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H lubject to eiatnloatlun. 1 war i tAV F "VaV SAD CASE OF JACK SMITH. Jack Smith was a clerk on a thousand a year And his heart was as bright as the May; Ills smart little wife made his humble boms dear, For she did her own housework with never a fear Of what other people might say. Might say, Of what foolish people might say. Ills tastes being simple, his wants they were few: Contented and happy he dwelt; llu dined on plain food and look exercise, too, , i Bo vigor and health and good nature be knew. And never it worry he felt, He felt. To shorten the girth of his belt. , Relng poor he could live as It suited him beat And dress Just for comfort nlone; He could ride on a merry-go-round with a zest, Bpeak the truth and be honest because be was bleat With true Independence unknown, Unknown To those In a wealthier zone. And thus he was happy until in awhlis There fell to hint riches galore, And then the poor fellow bloomed out In the style i And dwelt In a grand architectural pile WIAB servunts on every floor, Hoo-roor! With bosses on every' floor. J. Cumberland Smytho was our gentleman now, Esquire tacked onto his name; And his ambitious wife she. was training him now To make his politest society bow To further bat loftiest aim That cams From trying to "get In the game." With nothing to do he grew puffy and stout. And wine made him red In the face; 11..- dined on course dinners with nabobs about, His health and his nerves and good nature gave out. And he soon waa a pitiful caBe, Full case, For the doctors who thrived on his pace. In garments of fashion he had to be bound And walk with a dlgnllled tread; To operas, balls and receptions around Ills wife made him go if he didn't aha found Another to go In his stead, 111s stead. When scandalous things might be said. A valet he had who would fawn at his faca And fun of him make ut his back. His butler, bedecked with gold buttons and lace. Looked down on him so that he felt In his place Aa small aa the point of a tack, A tack. And worse than a man on the rack. In his carriage with liveried driver In-fore And a folded-armed tiger behind. And his wife with a poodle he had to adore. He rode in the park whlle admlrera, a score. Would bow to his wife who Inclined Inclined, While ba was compelled to be blind. I la spite of his money both ends wouldn't meet. For he had to ape wealthier geese. i Bo worries and cares made hla troubles complete; To keep up tha styla he must practice de celt. Which robbed all his slumbers of peace. Of peace, I Till death seemed his only release. One day In a restaurant sadly he went I And asked as a privilege rare That he, aa In days he had happily spent. Could take oft his coat and In shirt sleeves content Sit down on a plain wooden chair, Hard chair. And feel Just aa free aa the air. "And can't I," he asked, "aa a privilege great, nave corned beef and cabbage to eat With plenty of mustard and all on one plate Tou'l! pardon my tears for, alas, I must state It's years since Fve known such a treat, A treat, It's years since I've known such a treat." H. C Dodge, In Chicago Dally Bun. I A MAID and MOUSETRAP By Pauline Freeman TO I T oertatinly seems to ma us if some power wutched OV8I the tlusUultis of yuuntf ifirls and puunlcd thetn w lieu they're gyotl," the olU buchelor suld. lie ought to know, 1 thought, huving him self been a sort of honorary uncle und guide to na niuny as a dozen young girls in his time, all of whom were happily married, lie wuh u philanthropie sort of a middle-aged man, with a very large experienoe of tho world and its ways. "Why, I've known coses where things came right just when the girl herself thought they -were going hopelessly wrong," he continued, seeing that we were all listening to him and ready for more. "Now there was that case in Flor ida with my dear young friend Ethel llerry. It looked like a very sad cose at one time, but it proved to be all for the best, "So, I don't mind telling you about it. You, none of you, know who Ethel lierry is. And, in any case, the thing never was n secret. "Well, of course, you know that all women are afraid of mice. I would al most be inclined to suspect a woman that was not afraid of mice, for my own part I should regard her as something uncanny 'fit for treasons, stratagems and spoils' something not properly womanly. But Ethel's feelings about mice waa really quite beyond the or dinary. On every other subject she waa as Bound as a bell. You couldu't frighten her with a gun. She could shoot pretty well and had actually killed several deer out in the woods. About snakes she felt pretty much the same horror that most people feel who have not been used to them from childhood. She was not by any means a nervous or a fainting woman. But, somehow, she oould not stand mice; I have even seen her jump away from a little woolen penwiper, because there was a figure of a mouse on it, with beads for eyes and she knew perfectly well that it was not a real mouse, too. "When Ethel's mother took her to Florida she made the acquaintance of a young Englishman there who wot" ftipposed to be engaged in the orange frowlnf business, and also saippuatid to ' 7e w 'tT'i: be doing very well at It. Personally, ha was liked by everybody, not because his elder brother was said to be a lord, but just for his own sake. He was a gay, free-and-easy sort of youngster, so ciable, a good banjo player, always ready for a bit of fun, and nobody had a word to sn.v against his character. Ethel and her mother had been in Flor Idn nearly all winter, and they had seen much of this young man nil the time, and the conseq uenee was that the young man had told Mrs. Berry that he In tended to marry her (laughter. Mrs. Berry Raid that must be as her daughter chose to decide. Finally, so far ns any one could judge. ICthel herself was In clined to favor the young man. "That wna where the mice came In. The cottage Which the Uerrys had rent ed for the winter was a very fnirly built sort of affair, not at all old, and not troubled with such thingsnsmiee. They had lived there from November to the end of February without ever having been obliged to think of mice. But in February Ethel heard strange sounds by night In her bedroom. " 'Mother,' she said, 'I heard mice tu my room lest night, and vou know as well as I do that so long as there is any I chance of n mouse being anywhere about that room I can't sleep in It.' Mrs. lierry knew perfectly well that this was no exaggeration. The girl had not slept more than one hour all the previous night, and that would not do. They rigged a grass hammock for her In her mother's room she could sleep ail right In a hammock and a search was made for u mouse trap. ".Vow, the town where the Herrys were staying was a nice enough little place in its wny, but it was not agrett commercial center. You could buy most things that winter visitors to Florida are likely to want, but this did not in clude mouse Iraiis. The storekeeper said lie had never before thought that there was any demnnd for mouse traps among his customers, lie would send for a consignment of the newest make, however. "But this plan meant waiting for, perhaps, a week, and letting the mice have their fling in the meantime. Ethel Buid she could still hear them in the next room ut night, and thsy kept her awake, although she felt more secure in the hammock in her mother's room. She wns urgent to have those mice ex terminated, and she was a young wom an accustomed to have her will obeyed. "This was a chance for the young man to prove his devotion. He had no mouse trup to- offer the hidy, but be had a horse, and he could ride that horse far and fast. He mounted at dawn, nnd rode to a port 22 miles away, where there were many ironmongery stores, and at night he returned in triumph, though a little wayworn, bearing tho mouse trap. "It was a humble sort of mouse trap one of the wire cnge kind, but the young Englishman thought it would do. So did Ethel. She rewarded him with smiles and thanks; he waa happy, and the trap, baited with codfish, wia act. "That night Ethel again thought she heard stirrings, but in the morning, when her gallant came, early, to see how his trap worked she herself could not face the chances of seeing a mouse, even in captivity it was found that the trap was empty. " To tell the truth,' said the young man, 'I never had much confidence in this kind of trap. Sorry I didn't look for one of the other kind with a spring, you know. And, come to think of it, I don't believe mice care much for codfish. Bo you? Well, I'll Just ride over again to-day and see if I can't get one of the spring sort-' "That was it very fair test of that young man's devotion, I think. He had ridden about t.'. miles the day before, and here he was going to do it over again, just to get a better mouse trap for his lady love. I know it made a deep impression on her at the time, for she told me ns much. She told me that when the Honorable Tom that was his name started out on his second mouse trap expedition they had it all pretty well settle. 1 thut they should be mar ried two weeks later, in a quiet way. He said that he wanted to surprise his brother nnd 'all of them at home,' bo he would not say a word, about it be forehand just send thein a cable to say he was married. And I quite be lieve that Mrs. Berry would have given her consent; she liked the way the young man had acted in taking her into f his confidence from the first. 1 "Well, that Becond time he came back rather earlier than he had the night before. The mother and daugh ter were sitting up, waiting for him on the veranda. lie had succeeded in get ting a spring trap, and with It he brought a great hunk of cheese, saying that cheese was the only sure bait for mice.' 'And If that doesn't catch 'em,' he said, 'nothing will. You must pull down the house, or get into other quar ters. Only, don't go away from here, "That night, when the trap had been properly baited and set, there was a great commotion in the. next room to Mrs. Berry's. Ethel described It as a sudden loud click, immediately fol lowed by a sound as if some one had a piece of wood tied to a string and was whipping the floor and the walls of the next room with It. In between the raps and knocks the two women heard a sound like dried peas shaken in a bag. "Then they knew what It was all about. "And this waa what showed the pe culiar make-up of that girl; she wouldn't have gone into the room if a mouse had been there, but as soon as she was quite sure it was a rattlesnake she put on her slippers, lighted a lamp and led the way. "By that time the violence of the snake's agonies had subsided. He had stopped whipping and threshing about. Only the faint tremor of his rattles kept up. You see, he didn't care for codfish, but cheese, being made of milk, had a certain attraction for him. He had gone to Investigate the bait on that mousetrap and bad sprung It Juat aa If he had been a real mouse. The consequence was that the spring, which waa a good, strong one, had gripped him tight on the back of his head. And that was the end of him. "But, though Ethel could go Into that room with a lamp and look at the snake, the sight nearly shocked her into hys terics. She said she could never forget the look of that dead rattler, with its jaws wide open, staring at her in the corner of the room. Mure than that, after she had nearly dropped the lamp and set tde house on lire, she declared that she must get out and go to some other house. She could not stay in thnt house another hour. Fortunately, there MM a sort of hotel in the town, nnd the Herrys went to it. But it seemed very linrd ut the time ut least that during the next few dnyR, while she, was suf fering from an attack of fever, the doc tor would uot let Honorable Tom even send her a note. The fact is, she could not bear anything that reminded her of 'that hideous night,' as she always called it. "But here is where the providence that watches over good girls comes in, I think. Now observe "A few days later, when they were just going to stnrt north, Ethel saw the young man and told him that their marriage must be postponed for some mouths, until she could forget all about that horrible mousetrap affair. She said that, for some time to come, the sight of him would always remind her of it rattlesnake with its mouth wide open. "He tried to take her out of It, but one evening out in the moonlight she told him just how it was. "Now, you may think that n very un kind thing for a girl to say to her de voted lover, nnd no wonder he didn't seem to like it. Hut it was jus t as well that she did take that fancy. "She went with her mother to New York, and there by the merest acci dent, observe she met another Eng lishman who knew Honorable Tom. Then, in conversation, it came out that Honorable Tom's brother had sent him to Florida on purpose to separate him from Honorable Mrs. Tom, who was a very undesirable person. "In fact, Honorable Tom was the black sheep of the family. In many ways he was not a bad fellow never stole, or anything of thnt kind but he had a very light Idea of his obligations in the way of marriage, evidently. "He himself said, when he was asked about the affair, that he had come to Florida on purpose to escape from 'that woman' meaning Honorable Mrs. Tom, his lawful wife. "So, you see, that mousetrap and that rattlesnake did one good turn for Ethel Berry then, and a second good turn, you nay say, when she married the doctor who treated her for the nervous trouble that followed. "And I happen to know that the doc tor has made her a particularly good husband. I know It by her looks. lean always tell a happy wife." N. 0. Times- Democrat. OLD SOL'S RIDE IN 1840 Flowery Weather Prrdletloma of tlto Joaraallats of Long Aaro. In these days of practical newspaper writing, in which bald facta are ex pressed In the plainest and tersest form, the flowery language indulged in by Borne of the "journalists" hnlf a cen tury ago sounds peculiur. The follow ing convulsion was. copied by one of the local papers from the New York Trib une In 1849 as worthy of a high place In the newspaper literature of the day: "On Saturday evening, at 11:17 o'clock the sun rode calmly nnd mildly over the autumnal cuqinux nnd cast his golden anchor on the wintry coast of j autumn. But ns yet the vast ocean of air through which he Bails is glowing and transparent with the memory of the long summer duys that have passed over It, darting their rich beams to Its very depths. Even as we write, how ever, the remembrance fades, like the sky's blanching souvenirs of sunset; and In the distance the cold ghosts of winter glare nnd wave their frozen wings, which creak on icy hinges while in the silence of midnight a prophetic voice of wailing and desola tion moans fitfully at the casement." Few people can contemplate this specimen of literary architecture with out experiencing a feeling of awe and sadness, with a few cold shivers on the aide. It is proof positive that the pro fession has, in some things, gained by what it has lost. Albany Argus. Candles Made of Naphtha, A Russian engineer has succeeded In discovering a practical method of mak ing naphtha candles. These are com posed of naphtha, petroleum, tallow and a special substance to give the candles consistence. In St. Petersburg these lights can be bought at about the same price as stcarine candles, to which they will become a formidable competitor. The naphtha candles burn with a smokeless flame and give out a powerful light The Inventor intends establishing a large factory for the production of these lights, Chicago Chronicle. Aa Address to tho A linlarhfy. Diaries are dry reading. From one of the driest, however, one learns that the market-people of Trlchlnopoly, In dia, addressed a petition to "the Al mighty Cod, care of Right Honorable Mountstuart E. Grant Buff, Governor of Madras." There is confusion of lan guage here. The viceroy of India got the petition. Cincinnati Enquirer. Cause and Effect. Uncle Thomas I like ter git up early. Then I can git my work done 'fore night an' be able ter go ter bed garly, Johnny Wot yer want ter go ter bed early fer? "Why, bo'b I can git np early. Yon know mighty little 'bout the tma phi- 11 J, T A HEBREWS IN FIERY FURNACE. International Sunday School Lraaoa for July ltt, 1880 Teat. Daniel :til4- Memory Versos. Kl-is. Specially Adapted from Peloubet's Notes. GOLDEN TEXT. Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us. Dan. 3:17. READ the entire chapter. LIGHT FROM OTHER SCRIPTURES. Examples of Deliverance. Joseph, Noah, Hezekiah, Peter. Paul and Heb 11:31-40: Rev. 7:14-17. Promises. Isa. 43:2; Pfa. 13:4: 45:1: 91:1-16; Zech. 13:9; 2 Cor. 4:17-1S; Rom. 8:17; Jas. 1:2.3.12; Pet. 1:7; 4:12-14. PLACE IN BIBLE HISTORY. Boon aft er the conquests described in 2 Kings 25:1-24; 2 Chron. 36:11-21; Jer. 34:1; 39:1-18. PROPHETS. Jeremiah at Jerusalem. Kzeklel who lived by the river Chebar, In Babylonia, perhaps the royal canal from the Euphrates to the Tigris, 30 miles from Babylon. Daniel In Babylon. TIME. The date Is uncertain, but prob ably between 5o5-G80 B. C, soon after the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchad nezzar, and the completion of his con quests over most of the then known world. PLACE. The plain of Dura, within the limits of Babylon, where a mound of brick 20 feet high nowexlsts,whleh I ippert thinks was probably the pedestal of this colossal Image; so Scrlbner'a Dictionary of Bible, 1898. RULERS. Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon (604-K1). Zedekiah, last king of Judah. Pharaoh Hophra. king of Egypt. The aeven wlae men of Greece (Solon, etc.) flourish at this period. EXPLANATORY. Introductory. Nebuchadnezzar had just returned from a triumphant cam paign aguinst his enemies In the west nnd south against Egypt, Syria, and Arabia nnd he celebrates his return by the erection of a colossal image and a grand religious festival. The image was made of gold, probably not of solid gold, but of wood or clay covered with plates of gold. The great image of Bel is said, In Bel and the Dragon (v. 7), to have been of clay within and brass out side. Apocrypha. "Nebuchadnezzar, like other despots who suffer from the vertigo of autocracy, was liable to sud den out burst s of almost spasmodic fury. We read of such storms of rage in the case of AntiochuB Epiphanes, of Nero, of Valentiniau 1., and even of Theodo sius. The double insult to himself and to his god on the part of men to whom he had shown such conspicuous favor transported him out of himself." Ferrer, L The Faithful Three Arraigned Be fore the Kin '.-Vs. 14-19. 14. "Is it true?" Is it of urpose? Did you in tend to refuse my command, or was it a BUS undtrstuli ding that can be passed over? V'. 16. "We are not careful." Old English for anxious, solicitous. II. Vj We have no need. (1) Because It would be useless to reply to the king in his present temper. They could not change him. (2) Their actions had answered him already. (3) Their minds were made up, and nothing could change them. V. 10. "Nebuchadnezzar full of fury," so that his "visage was changed" with his passionate excite ment. II. In the Fiery Furnace. Vs. 10-05. "Heat the furnace one seven times more:" Expressing the fierceness of the fury burning in his heart, and ren dering it Impossible that any could be rescued from such flames. The fact is mentioned to show the greatness of the deliverance that followed. V. 21. "Bound in their coats," etc. "Herodotus describes the Babylonians as wearing a long undergarment or shirt of linen, which reached down to the feet. Over this they wore a woolen gown or tunic, shorter than the other (hats in A. V.7) and a short hood or cape over their head and shoulders. This description is ex actly borne out by the sculptures on the monuments. 'Coats' are the long un dergarment; 'hosen' Is the cupc that was thrown over the head and shoul ders for protection front the sun, and bound round the head with a fillet, ex actly as to this day the Uedawee and Syrians wear the ketleh of silken or woolen stuff, and fasten it round the head with a camel's-halrcord." Canon Tristram. V. 25. "The fourth is like the Son of Qod:" As the article is wanting in the sacred text, it 1b more correct to read a son of the gods (as in R. V.) Only a di vine being, the king knew, oould live thus in the fire himself, or preserve others there. No doubt in reality it was the Son of God, who, as "the angel of the Lord," at various times appeared to the Old Testament saints. He it Is who maybe found In every fiery furnace of life into which His servants are thrown. in. The Deliverance. Vs. 26-28. 20. "Come forth, and come hither:" Neb uchadnezzar makes sure thnt what he sees is real, and not a mere vision. V, 27. "The princes . . . saw these men:" The deliverance was public, unmistak able, nnd proved by many witnesses. V. 28. "Blessed be the God of Shadrach:" etc. The king recognized the power of the Jew's God, and His readiness to defend those who obeyed Him, The miracle would make such an impression on the princes and people that the king could more easily treat the Jews more kindly. The effect on the exiles was also good. It would enrich their faith; it held before them noble examples; it would enable them to realize the power and goodness of God; it was one of the forces that during the exile entirely cured them of idolatry, and prepared them for the return and the rebuilding of their citynnd temple. Doubtless also it raised them to a higher place among the people, and enabled them to serve their God with less opposition and per secution. PRACTICAL. There are still erected golden images, before which the world commands us to bow down and worship success, pleasure, wealth, popularity, sinful cus tom, palatable doctrines, an easy, lax morality. We sometimes have to do right, even when it seems disobedience to our country's orders. Doing right Is the best way to preserve our country. There are still fiery furnaces for those who refuse to worship the gold en image social ostracism, unpopular ity, losses of place and honor, failure In scorn EMULSION OF COD-LIVER OIL WITH HYPOPHOSPHITES should always be kept In the house for the fol lowing reasons: FIRST Because, of the family has If any member a hard cold, it will cure it. SECOND Because. If the chil dren are delicate and sickly, it will make them strong and well. THIRD Because, If the father or mother is losing flesh and becom ing thin and emaciated, it will build them up and give them flesh and strength. FOURTH Because it Is the standard remedy in all throat ana lung affections. No household should be without it. It can be taken in summer as well a5 In winter. toe. and f t.oo, all drugghti. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chcmitta, New York. Dr. Humphreys' Specifics act directly upon the disease, without exciting disorder in other parts of tho system. They Core the Sick so. ccaaa. rsicn. I Fevera, Congestions, Inflammations, .ii II Wafts. Worm Fever, Worm Colic. . .'it 3- Teethlns,CoUe,Crylag,Wakefalnesf ,M 4 Diarrhea, of Children or Adults 13 7 Cousha, Colds, Bronchitis 93 t4 Neuralgia, Toothache, Face ache. 33 Headache, Sick Headache, Vertigo . ,95 10 Dyapepals, Indigestion, Weak Stomach. 'J5 1 1 -Huppreaaed or Painful Periods 93 13-Will tee. Too Profuse Periods 93 1 3 4'roup, Laryogltle. Hoarseness 93 14 Ball Rheem. Erysipelas, Eruptloos.. .93 15 Rheurnatlera, Rheumatic Palm 33 It' 'Malaria. Cbllls, Fever and Ague 93 19-4'atarrh, laflueasa. Cold la toe Bead .33 30-W hooping. Coash 33 3T-Kldner Dlaeaees 38 'M-Xervous Debility 1.00 30 t'rlnarv Weakaess, Wetting Bed. . . ,33 77-4JrlB, Bay Fever 93 Dr. Humphreys' Manusl of all Diseases at your Drugglila or Mailed Free. Sold by drugs lata, or Bent on receipt of pries. Humphreys' Med. Co., Cor. William John Sta, New York. ft- r PAY IF YOU'RE PLEASED JO DAYS 4a K AFTER SHIPMENT: IP NOT, RETURN. (PC NO MONEY WANTED IN ADVANCE. wna every ouaksr Kitchen Cabinet we send, froo, a copy of The Every- Day Cook rjooa, remaining all pages of the moat practical re cipes ever com piled, substantially bound la cloth. The top of cabinet at 17 Inches by 41 height. S inche. : has two metn'.-bottoin trine, one holding 90 lba. ; the other i ... 1 1 . i. nc.l for corn-meal, graham, sugar, etc. ; vie large drawer; one bread board, which slides Into Vame. Price, complete, only H, on board can In Chl tago, with the cook tuk free. Par In 30 daya It yon Ind the Cabinet the innat useful, labor-saving piece t kitchen furniture von evur aaw; If not enUrelv pleased, return at our expense. No deposit, no guaranty re quired from any rrliibe person. In ordering be sura to say you're a reader of thle paper this la very Import ant aud that you accept our Kitchen Cabinet Offer No. 1 Order to-day ; or, send for must rated circular No. 8. UlULKS VALLEY JFG. CO., 355 W. Birritei It, Ckif. p. s Genuine QuaVer Vnlley furniture la never sold thron'Th retailers ulwsrs (rum factory to tlreslde at wLo.esulo prices. luu i act. ft a worthless Imitation. ftl Qfi BUYS A S3.50 SUIT S.0OO tSLkSSlTaS kASTWtAaoiT" stasia Mil tadSaaM aaaa. BasaJar St. 10 Bets' S- rier .erui aaiu eataf ai Sl.vo. a aaw SCIT r sag (or any of these salts which don't give satisfactory wear, - Sena NoWey, OTlTOeis etaie as ef kef and ear whether large or email for ace. end wa will sand yoa the salt by ei press. C.O.D.. aublect to eianua atlon. Ynu can examine 11 at yeureirrees offca end It found perfectly eailsractory and equal to Bulla ecld In jcur town for aa. mi, pay your aspreea .sen, ear ayseaai efTe. price, SI, OS aad eaareee caarM. TBEeS XJfSX-FAKT SUITS are aw aeietrwataisreasaafea. aaa s re retailed everywtwre at S3 tA Bade adik double seat and knees. Matt IMtaivta aa Illustrated, made from a aneelal wtar.reelsUat. aeavr- tU-WOOLOakwell eaa.lw.re, neat, handsome pal- tern, fine serge lining, Cleytea patent Interlining, paaV rorcinf , sua ana linen eewinej.aav tape measure aad run Instructions how to oner. Bea'e Bella sat s a ssasa aswe reea as. vn as. samples seat free so appl SEARS, ROEBUCK CO. (Inc.), Chieaga. III. SCt, art &AKE PERFECT MEN ! DO NOT DESPAIR! Dai Not twr Loader! The S re and ambitions of life can restored to vou. The very worst caaes of Nervous Debill- iv lire ahaiilnlA.lv PEKFECTO cureu oy TABLana, (lire prompt relief to Insomnia, falling memory and the wssta anddralnof vital powers. Incur red by Indiwretlo.iaoresresset of earlr years. Impart vigor and potency to every function . Give la. bloom to tbe eystem. lustre hi the ala"av eye. i f young 71 old. One Vic t.oi rcncwsFiTW 4 Tll-il enemy; II hoics at WS...) a cim-fS If Allele onaran-loi-.l l ore- or money retoTiJ-Bta-amjaWen Can be carried In rest purkrt. Nilci gsjswB' eTl,rrWhereor mailed In plain wrapiron saaw- receiptor priea by TI1K PKKFKCTO CO.. Gallon Bldg.. Chicago. Ill- For stile in Middlelmrgh, Pa., by laUfJdlebnrg Drug Co., in Mt. Pleas ant Mills by Henry Harding, and in Penn's Creek by J. V. Sumpsell. $2.75 HQX "A'HCOAT " a a tot Lea ta.ee waTtiraoor to aa, yl. r.t Ini-naa around bodr at state bseeet taken over vast under eoat , Amm saa and wa will send yoa this eoat b es press. C O. p.. eBSaaet tenia's Hhei esjualas and try IB on at your Dearest as press omee and ft found exactly tnr aa aa. aa.tk ea l" rar---d. tar V.IJJ5 9 m 1 aing, staying ana rain laltar-aeaeiareeckeel, a aull eny r r or nareri wooio be proud of. ss nth ciora rforuta efs.T.'ci.iaiaaj (salts, overcoats or ulsters), fer bays 4 TO is tubs, etas h Si aili Beet le. tOC. coouuie faaaj. n plates, Bra co up the h -el., and BBI A eoUar. fancy Pjaia -TjZ.