Poison in Eels. Recent investigations undertaken by the Academy of Sciences, llome, have demonstrated tho fact that tho blood of both eels and lampreys con tains a poison similar to that of tho viper. Tho blood of a four-ponnd eel is said to contain an amount of this poison sufficient to kill ten men. The poison is rendered innocuous by cook ing ; nevertheless the academy recom mends that people suffering from any organic lesions should abstain from these .fish. —Literary Digest. Dr. Kilmer's Kwamp-Root puro3 all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory llinirhamton. N. Y. The avernKe aj?e of students at Harvard is 22.7 yours and at Columbia 21.5. When Traveling Whether on pleasure bent, or buslncss.tako on every trip a bottlo of Syrup of Figs, ns it acts most pleasantly and effectively on tho kidneys liver and bow el*, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of sickness. Forsato in DOcents and $1 bottles by ali loading druggists. In IHSO u /?nni t n\" Bronchial lYochex" were in troduced. and their success as n cure for Colds, Coughs, Asthma and Bronchitis has been un paralleled. M. L. Thompson & Co., Druggists, Couders jiort, Ha., say Hall's Catarrh Cure is the best and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it. 75c. l>r. Iloxmle'* Certain Croup Cure For the baby and for tho adult. It cures croup and whooning cough, also asthma. 50 cts. A. P. Iloxsie, Buffalo. N. Y., M'f'r. CtTRE your cough with Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute, Sliiloh's* Care Is sold on a guarantee. It cures Incipient Con sumption; 11 is the Best Cough Cure: Sic., 50c., 51 If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle Mr. Henry TV. l>et wile r Pennsville, Pa. Heart and Stomach Both Caused Trouble—Cured by Hood's. "I commence 1 to tako HooR two >t RA !• w.i»'» Pills, ftiteti daily by tho*e subject to blliom I-tin* auer LIE*. Sold In nil HI iiuixlnl*. IC\l>\\ \\ ('<)„ M:\V VIIKH. The Marked Success of Scott's Kmulsion in consump tion, scrofula and other forms of hereditary disrase is due ty its powerful food properties. Scott's Emulsion rapidly creates healthy Mesh proper weight. Hereditary taint-, develop only when the system beculiu s weakened. 11, 111 t'W loj iiwiiaii, HI • <<•_ I IJOO.UUU PttUJEi). 4' » * HUHlMtll LUXKI, h • »r. UtlucS lltt ttillil u I < *Kt«4N Psslt, THE TOOTHSOME PEANUT. OTTB ANNUAL CHOP IS ESTIMATED AT 4,000,000 BUSHELS. Norfolk, Va., Is the Peanut Market ot the World—Cleaning, Grading and Hrandlng the Nuts, "T T'ROM 1866 to the present day I=/ the peanut supply has steadily I increased, until now the gross d amount produced and put upon the market is estimated at 4,000, - 000 bushels por annum. Peanuts grow upon a trailing vine, with leaves much resombling a small four-leaved clover. The small, yellow flower it bears is shaped like the blos som of all the pea family; indeed, tho agricultural bureau in Washington does not recognizo the peanut as a nut Bt all, but classes it among beans. The soil in which it is cultivated must be light and sandy ; after the flower falls away, tho flower-stalk elongates and becomes rigid, curving in such a way as to push tho forming pod well below tho snrfaoe of the earth ; if by accident this is not dono the nut never matures. They are planted in rows about three feet apart, and the vines spread until the ground is covered by them. Har vesting is done after tho first frost, and tho yield is often 100 bushels to the acre, making this a moro profitable crop than wheat or cotton. The vines, with tho nuts clinging to them, are torn up with pronged hoes, and allowed to dry in the sun for a day or two, and then stacked to cure. In about a fortnight the nuts are picked off, the jmpty ones, which are techically sailed "pops," being rejected. This picking is dono by hand, and is slow work, as an expert laborer can pick anly three bushels a day. They come into market in a rough, dirty state, nnassorted, and with viue tendrils slinging to tho pods. Norfolk, Va., is called' the "peanut market of the world." This may be somewhat exaggerated, for Africa sup plies the demand of Europe, but it is oertainly tho peanut market of the United States. From tho surround ing countries come by sloop, by steamer, by freight train, by wagon, by ox-cart, into tho hands of tho com mission merchants, thousands of big, four-bushel bags, containing tho pea nuts as they leavo the hands of the farmer. All this, though tho history of the peanut is interesting enough, would hardly have entitled it to be described among our "American industries." But in 1876 what is now (mis) called a "peanut factory," for the cleaning, grading and branding of peanuts, was established in Norfolk. The value of this product was at onoo immensely increased, aud there are now in Nor folk and its immediate vicinity four teen of these factories—several of them large, five-story brick buildings, filled with powerful and expensive machinery, and each employing from 100 to 200 persons, both male and fe male, for all the picking over is done entirely by manual labor. But though he did not hit on ex- | actly tho right namo for his new es tablishment, Mr. Elliot, the founder, not only proved a blessing to the farmers, by increasing tho worth of their crop, but made his own fortune, and, standing now at the head of the trade, is known all over tho Unitod States as "Peanut Elliot," or the "Peanut King." Ho is a fine-look ing, middle-agod man, with a bright, genial face and manner, aud has a cordial welcome for visitors. He con ducted a party of us, the other day, over his establishment, and after ex plaining all the various operations to us in a charming, clear and concise manner, he sent us away bearing each a large bag of "first quality" peanuts, and the most pleasant recollections of our host and visit. When tho peanuts arrive at the factory they are rough and earth stained, and of all sizes and qualities, jumbled together. Tho bags are first taken up by iron arms projecting from an endless chain to tho fifth floor of tho factory. Here they are weighed and emptied into large bins. From these bins they fall to tho next story, into large cylinders, fourteen feet long, which revolve rapidly, aud by friction the nuts aro cleansed from the earth which clings to them, and pol ished so that they coino out white aud glistening. From this story tho nuts fall through shoots to the third and most interesting floor. Imagine rows of loug, narrow tables, each divided lengthwise into three sections by thin, inch-high strips of wood. Theso strips also surround the edge of tho tahle. Each of these section* is floored with a strip of heavy white canvas, which moves incessantly from the month of a shoot to an opening leading dowu below at the further end of the table. These slowly-moving canvas binds, about a foot wide, are called "pick ing aprons." Upon the outer aprous of each table dribbles dowu from the •hoot a slender stream of puauuts, aud ou each side of the table, HO close together aa scarcely to have "elbow room," ntau I rows of colore I girls aud wouteu, picking out the tuferior pea nuts as they pais aud throwiu ; tlteiu into the central section. So fast do their hands move at this work that oue muttul see what they are doiug tdl they cast a handful of uut* iuto the middle division. Uy the titue a uut has tiWw.nl the sharp eyes of eight or leu pickers, one may he quite eer taiu that it is a lirst clam article, tit fur the flual plunge dowu two .lories, 11110 | li; ahich preaeutly shall be market, "till 'trie Light" braud, aud (etch th' highest market priee. the p< aunts front the central aprous fail uuty to tho *euui| story, a here they undergo yet another pie king u»r, ou similar tables, the U«t of tie 4 loiunu, the second Krale Irrout the central aprou of th ■■-*» table.. Mr i.llioit gath> red earc l> wly a hau tlul of puat.uU glwst. 111.. looking ui|. * that He lit night fhoul | ».truly hu gone tut 'au "»h»»: "I'll give »oi» « dollar (or e*«*» timet yU u„ I lu th**, h. „11, pi *|.,»4 i||s.a I« via We I ~1 lh a, 112 )4 I i" 4i«*. lljr . , t ,t,. a,. | »»**# ! 1 U* Mliot a* a t at .(tws.it 1 '*w, «h" lhtm*mh "it 1 th owj.h -I th'u t ik Ma Moth! ■ I, t *a va #1 mil Iks ill*., * 4*l h* 9*4 4* •»** a strong current of air blew the empty shells at onoe into the oentral division. The third grade of peanuts, or what remains after tho second pioking, is then turned into a machine whioh crushes the shells and separates them from the kernels. These are sold to manufacturers of candy while .the shells are ground up and used for horse bedding. So no part of this little fruit, vegetable or nnt, which ever it may turn out to be, is finally wasted, but all serves some useful pur pose. The peanut is a little patriot, be cause it helped the poor soldiers when tho war was over; it has stood by the poor farmers during many a desperate season, and now furnishes employment for thousands of laborers, not only in Norfolk, but in many factories at other towns in its section of country. It creates a steadily increasing in dustry, and there begins to be a de mand for our peanuts in foroign countries, as they are far less oleagin ous and more agreeable to tho tasto than thosu grown in Africa, so there is a fair prospect for a profitablo ex port trade in tho future. —New Orleane Picayune. WISE WORDS. Backsliding often begins by looking back. It is tho joy of truth to be looked in the face. A fool sometimes builds his houso of books. A genius is never taken to bo ono by his looks. True religion always puts sunshino in the heart. It isn't the biggest horn that makes tho best music. In the arithmetic of heaven nothing counts but love. Praise and doubt cannot both live in the same heart. Growth in kuowledge is tho only cure for self-conceit. Th re is as much kill in a selfish heart as there is in a musket. Bo grateful for your blessings aud it wdl make your trials look small. There can be 110 permanent or abid ing good in unconsecrated wealth. Benevolence without love has no moro heart in it than a grindstone. A flower will have something sweet. say to you, no mattei where you put Persevorance can accomplish won ders, but it cannot make a bad egg hatch. Build a fence any where, and the first boy who comes along will want to climb it. It takes more than philosophy to make a mau smile when ho has the toothache. One reason why some men swear, is because it does not tako any courage or manliness to do it. Many a man will open the front door for discontent who tries his best to keep burglars out of his house. Barn's Horn. Instinct Told Them fha Right Road. "I had an experience to be remoiu bered once at Moosehead," said Jos eph Williams. "Three of us were out in the lake ono winter's day in Janu ary when a storm came tip. We had a couple of horses and rode on sledges made of split birch poles. To got home and settled in the cabins bofore night came was our one wish, but for two hours the iey clouds had been blowing up on the horizon, and now came down in a whirl of snow and iey wind. In half an hour we were lost on the ice. Two hours later wo crossed our own tracks again and knew that we had been going about in a circle. To stay out there all night would be death, and to keep on trav eling about aimlessly meant to fall at last exhausted. Finally, as tho wind blew keener along tho level surface, 1 and the suovv beat on our faces with more cutting effect, wo callod a halt aud discussed again the chances. An old guide who was with us suggested ! that wo let the horses take their own I way off the lake. It seemed foolish, I but wo agreed. Striking the horses j smart clips with the whips, we were | surprised to sue them turn ouch to tho 1 left and start off to the east. Wo thought that this would take us far ther into the lake, but submitted, aud in half an hour tho trees along tho bank loomed up through the storm aud we were safe. A horse knows by instinct what a doubts and ques tions in such times."—Lewihton (.Mo.) Journal. rower ot Music to Sootll. Once more the power «>f music to sooth ralfertug is borne witness to by the effect it hit I upou H number of pa tients iu uu l'ut{li»h infirmary. Iu oue ease a woman who wan sutToriug from melancholia wan no uflcotoil by a lullaby that nhe spoke for the tlrwt time in two weeks. The experiment of distracting the mintous vtian da. this is not |t«e doctor's «tily *t regular Uoiuu at Hhelbourue, Vt , uu thu »hore« of l.ake Chaiwplatil, wkefe h» !«** au estate ul about tOiM a rt*. lit. has auotbet UotMM tit the Hit), but divides Uu«t ol hi* Hutu t«.i ai uhi Vvfutotil au I tlt luu>|»i hwiu>.« 1 lutlull Five fit.**. t U.uit« let a Uai «a>u. Halt a ><« 'I tb' Uu. »t at» I til. *t >m>< i" i hh (ui wttat Ike i.stloi W> 't-uolt tai, I »llUtkJ av't> U d I at iiltfllii M_ a'tlo itb pit>>» us*« laiUu 4ft) |pt k i4 >h llm Mint 111 i eati •• Mthvil 4 |e« lt**% limiting the Walrus. Mr. Arnold Pike tellb of a walrus hunt in Bird Bay, to the north of Spitzbergen. The bay was full of fast ice, but eastward the sea was fair ly open and the hunter was rowing slowly back to the sloop, wh«u the harpooner suddenly laid aside his glass and headed the boat for a black mass which the mirage magnified in to the size of a small house, but which was really a walrus: "The walrus raises his head, and wo are motionless," says Mr. Pike. "It is intensely still, and the scraping of a piece of ice along the boat seems like the roar of a railway train passing overhead on some bridge. Down goes the head, and wo glide forward again. The walrus is uneasy ; again and again he raises lii-j head and looks around with a quick motion, but we have the sun right at our back, and ho never notices us. At last we are within a few feet, and with a shout of "Voek op, gamling!" (wake up, old boy) which breaks the stillness like a shot, the harpooner is on liis feet, his weapon clasped in both hands abovo his head. As the walrus plunges into the sea, the iron is buried in his side, and with a quick twist to prevent the head from slipping out of the same slit that it has cut in the thick hide, the handle is withdrawn and thrown into the boat. No. 2, who, with a turn round the forward thwart, has been paying out the line, now checks it, as stroke and the "hammelmand," facing forward, hang back 011 their oars to check the rush. Bumping and scraping the ice, we are towed along for about five minutes, and then stop as the walrus comes to the surface to breathe. In the old days the lance would finish the business, but now it is tho rifle. Ho is facing the boat. I sight for one of his eyes, and let him have both barrels, without much effect apparently, for away we rush for two or three minutes more, when he is up again, still facing the boat. He seems to care no more for the solid Express bullets than if they were peas; but he is slow this time, and, as he turns to dive, exposes the fatal spot at the back of his head and dies."—New York Sun. Ten-Wrowing in tlie United States. The British Foreign Oflico is calling attention to a possible industry of this couutry which has attracted little or no attention here, but which tho Eng lishmen think promises great things. The office has published a report from the British Consul at Charleston, S. C., on tea-growing in that part of the country. He declares that the climate and soil are both eminently adapted to the growth of tho plant, and says that experiments give promiso of great success. The report gives tho opinions of experts on the quality of the tea, showing that it grades high, being worth something like thirty-five cents a pound wholesale. The yield re ported is large, and as tho plants are yet young, much better things are promised in the near future. All this is of the greatest interest here, seeing that the tea plant will grow to perfec tion on the gulf coast of Mississippi, where some luxuriant specimens may be seen at Ocean Springs, and it will doubtless do as well all through the uplands of this State. Of course the quality of the product depends upon the character of the soil, but a few in expensive experiments will show what tea will do in this part of the world, and the man who undertakes such ex periments may be able to open a road to fortune for himself and his neigh bors. —New Orleans Picayune. I Don't Blame the Cook | ® If a baking powder is not uniform in strength, ® so that the same quantity will always do the same ® work, no one can know how to use it, and uni- ® formly good, light food cannot be produced with it. % ® All baking powders except Royal, because ® improperly compounded and made from inferior & ® materials, lose their strength quickly when the can ® >|j is opened for use. At subsequent bakings there js ® will be noticed a falling off in strength. The food ® is heavy, and the flour, eggs and butter wasted. * ® It is always the case that the consumer suffers ® ® in pocket, if not in health, by accepting any sub ® stitute for the Royal Baking Powder. The Royal ® ® is the embodiment of all the excellence that it is ® possible to attain in an absolutely pure powder. @ ® It is always strictly reliable. It is not only more (Jj economical because of its greater strength, but $ will retain its full leavening power, which no js other powder will, until used, and make more ® wholesome food. efc L I BEECHAM'S FILLS (Vegetable) What They Are For lltHoiikiic** iniligc*lu»ii *4lU>w »kiit |>»u ti.nl t.mtr in ilie iihjuiU »Uk btlliiU* hi'.ill.u lit) )•>»» t'( ,li; tUjiH'iilUll u( infill whi'it llt« >«• cutidituit)* art* laumil by citntitipuiiuti; ttul ton #tl|»,tln>ll ill l)|r ltd<»l li t qttt lit i.iiiM t>| .til t<( (In ill. (>in til the nu'.t nit|i nuryiuitly to It.tin i> thai tuu»ii|i4titm taunt n mufu llt.tu hall th«* *it k lit-** in tin iurk); • witlt swq.HU' , .||id iuiii lUuttj (Hilt It *i! Il >i'Uit« IU4 ttlllttll !♦ nil m| i JlUg-Ufc, tilt. Mill Mill It 4 Mlt null i | 1,1111. The Famous Carrara Quarries. 1 Tho Carrara (Italy) marble quar ries, which are 400 or 500 in number, | aro situated far above the town, in the midst of tho grandest and most savage scenery. Tho so f t aerial hues which distance londs to tho mountains disappear on nearer approach. Tho great peaks stand up against tho sky in fantastic forms. No trees or ver dure clotho their naked sides, no flow ers grow, no water flows to fertilizo that soil. The 0000 quarrymen who are busy hero appear as ants crawling on the vast hillsides. The marble is quarried by dynamite. Every mo ment explosions rend tho air, and huge fragments fly up as if expelled from a volcano. Often the mine has to bo placed in the perpendicular faco of a precipice. Then the workman is lowered by a ropo and hangs sus pended, "like tho samphire gatherer, 'twixt earth and heaven. A dreadful trade." About 160,000 tons of mar ble aro annually exported, of which much goes to America. The quan tity is inexhaustible. Tho entire mass of the Monte Sagro, 5600 feet high, which dominates Carrara, is solid marble. One of tho most famous quarries is in the valley of the Polraccio. From this were extracted in Roman times the 1700 tons of marble that served for tho construction of Trajan's col umn at Rome. Hero Donatello got the block which he carved into his St. George, and Michael Angolo the one for his Moses. From here also eamo the huge block mentioned in the me moirs Benvenuto Cellini, which servod for the colossal Neptune of Ammanati in the middle of the fountain of the Piazza della Signoria at Florence. Unlike the miner, who burrows un derground, he works in a blinding glare of light. Tho fierce heat of the Italian sun beats upon him in sum mer. The cold blast of tho tramou tana, rushing from tho gorges of the Apennines, chills him in winter. Con stantly exposed to danger, seeing his companions killed and wounded by his side, trained to rapid action, aud with every faculty of mind and body on the alert, accustomed to dominate the rude forces of nature—ho has de veloped into an independent aud pow erful type of man.—English Illus trated Magazino. New Theory About Sun Heat. One of the profound thinkers of the day advances a new theory to account for the heat that is produced by tho sun's rays. The popular idea has been that the sun is an enormous body of fire, aud that combustion causes the heat. On this theory it is held that the sun will burn out iu about five thousand years, as certain scientists claim, the loss is made up by the fall of meteoric bodies upon the sun's surface. But the new idea is that the heat is pro duced by the rapid motion of the sun's rays as they pass through the atmos phere ou their approach to the earth. In support of this claim, it is urged that if the sun is a burning body the heat must necessarily be more intense the nearer one gets to the source of it. But it is a clearly demonstrated fact that the air five or six miles above tho earth's surface is intensely cold, also upon tho highest mountain tops, aud the region of perpetual snow is clearly defined. Tho rapid-motion theory suggests the dynamo and various elec trical possibilities, the further in vestigation of which will furnish a fer tile field for the ambitious student ol practical electric science. New York Ledger. The subject ot the above portrait 1b the Rev. Charles Prosser, a much beloved and most devout minister of the gospel of Car mol, Northumberland Co., Pa. Mr. Prosser's usefulness, was, for a long time, greatly im giired by a distressing, obstinate disease, ow his malady was finally conquered we will let him tell in his own language. He Bays : " I was a great sufferer from dyspep sia, opd I had suffered so long that I was a wreck ; life was rendered undesirable and it seemed death was near ; but I came in contact with Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and his ' Pleasant Pellets.' I took twelve bottles of ' Discovery,' and several bottles of the ' Pellets,' ana followed the bygenic advice of Dr. Pierce, and I am happy to say it was indeed a cure, for life is worth living now." For dyspepsia, or indigestion, ".liver com- S taint," or torpid liver, biliousness, constipa on, chronic diarrhea and all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels, Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery effects perfect cures when all other medicines fall. It has a specific tonic effect upon the lining membranes »t the stomaeh ana bowels. As an invigorating, restorative tonic it gives strength to the whole system and builds up tolid flesh to the healthy standard, when re duced by " wasting diseases." Mr. J. F. Hudson, a prominent lawyer of Whitoberville, Sebastian Co., Ark., writes: " Having suffered severely, for a long time, from a torpid liver, indigestion, constipa tion. nervousness and general debility, and tltraipg no relief in my efforts to regain my health, I was induced to try Dr. Pierce s Golden Medical Disoovery and ' Pleasant Pallets.' Under this treatment, I Improved very much and in a few months was able to attend to my professional duties." Yours truly, £ * c' To purify, enrlph and vitalize the blood, and thereby invigorate the liver and diges tive organs, brace up the nerves, and put the system in order generally ; also to build Sell on Sight. J LOVELL DIAMOND CYCLES, s Hljfh Grade in Kvery Particular. W LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, LIGHTEST WEIGHTS. } IVe stake our buslnesa reputation of over fifty i/ram that there l In no bo.ttcr tKv ivorhl than the IHAMOSD* 112 I s ;ni-u'accr, if 7. >] La&iM 140*1 Roadati H . IDA*. T WARRANTED IN EVERY RESPECT. UICYUIiE C'ATAI,Ount, t»n • uts *x»i the exact A cost of mailing. V JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS GO,, BOSTON, MMS, ] " k MM of Dirt May be a Houseful •? Shame." Keep Yww House Glean Witfi SAPOLIO 14 COLCHESTER " SPADING BOOT .1 iLm 4»* u i h. 1 • • |»| Wl« < tlhtf lU« lll4Nk Im tlu* tf|u» 4' ' hfc* • Unlim ilia Dutch Process No Alkulii'H v Olh#r 4 ht'iiticiiU -was T |A< tt.MIKMI.HI I | , Breakl'aslCocoa ,"ji |n «*<•* x ! 'X 7 j Ml t# IMM W «•*» 112 * i j up both solid flesh and stfabgth after grip, pneumonia, fevers and other prostrating diseases, "Golden Medical Discovery" haa no equal. It does not make fat people mora corpulent, but builds up solid, wnoUtom* Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited, have fullness or bloating after eating, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste in moutn, irregu lar appetite, frequent headaches, "floating specks before eyes, nervous prostration ana drowsiness after meals? If you have any cousiderable number of these symptoms, you are suffering from torpid liver, associated with dyspepsia, or indigestion. The moro complicated your disease the greater the number of symptoms. No matter what stage it has reached, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will sub due it. Nervousness, sleeplessness, nervous pro> tration, nervous deoility, and kindred dis turbances are geneially due to impoverished blood. The nervous system suffers for want of pure, rich blood to nourish and sustain it. Purify, enrich and vitalize the blood by taking "Golden Medical Discovery" and aU these nervous troubles vanish. The " Golden Medical Discovery " is far better for this purpose than the much ad vertised nervines and other compounds, so loudly recommended for nervous prostration, as thoy 'put the nerves to sleep," but do not invigorate, brace up and so strengthen the nervous system as does the " Discovery," thus giving permanent benefit and a radical cure. Buy of reliable dealers. With any others, something elso that pays them bettor Will Erobably be urged as " Just as good." Per aps it is, for them; but it can't be, for you. A Book (136 pages) treating of the fore going diseases ana pointing out successful means of home cure, also containing vast numbers of testimonials, (with phototype portraits of writers), references and other valuable information, will bo sent on receipt of six cents, to pay postage. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, 068 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. PUFF* WATCH & 150 CIGARS B BlbSti i TO EXAMINE* in.lal! 112 ill examination. The uni>ar*U«-leU tno ci.r v ;r ' K«'v Wr*l " M.'kelCigmr ha* lutlucrd ut t«. «i(Tcr uii v in- »" -liant > roiumntr u l»«» * 111 •*«»! ui Mu r W ri -r 1.-'u**< TfrU gum} Ic* Nickel Cignri V B-' (nil viiiuc* $7 i, nait t»; r.'o to show tiiem to their h'K itilH, *>ue duo i* Full |«wfl»4 fciem Wlui Watch b' M »■'•■. (OwaranttKi wUo w»U*b.) HIE *1 KM- I ft IMI r I! I/-' NI lit ira ami ON K FINK OLD.* I 1.1.1 U %% %T4'U J 'i mil b« ( ffliilA* Hun .Is h iva h*Ut frllu m - holiuvr ft< tii tlirin lu th« I. ii.lt * 112 tlwir fr.'-nll L* All MlMmMb !»• .1 W(t«Vl m fllf »r« inlm. i; voq luivh a w»»r»-h *«♦ will uru-t lii»r«.*d » 'J4« |»| t« » ** I I I 111 "»KT, It. Mil 1(414 t in ki Y W ST CluAli CO., wiuftton* * t. . \\ i . . .11 1.l v- » I »MOU jf~il t\ r|ji|r i li '"in ut'ik, »"»ung tVOnl Tfwiw \ 112 WfcLT, > i4U' «u ihc bottom, 1.-»-ry \ /* Mt-aKli'v \ i i t t.y iu.ll I'. N «b**| NUH IhtriN PACIFIC f RU " LANOS _ > » *u»uoT- TlOH». ... ">U. ■ .1. . I»fi I -T , ilfci. . .1 i I H-tH- .1 Ik I t H. a UMOAT V V.'u START f.Y* ,Nl,s of TOUI pATKNT* '' V»'■*£*; i*T fl « It %♦» •#•#*» ■