The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 08, 1893, Image 3

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    —
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NE 11.
Eccles.
iccles.
1 the days
ome not,
hou shalt
" In the
apter the
3 a judg-
pres-
ow he is
the days
consider
1 and per-
oash and
t, or the
, nor the
is is sug-
erusalem :
, and can
Can thy
I drink?
f singing
ore, then,
unto my
Barzillai
imply de-
e body in
s of the
men shall
cease be-
look out
is is sug-
arms, feet
thly house
in every
ing from
ure. But
ipanion of
lowed the
e and five
his day as
e. As my
y strength
) come in”
the streets
low, and
bird, and
> brought
> in upon
nd failure
16Cessary ;
an old age
, of whom
is eye was
d. At that
lone and
years later
xxxiv., 7;
iid of that
L the way,
z is a bur-
mond tree
1 age, and
ng home,
- rejoicing
le in the
ise,” ‘‘ab«
the Lord”
loosed, or
pitcher be
el broken
ence here
le nervous
its veins
little the
se things,
. him was
oy 4).
‘the earth
turn unto
nan since
Ilments of
'hosoever
offend in
8, 11.,10).
given to
helpless-
sive Him
1 the end
very one
vork into
whether
f we are
udgment
) remem-
. vill, 1;
however,
of Christ
ecrets of
and onl,
ks whic]
1 stand.
ves the
Age pre-
ery sin-
iles, 8
miles,
ks; 500
e than
ance to
miles.
double
letter,
hing 1
letters
"origi.
elivery,
phlets,
Quincy
i
ER REET
NS Gr ry
Se
Mrs. Thercsa Hartson
Albion, Pa.
Misery Turned to Comfort
Kidney Trcubles, Sieepiessness,
Distress—All CURED.
** Altion, Erie Co., Pa., Feb. 18, "93.
“I can truly say that Hood's Sarsaparilla
has done more for me than all the prescrip-
tions and other medicines 1 have ever taken.
For 14 years I have suffered with kidney
troubles; my back being so Jame at t:mes that
Could Not Raise Myself
up out of my chair. Nor could I turn myselt
in bed. 1 could not sleep, and suffered
great distress with my food. I have taken
& bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla with the most
gratifying results. I fesl like a new person,
and my terrible sufferings have all gone.
Life is Comfort
compared to th: misery it used to be. I can
now goto bed and have a good night's rest;
can eat heartily without any distress. Iam
9 3a
Hood's» Cures
willing this should be published for others
good.” MRS. THERESA HARTSON.
HOOD’S PILLS cure Constipation by restor
ing the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal
PNU 23 ’93
Darr LS hex
URES: CONSTIPATION |
INDIGESTION DIZZINESS.
"n RUPTIONSONTHE SK In:
BeauniFiEs SF CoMPLEXION.
50. FOR A CASE ITWILL-NOT CURE. :
An agreeable Laxative and NERVE TONIC,
Bold by Druggists or sent by mail. 25C., 500
and $1.00 per package. Samples free.
rere am am——
KO NO nia rs sown
“August
Flower
‘‘ For two years I suffered terribly
with stomach trouble, and was for
all that time under treatment by a
physician. He finally, after trying
everything, said my stomach was
worn out, and that I would have to
cease eating solid food. On the rec-
ommendation of a friend I procured
a bottle of August Flower. Itseem-
ed to do me good at once. I gained
strength and flesh rapidly. I feel
now like a new man, and consider
that August Flower has cured me.”’
Jas. E. Dederick, Saugerties, N.V.®
LEWIS M. EDMUNDS,
South Hartwick, N. Y.
BOILS, CARBUNCLESHE
AND 5
TORTURING ECZEMA,
Completely Cured?!
DANA SARSAPARILLA Co., “ “>
Wn ui Lac po rnomed my Blood a
had the ¢¢Shinglés®’ short]
1
as 1=2
o-
ter in their worst form. 1rtook alarge=
amount of Dr.’s medicines but they lett me worse
and not able to work.
I was terribly cfflicted with=
boils, had six and two car-
buncles at one time. I tried everything
could hear of but continued to have boils.
Added to ell this Eczema
tormented me night and day, th
hing was intense. I had severe pains in righ
ide and back, continual headache. I
was discouraged. At last 10m
heard of DANA'S SARSAPA-=
commenced using it, and the third]
od et
CEE
NT
RILLA,
= bottle completely C URED me
ours respectfully,
LEWIS M. EDMUNDS.
South Hartwick, N. Y.
The truth of the above is certified to by.
H. R. HOLBROOK, P. M.
= South Hartwick, N. Y.
a Dana Sarsaparilla Co., Belfast, Maine.
A
ENSIO JOHN W. MORRIS,
Washington, D. C.
Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau.
Syrsinlast war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since.
-— ~—
Every Month
many women suffer from Excessive or
Scant Menstruation; they don't know
who to confide in to get proper advice.
Don't confide in anybody but try
Bradfield's
Female Regulator
a Specific for PAINFUL, PROFUSE,
SCANTY, SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR
MENSTRUATION.
Book to’ ‘* WOMAN" mailed free.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, @a.
Sold by sll Druggiste. Ne
|
COLUMBIAN FAIR NEWS ITEMS
—_———
SUNDAY FAIR A FAILURE.
ORLY ABOTT 59,000 PEOPLE WERE THERE.
TH NUMBER VERY FEW WERE WORKING-
MEN, WHO WERE EXPECTED TO COME
-BY THE THOUSANDS.
There was no great outpouring of the
wage workers or any other class at the ex-
position on Sunday. The oppressive heat
OF
and a heavy storm in the middle of the
afternoon accounts in part for the
small attendance. On the whole
the second open Sunday can hardly be call-
ed a success, judged by the standard of pop-
ular ap roval and the presence of working-
men, for whose benefit and edification in
particular the gates of the Idir are open.
The cafes and the beer gardens in the foreign
villages were liberally patronized. The New
England State buildings and those of Penn-
sylvania, New York, Missouri, North
Dakota, Utah, Delaware. Maryland and
Virginia were locked.
Many of the finest exhibits were hidden
from view because their exhibitors or their
agents do not propose to work seven days
in the week. The coverings which protect
the exhibits at night were not removed.and
all the visitors could see were big ornamen-
tal booths and show cases disfigured with
canvas, wood or iron sheeting. The exposi-
tion authorities have no right to remove
the coverings without the permission of
the exhibitors, and no arrangements have
vet been made for unveiling them on Sun-
ay.
Not even a flag was to be seen on the
buildings of Great Britain, Canada, New
South Wales and India, and the doors were
locked. Visitors were denied access to the
great display of the T/nited States Govern-
ment in the big-domed building and the
small adjuncts. Machinery hall was silent.
It was a dull day for the guide and catalogue
sellers, as nearly all the visitors were
Chicago people.
Music appropriate to Sunday was provided
in the early part of the day by the Chicago
band, but the audiences were not large.
Everybody who passed through the
Plaisance stopped to strain their eyes heav-
enward, to see the intrepid workmen re-
moving the mass of scaffolding from the
high and airy Ferris wheei and tightening
the spokes, preparatory to putt'ng in the six
great cars which will go round with the
wheel on June 15 for the first time.
A dispatch from the Chicago ‘‘Record’’
says:
The paid attendance at the Fair on Sun-
day was 51,344 adults, and 2,960 children,or
about 20,000 less than last Sunday,and many
less than attended on certain other days of
last week. The directors had confidentially
counted on a Sunday attendance of not less
than 200,000 to 250,000. Some rain fell this
afternoon, but ir was a fleasant day in the
main, Sunday opening is distinctly a fail-
ure.
All the Southern buildings were open to-
day except those of Virgima and Missouri.
THE EDISON TOWER.
A SHAFT 100 FEET HIGIL OF MANY-HUED INCAN-
DESCENT LAMPS,
The formal opening of the Electricity
oui ding took pace Friday night. The fea-
ture was the unveiling »nd lighting of the
big Edison tower, erected by the General
Electric Company. This shaft represents
the highest achievement of the incandes-
cent lamp and is about 100 feet high. It
springs from the roof of a colonade pavilion
surrounding the base, and the entire inter-
ior is filled with thousands of incandescent
lamps, as many hued as the Western sun-
set. The colors are arranged by mechanical
methods, capable of being flashed in har-
mony with the strains of music.
The column is crowned with a well pro-
Doriioned replica of an Kdison incandescent
amp, formed by a muititude of pieces of
prismatic crystals. Upward of 30,000 of these
beautiful jewels are strung on a frame and
are all lighted from the interior by hundreds
of incandescent lamps. The effect produced
is marvelous.
ls
FIGURES AWAY OFF.
WORLD'S FAIR OFFICIALS PROVE THEY
GUESS AT A DAY'S ATTENDANCE.
Just as the officials were mistaken in their
estimates of the Sunday crowds by guess-
ing too heavily. so they were wrong in the
attendance on Decoration Day, Sunday the
officials thought 150,000 persons had paid
admissions. and the official figures showed
less than 80,000. Their guess of Tuesday's
half dollars paid in was under 100,000, while
in fact 123.097 paid to enter the gates, and
adding an estimate of 65,000 free passes the
Decoration day attendance was nearly 190,-
000. On the same day in 1876, also one of
fine weather, the paid admissions to Fair-
mont Park was 82,222,
The marble room of the German artsec-
tion was thrown open to the public without
ceremony.
CANT
en
THE OFFICIAL FIGURES.
DURING MY 1,050,037 PEOPLE PAID TO
THE FAIR.
The official figures show that during May
1,050,037 people paid to se the world’s
fair, of which number 22 825 w re children,
and 346,391 persons entered on passes. This
re rese ts $519,412 25. The total number of
tickets sold during month was 1,521,460,
23,328 of which were childre’s tickets en-
riching the exposition to the sum of $654,498,
There are now outstanding 231,413 tickets
bought during May.
SEE
JEFF DAVIS’REMAINS
Finally Placed in a Deep Grave in the
Presence of Thousands.
All that is mortal of Jefferson Davis now
restsin Hollywood, at Richmond, Va. The
special from New Orleans bearing the re
mains and escort arrived there Wednesday
morning. At the depot the First Regiment
and the veterans from Lee and Pickett
camps were drawn up to do honor to the
dead, while thousands of men, women and
children, some of whom had been waiting
for hours, testified their appreciation of the
occasion by the most respectful silence.
Asthe casket containing the body was
removed to the hearse heads were uncover-
ed. The procession then proceeded with the
visiting escort of veterans from various
Southern States from the post of honor to
the State Capitol building, where the body
was placed in state in the rotunda immedi-
ately in front of the Senate Chamber. . Over
25,000 people viewed the bier. At 3:30 the
remains were conveyed to Hollywood.
Flowers were strewn along the route, and
the sight was a beautiful one. ¢
At the cemetery the display of veterana
was undoubtedly much greater than at the
unveiling of the Lee monument, and never
since the war have so many Confederate
soldiers been seen in one body in Rich-
mond. The grave was of unusual depth and
size and was carefully constructed of brick
and lined at the head with the Confederate
national flag, at the foot with -the bat.
tle flag and on the sides with broad stripes
of red and white—the Confederate colors.
After the funeral services the casket was
lowered into the grave and the vast throng
dispersed.
Tne Public Debt Statement.
‘The public debt statement issued at Wash-
ington shows a net decrease of $739,425 99
during the month of May. The aggregate
interest and non-interest bearing debt May
31 was £961,750,888 63; on April 30 it was
$962,407,764 13. The total cash in the
treasury was $754,122,984 47 the gold reserve
$95,048,640 and the net cash balance $56,
$14,514 30,
LATER NEWS WAIFS,
DISASTERS, ACCIDENTS AND FATALITIES.
At Detroit, Mich., Lottie Dingemans,
aged 13 years, and her little §-year-old niece,
Clara Wagner, were drowned in the river
Rouge, Sunday afternoon. The younger
child, while walking along the river bank,
fell in, and her companion plunged in to
rescue her, but both were overcome by the
rapid current.
William Bente, a stenographer, and wife,
Elsie, his sister, aged 20; Helen Dietz, his
his niece, and Pugh, a young man, were
burned to death at a fire in New York City
on Sunday.
George Coulter, B. J. Morris, William
Cox and John Morrissey, firemen, were
killed by the falling of a wall at a fire in
Omaha Saturday.
At Bakersfield, Cal.. James M. Reed, 43
years of age, and his wife Mary, aged 49
years, were drowned in an irrigation canal.
Reed having leaped in to save his wife.
Peter McGovern, a young gasfitter, and
an unknown girl were drowned in the Pas-
saic river at Newark, N. J. They were
out rowing.
iad
RELIGIOUS.
Before final adjournment at Reading, Pa.,
the Reformed German Synod voted down a
resolution that the members do all in their
power to overthow the liquor traffic and use
their united efforts to have a clause inserted
in the Constitution of the United States to
prohibit the manufacture and sale of intox-
icating liquors as a beverage by a vote of 36
to 42.
The Lutheran General Synod in session at
Canton, O., adopted a resolution forbidding
the marriage of divorced persons, except
where the party desiring to marry was di-
vorced upon the ground of the commission
of a cardinal sin by his former helpmeet.
pm
FINANCIAL.
Potter's Bank, the oldest in Paulding
county, O.. and heretofore considered one
of the safest. made an assignment to J. B,
Brondix. The bank was established in 1874
and always done a large business. It done
a large business loaning money on land in
that county.
Cheverton, Marton & Co., bankers,Chica-
20, made a voluntary assignment to Abra-
bam Baldwin. Assets were scheduled at
$100,000 and liabilities at $70,000.
At Johnson City, Tenn., the Carnegie
Land Company anil Carnegie Iron Com-
pany made an assignment to J. W. Cure.
The liabilities, due largely to Eastern and
Northern parties, are placed at $125,000. The
assets are estimated at $600,000. Inability
to float bonds was the cause.
eg
CAPITAL AND LABOR.
At Cincinnati all of the 70 or more farni-
ture manufactories, except the Robert Mit-
chell anc the Huss Brothers com panies,shut
down Saturday night, Both sides are de:
termined and the suspension threatens to
continue all this year or longer. The fac-
tories employ 7.000 hands, with a weekly
pay roll of $105,000. The lockout will en-
volve 5,000 employes.
CRIMES AND PENALTIES.
John Dennis, a negro market gardener,
near Laurel, Dela ware, killed his wife and
father because they upbraided him for
coming home drunk. Dennis fled to the
woods, killing the sheriff in his flight and
is at large. If caught he will be lynched,
Three American crooks robbed a farmer
named Edy, near Beech Ridge, Ontario, and
then murdered him, his wife and daughter
Saturday.
The trial of Lizzie Borden for the murder
of her father and stepmother has opened in
New Bedford, Mass.
— en
WASHINGTON.
President Cleveland returned from his
fishing trip to Hog Island Sunday morning.
Secretary Carlisle has returned from
his trip to th: Eastern shores of Mary-
land, where Le has been entertained by
Senator and Mrs. Gibson.
ak
FOREIGN,
An earthquake at Guayaquil Ecuador
wrecked the jail and crushed to death three
prisoners. Many public and private build-
ings were damaged.
i >
CROPS.
A good wheat and corn crop promises an
era of prosperity in Oklahoma.
MONTHLY OILSUMMARY.
Pennsylvania and Ohio Show an In-
crease While Indiana Lags.
There were 195 wells completely in the
various oil producing sections of New York,
Pennsylvania, West Virginia and South-
eastern Ohio during the month of May, 41
of the number being dry and the new pro-
duction was 8,131 barre!s. Compared with
the report for April, there is an increase of
48 completed, 13 dry holes and 1,169 barrels
production. In April 147 wells were com-
pleted. the new production was 6,962 bar-
reis, and 28 of the entire number proved
dusters. March completed 140 wells; 33 of
them dry und the new production was 7,-
650 barrels,
The work under way at theclose of May
consisted of 145 rigs and 293 wells drilling,
a decline of 11 in rigs and an increase of 25
in drilling wells, as compared with the Ap-
ril record. This is a net increase of 88 in
rigs and dnlling wells over the report for
March 31, On April 30 there were 165 rigs
and 268 driliix ells in the region, against
206 drilling wells and 130 rigs on the 31st of
March.
On May 1, prices were again rdvanced for
Buckeye oil, and the North lima product
now commands 49 and the South Lima 46}
cents a barrel. The Northwestern Ohio
fields completed 128 wells in Mav. with 6,-
858 barreis production. Compared with
April there were seven fewer wells complet-
ed, accompanied by an increase of 1,376
barrels in the new production. The Ohio
fields showed an increase of 20 drilling
wells and 35 rigs, a net increase of 64 over
the report for April.
Indiana oorapioes six more wells in May
than in April, but the production was 1.-
180 barrels less. Last month’s production
was 1,330 barrels greater than that of
March. In April 39 wells were completed
eight of them were dry holes. In May 45
wells were completed, 14 being dry holes,
and the new production was but 2,055 bar-
rels. 1,180 barrels less than the preceding
month. The new work under way is only
slightly in agvance of what it was” 30 days
ago.
A Young Mother Has Quadruplets,
The wife of Mayor Boye, of Rottendorf,
Germany, gave birth to a quartet of child.
ren, two males and two females.
mother is only 18 years of age,
Of What Use Was His Strength?
Colonel Fred Burnaby, whose ride
to Khiya made him famous, was amn-
bitious when a boy to become the
strongest man in the worid. Ap.
pointed a cornet in the Royal Horse
Guards at 17, he threw himself into
the pursuit of muscle. When a pre-
tise examination demonstrated that
his arm measured round the biceps
seventeen inches, his cup of joy was
full. 1t ran over when, at Aldershot,
he lifted straight out with one hand
a dumb-bell weighing one hundred
and seventy pounds, and no other
man in the camp could perform the
same feat. He once undertook to
hop a quarter of a mile, run a quarter
of a mile, ride a quarter of a mile,
and walk a quarter of a mile in a
guarter of an hour. He covered the
distance in ten minutes and twenty
seconds. A horse dealer arriving at
Windsor with a pair of beautiful
ponies that he had been commanded
to show the Queen, took them first tc
the quarters of the officers of the
Horse Guards. Some of these, by
the way of a surprise, lea the ponies
upstairs into Burnaby’s rooms. When
the time came for them to go, the
ponies would not walk down-stairs.
The horse-dealer was in a quandary,
but young Burnaby came to his help
by taking a pony under each arm and
walking down the stairway. He was
barely out of his teens when he was
acknowledged to be the strongest
man in Great Britain, but he paid
the penalty of success in wasted
tissues and failing health. His
stomach refused all nourishment save
that afforded by ice-cream, and the
doctor advised him to travel. Ab
cence from dutv for a long time. the
abandonment of dumb-bells, and tlLa
laying aside of his ambition to be.
come the greatest of athletes restored
bim to comparative health.
¥ish Recognize Their Food.
It is a well-known fact that sea-
anemones have a sense by which they
recognize food. This has been studied
recently by Herr Nagel, at the Zoo
logical Station, in Naples, and he has
endeavored to localize it. Among
other experiments a small piece of a
sardine was brought carefully to the
tentacles of one of the animals; the
tentacle first touched, then others
seized the food and surrounded it,
and the morsel was swallowed. A
similar ball of blotting paper, satu
rated with sea water, brought near
in the same way, was not seized. If,
however, the ball was soaked in the
juice of flsh it was seized with the
same energy as the piece of fish, but
often liberated again after a time
without being swallowed. Blotting
paper saturated with sugar acted like
the other, but more weakly. If sat
urated with quinine, it was refused. |
the tentacles drawing back.
Henrietta Herschfeld, the first wo-
man graduate of the Philadelphia Col-
lege of Dental Surgery, is assistant
court dentist in Germany.
Nearly 1000 children areborn yearly
in Lendon werkhousee.
KNOWLE
GE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly HE The many, who live bet-
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas-
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax-
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
and permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid-
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak-
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug-
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man-
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
backage, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
This Trade Mark is on the best
WATERPROOF COAT
Tinsaiea in the World!
Free. A 1 TOWER, POSTON, MASS,
The
\
with Pastes, Enamels and Paints which stain the §
hands, injure the iron and burn red.
The Risinz Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor-
less, Durable, and the consumer ays for no tin
or glass package with every p ase.
New Idea.
A Kansas man, B. D. Hanbpa of
Cowley, has a plan for preserving
wheat in the bin free from must or
weevil. In 1891 he bad 1,000 bushels
of wheat and placed it in his granary.
He first placed a stalk of green hemp
in the bottom of the granary, and for
every load of forty bushels he placed
another stalk or a part of a stalk of
green hemp, covering the top, when
the granary was full, with ten or a
dozen stalks. When he removed the
wheat one year later it was bright,
plump, and without a sign of must,
mold, or weevil.—Live Stock Indi-
cator.
‘We Rival the Tropics.
There are now more than 500,000
almond trees bearing “in the United
States; there are hundreds of thousands
of bearing cocoanut trees: there are
mores than 259,000 olive trees, producing
fruit equal to the best Mediterranean
varieties. There are more than 500 000
bearing banana plants, 200,000 bearing
lemon trees, 4,000,000 orange trees, and
1,000,000 pineapples.
| near Newport News, Va.,
A Novel Schems.
Frederick Douglass has organized a
company ior the purpose of establish-
ing a large manufacturing enterprise
building a
town and giving employment to young
negro men and women.
The man or woman who is profitably employ-
ed is generally happy. If you are not happy it
may be because you have not found your prop-
er work. We earnestly urge all such persons
write to B. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va.,
and they can show you a work in which you
can be happy and profitably emploved.
A Frenchman is experimenting with a
phonograph upon the language of hens,
We will give $100 reward for any case of ca
tarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's Catarrk
Cure. 'l'aken internally.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props.. Toledo, O.
Eoail
J. 200.
Are your lungs sore?
% Hatch’s Universal
Cough Syrup will cure them. 25¢c. at druzgists.
The courier system which now
in China was put into operation B.
Tn 1877 composite “portraits were first
taken by Francis Galton.
Beecham'’s Pills are better than mineral war
ters. Beecham’s—no others. 25 cents a box.
Marseilles is the human hair mart.
the food.
with safety.
A Matter of Health
1 costs more to make Royal Baking Powder
than any other, because its ingredients
are more highly refined and expensive.
the Royal is correspondingly purer and
higher in leavening strength, and of greater
money value to the consumer. The difference
in cost of Royal over the best of the others
does not equal the difference in leavening
strength, nor make good the inferior work
of the cheaper powders, nor remove the
impurities which such powders leave in
But
Where the finest food is required, the
Royal Baking Powder only can be used.
Where the question of health is considered,
no baking powder but Royal can be used
All others are shown by official
analyses to contain lime, ammonia or alum.
VIVVVVVVVVVVVVVVN
“ He that Works Easily ‘Works Success
Easy to Clean House With
fully.” 'Tis very
- Do You Sleep Peacefully ?
Blessings light on him
who invented that sleep-charmer, the ®
PILGRIM |
SPRING
BED.
‘‘ Sleep covers a man all over, thoughts
and all, like a cloak. It is meat for the
hungry, drink for the thirsty, heat for the ®
cold and cold for the hot. In short,
money that buys everything, balance and
weight that makes the shepherd equal to
the monarch and the fool to the wise.”
The Pilgrim is made of Highly Temper-
» 6d Steel Wire, is the PERFECTION of®
> EASE, and will last a LIFETIME. BRe-
p Ware of cheap made comnion wire imita-
tions, for ‘‘they are not what they seem.’
Exhibited at No. 51 Warren Street, New York;
No. 2 Hamilton Place, Boston.
For sale by all reliable Dealers.
See Brass Tag Registered Trademark on all
Genuine Pilgrims.
Send for Money Saving Primer, Free.
Atlas Tack Corporation, Boston.
WAREHOUSES --Bostomn, New York, Philadelphia
Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco, Lynn.
FacTorIES—Tauntoén, Mass. ; Fairhaven, Mass.;
Whitman, Mass.; Duxbury, Muss.; Plymouth,
Mass.
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MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
THOMSON'S |
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tools required, Onlv a hammer needed to drive
and cinch them easily and quickly, leaving the clinch
absolutely smooth. Requiring no ho ¢ to be made in
the leather nor burr for the Rivets. They are strong,
tough and durable. Millions now in use. All
lengths, uniform or assorted, put up in boxes.
Ask your dealer for them, or send 40c. in
stamps for a box ot 100, assortea sizes. Man'td by
{UDSQN LL. THOMSON MFG. CO.,
WALTELAM, MASS.
—
AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE
For Indigestion, Biliousness,
lfeadache, Constipation, Bad
Complexion, Offensive Breath,
and all disorders of the Stomach,
Liver and Bowel
ail. xX
3 S (4 boxes), §2.
f es-address
For RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., New York.
If any one doubts that
We can cure the must ob-
stinate case in 20 to 60
days, let him write for
particulars and investi-
gate our reliab lity. Our
financlal backing is
os $500,000. When mercury,
iodide potassium, sarsaparilla or Hot Springs fail, we
gu ce a cure—and our Maric Cyphilene is the only
thing that will cure permanently. Positive proof sens
sealed. free. COOK REMEDY Co., Chicago, lll.
bad eal
-
Gari Tea ux
C tors’
ures Bick Headache, Restores Complexion. Saves Doc
ills. Sample free. GARFIELD Tra Co.,319 W. 45th 8t., N.Y.
Cures Constipation
AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY
or commission, to handle the New Patent Chemical
Ink Erasing Pencil. Agents making §0 per week.
aser Mf’g Co., x1063, La Crosse, Wis.
P A 'I'IEN 'I'Q TRADEMARKS, Examination
P A 1 EN I S, and advice as to patentability
of invention. Send for Inventors Guide,or how to get
a patent. PATRICK O’FARRELL, WASHINGTON, D.C.
working for B. F. Johnson & Co
$7 5. 00 No. 3South 11th St..Richmond, Va
BLOOD POISON
A SPECIALTY.
|
Overcomes
results of
Monroe
To ®230 can be made monthly
Morphine Habit Cured in 10
PIUM to 20 da 8. No pay till cured,
DR. J. STEPHENS, Lebanon,Ohios
SAPOLIO
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3 Or do Business? {
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WANTED
IF" Send 6c. in stamps lor 100-page
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John P. Lovell Arms Co. Boston, Mass.
The Davis ITand Cream Separztor ang
Feed Cooker Combined.
Completest of outfits for a dairy farmer. This
machine has an attachment which, when the bowl
has been taken out, is dropped into the Separator so
that a belt can ru
Write for further
s in Bldg. ang Mfg.
»>4 W. Lake St., Chicago, IIi.,
Manufacture all kiads of Creamery Machinery and
Dairy Supplies. “(Agents wanted in every county.)
to the churn.
s & Ranki
Catarrh is the
Best. Fasiest to Use. and Che
CATAR
i Sold by druggists or sent by mail,
6c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa,
Piso’'s Remedy for