RARE AMD COSTLY WOODS WHSM THE TIMBER FOB FINS FURNITURE IS OBTAINED. All Parts of the World. lial<l Undoi Tribute—How Various Kinds ol ( Woods are Treated. Very few people ever stop to think how much of our national prosperity has a wooden foundation. Nor is that all. We lay all wooded regions under tribute. The far and fragrant East sends us san dalwood and ebony, so precious thai they are sold by weight. Norway, England, Spain, Southern Italy, South and Central America, Mexico, Cuba and the West Indies in general add to out supply. So, too, does Canada in very large measure. She sends us every yeai pines from many million stumps. She supplies also much more than half the yellow birch, which, by help of aniline stain, is a very Proteus of timber. It is strictly a temperate growth—haunting hills where snow lies long and summers arc short and hot. Next to Canada as a source of supply come Maine, Vermont, northern New York and the mountains of north Pennsylvania. Its main use is in veneers, that in timo become chair backs and car-seats and all sorts of panels. Logs work much better if they come to the mill green. First they are stripped of bark, then cut into lengths and steamed in a vat for twenty-four hours. Then a big ma chine catches the bits of log and holds them lengthwise of the liber against a lancet-edged, half-round cutter. In the twinkling of an eye the log is a big wooden ribbon, whoso length depends upon its girth. Sixteen thicknesses of it come out of every inch, and it takes twenty-four after they are cut to make an inch of solid wood. It is not often that so many go together. For car-seats, chair-backs and so on these thicknesses ore used—the grain of the middle one running against that of the other two. They are glued together with the strong est sticking of the glue pot and molded by hydraulic pressure iuto whatever form is aeeded. They stay in the mold until the glue is set hard. After that nothing but steam or moisture will move them from their proper curves or rec tangles. After hardening they are kiln dried, then sand-papered and stained cherry or mahogany, or else simply var nished to show their natural yellow. The process Is much the same for all na tive hardwoods. For some purposes ven eers are sawed instead of cut. The waste is much greater, but the grain is better preserved. Birch is wonderfully cheap—only sl2 the thousand—in the rough. Manipulation adds to its value Beveral hundred per cent. Even with costlier woods, such as walnut, it more than doubles it. The best walnut in the log fetches twelve to fourteen cents the foot. Inferior qualities—known as '-second growth"— comes sometimes as low as SBO a thou sand. It is enormously in fashion, though, and as the supply yearly grows smaller the price is likely to grow larger. It comes mainly from the middle south —Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and North Carolina, llichmond is quite an entrepot for it. Few things are more picturesque than getting out walnut. The trees grow eparsoly here and there in the forost. Rich, deep alluvion is its favorite soil. If it is rocky and fed with draiuings of limestone hills, so much the better. In the narrow, rich bottoms along mountain streams or the chines of the hill coun try, it grows to a girth and stature else where unknown. Up, up to the far blue heaven it sends its black-brown column, straight and true. At fifty years old it will be four feet through, at a hundred may be five. A curious fact in tree growth is that the larger the trunk the smaller the yearly increase. Walnuts less than two feet through will not pay for cutting. Even that measure the local buyer looks at askanse, though he sells it for the same money to the manu facturer. A three-foot log is ''good stuff;" a four-foot one "fine," provided It has no burls or hollows or is not •'doated" at the heart. In the old lavish days the felling was done with axes and the logs "butted" 09 they lay. Now the logger saves muscle, time and timber by sawing down the trees. No matter how straight they grow, there is always to a woodman's eye a slight "hang" to one side or the other. By looking up the trunk he finds it out and governs himself accord ingly. He saws first upon that side nearly half way through the trunk, using a crosscut about six feet long. A man •lands at either end of it, and at the end of half an hour is more than willing to rest a bit. Then two small logs are laid crosswise for the tree to fall upon and the saw is set in upon the other side. Swiftly, surely, the sharp teeth bite their way to the heart. When the saw is well buried a wedge is driven to the cleft behind it to keep the tree from binding—that is, resting so heavily upon the blade as to stop its work. It takes nice calculation and steady hands to mako both sawings meet true in the cen ter. For ordinary timber an inch or so of difference does not matter. Walnut, though, is so prone to split that a little inequality may spoil several hundred dollars' worth of wood. To lessen the risk of it, felling is not done in windy weather. It takes contrivance as well as muscle to get the logs to market. Log wagons are of various patterns; some low and broad enough to take off three or six, piled pyramid wise; others with wheels higher than your head and tremendous axles, to which one end of the log is chained, while the rest "drags its slow length along" at the impulse of eight stout yoke of oxen. Often, though, the finest logs grow where wheels cannot go. In such cases "snaking" comes in. A log chain, a big cable and a steady team are needed for it. Usually the log lies in • deep, narrow ravine, up whose steep sides wheels are out of the ques tion. One end of the cable is made fast op the hill, the other is carried un der and around the log. It is then tied ftrt to the log chain, at whoM other end is the team. At the word they tug and strain upward, and as the rope grawa taut the big log roll* uphill. When the cable length is out the log ia scotched, the whole process repeated, and continued sometimes till the load lies safe beside river or railway. There it lies till a buyer comes or high water floats it to lowland markets. In that case the purchaser better look out. In one case on rerord a sharp mountaineer tacked walnut bark all over a five-foot sycamore, rafted it down the Cumber land, sold it for some hundred dollars and got off with tho money before the cheat was discovered. Cherry has much the same habitat as walnut, and is handled nearly tho same way. The main difference is that it is not so liable to split, hence docs not need such care in felling. It fetches SOS to S9O a thousand feet, and either solid or in veneers is one of the moat useful hardwoods. Walnut is tho base of nearly all the so-called ebony, into which it is converted with aniline stain. For long cherry often did duty for mahogany. Now that it is almost as costly, it is used in its own name and color. Tho unweildiuoss of timber is a main element of cost. Every handling almost doubles the price. Freight rates, high as they are, sink to nothing beside deckage, loading and unloading. A timber ship iu the tropics is often five months taking cargo. She will dis charge it at a New York pier inside of five days. There are blocks along that water front fragrant with the clean, pun gent smell of sawdust from Spanish cedar, mahogany, rosewood and many more. Mexico, Cuba and the West Indies, send all of them at prices not much beyond those paid for walnut. After the trees are felled they aro hewn square so as to fit solid in tha ship's hold. Veneers of them are cut thinner than those of birch—about thirty to the inch. They arc worth triplo tho same measure in the plank. The saw dust is saved for use in the arts—notably for tanning lino fur, wherein it is tho active agent. England spares us a little of her oak— precious little, though, for a magnificent price. All of it goes into cabinet work or for interior carvings and decorations in very swell houses. Black Irish oak comes, too, in very limited supply, but sufficient for the few who prci'er it to native timber. Though we have more than twenty sorts of oak, the red and white ones are those that furnish forth our walls und halls and wooden needs generally. It is usually quarter sawed—that is, cut in four before making into boards. The "Japanese oak," so-called, is a curious triumph of mechanics over nature. It shows a mottled or rather mackerel grain, like nothing that ever grew—for ill that oddly handsome. To make it the knife edge is crinkled and made to eat its way with lateral motion, thus cut ting in one place tho growth of a dozen years. It takes enormous pressure to bring out a smooth surface, but it comA ifter awhile and remains without trouble. Oaken wood comes from all over the country. The biggest and best, though, is cut in tho river bottoms south and west or on northern slopes of the mount lin lands from West Virginia down. Birdseye or rock maple grows in Ver mont, northern New York and the hill land of New England generally. It is iu demand for furniture, carriage and :ar building, as -well as for facing panels of steamers, houses and so on. It costa ibout tho same as oak—s4s to SBO the thousand. California redwood is hand some of grain and easy to work, but for its peculiarity of shrinking—lengthwise is well as in width—it would doubtless tank high among ornamental timbers. California, too, sends us what is known is white mahogany. It is valued at JS9OOO the carload, pays about S4OO freight, and perhaps costs the city owner it it as much more at tho siding.—Chi cago Neics. A Wonderful Sense of Smell. The buzzard's wonderful sense of itnell is a curious subject that has been jftcn discussed, tho discussion of tho jiatter having resulted in a general uni formity of opinion among scientists that they locate their food by their sense of smell alone. C. L. Hopkins, the noted biologist, says that he has noticed that in Florida they never leavo the roots whero tho night is spent, especially on damp, foggy mornings, until the mois ture has been dried by tho sun. They then move slowly across the wind until a "scent" is struck, when they move more slowly "up tho wind" until the carrion is located. Sometimes they will drift down the wind past their prey, until they liavo struck the scent, which they follow up until they have found the ob ject of their search, sometimes in the densest thickets. Mr. Hopkins says that he has upon several occasions killed wild hogs in the thickets, and after dressing them and taking what meat ho wished would see twenty or more buz zards coming down with the wind. On one occasion they had discovered SIJIIIQ animal remains he had covered up, and on another had found a dead snake which he had buried. All Gold Hasn't the Same Glint. "Most people suppose," says an as sayer, " that all gold is alike when refined, but this is not the case. An experienced man can tell at a glance from what part of tho world a gold piece comes, and in some cases trom what part of a particular gold district the metal was obtained. The Australian gold, for instance,, is distinctly redder than the Californian, and this difference in color is always perceptible, even when the gold is 100 fine. Again, the gold obtained from the placers is yellower than that which is taken directly from quartz. Why this should bo the caso is one of the mysteries of metallurgy, for the placer gold all comes from the veins. The Ural gold is the reddest found any where.—Philadelphia Record. Straight streets are unknown in China. They are purposely made crooked to confuse Satan, as the Chinese believe thu devil travels iu a straight Hue. NEWS AND NOTES FOB WOMEN. Skirts arc growing longer. Brown was never more popular. Indiana has women notaries public. Fur capes will be worn all summer. Finger rings remain as popular aa ever. Ginghams with a lace design can bo bought. The streets of New York are filled with white-gloved women. Minnie Hauk, the singer, was born in New Orleans in 1853. Lover's knots ot ribbon give the latest touch to a lacc llounce. Mrs. Robert Goelet, of New York, pays taxes on $3,000,01)0. Diamond asps are worn as brooches and as ornaments in the hair. The bracelet par excellence is a gold bangle with in Egyptian inscription. Thirteen more women than men voted at the municipal election in Cawker City, Kan. A new brooch imitates in gold a little shoe, the rosette of which is formed of peirlo. Young women employed at the British Museum receive two cents per folio for copying. A new veil, called fil do Vierge, is of thread studded with pearls or electric blue stones. Tho latest flat is that simplicity shall prevail in the street though magnilieenco runs riot everywhere else. The first trades union of women in Belgium is an organization of women to bacco workers in Antwerp. In the fashionable New York boarding schools a manicure calls twice a week to treat the hands of the pupils. A fat figure can be reduced in appear ance by trimming the darts with braid one-sixteenth of an inch wide. Tho Montreal (Canada) General Hos pital refuses to admit femalo students to the privileges of the Institution. Enamelled snakes arc demanded in tho jewelry trade and tinsel snakes from tho milliner and dealer in fancy goods. A new brooch likely to please very young ladies consists of a pearl key thrust through a heart-shaped padlock. The best dressed woman in the world Is said to be Queen Margherita, of Italy. Slio seldom wears a dress moro tha» once. Ninety per cent, of all the applica tions of adoption received at the New York Foundling Asylum call for girl babies. New York is said to employ an aruiy of cash girls 30,000 strong, many of whom are nearer twelve than fourteen years of age. The Empress of Austria is as bu?y as a school girl with her linguistic studies, and as interested as a land reformer in her agricultural projects. The Duchess of St. Albans has recently had one of her gowns encircled with a set of family buttons made of cat's eyes and diamonds set in gold. Printed crepe-de-Chino in bow-knots, floral and dotted designs, is mado into very charming gowns for summer wed dings, dinners, aud water parties. A London tradesman recently received an order for sixty-four pairs of shoes for the daughter of the Grand Duke Paul, of Hussia, a" child less than a year old. A bride in Montreal appeared at tho altar with her pet canary fastened to her I shoulder by a golden chain. The bird enlivened the marriage ceremony with a song. The Prince of Wales asked on one occasion who was the cleverest woman he had ever met promptly ans wered: * 'My sister, tho Empress Fred erick." Senator Blackburn's daughters arc ur rteut admirers of thoroughbred horses. They are always to be seen at the Lex ington (Ky.) races und are thoroughly accomplished in equine lore. Mrs. Jennio June Croly is a littlo woman of slender figure. Her hair is brown, with a few strands of white in it. Mrs. Croly is a pleasaut talker and an amiable and interesting woman. Thousauds of ready made skirt yokes are sold in New York every day. They fit the figure nicely and arc invaluable to fat women. The}' are, however, cut on tho bias, and require careful handling. The i'riuccss of Wales, who is a very pretty woman with a figure of a girl of nineteen, is the arbiter of the fashion able world. She is responsible for cling ing skirts and high collars, small bon nets, and other prominent features of women's dross. The art of crochet has been turned to a very profitable account; for gold and silver laces are thus made, and many handsome black silk trimmings and largo buttons are covered in the same fashion. Gold and silver gauze ribbons are studded all over with with silver, gold and jet stars; and the graduated jet studs are used alike on jjowiu, skirls, capes and bonnets. Princess Hikmakk is in such poor honlth that the physicians doubt the possibility oi her recovery. It Makes Pure Blood And by ao doing Hoort'« SaraapartUs cure. ncmfola, Mlt rhuum and all otber blood d tee mob. aids proper digestion, give* strength to erery organ of the body, and prevents attacks of that tired feeling or more serious disease. If yon will take Hood's Sarsaps rllla now It will put you In the best condition *> bear the hot days of summer. Hood's Sarsapirllla Bold by all druggtflts. sl} §lx for $5. Proparod only by C. I. HOOD A CO., Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar N Y N U—43 ■ || AIIOL'T Kssi Tennesiiec'fl FINE Dl I I'l.niATK and Orkat KExornr;Ks is Oil KNOXVIU.E NENTINEI,; dally 1 mo, jUc.i weekly 1 year, »1, samples Jo. President George Stephen, of the Ca nadian Pacific Railway, who has been elevated to the peerage with the title of Loid Stephen, will have a seat in the House of Lords. The number of pupils belonging to the different grades of public schools in Boston the past year was 67,022. The last two convents on the island of Madeira have ceased to exist. How'i This 112 We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking; Hall's Catarrh Cur a. J. CHENEY <fe Co., Props., Toledo, O. we, the undersigned, nave known F. J. Cheney for the last 16 years, and believe him perfectly honorablo in all mminess transac tions, and financially able to carry out any ob ligations mado by their firm. WESTjfc TUUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, WALDINO, RINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c. per bottle. Solu by all druggists. THE reported profits of the Methodist Hook Concern last year were $140,000. In the "Guide to Health and Etiquette" wilt be. found much useful advice on both subjects; this book is sent free for two 2c. stamps,by the Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Ilow to illnke .Honey. PEAK Slit—liaviug read Mr. Sargents's ex perience in plating with gold, silver and nick el, 1 am tempted to write of my success, i sent to 11. K. Delno «V Co., of Columbus, 0.. for a $5 plater. I have had more tableware and jew elry than 1 could plate ever since. 1 cleared $27 the llrst week and in three weeks SD7. Any one can do plating and make money in any lo cality the year round. You can get circulars by addressing above firm. WM. GRAY. Children Enjoy T?l»MoasAiit flavor,gentle action and soothing eirtjuts or oyrup of Figs, when in need of a lax ative and if the father or mother bo costive or bilious the most gratifying results follow its use, so that it is tho best family remedy known and every family should have a bottle. The Convenience ot Collet Trains. Tho Erie is the only railway running solid trains over its own tracks between New York and Chicago. No change of cars for any class ot passengers, ltates lower than via. any other Urst-class line. FITS stopped free by Dct. KLINE'S GREAT XEHVR RESTORER. NO nts after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial bottlo tree. Dr. Kline, 901 Arch St., Fhila., Pa. A leading actress remarked to a reporter, "The last time 1 played here 1 was worn out, but Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has since made a new woman of me." jftewlisa PROMPTLY CURED BY Cures Also: Neuralgia. Lumbago, Sciatica, fXiikilllllK Sprains, Bruises, Burns, KZ3IB Wounds, SF"Uqa| Soreness, Frost-bites, 811 ffn ess, ||H A3l Aches, How About Your Mother. Scrofula or Kings Evil is the most stubborn of all Skin af fections. Whether inherited orotherwise, it is a blood disease and cannot be permanently cured by anything but S. S. S. A GRATEFUL DAUGHTER. My Mother was sorely afflicted with Scrofula for tliroo years and a half; during tml time the ulatuls on her tuck burst open in tivo places. Thioe of tho openings «cro small and healed right up, but the other two would fill up and break open unow, about ev.'n |two weeks, always causing-scvere pain and often prostration. She was so reduced in strength, that tonica and coca winos had to bo gen: r >usly used to keep her alive. Sho commenced taking S. S. S., and improved Irom the start, the first bottle gave her an app.'tlte and by the time 6he finished the fourth bottle her neck healed up, she Is now entirelly welL Mrs. E. J. Koweli., Mcdford, .Maps. ltookg on Hloofl anil Sktn diseases tree. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATI.ANTA., Oi. DADWAY'S 11 READY RELIEF. THE CHEAeiiST AM) lifcsi' JIEDI CINU FOU FAMIIiV ÜBK IV U'HIS VfOßlil). NKVKU KAILS TO RULIEVK PAIN. Cures and Prevents Colds, Cortjfhs, bore Throat, Inllainmat ion, Kheu luutism, Neuralgia, Head actio, Toothache. Asthma, 1)1 W cult llrcathln^. CURES THE WORST PAINS In from on© to twenty minutes. Not one hour after reading this advertise ment weed any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. INTERNAI.LV, a half to a teMpoonfui In half a tumbler of water will In a few minute* cure Crampi, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomiting, Heart burn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness. Sick Headache Diarrhoea, Colic, Flatulency and all Internal palna, 50c, Per Hot lie. Hold hv DADWAY'S n PILLS. An Excellent and Mild Cathartic, Purely vegetable. Tho safest and l>est medicine ill the world for the cure of all disorders of the Liver, Htomnch or Rowels. Taktrn according to dlrectloua they will restore health and renew vitality. Price, 25c. a box. Sold by all druggist*, or mailed by RAI»WAV ft CO., aa Warren Street, Mew Yorfc en receipt of price. IX THE NEW METHOD for ALLchrouic dhrascs, ilvanepfiia, debility, ofttnrTh. At\ No imtrnt mouirlnt-s. Send for |Tj pauiiihiet, free. lluudred* of t«-«tlmoni&ls. II I"The New Method I* north ita weight in gold. live l>r. K< rr#t '-J. B. Nut'RTS. l'ft*tor >■■ Fir. t Fr**hnChureh, (Y.rthitge. N.Y In finitely JW better than the Hull SjHtenu Ag«*uts wanted. HEALTH Nl ITI.Y CO., 710 BROADWAY, N. ¥. FRAZER**" tfahi ttW riftJk WOKA.O Ullbllv&i fcF tftt too Ucnuine. doia &verywoara Pretty strong reasons for trying Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. In the first place, it cures your catarrh— no matter how bad your case, or of how long standing. It doesn't simply palliate —it aires. If you believe it, so much the better. There's nothing more to be said. You get it for 50 cents, from all druggists. But perhaps you won't be lieve it. Then there's another reason for trying it. Show that you can't be cured, and you'll get SSOO. It's a plain business offer. The makers of Dr. Sage's Remedy will pay you that amount if they can't cure you. They know that they can you think that they can't. If they're wrong, you get the cash. If you're wrong, you're rid of catarrh. £VEB y JJothe r Should Have an The lion*©. Dropped, on Sugar, Children Love cotakeJoHNwiK'S ANODTKI J.INHHWT ror Croup, Uoldk Hon' i hroat, Ton.lllttrt, Colic, CranuM and i'nlnii. ItS Lieves Buminer Complaint*, Cut*, ItrulseH like maffia. THINK OF IT. In use over IO YKAIIH In 011 c faml!y. Dr. J. S. JOHNSON «S Co.—lt 1B sixty years since 1 flrst learn.-.l of vour JOHNSON'S ANODYNE LINIMENT, tor more than rorluu«tr*L have used it in my family 1 regard it A* one of the best nn<l *afist family remedies that ran ll *°d internal or externul. In all cows. O. H. i>eaeon 2nd Rajitist Cnurch, Rancor, Me. FvATU fsilffaror* Froin Itheuiuatißm.Scl &vcry OUIIBier atlra. Ncuralina, Ner vous lirndifne, I>inhtherla,Coufrhs, t'ntarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma. Cholera Morbus, DiairhoSa, luiim-nt-vs. Soreness '»> or Limbs, Stltt Joints or Strains, will find in this old Anodyne relief and BDeedy etire. Pamphlet free. Sold eyvrrwhe™ Price » eta, by mail. 8 bottles, Lxprvw paid, 1. S. JOHNSON & CO.. BOSTON. HAM. II Alp lm « BUVAI/8 SUPERFLUOUS "MIR HAIR DESTROYER ON THE APTUCVED BY FMIMFNT PHYSICIAWS. _ , A FRV'NCH preparation guaranteed I IDC harmte/ato the ai-fn and free from poi- Lll Bonous drugs; highly iierfumed; never fo permanently remove the hair; CMOC l mt wp in plain packets In the form of a lIIUE9 sealed letter. Price. 81 .110 per packet. SiU . by Ihttagigf*. We will send It by ARMS on receipt of Mice. TUB KIJ It E- HnmO. K A CO ~ V. O. Box 3253, N. Y. City. - 1 MONEY IN CHICKENS* M w BR 'or 25c. a KKVpaKe book, experience AAA SkJN) °f n practical poultry raiser during * years, il teaches bow to detcot TV and cure diseases; to feed for eggs c=^_-' %^: >»*j**jßPnnd for fattening; which lowlsco save for breeding. Ac., Ac. Address BOOK PUII. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., N. Y. City. TTTFATTTT CALENDAR ana nm or XlXiXlli XXX bare, for each day of '9/. 11 Or. Few left, will mall for 12c. each to clow. v*.~>o,oi>o in use <lf*i£ii4M| lor the inimes-sronomical! 1891 Cook Book "MR# I——— 1»r n 111 el k iro. Vt. PATENTS * ** ■ 40-pagf book Iree niftlf Wu«, NEBVOtm, WRKTCHKI) mortals «o: >II,K well and keup well. llctiUn. Helper ul lolls now. iuots. n year. .^amplooouy frrp. I)r. J. 11. IIYK, Kitltor, HulTalo. N. Y. VIICTIONARY 2.' 80,< * 10 Worrt »nn<l Definitions, yiUIIUUHni KINKI.VBOVNDIUCI.OTH. Bymnll. poMpalil.itQc. J.J. PINXKY, Evergreen, W1&. diamond a r I Wohrttrr MaeHno 112 Mid, it Abt Price. OH J I [/\ni»«oid Frui«, Steel Drop Fer* lan, Steel Tubing. AdJaMtblr Hall IfIVC ■■ J I •" Rnnnlnj Tart*. laelndlne Pedals Knapmnlon H I | 1I • \/U- Jf Av' A Flneat material moaejr ran bay. Finished iu Enamel and Nickel* 111 I S S J STRICTLY HIGH GRADF IN EVERY PARTICULAR. > S .*s"^*.Y : 'I.V / | Send tlx cent! In (tampt lor our 100-page Illustrated Catalogue of j J ( Bicycle CataioguemE [ Guns ' RlWet. Revolvers, Sporting Goods of Al< Kinds, etcjl MOHN JP. - ~ BWjT<)N. MAWH.j "Better oul* of t*he wor Id.t"h&n out- of* the f&shion^-^^^? — — It is f| far house-cl e&nin£- lb is & Jfe of scouring so&pTry it* "^jgl 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 SAPO' pi Best Couprh Medicine. Reeominended by Php |±l Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agre ea V Ltl taste. Children take it without objection. By ( "German Syrup" v " We are six in faitt- A Farmer at ily. We live in a place where we ai» Edom,Texas, übject tQ violen| Says: Colds and Lung' Troubles. I have used German Syrup for six yeaxa successfully for Sore Throat, Cough,' Cold, Hoarseness, Pains in the Chest aud Lungs, and spitting-up of Blood. I have tried many differ ent kinds of ccugli Syrups in my time, but let me say to anyone want ing such a medicine —German Syrup is the best. That has been my ex perience. If you use it once, you will go back to it whenever you need it. It gives total relief and ' a quick cure. My advice to eve*, one suffering with Lung Troublesis —Try it. You will soon be con vinced. In a'l the families *where your German Syrup is used we have no John trouble with the Frank „ n H Lungs at all. It is the medicine for this . _ Jones. country. SJ 0. o. n'-rrv, <soio M.in'fr,Woodbury,NJ. N Y ,S pBTOBIAs UNEXCELLED! APPLIKD liXTEICNAi-IA FOR Rhenmitism, Neuralgia, Pains in tba Limtis, Back or Chest, Mumps, Sora Tbroat, Colds, Sprains, Bruises, Stings of Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNALLY It nets like it chnrm lor Cholera .Morbus, I)iarrhn-a, Dysentery, Colic, Crumps, Nnu- Hra, Sick II endue lie, tVe. Wnrranted perfectly liarinlrM. (Seponth neeotniMiiiylns eneli bottle, nUo directions lor use.i 11 m SOOTHING mid PEN ETll A* TI N(J <j unlit let* ure lelt immediately. Try it and bo convinced. Price '23 and .JO cents. Sold by all drug* gists. DEPOT, 4O lll'int A Y ST., NE W YOU K, j ' PAINT. I REQUIRES ADDITION op ANf DIIDK EQUAL PART 0F0IL&4 OR runt MAKING IADVERTISED IN 7343 PAPERS I Where we huvc no Agent will arrange with any aclivr ti ercliaiiiL. iV N. l. RUPTURE CURED! Positively Holds Rupture. a **n nons AJtD DAY. ■H bLAS XI C glllUnan Adjuhlulilo I'nd nhlrheos »n;lp larpT or r.mallerlflnll -v House Mra.Ca (PATENT ALLOW KD.) 744 BSOMDWAY. N. Y-SITV m I EWIS' 93 LYE I Powdered and Perfumed. La Strongest and purrst I-ye made. Li M ' lk,ls the best perfumed Hard ® Soap in 20 minutes without boil ing. It is t)ie best for softening water, cleansing waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets,wash n ing bottles, paints, trees, eta 111. PENNA, SALT MFG. CO., wrtrrwffnmi Ueu. Agents, Phi la., l'a. |U If All Do yon Hunt a \Vnull *■ Do Mf H I I.M you like Story rnuerxr sond WW ** I Vlll |Oc. (diver) to the CI.I.WAX, Alliance,O., for 4 inop. Trial Subncrlptlon. . Tho .Seml-inontlily Story Paper published. It will also tell liow to earn tlie VVATI?II easily. IIAV CCUCR CURFO TC STAf CUREa nnl It" til We want tnc name and ad orers ot every sufferer in the & ACTUM A u - s and Canada. Addreu, HO I nlllll F. Harcldlltjos,M.D. : lloffalo,Kit.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers