rm——— anly influ- off to one I's ago, wa About 87 marriage up in the N. J., and Christian. she lived to her end ime to her . No one omforted. ed but she the angel lling, she 1g of an- » angel of lling, she ‘he burial, n leading ly father, ~ children t they all 1g grace I” ngdom of and that sent mis- ym China the long 1d of his rd. lettest for mine he prayer anthered use from he looked as wien for her we never As we not help ?’ It was y hearts, resting ed under the sun it looked iful and aged pil- tears, no * mother! sod, DL. Zenobia 8 woman xcellence point to ory, and mber so liscencees, o God by beautiful, C8. in the al med- ons are eye was mended ogg, lap nd hang kin of a r gout. terested man be- m Carry x Jion or of his terrible to reti- fault of 1s, ete., mb: ¢eTf e, give hose of ch crea- ntinual ra pips mended m, into n leape wat side et him syde, if 1e out.” was to and sift nd blow les were tens are better." ed with undice. 7 an ap- greene worms 0s, hav- ds were y when rbarous against clining, r alto- Ages it al basis. 3 to the "The In once le loss. La writ- ered up presents gyptian ceasion, ter was ould be ast man also the , liberal y he re- ber upon up. 1 tive of a though of and I found duction I was e of the yrevious y large that he o under 1irce, he ; his in- y bill of 1d made ced me in ques- was also transfer romptly bignore ng this fly, and y an ex- r indig- ad, but | by the the ab- ners. I ter in a eling of “Took the Hiut. Sir Henry Hawkins was once pre’ siding over a tedious and unintereste ing trial, and was listening, appar ently with absorbed attention, to a tedious and uninteresting speech from a counsel learned in the law. Pres. ently he made a pencil memorandum, folded it, and sent it by the usher to the counsel in question. This gen- tleman, on unfolding the paper, found these words: ‘‘Patienze Competition. —Gold Medal, Sir Henry Hawkins Honorable Mention, Job.” His per. oration was wound up with as little delay as possible. Zeke Was Down on "Em. The present diabolical dressmak- er’s device of balloon shoulders was denounced as long ago as the time of Ezekiel, that prophet having uttered this solemn warning: “Thus saith the Lord God: Woe to the women who sew pillows to all armholes!” The doubting can verify this curse by turning to Ezekiel xiii., 18.—Water- bury American. NO Vetoes There. No British sovereign has Parliamentary bill during 185 years. vetoed a the last STATE oF OR10, CITY OF TOLEDO, UCAS COUNTY. 5 FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of ¥. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, ounty and State aforesaid, and that said firm will oy the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL- LARS or each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL’S CATARRHE CURE. FRANK J, CHENEY. sworn to hefore me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. —t— A. W, GLEASON, { sear} —— . Notary Public, Hail’s Catarrh Cureistaken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo. O. "Sold by Druggists, 75¢. Jerusalem is still supplied with water from Solomon's Pools through an aqueduct built by the Crusaders. We Cure Rupture. No matter of how long standing. Write for free treatise, testimonials, ete., to S. J. Hollensworth & Co., Owego, Tioga Co., N. Y. Price $1; by mail, $1.15. Soap is legal tender in Dueretaro, Mexico, Soap money in that town is not cur- rentin any other. Send 10c, silver, for reproduction of Vicks- burg (Miss.) Citizen of July 2, 1863; commenc- ed by secessionists, captured and finished by federals; printed on wall paper ; a most inter- esting and valuable souvenir of the rebellion; address, Faulkner Bros., Marionville, Mo. The Colossus of Rhodes was cast in over 100 pieces and fitted together. Why so hoarse? Use Hatch’s Universal Cough Syrup. 25 cents at druggists, There are over 70 miles of tunnels cut in the solid rock of Gibraltar. Beecham’s Pills correct bad effects of over- eating. Beecham's—no others. 25cents a box. Scientists have invented a device which makes a sunbeam audible. Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. 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 cmbraced 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 or 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 package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. PNUD 35 TE [Algal NSTIPATION | [NYE 4 ANY ONT H An agreeable Tazsative and NERVE TONI Bold ati or sent by mail. 26c., 500 and $1.00 per package. Samples free. KO NO Zima v 1 Pri BUQCCIES at 1 Price Shan & EARNESS ———— Corry 0 Top Bu ..§37 e Luli e «] 9, $05 Phastor -... 354 | PRICES and Xie 4 Pass. Top Surrey.$47 outsell ALL $9 Road Wagon $25 competitors. 16 Road Cart..$8.25| Buy of fac- Buggy Harness$3.85/tory and save to uggy “ $4.75 Middleman’s 0 Team * $12.50 rofit. 4 4 5 Morgan Saddle$l.85 sans Wrens U. 8S. BUGGY & CART CO. 61 8. Lawrence 8t., Cincinnati, 0. Do Not Be Deceived HE LS with Pastes, Enamels and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron and burn red. 7 The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor- legs, Durable, and the consumer 22y8 for no tin or glass package with every purchase. » ELECTRICITY BUTLDING. WONDERS OF ELECTRICAL ~ SCIENCE AT THE FAIR. The Long-Distance Writing Machine —Electrical Appliances For Cook- ing and Cloth-Cutting—Hatching Chickens in Electric Incubators— Submarine Telegraphy. After a person has examined the exhibits of the Electricity Building, he might well bid adieu to sensation of astonishment, writes a Chicago correspondent of the New York Post. He is in a mental attitude which ac- cepts all things as possible. When he has seen real thunderbolts made and launched, facsimile letters and drawings transmitted by electricity, even chickens hatched and roasted by electricity, credulity is likely to be his chief characteristic, and nothing after- wards can seem very surprising. In the west gallery the Gray National Tel- autograph Company make an exhibit of the Jast and, one might almost say, greatest elec- trical marvel. Professor Elisha Gray has been known to the world many years for his improvements in telegraphy, but his latest invention, the telautograph or long-distance writing machine, quite eclipses his previous efforts. More or less has been hears of this device in the last few years, but it has only recently been perfected for commercial uses. It consists of two instruments, a transmitter and receiver, each provided with a roll of paper of convenient size for writing. Both together are about half the size of a type- writer. In writing at the transmitter, an or- dinary pencil is used. near the point of which two small cords are fastened at right angles to each other. These connect with the in- strument, and, following the movements of the pencil, regulate the current impulses which guide the receiving-pen at the distant station. The paper is shifted forward by a little lever, giving an electric impulse which moves in a like manner the paper in the receiver at the other end of the line. The receiving pen is a capil- lary glass tube supplied with ink and placed at the junction of two aluminium arms. The electrical impulses conducted overthe wires move the pen of the receiver simultaneously and in the same directions as the pencil of the sender, and an ink tracing is left which is an exact reproduction in every dot and flourish of the original writing or drawing. The ex- hibit is arranged like a central station, and any two subscribers might be placed in com- munication through it in the same way as they now are upon the telephone ; one writes what he wishes and keeps or destroys what he has written, the other receives and retains his communication in the handwriting of the sender, and that is the complete yet sole record of the transaction. Accuracy and secrecy are secured, the wires cannot be tapped or the message overheard, no opera- tor is necessary, and any kind of figures from short-hand to Chinese characters may besent with equal ease. As ons sits writing at one table, it seems almost uncanny to see at an adjacent table a pen with no guiding hand eproducing at the same instant his own fa- By another electrical machine the speed and direction of a ship are indicated. This instrument is connected with the compass in such a manner as not to interfere with its movements, and at the same time to show a continuous chart for each fifteen minutes of the distance traversed and any variation that may have taken place in the course. In submarine telegraphy the Commercial Cable Company make a very instructive and interesting display. After the several fail- ures of 1857, 1858 and 1865 of the attempt to connect Europe and America by cable, sue- cess was achieved in 1866. Since that year electrical communication has remained un- broken between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres, and submarine telegraphs have multiplied, until now the different lines of the globe have an aggregate length of 139,600 miles. The Atlantic Ocean alone is at pres- ent spanned by ten cables in more or less continuous use. The Commercial Cable Company’s system is composed of two main cables from Cape Canso in Northeastern Nova Scotia to Waterville on the southwest coast of Ireland. From the latter port the cable is laid to Bristol, with aerial lines to the chief cities of England, Wales and Scotland, and another to Havre with an underground line to Paris. At the American end a double cove cable runs from Cape Canso to Rock- port, Mass., with aerial lines to Boston and New York, and a second cable running direct from Canso to New York. The efficacy of the last line was well demonstrated during the blizzard of 1888, when it was the only one open from New York to the outer world, and messages to Boston and other places were transmitted by way of London. The total length of cables operated by this com- pany is 6935 nautical miles. In the exhibit here the whole process of transmitting messages between Europe and America is shown. An artificial cable with all the prop- erties of the real Atlantic cable is employed ; signals sent through it and received by the recording instruments are ot the same shape and occupy the same time in sending from one side of the pavilion to the other as from one side of the Atlantic to the other. Visitors are permitted té send souvenir de- spatches through this artificial cable, and by watching their course through transmission and reception, obtain a correct idea of the whole operation. Many people suppose that cablegrams are received by means of flashes of light, but it seems that that system is prac- tically abandoned. The messages arerecorded on a paper ribbon with a fine glass siphonno thicker than a hair ; the ribbon moves at the rate of about forty inches per minute and the siphon leaves an inky trail clear and legible to the operator, but to the ordinary specta- tor it resembles the outline of a mountain chain in which there are no two peaks alike. With these recorders a speed of 250 to 300 letters per minute may be maintained. Automatic senders are also used. The mes- sage is transcribed upon paper ribbon hy nieans of indentations, then the ribbon is run through the automatic sender ; by this means light, speed and uniformity are attained. Some of the instruments for detecting breaks and injuries to the cable are extremely ine teresting. For example, a machine has be devised for registering tho amount of re tance the current meets with in passing through the cable. This resistance is divided into units called ohms, and the number of ohms per nautical mile for any given cable is readily deduced from the total re- sistance and total mileage. If the insulaz- N aye ~ Nn hed i I “CH tienrrer, td TORTAL OF THE LIBERAL ARTS BUILDING. miliar writing. This invention is in many points much superior to either telephone or telegraph, and it is quite sure to encroach considerably upon their domain. Negotia- tions might be conducted between parties in widely separated places and contracts signed and exchanged without their coming to- gether, or minute instrustions be given to bankers or brokers without any room ior misunderstanding or dispute. In the north gallery another recent and clever appiication of electricity is shown by its use in cooking. Electrical ovens, models of convenience and neatness, are ex- hibited. They are made of wood, lined with asbestos to prevent radiation of heat, and are lighted inside by an incandescent lamp. The temperature of the oven is indicated by a thermometer, and a large miea-colored door shows the progress of the cooking within. Wires offering resistance to the passaze of the electric current, and thus producing the heat, are disposed in the oven, and switches placed at different points enable one to ap- ply the heat wherever desired. If a turkey is roasting more rapidly on one side than on another, instead of taking it out and turning it about, a second switch is closed and the temperature is raised as required. All sorts of utensils are provided with attachments through which a eurrent may be passed ; coffee is boiled and steaks are grilled with electricity ; flatirons have small silk-cov- ered copper wires fastened at the back so that a high and even heat is maintained at the bottom, while the top, made of a non- heat-conducting substance, remains quite cool. In fact, conditions seem so changed that the kitchen becomes almost a parior and cooking a pastime, In this display there are also registers from which rooms may be electrically heated. In the south gallery chickens are hatched in electric incubators, and the records of other processes, or even of the maternal hen, are completely broken. Wires are led through compartments where, by means of switches and thermostadts, an absolutely uniform temperature is maintained through- out the period of incubation. The time is lowered from twenty-one to nineteen days, and almost every egg produces a lusty chick. Another contrivance is an electric eloth- cutting machine, This is for uss in large clothing manufacturers’ shops, and it is said to save one-half of the labor while giving better results than are obtained by any other method. It does its work with the greatest ease and precision, and costs for motive power less than $5 per month. An electric bootblack is the next novelty. One sits in a comfortable chair, and puts a nickle in the slot, when at once one brush cleans the™oots and another give them a ra- diant shine. In one of the cases the advance of telagra- phy is shown by contrasting a Morse receiver of 1893 with the original Morse machine of 1837. Near this exhibit is an interesting witness to Cyrus Fields’s labors. It is the grapnel with which the broken cable of 1865 was successfully recovered. tion of the cable is torn off hy dragging anchors, contact with the bottom, or thelike, the current at that place eoases to have re- sistance, and by dividing the resistance which remains by the number of ohms per mile the exact place of injury is known. Some in- stances of extraordinary speed in cabling are recorded. One case is mentioned in which instructions were sent to London brokers, the business done, and answer received, ail within six minutes. In another case a mes- sage was sent to London and an answer ob- tained in forty-five seconds. This, as may be conjectured, is the fastest time on record. In all quarters of the Electricity Building are new and astonishing uses to which the suble fluid is put, sometimes when only the slightest force is desired, at others when a mighty and irresistible power is applied. There are splendid exhibits showing the ap- plication of electricity to mining. Leaving this building, one watches the elec- tric trains glide along the intramural road, or the electric launches dart silent and smoke- less about tho beautiful lagoons; turning city-wards, he sees Chicago covered by the lowering impenetrable pall of smoke belched from myriad chimney<, and wonders when the equivalent of light and heat will be gen- erated at the big coal fields and watertalis and sent broadcast throughout the land: when cleanliness and quiet shall prevail. NOVEL MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT, The most novel musieal programme given at the Fair attracted a large aud 6 to Festival Hall. Wagnerian musie, Irish Jig dances by pipers and the rude tom-tom beating by Oriental tribes followed in rapid succession until the audience was dazed. This was one of the popular attractions ar- ranged by the spacial committee to increase the attendance at the Exposition. The first number on the programme was “Tannhauser,” by ths Royal Intantry Band of the German Village. This was followed by Irish melodies by singers from Lady Ab- erdeen’s Irish village. Taen there was “‘yod- ling" by the Swiss mountain trio. Tifteen Javanese musicians beat trowangas and played on soolings and trumpets. The songs and dances of the Dahomeyans proved an at- tractive feature, being followed by charac- teristic songs and dances by the Indian chiels and squaws of the Plaisance. The grand concluding feature was a medicine song and scalp dance by Chief Crazy Horse. PERSIA AT FAIR. The Imperial Persian section in the Agri. cultural Building has been opened to the public by tho Commissioners without mony. Thesubjeets of the Shah have brought together a magnificent display of Persian tapestry, rugs, carpets, art wares in brass and other metals, ancient and modern w jeweled and chased and inlaid with ble finely tempered steel. The walls of the heau- tiful pavilion are completely covered inside and outside with rugs from the looms of the Shah’s dominion. THE cere- FIVE THOUSAND HOMELESS. Helf a Million in Property Lost, 50,000 Panic Stricken Inhabitants. Five Blocks of Homes and Busi- ness Houses Laid Waste. —-——————— A fire which,in the extent of the territory it covered, rivals Chicago's historic confla- gration, began in South Chicago Thursday evening. The 50,000 inhabitants were pre- cipitated into a panic second only to that which characterized the conflagration of i871. The loss is estimated at $3500.000. Two hundred houses were destroyed and 5,000 people were made homeless, The fire started in a three-story brick building at the corner of Ninety-first and Superior avenue. Within two hours it had consumed 3) buildings and tive blocks of the greatest industrial suburb of Chicago. Among the first buildings to fall were the First Methodist Church and the German Lutheran Church. Then the fire was detected burning in a dozen places further east. After Superior avenue the flames crossed Ontario avenue, Buffalo avenue, Mackinaw and Green Bay avenue to the lake, The dis- trict between Superior avenue and the lake was filled with frame structures. and burned rapidly, as the strong wind carried clouds of smoke, laden with sparks and embers in all directions. The whole area of five blocks was full of small fires. As the pine structures in which Jived the workingmen employed mm the Jarge steel mills, and in wuich the smaller merchants of the place made their homes were leveled, those whose honies had not yet fallen fled with their goods aud house- hold chattels to other portions of the city. Betore the scores of engines had made tie least appreciable effect upon the progress of the flames the immense docks of the Sun- duy Creek Coal Company were burning. Over 100,000 tons of coal were stored in the limimense bins. At the same momeut the A. R.Beck lumber yards were found to be burning. When the fire broke into the coal yards every engine that could be spared and the powerful steamer Vosemite, 1s soon as it reached the harbor, was brought to fight the conflagraion. ‘When a dozen houses in the vicinity of Superior avenue and Ninety first street” had been swept away in the whirlwind of the fire, the early fright of the people t yzan to give wuy to the panic, which in another hour precipitated a flying army towyrd the other portions of town Fanned by a niff ga.e from the east the fire swept on untii more than 200 « weilings and buildings were in ashes. making 5,000 people homeless and eniailing a loss of at least $500,000. The fire started, itis supposed, from a smoldering] bonfire started by two boys piaving iu the yard in the rear of William Giliis's house. EAT EVEN THE FENCES. Voracicus Grasshoppers Devastate All of Western New York. Reports from all the counties in Western New York agree in the respect that the ravazes of grasshoppers are unprecedented. Farmers in Niagara county complain that the insects are so greedy that they not alone devour oats, buckwheat, corn and vegeta- bles, but are eating the f oliage of the trees and attacking fences. They are so raven- ous as to eat weeds and even the bitter burdock. in Chautanqua county the vineyards are suffering from depredations of grasshoppers, Bushels of grapes can be picked up where the stems have been eaten in two by the hoppers. Tlorists and hegticulturists haye tried poisonous washes for the leaves of their plants, farmers have set ducks, turkeys and clrickens loose in the fields, but no one has done more than to turn the pests into the grounds of his neighbors, In the city grasshoppers are as thick as flies and the parks are full of them. All lawns and meadows are suffering and the pests seem to multiply like the locust plague in Egypt. Thousands of dollars worth of damage will be done in this part of the State. AIR PEOPLE FEEL BETTER. The Attendance at the White City is Growing Larger Day by Day. Everybody interested pecuniarily in the Fair is feeling better. It seems now as if expectations of a better attendance will be realized. The hotels in the vicinity of Jackson Park are filling up rapidly, and the restaurants are reaping the long waited for harvest. From 120,000 to 150,000 visitors can be counted on now on ordinary days, just as 20,000 or 30,000 could be ‘counted on in the discouraging times of a month ago. Consequently things are loosening up all around. The concessionaries are offering extraordinary attractions, The manage- ment is spending money liberally on epecial amusements. Day by day the pecu- liar features of the programme are getting more interesting, and the greatest show on earth is deemed by old visitors to be greater than ever. el Total admissions on Tuesday were 182,757 of which 152,380 were paid. THE MONEY SCARE ABATING. Bank Failures Have Ceased, Gold is - Coming Back and a General Feeling of Confidence Is Restored. Viewed from a Treasury standpoint, the general financial situation of the country shows improvement, slight perhaps but it is believed permanent. Bank failures have almost entirely ceased, banks that have nded under the financial stringency are resuming business; gold which poured out of the country is returning, and a gen- eral feeling of confidence is being restored. During the time that gold was being shipped to Europe the United States sustain- tained a net loss of $63,000,000. This is now coming back and it is estimated that al- ready $25,000,000 has returned. This specie s found its way into the interior of the United States, much of it to Chicago, Some of it now figures in the bank balances, but much of it was absorbed by American securities. —_——— DECIDED BY VOTE. SUS ) Toronto,Ont., Citizans AgainstRunning Sunday Street Cars. The citizens, of Toronto, * Ont., voted on the question of running street railway cars on Sunday. The vote resulted in the defeat of the proposition to run the cars by a majority over 1,000. Of the seven daily newspapers published here, but one advo- cated running street cars on Sunday. The Weekly Crop Report. The weekly crop report says: Pennsyl- vania—Rain too late to materially benefit corn, potatoes and tobacco; late garden crops and pasture greatly benefited. West Virginia—Corn fired in many fields, tobacco pastures and buckwheat short, Ohio—Crop conditions generally unchanged. Upland corn and late potatoes past help; tobacco, light crop; large clover seed, fair, small. total failure; tomatoes rotting. { Measuring the Power of Light. The method of measuring the candle-pover of light is simply to move an object along a graded scale, away from the light, until it ceases to cast a shadow; a mark on the scale at this point candle-power of the flame. It is apparent that the shadows thrown are to a great extent dependent on the inteusity of the light. Thus water-gas, which gives a more in- tense light to a given area than coal. gas, casts a strong shadow in the measuring machine, but when put to practical use it does not illuminate a room so well, not having so great diffusive power as a coal-gas light as the same measured candle-power. An analogous case is that of the sixteen - candle - power incandescent light. It is very intense, but does not illuminate a room as well as a gaslightofequal candle-power. What the public wants is better illumina- tion, and it would seem that some other standard should be devised than the admittedly imperfect one of candle-power. Month of Marriages. In all countries more marriages take place in June than in any other month. Highest Church Steeple. The highest church steeple in the world is that of the cathedral of Ant- werp, 476 feet. Rainfall at the Equator. At the equator the average annual rainfall is 100 inches. indicating the | 1 was taken ill with spi- nal disease and rheuma- tism. I went home and was confined to my bed unable to help myself for 22 months. After WHILE IN sarsaparilla. I got a bottle and could quickly note a change for the NL > Deptor. Poe taking : ttles was well ani Mr, Wheeler. ave not since been troubled with my old complaints.” JAS. A. WHEERER, 1930 D.vision St., Baltimore, Md. Hood’s*=»Cures Hood's Pills cure liver ills. 25 cents per box. Always the Favorite. Although the rose was brought ins to greater prominence during the feud between the houses of York and Lancaster, which Bent between the red rose and the white, A thousand souls to death and deadly night the emblematic rose of England wat part and parcel of ancient history in England long before. There is (o1 was) a wild rose which trailed and climbed over the cathedral walls ai Hildesheim, with its roots in the crypt. This rose was said to have flourished there long before Char. lemagne laid the foundations of that glorious edifice. Roman warriors had roses depicted upon their shields, and, indeed, for ages and in every clime the “queen of the flowers” has been a universal favorite. It is a worthy emblem of “the rose and ex pectancy of this fair state,” and long may it continue to be.—Homs¢ Journal. HOHE OD ED Dlddde greatest of helps. Eodbdd SOOOOOOLOLLLLOOELOLL0EL0E For Summer Cookery Royal Baking Powder will be found the With least labor and trouble it makes bread, biscuit and cake of finest flavor, light, sweet, appetizing and assuredly digestible and wholesonie. EOD T ODDO ITOD “August Flower” My wife suffered with indigestion and dyspepsia for years. Life be- came a burden to her. Physicians failed to give relief. After reading one of your books, I purchased a bottle of August Flower. It worked like a charm. My wife received im- mediate relief after taking the first dose. She was completely cured— now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat anything she desires without any deleterious results as was formerly the case. C. H. Dear, Prop’r Wash- ington House, Washington, Va. ® BTHE KIND STERRY, Morristown, N. Y. Cempletely Cured. ges DANA SARSAPARILLA CO., MESSRS :—. ceo ha = my back. s it was hard work for me to get [fl ==around. XLas . I had another attack of ¢¢ Fa =— Grippe,” which left me so bad I could =hardly get across the room. == chant advised me to try a bottle of - DANA’S SARSAPARILIA 8 did so, and have taken three bottles of SAF APARILLA and one bottle of DANA'S PII iB ndIam COMPLETELY CURED ES No trouble with Kidneys; back =ache; good appetite, and I never felt be B® ife. You may publish thts if you wish —asevery word is true. Our me; 112 {ours truly, Morristown, N. Y. ‘WESLEY STERRY. GENTS :—We are personally acquainted with »- mB Sterry, and knew his statements are true = = spectfully, A.F, &C.F. MCNEILL. @ Dana Sarsaparilla Co., Belfast, Maine. gi This Trade Mark is on the best WATERPROOF COAT Tllustrated . Boone in the World! #res. A.J). TOWER, BOSTC FREE. 500 ladies and MARRIAGE PAPER gents want correspondents GUNNELS’ MONTHLY, TOLEDG, OHIO. S— You Wil Realize that They Live Well Who Live Cleanly,” SAPOL if You Use O MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hammer needed to drive and clinch them easily and quickly, leaving the clinch absolutely smooth. Requiring no hoe to be made in the leather nor burr for the Rivets. Thay are strong, tough and durable. Millions now in use. All lengths, uniform or assorted, put up in boxes. sk your dealer for them, or send 40c. stamps for a box of 100, asgorted sizes. Man'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WALTHAM, MASS. PNU 35 ‘e3 AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE For I¥ndigestion, Bilicuszese, eadache, Constipation, iad Complexion, Offensive Breath, and all disorders of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, RIPANS TABULES act gently yet promptly. Perfect digestion follows their use, Sol ox iodide potassium, sarsaparilla or Hot Springs fail, we guarantee re—and our Marie Cyphilene is the only thing that will cure permanently. Positive proof sent sealed, free. COOK REMEDY Co., Chicago, 11. SMITH "PAPER MERCHANT MIT SELLS THE BEST, THE CHEAPEST WALL PAPER Gead Papers 3c. and 5c. Gold Papers 5c., Se. and 16e. Send dc, Stamps for samples. 541 Wood Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. VIEW : WORLD'S FAIR FREE Agent, ILLINOI» AL RAJL- ROAD, 194 Clark Street, Chicago, 111, for a free copy of a large, colored bird's-eye view of the Werld’s Fair and vicinity. It is mounted on rollers for hanging up, and will be found of VA LUE AS A SOUVENIR, AND FOR REFERENCE. FRAZER AXLE Getsthe Genuine! EASE Sold Everywhere! ‘ fy _NTechanien! Freans Ie GURING CUR SPECIALTY— our science, You can learn more ; about our methods and success by addreseing ¢ I. B. SEELEY & CO. ————nce—— 30, 1th niladelphia JOHIN W.MMORRIS, Street, ENSIO Washington, D.C. Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3yrsinlast war, 15adjudicating cl4ims, atty since. Send two cents in postage to F. B. -@ < a day made by active agents selling 50.00 our machines, Wanted, Agents to sell the Best Typewriteri the world ; exelusive territory given. Address N. TYPEWRITER CO.,Boston, Mass. P A TF E N "1" Q TRADE MARKS. Examination 4 bil WJ, and advice as to patentability of invention, Send for Inventors Guide,or how to get a patent. PATRICK O’FARRELL, WasHiNGTON, D.C, 'S SHORTHAND COLLEGE, 303 Smith- Street, Pittsburg, Pa. Open all year, 1d evening; catalegue free. GOITRE CURE Piso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the Best. Easiest to Use, anid Cheapest. ax SEND for FREE Circular, J. N. Klein.Belleville,N. J. i Sold by druggists or sent by mail, S0c. H.T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa.