“Bold by every the United States FORTING 8 a ae Yor here sa Freak point. y esca) any a shaft by keeping our: es well fortified with pure blood ‘and a proper}: hed frame, "Cy e Gazette. E * vil 27 GOOD & THOMPSON, BINGHAMTON, N, Y., ‘on application. : : : PHIAS PA. © of Feonurero's Horse | 10 ® world, with fres book, 3 'MPLOYMENT--Situations easily and speedily si of secured, you are out of employment or wis oa omkes chi onelose fifty centd and ad . {THE WES 0, | EMPLOYMENT BUREAU, 4 + HILLSBORO, O. We wait a wide sa ace Sonu: i aan or woman in every inthe U 3. 2 UCP aR Bri: ido without. Adapt. 8 ar Catalogue. 200 testl ewcomb, Daveriport, lows | 4 : . PE) CUREN 70 STAY CURED. wR We want the name and ad- VS oe Ca madsen U.S.and Canada. Tess, P.Herold Hayes, ).D., Bufllo, 1.1. HAY FEVER ASTHMA va a, Business Forme Shori-aand, dts, Le Clroulars teas 8t,; Buffalo, N. ¥ ee ET ww. a Ar, YD YE. Baitor, Buitaio, Py 1 Nursery St or Y 55} tucked: « | breeches. .'| veloped in nearly dress | |, They’ | fectly ha © GOLLECTED BY G, ¥. CHASE, Ha who robs a scholar robs the pub- God deliver me from the man of one book Pen and ink are wit’s plongh. No tyrant can take from you your knowledge. A fool may chance to put something in a wise man’s head. Seek till yon find and you will not lose your labor. To read and not understand is te pursue and not'to take. An idle brain is the devil's work shop. - Deeds are friits; words are bus leaves. ; A word before is worth two behind. Have wide ears and a short tongne. A diligent man can always find lei- sure, 8 lazy msn never. Many talk like philosophers and live likeSoola. die . Feather by feather the goose is : Each man at forty 8 physician, ; Lf you love life don’t waste time. If you would have a faithful servant, serve yourself. - Diligence is the mother of good luck. If every ome would mend one, all is either a fool or { would soon be mended. + If you would enjoy the fruit, pluck not the blossom. ; A'manloses his time who comes early to a bad bargain. The richer the cobbler the blacker his thumb. = a When the curate licks the knife it must be bad for the clerk, sd proselytes. : A crown will not cure the headache, nor a golden slipper the gout. vd Honey in the mouth is money in the purse. “| There is no fishing for trout in dry ‘The holidays of joy are the vigils of SOITOW. BEN Seek not for a good man’s pedigres. Lawyers’ houses are built on the heads of fools. En Men who fear no God, trembleat a gypsy’ curse. ; : old goes in at any gate except heaven's. : : He is a good orator who convinces himself. : If things were to be done twice all would be wise. 1 Oil and truth will get uppermost at ast. : x thistles. Pleasant Evenings at Home, : A fondness 6% music is a grédat bond of union in a family, and it may be de- children. Though they may not have fine voices, they can be taught to read music, to sing cor- rectly, and take great delight in glee and ciiorus singing, And when two or three musical instrnments are added “I to the home concert, there is fio fear but that the boys will be content to | stay at home of evenings, whatever the attractions out of doors. A degree | of facility with pencil and crayon, such as may be attained by everyone, is an important aid in many a parlor game; besides furnishing occupation for idle hands in hours when social intercourse is ont of the question.. But of all ac- complishments, the most jiseful, the most delightful, and the most cheaply acquired, is that of reading aloud. If the children are trained from very in- fancy fo take pleasure in being read to, and are taught to read aloud, as well, the family is never without its resource of pleasure. Pretty needle-work for the girls, and drawing or whittling for the boys, with ‘a book to be taken in est evening a season of delight. “OAx you tell me where I can find ‘Rienzi’s Address’?” asked a young lady of a clerk in a Brooklyn bookstore, “Have you looked in the directory?” he replied. THE man who lectures on the benefits of physical exercise takes the elevator when he might climb one flight of fi woe Bigs but bad —the old-fashioned pilt"' Bad to take, and bad to have taken. In- efficient, too. It’s only temporary relief you can get fromidt.. . Try something better. With Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets the benefit is lasting. They cleanse and regn- late the liver, stomach and bowels. Taken in time, they prevent trouble, In any case, they cureit.. And they cure it easily ; they're mild and gentle, but thorough and effective. = Theres no disturbance to the system, diet or i i One tiny, sugar- coated Pelet for ‘Bick and Bilious Headache, Consti- pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels are promptly | relieved and permanently Sted. re purely vegetable, per- Hy ANA 5 es and the easiest to. take—but besides | that, they're the catl ‘buy, for | give satisfacti returned, A profitable religion never yet want- If the brain sows not corn, it ‘plants turn, will make the longest and stormi- a laxative—three for a cathartic. | - AYoung King's Sguirt Gun... | The big-eyed little King of Spain is very fond of his garden, and some time ago one of the Queen's Austrian rela- tives, who was going to pay a visit at the Spanish court, bought a very nice squirt-gun in Vienna for the young mon- arch fo use in watering his plants. His Majesty found it perfectly charming for this purpose. It would send a stream of water to almost any height or dis- tance, and such a well-watered domain as the royal\ parterre had scarcely been known before. Irdeed, there was zlogether too much of it to confine it strictly to thé garden, and the King soon began to make ex- periments in other = directions. Fine paintings, rich draperies and various works of art were played upon at in- tervals, to the great satisfaction of his youthful Majesty; but soon he yearned for more exciting subjects. There is no great glory in attacking inanimate ob- jects that cannot move nor ‘‘answer back,” and Alphonso next cast specula- tive eyes on his noble playmates and the ladies who surrounded him. He also cast the contents of his squirt-gun in the same direction, and found himsef in pos- session of more enjoyment than his short life had yet afforded him. The criesand scuffles of his victims, though muffled in’ their veneration for their sovereign, added greatly to the zest of these per formances, and it was a long time before Queen Christina know of the in-door waterings which gave her small son such infinite pleasure. > x : . But Alphonso especially loved a shin- ing mark for his squirt-gun, and this led" fo his exposure and a tutor to keep him in better order. The Queen Regent gave a grand garden party, at which celeb: rities from far and near were present; and the King, singling out a big Gen: eral in a magnificent blue and gold uni form, put’ himself behind a shrub and shouted at him. The General approached the spot, and Alphonso held up a hand- ful of flowers to lure him on. The glit- tering uniform came nearer, and when close to the shrub behind which His Majesty lurked in ambush, the point of the Viennese squirt-gun appeared like a Serpent among the leaves, drenching and spotting the gorgeons suit which a mo- ment before had been so imposing. + The dripping General backed out of range as quickly as possible, and before the mi.chievous boy could reload and follow up his victory, his injured subject ‘had taken refuge under the protecting eye of Queen Christina. ‘Then the merry monarch tried to inveigle into his snare ao less a person than Monsignor Del Val, son of the Spanish ambassador at Vienna, but the young prelate had seen the Gen: eral’s plight, and was wary enough to keep several persons between him and Ais sovereign for the rest of the after ny "On the following day it whs decided at | the palace that a maseuline hand was seeded to. lie heayy on Alphonso, and the cautions Monsignor: Del Val was se lected” to train his Majesty. — Harper’ Young People. Si ts 2 | rm ES In x Magnificent Estate of a Millionaira, delphia Times, writing from Asheville, N. O., to his paper; among other things says: ‘One prominent elevation somes three miles from the river, is the center of the magnificent estate of George W, Vanderbilt, containing 7200 acres in one body and now employing from 600 to 1000 men in beautifying it. ~~ The land alone costs $250,000, and his improve: ments are so colossal in: conception as to find parallel only in the grandeur of the ancient Romans. : His house. is now ip course of erection on the western slope of the central elevation, with a bewitch- ing view of mountains, river, farms and city. It is 400 feet inlength, with solid walls of fifty feet in height from thé'deer park on the western front to the first floor, and the lawn tennis court alone, with its buge walls from thirty to fifty feet in height, would make a foundation for the grandest of the ancient temples. in the Old Worli, A private railroad some five miles in length is kept busy {transporting materials for the palace, for ‘bridges, for roads, etc., and when com- pleted the cost of the estate will reach $5,000,000. There will be 100 miles of. elegant roads traversing the Vanderbilt estate, of which thirty-eight will be | macadamized, aad scores of bridges, of every conceivable form of exquisite ar- chitecture, wall add to the beauty of the place. The building of the palace will be a five years’ task, evea with every branch of mechanism employed in its construction filled with workmen, This ‘will be the most magnificent estate on ‘the continent, surpassing the oldest and largest English estates in natural beauty, and with 1ts game preserves equaled by few in any country of the world.” A As. Two Great Tannels. .. The Khojak tunnel in India through which the first train passed en September 5, is stated to be about 2.38 miles long, twenty-three feet high, ansl thirty-two feet wide, with a horseshoe section. It is on the northwestern frontier in the Khwaja Ameran Mountains, and has ‘been about four years under construc. tion. The grade on the eastern side is one in 1000, aad on the western side one in forty, the latter being necessary for | drainage. The excavation was carried on from the portals and from two shafts, six headings in all. Compressed air machinery was used throughout the rock work. : The tunnel to be driven under the Thames River at Blackwell, England, .about four miles below London Bridge, will be about twenty-six feet in diameter and twelve hundred feet long. At the ‘deepest part of the river the crown of the tunnel, as now located, will bs but eight feet below the bed of the river. A : shield, much like that in use in the Hud- son River tunnel, will, it 1s reported, ba employed. Owing #0 the nature of the larly driven.’ The tunnel is intended | works year after Colonel A. K. McClure, of the Pala.’ : ground,’ about twelve hundred fect of | ‘approaches on each side must be simi | ‘deage Waxem's Political Proverbs. Some candidates don’t own them- selves. WimnNn can’t improve politicks by gittin’ in um. : . Raisin’ a family 1s good pattriotism. ‘The people has more confildents in a Statesman ef he takes his licker strate than ef he sweetens it. Diplomats air a tricky breed. : “Iain’t safe to sware to a stump speech.: So far the Amerikin Eagel ain't bit off more’n he could chaw. The Goddess of Liberty has got a perpetule lease on the western con- tinent, and pays rent to the Lord. Wheat at a dollar a bushel makes votes. Speakin’ of votes tan’t quality so much as quantity that counts. A man in politics has got to trim leetle now and then.—[Free Press. The Spirit Moved Her, Antoinette Sterling, the well- «nown contralto who used to sing in oratorio here and in England, and who has lately joined the Quakers, created an unusual sensation at a meeting at Legtonstone. After the meeting had sat for a long time with- out the spirit. moved anyone to speak, Mme. Sterling got up and sang. Singing is unheard of in Quakers’ meetings, but she sung “Rest in the Lord” without interruption. After- ward one of the elders approached her and said: . “Thee knowest, sister, that it is against the rules, but if the h Lord telleth thee to sing, thee must.” A pauses of Grand Rapids, Mich., who sued for $15,000 for breach of promise got & verdict of 6 cents and costs, a You Can’t Do It, You can’t sow shoe pegs and harvest a crop of wheat. To get wheat yon must sow wheat. Your dyspepsia will not get well of itself but requires & reliable and mless remedy, such a8 Dr. White’s Dandelion. It cures dyspepsia, billiousness, sick headache and other diseases of the stomach, liver, -kidneys and urinary organs. hi Are not caught in a cistern; yet how many men are spending their time day after day fshing ina rain-barrel. The man who works month in and month out on a few acres of ground, trying to make it produce enough to support himself and. Farol) + When common sense and his past experience ‘tell him it won't do it,is one of them. The man who year in a shop at $30 a his family expenses are $32, is another. end, you cannot buckle a seven-and-a-half foot saddle girth around an eight-toot horse—you cannot bring the ends together and keep them there without killing the animal, = If your income is not larg month, when te to B. F. » Va., and they will show you ho or a month toit; or if youn can ve them all of your time they will put yon na position to establish a paying business of our own where Jou can Lie i from $100 to 50 per month. Don’t wait to turn it over in your mind a few days. ** tination is the thief of time,”” and many a golden oppor- tunity slips from our grasp forever through the want.of promptness. Tite them at once. Crime is very rare among the women in Scotland. a Cs > i i BAAS AAAI The Glimpses of Royalty. 700 Large Pages. { “A Yard of ROSES,” JN 0 and for a Full 5 Nine Illustrated Serial Stories. Articles of Practical Advice. Railway Life and Adventure. Five Double Holiday Numbers. To New Subscribers who will cut out and send us this slip with name and address and $1,753 we will send The Companion Free to Jan,, 1892, GIVING; CHRISTMAS and NEW YEAR’S Double Holiday Numbers. We will also send a copy of a beautiful painting, entitled “A YARD OF ROSES.” Tte production has cost TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS. Send Check, Post-office Order, or Registercd Letter at our risk. IP RAPD TPT PRT PIII P Re resaid, and rm iL Day the sum 3 of $100 Jor Sach and Svery anno! curea oy the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. y FRAXE J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed :n m presence, this 6th day of December, A. Day 1888, ~~ A.W. GLEASON, { sma } Notary Public. | Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Rend for jestimoniale, ree . J. CHENEY & CoO., To. EF Sold by Druggists, 75c. 9 There are 74.000 Germans in London. The Lovell Safety. A NEW BICYCLE WHICH THE PUBLIC LIKES. While thousands within the last decade have enjoyed thie sport of cycling, the fact is nevertheless obvious that many thousa more have n deterred from enjoying itin consequence of the high prices demanded for a really good wheel. 1t remained for the John P. Lovell Arms Company of Boston to change this state of af- fairs, If was last year that the public first be- CAS AWAre there was a new low-priced safety bieycle on the market, a wheel strictly high grade, and eg in every particular to Any manufactured in America or Europe. previous to th a manufacturers had charged a very large price for a first-class wheel, the John P. Lovell Arms Company is theretore the first house that has ever offered the public such a wheel at & price that does not place it beyond the reach of the average person’s purse. The fempang that manufac tures this wheel (the Lovell Diamond Safety) is one of the oldest of ail the manufacturing and mercantile houses in New England, hav- ing been established in 1840. sides being now one of the leading bicycle firms in the United States, the Jobn P. Lovell Arms Company is and has been for years a well-known manufacturer and dealer in fire- arms and sporting goods of every description. On June 13 of last year, the firm celebrated its half-century anniversary, The founder of this enterpris ne house, Mr. John P. Lovell, although over 70 years of age, is still an im- portant and active member of this world~ famed house, * Both She pethed and zeslis when: yrup of Figsis taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, Roc gentlyyet promptly on the Kidneys, iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and Severs and wes habitual constipation. of Figs is the only remedy of Ys Bind fish ro- duced, pleasing to the taste pl ac ceptable to the stomach, mpt in i action and trul heue ial in its ects, prepared only from the most healthy and Sgress le substances, its many excellent qualities com- mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c: and 1 Potties by all leading drug- gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will cure it promptly for any one whe wishes to try it. Do not accept Not a Nostrum. e's Certain Croup Cure, the tested n of an eminent physician in reg- ing an For itive, 5 ft, | or iled 0} adress 4: P. Hoxsie Buttude 3b" FITS stopped free by DR. KLINR'S GREAT Nusve RECTORER, No'fita after first daysuse. velous cares. and $2 trial Dr. Kline, 91 Arch St..-P] Pa Dr. Hoxs oe r stan sive. “Gore of 60 cts. 4 SAN FRANCISCO, CAL KY. SEW YORK. N.%- PNUA4S ‘9g LAwreNcE, KaANs., Aug. 9, 1888, \N George Patterson fell from a second-story M\ window, striking a fence. I found him using ST.JACOBS OIL. He used it freely all over his bruises. I saw him next morning at work. All the blue spots rapidly disappeared, leaving neither pain, _ scar nor swelling. C. K. NE NN, M.D. 8 == 'S CREAN BALM-Cleanses the NasalfRE FELYS SREA Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Restores Taste and Smell, and Cures 1.2 ves Relief at once for Cold in Head.) 2 Vostrils, ———1It ia: Qude beorbed. 2 500. Eats or by mail: BLY Brod. Sowa n St, N.Y. AR Sy a 3 ay nm y Gs 4 3 4 CRS A A A CA UC Ce Et CI ECAC, Brilliant Contributors. : Articles have been written expressly for the coming volume by a host of eminent men and women, among whom are The Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone. — Count Ferdinand de Lesseps. — Andrew Carnegie. — Cyrus W. Field. : The Marquis of Lorne. — Justin McCarthy, M.P. — Sir Lyon Playfair. — Frank R. Stockton. Henry Clews. — Vasili. Verestchagin. — W. Clark Russell, — The Earl of Meath. — Dr. Lyman Abbott: Camilla Urso. — Mrs. Henry M. Stanley, and One Hundred Others. Volume for 1892 will Contain 100 Stories of Adventure. The Best Short Stories. Sketches of Travel. flints on Self-Education. Popular Science Articles: Household Articles. . Charming Children’s Page. Natural History Papers. This Sip and 1.18. 2 a ss co wr i : rere reali IIT PPI l DIT FFD DT I PP FPR PT DE Ilustrated Weekly Supplements. FREE TO JAN. [, 1892. Year from that Date. This offer includes the THANK S- Address, THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, Boston, Mass. “August Flower” Perhaps you do not believe these statements concerning Green’s Au- gust Flower.. Well, we can’t make you. We can’t force conviction in- : to your head or med- icine into your throat. We don't want to. The money is yours, and the misery is yours; and until you are willing to believe, and spend the one for the relief of the other, they will stay so. John H. Foster, 1122 Brown Street,’ Philadelphia, says: '** My wife is a little Scotch woman, thirty years of age and.of a naturally delicate disposition. For five or six years past she has been: suffering Hire from Dyspepsia. She became so bad at last that she could not sit down to a meal but . she had to vomit it as soon as she had eaten it. Two bottles of your August Flower have cured her, after many doctors failed. | She can now eat anything, and enjoy it;and as for Dyspepsia, she does not know that she ever had it.” @ 0000000000 on SMALLEST PILL 223% ® Doubting Thomas. Vomit Every Meal. SORE NOSE OR COLD IN THE HEAD B RY HALL’S I= stat CATARRH REMEDY. IMMEDIATE RELIEF — — POSITIVE CURE or money § refunded. Always specify " ERIE "—Take no other. LEASANT,; HARMLESS, CONVENIENT. BO Cents by Mall or at Druggists. ' Free Sample on application to E. P. HALL, 3e~ ERIE, PA."&1 PAPER CUTTERS! 2 IF THIS MEETS THE EYE OF ANY Printer, Bookbinder, Lithographer, Paper Maker or Paper Box Maker, | WHO MAY BE IN WANT OF A FIRST-CLASS PAPER CUTTER, HE WOULD SAVE MONEY BY WRITING TO THE HOWARD IRON WORKS, BUFFALO, N. Y., ; FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE AND PRICES. TRADE MARK "The Owiainar AND Owty PISOS CURE FOR {¥ ¥ Oonsumptives and people § who have wesk lungs or Asth- ma, should nse Piso’s Cure for Consumption. It has cared homsands. (thas not injur . 1b is not bad to take. It isthe best cough syrup. |. Boid everywhera. 88c. CONSUMPTION, The Change of Life, The sole aim of women nearing thisx critical period should be to keep well,. Lydia E. Pinkham’s ' Vegetable on Compound i arto, ths condition. | down Reeling, Weak eu nt 0 The Wout, nf and all Organic: yi and is in to ~‘Dissolves Ei ES’ SGA z | NE sey ALE | = oFULLY WARRANTED = BTon § $ Oh has