1 -'W - t v'iu :i It Makes Restful Sleep. Slo. . saneM I IniOSt Invariably n imps. ntesoonstli Rtlou mi "l its manifold attendant evils ious tent, Indigestion, hosd acbe, I mof apptittisetc. To attempt to in duccsli op it Is a serlonB mistake, for iln'i.ri tilsotilj numi-d und the body suf- rem, ' t. vi- remove IhocauMof wake iiiu soothing iif-t on tUo nerves and 011 luc stomach ana isiwels. li 1 lig cures Constipation and Nerve, step,!, eh, Liver and Kidney dleoaaes. a Votr Horse a Chance ! Experts Baffled Real Diamonds are no better for all purposes than the Genuine. arnos Jn Diamonds We hip the sole nf-nffl In tho United State for thesn marvsHous semiprecious stones, which nr the nearest approach to Genuine Diamond! ever discovered. For the purpose nf Introducing" them quickly to the RING. PIN, STUD EARRINGS (Bcrewa or Drops), at CUR lOAKANTEl n'hti . ' i . i nrA i H H 6j H iru iranteed to re- 1 M 9 Pi Q tain tlielr lustre "'1 rurevrr; the mount- limn are lieavr IEACH rolled pliite, and lire warranted for llvo years. Earrings Are $2 Per Pair. SPECIAL CAUTION : Do nut cliound Oenulne BarriOl Tlo monda with so-called Rhinestones, White T' i;ia, or othni imitation Ktoiu", reKardlessof riutt the imine may tie. Qenulue Barrios diamonds have no artificial backlna, are e.junl t n il rtlamonda a- to lool i n l wear, J . il e a jT'ii-m. Thli" offer will last only a h lonRer, und U nuojcct to With flittw ;il without QOtlca, WAIL ORDERS. a Beautiful, Brilliant, Oenulne Harriot Diamond. nvunU'd in n heavy ritu. pin or ijud, Will lie gent to any address on receipt ilt One 1 ":;.ir. in ordering, kivo full diruo tiomi i . uite whether suwli, medium or lai Ko m no w deatred, trnn .1 R N;Ytitn, the rruna Donna of the Walter Damrosch opera Co., writes: " llarrliw Diamonds are lustrous and full of fire 11 am tniiKiilfieent HiiltKlUutoM for laubii- : am ndi fur matte pnrposes," CAMlLLdi bEYUABD Money pomptl) rernndrd if itoMi r nt us represented. IPf Beware of Imitators j& Vddresi MallOrdsrs to The Pomona M'f 'g Co., 1131 BROADWAY, NEW YR I Mention Middleliuri; Tout. Our l urned it wefait. Any one sending itch description of any invention will firumptlv teceive our opinlou tree concerning he patentability of mime. " How to Obtain a TateM" sent upon request. Patents secured , through us advertised for sale at our expense. 1 Patents taken out through us receive sjwcial ' fioice, without charge, in THB 1'atk.it Rkcohd, 'an Illustrated tad widely circulated journal, consulted iy Manufacturers aud investors v Scud lor s.imulecopy FREI. Addiess, VICTOR J. EVANS A CO. , -ttent Attorneys,) EvsnsOui' g, WASHINGTON, . C. Dr. Fcnntr's Golden .Belief. 50 a Tin s si'Ki mc; u i. INFLAMMATION lid t r, Wounds, RhtUtwUVm, Neura - , M olds." A SURE tiUrHXi 'Oris Ac E. l'i Ei any PHI inside or out. I- '. ,K--M l.y mail H.tiv"n!,.NY fish Wy tW r r. n s 111' it nil iuHr !' kjIc- -'V ' Iiik barnesa 1- the ,5 "3 M r-t klaj cf u Cum i H blimtlon. Harness OH notonlr p.ukcstlK'hnrncssan'l the l.jBSe hoi 1 ink l-itei 1 "t 1. . i 1 W leather 10ft and pliable, puts It In n. 1 mi ji . illiiun to IuhI twice an long 1w 'iiKfilt-.'. , M " "r'"' "" would, (n iCT-V 1 1 r XV( STANDARD fl 4 0,LC0v,3l I 1 A A At Dunuc we win mrwaru eiuma MALCOM KIRK. II X II A Tale of Moral Heroism J In Overcoming the World, f BY CHARLES M. SHELDON, Author of "In His Steps," ''Crucifixion of Philip Strong," "Robert p Hardy's So vn Day." - OOFTKJUBt, 1900, DT TUB Tiiii.iiMiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiii immwumnt)) Imjiiuiuii CHAPTBB IX. KI71K THKVEMTS A I.Y.NCHIXO. A afalcom Kirk uiitl Coxver run on directly in t ho face of Unit wild line of fire mid smoke there was only one su preme thought in t lie mind of Malcom, He hiiw tlie boy'l mother, ami while he ran he bean her voice as nlie had up- I pealed to Dim in his study. Instinctively the two men bore off from the road over which the horses hail entered the town toward ii swale where the tfniMs and rosin weeds grew deep, and It was hut n few feet from the beaten track of the prairie road that they saw the body of PhUlp Itar ton, lying face downward, tho hands clinched and holding tightly .1 broken piece of the lines of the harness. No time then to stop and ask wheth er he Were living, hut up with him be tween tin in and back to the town with nil tho power of their pulsing mau nood. Carver was entirely sober now. He was naturally a man of great muscular endurance. Malcom had kept on his physical training In his work with the young men In the church. Not ft word was said. They realized that the time was short, and they ran with their unconscious, heavy burden between them. Meanwhile men, women and children bad organised lu n desperate effort to save the town. There was one fact In their favor. It had been the custom for those living on the edge of the town to picket their animals out on the prai rie near by. Tho grass wna cropped short on this nrcotint. Under any or dinary circumstances this fact would have insured safety from any usual lire. Hut the whole prairie wns aflame, everything was as dry us two months of drought and hot winds could make It, and water for a long Mine had been very scarce In welhj and cisterns. Hack of all that advancing line of lire was a prairie gale that shot the flames straight forward, and old settlers, some of whom had seen tho grent Ilres In Da kota In the early sixties, looked at the sight now before them with gruvo faces. Dorothy enme to the door of the par sonage, stood thero a moment and then ran, with other women, her neighbors, down to tho main street. I Bucket lines wero being formed from Bl tho wells ami elBterns that were available. .e Instantly joined with the others lu handing the water. A largo company of men arnied with wet j cloths to whip out the lire began to I form as far from tho houses as they I dared. It was too late now to plow , tire breaks and too windy to make a I back lire. Tho only hope that any one ' hail was that the shortness of the grass near the town would check the fury of 1 the advancing whirlwind of flame, "Have you seen Mr. KlrkV" Dorothy nsked as she lirst Joined the others. And they told her. Her face blanched and her lips breathed a prayer as she ! worked on silently. She knew that be whom she never loved us she loved They ran with ihcir unconscious burden between them, him at that moment was In tho line of duty, nnd she would not have called him back from It. Rut her heart cried out for help, and she agonized for him whom her soul dearly loved. Down came the great wall of Are nnd smoke. The hot air scorched the faces ' of the fire lighters. Dim figures out on the advance line were seen desperately I struggling with tho element. The town ' was enveloped In smoke nnd burned ' out ashes of prairie gruss that sifted ' over the workers until the faces and hands of all were black and grimy. Scores of men rushed upon the fire line as It came on, checked some by the ' short grass, nnd stamped out the j name with their feet, with rags, with old brooms, with pieces of carpeting and bedding torn from their own j bouses. The outstanding line of flgbt l crs was forced back, burned and ex ' hausted, but the fire had been checked, i and as It broke out in new places fresh groups threw themselves upon It aud fougb fyr ihelf,of the town.,, M9wfy r'WIU" "Oi reijieuiuer opw came to be with tho fighters on the pruirie iiisienu ui uuo me vrmui tor tiers, but It was undoubtedly her anx 1 lv ahvamb r-CBUSnUiO OO. umnnn 11,-ucr. iiinUiiiihiiiiimiiiiiinimiiiir; iety for MalcrmTs safety that urged her out toward the lire. Her dress had caught on fire aud been put out several times. Some one had thrown water over her, but she hnd hardly known It. She worked with all the others lu a sl leut frenzy. Suddenly she wns con scious uf a tall, awkward figure near her, looming up through the smoke, thrashing at the fire with powerful en ergy, a very incarnation of resistance and stubborn refusal to surremler. "Malcom!" she cried, nnd, faint as she was, she felt new life at the sight f him. "Dorothy! Thank God, we got back with blm Just in time!" There was no time to say more. The danger was still great Near together now, husband and wife fought on. The t'ilizens of Conrad afterward bore wit ness to the way in which they fought "Ray, did you see Mr. Kirk?" A group of men at the postofnee, several days after the great lire, were talking It over. "These New Kngland folks bent ev ery other kind when It comes to never giving up." "Ves, or lighting tho devil. Our min ister beats all the rest at that," said Carver, who spoke of Kirk as "our minister," SlthoUgb he had never been a member of uny church and rarely went to hesr even Malcom preach. Bui It was a tribute to the hold Malcom bad secured on such men that they appropriated him somehow to them selves or to the best that was strug gling in them. It was nearly the middle of the after noon of that eventful day that the peo ple of Cournd, exhausted, burned, blackened, saw the great dancer pass around them and the galloping whirl wind thundered off beyond the town, leaving a mighty and desolate expanse of black and smoldering prairie be hind it Then It was that the severest trial of till came to Malcom and Dorothy. They bad gone Into the bouse of one of their parishioners, where the body of l'hllip Barton had been cnrrled. He was living, but had received some In juries from falling out of the wagon probably when the team ran away. They had come out of the house and were ou their way home when some one lu tho street suddenly clutched Malco'n'e arm and, pointing through the smoke, cried out: "Look there! The church Is on fire!" The church nnd parsonage stood nt the opposite end of the town from the prairie fire, and the danger had been the lenst lu that quarter. That part of the town had been entirely deserted while the fight had been going on at the other end. "If the church goes, the pnrsonnge will go, too," thought Malcom, as be am I Dorothy ran through the street When they reached the parsonage, the roof bad nlreody caught from a flying timber blown off the church tower. Tho water of tha town was ex hausted. The well In the parsonage yard was already nearly empty. Mal com rushed Into the bouse and by des perate work, helped by several other men, succeeded in carrying out some furniture and a few of his books. Due of the boxes In Dorothy's room was blazing as he carried It out nnd threw It over, and a pile of papers In a portfolio was scattered. DorOthy,OI she worked helping to carry some pieces of furniture to a place of safety, felt 1 something blow against her face, and, putting up her bund, she caught a piece of paper. Even In the excitement sho saw what it was. It wus the sketch that Francis Itnlelgh had drawn ou board the Cephalonia three years before, the sketch of Malcom holding tho baby. Dorothy sobbed as she saw what It was. Her own baby! And now their home and nearly all the things they . counted dear! i It was over soon, and In a little' while the church and parsonage, the work of many a weary struggle for their little company of dlselplea, were dreary heaps of ruin. A hard tight on the part of the wornout citizens hnd kept the other bouses from being burn ed. The church and parsonage had stood In a large lot by themselves. "After all," said Malcom when It was all over, as he sat down by Dorothy on a trunk while a little group of neighbors stood by discussing the inci dents of the fire, "after all, dear, we have a good deal to be thankful for." i "Yes," said Dorothy, with a smile. It was a little hard for her aa she sat there to imagine that Dorothy Gilbert Who once back In the old New Eng land home had been noted for the ele gance and refinement of all her ways and surroundings. Nothing but the great love she bore the man who had asked her to share his life now made her Insensible to that former life be fore she was married. .iil'i Ma!, . -in Kirk sat there gazing at .the. ruins of his home nnd bis church, and deep down In bis heart therei;wna. a mighty conflict going on. lie-had lost his books, nearly nil that were ofl irnlue, and the other losses weje-gteak- HP was blackened aud burned, his clothes hung in ragged rents about -him, his grout fists. were bledVrig,'lanU here' btV side llltil was the wonjaWwnd'bnil left al for-whdtt To, share -stieh rrlVA- llAna (Iniiffarfi' locdnol For a moment be hardly heara what some of his parishioners were saying. They had been talking excitedly to gether. "Mr. Kirk, we are of the opinion that this fire wns Incendiary." "now Is that?" asked Malcom, rout ing up a little. "The first seen of It was In the tow er. Now, the firo from the prairie could not possibly have caught up there. Some one must have set It" Then different ones began to whisper their suspicious. The next day, while Malcom nnd Dorothy were staying with one of the church members who took them Into his home, the rumor grew that the Ore was the work of the whisky men. Down on the street excited groups of men gathered that evening, discussing the matter. Every one knew that Mal com Kirk had fought the saloons from the first day of his entrance Into Con rad. He was feared and hated by them more than any one else. He had succeeded to a large degree In getting tho other churches to uct together In the agitntlon now going on all over the state. He was already noted for his leadership throughout the county und had written and spoken on every possi ble occasion fur the proposed prohibi tory amendment. So there was reason In ihe suspicion held by the citizens. As the evening wore on proof of a certain saloon man's guilt seemed almost sure. Two or three persons had seen him coming out of the parsonage yard that afternoon of the lire. A child had seen the same man on the steps of the church a few minutes after Dorothy had left the par sonage. It was now 10 o'clock. The crowd nt the corner by the poatofflco grew every minute larger and more threatening. Croups of men stood surrounding some speaker who urged lynching as the only satisfactory punishment for such a crime. The citizens were exuspernt ed and nervous from the great strain of the last two days. Malcom Kirk came down town latfl that night to get the mail from the east bound express and walked luto the mob Just as cries of "Lynch the fire bug!" rose from many voices. As soon as the crowd saw blm It surrounded him excitedly. "Mr. Kirk, we've proof that 'Hlg Jake' set fire to your churcli." Malcom looked over the crowd a moment In silence. He bad not been thinking so much about the loss of his church and parsonage SS be came down town as about Dorothy and his future prospects. But the sight and sound of that mob of citizens brought his mind back to the situation not only In the town of Conrad, but throughout the en tire state. For the time, therefore, he let his own personal plans go as he faced the fact of a grave crisis In the temperance movement lie hnd more than one Sunday even ing held outdoor services nt the very corner whore the crowd now gathered. Don hnd often helped him at such i eea by playing aud singing. Every i. .n In Conrad was familiar with the tall, homely, awkward figure that uow towered over aluiost every head, nnd every man In Conrad re spected him. There was nn empty dry goods box near one of the stores, and Malcom Kirk asked some of the men to drag It out to Uie corner of the sidewalk. The minute he had mounted It the crowd became silent It Is a rare gift to be able to Speak to a great crowd of men out of doors and hold them. Kirk possessed that gift. His voice was u splendid instrument, nnd he knew how to use it It is suld of Gladstone that In tbs days of bis greatest power ns a speaker people would linger lu the corridors of the house of commons when be was talk ing simply to enjoy the sound of the tone of tils voice, although they could not distinguish a word that was sold. Something of this same quality made Kirk's voice a fascination for an audi ence. Whatever It was it could truly be called a great gift of Cod. Aud be used It now In a godlike man ner. He began by calling attention to the fact that the people of the stnto were trying to abolish the saloon by legislative amendment to the constitu tion. At such a time as that, for tho temperance people to act in a lawless manner toward even tho enemies of the home nnd the church would bo nn net of folly ho great that It might en danger tho entire movement for prohi bition "I nin perhaps," continued Malcom, the most interested iierson In tills whole matter. It Is my church thtit lias been burned and my home that has been destroyed. And yet I say to you men that If you nttmit to uso violence townrd 'Hljf Jake' or any other) saloon keeper on tho ground of this clrcuui-, stantlal evidence and take tbe Uiy Into your own hands I will defend him from such violence at the 'tfsit'of tny own life. Let us act like meh' Ih this matter like men who see further than personal vengeance nnd are- determine ed that our tight shall he. directed not against the saloon keeper so much as against the business be represents. Tbat Is what we" want ttf'B'ght -fb1 1" In behalf of all our homes and churches and our ststedUid ooiuatxy." wotljj vil n Be got down .oil the: box. after be hod spoken and. appealed iu a quiet but powerful mi). ami- to some, of tbe more Influential men In, ihe crowd not to let the men act'Iawlcssly'. Ills speech and appeal had the If effect, A small group of miW'oii ttfe jbg'ot the crowd gathered farther up1 Wt street, and aft er Klrku bad! gonehhmoi they marched Up to "Dig, JaWs"; soloQU, only tpjldndi It closed and tbe proprietor fled. jbIbX Tid io.l Inn. jindl TO BE CONTINUE!! NEXT WEEK. , wijiill rtUici Sttl tOSO 101 Inn; wool 1 l"IIM1illt"THT! .ud Llli.i.cL aa. i aklkrr drusglsU. Can't De Curtailed. Vhlle a flog with a tea-kettio tied to Mb tall Ts a sad sight, you'll agree. It's an evil that everywhere must prevail. For it's bound to a cur, you see. L. a. w. Bulletin, a po vnt' it pt fk. Maud (pettishly) Oh, how t do wish I were a man I I'd love nothing better than to be a soldier nnd t 1 I for mv country. Ethel No doubt you'd males a good one. You're well used to powder, y on know. Black and White. A Good Ran. "I'm going to change mv hi name and call bini Love Letter." "Love I tter? Why?" "He's M1 s,t the post so ofl ' ." Y. World. N. a Always, On the wings of the llc.htulng The Truth may By, But li never will quits Catch up with the Lie, Chicago Tribune, ft ft ft ft ft II if CENTS ! I DOBBINS' ELECTRIC SOAP educed from Ten Cents Y.ur cii.dce of HIT twenty-five oe n 9 i books seat free, for each three wrappers t nd Scents for postage. f 5r ht ww. ' m v & LEGAL ADVERTISING. AMENDMENT PHOPOHED T i TM CONSTITUTION TO TUB OlTtZBNS OF Tills COMMONWEALTH FOB THEIR AP PROVAL! OK REJECTION BY THE GEN ERAL ASSEMltl.V OK THE ('U.M.MON WEALTH OK PENNSYLVANIA I'UB MSIIEI) BY OHPKK OK THE BKC'KKTAHY OK THE COMMON WEALTH IN PURSU ANCE OK ARTICLE XVIII OF THK CON s,l'irUT10N. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing nit amendment to the Constitution of the Commonwealth, section l. He it resolved by Ihe Senate and Bouse of Representatives of the Common- wealth in (tcncral Assembly met. that the fol lowing is (ironicil as amendments to the Con. stltutlnu of the Commonwealth of Pennsyl vania, !n accordance with th provlslona of the eighteenth article thereof: Amendment one to Article Eight, Section One. Add at tho end of Ihe first paragraph of said BBcllon, aft' r the words "shall he entitled to vote at all elections," the words, "subject howti everlo such laws requiring and regulating t lie resignation of elector-, as ihe General Assembly mav enact," so that the Bald section shall read as follows. Section I. Qliallflostton of Electors, Every male citizen twenty-one years of age, possuMS, ing Hie following quallneationB. slHtfl he'ieit HlTed to vote at ail elections, subject, luwaygfl to such laws requiring and regulating tne rap istrution of SMQtorfl as tin Ci in ral Asnmij, may enact- He shall have been a citicn Slates at least one month. V !l -r-ny -nil of inatJjnlted He shall have r. Bided in tliyrifb.' one year (or if, having previ tusly been a quaunod elec tor or native bom . itl.en . f tin Male, In. -i'i ill have removed therefrom and returned, within six months Immediate!) ,iniii. tint dew lion.) ,, .i i..i u l- He shall have resided In 'the election district where be shall otter . epic atl U-iud "tSSl months immediately prccedingthc election. . if twenty-two years ol -' asd ii.w anl -, lie shall have paid within two yenrs a State or county lax, which shalT lilvo heeti assessed at least two . i . i -I jm'.I it . i-t one month before Ihe election. Amendment Eleven to-HriMe Efght, Bwtlou ill Srivsit," I .In.', lofliij' Strike out (i ion, sah section tlie.wqrds "but no elcetir shall l.e deprived at the privilege of voting Uy ruison of Iris name not i -1 1 . gunered i '..t add to said section the following Is, hot laws ingnl.itlmr anil requiring Hie registration of eleel,.rs iiun te 'Miftite.Uvapply j to citn s only. pttmaevBUSBsuen isws may bs I unilhtfil for v'tK'S of the BSnB elosrt." so'tlut the said section shall i t ail as foilotl'S : J n-ction7. Uniformity of Election liws! All , 1 T.?:" "V,1?'.V.' 'S ,;Vi'.V?.,yr ?&L!fi,S2 in i if. ii iii ' ' .i : ol Hie i tato. hut laws rtwiila- tiiigand reuufflng tlx- iwglslratlon ofelsetDri n.iy IseeiHiHed toafVply i. Pities only, provided that such laws he uniform furcitiepvjf tin- .ail.' Class. A I of'thn J6lnt Hcsdlnlionr I W, W iRI,KST. , Fet retary o. tofl t omniOiiweBllh. A MEMiMKNT TO' 'THK H OWTITirritiN " PHoPOSET) Tp THK ('(TI.ENM Or THIS lOMMONWBAl.TH Foil THEIR AlVROVAl. OR iaVKCTB.N. pa THE lUEB ERAJ. AS KEMIItY OV Til K COM MtVN WEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, PURI.IsllEHBY ORDER OF THE BECBETABi OF THECOMMONWELTH. ! .ll"IJltMinrt:i., UJT A HI II ,1.1. .Will Uf I III. CbMSTlTUTION. . ,, ,, .,,.., A jyiNT.KKSOI.CTIOJI iVop'osiAg :.a .tiii.ndmeiit to the Conatiriiltbn nt theCommonwSaMsf.ff;,, i,lm ' Section 1. He il resolved hv Ihe Senate and House oS knpnlseutailvea'of rlieKVuiimiwiwiinaii of ( I'eini-ylviuua .In (ieuurU AQsinbly (net, rtan ine Adlrnrinelspropnsislaiiaft aaiendmcni tiltl. a..istmilqil ifl f li ,VoiiimonWAUh All I'eniisylvnnia In accordance with tfie provisions of tkeitlghlel-nth .AlUele Bbetcol. Sill i Amesdraeptin., s)ldiniH .D . Strike out section tour of article, eight, and laser! lu fcdiK-e thcreofi as followai t. -i.l It. iffrTtlpMBY Alio! nBjby tbc Hllt-Jis, shall oilier method as mav be by Daultn of by sue t ! -onHiri I -d by la w : froviileil, Tlst eakreBy TAIruecopy of the Joint Resolution,'' '' vYuniuutinau, , Secretary of the Commonwealth. rOjiM .be eij: fl .1. . DMIPrfeWAfklJ1K3li.,,'!it-' i, 'ters of AdmiujU'at)ioO:in,;therSe IS or Tlieodoru Krdlcy, lale of Franklin twp. SW :' flt.. eM,''kWvrI oedftttiisb: a . : Clrt I I '"'Chi, I , nuiuiiiinajuu , 'M. I. POTTER, Att'y. PuXOIUsWPS ! llDjuii, i.., a:-,. 1, uii. U1VI1 I A VuniVV A HmlnlufMitsl .J It; il: I! it Saved My slie. Extreme cases of di. is test tne rca vl of a medicine. Many "tonic" .j "stimulant" preparations, which ha, no real medicinal value, seem to br up the users when they are feelis. "piayea out." Any stimulant will tins wuetner oougnt at tne liquor sturt or drug store. Tut true test of a men icine is when life itself is staked on fa remedial power, lu Hundreds or such cases Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Db. covery has been the means of saving life when even the '' family doctor " ' j r - m : .. i I uiunuunttu Ruican ucaui. . . . f . , and my family doclur said I would not i !, ing thru in iwomri. mil. iiunii ioa. i am itin I uvins, wTiicw wit. WWfJTfi W " runii.w, ol ur Ueorrr w TruM. i - ID. AUfWI V.. VS." "OT 'I'lete.'. 1T 'I"IIIV; V Medical LMacoTtry la wlwisAveo) ray lib, m UOii iiuiim. au umn iut. i cuuiu uui ,ir n; , left side without u great deal of puiu. i V.M nearly past work when I enmmenaed your tnrd 2 Idas, but I can do about a much work nou any man. i uannoi My too mucn ioc rue bem&t I i naTe reowivea." Many diseases, named for the organs nfected, aa "heart disease," "hug dts ease," "liver complaint," etc., are pej. fectly cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden ifei. tea! Discovery, which cures through the stomach diseases which originate in the stotnacn, ALWAKS HELPS. ALMOST ALWAYS HEMS. Paris and the Exposition Illustrated PARIS, tlio most beautiful city in the world, presents this Year the most magnificent Exposition of the marvels of the Nineteenth ami a forecast of the Twenty Century ever known. Millions of people will jour ney thousands of miles at vast ei petise to see the MATCHlKSS WONDERS of the Fair. Millions more can secure, nt trilling expense, Deautuui IfCi Photographic Reproductions taken by n corps of our own. artists, portraying all tbat is wbr'tn seeinir.l This Beautiful Art "t&Mjs' Will be published weeklyj ,'bBtfin'fj1rfg"JuM; 2d, in twenty consecutive -numbers of sixteen views eftcAi. -Th whole ill AJA-.A- - 1 VI Jl 1 ..... I vi 111 coDsiitute a larKe.auii.Deauiil J villoma nf aWaBIOWJi . W S 320 Magrtlffcewt Aft ToduCtlOnJ size 9 x 12taShlBSi','l,',', " 'in is. OU R TRItfofc-slY?rttl' feratoly1 youf name anld .addresrt, and' mail the same. to,, up with Ton ooutH e .(h vieekj, ami y,pr,name,;wiD.bi enter ed upon our oooks ana mo pans I will bo itiaiJoi) tu you iiroKipilv, an s(!0A.a8,.pyii?AiphstLlli,.,.,1,,1l,,1.') Sopd in,3fOur praersif,t,oncfl:tPini sure prompt M7itliMS JW, niuuljorea conspcutively. 'torn 1 to 2J," anil rffibficr'fteVy'sliriilii1 iHJIiortfe iiicb wvfek tll nniuberesirtt. Back lUimrjors can always ue aeaured. Stibsci'iher.s sending ue postal or- IIOI iui i,yv Will BUUUIW rlllt) CUllie (IliltHSLuAtiyperU!! simHlnvi OOUBMH upc iy mm-ouland erdcrione dollar bm . win ne given omTsei or tne piirtsms'. LAlivrTfj AlWEHtlUKnl 'Witt TstRI td liniliHttS..IHH;Ll. WKIXE .TO .I f luii HPTFClA I. TERMS FOR THEBKTAHT8. CANVASSERS Person tii,lrpW'..1 -r. griake.blg tnonei by. writing to ils f.r .-i -Mi termn foBgdsts. ' i- ' i- 'I ' MWI'hEiM'K ISSEKKPABXEMAV KF.!Ei:K at tiuj; or r ice of this i'ai'isk. PARIS EXPOSITlOf VIEW COMPANY 114 Flftrf Avienlje NeW Vbrk. .nil ii i iiiu in Cores all Coins ano Ooi. Abotcf low NCWLV FuONISHtO NEW fSAWAGtntro. W-.H-I-I-H-H-M-1-I-M-M-M-1-IH-44I MIFFLINBURG MARBLE WORKS. ni -ii, n..tf sJi-ea r.h.lAkce. 8T0NE8 & Cl-WETERT LOT ENCLOSURES. Old Stones 'Cleaned and Repair" J Pnces as Low as the Lowest 6atfsfacttomGuarant6ed. Ti A ' SaSttWTWtt idtaaOtll III ' i gi a. ihw.ibi wi ,. z Nil wwjimtvm. iH-iiHiiiiiiiirtiini-H ji.ii'i.ni.j.i iiiiiniiii J-HC'ol!'' !! i -Tri ncbalt . .Brobeii. Artf-J n inher - I iiHiaw-tT" 1 MAJOR'S! avnisn BT A TflM'JI . II . r'' I t'ir.iio ulilntbi-u I gmW Ciesu j y