ignorant of tha uses of SAPOLIO is to be behind the age.
R CO PV RIGHT CAJO *
« Well! Well/ 1 *
That's the way you feel after one or
two of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets
have done their work. You feel
well, instead of bilious and consti
pated ; your sick headache, dizzi
ness and indigestion are gone. It's
done mildly and easily, too. You
don't have to feel worse before you
feel better. That is the trouble
with the huge, old-fashioned pill.
These are small, sugar-coated, eas
iest to take. One little Pellet's a
laxative, three to four are cathartic.
They regulate and cleanse the liver,
stomach and bowels—tjuickly, but
thoroughly. They're the cheapest
pill, sold by druggists, because you
only pay for the good you get.
They're guaranteed to give satis
faction, every time, or your money
is returned. That's the peculiar
plan all Dr. Pierce's medicines are
6old on.
Can you ask more ?
FRAZEHAfKi
UH&'i' J.N TliJt WUSUiI> IS It Si ™ W fc
10" Get the Qouulna Sola Everywhere
PATENTS «" v <'^
■ JT* I J V ;1 Patent. Bent Free.
Patrick O'Farrell, WASHF'STON'
-VASELINE
FOR A (INK-I)(I1,I,AK 111 1.1. sent us by mall
we will dellv< r, free or all charges, to any person la
tlu« Unlt 'd States, all of the following article, care
fully packe.:
One two-ounce bottle of Pure Vaseline, - - lOcti.
One two-oui.ce bottle of Vaseline Pomade, • 15 "
One Jar of Vaseline Cold Cream, 15 "
One i >ke of Vaseline Camphor Ice, - • - - io--
One Cake of Vaseline soap, unscento l, - - 10"
one Cake of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely seen ted,2s "
One two-ounce bott.e of White Vaseline, • - 23
81.10
Or for postage stamps any single article at the pries
named. On no account be persuaded to accept fron
your druggist any Vaseline or preparation therefrom
unless laltclled with our name, because you will ee.r
ta inly receive an imitation which has littui or no ralue
(lie* <h rough >lfir. Co.. it Stale St.. N. V.
BFor Coughs 0 Colds
There io no Medidno like
DR. SCHENCK'S
PULMONIC
■ SYRUP.
It is pleasant to the ta*N» and
does not contain a particle of
opium or any thing injurious. It
in the IlestCongh Medici no in the
World. Fc oalohyall Druppiits,
Price, SI.OO por bottle. 7 Schenck's Book on
Consumption and its Cure, moiled free. Address
Dr. J. H. Schenck & Bon. Philadelphia.
m I EWIS' 98 & LYE
jjaSfc L P ow d eretl and PcfumeJ.
The stroiujc.it and jjurs.it Ly »
WJm* V r mai ' e - Will make the best p )f-
Mtmj} « fumed Hani Soap in 20 wia-
IHB? utes without boiling. Itist.lio
liest for disinfecting sinks,
Hf < losets, drains washing bottlai,
mm i arrets, paints, etc.
PENNA. SALT M'FG CO
/""l/jQNESX
/ TON SHALES \ / OF \
S6O BINSHAMTON
V Beam Box Tare Beam J N. Y. a J
PENSIONS! SSS
sion Claim*. an.l tea years au Lxuminer m U. s.
I Pension office. Claims that hang Itr* under the old
law cau be settled under the new law. For circular
and Information write to TilOS. ('(MiLEV,
Any.. 160# It HU N. W.,\lawfctngf n. l>.< .
FtXHIOH JDURIOIS. •■fc'V
now publish our French Faahion Dooks In Knfh|l>.,
jß*C*ai inducetnentsto introduce item. The mwt tractNhL
I Cod olefiuit ever offered The Icssoob on Basttcg, Bonetoo
Bnlshlng-KreplDK Wrmktue Out, Cutting Skirts, etc + cm
eKpblalned only In fhese hooks, tt-rh woityne
yoJl^KUWrlptlo n. tend only c«nts for copy,
A \%>OWI 1,1 .AC . a W H Yorh
nENSION^Kr^
Prosecutes Claims.
■ Late Principal Examiner 11.6 Pension Bureau.
| UvrstuluHt wai, IdiuUudurating claims, attjr si into-
M 1 prescribe And fully en
iiS?7*l! ° valß aped tir for the certain euro
SuiuTA.' « ItA iiA M . WL U.,
pf Mf dcniy by the We bave sold Big G for
IMltmiQk^lfljlfli many years, and It has
W f*nnflnt«*H ■■■■ ?' V * n the t>e#t 0f
Cincinnati btgH faction.
D. R DYCHE <* CO..
81.00% Bold by Drujidiaui