Beautiful and Curious Sponges. The sponges usually seen in the city drug Btores give a by no means adequate idea of the beautiful forms of these creatures that arc found in the lower depth of the ocean. These sponges of the ;;reat depths arc among the most beautiful things that live in the ocean. They assume various forms, some of which are very interest ing, and not a few of which are curiou" Several of these curious ones are men tioned below. Not least remarkable are the so-called sea nests, which are in the form of spheres or sometimes egg-shaped. Tho outer coat of one of those specimens is a complicated net-work, over which a delicate membrane is spread. An ornamental frill adorns the upper part, while the lower portion throws out a maze of glossy filaments like tine white hairs. These hairs penetrates the semi-fluid mud in every direction, thus holding the sponge in its place, while a continuous current of water is drawn by waving "cilia" through all parts of the mass, passing out by a hole at the top. In this manner the animal absorbs whatever food may be afloat. Another singular sponge is the glass rope, which sends down into the mud a coiled wisp of filaments as thick as a knitting needle. Tho hitter opens out Into a brush, fixing the creature in place after the manner of a screw pile. Still another remarkable sponge is found in the deep water off the Lotloden Islands. It spreads out into a thin cir cular cake, surrounded by what looks like a fringe of white floss silk. Yet another curiosity is the cupectella sponge of the Philippines, which lives embedded to its id in the mud and supported by a lovely 1 frill.— Neio York Mail and Ex press. An India IJnbber Plantation. A plantation of India rubber was started by the Government of Assam in 1873, in a forest at the foot of the Him alayas. Seedlings were planted in the forks of trees, and by 1885 they had reached the ground. The trees were subsequently placed in beds forty feet wide, protected by the surrounding for est. In 1890 the plantation exteuded over lIUG acres and contained 16,054 healthy plants, besides 8-4,000 seedlings. The experiment will not begin to be profitable for several years.— New Orleans Picayune. There are ISI,OOO foreigners in Paris, or one-tenth of the entire population. Among these the Belgians lead with 45,- 000: next the Germans, 37,000; then the Swiss, 25,000; and Italians, 21,000; theu comes Luxembourg, and next Great Britain with 13,000. The State of Massachusetts' has ar ranged to aid the 103 small towns that | have no libraries iu their efforts to se cure them. Health IB that state when all tho organs of the body per form their functions iu 'regular an<l efficient mau uer; and to remove any obstructlou to such action is the proper duty of medicine. Hood's Sarsaparilla Gives health by purifying tho blood, toning tho stomach and bowels, and Invigorating tho kidneys und liver. Therefore, If you are la poor health, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. 100 Doses One Dollar llood'M Pill*—Best liver lnvlgorator and ca thartic. Reliable, effective, gentle. Price 25e. Sheridan's Condition Powders IHENI £ A> It yon can't KPt ft wend to ua. We mall ono pack tsc. Flvosl. A 2 1-4lb.cant 1.580. 81*. $5. Ex. paid, llmltru liaiHfna GufrU, free,with fiordera L B. JOHNSONCP . K >.IM St,. Itoatop.MftM * Y NU—44 DONALD KENNEDY Of Roxiuiry, Mass,, says Kennedy's Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep- Seated Ulcers of 40 years' standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, ex cept Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root. Price, $1.50. Sold by every Druggist in the United State* y.nd Canada. ELYS CATARHH CREAM BALM IH WORTH Wf SSOO §i§L Lo,^f'f] TO ANY MAN, $A Woman or Child |£~ suffering from CATARRH WfMIP LIQUID or SNUFF. HAY'FEYER A particle is applied Into each nostril and la agroe able. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. EI.Y HKoTUEKS. ,5 Wurren str.'ft, Now York. AlAlf WEAK, NEKVOCB, W HITCHED mortals gej JtllaK Well and k«fp well. Health lltlyer tells how. 50ctx. a year, hample copy Iree. Dr. J. 11. I)YK, K.iiU»r, Buffalo, N. Y. PBJNBIOW - i>i.r sail NOLMEKM M disabled, tl fee for increase 'Jrt years ex perience. Write for Laws. A.W. McConmcic SONS. WASHINGTON D. U A CINCINNATI, O. THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STOBIBS THAT AU TOLD BY THE FUNNY KEN OF THB P&BSSS. Man—Time to Grow MI Appetite—Ac commodation Unnecessary lt Was, by That Time, Etc.. Kto. "Man Is bat olay," oh, ward of trathl We learned, each one. In early youth, Man is but clay. We call the speedy man a "briok," The "soft-baked" mortal makes us sick; Man is but clay. Down goes a fellow with a thud, Wo straightway say, "His name is mud;" Man is but clay. —Lowell Newt, ACCOMMODATION. Donnerwetter—"Can you accommo date me with my little bill?" Blitzor—"Call next Friday and I will let you know when you can call again." —Chicago Nctci. DISAGREEABLE. "I must change me mind," said How ell Gibbon. "No," returned Tom Knox. ,4 You can't get something for nothing these days."— Judge. TIME TO GROW AN APPETITE. "Let's go into this restaurant and get something to eat." "But I'm not hungry." "That's no matter; you will be before you get anything."— Puck. LEGAL EXACTNESS. Lawyer Quibble —"llow's business? Looking up?" Counselor Quirk —"Yes; and that's about all there is to it. I'm tired of staring at the ceiling I"— Judge. UNNECESSARY. Barker—"Say, hold on, old man!— here's one of those talking machines—l want you to hear it." Harker—"No; I'm going on home— my wife is waiting for me."— Puck. A MEAN JUDGE. Judge—"How old are you, madam?" Witness—"l've seen eighteen sum mers." Judge—"And eighteen winters—thir ty-six, Mr. Clerk."— Neio York Prets. IT WAS, DV THAT TIME. "Well," sa.d Chappie, as he and the Earl of Skipabout paced the deck the day after the grayhound sailed, "what do you think of America?" "It's out of sight," said the noble Earl, diplomatically.— Puck. ■WOMEN'S WAYS. First Little Boy—"My ma got a new dress yesterday and she threw her arms around pa's neck. What does your ma do when she gets a new dress?" Second Little Boy—"She says she'll forgive him, but he mustn't stay out late again."— Cloak Ilevieto. DASTARDLY. "Harkins played a mean trick on his neighbor down at Metuchen." "What was it?" "Why, his neighbor has been fatten ing a turkey for Thanksgiving all sum mer, and Ilarkins mixed a bottle of anti fat with the turkey's food."— New York Sun. BAFE TO STAY. •'How long has he been preaching?" asked the stranger, as he came in during the sermon and took a seat in a back pew. "Thirty or forty years, I think," re plied the old member, "but I don't know exactly." "I'll stay then. He must be nearly done."— New York Sun. PROFESSIONAL OBJECTION. "I notice by the papers," said MoOor kle to a chance acquaintance in the street car, "that one man saved fourteen llyes last summer in the surf at Atlantic Oity." "Yes, and it does seem as if people ought to mind their own business." "Are you alluding to me?" "No, to the life savers. You see, I am an undertaker."— Epoch. A DIGNIFIED AJIBWKB. A north side teacher was getting her new pupils tabulated. "What does your father do?" she asked one of the new boys. "He's a contractor," was the reply. •'A railway contractor?" "No, ma'am; a sausage contractor. He ties up the ends after another man has filled 'em."— Chicago Inter-Ocean. EVERYBODY HAPPY. A rather frivolous lady told her hus baud not togo hunting, as in her opinion it was a cruel pleasure. "How can it be a cruel pleasure?" re turned her spouse. "I enjoy it, and my dogs enjoy it. I know you enjoy your self when [am absent; and evon tho quail enjoy it, for I can't hit one on the wing to save my life."— Texa* Sifting*. READY COMPLIANCE. "Stop, sir I You needn't toll your ■torv to me," sharply interrupted tho cross-examining attorney. "Address your remarks to the jury." "Are there any lawyers in tho jury?" inquired the witness. "No, sir." "Gentlemen," began the witness, with marked emphasis on the word.— Ohicaqo Tribune. BETTER THAN AZURE BLOOD. Pater—"So you don't like Mr. Fahr weste?" Daughter—' 'I don't. He's too coarse. I don't believe there's a drop of blue I blood in his veins." , Pater—"Never you mind that. He's a mine owner, and the contents of his veins are ores that assay twenty thousand to the ton." Daughter—"l'll wed him."— PiUi- 1 burg Bulletin. EFFECT/V ELY TOt-Tt. Servant—"Oh, miss, that Mr. Borem do be coming here again. There's no use tellin' him y'r not at home, far he'll just push past me an' say he'll wait till yez do come back." Miss Beauti—"Then,for mercy's sake, tell him plainly that I'm engaged. Do it in such a way that he'll conclude to leave." i Servant—"Yis, mum." Mr. Borem (a minute later) —"Is Miss Beauti at home?" Servant—"Yes, sor, but she do bo engaged; an'the felly she's ingaged to do be waitin' in the parler fnr yea wid a club."— New York Weekly. SIGNAL SERVICE SUGGESTIONS. He had finally reached the tower, and when he entered the Signal Servica office he said abruptly: "This 'ere's where you give out weather predictions, ain't it?" The clerk nodded. "Well," continued the old man,"l thought as how I could come up an' give you some pointers.'' "Yes," said the clerk politely. "Yes; I've fisjgered on it a little an' I find that ye ain't al'ays right." "No, we sometimes make mistakes." "Course ye do. We all does some time. Now, I was thinkin' as how a line that used to be on the auction hand bills down in our county might do fust rate on your weather predictions an' save ye a lot of explainin'." "What was the line?" "Wind an' weather permittin'." He went down without waiting for the elevator. Eating Before Sleeping. Our forefathers did not need to eat just before retiring, because the time belween their evening meal and bedtime was of short duration. But thousands of weak people to-day let several hours elapse between their evening meal and bedtime, and during this interval the stomach gets empty. From this time on until the breakfast the stomach is entire ly free from all food, and this adds greatly to the nightly emaciation, sleep lessness and general wakefulness. It was considered an unpardonable sin against our stomachs to eat before retiring in earlier days, but the proof of medical ex perience show? now that there are more people benefited by eating some light food before retiring than those who aro injured by it. A little common sense will easily demonstrate to one whether eating before sleeping benefits hiin. The per pstual disintegration of the tissues, which goes on at all times, must be made up for by supplying the body with plenty of nutriment. Food taken into the stom ach at night is belter assimilated, aud does more good than that which is taken in the daytime, when violent exercise tends to counteract its good. Food will digest when one is sleeping, but tbs great fault is that people do not know the physiological limit of their stomachs. Weak and emaciated persons improve when only a small quantity of food is placed in their stomachs at night, but if it is overloaded injury follows. Stout and fat people should avoid food at night and their weight would be greatly re duced. Weak and emaciated people should cat a little of easily digested food before retiring, and their general weight would be increased. Many arise in the morning with a bittor, sour taste in the mouth, and they attribute this to the food they ate before retiring. This con clusion is logical and true. The remedy is not to take that kind of food again, but try some other kind until that which does not disagree with the stomach is found.— Yankee Blade. Our Treatment of the Spider. It is not enough that every bird that flies, ruthlessly robs her nursery, devours her babies, and even snatches her own soft body from the very sanctum of home; that yauzy flies steal their greedy young into her nursery to fatten upon her infants; that to monkeys, squirrels, and lizards her plump body is a sweet morsel they never resist; that frogs and toads snap her up without ceremony; that centipcds seize her in resistless grasp; that wasps paralyze and bury her alive? Are not these enough, without man joining the host of exterminators! Man, too—in whose service she lives I Consider for a moment her useful ness. Count, if you can, the thousands of flies and mosquitoes eaten by one common house or garden spider in a summer. Then remember her harmless ness. Other servants we must pay; birds cat our cut-worms, our caterpillars, aad our potato beetles, but we have to pay a tax—small, it is true—in fruits, in ber ries, in greea peas, in corn; owls and hawks, while they destroy moles and mice, indulge now and then in young chickens. But the daughter of Arachne asks no reward, neither fruit nor vege tables suffers from her touch, no hum ming or buzzing attends her movements. Steadily, faithfully she goes on her way doing her appointed work; and we, so 'wise, so far above her in scale of being, we—murder her!— Popular Sci ence Monthly. Many Men Are Magnets. That the human frame is an excellent magnet is well known by practical ex perience to every watchmaker and mend er, says a jeweler. A man will carry a watch for years and bo proud of its ac curacy; then he will fall sick, the watch will lie on the mantel or on the dresser, and will develop great inaccuracy and unreliability. No explanation is forthcoming, except the one that the absence of maguetism upsets the time announcer, and the best proof of this is that when the man gets around again and carries his watch it soon gets all right again. No two men appear to have the same magnetism in their frames, and it is sel dom that two individuals can use the same watch satisfactorily.— St. Aouti Olobe-Democrat. Is There Snow on the Moont Remarkable discoveries have been made at the Lick Observatory, Califor nia. Professor Holden, the director, has secured through the big telescope better photographs of the moon than have been taken anywhere else, and the work of photographing goes on every hour when the satellite is visible. By studying these photographs with a mag nifying glass and comparing them any changes taking place on the surface of the moon may be discovered. The astronomers on Mount Hamilton have discovered somethings that nobody else ever saw, but they have not deter mined whether these are new features or things that are too small to have been seen through a less powerful telescope. For example upon the top of one of the mountains of the moon the photograph shows a luminous white spot which looks like snow. If that is snow, and if it was not there before, the presence of an atmosphere is indicated. It has been believed that the moon has no atmos phere, and therefore is uninhabitable; but if it should be demonstrated that snow falls upon the surfaco of the satel lite the accepted theory would be upset, and astronomers would begin to study the moon with new and greater interest. Objects upon the moon are detected by their shadows, aud a projectton or eminence fifty feet high casts a shadow large enough to be seen through the Lick telescope. If Professor Holden, studying his series of photographs, should discover some day a new shadow where none had been cast before when the moon was in the same position aud under the same light, he would know that something had been erected upon the surface, either a part of the crust up heaved by some internal movement, or a building put up by living creatures. The moon appears to be a dead, desolate waste of played-out volcanoes and cooled off lava beds, without atmosphere, and, like Arizona, rather short of water and good society.— Philadelphia Telegraph. The Telephone Forcasts Weather. The telephone is about to have a new application, namely, that of fortelling storms. A new discovery has been made ns to one of the properties of this means of transmitting sound. By placing two iron bars at seven or eight meters dis tance from each other, and then putting them in communication on the side by a copper wire covered with rubber, and on the other side with a telephone, a storm can, it is said, be predicted at least twelve hours ahead through a dead sound heard in the receiver. According as the storm advances the sound resembles the beating of hailstones against the win dows. Kverv flash of lightning, and, of course, every clap of thunder that ac ! companies the storm produces a shock , similar to that of a stone being cast be i tween the diaphragm nnd the instru i ment.— JSew York Journal. — Valuable Mineral Discovery. An important deposit of that rare metal known as vanadium has been found in ] the Province of Mendoza, Argentine Republic. This metal is one of the tarest aud most valuable knowu aud is used for setting dyes in silks, ribbons, hosiery and other fine goods. The principal source of supply uutil recently has been 1 a small deposit in the Ural Mountains, and it has been held as high as SISOO per ounce. This newly-discovered dc j posit in Mendoza will therefore be re ] cognized as of great importance.—Chi ea'jo llcrald. The actual length of the new St. Clair Tunnel is 0020 feet. It cost $1,400,- 000. • LOST TIME. • From 1863 to 1885 —about 22 years—l suffered with rheu matism of the hip. I was cured by the use of ST. JACOBS OIL. T. C. DODD. # "ALL RIGHT I ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT." * ••••••••••• THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD! _ • TUTT'S Z •tiny liver pills® • have all the virtues of the larger one* | equally effective; purely vegetable. V Exact size shown In this border. + » = 0 FUIIIIY WARRANTED°= STON SCALES S6OFREICHT PAID * g^IONES°rBINGHAMTON.NY RAG ciiLLOiH Send at once tor our Catalogue. *» testi monials. C. N. Newcomb, Davenport, low* ||n|AMJ<>H!V H.WIKHIS, llbllOlUri D.C. ■ 3 via in last war. l&atUu'iicaLiuKclaiiui*, attj aiuce. AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY. or communion to handle the New Patent rhenilcal Ink Erasing Pencil. Agent* maklUK *3O per week. Mcarw Eraser Slf 'g Co., I-a Wis, box 831. UiSO'b ltfcJVlliD\ FOB CATAit-U-U-—Ueat. AtftolCSt .0 M6. na HI Jr cheapest. Kellef Is immediate. A cure is certain. bor 03 uoid in the ileao it has 110 equal. _ HBK|3P p !l^C B 7rV^W oi which » small particle Is applied to the MM nostrils, t'neo, 50c. Sold by druggists or sent by niall. m Address. K. T. HAZFLTIXF Warren. Pa. Udlr*. ul Drug/i«t for ChUktntr a MmmUih Diamond Brand in K«4 ud Gold nauillc \T boxc* -enleU with blue ribbou. T»k« •• *Ui«r Llnd. Refute Substitutions mnd bmil<\H<m*. V All pills In boiaa, pink wrappara ar« dmifrroa* ruaatrrfrlU. At Drtifbu. or m«4 m **■ In »i*mpi for particular*, tMUaotKU, ud "Kellef far UdlM," Utfr, by rtlara Mall lO.OOttTwtlawltli. Nam« Pmptr. CHICHIITKR CHKIKCAI CO , MtdlMf NjMI« Hold by mil Local Or«**iaU. PWxA^TEIVwiA^A A Fox Story. An island off the Irish coast was in habited by large numbers of rabbits, nod could be reached at low tide by, ( Wading, the water there being only a few inches deep. One morning some fisher men went in their boat quite early, It be ing high tide, and on landing saw a dead lox lying on the beach. The animal seemed to have been drowned. One of the men, remarking that his skin was worth something, pitched him into the boat. Procuring their bait they returnod to the main land, and the man who had possessed himself of the fox seized him by the tail and dung him on shore. As soon as the animal struck the bench he picked himself up with considerable agility for a dead fox, and shot off like a flash up among the cliffs. The men concluded that he had crossed over to the island during the night when the tide was low, in search of labhits, and finding in the morning that he was cut off from the mainland, counterfeited death, with the expectation of thereby procuring a passage to the shore in a boat, an expectation which was fully realized. Labor Tribune. Cuba has the largest sugar crop this year ever known in its history. E. A. Rood, Toledo, Ohio, says: "Hall's Ca tarrh Cure cured my wife of catarrh fifteen years ago aud she has had no return of it. It's a sure cure." Hold by Druggists, 7. r »c. Chin KSE will run a nalmou cannery on the Frazt r Kiver, Oregon. Children Tease For It. Dr. Hoxsie's Certain Croup Cure is a boon to children who are attacked with croup or acuta congestive colds. Sold by druggists or mailed on receipt of fiO ct». Address A. R Hoxsie, Buffalo, N. V. KITH stopped free by Dr. Kline's Gkkat Nerve Kkstoheh. No llts after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial bottlo free. Dr. Kline, t>3l Arch St., Phlla., Pa. IfaOlioted with sore eyes use Dr.lsoac t'homp i-on'sKye-water.Druggists sell at 2Sc.per bottle. lis ON® BXJOYS Botb the method and results when Syrup of Figs ia taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet prom ptly on the Kidneys Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sy» tern effectually, dispels coids, head, aches and fevers and cures habituai constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its iind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste ana ao> ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial In its effects, prepared only from the moat healthy and agreeable fubstaneea, its 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 u v all leading drag, 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. HAN FRANQtSOO, CAL. mmviut, k¥. new ton*. *.* jjkSIR HIOT TIIORMOK, the fS&ib \ most noted phyiictan of Eng- JrSSuMj/j } \ land, Bays that more than jK&KfyC&V half of all diseases come from Send for Free Sample of G>rfleld Tea t0 319 We4t Street, New York City. GfflMmis *eato*eaComple*to»ie«re»Con«ttp»t»o«. WOODBTJBY'B FACIAL SOAP. For the Skla, Snip and Coaplfllaß. Ke salt of foyeanr experience. Forsale / at l>rurcl"t« or by mail, Mr. Sample / Cake and 128 p. book on I>ermatol<w7 t_ HI and Feautjr, TlUua.]; on Nkin, Beam, y| Jvjfcv- ™|/j Nervous and Blood disease and their I7 ty NISN<n RI*T\TS like BIKTH ■ilia, \ V *NL • j lain, WifU, liKlln lak and r»»f" tjfliHWjy Mark*. Ann, milage, R")»» of Kaar, Ha. \ ntrliDU H»tr, ria>U>, *r„ removed. JOlt™ H, WOODRI It, BERHiTOUMIH-U. Ko'KK" .n r WQHSTED AND WOOLEN REMNANTS Sultlmt* anil Hantinns, direct from MlUa. Send stamp lor sample*. I KTHHL WHHUTICB Mn.u,Hopklnton,R.l. < nno/ profit. A Rent* Wanted. Houaehold Novelty I Ull/OSample.2.V. M. J. Hotchklsa, New Haven,Ct. HAY FFVFR Cur#(| ,0 s,a T Curtd. ■in I I WE want U»e name and addres of every sufterer in the U.S. And £>, ACTUM A Canada. Address I*. Harold <xno I nifln Have*. M. 11., Buffalo, N. Y '' 1 IcS^ comunitu ' AU over —your sufferings from Catarrh.; That is, if yon go about it in the right way. There are plenty of wrong way#,' that perhaps you've found out. They may relieve for a - - time,' but they don't cure. j> Worse yet, they may drive the disease to the lungs. You-.can't afford to experiment. I, But there is a right way, and ft' Bure way, that does cure. Thou sands of otherwise hopeless cases have proved it. It's with Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. By its mild, soothing, cleansing and healing properties, it permanently cures the worst chronic cases. Catarrhal Headache, " Cold in the Head "■— everything catarrhal in its nature, is cured as if by magic. It's a way so sure that the pro prietors of Dr. Sage's Remedy offer, in good faith, §SOO for & case of Catarrh which they can not cure. If it's sure enough for them to make the offer, it's suro enough for you to make the trial. They risk SSOO. \. hat do you risk? "August Flower" " I have been afflict- Blllousnese, "ed with biliousness "and constipation Constipation,>< f or fifteen years; " first one and then Stomach „ anQther prepara . Pains. " tion was suggested "tome and tried but "to no purpose. At last a friend " recommended August Flower. I " took it according to directions and " its effects were wonderful, reliev " ing me of those disagreeable " stomach pains which I had been "troubled with so long. Words " cannot describe the admiration "in which I hold your August " Flower—it has given me a new " lease of life, which before was a "burden. Such a medicine is a ben " efaction to humanity, and its good " qualities and "wonderful mer-Jesse Barker, " its should be D . . "made known to Printer, "everyone suffer- Humboldt, "ing with dyspep sia or biliousness Kansas. 9 fi. G. GREEN, Sole Xlan'fr,Woodbury,N.J. ORATEFUI^-COMFORTINa. EPFS S 00G0A BREAKFAST. '•By a thorough knowledge ot the natural lawi which govern the operati >ns of digestion and nutri tion, ana by a care.'ul applle ation «»f the flue proper ties of welt-selected Cocoa, Mr. Bpps ha* provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bev erage which may save us many heavy doctors bllla It Is by the Judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gr dually oullt up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around ub ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping our* selves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."—"Civil Servioe Gaaeite. 1 Made simply with boiling water or milk, sold only in nalf-oouad tins ~y Grocers, labelledtbui: JAAIES KrFS Sc CO.. Hom«eopathlc Chemists, Loxdo.V, E.volajcd. HOW TO SAVE , AO per oU or more in CASH and get trees, plant*, etc., with trifling effort FREE* Agents wanted. For catalogue with valuable Information, address J. HAMMOND, Nprskrvmas. Geneva, N. Y. IffE PAY SALAR YaS&MS ■V men or women. Work Stkady. 810 PAY for WW part time. C Hit tit Free. Experience not peal ed. .1. Kngcne Wliltnrv, It or li ruler, M. I X X INTER-AIR-SPACE X * II V Adapted to all climates anil variations of tem-*"i perature. Sold by Leading merchants In principal] cities. Illustrated catalogue mailed free on applM cation to llarderfold Fabric Co., Troy, N. ¥.[ Lydia E. Pinkham'B Vegetable Compound Acts in perfect harmony with the laws that govern the female svstem under all circumstances, its sue* cess in quickly and permanently curing all kinds of Female Complaints, is unparalleled in the history of medicine. It Is almost infallible, t'se it with confidence .n cases of Lnirurrhm. Bmrlnl-li.'wn FrrliiK. "'* k .ft? it rssxt wari $S££Z IMSE.- 1 haSrtSTKiTliwv cSnipl.lnto,an<llo W .theßt«iMeh LosM^im^• l J' , l> i' NK | l 4 M jiEU CO., LYNN, MAS*
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers