° 1g writes a e. loving hem in Ve may e¢ looked: the lasg = = et we affection, > of ot p might Lieart of bury the it let the hallowed . ut. Leg vith your vmething 5 wrote; ing baels be inter- it time to will be niscarry, 1as often me letter the pers DISTINCT it religion the other ve looked liar, hav- exercises charities ngs of the arded as 0 right to 0 invited uest, and jovereign. | orldly en~ ings apart vhich god- vhich itis nD eXpress- 3 been dis~ d other as come it is so, ia S a gea- lities con- differenti The same measure is 1tle treat any other business,’’ . in many itors than r creed, or f respect- igion and mo Christ rocks are n schemes reins has e. Ever ffort that y_ insured. We min- hers, and too much ing of re- Jd we can kernel of v duty is il right n, and ome when er worried stened its vhen I was 18 shower ife has its ite; but it eaven will thousands tians who re in the along of 16 Moodys. 0 be rath. e sword’s . thrown out of employment, ~ to ; Disasters, Accidents and Fatalities. ton, Miss. a destructive hail storm | d, causing incalculable damage. The nes were as large as teacups, and re- Lon the ground for an hour. Re- The d ¢orn crops are damaged ts the ent. £75 per cent., and fruit has been | ly destroyed. (Nathan John, a far- ‘killed by hailstones while plowing ing Charles Madison, of | aged 23, was suddenly struck- d Rl xplesion at King’s powder mill, near nati, killed Archie Grubbs and badly ded = others. “The factory is a At Cleburne, Tex.; a cyclone demolished forty-two houses, Dr. Prescott and his wife were crushed by their falling house and fatallyinjured. Several-other persons were injured. Crops of all - kinds ‘are : badly damaged. : A father, mother and two childrén nam- ed Shaler, near Forest City, Mo., drowned in a pond. First a boy fell from a foot. bridge into the water, andthe other mem- bers of the family, one after another, leaped in in a vain attempt at rescue. ooo George Lear and James Patterson were - striiek at New Florence, Pas by an. express:| train and, killed. «!Théy were employed on a gravel train and both resided at New Florence. je. : Three negro men and a woman have been killed by lighthing on a plantation near Capforyemn.o, gu gn #0 fy 5 At a) n, City, Col, a guard at th peni- edly x discharged his rifle, | ly gvounding John Astbury, a guard and wounding two more guards and a con- Clinton S. Strong, of (Cleveland, member of the junior class of Cornell University, was drowned while’ bathing at’ Ithaca, N, Y. The body was recovered. An electric car jumped the track at Balti- more, turning over and throwing 20 passen- gers out. Christopher Beuver was killed and several others seriously injured. ta Fires At Niagara Falls, N. Y., Mackl em & Slat- er’s malt house, with 50,000 bushels of malt, were burned. Four firemen, Herman Hertel, i Louis Frommert, Joseph Percy and James Jacoby, who were on one of the high roofs, were precipitated into the ruins by the walls falling. Hertel fell 50 feet. Other firemen rushed to the rescue and dragged Hertel and ommert out. They were unconscious. Percy and Jacoby had almost a miraculous escape. 1tis feared Hertel will die. Loss on the building, over $30,000, and on the bar- Tey and malt, $50,000; insurance, $66,000. Powers opera Loss, $30,000; houes was gutted by fire. fully insured. A$ Roekport, Mos, 16 business buildings. Loss, $75,000. At Denver, Col., the ‘People's Theater, owned by ex-Senator Tabor. Loss, $30,000; insurance, $55,000. At Birmingham, Ala., a number of busi- ness houses, dwellings, a hotel and a furni- ture factory, at Cullmanthe, a well-known Alabama German colony. Loss, $60,000; partly insured. "The entire plant of the Crescent paper mills, Hartford City, Ind., one of the largest in Indiana, was destroyed iby fire. Loss, $88,000; insurance, £56,000. : ‘ Convention News Tlie Maine Democratic State Convention The Mississippi Democratic State Con- vention met in Jackson. Notwithstanding that the delegates selected to the Chicago Convention go uninstructed, the convention was clearly Cleveland. The platform in- forses Cleveland, but does not instruct. The Maryland Democratic State Conven- tion met at Baltimore and named delegates io the National Convention. The delegates are uninstrocted, but will vote as a unit. The big fight in the Texas Democratic Sonvention took place at Fort Worth, after a strong free silver plank had been adopted. The delegates are instructed toact as they Idem. Wise and are not shackled by instruc- sions. The delegates stand 16 for Cleveland to 14 for Hill. } The Alabama Democratic convention Saturday elected Cleveland delegates to the Chicago convention. Capitak Labor dnd Industristh ; S : 5 I arondess, the leader of the eloals nion, New vy conviet, : yriexorting money fas : hg a hah a fireg man, - Gov + wer having fsstied higpardon. Si About 70 Salt Lake City plumbers struck yesterday. They ask an increase of pay from $4 to $5. Fast Liverpool, 0. potteries are about closing up on account of growing dullness of trade, A large number of persons will be Five hundred striking lumber shovers at Tonanwanda, N. ¥., drove off the non- union men and took possession of the docks and barges. The police fired blank cart- ridges at the strikers, but the ldter returned the fire with ballicartridges, shooting two.of the officers, one of them fatally. A non- union man was almost stoned to death. A Sheriff's posse finally arrested ten of the strikers leaders, The feeling against them. a8 50 strong that they had tobe removed . Guernsey Osborne, for 20 years trusted 3 ‘Hermann (Rep,) 2,306. About one half of ‘the vote of the State has been counted. 3 she holds. = “V'ston, Beaumont Hartland and Spendthrift a8 fallen a victim ta smallpox. The Oriental bank in Eondon has failed for £9,000,000.% The Mauritius cyclone’caus. 4 ed the wreck. | od At Creede, Col; Bob Ford, the slayer o Jesse James, was shot and instantly killed by Deputy Sheriff Kelly in a dance hall. Andrew Whiteley, a white nian, charged with wife-murderer, was taken from the Albemarle jail, near Charlotte, N. C., and hanged. 5 ] Dr. Bennett shot and killed a"negro at Greenville, 8. C. They had a quarrel at the doctor's house. Fi Charles McCarthy was mupdered at Yard- ley, Pa., by Isaac Robinson, colored. . = At Marquette, Mich., a mine captain and another man. were killed in a riot of striking miners, : Walter Nelson was sentenced at Albany, N. Y., to be executed at Clinton prison, by electricity, during the Week beginning July 25. Nelson is 27 years of agé; and was con- victed of murdering his wife, 20 years of age, by cutting Ber throat with a razor, on Saturday night; December 23. cashier of H. D. A. Morison & Son, dry- goods dealers in New York City, was arrested on a charge of having rgbbed the firm of up- ‘of $10,000 through a system of false entries. Osborne admitted that he had stolen at least $12,000.4 : : Political. : Incomplete returns from six Oregon’ coun- ties ‘gut of 15 in the Second Congressional district give Ellis (Rep.) 2,746 plurality. In the first district, 8 counties out of 16 give + Moore (Rep.) for Supreme Judge, has 3,275 plurality from 16 counties out of 31. Webser (Rep). for Attorney General, has 1,5 majority. The Republicans control the Legislature by 20 majority. = The éanvas roof wis put on the Wigwam in which the National Democratic Conven- tion is to be held. Sergeant at Arms Bright ‘says that everything will be in readiness by the close of the week. : Mortuary. “The Louisiana Legislature will atteraptto prevent the spread of leprosy by providing for the isolation of affected persons. There are about 250 lepers in the State. : . ‘Fears of a small-pox epidemic are disturh- ing the Illinois health authorities..; The New York health officers = have dis- covered three more cases of smallpox. The victims were at onze removed to North Brothers Island. The Weather. Near Doniphan, Neb., a terrific hail storm destroyed all fruits and growing crops in ifs track and breaking every window in town that was exposed to the fury of the storm. Hail fell as large as hens’ eggs, banked up in some places to a depth of two feet. Friday was the hottest day of the season in Kansas City—98° in the shade. Four cases of sunstroke. The thermometer at Pittsburg, Pa., went up to about 93 degrees pn Sunday. x Personal. Sa Ex-Secretary Blaine has a letterto a New York morning’ paper, saying: “Will you please state in your columns that it is utter- ly false that ¥ or any one for me, orinmy name, ever paid, or offered to pay, Marie Nevins Blaine or any one for her one cent, or any other sum, for alleged letters that Mart News ON fty-seven thoroughbreds from the King- studs were sold at the Tattersalls, New York. The highest prices paid were $4,500 for bay colt by Longfellow. Mariganita, and $5,700 for a bay filly by Longfellow, Imp. Encore. Total sales, $40,750. Average per sale, $349. Washington News, : Blaine’s last official act was to sign a trea: ty with British Minister Pauncefote for the recovery of deserting merchant seamen. President Harrison was kept busy Satur day receiving calls of congratulation. Tele- grams of congratulation continued to pour in upon him all day. : Legislative. The Kentucky House has passeg the bill prohibiting the sale of liquor on election ays. Heretofore there has never been a saloon closed on any day in the week, not sxcepting Sunday. PheNew Jersey ballot reform been declared constitutional, % ‘Sanftary. © Seven cases of smallpox ‘have been prought into Danbury, Ia., from Mexico. ' Congressional Nominations. The Democrats of the Seventh Missouri Congressional District renominated John T. Heard for Congress by acclamation. Miscellaneous. John D. Rockefeller has presented Shurt- leff College, of Upper Altoona, Ill, with an aducational endowment of $10,000. \ Crops, Welcome showers have just broken a pro- tracted drouth at Madras, India. eee eet BEYOND OUR BORDERS, At Patchinski, Russia, threehundred and ten houses were burned. The population of the town is 7,000. ‘Great destitution pre- vails. : The Berlin Tageblatt confirms the recent rumors of the déath in the interior of Afri- caof Emin Pashia. Ifiti8true that Emin is dead, the natural supposition is that he & The drouth in Cuba continues. The eruption of Mt. Vesuvius continues, At about the middle of the ‘Atrio Del Caval- lo, the deep sickle-shaped valley which separates Monte Somna from Vesuvius proper, a small cone has appeared from which two streams of lava are flowing. A shower of small stones and scoriae are being ejected from this cone, above which dense clouds are hovering. Stones are also being ejected from the principal crater, This ‘phenomena is accompanied by prolonged ‘and ominous subterrafiean rumbling, The director of the Meteorological Observatory thinks that the eruptiorfs will cease at the ‘next full moon. : a : /Beventeen bandits who were captured pea: 40 rt jail under guard. Jaw’ has £ THE STRICKEN CITIES. Latest News From Oi] City and Titus- ville, Pa. All Bodies Recovered. Om City, Pa., June 13—The list of dead is completed. The last body identified, that | of William White, found at Emlenton, was the last of the list missing. Frank Yeager, of Sivélyville, who was rescuing people by means of a boat when the flames came, lost his reason to-day through the terrible strain upon his mind. = Other reports of a like ‘nature may be expected at any time, as a great many persons are still prostrated from fright.” ; TrrusvinLe, PA., June 13.—Memorial ser- vices were held in all the churches Sunday and were largely attended. It is estimated that 10,000 peopie were in the city from the neighboring towns. The recovery of Bert Osmer on Saturday morning brings the number of dead up to 69. Work in the tains were suspended Sunday to give the exhausted laborers an oppor tunity for rest. A reporter Saturday went down Oil Creek from Titusville to Oil City in a boat, searching for bodies. The bushes along both banks are laden with every description clothing and furniture. The high water mark reaches in some places halt way fo the tops of tall trees, whose roots are on the bank of the stream. The old Drake well, a mile below this city, is washed away. Twenty-five other derricks along the banks just below the Drake well are entirely oblit- erated. Two iron tanks, of 800 barrels ca- pacity, have lodged in the lower branches of a big oak, Several houses from Titusville are stranded in the channel a distance of five miles from the city. a From Titusville to Pioneer the debris is thickest, Re Five large iron tanks which were swept from Titusville, are lodged at various inter- vals as far as Pioneer. The most remarka- ble sight is the immense amount of debris, Sh, men’s, women’s and children’s wearing apparel, furniture of all kinds and cooking utensils, which hang upon the Pees: and the willow branches all along the creek. . A small dwelling carried from Titusville stands 30 feet inland, surrounded by brush and trees and wedged between two gigantic oaks upside down. Only three bridges of the 25 which formerly spanned Oil creek be- tween this point and Oil City remain iotact. The others are either totally or partially wrecked. No bodies were found. A notable difference appears in the. char- acter of the disasters which have overtaken Oil City and Titusville. Here the elements of fire and water together wrought the aw- ful destruction of life and property. At Oil City the flood caused but a small portion of the loss, and fire did the rest. i ei Havoc Wrought by Cuban Floods. Maranzas, Cusa, June 13.—The flood in this region is, rapidly subsiding, and the damage done is now everywhere apparent. The furniture of some 325 flooded dwellings has been either carried away by the waters or ruined; crops have been destroyed, and about 450 head of cattle have been drowned. The market place is partially ruined, and it stated that over 600,000 bags of sugar have been lost. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Epwiy Boorn’s fortune is estimated at £300,000. : Ex-QUEEN IsABrELLA of Spain 1s the mosé corpulent royal personage in Europe. PROFESSOR CHILD, of’ Harvard, is the foremost American authority on the Eng: lish janguage. a PRINCE GEORGE of Wales wears a beard to please his mother, of whom he is votedly fond. . . ‘ . Sir HENRY PONSONBY, Queen Victoria's Private Secretary, gets $10,U0) a year and house rent free. t GENERAL Mirnms thinks the great relay great achievement. JOSEPH MARTIN, the French explorer, whose field of operations has ‘been Central Asia, is dead at Khokand. ie 3 WHENEVER Gladstone goes to Court he attires himself in the uniform of an elder brother of the Trinity house. CouMMODORE HENRY BRUCE, of Massachu- setts, who entered tae United States Navy in 1816, has been “unemployed” for fifty-five years, : Taz late Dr. Amelia B. Edwards be- queated her valuable library to Oxford Uni- versity, at the same time endowing a chair of Egyptology. THE Baroness Burdett-Coutts, although eighty years old, declares her intention of coming to the World's Fair at the head of the Philanthropic section. ComMoporr WiLniaM P. McCANN, who has recently been retired from active ser- vice, procured his midshipman’s warrant by his personal intercession with President Zachary Taylor. Dr, T. V. McGirncuppy, formerly Indian agent at Pine Ridge, the man who broke up the Sioux sun dance habit as hostile to the spirit of civilization, is now a banker at pid City, South Dakota. i FREDERICK L., AMES is » fo be the richest man in New England, a.d to aspire to be the greatest landlord in Boston, hold- ing in that city some such position business. wise as the Astors in New York. “Mipp¥” MORGAN, known all over the country as an authority on live stock, about which she had written for the newspapers for more than twenty-three years, died of dropsy in 8t. Francis's Hospital, Jersey City, N. J. GENERAL ALFRED PLEASANTON, hero of ‘both the Mexican and the Civil wars, is now living in peculiar seclusion in Washington. He has a snug little apartment in a hotel at the capital, and for two years has not been seen, it is said, by over.a dozen persons. NEWSY GLEANINGS, CHOLERA ig raging in Persia. THERE is a water famine in Maine, *PHE maple sugar counties in Ohio are in: creasing. BAD harvests are reported in many Rus- sian provinces. : Tre Mississippi is. changing its course near Memphis, ly § FRUIT and other crops in Spain have been ruined by hailstorms, THERE is a decided falling off in' the cot- ton acreage in South Carolina. THE new British coinage will bear the Queen’s head without her crown. A COMPANY has been formed for the busl- ness of insuring burgiar-proof sates. MAPLE sugar makers must file their bonds for next year’s bounty before July 1. WITHIN the past few weeks seals hava been caught off the Connecticut coast. Tar Texas crop report shows an increase in corn and a decrease inthe cotton acregge. PROTESTANT natives in Africa are waging a war of extermination on “atholic mis- sionaries. Suvccr, the fasting man, aas becoras io- sane. He has been committed to an gsyium in Engiand. : Too much silver in Havana has causad a great depreciation in tas waite msatal throughout Cuba, Tae monument erected by the people of New Orleans, to the memory of the late Su- _perintendent of Police, David C. Hennesay, who was a. db assassinated by the Mafia in Ogzto- ‘ since, af oda tew dao bicycle run from Chicago to New York a. A Hose as a Teiephone Line, A couple of bright young men of Cincinnati have invented and pat- ented an electrical device whereby the pipemen of a fire engine com- pany may be able to telegraph from the nozzle end of a line of hose to the engineer. By a code of signals given on a small electric bell the pipemen ran notify the engineer when to start the stream and when to close down. ft like manner a distress call may be riven to show that the men in a »uailding are in danger from suffoca- ion or other cause.—New Orieans imes-Democrat. GOLD IN GEORGIA. Where It isto be Found in Paying Quan- i tities. A RICH DEPOSIT DISCOVERED NEAR DAHLO- NEGA, GA.—HOW THE GOLD IS SECURED. Great excitement prevails in the gold belt of North Georgia, and mineral property is rapidly being ‘‘gobbled” up by capitalists and mining men from the North and West. The whole gold belt, and particularly that immediately about Dahlonega, promises this year to be the scene of gigantic energy in mining operations, the like of which has not been witnessed since the early days in Cali- fornia. ’ This tremendous revival of an industry which has been prosecuted in a listless sort of way for upwards of fifty years in this field, is occasioned by the result of certain experiments recently completed on a large scale, in the concentration and subse- uent reduction by - chlorination, of the metailic particles contained in neerly all of the ores of this camp, These ex- periments have demonstrated that the old processes in vogue saved only a small par- centage of the actual value of the ores, and that by the introduction of methods long practiced in the west, but,strangely enough, never before tried here, many mines before regarded as of little value, can be worked at enormousprofits. The ores are all more or less suphuretic, and increass in sulphur .as well as gold as depth is attained. Some of the richest ore the writer has ever seen came from water level and below, but con- tained so much sulphur that the stamp mill process alone would not save the gold from it.The new processes introduced do this most effectively and have the virtues of being in- expensive and readily applicable to the mills now in use. At a point about three miles from Dahlonega, on the Calhoun Belt, one of the five great gold-bearing belts of Lumpkin County, an old mine has been re- opened and some marvelously rich deposits of gold quartz and gravel were discovered. One small spot is reported to have yielded $4000 in three days’ work of two men, while the whole product of the mine, under crude operations, entirely without machinery, is estimated at upward of $60,000. The mine covers one whole land lot of 40 acres, and the gold belt, over 100 feet wide, extends entirely through the lot. The work has, so far, mainly been done on about two acres, and the rest of the lot has only been prospected sufficiently to show the gold veins continuing all the way across. ne shaft has been sunk about 60 feet on an in- cline in the belt, and the ore taken from it yielded an average of £6 per bushel, or at the rate of about $120 per ton in free gold. A party of Atlanta gentlemen aye purchased tkis property, lot 523—15th Dis- trict, 1st Section Lumpkin County, and named it the Bertha C. Mine. A corpora- tion has been organizzd to work this mine, writes: “I d headache.” All druggists, fifty cents. In Town or Country, Every family should have a bottle of Dr. Hox- sie’s Certain Croup Cure. It is the only remedy known that will inev2nt Membraiieou: Or nv, upon the air passages of the throat, it keeps them open and prevents Pneumonia. No opium. Sold by prominent drug ists. _50c. Manufactured by A. P. Hoxs.e, Buifalo, N. Y. Grecisnwcmen had longer feet than the average man has now. Wm Snags Smith, Providence, R. L, radycrotine always cures If-afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp- son’s Eye-water. Druggistssell at 25c per bottle. chartered by the State of Georgia, as the Atlanta Gold * Mining Company, with a capital stock of §100,000, divided into shares of $10 each, fully paid up and non-assessable, The company proposes to put in reduction works of the most approved machinery to save the full assay value of the ores and to conduct the mine and mill upon strict. ‘business principles. $50,000 of the capital stock has been placed in the treasury of the company for the pur- pose of.carrying out, these plans and a por- tion of the same is now offered for sale, in sume to suit purchasers at 50 per cent. of its par value, or five dollars per share, . ‘the Southern Banking and Trust Com- pany, one of the strongest financial institu- ticns in the South, is tae depository of the company, and issues its stock. All orders for shares should be addressed to The South- ern Banking and Trast Co., Atlanta, Ga. A Lebanon county (Pa.) farmer has a calf weeks old thatis only 14 inches high and weighs but 35 pounds. Deafness Can’t be Cured By local applications, as they ¢annot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu- tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in- flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in- f ed you have a rumbling sound or imper- fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the i mation can b2 taken out and this tube re- stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in- flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. ‘We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that we cannot cure by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. for circylars, free. J. CHENEY & Co0., Toledo, Os Sold by Druggists. THe. 2 has given birth ‘to five calves within 18 months. rete ee eet. ¥ To Cleanse the System Effectually yet gently, when costive or bil- ious, or when the blood is impure or sluggish, to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken the kidneys ani liver to a healthy activity, without irritating or weakening them, to dispel headaches, cold or te vers, use Syrup of Figs. There are about 525 species of spiders at present known in the British Isles. Valuable Information. Sample copy of the Southwest Land and In- vestment Journal, a carefully edited and thor- oughly reliable monthly Journal, published in the interest of the Southwest, and especially of Texas, will be mailed free of charge, upon ap- plication to E. B. Parker, No. 509 Chestnut St., St. Louis, Mo. The paper contains much valu- able information to those contemplating visit- ing or settling in the Southwest; also informa- tion concerning R¥DUCED RATES to and from this territory. Write and obtain a copys Green vegetables will refain their color, it is said, if cooked in an uncovered vessel. The Proper Thing to Do. The Cincinnati Enquirer will not follow the ‘usual custom of giving a reduced price of sub- _scription for a campaign term, It proposes to give an additional amount of political news of a quality that is instructive and beneficial to the reader regardless of partisan prejudice, The additional cost of same will exceed any loss consequent on a’ cheaper rate; and prove more advantageous to the reader and general puplic. ; * BEECHAM'S PILLS are a painlessand effectual remedy for all bilious disorders. 2b cents a box. ¥or sale by all druggists, : ‘Thousands Of dollars I spent trying to find a cure for Salt Rheum, which I had 13 R years. Physiciand said P they never saw so severe } a case. My legs, back and L" arms were covered by the Mr. 8. G. Derry. hi the the sores soon healed, the'scales fell off, I was soon able to give up ban and crutches,and a happy man [ was.” 8, There is a heifer at English, Ind., which ee | | 7 * = tbopemcaT Set right —all the proper functions of wo- manhood. =~ Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the remedy. It regulates and promotes their ac- tion, and removes the obstruc- tions and suppressions which cause trouble and misery. At the two critical periods in a woman’s life— the change from girlhood to woman- hood, and, later, the “change of life” —it is a perfectly safe and an es- pecially valuable remedial agent, that can produce only good results. It’s a powerful, invigorating tonic, and a soothing and strengthening nervine; a legitimate medicine— purely vegetable, perfectly harm- less—and carefully adapted, by an experienced physician, to woman’s delicate needs. For all the derangements, irregu- larities, and weaknesses peculiar to the sex, the « Favorite Prescription” is a remedy so certain that it can be guaranteed. If it doesn’t give satis- faction in every case, the money is returned. No other medicine for women is sold in this way. No other medicine can be. Should Have Xt in The IXIouse. Dropped on Sugar, Children Love to take JORNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT for Croup, Colds, re Throat, Tonsilitis, Colic, Cramps and Pains, Re- lieves all Summer Complaints, Cuts and Bruises like magic. Sold everywhere. Price 85c. by mail; 6 bottles Express paid, 82. 1. 8. JOHNSON & CO., BOSTON, Mass, DR KILMERS Kidney, Liverand Bladder Cure. Rheumatism, Lumbago, pain in joints or back, brick dustin urine, frequent calls, irritation, inflamation, gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder, o 4 © 1 Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, gout, billious-headache, SWAMP~-ROQOT cures kidney difficulticg, La Grippe, urinary trouble, bright’s disease. Impure Blood, Serofula, malaria, gen’l weakness or debility. Guarantee— Use contents of One Bottle, if not ben Druggists will refund to you she price At Druggists, 50¢. Size, $1.00 Size, “Invalids’ Guide to Health”free—Consultation free, DR. KiLMER & Co.. BINGHAMTON. N. Y. “August Flower” “One of my neighbors, Mr. John Gilbert, has been sick for a long time. All thought him pastrecovery. He was horribly emaciated from the inaction of his liver and kidneys. It is difficult to describe his appear- ance and the miserable state of his health at that time. Help from any source seemed impossible. He tried your August Flower and the effect upon him wasmagical. It restored him to perfect health to the great astonishment of his family and friends.” John Quibell, Holt, Ont.® A torpid liver is the source of dyspep- & sia, sick headache, constipation, piles, e bilious fever, chills and jaundice. *Tuit’s Tiny Pills $ a have a specific effect on the liver, re- storing it to healthy action. 25¢ ts. 000006 To take orders, No delivering or cols lecting, Steady work. Good pay every week, Fast relling specialties. Samples iree. GLEN BROS., Rochester, N, Y HELLO! O. D. Green, Syracuse, N. ¥., wants HUSTLERS to fell NURSERY 700K. - Xow Jv - {Blood 2- —ET—, 1 had a malignant breaking out on my l below the knee, and wascuted sound and 1 with two and a half bottles o! Paliadd Other blood medicines had failed § wh RIOR me any good. WiLL C. BEATY, todo TE Yorkville, 5.C S| Nau Se me ‘T'was troubled from childhood with an ag- gravated case of Tetter, and three bottles of <3 cured me permanently. . \S. Lf ho : WALLACE MANN, , Mannville, I. To. Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Swirr SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. PNU24 92 Want to learn all about a : Horse? How to Pick Outa A ™\ Good One? Know imperfec- 2) = tions and so Guard against Fraud ? Detect Disease and Effect'a Cure when same is possible? Tell the age by i the Teeth ? What to call the Different Parts of the! Animal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly ¢ Allthis | and other Valuable Information can be obtained by | reading our 100-PAGE ILLUSTRATED! HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, post- pald; on receipt of only 25 cents in stamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., New York City | 0 NOT BE D a 0,N Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain §! the hands, injure the iron, and burn off. : The Rising Sun_Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor- jess, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. : OTHERS? To Young Mothers =e WEST gon’ 4 . B 8 Makes Child: Birth Easy. hortens Labor, - Lessens Pain, ; Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. Book to ““ Mothers’? mailed FREE. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA, GA. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Sie Henry Tuoxrsox, the most noted physician of Eng- land, says that more than half of all diseases come from errors in diet. : Send: for Free Sample of | Garfield Tea to 319, West 45th Street, New York City. | comes | ARFIELD TEA 55 a of bad eating;cures Sick Headache; restoresComplexion;curesConstipation. ar + Ovora! C000 0008 BETTER DEAD A Se Dutcher’s Fly Killer is certain death. Flies are at- tracted to it and killed at once. They do not live to get away. Use it freely, destroy their eggs and pre- ventreproduction. Always ask for Dutcher's and get best FRED RED'’K DUTCHER DRUG CO., ST. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers