THE POLITE PERUVIANS A STRANGE MIXTURE OP GENTLE NESS AND CRUELTY. Exquisitely Pollto but Unscrupulous in Aloncy Matters—Kind anil Yet Heartless—Sheep Flayed Alive. In common with other Spanish Ameri cans, writes Fannie 15. Ward, in tho Philadelphia Record, the Peruvians show a strange mixture of gentleness and cruelty, sentimentality and hcartlessness. They are excessively polite to the min utest detail of an exaggerated etiquette, on all occasions, at home or abroad. Their voices are always low and musical, their vivacious gestures and profound obeisances the perfection of grace, and their every-day manners such as Lord Chesterfield might have envied. If a lady—youug or old, handsome or hide ous—comes into any public place where gentlemen are congregated, instantly tho buzz of conversation ceases, every man rises to his feet, takes oil his hat and re mains standing until she has passed flut or is seated. When a funeral procession goes by, men in their carriages, in the horse cars,on the streets and in the door ways or balconies of their houses, un cover and bow their heads; and the same custom is observed whenever the door of a church is passed. Their deference to the aged, tho obedience of adults to their parents, their tenderness to the young, aud their toleration of and charity toward the vast army of beggars, are beautiful to behold and worthy of emulation. They will put themselves to the great est amount of trouble to serve a stranger without expectation of inward. Their hospitality is unbounded, their generos ity proverbial, aud for a point of honor most of them will lay down their lives. Yet the temporarily reduced will resort to a thousand polite pretexts to get money out of you—such, for example, as a dead friend who had recently lost all his property and whose coffin must be bought by subscription. Won't you do nate $lO toward so charitable an object? Or a talc of woe about a poor widow and her children, left penniless in the cold world, who arc desirous of going to their relatives in some distant place; surely the senora will be happy to assist them? etc., etc. I myself subscribed small amouuts from time to time for dozens of coffins and poor widows with weeping families until I learned the little game. Even tho Peruvian highwayman will take off his hat to you in the most defer ential manner before politely requesting your money or your life; and if it comes to the unpleasant necessity of forcibly taking the latter in order to secure the former, he will crave your pardon while plunging his dagger into your vitals; will compliment your handsome appear ance in death, and tarry long enough, at •whatever risk to himself, to not only bury you decently, but to set up a cross over your grave, so that future passers by may pause to say prayers for your un shriven soul. In all the months I have remained in this country I have never seen a child whipped and have scarcely heard oue cry. The poorest among them loves music and poetry, flowers and sentimen tality, more than his daily meat and drink; yet a vein of coldest cruelty aud utter hcartlessness runs through the best of them. This is evidenced in many ways besides tho bull-fight, the cock-pit and their conduct in war. Perhaps the most common example is in their treatment of donkeys. No tongue can tell what those patient and tractable little creatures are made to en dure till merciful death at last roleases them from torment, overwork and slow starvation. Everywhere we see pitiable examples of beasts bearing heavy bur dens upon raw and bleeding backs, which daily press deeper aud deeper into the festering flesh until the bone is laid bare, aud still no attention is paid to it, nor is the burden m any way lightened. We see them with hugo welts criss-crossed along their backs and flanks, laised by the merciless whip, which falls unceas ingly, whether the poor animals travel fast or slow. Some have their ears lopped and broken by blows from cudgels, aud many have their nostrils slit up on each side the nose, so that there may bo "no nonsense" in the way of dif ficulty of breathing and consequent Joss of speed in the higher altitudes. Not lcs3 to be pitied are the street-car mules and horses, which are bcateu in cessantly no matter how hard they pull or how desperately they exert themselves —lash, lash, goes the long heavy whip over their suffering backs, up grade and down, from dawn till midnight. An ex tra man is hired for Che express purposes of whipping tho animals, who stands be side the driver and appears to be about tho most industrious person in Peru. The most blood-curdling, cruel thing that has yet come under my observation is the manner in which arc obtained the so-called "pig-skins" that so commonly serve for bottles and casks. They aro not the hides of pigs,but those of sheep, and, horrible to relate, are pulled off the living animal, tho poor sheep being ac tually skinned alive, or, more correctly speaking, skinned dead, for of course he does not long survive the operation. Tho modus operandi is as follows: The beasts aredriven, oue by one, to the appointed placo and firmly tied to a stake. Then the hide is neatly cut around the neck and down tho middle, without touching tho flesh or serving the arteries or hurt ing the animal much; after which hooka are fastened into the loosened skin, a ropebeiug attached to each hook;strong men take firm grip on the ropes and pull backward, pulling and pulliug, until the hide is torn off clean to the tail. It is said that during this frightful torturo the cries of the poor sheep are almost huinau in their expression of agony, and that the bloody, quivering mass some times livts several minutes. The only excuse for the barbarous practice is that tho skins are much more flexible and durable when thus taken off alive than when the animals are dead. There arc six Siamese students at Westminster College, a small institutioa at Xow Wilmington, Penn. Chronic Rheumatism And serious disorder of tho liver and ntomaoh hare troubled me for more than ten year*, during which tln\o I have used almost every medicine recom mended without finding any relief whatever until I tried Hood's Sarsaparllla. This has done me mow good than anything else that I have ever taken, and I take pleasure In recommending It In the highest terms. It has been worth Its weight In gold to me. — FREDERICK MILLER, Limerick Centre, Pa. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all (trugglßts. s!;«lxfors3. Prepared onl/ by C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Moaa. 100 Poses One Dollar DAD WAY'S II READY RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUEMi OF PAIN For SprnliiM, limine*, Backache, I'ulu in the Client or *ide-», ileuduciie, I'ootliaclie, or uuy other external i»iiin, a lew applica tion* rubbed uu by liuntl, act tike inaglc, cuiming t ue puia to luntantly HI op. l-'or i 'oiitfent IOIIX, Cold*, lironciiitin, I'ueu moiiia, lutlaaiaiatioun, itiieuinatinm. Neu ralgia, iiiiiubago, sciatica, more tai#*-ouga unit repeat eU application* are neceitary. All Internal t'aiu*, iiiarriiu'a, Colic, Hpaninn* JSailnea, Faiatlng Spell*, Nervous no**, AleeplennneMa are relieved iiisiautly* and quickly cured by taking iuwanlly vs«J to tiO drops in iiall a tuinbler ot wuter. t>Uc.a bottle* All ilriiggiats. RADWAYS n PSLLS, An excellent and mild Cathartic. Purely Vegetable. TbeSalent and Bent Medicine In the world lor the Cure ot all IHsorder* 01 the LIVER, STOMACH OR ROWELS. Taken according to directionn they will restore health and renew vitality. Price 25 eta. a Box. Sold by all Dra?i?isti |KA|iC HTIJIIY, Hook-keeping, Business Poring ■■ UIVIC Penmanship, Arithmetic, Short-hand, etj., IB thoroughly irught by MAIL. Circulars free. Hryaut*M College, 437 Main St., iiultalo, N. V. "DIIDTIIDET " Selected eases cured without nilr I UllCa pain or inconvenience. Consult- Ing hours 8 to 1. Dits. HARDINU & PIXLKY, HS West 23d St., New York. Send for testimonials. READ "A Little Chat With Farmers." Fine l»ook| > bound; paper, 50c.; cloth, 75c. Geo. A. Williams, 1023 Chamber of Commerce, Chicago, 111. PATENTS Miy ftsst <» oeeutlfui Hllk c* Hatln if !TJlHtAAVlllt*p<-s enough tc cover 500 wj. hifc 20c.; best,2sc. LKMAUIE'sSILK MILL, Little 1-erry N.J. IDHn UOTCS 28th St.and Broadway. Select Anllll nUIE-Lj family hotel; rewms en suIN or singly, $1 per day and upward. _ TAPftli A flUMMM'umfnlly lnvMtr.ll.er*. J AAO {AwUMAhrlnv AVMALI.Y from TWENTY l IUU J Teat ai. Ti.t'OJU y VKsTmCST tO.. TACQMA. WA&U. < SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Electricity has been put to driving drills. It costs sixty-four cents to run a train a mile in England. Wooden-spoon snaking is an extensive industry in Russia, about 30,000,000,000 being the annual product. Electricity has just been applied to the reeling, weighing and making up into balls of silk aud similar woven fabrics. Iron bolts exposed to water in the bridges over the Thames in England, have in twenty-five years been eaten away one-half. Silk from paper pulp- is made smooth and brilliant, has about the same elastic ity as ordinary silk, and is about two thirds as strong. Japan is about to enter the field as a producer of indigo. The soil and clim ate of parts of the island arc stated to be favorable to the cultivation of the 6hrub. An Austrian has invented un instru ment resembling a piano in appearance, which coutaius six violins, two voilas, aud two violoncellos, aud is manipulated by a keyboard. A machine, said to be a marvel of lightness and ingenuity, has recently been built in Australia for experiments in fljing through the air. It is propelled by un engine fed with compressed air. The group of bodies termed by chem ists the carbo-hydrates—because they are composed of carbon united with oxygen and hydrogen in the proportion in which those two elements combine to form water—contain the well known series of sugars, gums and starches. A 9.2-inch armor-piercing shell, manu factured by the British firm of Thomas Firth & Sous, was recently subjected to being fired at a fourteen-inch compound plate. The projectile passed clean through the plate. Further tests with this shell will soon be made. At a test of steel manufactured at Reading, Ponn., the other day, a one inch bar broke at a strain of 233,833 pounds, "being about 20,000 pounds in excess of the highest record authoritavely known." The test was made under the supervision of Government officais. At the Pechiney Works, at Salindres, France, caustic soda is now prepared for the market in leaves or .flakes. This is effected by allowing the hot supersatu rated liquor to flow from a funnel be tween hollow rollers, which latter aro kept cool down io a low point by the circulation of cold water within them. Clay which w pure white, and that also which is discolored, and has been washed to bring it to a uniform shade of color, is used by the manufacturers of paper hangings to give tho smooth satin surface to the finished paper. It is used by mixing it up with a thin size, apply ing it to the surface of the pieces of paper, and then polishing it by means of brushes driven by machinery. Recent investigations t>j Professor Geddes, of Edinburgh, Scotland, have led him to reject the commonly accepted views of the origin of thorns. He has found that there is a more or less devel oped general contrast in vegetative habit between thorn less and thorny varieties. The thorny varieties or species show a more diminishing vegetal iveness than their thorn loss congener#; in fact, they frequently develop their thorns by the ftctual death of their germ points. A Fright. H. Hennequln, of Paris, France, who has had some experience in aerial navu tion, arrived in the city yesterday from San Francisco on his way home, and during his stay in Chicago called on Mr. Pennington, of airship fame, at the Orand Pacific Hotel. Mr. Hcnnequin was in Fontenay at the time Tissindler and Qower had their startling adventure in a balloon. The traveler is an intimate friend of Qower, and tolls the ito y of their fall of a mile as the balloonist re lated it to him. "They ascended from Tissindler's house in Paris, and floated off toward Vmcennes, and as the wind was some what strong from the northeast, the two men soon disappeared from the view of Paris, having risen to a height of about 1500 feet. When they had reached Fontenay, they were fully 6000 feet above the earth. They were sailing along smoothly, watching the scenes be.- low, when suddenly they seemed to fall into a hole in the atmosphere and down they went at a terrific rate. Oower glanced at the needle of the verticle scale. It was traveling with lightling speed. A roar filled their ears, and both men thought their time had come. Nothing had happened to the balloon. It was in perfect condition, but there seemed to be no air to hold it up. Tis sindler desperately threw out sand-bags. They were falling so rapidly that the bags were left fur behind and disap peared above the in. The earth seemed to be rushing at them with tho speed of a comet. There seemed to be no atmos phere left, and the 7 could scarcely breath. As a last resort Tissindler threw over the anchor and the remaining ballast, aud the big balloon, after a rush of a mile through the sky, regained its poise, and they were saved. The earth was but fifty feet below." "This goes to show," continued Mr. llcnnequin, "that too much precaution cannot be observed in carrying plenty of ballust. There are in the air occasional rarefactions and when a balloon once gets into one of them it drops like a piece of lead. Oower and Tissindler sailed into a veritable pit in the air and had they not had lots of ballast aboard they would have been dashed to pieces." Chicago Tribune. Indiana's Trees. The forests of Indiana, the fifth lum ber producing State in the Union, have now been reduced to 2,000,000 acres, or about one-tenth of the total urea. They contain, according to Professor S. Coulter, 100 species of trees, belonging to twenty-four orders. The sugar maple, found in every county, is the most uni formly distributed. Geological forma tions are assumed to have little effect on the distribution of tress over so limited a surface, but the main influences are differences of elevation, the courses of the streams, and the location of the swamps.— Trenton {N. J.) American. A man who has practiced medicine for 40 years ought to know halt from bUgar; read what he says: Toledo, 0., .lan. 10,1887. Messrs. F. J. Cheney Co.—Gentlemen:—l have been in the general practice of medicine for moet 40 years, and would say that in all my practice and experience have never seen a preparation that 1 could prescribe with aa much confidence of success as 1 can Hall's Ca tarrh (Jure, manufactured by you. Have pre scribed it a great many times and its effect is wonderful, and would say in conclusion that i have yet to find a cat?e of Catarrh that It would not cure, if they would take it accord ing to directions. Yours truly, L L. UORBUCH, M. D„ Office, J-l » Summit St. We will give SIOO for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. .Sold by Druggists, 76c. Lee Wa's Chinese Headache Curo. Harm. Jtfs in effect, quick and positive in action. tent prepaid on receipt of $1 per bottle. Adeler& Co.,ji£iVV yandotteaL, Kansas City,Mo For a disordered liver try HeechanTs Pills. is. s. s. \ %is the most popular remedy \ % for boils, pimples, blotches, etc. \ % Because, while it never fails to \ % It acts gently, \ % builds up the system, \ % increases the appetite, \ % and improves the general health, \ % instead of substituting one disease \ % for another, as is the case with \ % potash, and mercury mixtures. \ ■ Books on Blood and Skin dluaiti li>n. \ % THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. \ FLH|HH-ELY'S CREAM BALM— Cleamwia uo PaMxm, Allay* Pain and Inflammation, HeallKt'Sl Horei, Keatorea Taate and Smell, and C'wro* B ' <IIAIII * ''ill Gives Apply into the Nostril*.- It it Quickly Abtorbed. he malL ELY BHOS., 6# W*rrcn St.. N. IM IM j I took Cold, I took Siok, I TOOK , scorn EMULSION RESULT: I I take My Meals, I take My Rest, AND T AM VIGOROUS ENOUGH TO TAKE ANYTHING I CAN LAY MY HANDS ON ; fetting fht too, HOR Scott's mulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphitesof Lime and 1 SODA NT)T ONLY CURED MY IllClp icnt Consumption HUT BUILT ME UP, AND IS NOW PUTTING FLESH ON MY BONES AT TIIE RATE OF A POUND A DAY. I TAKE IT JUST AS EASILY AS I DO MILK." SUCH TESTIMONY IS NOTHING NEW. SCOTT'S EMULSION IS DOING WONDERS DAILY. TAKE NO OTHER. Hla Unique Bt|i. A striking signboard may sometimes be the means of making its owner's fortune. There are plenty of places in New York where old umbrellas are mended, but the west side mender who put up the sign "Umbrella Hospital" struck an idea that none of his rivels had thought of. People laughed at it, took a second glance at it, looked at the place, and told their acquaintances about it, thus advertising the umbrella hospital and sending customers to it. Unless the signs fail, that signboard will yet enrich its inventor.— Detroit Free Preu. A London (England) matrimonial agent boasts of having arranged 40,000 marriages between members of all classes of society. Dobbins'* Electric Boap is cheaper tor yon to nse, if you rnlUne • Hrecllone, than any otnir soaps would be if nlvil to you, 112 ir by It use clothes are wired. Clothe* oosi more thai aoap. Ask your groo«*r for Dobbins'*, 'l'ake no other. There are in European Russia 223 sugar fac tories, producing sugar from beets. Tourists, Whether on pleasure bent or business, should take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and effectually on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of Blckneas. For sale in (50c. and J1 bottles by all leading drug gists. The Convenience of Holtd Trains. The Erie is the only raliwav running solid trains over its own tracks Letween New York and Chicago. No change of cars for any class of passengers. Kates lower than v.a. any other tlrst-class line. Money invested in onoioe one uundred dol lar building lots in suburbsof Kansas City will pay from live hundred to one thousan l per cent, the next few year* under our plan. caah aud 15 per month without interest con trolsadoslrablelot. Fartlonlar* on appUoatloo. J. H. Bauerleln A Co., Kansas City. Mix Guaranteed Ave year eight per cent. FHrtt Mortgage* on Kansas City property, interest payableevery six months; principal and inter estcollected when due and remitted without expense to lender. For sale by J. U. Bauerleia & Co., Kansas City, Mo. Write for partiouUr i Do You Ever Speoalnta" Any person son ilnz us their nana an I al dress will receive information that will lei I to a fortune, lion J. JE CJ, SECURITY Building, Kansas (Jlty, Mo. FITS stopped free b/ Da. Kniics's <>ae\r Nerve Rbstohku. No tits after first day's USX Marvelouscures. Treatise aai &' trial bottle free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. I'hllv, Pa. Timber, Mineral, Farm Lands an 1 Ranohsi In Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkansas, boughtandsold. Tyler <& Uo~ Kansas City. Ma OklahomaQulde Book and Mapsent any whsr* ou receipt of Socts.Tyler & Co.. Kansas City, Mo. s'JACohsoii GOVERNOR OF MARYLAND e^.-sret IT EXECUTIVE CHAMBER. IS •linnapolin, .tfd., Jan. 6, '9O. "112 tut re often used, ST. JACOBS OIL, and find it a good Liniment." EL.IHU E. JACKSON, THE BEST. NY N c—r Eve^Motheh Should Have it In The Hon^e. Dropped on Sugar, Children Lore to take Johnson's anodtns I.ixisknt for Croup, Cold*, Sore Throat, Toniillltlft. Colic, CrainiM »nfi rams It«*- liovea Summer Complaints, Cut*, Bruhtes like matfe. THINK OF IT. In uip over SO YKAIiH In one family. Pr. I. R. JoiiKso.H A Co.—lt IN Kiity yearn fcince I .lrrt learned of your Johnson's Akodyme Linimknt; for won than forty yea nil have used It in my family. 1 regard It a* one of the tteMt and nafent family remealeH that nan found, uned Internal or external. In all eaaea. O. H. INOALLB, l>ea«v>n 2nd Ilaptlut Church, Bangor, Me. Every Sufferer SS TOUB Heailache, Diphtheria, Coughs, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Cholera Morbu*, Dlarrmea, LameiieMA, Sorrow in Body or Llmbu, Stiff Joints or Strains, will find In this old Anodyne relief and sneedy cure. I'nmphlet free. Sold everywhere. Price » eta, by mail. 6 bottles, Lxpress paid, $1 I. 8. JOHNSON * IX)., Boston, MAM. GRATEFUL —COMFORTING. EPPSS COGOA BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural lair, which govern the operations of digestion and nutri tion, and by a careful application of the fine proj>or ties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bev erage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It Is by the Judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hun dreds of subtle maladies are floating around UJ», ready to attack wherever there Is a weak polut. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping <>ur selves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."— Civil Service Qaxette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only In half-pound tins by Orocers, labelled thus: JA>IEB EJPPtt dc CO.. HomcEOpathlc Chemists Low DOM, KHULAND. Best Truss Ever Used. Will hold the worn case with cam tort. Worn ■ BLAST IOH Positively mm us U curt * rupture, aent by 1 A DSB JW mall everywhere, bend for descriptive oatalogui- And testimonial* to \ # tt.J.Htsw Mfg.Cs. V# V J 744 Broudwttv* New Y«rk Clty. —MIIS. DUN LEY. M. D./can be consulted eo • deutlally on all female complaints: electrU-lt. given when beneficial. 116 West ittd St., lu> « r Brooklyn office, 10 Cllnt<*n St., w to 12 dally. No one doubts that Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy really cures Catarrh, whether the disease be recent or of long standing, because the makers of it clinch their faith in it with a SSOO guarantee, which! isn't a mere newspaper guar antee, but "on call "ma moment. That moment is when you prove that its makers can't 1 cure you. The reason for their faith is this: Dr. Sage's remedy has proved itself the right cure for ninety-nine out of one hundred cases of Catarrh in the Head, and the World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion can afford to take the risk of your being the one hundredth. The only question is—are you willing to make the if the makers are willing to take the risk? If so, the rest is easy. You pay your druggist 50 cents ana the trial begins. If you're wanting the SSOO you'll get something better—* a cure! THE NEW WEBSTER JUST PUBLISHED—ENTIRELY HEW. I INTERNATIONAL J \ DICTIONARY J , A GRAND INVESTMENT for th© Family, the School, or the Libranr. Revision has been In progress for over 10 Years. More than 100 editorial laborers employed. Critical examination invited. Get the Best. Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated paraph letfree. G. * C. MERRIAM A CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass., CJ. 8. A. Caution!— There have recently been issued several cheap reprints of the 1847 edition of Webster's Unnbrlnged Dictionary, an edition long since superannuated. These books are given various names,— * Webster's Unabridged,** T, The Great Webster's Dictionary," ** W©ester's Big Dictionary," "Webster's Encyclopedic JMotiona ry." etc., etc. Many announcements concerning them are very misleading, as th© body of each, from A to Z, is 44 years old, and printed from cheap plates made by photographing tho old pages. -VASELIHI MS A OHK.OOLLAB BII.L ml ■ t>r art we will deliver, tree oc ell oturm to iv lw'— «la the Dotted statea, all at toe fallowing aruola* out* (ally paokaji One two-ooaee bottle at Pure VaeeUoa, . . IS eta One two-ounce bottle of Yaaeltne Pomad* 13 - One Jar at Vaaellne Coid Cream, 1» » One Cake ot Vwe line Camphorloo, • ■ • • 10 '• One Cake ot Vaeeltne Moan unecented, . . ID • One Cake at Vaaellne Soap, exqulaKel/eoamtwMl " One IWv-ounoe bottle of White Vaaellne, - ■ » - M price naaaed. On no aooownt be porewviei to aoeep t from vovrtnmjiet any KaeeMne or preparation there fr m ww lew laootted with «r name, beoause you wit l oer- ; tatntyreooive an imitation tohioKhae >UtU or no oaiut Uhe.ebreaeh .Hf«. Co.. M State lit., M. Y. FRAZER**" UKMT IN THE WOULD ™■■ ■» © C * fW~ Oat tue Genuine. ttoia Krernrtiara. DIPRV If MCCC ro«rrinxT bkmmdibd. DAUUI IVIIILO Oreelj fant Htreteher. Adopted bj atudenta at Harvard. Amhent. aad other College, alao, »y profteetonal aad ba.ln.aa men ereiy wtierr. If not for aale In ronr town .end ao«. to M. J. ÜBEELY. 715 waahlwgtoft Wtrret. Beaton. Ftcaicinai"" 1 " w.moHßis, ItllOlUll Waahlncten, D. €! 3 vrs in laat war. 16 adjudicating claims, attj slnce> "Better out of tire world.tha.n out of the fashion^-"^^ — It is _ f'NF^miON^ far housexle&nfng- It is & Jfe of scouring ib Cleanliness is always fashionaole and the use of or the neglect to use SAPOLIO marks a wide difference in the social scale. The best classes are always the most scrupulous in matters of cleanliness—and the best classes use SAPOLIO. Kzl Cures whore all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to tho El _<r3fc-V CmcHtsicifa ENOLIO./. RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND /\ && Vtnn\Ro\Mi * r\\iVis A Vvj , TMI »NO OIBUKIt. Tk» ..1? Safe, Bare, «nd reU„hl, I'll! for isle |=J /OF Drajitat Ibr nutuMr i BmfUlk Diamond Brand In Ked ana Ml mtitlllo \IT I / n .»•«••«*>< 7"" 52**5b* Taka a. atker kl«i. «</*»« ■>(»k.an ( tv,n 4 a ,j Imtuhctf. V I T MB - ill pill, la puutxwrd boi.., pl.t wrapper. «' 4a.«erou. rnuMerf.li., At Dru.fiMv or •-lid m \t Pp faiVi'ViE MluaUK Md "Relief f.r U<l«k" (n htt-r, by ret am MalL -V _£T R T R ~- CMICHTSTIH CNCMIOL CO ~ M.H1... HAAAHFC ~ Mdbr.llU r .U™ II Uu PMII.AUKI.HM I A^P** MONEY IN CHICKENS. For Dfte. In stamps we send a 100- | 112 . PAGE HOOK giving the experience fj I AL of a practical Poultry Kaiser—not /4|f f'\ an amateur, but a man working / X for dollars and cent*—during » [ It teaches how to Detect J and Cure Diseases; Feed for Eggs, for Fattening; which Fowls to ' IT-* Have for Breeding; everything rr 11 quislte for profitable Poultry rat* U ln«. Book PlJßLltfftilNtft QOei 134 Lttiuri Stmt. H«w Yark. TJermari Syrup" For Coughs & Colds.! /ohn F. Jones, Edom,Tex.,writes* have used German Syrup for the past six years, for Sore Throat, Cough, Colds, Pains In the Chest and Lungs, and let me say to any one wanting such a medicine—• German Syrup is the best. B.W. Baldwin, Carnesville.Tenn., writes: I have used your German Syrup in my family, and find it the best medicine I ever tried for coughs •nd colds. I recommend it to every one for these troubles. R. Schmalhausen, Druggist, of Charleston, 111., writes: After trying scores of prescriptions and prepara tions I had on my files and shelves, without relief for a very severe cold, which had settled on my lungs, I tried your German Syrup. It gave me immediate relief and a perma nent cure. (s> I G. G. GREEN, Sole Mannfactarer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A. i Hi ■ J X Y N U—7 B DR. SCHENCK'S QEAWEED 0 TONIC Ii * Positive Cure for DYSPEPSIA And all Disorders ofth* Digest- Ire Organs. It is likewise ft corroborative, or strengthen ing Medicine, and may b* taken with great benefit In all cases of Debility. For Sale bf •Jl Druggists. Price, fl.oo per bottle. Dr.Sclienck a Hew Book on Lung* Liver and Stomach mailed free. Adtfnu. Dr J. H. SCHENCK & SOW. Phll&delDhla. B"HE DID rr "By using the K-WREN Remedies 1 have cured all the colds In my family, and in the vicinity (or mllofl around. Including bftblor three*- ened with croup. ,T —E. G. Roan i% Yergennes, Vt. K.WREN Cough Balsam no I Troches cure hoarseness lu a few minutes, bail coughs and colds over night. Balsam, 50c.; 10 and 2 Tie. By mad or druggists. M.B. KEEP ACQ. ,63 E. 18th St.,X.Y. PROF. LOISETTE'S NEW MEMORY BOOKS. Criticisms on two recent Memory Systems. Itcady about April Ist. Full Tables of Contents forwanlod only to those who send stamped directed envelope. Also Prospectus POST FREE of the Lolsettlun Art ol Never Forgetting. Address Prof. L< iISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New York. % HEID-tCHE ? Ne?«. v »P BROMO-SEITZER GUARANTEED CURE ■ t " u I "xx&tixtMT MM I Draccuu I lIALTUtoKK, MB. Jl , i Pwvrlba and fully Jl dors* Bin (j a* the only JjW"•poclflc for the certain cur* I | -9., of this diMffuif. I EFZZXmSL 1 O.H.INOUAHAM.M.O --s MM AmiteMam, NY. i El urftoaiybyti* Wo have aola Big G fot > ' **- many yean. and It hat l* """ " triven the best ot satl* 01— faction. Ofcl* D.R. DYCHFAOO. v Chicago, irk
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers