SOME ENOR M OUS SALARIES. 810 WAGES THAT SEEM TO BE PAID FOB VEBY LITTLE EFFORT. Why It is That Corporations Pay Large Sums to Those Who Ulan age Them—The President's Salary. Chauncey Depew has always been very reticent as to his salary as President of the New York Central, but others who appear to be familiar with his income say that he certainly receives from the New York Central $75,000 a year and that lie makes from his outside legal practice an additional $25,000, making his total income SIOO,OOO a year. This may seem an exorbitant sum to pay to a man whose career by most folks is thought to be one of unalloyed pleasure. But Mr. Depew does not receive the $75,000 from the New York Central in remuneration for any severe manual strain on his part, but for his compheusive knowledge of the affairs of that company and his ability to direct them with the least possible friction. Mr. Depew's office from early morning to late at night is filled with all _.o»ts of people with all sorts of questions, and the man who receives the big salary he does must be able to answer them most satisfactorily, and always in the in terests of the New York Central. Then take some of the salaries of other New Yorkers: H. B. Hyde, President of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, re ceives $50,000; James W, Alexander, the Vice-President, $40,000, and John A. McCall, tho Comptroller, $25,000. R. A. McCurdy, President of the Mutual Insurance Company, receives $50,000, and R. A. Grannis, the Vice-President, receives $30,000. W. H. Beers, Presi dent of the Now York Life lusurance Company, receives $60,000, and Dr. Henry Tuck, the Vice-President, $30,- 000. John E. liegeman, the Vice-Presi dent of the Metropolian Insurance Com pany, receives $35,000. D. O. Heald, President of the Home Fire Insurance Company, gets $35,000, and John W. Murray, the Vice-President of the Ger man-American Company, $35,000. Then look at some of the salaries paid to the chief officers of banks and trust companies. Frederic P. Olcott, Presi dent of the Central Trust Company, re ceives $60,000; Richard King, President of the Union Trust., receives $50,000; General Louis Fitzgerald, President of the Mercantile Trust Company, receives $30,000; John A. Stewart, President of the United States Trust Company, toddl'js along with $50,000, and Colonel W. L. Trenholm, President of the American Surety Company, receives $20,000. President Williams of the Chemical Bank, and President Perkins of the Importers and Traders, each receive $20,000, and the average salary of other bank Presi dents in New York is from SIO,OOO to $15,000. There is a long string of such salaries, » -.a the general opinion is that the men earn their money. The interests of these vast company are all under the minute observation of the commanding officer. These interests ex tend over all the globe and require the greatest judgment and the most skilful knowledge of affairs. Many of these officers, by their keen knowledge of af fairs of state and nations, save their com panies annually ten times the salary they receive. They are provided against al most every system of the blackmail by reason of their vast experience in the conduct of their companies and earn their salaries many times over. Up in the dry goods district the big men of the Clailin Company, Tcfft, Wel ler & Company, and other firms of that calibre, receive on an avciage SSOOO to SIO,OOO a year. There are several excep tions whete buyers and others run their incomes up from SIO,OOO to $20,000 a year. This is in the dry goods jobbing branch, because in the dry goods com mission branch the average salary of an cicploye is from $2500 to SSOOO a year. There are exceptional people who receive $7500. All of these people earn their money, too. The vast experience neces sary to buy goods successfully and to keep in touch with the vest competition of tho present day is certainly worth a liberal income. Then the selling of goods re quires an extended ucquaintance. much personal outlay and the temperament of a diplomat. Looking over these few facts and fig ures the salary of tho President of the United States comes in for consideration. The President receives $50,000 a year, and from the day he enters tho White House until the hour ho leaves it very few men can tell how hard he earns his money. There can be no adequate rule of compensation applied to his case. The vast army of office holders and offico seekers who besiege him ought to make the place worth $500,000 a year at the least. But possibly the compensation for the place is eked out by its great honor and the hurrahs and cheers which greet the President, no matter how un popular he may be, wherever he goes. The salutes of the great cruisers, the bau-ls playing "Hail to the Chief," the great personal honors shown the holder of the office, no doubt are intended to make up the compensation, which can not be represented by his salary of $50,. 000 a year. The Cabinet officers re ceive SBOOO a year. Senators and Con gressmen rcceivo each SSOOO a yetr. Governor Hill receives SIO,OOO a year, and the Senators and Assemblymen re ceive SISOO a year. One has only to look at tho difference in the figures re ceived by men in public life and those paid ta men who reach the pinnacle in business life in New York to observe the great difference and to wonder at it. The wonder is that men of the personal abil ities at the head of the National and State Governments should consent to ac cept the salaries paid to them. But then comes the universal statement that the honors of the places held by them, in a measure, must make up for this vast difference in the pecuuiary compensa tion.—Neti) York Sun. The Lehigh Vullev Railroad owne the longest freight house in the United States. It is situated at Buffalo, N. Y. It* length is 1850 feet. NEWS AND NOTES FOB WOKEN. Lobelia is what the new French blue is called. Fans wtth folding handles are some times seen. The orchid is a favorite medal for fine enamel jewelry. There is a fancy this year for neck laces of colored stones. The ladles -who skate in Paris are all wearing astrakhan jackets. Never have dress fabrics been so magni ficent as they are this year. Gauntlet gloves are very much worn with the tight sleeves that now prevail. The ages between which most women marry are from twenty to twenty-five years. Beautiful flower vases are those of rain bow-tinted glass in devices of a fanciful character. The Turkish fez, in enamel, with gold tassel, constitutes the latest in queen chain pendants. Gentlemen's oval lockets of gold are sought after with either upright or diag onal lines of diamonds. "The color of sun, gold and corn," as a great critio has christened yellow is most conspicuous in dinner toilets this year. Lady Alexandra Levcsou Gower, only daughter of the Duke of Sutherland, is studying to be a nurse at the London Hos pital. Fashions are nothing this season if not furry and feathery, and the point de re sistance in every gown is its enormous sleeves. Strings'of mock gems are now employed as epaulets, necklets and waist bands, the stones being usually in simulated un cut state. In the Postoffico Savings Bank in Lon don women are doing exactly the same work as men, and arc doing it with few er mistakes. One of the largest land owners in the world is Mrs. Emma E. Forsyth,who has a plantation of 150,000 acres on an isl and near New Guinea. Miss A. B. Cleghorn, a Hawaiian Princess, and in the line of succession to the throne of Honolulu, is shortly to wed a well-known Englishman. Lady Anne Blunt, Lord Byron's grand daughter, is living with her husband and young daughter in a tent on the border of the Egyptian desert, near Cairo. Queen Victoria's favorite daughter-in law is the PrineeSs of Wales. The Queen's affection for her is the natural result of the great tact and amiability of the Prin cess. Mrs. Custer, wife of the great Indian fighter, who since the death of her hus band has received a pension of S6OO a year, has asked to have it made §I2OO a year. The ex-Empress Eugenic is a daily vis iter to the graves of her husband and Bon. To say mass iu the chapel of the mausoleum she employs six priests and four monks. Mrs. Miles, the wife of the General who is Iboked on as the nation's best Indian fighter, is a niece of General and Senator Sherman and a sister of Senator Cameron's wife. The latest thing in necklaces is a chain of pearls wound once or twice around the throat, the pearls strung upon a scarlet thread and tho tbreud strung in a little bow at the back. Miss Helen Gladstone, the statesman's daughter, is Vice-President of Sedgwick Hall, Cambridgo. She is noted for her originality as well as her eccentricity of manner, and is utterly regardless of dress. Black silk gowns arc economical as well as stylish made with a yoke and sleeves of some colored cloth, such as heliotrope or bottle green, or of a soft plaid combining white and heliotrope or green. The daughters of the Princess of Wales are excellent pedestriaus. For a number of years they have been put through a vigorous course of physical training, and they thiuk nothing of a ten-mile walk. Aprons are coming in again, but to bo quite of the approved mode they must be in black Chantilly lace adorned with tiny velvet bows. White ones are rarely used, apd arc of Valenciennes lace and insertion over silk. Some ladies of high social position in New York are said to have started a so ciety "for the advancement of propriety and frugality in dress." Among the things to be avoided are decollete dresses and sleeveless bodices. Mme. de Stael turbnns in plaid silk stuck with jeweled pins are quite the rage now. A pretty young girl inaugu rated the mode at a 5 o'clock tea by wearing on her dark hair a yellow silk turban stabbed with a diamond arrow. A new trimming which promises to become immensely popular with society girls is the tulle suzette, a coarso meshed black net having a narrow border in black and colors upon one or both edges. This, plaited very full, is extrmeoly pretty. A Week ol Old Time Moutbern Sport. Amid the vast forest of Loue Leaf Pines, ii the hign Fund hills of North Carolina, a lara number of Northern people have conitrogatei from year to year for the pa-st six years on ao count, of tho xrcat lwncllt to be derived b| . thone sulTorinir with throat nnd lung troubles until quiio a village hasbaen built, consistint of six nit?ls and a number of boarding housed The place has been named Southern Fines Th» surrounding forest abounds In garneol all kinds, and during the lirst week in Fobrik nry a pro;tai,me lias been arranged for I great week sport for tho visitors and eicur sionlsts; low round trip rates of tare from tin North litrinx been arranged. From Bostoj $!0, New Yoriv sl4.U>, Baltimore JH.9O. Then will be a deer hunt, a fox chase, a quail hunt a Mjutrrol hunt, a rabbit cliase, a wild turkej hum and a coon hunt. Also a .Southern bar becue, a 'JKJSSUTU supper and an old time plan tation dance by colored men and women wh? will introduce som» of their plantation sonus The excursionists cm u'l) by either Murchanti •Vr Miners'steamers fr im Boston, Old Domin ion steamers from New York on January 31 or Bay Line steamers from Baltimore on Feb ruaryll. Thovi who attend w.ll, no doubt, en Joy the snort, for it will 1» ao much differen to any of the Northern sport, that tho oddlt] < 112 it, if nothing else, will make It Interesting A NEW J3.000,0*1 British battle-ship, tb Hood, la being built at Chatham. In reading over tlie literary Items ol the week, I found not much to interest me, until my eye caught sight of an article heailed " Jetties' Dream.'" Imag ine my surprise to And it pnded up with a recommendation to use Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Nevertheless, being a great sufferer from sick headache, I determined to try them, and, to my great joy, I found prompt relief, and by their protracted use, a complete immunity from such attacks. Pierce's Pellets often cure sick headache in an hour. They are gently laxative or actively cathartic, according to size of dose. As a pleasant laxative, take one each night on retiring. For adults, four act as an active, yet painless, cathartic. Cause 110 griping or sickness. Best Liver Pill ever made. Smallest, Cheap est, Easiest to take. For Constipation, Indigestion and Bilious Attacks, they have no equal. Manufactured at the Chemical Labo ratory of the WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, NO. 663 Main Street. Buffalo, N. Y. ilp3® P CONDITION POWDER Hlflrhly concentrated. Doee small. la quantity costs less than cent a day per hen. Prevents and cures all diseases. If you can't get it, we send by mail postpaid. One pack. fee. rive fl. 8 1-4 lb. can $1.16} 6 cans $6 Express paid. Testimonials free. Bond stamps or cash. Tanners' Poultry Guide (price 2ftr.) free with fl.Ot orders or more. 1. 8. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Man. lleds in Different Countries. In the tropics men sleep in hammocks or upon mats of grass. The Ea9t Indian unrolls his light, ]K>rtable charpoy or mnttress, which in the morning is again rolled together and carried away by him. The Japanese lie upon matting with a stiff, uncomfortable wooden neck-rest. The Chinese use low bedsteads, often elaborately carved, and supporting only mats or coverlids. A peculiarity of the German bed is ite shortness; bedsides that, it frequently consists in part of a large down pillow or upper mattress, which spreads over i the person, and usually answers the pur- 1 pose of all the other bedclothing com bined. In England the old four posted bed stead is still the pride of the nation, but ] the iron or l>rass bedstead is fast be coming universal. The English beds arc the the largest beds in the world. I The aueient Greeks or Romans had their beds supported oil frames, but not flat like ours. The Egyptians had a couch of a pecu liar shape, more like an old-fashioned easy-chair, with hollow back and seat. —lfeio York Journal. Itahbit Wool. To look at the rabbit as a wool-bearing animal and source of annual profit is a point of view that will certainly be novel to most people, but a student of the sub ject declares that the rabbit is valuable when thus regarded. He yields a wool, it is said, softer and finer than that of sheep, and, besides its beauty, it is be lieved to have the valuable attribute of benefiting or curing rheumatism. Small as lie is, his growth is vigorous, and it is estimated that tlie amount of wool pro duced by a rabbit in a year, as he can be combed several timesand the wool grows again, is woith about five francs, which is as much as the wool of a lamb would fetch.— London Standard. The foreign trade of the United States in manufactured furs amounts to $5,500,- 000 per annum. 11 (IMF "V, Hook-koopln?, Huftlnpiu Form*. M umi lYniimnshlp, Arlttunotlr, Short-hand, eta, ■ » thoroughly trtwht by MAIL. Circular* froe. Bryum'- lollrin?. I>7 Mala si. Buffalo, K. Y. W'liVA'AVf ll»l1 n " rt omtutlftil Bilk A Satin I" • AAUllenough Ui covet SCO sq. ,'roi ilk-.: IpMit, 2fk'. I.r.Mutix'xSii.K Mux, I.ltllp Ferry N.J. How to Learn Modorn Languages Without cost. Address Ungutwt, Hartsdale. N. Y For an Investment Buy a Ix>t in Chicago. Free Maps ft guides to city with prices ft term* for our property V. M. Williams, 1023 Chamber of Commerce, Chicago TACOMA hrlu ir AV\lAl, iVfrow TWKm'i! no? ■ «WWmM hrii.w anm aixv from TWEJITY to I UU d i ■ L*taPrincipal Examiner u.B. Pension Bureau. t—t u>. TACOHA IKTIMTMIST CO.. TACUIj WiML | 3rr» In la«t war, 16 abjudicating claims, attv aince. pEECHAM'S PAINLESS. rILLd EFFECTUAL^ < STWORTH A GUNEA A BOX.I* < For BILIOUS & NERVOUS DISORDERS S SS H 2 Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired \ S Digestion, Constipation, Disordered Liver, etc., > c ACTING LIKE MAGIC on the vifrl organs, strengthening the c I muscular system, and arousintwith the rosebud of health < C The whole Physical Enerpjj of the Human Frame. I < Beecham's Pills, taken as dipcted, will quickly RESTORE C ( FEMALES to complete health. c S SOLD BY ALL tfcUCCISTS. ) > * Price, 25 certs per Box. S ( Prepared only by THOS. Helens, Lancajhire, England. / )n. F. A1.1.F.X CO., Sol" A(fftttn for r,i»<f stntrn, SOU ,r 307 Co,ml St.. Xeu> ) \ York, irho (IS tiour itritiitfiiit dot* not ktvjtlirm) uHU malt Ibrrha,,,'* fillton \ ~ , £M<"H""thli paper.) ( PaMUHtrii 1 , £!af/^S^ln'iiiii?tiiAiiiniiiiiU(in l IB Rt* / <£*" ■ Ivpr Relief at onc^^ol^iWle«G7^ , "^ftßrtC^'^B HHBUhH ' ll bKirbtti.^ A Dandy of Other Days. 1 From a newspaper printed in the year '1770 is the following description of a dandy: "A few days ago a macaroni , made his appearance in the Assembly rooms at Whitehaven, dressed in a mixed silk coat, pink satin waistcoat and breeches covered with an elegant silk net, white silk stockings with pink clocks, pink satin shoes and large pearl buttons; a mushroom colored stock, covered with fine point lace, hair dressed remarkably high, and stuck full of pearl pdM.*— Clothier and Furnither. If not above being taught by a man,lake tikis OOMI advloe. Try Dobbin*'* kltctrlc Soap n«-xt Monday. It won't cost much, and ym will then know (or ymmtlf just how good It la. Be sure to get no imitation. There are lots of them. THKHE are 2700 courts In the United States engaged in granting divorcee. ST ARE or OHIO, CITY or TOLEDO, t LUCAS COUNTY, J FRANK .1. CHF.NKV makes oath that he Is the senior purtner of the firm of K. J. CIIENKT & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, > ounty and.State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the snm of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of CATARKII that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CUBE. FRANK J. CIIENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December. A. D., 1888. , —, A. W. QLKASON, < SEAL [■ ' —. —-' Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally and acts directly on the blood and mac iiis sur faces of tho system. Send lor testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co.. Toledo, O. t~*r Sold by Druggists, 75c. ITALY is TO spend $15,000,000 on its new navy this fiscal year. Tbe ('oldest In Years. Ro the weather prophets sejm to predict that this winter will be, and by our experi ence thus far can we doubt but that thoy must knowa thing or two aoont tbe matter? Well.be this as ft may, all will concede (hat a winter with clear, cold, bracing atmosphere Is certainly more conducive to health than those so mild of the pa«t few years. Warm clothing Is mo-it essent lal; even that sometimes fails to protect us from the friend ly embrace. of "Jack Frost," whis no donbt. will be very vigorous In his endeavors to let us know that he has come to stay awhile. Welcome him we mu-t, bui let not "auld ac ?ualntance be forgot" should he become too similar: checkmate htm as I always have done. No frost-bites for me If yon please; the moment I feel his icy breath upon Angers or toes I ntp his little scheme in the bad by bathing freely with some of that grand old pain reliever cailod Dr. Tobias's Venetian Lin iment. You can Just try it for yourselves and And out, too, that what 1 tell jon is the trni h, and nothing but the truth; something well to remember! Do You Kver »» ecu lata ' Any person sending us their name and ad dress will receive Information that will lead to a fortune. DenJ. di U, Security Building, Kansas City. Mo. FITS stopped free by DR. KLINE'S ORBAT NEIIVE RESTORER. NO tits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and s.' trial bottle free. Dr. Kline. Ml Arch St., I'hlU., t'.u If afflicted with sore eyes ase Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water.Druggists sell at£>c. per bottle "Cause of Rheumatism Ati acid which exists in sour milk and rider, called tactic acid, Is believed by physicians to be tbe ratine of rheumatism. Accumulating In tbe blood. It at tacks tlx* fibrous tissues In tbe yfints, and causea agontatn# pains. What Is needed Is a remedy to neutralize tbe acid, and to so invigorate tbe kidneys and liver that all waste will be carried off. We can honestly recommend Hood's Sarsaparllla for these purposes. It has curod others of rheumatism and it will cure you. Hood's SarsaDa'iila Bold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar "August Flower" The Hon. J. W. Fennhnore is the Sheriff of Kent Co., Del., and lives at Dover, the County Seat and Cap ital of the State. The sheriff is a gentleman fifty-nine years of age, and this is what he says : "I have " used your August Flower for sev " eral years in my family and for my " own use, and found it does me '' more good than any other retnedy. " I have been troubled with what I " call Sielc Headache. A pain comes " in the back part of my head first, " and then soon a general headache "until I become sick and vomit. " At times, too, I have a fullness " after eating, a pressure after eating " at the pit of the stomach, and 1 ' sourness, when food seemed to rise '' up in my throat and mouth. When '' I feel this coming on if I take a ''little August Flower it relieves " me, and is the best remedy I have " ever taken for it. For this reason ' I take it and recommend it to " others as a great remedy for Dys 'pepsia, &c." ® G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A ■MPMOIAIIIOHH W.moitHlS, IKIIOII/ll Wuhlnßton, D.C, Guaranteed five year eight par omit. First Mortgagee on Kansas Olty prooerty. Interest payable every six months; principal and Inter, eat collected when due anil remitted without expense to lender, for sale by J. H. Bauer lei n & Co- Kansas City, Mo. Write for particular* LeeWa's Chinese Headache Car*. Harm less In effect, quick and positive In action, tent prepaid on receipt of 11 per bottle. Adeler A C 0.,588 Wyandottest..KansaeCity,Mo Timber, Mineral, b'artn Lands and Ranches In Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Ark&nsas, homeiitand sold. Tyler A Kansae Olty. Mo. Money invested Inohoioe one Hundred dol lar building lots In saburbeof Kansas Olty trill pay from Are hundred to one thousand per cent, the next few years under our plan. |B} oaah and >3 per month without Interest oon xrolradeslrablelot. Particulars OQ application. J. H. Bauerleln A 00.. KansaaCltr. Mo. Oklahoma Guide Book and Map sent any when on receipt of SUcts-Tyler & Kansas Olty, Mo. ONB EJJVJOY® Both the method and results when Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet prom ptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable fubstances, ite many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 500 and 81 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, CAL. iswrntf, ky. hew "0/m. * r. -VASELINE POR A ONIUDOLtkA It HI l 4 I 4 sent us by mall we will deliver, free of all charye.% to any person la the United States, all of lUe foiiowm* arcioloi, oArt fully packed: , One two-ounce bottle of Pur* Vaseline. 10 eta. One two-ounce bottle of Vaseline Pomade. • 15 * One Jar of VaaelUie Cold Cream, 13 *• One Cake of Vaaellue Camphor 100, • • • 10 •• Oj*e Cake of Vasellno soap, unseenteJ, . • li - One Cake of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely n >suted,AS M One two-ounce bottie or While Vaneiiue, - • ii •• $1.1) Or for pontage ntnmp* any Hinjls art tot* at the price named. On no acoount be pertua lei to aonin t from yowrdruaQiMt any Vaseline or preparation there fr m urUr-tM labelled witti our name, because you will csr tttfnJyreceive an imitation which has tittle or no t*U+9 Cheaebrouyh -Hie. Co.. 14 Stale St., N. V, / 6 /^JONEB\ /TON SCALES\ 112 of \ S6O BINGHAMTON V Beam Box Tare Beam/ yk N. Y. */ \ J. iLLSUBS % / FR4ZERASKI OKBT IN THE WORLuMII tHy b <. tr* Uat the Genu!no. Sola Kverywhera, PATENTS!^: lormattou. J. H. CKAM.E «V CO., Washlnirton. 11. Xfcffe&SthefifofifoG-. St. Louis, Mo. rt U U °p loor, r K r " f 8 BAGGY KNEES Oreely rant Ktreteher. Adopted by students n& Harvard. Anilierst. and other Colleyfs, slso, bv prtifessloiinl sn<l men every- Wbere. If not for salo in your town »M,<l 25c to B. J. URKEIiY. 71& Washington Street. Ronton. A QTHIH A DR - TA7T*B ifITHMALINB MO I ni¥l A||DCn r V Is; kendusyour « dress, we will mail trial I# ■■ IIMLUTTUOS.M.CO.sIOeNCSTCR.N.I.r HEE M. x prescribe and fully ( ' or ®* Big O as tbe only * O.H.INUBAHAM.M. M __ Amsterdam. N Y B1 MMealybytta We have sold Bl« O for yyt-i" ftMhd ffi ma "y and It baa W F 1 !* 0 th ® DMt of sat la- faction. Ofelfe D. K. DYCHB * 00. _ V _ Chicago, fiL 111.IU« Sold by Dmgfiata " ! burdens cfn lessen^" APO U ©■«- IHs&.solid c&ke ofscou ring soap vJJSßpNOiused/-or cleaning purposes••• *v" k " " • »COPv»'HHr» » What would you give for a Friend who would take half your hard work off your shoulders and do it without a murmur ? What would, you (fire to find an assistant in your housework that would keep your floors and walls clean, anil your kitchen bright, and yet never grow ugly over the matter of hard work Sapolio such a friend and can be bought at all grocers, DISCS REMEDY FOR CATARRH. -Best. Easiest to use. - x Cheapest Relief Is immediate. A cure Is certain, For IHfl (.'old in tlie Head it bus no equal. Ip^H Bit is an Ointment, ol whloli a small particle Is apiilltd to nostrils. 1 Address, K. T. Htimmi, Warren, l*a. HB CHICHESTER* EHOOO.I, RCD CROSS DIAMOND BRAND F\ rEHHNRONMi * Pvuus & ft asrfts *--*■ Yw A —/r 'txrjmSußsSE c H.oH t . TtB JJuHNSS|c*iis C/ > are cured by OIRECTIDNS Wttl\ e«c»i BOTTIE^ WOUNDS, CUTS, SWELLINGS V TOT CHHHLEB ». vnnrtFß 00.. B«tHmor«. IM. S3 SHOE «Nm™. ftC.OO Genuine Haad-itewpil, an elegant andi stylish dress Shoe which commends Itself. M.OO lliind-newed Welt. A ftne calf Shoe un equalled for style nnd durability. (isodycnr Well Is the standard drees v Shoe at a popular price. 84.A0 Policeman'** Shoe Is especially adapted v for railroad men, farmers, etc. All made In Congress, Button and Lace. 94*00 for LadifN, Is the only haiid-newpd Rbos M Hold at this popular price. 90.30 I)oi»»oln Shoe for Lndiew, Is anew <le » parture and promises to become very popular. 90.00 Shoe for Lndlpn, and 9 1.7. "5 for jllmiim » still retain their excellence for style, etc. All goods warranted and stamped with nam«* on bottom. If advertised local agent cannot supply you. send direct to factory enclosing advertised price or a postal for order blanks. W. li. DOI'GJ.AS, Brockton, Maw. N Y N U—l I » PURELY VEGETABLE. "J 2 5 ® £NT ' "'I,? o** 0 ** THOROUGHLY RELIABLE, 112 ABSOLUTELY SAFE. J fret, on recdpl.l . price. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. _OR. J. H. SCHENCK & SON, PHILADELPHIA, P* B "HE DID IT;" 4, Rv using the K-WREN Remedies I flavr cured all the colds in my family, and In the vlclnßy for miles "kSvRKN Cough Ilalsam i.| I over nitc'ht. Halxanf, 50t\; Trwtaea, 1U aud a.'*-. lJy mall or <iruKKl»tß. M. B. KEEP it C0.,1»3E.18that.,.N.r. <gr I tWIS' 98LY£ I Powdered and PerfuimJ. (PATENTED, i The strongest and purest Lyi mai ' e - Will make the bait pjf • fumed Hard Soap in i ) min utes without boiling. Itist.na Licst for disinfecting sinki, mm closets,drains, washing bjttlai, mm larrels, paints, etc. PENNA. SALT HfFG C 3 («cn. Ants.. I'lilln., Pa. n ATPMTC P. A. I.KH.tI Alflf, I E" 111 | Si Washington, I). C. ■ SKKD ron C'iKCPLAB. .«i r • •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers