looked surprised, but made describing briefly the acci dents. Mr. Hardy listened intently with bowed head. At last he looked op and said abruptly: "Corns Into the casting room." They went out of the office, passed through the repairing shops and enter ed the foundry department. Even on that bright winter morning, with the air outside so clear and cool, the atmos phere In this place was murky and close. The forges In the blacksmith room at the farther end glowed through the smoke and dust like smoldering piles of rubbish dumped here and there by chance upon some desolate moor and stirred by 111 omened demons of the nether world. Mr. Hardy shudder ed as he thought of standing in such an atmosphere all day to work at severe muscular toil. He recalled with sharp YtTldness a request made only two months before for dust fans which had proved successful in other shops and which would remove a large part of the heavy, coal laden air, supplying fresh air In Its place. The company had refused the request and had oven said through one of its officers that when the men wore out the company could easily get more. Mr. Hardy and the foreman paused at the entrance to the casting room where the men had been Injured the day before. A few men were working sullenly. Mr. Hardy asked the fore man to call the men together near the other end of the room; he wanted to say something to them. He walked over there while the foreman spoke to the men. They dropped their tools anil came over to where Mr. Hardy was standing. They were mostly Scandi navians and Germans, with a sprin kling of Irish and Americans. Mr. Hardy looked at them thoughtfully. They were a hard looking crowd. Then he said very slowly and distinctly. "You may quit work until after Sco Tllle's funeral. The machinery here needs overhauling." The men stood impassive for a mo ment Finally a big Dane stepped up and said: "We be no minded to quit work these times. We no can nITord it. Give us work In some other place." Mr. Hardy looked at him and replied quietly: "The wages will go on Just the same while you are out." There was a perceptible stir among the men. They looked confused and Incredulous. Mr. Hardy still looked at them thoughtfully. Finally the big Done stepped for ward again and said, speaking more respectfully than he did at first: "Mr. Hardy, we be thinking maybe yon would like to help towards him the "No, no thank ni do $rmethtng more." family of the dead and others as be hurt. I been 'pointed to take up purse Cor poor fellows injured. We all take band in't My brother be one lose his two eyes." A tear actually rolled down the grimy cheek of the big fellow and dropped Into the coal dost at his feet Mr. Hardy realised that he was look ing at a brother man. He choked down a sob and putting his band In his pocket pulled ont all the change he bad and poured It Into the Dane's band. Then, seeing that It was only $4 or $5, he pulled out his purse and emptied that of Its bills, while Barns, the fore man, and all the men looked on in stu pefied wonder. "No, no thanksl I'll do something Mr. Hardy walked away, feeling as if the ground wore heavy under him. What was all his money compared with that life which had been sacrific ed In that gas poisoned sepalcber? He could not banish from his mind the pic tars of that face as It looked to him wokfi ho drew back the sheet and look ed at It He harried back to the office through the yard and sat down at the well worn desk. Tke mail had come In, and half a dosen letters lay there. What did it all amount to, this grind of busi ness, when the heartache of the world called for so much sympathy? Tbsn over him came the sense of his obliga tions to nil family Clara's need of a father's help, George going to the bad, Alice In need of sympathy, his wife keeping even now at home, the church tad Sunday school where he had been of so little use, the family of Scovllle I be provided for, the other injured Bin to be visited, improvements for tht welfare of the men In the shops to he looked after and the routine of his nseess all these things crowded In pan him, and still 'he saw the face and Wri the voice of Eternity, "Seven ays do re to live!" Re sink Into a reverie for a moment Be wai Boused by the sounding ef the i wllstle. What noon already? So wlftly lad the time gone! Ho turned hlaTletk, bewildered, and picked up i letters glanced over them hurried- ' aaa ins, care directions for the an- n of mm of them to bis Impatient employer's strange behavior this morn ing. Among the letters was one which made his cheek burn with self re proach. It was an invitation to a club dinner to be given that evening In hon or of some visiting railroad president It was Just such an occasion ss he had enjoyed very many times before, and the recollection brought to mind the number of times he had gone away from bis home and left his wife sitting drearily by the Are. How could he have done it? He tossed the glided in vitation fiercely Into the wastebasket and, rising, walked his room, thinking, thinking. He hud so much to do anil so little time to do It in! He thought thus a moment then went out and walked rapidly over to the hotel where he was In the habit of getting lunch when be did not go home. He ate a little hurriedly and then hastened out. As he was going out upon the side walk two young men oame in and Jos tled agaiust liiiu. They were smoking anil talking in a loud tone. Mr. Hardy cauclit the sound of his own name, lie looked at the speaker, and It was the face of the young inuu be had seen In his dream, the one who had Insulted George and struck him afterward. For a moment Mr. Hardy was tempted to confront the youth and luquirc Into his son's habits. "No," he said to himself after a pause: "I will have a good talk with George himself, That will be the best." He hurried back to the office and ar ranged some necessary work for ui clerk, took a walk through the other Office, then went to the telephone and colled up the superintendent of the Sunday school, who was a bookkeeper In a clothing house. He felt an Intense desire to arrange for an Interview with him as soon as possible. Word came back from the house that the superin tendent had been called out of town by serious Illness In his old home anil would not be buck until Saturday. Mr. Hardy felt a disappointment more keen than the occasion seemed to war rant. He was conscious that the time was very brief. He had fully made up his mind that so far as In him lay he would redeem his svlflsh past and make a week such as few men ever made. He was Just beginning to real ize that circumstances are not always In our control. We nre obliged to wait for time to do some things. We cannct redeem seven years of selfishness with seven dsys of self denial. The death of Scovllle revealed to Mr. Hardy bis powerlessness in the face of certain possibilities. He now feared that the superintendent would fail to return in time to let him confess to him his Just sorrow for his lack of service In the school. He sat down to his desk and under that Impulse wrote a letter that expressed In part how he felt Then he Jotted down the following Items to be referred to the proper authorities of the road: Item 1. The dust In the blacksmith shop and In the brass polishing rooms Is largely unnecessary. The new En glefield revolving rolling fans and ele vator ought to be Introduced in both departments. The cost will be but an Item to the road and would prolong the life and add to the comfort of the em ployees. Very Important. Item 2. Organised and Intelligent ef fort should be made by all railroad cor porations to lessen Sunday work In shops and on the road. All perishable freight should be so bandied as to call for the services of as few men on Sun day as possible, and excursion and pas senger trains should be discontinued except In cases of unavoidable neces sity. Item S. The Inspection of boilers, re torts, castings, machinery of all kinds, should be made by thoroughly compe tent and responsible men, who shall an swer for all unnecessary accidents by swift and severe punishment In case of loss of life or limb. Item 4. In case of injury or death to employees. If Incurred through the neg lect ef the company to provide safety, it should provide financial relief for the families than Injured or stricken by death and so far as possible arrange for their future. Item 5. Any well organised railroad could, with profit to Its employees, have upon Its staff of salaried men a corps of chaplains or preachers whose business Is would be to look after the religious Interests of the employees. Under this last Item Mr. Hardy wrote In a footnote, "Discuss feasibility of this with Mr. B., Influential director." It was now 3 o'clock. The short win ter day was fast drawing to a close. The hum of the great engine in the ma chine shop was growing very weari some to the manager. He felt sick of Its throbbing tremor and longed to es cape from It Ordinarily he would have gone to the clubroom and bad a game of chess with a member, or else be would have gone down and idled away an hour or two before supper at the Art museum, where be was a con stant visitor that was when he had plenty of time and the business ef the office was not pressing. Young Well man, however, had succeeded to the clerical details of the shops, and Mr. Hardy's time was generally free after 4 o'clock. He had been oppressed with the thought of the other Injured men. He must go and see them. He could not rest till be had personally visited them. He went out and easily ascertained where the men lived. Never before did the contrast between the dull, uninter esting row of shop tenements and bis own, elegant home rise up so sharply before him. in ract, ne nad never given It much thought before. Now, as be looked forward to the end of the week, he knew that at Its close he would be no richer, no better able to enjoy luxuries than the dead man lying In No. TOO. He wondered vaguely but passionately how be could make use of what he bad heaped together to make the dally Urea of some of these poor men happier. Bo found the man who had loot both eyes sitting np In bed and feeling in a pathetic manner of a few blocks of wood which one of the children In the room had brought to him. He was a big. powerful man like his brother, the large boned Dane, and It seemed a very pitiful thing that he should be l.ving there like a baby when his muscles were as powerful as ever. The brother wub In the room with the Injured man, and he said to Dim : "Olaf, Mr. Hardy come to see you." 1 "Hardy? Hardy?" queried the man In a peevish tone. "What uo I know him to be?" "The manager. The one who donate so really much moneys to you." "Ah!" with an Indescribable accent. "He make me work on Sunday. He lose me my two eyes. A bud man, Svord. I will no have anything to do ! with him." I Aud the old descendant of a thousand kings turned his face to the wull and would not even so much as muke a mo tion toward his visitor. His brother Offered a rude apology. Mr. Uurdy ro plled In a low tone: "Say nothing about It. I deserve all your brother says. Hut tor a good rea son 1 wish Oluf would say he forgives me." Mr. nardy come nearer the bod and 1 spoke very earnestly and as If he hud known the inuu Intimately; "1 did you a great wrong to order the work on Sunday and In not doing my 1 duty concerning the Inspection of the ' machinery. I huve come to say so and to ask your forgiveness. 1 may never see you again. Will you say to me, ' 'Brother, 1 forgive you'' " I There was a moment of absolute ' passivity ou the part of the big fellow; then a very large and brawny hand was extended, aud the blind man said: "Yes, 1 forgive. We learned that in the old BJble at Bvendorf." Mr. Hardy laid his hand in the other, and his lips moved In prayer of hum ble thanksgiving. What, Robert Hardy! Is this that proud man who only the day before was so lifted up with self Ishuess that he could coldly criticise his own minister for saying that peo ple ought to be more Christlike? Are you staudlng here In this oor man's house which two days ugo you would not have deigned to enter and beseech ing him as your brother in the great family of God to forgive you for what you have done and left undone? Yes; you have looked Into the Face of Eter nity; you realize now what life really means and what souls are really worth. He went ont after a few words with the family and saw all the other Injur ed men. By the time he bad finished these visits It was dark, and he eager ly turned home, exhausted with the day's experience, feeling as If he had lived In a new world and at the same time wondering at the rapidity with which the time had fled. He sighed almost contentedly to him self as he thought of the evening with his family and how he would enjoy It after the disquiet of the day. His wife was there to greet him, and Alice and Clara and Bess clung about him as he took off his coat and came Into the beautiful room where a cheerful fire was blazing. Will came down stairs as his father came In, and In the brief Interval before supper was ready Mr. Hardy related the scenes of the day. They were all shocked to bear of Scoville's death, and Mrs. Hardy at once began to discuss some plans for relieving the family. Bess volunteered to give up half her room to one of the children, and Alice quietly outlined a plan which Immediately appeared to her father businesslike and feasible. In the midst of this discussion supper was announced, snd tkey all sat down. "Where Is George?" asked Mr. Hardy. Ordinarily he wonld have gone on with the meal without any reference to the boy, because he wss so often absent from the table. Tonight he felt an Ir resistible longing to have all his chil dren with htm. "He said be was Invited out to sup per with the Bramleys," said Clara. Mr. Hardy received the announce ment In silence. He felt the bitterness of such indifference on the part ef his older son. "What!" he said to himself. "When he knows I had such a little while left, could he not be at home?" Then almost immediately flashed into him the self reproach even stronger than his condemnation of his boy. "How much have I done for him these last ten years to win his love and pro tect him from evil T After supper Mr. Hardy sat down by bis wife, and In the very act be blush ed with shame at the thought that be could not recall when he bad spent an evening thus. He looked Into her face and asked gently: "Mary, what do you want me to do? Shall I read as we used to In the old days?" "No; let us talk together," replied Mrs. Hardy, bravely driving back her tears. "I cannot realize what It all means. I have been praying all day. Do you still have the Impression you bad this morning?" "Mary, I am If anything even more convinced that God baa spoken to me. The Impression has been deepening with me all day. When I looked Into poor Scoville's face, the terrible nature of my past selfish life almost over whelmed me. Oh, why have 1 abused God's goodness to me so awfully?" There was silence a moment Then Mr. Hardy grew more calm. He began to discuss what be would do the second day. He related more fully the Inter view wltb the men In the shop and his visits to the Injured. He drew Clara to him and began to Inquire into ber trou bles In sucb a tender, loving way that Clara's proud, passionate, willful na ture broke down, and she sobbed out her story to him ss she bad to ber mother the night before. Mr. Hardy promised Clara that he would see James the next day. It was true that James Caxton bad only a week bofore approached Mr. Hardy and told him In very manful fashion of bis love for his daughter, but Mr. Har dy bad treated It as a child's affair, and In accordance with his usual policy In family matters had simply told Clara and Bess to discontinue their visits at the old neighbor's. But now that he heard the story from the lips of bis own daughter be saw the seriousness of It, and crowding back all his former pride and hatred of the elder Caxton he promised Clara to see James the next day. Clara clung to her father In loving surprise. She was bewildered, as were all the rest, by the strange event that hod happened to her father, but she never had so felt his love before, and, forgetting for awhile the significance of his wonderful dream, she felt happy In his presence and In his affection for her. The evening had sped on with sur prising rapidity while all these matters There was his son George, too drunk to stand itfofic. were being discussed, and as It drew near to midnight ogaiu Kobert Hardy felt almost happy in the atmosphere of that home aud the thought that he could still for a little while create Joy for those who loved hi in. Suddenly he spoke of his other son: "I wish George would come In. Then our family circle would bo complete. But It Is bedtime for you, Bess, and all of us, for that matter." It was Just then that steps wers beard on the front porch, and voices were heard as If ul'.lng In whispers. The bell rang. Mr. Hardy rose to go to the door. His wife clung to him ter rified. "Oh, don't go, Robert! I am afraid for you." "Why, Mary, It ennnot be anything to harm me. Don't be alarmed." Nevertheless be was a little startled. The day had been a trying one for him. He went to the door, his wife snd the children following him close behind. He threw It wide open, snd there, sup ported by two of bis companions, one of them the young man Mr. Hardy bad seen In the hotel lobby at noon, waa his son George, too drunk to stand alone. He leered Into the face of his father and mother with a drunken look that froze their souls wltb despair as the blaze of the hall lamp fell upon him reeling there. And so the first of Robert Hardy's aeven days came to an end. TO UK CONTINUED. Our brush should be used daily in place of the ordinary hair brush, hair washes, or hair grow ers. If you do not find, after six months' trial, that Dr. Scott's ELECTRIC Hair Brush I will do all we claim for it send it back and your money 1 will be refunded. You can buy the number ! one size for One Dollar. It Is Guaranteed to Cure Nervous Headache In five minutes I Bilious Headache In five minutes I Neuralgia in five minutes I Dandruff and diseases of the scalp I Prevents falling hair and baldness I Hakes the hair long and glossy I For sale si Dry Goods stores sad Druggists or sent on approval, postpaid, on receipt of price and ten cents for postage. S) Vrtook, " Tilt DOCTOR'S STOUT" trntfron . iM-Ht. trifm fU Information contvmlng Dr. tmit'l BrciriolMn. $1. Si. and Sin. Elrrtrlc or(. II. S1.K. II M St. .mi.TS-1 KUetrie Fink Rrunhr: S ttrctnc S inn l:.t,.,r,. fi Bid Ftmnltrt, et. Ktretrir SusSSj ctt. Khuf - rru.v.. (I. m GEO. A. SCOTT, t,i Brosdwsr, n . V. i Use It Daily. sjuBWWIHMIIs BBS HI WntSt ALL UK TSU. BBB mplo BBBESnHHSBBilmMBmBi ftta.puoo " If I were sick and wanted to get well, I'd find out how some one else got well who had the same sort of sickness as mine.'" If your sickness is like hers, Mrs. Jacobs' story will interest you. "I wns vrry sick indrrd," writes Mrs. Moltic Jacobs, of Fclton Kent Co., Del aware, "and our family doctor said I had consnmption. I thought I must die soon for I felt so awfhl bad. Had a bad cough, spit blood, ass very short of breath, hud pain in my cbcit and right lung, and also kail dyspepsia. Before I took your 'Golden Medical Discovery ' and ' Pleasant Pellets ' I wai so weak I could not Sweep a room, and now I ran do a small washing, anil 1 feel like a new person. I believe that the LOTd ana your medicine have SSved my life. I was sick over two years. I took It bottles of the 'Golden Medical Discovery, and four vials of Dr. Pierce's Pellatv." Are you sick ? Are your lungs "weak?" Have you obstinate lingering cough, with bleeding lungs, weakness and emaciation ? Thousands in just your case have been cured by the use of DR. PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY. always helps. It almost always cures. 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'mny u MtUflML W til wtftraM tkM rri.iv.wf Biai Jin-i CI , kfll.UO, II. .00 iWl up, ftll t ill del rriln i in it arfclne aialoa-uo, hill t l .,..: 1 . 1 1 II HI IV IIRSH I AH I I In- tr nut - I it l if rtiT offVrctl U I ii 1 1 1 B EWARE OF IMITATIONS b? wnocupj UMDVfUitaOUOrlriC uBlmnsifi wariiliit-s hid.- r vm koill tUUM . dareswwta. rlla -ome ft i ml In ( hirigo ami Irani ba imnllliblf THE BURDICK ! ' ' v a'WKRll Hl (HMD l IM lilt lU - II! . Bh)h. b. -t mil In. I I I . - t'V Si I Bmaaesst skit b.. SOLID (i. wr dL. tin M'WlIlk'. 4 f- l-i-s I'll HI. ' I I rastrn. al jtmtal.lr i - nil w baas, positive four u bobbin winder, mi ; whetil, adjustable pn ' MMjh and then If cnnrlneM that you are aainir ttt.vou to ' iv vir frtiiri t a-.ent tit 910. AO Wl TO MITOU TOGM tl-.O If at any time within three mnnthl vou eay voli ar not atllfled. UKltKlt 111 IMY DON'T DXIsAY. (HMiv, Roebuck OO, are th'ironehlv tellable.- Kultor ) Addrass, SEARS. ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.) Chicago. III. A REAL REPRODUCES SAME RECORDS AS ALL STANDARD TALKING MACHINES. Gimi 1 0 SB at SB SB .1 MAKE YOUR OWN RECORDS I Th: pleasure of a Graphophone is largely I vnur am rirnriK W fm n !i this Ttirliinc with recorder for $7.rO. H Or.phop.OD.i or ST.rr arvrlplUn. t all or rll. . r.DI UMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO. Dcpt. '.10 IHIIIUIU i4;i 11.V)-11;Vj Dyspepsia k Else 1861, lasting immediate I Ks-mtJbaV--.. m k SENP-US ONE DOLLAR Oattbla wL ol sad MM u as mlik Al.tNl, tM wr mm aasaaj IIPBOTslD fAKLnK UK tKi.. Lj frrlcht (. . It., sabrt laeiaailaa tl. V tU tun v i ami in It ut jitur sji-aPfl NflM I. Jm.1. and If jmu Ind It risBCtly aa reprraenleil, lla vrvaUat valaa yu If saw a4 far hmiUr taan orsssrs advertlard h. cih - r- at saur min. . par las IVHa hi arsl OUR PRICK $35.30. Ias iti r 1 . 0O drpMslt, or ORI .:.n as ii (WtcbitbarfM. THE PARLOR CEM ' fi SUMsl AUB HWUBTKhT TOSI D latlrararatu ew saa-U. Kmiii thf llhl t rat imi iboi, which Uenttraved direct frum a iihfit"nraph yout-an fnn soma Idea of It tautlfji a j 1 1 .-:i m r - Made rrntaaolld ihiMvp aawsxl aak r WBlaiyt ftadealrvd. awrfaralrsd 17 Hip, full paaol i ' kwaaHfal gaartatlrr d'lra aaaela aas, mj ulhtr baadaosnc drrarailnn i asxl onaa.is.is, snsklaa It Us TKKT UTlMTSliLK. J HK VUlAIK 4tEMia6reet hurli, tnhei ong, U IMM wideand v. ,. i,- W) pounds. Contains t ocimxren, 11 atop, mm hUotM l Dtapaana, riiaclpal, fraJaliaa. atadia, Crvasaaa, Baaraplrr, 1 n-hi, i n.,,,i.r. massai rsrlt u tsi naaaM iumfiis'ri, i wit, 1 Hi sal Oraaa BotL 4 Bala af Orebaatral Toswd K-...nar r, lp SsJMt Kssrds. 1 VI of 17 far Hwi H. -In.ll. U4; 1 tWof! aeaUasrl; Itriillaat f eleate Bswds, 1 Pel t3 mm mmmW Ms-.Hi sHaaaa a.4s. 1 rVt or ri.ulM Ftori ariii i-u. iiinntu aUada. THE PARLOR OEM " r.malaUof tu Call bra ta Hawaii Bavda. whirl) are onlr uwd In IM ajt rrade Inatrumenta: flttM with Haaiaioad tasiplsra sa l Tat Massaaa, ftlno beat oltfa fclta. leathern, . t . 'i-.v -of the bait rubber cloth, J nlj bellwa wtom and finest leather in valve. THE PARLOR CEM " furM-hed with a Mill beveled plate reneh mirror, nlfkrl plat I pedal frame, and ev-rv modem Impniv-ement. Wa faraUh frt. a baalsou tJB fta stool aa ta treat oefaa laatrar laaa tkaoktt Mbllabsd. CUARANTEED 25 YEARS. KTBftfS iaaae a written blndlnc fi year iruarantoe, by th avtid condition! of which if any part irlveaout c repair A free f abarwa. Try It one month and we will raftiM your money it you are not botw uj aananeu. of these i.rirani will be n Id at $35. SO. OttDKK AT MOE. MXT DEUT. OUi RELIABILITY 1$ ESTABLISHED SSlwS uaaaki youroelirbborabout us. write the pui)liaher of thla pant r or MetrnotUn National Bank, or Corn Nat. Bank, or Chicago ; Ar or German Eirhansr Bank, New York ; or any j railroad or expreea company In Chlrav-i. base a eapftal ef (w TOO.noo.OO, net-up entire one of the largest buelnesa bln-ka In i blcaro. nearly v.em people in our own s M sI.ii rrnrihinir In mu-kmj Innrnssnrtt st sMSsBJ whotrul. prinss. Wrtu for ffsc fpaafel BBS saaSBM ln.trum.nt SMSlsssja. Address, liasn, BsskssaaOt. ssskmmsWTisssSls-SSass,a IAR8, ROEBUCK CO. asc). Fulton. PERSONALLY CONDUCTED TOURIST PARTIES TO California if you are i m to California and wish to save expense, yet travel in safety unit contort, lirmtlfBtK Umbo "onco-a-work parties." They have every Wednesday from both Chicago ami St. Louts, Joining at Denver. Then psst tbe grandest seen ry lu tin- world, oyer the Denver & Rio c rands Itullrnail. A few hours' stop to m-o Suit Lake City, mid on via Ogdeo met tho Southern Pacific Beltway, A special agmt is in charge of each party, and the cars sro comfortable and exquisitely clean, write for a folder giving full particulars and semi Scents in postage for our beautifully Illus trated hook on California. It Is a work ot art. P. S. EUSTIS. Gen'l Psss'r Aft .. C.B.4Q.K. R. CHICAGO. ILL. Haw ONI V T j . 1 ' J ,:,8tf.DUb . .'s'.. ; ' .' ii. i.i hi.. iBWsiiWfS'j ,th,r. f, r, , L s, . J I". im lr. i Ik '.' ," 'i It. I.. M . k . .. f nt wllh cm 'or; Othi r , .r . . -nnd wo wi ! return v itr ., n MtMlwfifbrtb beam fi U.i . lb, ( II. t$ fc lb,. 9t9.ti M.UM2..HU.,..J' . n In i Mb! aalil diinr a: iff. fr lti(i' hu start, tarter?, (.-.. n Inrhrs I" 1 . : HW l.,, fkM.fll CI inrhr. . rh M f.fMpt DfTlfUl II . V IOM wii. s. lOmii, WRITE FOII V Iks IKX. UK.. .kk nl. tSStfc 'I'.t jfi ' '" s i 1 1 n ' ru i t , ii. . , . i . . SEARS, HOE.BUCK & CO. Citlci.o. WITH Oil U.eatiMt Sil. nilt Hint -I'll I I .' Mi. cm it w. arlll wnil you OUR HIQH J yjrouara n ln at H. 5 tr Hvr St Kl 111 I.I'M k nnannwn r With sarli anil shn s linMITl or ItlKI WIlK, WITH - In Am 'tcrlai R SAWED OAK DR0'P($""iNn.l " iTiurtinm ii f.bow-1 mmihint .: I : in fliftit I t ! "' U1 ftj n renter la.', and utl - .u i with full li-ivlti lie !. and In i T r lalrat IMV ehrUlnn frame, carved, liailf.etl. ht. iihIhIi, AmM Dlektl rtrewtrpnlia, rents, on f.iur MilrieHm vtb Iron ntand Hik-si larrr ItHth Ana ni i Mlf threading vtbratllitr ibattl. Utomttll tti In ' IntTflt patent Unipin Mbtfatoi Improved loon irti foot. Improved nutt) farrier. MtiOl noodlt bar. k i (P1RS v or.'V l ' vi s m urn i f "lllliH Kl x-n-ttScdSt ODCJ m .jwi - i J. patent QfiM RUard. bet 1 1 I m -ly tlrrorau-d anil nriiameati'd aid bMatHWIf alabal trlsmaata. CUAK N -'.-. 'he HffblMt raaalac. amst aarab ami Bar ItsvlfM saaralae mail. I very tWMMU ...laekmenl Is furt,,-i . i uml our j-'reo In tructloo Book Mill J'lil how -m rnnoeu run It and do either plain or uni kind of I ancy work. A IOTwn MadiM Uaaraa.ee Ii aent with evet y machine. IT rfKTQ Villi NfYTHINn ee I'nrl naialaeihls marhiar. OOtnpOfl K "UO l. a- i- a: j ss fj.. r" -" I I) I i HUM ill li'l m TOY B 1 iiuui msmtiti:in:i; luiuiim j!S :. A itrongly construe ted Graph. , , B ophonCi witli ilmplc mccKin. ill 11 ism, made to meet the dp- jjjj ,; mand lor a first-class talking D J; machine, at a low price. M xxiixxix:ixiixi-"xxrxirixnilixxi I! km increased by making and reproducing s i biomlwio ,.N.; Y. Vdy. tSHismaa 6j 1 Thfl Ideal Freocli Tonic ..mi ass FOR BODY AND BRAIN Bsdoraed try M edlcal Faculty efficacious agreeable m ibis Sfc W DsasteHtM snl Waymss St., CHICA0O, ILL. rsmKJStsSail I rK'ju 11(99 a sr. sr., l issunasBSfwBvgsngvoFggs gsa ' - smPWr ' ' ' lad base wandering at his