5 fle coal of- sW opens was in- emature hich he ner, was: ring No. y. He Springs in. sum- is Bein- . Eightly y sharp- son has being a alleged, vas pros-’ ton, neaxy 3 tramp f Frank weter, of and died nd dead r Stone- ring the iting ip les, outs ruins by $s unable ympanies and - the The los n Killed 13 served pick that sible for y inflict nn. work ugh went after ha’ ort time. n caused , into the p Caving ~This af e wall in ity glass ind badly f the wall pavy dirg ey. Mer ‘+ All were severely burned. | ‘was eaten off and the screams uttered wera , heartrendering.. Two of the men tore off Condition. Business Generally Reported in Good Eve o {H. ©. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of trade Crop reports srenotquiteup to expec: tations, and are construed as indicating a deficient supply of corn and oats, while any 0 deficiency in wheat and cotton will than met by surplus stocks. Bat have advanced quite sharply and ex- domestic products fall below last The great industries are ali doing ably well excepting the iron manu- on output August 1st was 155.136 ekly, against 169,151 July 1st, and 76 a year ago, but the stocks unsold eless increased 16,000 tons during the of July, and on the first of Augnst ex- a million tons. Southern pigiron is | Her “mean load water line, 257 feet; extreme breadth, By feet: depth of hold to under side ‘spar dec n sale, and some quotations are ever. But the resumption of lure by Western iron works, which | their controversies with the men, on being crowded with orders. in opera : But steal rails are dull as ever and while 00,000 tons have been sold for tne us far, the orders on hand will A carry eastern mills beyond Septem- “ber 15. Sopper is weak at 11§c and lead at dc but speculation advanced tin to 21.15¢c { ressed it fo 20.45. There is no worth mentioning for coal, but in ly. Boot and shoe factories are still sed to the utmost. ; fhe particular feature of the week has the rise in breadstuffs, 2c in corn and oats, ‘while wheat declined ic with . ,000,000 bushels. Western were 4,930,000 bushels in four days, fantie exports 2,309,000 bushels. Pork bc per barrel, but lard declined il rose 5c and coffee ic, but cotton fell , though exports are larger than a year 0, as reports grow more favorable. It C not be forgotten that if exports of ets, which for two weeks have been7.5 cent lower at New York than last year, ould be restricted by advances in price, the | “outflow of gold would be likely to continue and before long to affect speculative markets. ¥mports continue extraordinarily large, at New York for five weeks 30 per cent greater than last year, and such ‘a movement would ensure further gold exports unless other _ gonditions change. Bos oston reports money stronger with in- creased demand. Trade in dry goods is ren. dered larger than usual by liberal western orders, particularly in women’s dress goods. At Cincinnati manufacturers of women's es report a very prosperous season with le 10 per cent. greater than last year, and ev.land business is fairly active in all ipal lines. Chicago reports sales great- ‘er than a year ago, and receipts of hides, oats and barley shows some increase of flour and cured meats 50 per cent; and of lard a ree fold increase, while some decrease ap- rs in ‘wool. cattle and rye, a third in wheat and corn and 50 per cent in dress- . beef. Collections are satisfactory re and throughout the West: At St. Paul threshing reports promise an erage yield, and at Minneapolis business ‘js excellent in all lines, especially in lum- ber. Trade is very heavy at Omaha and . “collections never better; improving at Kan- gas City: with money in better demand, and good at Denver. At St. Louis trade is fair volume, labor troubles have been tions are more proript than 8 n reports show general im- ement in trade at Little Rock, at Mem. ‘at Montgomery and at New Orleans, at Galveston collections are slow, and. Savannah money is reported tight. The business failures occurring through- out the country during the last seven days mumbered 189, as compared with totals of 184 last week. For the corresponding week of last year the figures were 227. KEPT THE THREAT. Murder of a Young Man and Wounding of His Mother. Rrversioe, CAL, Aug. 13.—While Mrs, ‘Wall, the wife of Peter Wall, a prominent ‘business man of Elsimere, was driving _ through the Temescal canon, accompanied by her son, Ira, a young man named Elmer Walters stepped from the roadside, and raising a gun he was carrying, fired at the occupants of the buggy, killing Ira Wall in- oe stantly, and badly wounding Mrs. Wall The news of the shooting caused much ex- citement in town and a posse was immedi ately formed to go in pursuit of the mur- derer. He was overtaken near South River- side, and was turned over to Sheriff Sey amour, “ There has been considerable trouble be- ‘tween the Wall and Walters families over ‘disputed water rights, and the court pro- ~ Wall, resulted in a deoision favorable to About a week ago Mr. Wall was a¢- costed by two masked men while driving -.. through the canon and warned to leave the country. He thought lightly of the matter atthe time, but mow believes the murder had been deliberately planned. : BURNED WITH SULPHURIC ACID. A Pips Bursts and Scatters the Awful fe Fluid Over Four Men, . Wororsrter, Mass, August 10. Four‘ em- “ployees of the Washburn & Moen wire mill, at Quinsigamond village, were hor- bly burned by sulphuric acid yesterday, The acid is used for cleaning copper wire, sud is forced into the annealing room gh lead pipes. Only a small amount of acid had been pumped from the tank, when suddenly one side of the iron recepta: "mle burst outward, throwing the awful fluid over the four men who were standing near. Their clothing their clothing and jumped into the river. .-Alkalis were administered, and latter the "wounded men were taken to the city hospi- 4al. At the hospital tbe men uttered awful _ gries while their wounds were being dressed, and their condition is very precarious. TATE NOT ELIGIBLE. He Has Not Baenm a Citison of the Country Lea Emough, R i’ Tt has been discovered the Rev. G. Tate, ' ‘the Republican nominee for Lieutenant Gov- + of Nebraska, ig ineligible. Tate is an “Englishman, and Be failed: to take out his naturalization papers until a year ago. The nstitution requires that the governor and tenant governor shall have been citizens | ‘of the United Btates two years prior to thelr ection. Tlie State Central committee wilt ited upon to fill the vacancy. Tate's arto Gov. thei ‘the Upper Congo river are in revolt, owing felt for the saf The Speed to Be 18 Knots an Hour. It ise Twin Screw Vessel of the Pro: : tected Type: .,Bosrox, Aug. 12—Before 1 o'clock, the hour set for thelaunching of United States cruiser No. 11, the immense ship-yard of Harrison Loring, South Boston, was a live- ly place, with its busy shipwrights burry- ing to and fro under the toweriag mass of steel, putting on the final touches of lubri- cator to insure a perfect launch. of tHe Navy James represented the government at and Gov. Russell and a number of members of the legislature were present for Massachusetts. The city of Boston was also well re nted members of the board of aldernien and common coun- cil. Leds ; At the appointed hour the signal was iven to kilock away ‘the shores, and amid 3h cheers of the spectators, cruiser No. 11 slipped slowly down the ways into the water, christened the Marblehead. Mrs. C. F, Allen broke the customary bottle of wine over the ship's bows as the vessel plunged into the sea. ~E nepal dimensions are: Length on Russell 8 Washin 1 k amidships, 10 feet 6 inches; aft of water, mean normal, 14 feet 6 inches; displacement in tons to load water line, 2,- ares x feet; dicated horse power, 5,400; ter. | speed per hot ~8he is per , 18 knots in smooth water. 8 8 twin-screw ro cruiser, with ‘and forecastle decks, and an open gun eck between, fit:ed with a water-tight deck of 174 pounds plating at the sides, reduced to 12 pounds in the center, and extending the entire length of the vessel. The torpedo outfit will consist of six tor- pedo guns for launching torpedoes. There will be an electric light plant on board. “The battery will consist of two six-inch Joad breech-. ing rifles, eight five-inch breech- loading rifles mounted in sponsons, four on each side of the cruiser; six six-pound and two one-pound rapid-firing guns and two Gatling guns. The motive power for the twin screws will be furnished by two triple expansion engines of the vertical inverted type, one on each side of the vessel, 5,400- horse power, with cylinders of 204, 39 and 63 inches diameter,and a stroke of 33 inches. The vessel was designed by Chief Contrac- tor Theodore B. Wilson of the Unig~d States navy. The machinery, which 48" to [laced in position a few months after the unching, was Jesined by Engineer-in- Chief George W. Melville of the navy de- partment. : 7 : MURDERED BY ARABS. The Congo Free State Threatened With | Grave Dangers From Slave Traders. BrusseLs, Aug. 13 —The Arab tribeson to the evident determination of the whites to suppress the African slave trade and 20 agents of the Katanga Company have been killed or captured by the Arabs on the Up- per Congo river. The steamer Berneert, which was taking goods up the river, was seized, and the factories were raided. Whole tribes on the western bank of the river are in insurrection. The Arabs northwest of Nyangwe have gone down the Lualaba river and captured the sta- tion at Ribara. killing the whites employed there. [The stations on the Upper Lomassi have also been destroyed. The Arabs at Stanley Falls and Isangi who have hitherto been loyal are showi: ig hostility. The Con- go State authorities are sending reinforce nents to various points threatened by the Arabs. Fort Johnson was attacked, two Europe ans wounded and a 7-pound: cannon ca tured. The Arabs are well armed wit European rifles, and the greatest alarm is ty of the expedition sent out unner Captains Jacques and Joubert to sup- press the slave trade, Wasurseros, Aug. 13.—Captain Healy, commanding the revenue steamer Bear, has made a long report to the treasury depart ment in regard to the cruise of that vessel in Alasican waters, The Bear touched at St. Matthew's Island June 3, and took off a man named Peter Viani, who was in dire distress trom lack of provisions. He said two other men nanied Fred Burns and J. B. Pulsford, who had been left on the sland with him, had started in a dory May 4 for Hall's island, since which time he had heard nothinz. The Bear visited Hall's island but did not find the men. Traces were found of their camp, which appeared to lave been abandoned three weeks beford. Captain Healy says he thinks the men must Lave been drowned at sea by the capsizing of their boat. ; 5 . UNFORTUNATE YOUTH, A Guileless Baltimore Lad Entrapped Into Marrying a Variety Actress, At Washington, D. C.. the mother of Charles J. King, of Baltimore, and to whom a marriage license was issued last Friday in which was the name of Sarah R. Beltzer, was here to make inquiries as to whether they were really married. The court-house records showed that the license had been is- sued, but there had been no returns made, nor could it be found who married them. King gave his residence as Baltimore and that of the lady at Columbus, O., and it ap- pears from the statements of Mrs. King that her son is but 19 years of age and Sarah is a variety actress under the name of Belvoir, engaged at the National hall, Baltimore, and the alleges that the boy was entrapped inte marrying the girl. . Harvest Hands Needad. The $5 rate of harvest hands from St Paul to any point in Minnesota and the Dakotas has been extended and the Mil waukee road especially is making grea effort to supply the demand for : help in gathering their harvests. Several thousand men are still needed. Northwestern Wheat Report. Figures complied by the Northwestern Miller shows the stock of wheat in private elevators in Minneapolis to be 983,000 bush. els, a gain of 12,000 since Monday last. The total stock at Minneapolis: and Duluth is 9,158,650 bushels, against ‘9,405,968 a week ago. The Market R-cord reports the stock of wheat in country elevators of Minnesota and the two Dakotas to be 965,800 bushels, a decrease of 233,000 bushels. . Shot by His Son. CLEVELAND, Aug. 9.—At Waldo, O, to- day, Harvey Kenyon, a wealthy farmer. was shot four times by his son George, and will die. The old man was intoxicated and he began abusing his wife, finally striking her with a club, Young Kenyon interfered, hi) Manufacturers and Men At Last Come a to Terms. : The Western iron scale of the Amalgama- ted Association of Iron and Steel Workers was agreed upon, and-fixed for the coming year by the action of the Conference Com- mittecs of the Amalgamated Association and the Pittsburg iron manufauturers. The base of the new scale—that is the rate of pud- dling—is the same as it has been for some years, $5 50 a ton. But in the finishing de- partment, a reduction of 10 per cent. was agreed upon by the two sides. The settlement was arrived at after 16 conferences, by concessions on both sides. The manufacturers conceeded the $5 50 rate for puddling. Their demand was for a $4 50 rate. The Amalgamated ‘Association con- ceeded to the manufacturers the reduction asked in the finishing departments. The mills that have already signed the scale, ex- cept the sheet and wire rod mills will be affected ‘by the agreement arrived at They will all get the benefit of the 10 per cent. cut for finishing, as they signed the scale with the stipulation that they would be governed by any changes made. In Pittsburgh abeut. 20,000 iron. workers are affected by the agreement, while out- side of the city about 15,000 men areaffected. The iron scale for the entire country is now settled, with exception of that in the Ma- honing and Shenango valleys, and this will probably be signed shortly. The settlement occurs after an idleness of 41 days, and in some cases this time will probably stretch into two months before the mills are Bn Ex‘epsive Swindler Arrested. New York, Aug. 13.—Henry Gottlieb, a Jawyer with an office on Park Row, was ai® raigned on a charge of forgery. = The police | say they have as many as 50 cases against him of swindling and forgery. Gottlieb once practiced law in Chicago, and itis as- sgerted that he is a fugitive from iustice in thal city. THE man with no music’in his soul should hire a hand-organ. —Picayune. MARKETS. _ PITTSBURG. THE WHOLESALE PRICES ARE GIVEN BELOW. GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED. WHEAT-—No. 2 Red.. $§ B5@% Red 80 No. 2 Western... seecensns FLOUR—Fancy winter pal Fancy Sprib paighis. os Fancy Straight winter EXO Bekeasi ves BERBRonaos pEpHoanoer [392828 S8SHSSBRIIERERSBERER Oats. Joi a, FEED—No. 1 'WhMd$T Brown Middlings.. : PANG ivy ies A CHOP: + svvss sssssnsrnsases ; DAIRY PRODUCTS. BUTTER—Elgin Creamery Fancy Creamery - Fancy country roll....... Choice country roll : CC IRERBasREER amen EEE oEERE | ZR83AFSSSSHRGS BREKSB R58 ‘Wisconsin Swiss bricks.. ‘Wisconsin 8weitzer. ...... I TAMbUTREr.. wiivii steeds ve FRUIT AND VEGETABLES. APPLES—Fancy, 8 bbl... 2 Fair to choice, bbl: 2 1 BEANS—Select, Pa & O Beans, Lima Beans, oo ‘Yellow danvexs @ bbl.... Yellow onion, §¥ bbl. Spanish . CABB POT. ~S383 = abhg8 «3888 n 8 crate AGE—New ‘P crate... ATOES— Fancy Rose per bbl Choice Rosegper bbl POULTRY ETC. DRESSED CHICKENS— Dressed ducks Bb ....... Dressed turkeys @ b..... LIVE CHICKENS— Live Spring chickens § pr Live Ducks # : Live Turkeys RGGS—Pa & Ohio fresh FEATHERS— Extra live Geese © 1b..... No 1 Extra live geese Mixed... .ooaiiiiiiaians MISCELLANIOUS. HAD HEE a8 8B88a ase Bi) SEEDS—West Med’'m clo’er Mammoth: Clover Timothy pri Timothy choeice..... dens Blue gr: Orchard grass..... eaaanes Millet Buckwheat... .. lo RAGS—Country mixed.... HONEY—White clover.... Buckwheat. ....c.... edge CINCINNATI. FLOUR . i.e ssssspsinssnss WHEAT—No. 2 Red........ 290 i50 17 16 It od oh BO 1 Jot = AF BEE-BE8H88aR on $3 25@ $3 90 TE 81 47 33 1 FLOUR ...oiteire WHEAT—New No. 2. ie CORN—No. 2, Mixed :...... . OATS—No. 2, White : BUTTER—Creamery Extra. EGGB—Pa., Firsts : : BUTTER—Creamery. ....... EGGS—State and Penn...... LIVE-STOCK REPORT. EAST LIBRETY, PITTSBURG STOCK YARDS, CATTLE, Prime Steers... .-voeansseesd Fair to Good... .. COMMON. ok. i vas os vanninia Bulls and dry cows......... Veal lve ay eavy rough calves... .... Tesh cows, per head....:.. RHEEP, Prime 95 to 100-15 shecp..:.$ Common 70 to 75 Tb sheep... Yearlings ...vi.vivaesviaiie Spring Lambs... ; Bsowewn oa leon [Boorman {= 8 ¥--% 8 [8588 [3538888 § [5555 [8558858 = ‘ural drainage is poor, 8 |saks I88382388 ROAD DRAINAGE. it Is Absolutely Indispensable to the Best of Results. The one thing necessary to a good road-—earth, gravel, macadam., or -paved—is thorough drainage of the foundation. Money has been misap- plied in road-making because of neg- lect of thorough drainage, even when the money has been used to build roads of a material that should give them a permanent character. On the Western prairies, where the nat- undrained gravel roads have suddenly become mud roads when put to the severe test of a long rainy spell in’ winter and early spring. Not the least un. fortunate result of this has been a prejudice against gravel roads in par- ticular, and a scarcely less pronounced distrust of permanent roads in gen- eral. Lack of drainage was the real cause of the failure. ‘Whether the road is to be of earth, gravel, or macadam, the earth road- bed should be graded, crowning it twelve to fourteen feet wide, and twelve to eighteen inches higher in the middle than at the edges. Along each edge should be cut a shallow: ditch. This is a correct general statement, which, of course, should be modified to suit peculiar circum- stances. Thus, in a Very hilly coun- try, especially if the soil washes easi- ly, the ditches should not be cut at the sides, as they are not necessary, and will become serious gullies. In a hilly country it is not Dpecessary to crown the roadbed so high, but the crowning must always be sufficient to insure ready surface drainage. Twelve to fourteen feet in width is sufficient. Making the road wider has been found a needless expense. With those soils dnd subsoils specially well adapted to drainage, ¢rowning the roadbed and cutting the ditches at the sides will secure the necessary drainage, . buf, yhere the soil and subsoil are not fav- orable to drainage, additional meas- ures must be taken. In the country in which I reside, a gravel road has been made for twenty miles, near the Mississippi river bluffs. 'This road is on a soil and a subsoil decidedly grav- elly, giving splendid drainage. This gravel road is now eighteen years old, and has proved satisfactory. The only means taken to secure drainage was to crown the roadbed a little in low places. To make ‘a gravel road in this way over the greater part of the same country would be a waste of money, for in most places the soil is a black prairie loam, and the subsoil a tenacious clay. It has been found quite satisfactory in most localities, having a black sur face soil and clay subsoil, to lay a drain of tile along each side, near the edge of the roadbed. This bas been found a better location than near the middle of the roadway. The office of the tile is to carry off water brought up from below rather than water sinking in from above. In some localities it 1s necessary to use three draips—one Hue of tile beneath the center of the roadway, and one under each ditch at the side. It seems un- natural to put the tile under the side ditches, but this location has been proved best. : ‘When the roadbed is to be graveled or macadamized, the crowning earth foundation should be nicely smoothed and then rolled until quite solid. It is well, also, in this case to put the clay subsoil from the ditches on to the surface. When rolled, it makes a hard, smooth surface, almost imper- vious to water, and over which will flow, off to the ditches at the sides, the rainwater that may sink through the gravel or macadam. When the surface is to be of earth only, the clay subsoil should. be kept under- neath, and the natural soil be placed on top. The surface soil will usually afford much better drainage than the subsoils, and make a better road sur- face.—American Agriculturist. TE witness asked for water. The opposing counsel had pumped him dry. A Mother's Gratitude Too grest®for tongue to tell, is due Hood's Sarsaparilla. My daughter Olive 8 years ago had dreadful pains, beginning in one knee and extending toal- mast every joint in her body, caused by Consti-~ tutional Scrofula. The pains grew less and the swellings subsided after using one bottle of HOOD'S SA- + Then improvement was rapid, until it effected a perfect cure.” MRS. J. A. CARL, Reynoldsville, Pa. ~ pliood's Fills are the best after-dinner , assist digestion, cure headache, DR. K A I RS Kidney, Liverand Bladder Cure. Rheumatism, Lumbago. pain in joints or back, brick dustin urine, uent callg, irritation, inflamation, gravel, Ton oF catarrh of bladd ; i Disordered Liver, Tm; di on. gout, billlous-headache. difficult! SW A OE ur Ks oo Impure Blood, ‘Borofula, malaria, gen'l weakness or debility. ot 0c, Size, $1.00 TR ge Be pri T Ir the harsh criticism or unfavor- able opinion of your act that comes to you, awakens quick resentment and a desire to retaliate, 1t is an evi- dence that conscience joins in the ac- cusation. He who is innocent can alwavs afford to be calm. THEORETICALLY, it is hard to be poor; but practically, many people find it anly too easy. M. L. Thompson & Co.. Druggists, Con- dersport, Pa., say Hall's Catarrh Care is the best and only sure cure for catsrrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it, Thc. H Arp worps breaks no bones; there are no hones in the heart. —Puck. The Stay at Homes Will take cold while boating, bowling and rowsing around town, Use Dr. Hoxsie’s Cer- tain Croup Cure for every form of throat and lung irritatio It is so subtle in its action that it permeates all the (txsuss of the respiro. tery organs. Sold by vrominent d ists. 50c. Manufactured by A. P. Hoxsle, Bu: N.Y, THE TORTOISE one beat the hare; but the hare is not 80 sleepy nowadays. It hasn't happened since.—Puck. A Complete Newspaper For One Cent. The Pittsburgh Clromde telegraph is sold by all News Agents and delivered Carriers everywhere, for One Cent a copy or Siz Cents a week. It contains daily, the news of the world, receiving as it does, the reports of both the Associated Press and the United Press. No other Jaber which sells for One Cent receives both of these reports. Its Sporting, Financial, Fashion, and Household Departments are un- equaled. Order it from your News Agent. Row Boats—War Vessels.—Puck. vils of malarial disorders, fever, weak- ness, lassitude and debility and prostration are avoided by taking Beecham’s Pills, THE © © “Eat, drink and be merry for to-morrow” Bradycrotine will stop the headache. drug- gists, fifty cents. P ache. All ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts ently yet promptly on the Kidneys, iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and fruly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. yrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug- Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it.. Do not accept any substitute. BL CALIFORNIA FI8 SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N.Y. JOHNSON’S Anodyne Liniment. Ue ANY OTHER ORIGINATED IN 1810. Tring oF ITI ALMOST A cEnTus ¥Y. ways wanted. particulars free. L 8. JOHNSO:! Re nce used al JO. Ss BEST IN THE WORLD, Its wear Lit amsuipasscd, outlastin, ra oes oar other brand. Tot ected by heat, (# GET THE GENUINE. FOR SALE BY DEALERS GENERALLY. ind with gold, sliver er nickel. Ne experience. No capital. oie 3 | om man Tn. ly less, Durable, and or glass package witli every purchase, successful in the treatment of Con- sumption than any other remedy prescribed. It has been tried under every variety of climate. In the bleak, bitter North, in damp New England, in the fickle Middle States, in the hot, moist: South—eve where. : : every Jationality. as Deen of oyed in every stage of Consump- Ron In brief it ; Wo been ns by millions and its the only true and reliable Consumption Remedy. BIPANS TARULES oe load. are safe ne the b] arify. S ectual. The best medicine known EE Hones 0! by ihe nctions. of . Person hetiedby 3 TAB > + enna pros thy SED anted; EIGHTY per cent prof ft has not injur- . 1s 1s not bad to take. be best cough syrup. Sold everrwhe Poultry, Vegetables, Fruit. 80. all platean towas, CUMBERLAND TEAU LAND OFFICE, Roslin P. O., Hui bert Park, Teun. NSIO JOEIN W.MORR ] p HY ashing B. Succes: stully Pro: Ete alms. 3yrainlast war, 15adjudicating claims, atty siug i ATENTS ! PENSIONS !-Send for Invent or's Gulde or How to Obtain a Patent. Send fo tof PENSION nnd BOUNTY LA WS, ATRICK O’FARREL, WASHINGTON, D. PRIVATE SHORTHAND INSTITUTE, 815 Smithfield St.. Pittsburg, i d snd typewritin r month, $4.50; qr AEE 5. ‘Write for otaloche. Butter! Butter!!! Butrer!l On receipt of 2icts., will mail recipe for mak Rancid Butter Sweet, T A NOVELTY CO., 233 North 4th St., Philadelphia, Pa, ANTED-—Agents, Male and Female. Something 4 new. Sells at sight. Requires no talking, Exclusive territor: YElven, Profits 400 per cent. ‘Address KERMAN & CO., NAPOLEON, OWIO. PATENTS Yastinieged YOU WANTTD AN» THEIR THEM TO WAY oven if you merely keep them asa diversion. In der to kandle Fowls {eh cionsly, you must sometaing about theny. To meet this want we selling a book giving the experience of a practical poultry raiser for twenty-five years. It was written by & ail his mind, and time, and money so makinga ess of Chicken raising—notass postin ut as & 5 e, but business—and if you will profit his twenty-five years’ work, you can Save many Lnicks annually, 3 am Lt) ent postpaid for Se 0 ps- Fd ook Publishing Heuse B abi ne Br. N Y. oir, ITISA DUTY yon awe youre self and family to get the bext value for your money. KEceno- mize in your footwear by PUT « L. Douglas Shoes, for prices asked, as thousands will testify. | * x 7 TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE, ate 3 which represent the best value 3 to walk 2 50 Fine Calf, 82.4 mn will give mere wear 2 cd this oul ingmen : ; ed and Youtha' $1.75 Schesl Ss’ Li everywhere. pal She W. L DOUGLAS SHOE GEN oy ; THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MON A genuine sewed shee, that will not 1p, ls 8 Hao inside, flexible, more comfcrtable,sty’ and durab! any ther shed: eb at the uals mad om EG $4 and $5 Hend-sewed, fine calf shoes. The most i easy and durable shees fine imported shoes costing from ® Police 8hes, worn : fine cal price. Eq custom le he ever sold at these prices. They [5 4 8aAvy in, and wiil keep the feet the money. increasing sal