Libby Prison in 1835. ‘TI have been a sufferer from chronic diarrhoea eve: since I came out of Libby Prison in 1885 and at times it Was very se- vereand my last attack of it lasted me over 81x weeks durinz whicn time I tried all the remedies IT had previously used and had several doctors treat me for the same but ! nothing would stop it. I was induced to try | a bottle of Thurston's Blackberry Cordial and after using less than half a bottle was relieved and am once more regular. Thanks to your Cordial, I cheerfully recommend it to all the ‘‘old boys” who are troubled with that dreaded disease or anyone else for sum- mer complaints. This testimony is unsolic- ited. —Yours truly, J. L. Styron, Traveling Salesman.’ Thurston's Blackberry Cordial is prepared Dy Duarsion Chemical Co., Grand Rapids, io. A San Francisco *‘aoctor’”’ produ ces dim- ples for $5 apiece. There is more Ca arrh in this section o~ the country than ail other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incuranle. For a great many years doctors pro- nounced it a locat disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. ’cience has proven catarrh to bs a constitu- tional disease and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man- ufactured bv F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the oniy constitutional cure on the market. t is taken internally in doses trom 1) drops to a teaspoonful, It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars f r any case it fails to cure. Send tor circulars and testimonials free. Addreg 3 - . J. CaeExey. & Co., Toledo, O. £2 Sold by Druggists, Toc. 2 2 : The la est ocean s camsuip sugges ion is a submarine trolley. Hatch’s Universal Cough Syrup is positively unequaled, Try it. 25 cents at druggists, The ‘allest tree on earth is a gum tree in Australia—i413 fee . We Cure Rupture. No matter of how long standing. for free treatise, testimonials, etc., Ss. J. Hollensworth & Co., Owego, Tioga Co. N. ¥. Price $1; by mail, $1.15. Write Elec rified horsewhips are the lates". Brings comfort and improverzent ard tends to personal cnjoyment 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 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 permanenily 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. gistsin 60c 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. THE KIND THAT CURES 1 ES | 151 LE NE EE ) CHARLES SIMMONS, Cohoes, N. Y. A MARVEL IN COHOES! Kidney and Liver Disease FOR 15 YEARS, CURED BY 3 BOTTLES! DANA SARSAPARILLA CO.: GENTLEMEN :—Having been restored to good health by the use of your Sarsaparilla I feel it == my duty to let others know the great benefit 125 Z= have received. Eo For 15 years I have been troubled with Bi ==severe pains in the Stomach, alse Kid-= FEE 1101 1 i i i E115 ey an ver Eisease, so badly that fore en 2 = Evers at a time I had to stay in bed. Bo = Ihavcused three bottles of A’S mand I feel like a new man. I recom- mend it to ay afflicted with disease of the Kid- nays. ours rg¢spectfully, = § Cohoes, N. Y. CHARLES SIMMONS. | The truth of the above is certified to by Dr JAMES 8. CALKINS, = Druggist of Cohoes, N. Y. mB 3 I HR Never purchase of a ‘‘ SUBSTITUTER, == (a person who tries to sell you something= else when you call for Dana’s.) Our bot-58 plies are being filled with a COUNTERFEIT= ==ARTICLE by ‘‘Substituters.’”” Buy of thez== JE HONEST DEALER who sells you what you = ask for, and if ‘ou receive no benefit he= B® will return your money. i na Sarsaparilla Co., Belfast, Maine. I Do Not Be Deceived LES with Pastes, Enamels and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron and burn red. - "he Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor. ler, Durable, and the consumer jf.ays for no tin or gless package with every purchase. FCLEIGN AND DOMESTIC, —_— What is Going On the World Over. important Events Briefly Chronicled PAE frritnl. Labor and Induetrial. The Ed wards Manufacturing Company, of Boston. operating a great cotton plant = at Angusta. Me.. has announced a 10 per cent, reduction ir: wages. Abont 1,100 hands are aflecied. The Chesapeake and Ohio and South- western Railroad Company have ordered a cut of 10 per cent in the wages of all its em- ploves, from the President down. The cut tukes effect Octoter 1. The Remington Arms Company's works, at Illion, N. Y., after a month's shutdown, started up in full. The Aetna Standard mills, at Bridgeport, O., resumed work. One thousand men are employed. Many large manufacturing establishments in Cleveland, O.. and suburbs are adding to their working force daily and idie men are not nearly so plentiful as a few weeks ago. Business menin the vicinity report a big improvement in trade, with collections very good. At Lancaster. I'a., notice was published that the (onestoga cotton mils, orerated by John Farnum & Co., and emploving near 1,000 hands, wonid run only alternate weeks after Oct. 1. The mills bave been working full time incessantly since 1861. The s rikers at the Thompson Run coal mines near New Castle, Pa, have resumed, accepting the reduction of 5 cents per ton on which they struck. The Haskell & Barker Car Works, at Michigan City, Ind, employing 1,000 men, have resumed operations. ae Financial and Commercinl. The National bank of Ashland, at Ash- land, Neb.,resumed business in an excellent condition. The Exchange Bank at Wheeling, W.Va., which suspended last month, has reopened under a new organization and largely in- creased capital. This resumption will release about $930,000 which has been tied up. The Rocky Mountain Dime and Dollar Savings Bank, of Denver, opened for busi- ness. This is the first of the four failed sayings banks to resume, Deposits amount- ed to fully five times the withdrawals. The daily statement of the United States treasurer shows for the-first time in two weeks t he receipts of the government to be in excess of the expenditures, the figures for the month thus far standing as fotlows: Receipts, $17,272,851; expenditures, $17,062,- 000, Of the latter amount $8,518,500 was on account of pensions. The gold reserve to- day was $95,684,317. The net balance is now §11,819,273, Crime and Penalties. Henry S. Cochran, the embezzling Phila- delphia Mint weigher, was arraigned and held 1n $30,000 bai! in order to give him lime to procure counsel. Supt, Bosbyshell testified that the shortage amounted to £98,000. Two men robbed the passengers of a Santa Fe train near Guthrie. Okla., of about $1,000, at the muzzles of revolvers. They were captured. ! Three robbers who held up the New Orleans Limited train on the Illinois Cen- tral railroad just outside Centralia, II, Thursday night, gotthe worst of the bar- gain, The train hands gave them battle, mortally wounding and capturing one of them, while posses of citizens captured the other two. The robbers got no booty. Three of the train crew were wounded. Those who were hurt in the shooting during the attack were: Engineer Young, Conductor Odum, Fireman McDowell, Robert J. L. Jones. ERS Disasters: Accidents and Fatalities James Chessberry and Isaac Roland, two colored men working in the main wheel pit of the big tunnel at Niagara Falls, fell from a scaffold a distance of 90 feet. Chess- berry was instantly killed, and Roland fa- tally hurt. Near Whittier, N. C., the boiler of Keel- ey’s sawmill exploded. The mill was wrecked and six persons were killed. The names of the dead are: Richard Nichols, Jas. Kelley, Ben McMahon,Gales McMahon, Jessie Gunter and Henry Smith. The bodies were blown to pieces. ee Washington News, The House Judiciary Committee ordered a favorable report on the bill introduced by Mr. Oates, of Alabama, repealing that sec- tion of the statutes which requires proof of loyalty, during the War of the Rebellion as a pre-requisite to being restored or admitted to the pension roll. le Cholera Advices HavBurc—Ten new cases of cholera and two deaths from the disease have been re- ported within 24 hours. All the cases oc- curred in the suburbs. Miscellaneous. The dry spell at St. Paul was broken Mon- day with thunder, lightning, hail and rain. Two men were killed by lightning. The remains of J. Knox Polk, 10th Presi- dent of the United States, and those of his wife, were removed from Polk Place, the old family residence in Nashville, Tenn., to a picturesque spot in the State Capitol grounds. The finest varieties of peaches are selling for 25 cents a bushel and much of the fruit isrotting on the trees at Hagerstown, Md. The destitute starving in the vicinity of Brunswick, Ga., on account of the exodus caused by yellow fever number about 100,000. SC BEYOND OUR BORDERS. Part of the shaft of the Dolcoath mine, in Cornwall, fell in entombing thirty miners. All but eight of the miners were rescued. Er- fcrts are being made to rescue the others, but it is feared they will die before they can be released. SHE=—WIIl you see papa 10-mor- row? He—Y-yes. if you will give me a letter of introduction. lic never kpows me when he sees me. THE NATIONAL GAME. Davis, of New York, leads the League in batting. Kixsrow is doing ell the catching for Brooklyn. TEERE never was a more prosperous year in baseball in New England. Tre Chicagos will take a trip to Cuba after the championship season closes. Tre Philadeiphias lead in flelding and batting but by a very small margin. Troxpsox, of Philadelphia, recently made a home run in four successive games. Bostox will make a tour of the Northwest with St. Louis after the season is over. Harruax, of Philadelphia, is the only League player to score five runs in one game. NEITHER the St. Louis nor Baltimore Clubs has won a game in Pittsburg in two seasons. NevER before has a Chicago team finisheq so low as the Chicago team of 1893 will finish. St. Lovurs players have made fewer home runs than any other lot among the League dozen. Tak Bostons have scored more runs than any other League team thisyear. Tey play for runs. Keere will coach Harvard next season, while Irwin will look after the University of Pennsylvania boys. SHorT fences come high. During its checkered career this year the Southern League paid 81320 for balls. > PrrcaEr FisHER, of Buffalo, holds a re- cord. He pitched in three successive games , in which his opponents were shut out. Axsox, of Chicago, and O'Rourke, of Wash- ington, have played ball from the time of the Centennial to the Columbian Fair. GoopneNoueH has introduced a new play since he joined St. Louis. Two orthreetimes he has beaten out short hits by headlong slides to first. EVERY team in the League Fas now been whitewashed. Brooklyn was the last one to succumb to the shut-out tate, the Clevelands doing the trick, BosTox's record of consecutive victories at home and abroad has not been approached by any other club this year. Neither has Washington's record of consecutive defeats. In First Baseman Motz Cincinnati has found a jewel. Over six feet high he has a long reach, is & good hitter and fields his position well, being particularly strong on ground balls and low throws. ! WaER deaf-mate Hoy, of Washington, wants to tell an umpire what he thinks ot him he slams his bat down bard and stamps viciously once or twice. But he never says a word. No umpire has ever yet fined him for talking back. ; STAFrorp, of New York, is now flelding, i batting aud running bases up to his Cali- fornia standard. ‘Phenomenal Jim” did but poorly in his first weeks, but Ward never lost faith in his all-round ability. From the waist down Stafford is buils Like an ideal sprinter. le ! 1 NEWSY GLEANINGS. CrooLERA has spread considerably. Hartrorp, Conn., hasrejected the trolley. WesTERN NEW YORK reports a grasshopper plague. New JERSEY announces 659,000 bushels of cranberries in sight. THE army worm is doing great damage in some parts oi Minnesota. THERE are now twenty inhabitants to the square mile in this country. A rEvivAL of gold mining in Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Idaho is reported. CexTrAL NEw MEXICO has been subject al- most daily for three months to violent earth- | quakes. Customs receipts are unusually light this year, and a large deficit is expected by the Treasury. | Acoroxyof Japanesa ara to settle upon ! rich agricultural lan is in the Southern States of Mexico. CHARLES DE LESSEPS was liberated after about six months’ imprisonment for Panama Canal frauds. MESHONALAND is threatened with invasion | by the Matabele tribe, the bravest warriors in Africa, barring women. Tae bull fight is regaining its old popu- larity in Mexico after a moral spasm which temporarily dethroned it. TaE hop crop in Central New York will be from fifteen to twenty-five per cent. lighter than the crop of last year. Tae indications are that the cranberry crop in Plymouth County, Massachusetts, 1» will be the largest ever harvested. TrE wheat crop of Kansas last year was 70,000,000 bushels. The crop for this year is now estimated at only 21,000,000 bushels. THE merchants of New Orleans, La., have rebelled against the action of banks there in charging them $5 per $1000 on New York ex- change. M. BarTrEOLDI regrets to find that his god- dess of liberty in New York Haroor is show- ing signs of wear, and suggest that she bo gilded to promote her longevity. | TRADE INCREASING. A Gradual Recovery in All Lines of Business, With Exports Excced~ ing Imports. Many Manu. factories Resuming. R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review ol Trade says: Some increase is seen both in production and in distribution of products. True, it is small as yet, but after the worst financial blizz rd for 20 years, it isnot to be expected that all roads can be cleared in a day. But all conditions, except at Washington, favor gradual recovery. Business goes on in un questionabie confidence that the genera desire of the people wi l in some way pre: vail. Money has become abundant and ecsy a: 3 per cent. here on call and stagnant specu lation fortunately favors greater freedom in commercial loans. Stocks and products are dull wi hout sericus fall in prices, and the industries are rapidly rallying to make gooc the scarcity of ~upplies caused by weeks of inaction. goods shows that the wonderful consuming power of the people, if lessened for a time has not ceased, and the shrinksge in the record of commercial disease aud mortality shows progress toward health. Exports of principal products in Augus were $44,797,528, or $3,494,846 more than las year, which, with the known decrease ir imports here, indicates a small excess of ex ports. Kor three weeks of September the increase in exports has been $4,800,000 anc the decrease in imports $9,500,000, promising a larger excess of exports this month. Thi receipts of wheat fall far behind last year’ being 5,635,904 bushels for the week, agains 8,581,495 for the same week last year, anc in three weeks 14,170,533 busheis, agains 23,627,712 last year. The industries are giving strong proof tha consumption of goods was not as muct arrested as many feared when the collaps: of trade manufactures came. While man ufacturers show extreme cantion and declini to start work without «(rd:wrs, improvec financial conditions er ab e them to accep many orders which wourd have been o were refused weeks ago, and actual order rendered frequent by the exhaustion of re tail supplies in many directions. The num ber of works resuming this week have bee: at least 58 wholly and 24 in part. The failures for the week number 319 ii the United States against 188 last year, anc in Canada 40 against 23 last year. Onl five failures were for over $100,000 each. Th. liabilitiesin failures for the second week i September were but $3,042,120 against $5. 319,008 the first week. The vitality of the demand for PRACTICAL JOKES. Usually Silly or Malignant and Sometimes ata Innocent and hilarious fun is all richt when it is not carried beyond the bounds of respect for the feelings of others, but when it oversteps this limit and disregards personal rights, eomafort, and even safety, it is time to eall a halt. The practical joker is, under almost all circumstances, an unmitigated nuisance. So long as he gets his little joke on somebody nothing more is required. Whether it’s agreeable or taken in good part matters not in the least. If the vic- tim is merely angry the joker puts on a most contemptuously lofty air and calls upon the members of the com- munity to observe the surliness of the individnal who can’t take a joke. That it was only intended as such appears to ccver not only a mul- titude of sins, but a multitude ot idiotic performances that nobody but himself or these of his ilk seems able and willing to appreciate. If there are serious or possibly fatal conse- quences, there are tears, protestations, any amount of affected grief and re- gret—‘‘so sorry, but hadn't the least idea that anything wrong would come of it.” : The recent drowning of a promising young girl who was put under water for a joke, the disfiguring for life ofa young man by the explosion of a car- tridee, when sombody didn’t mean anythiog, and sceres of like instances conclusively prove that human nature has some alarmingly weak spots in it and that there are yet in the world, in spite of ail the newspapers and other enlightening influences, very many extremely foolish persons, and that there is still great need of rad- ical reforms in many of the current ideas of what is meant by having a good time. Nothing should bo looked upon as a pleasure that gives pain or anxiety to other peop'e. Sensational scares, the idea of a gigantic hoax, the no- licn that to get ahead of somebody else it is necessary or proper todo something to mislead, is one of the whims that 1t would be an excellent thing to breed out of humanity by ;asy and persuasive measures if pos sible, if not. by the most vigorous ind peremptory treatment. There is plenty of rational amuse- ment to be had in the world without resorting tosuch a very questionable lorm of entertainment as the practi- able ioke. i Oh, the Pity of I$! " If anybody has any advice he isn’t asing be might send some to this un- fortunate young man who writes as follows to the San Francisco Exam- ner: “] am a fairly good-looking young , man, twenty-five years of age, not rery large or very strong. I teach a mountain school eight months in the year for 850 a month. During the tummer vacation I pick berries for 4 rents. a box. I am thirty-five miles ‘rom a railroad cr postotiice, and it is wut seldom I see a paper of any kind. “I board with the trustee of the istrict, a grass widow forty years ’ld, with a family of ten children. she is determined to marry me, but wants me to pay $25 for the diverce. As the other trustecs are afraid of her she has things her owa way, and 1 feel that if I ab:olutely refuse tc comply with her request I shall lose my position and sufler physically also, as she scalded one man who re- fused her. “She is a type of the coming wo- man—=6 feet tall, weighs 200 pounds, plows her own potato-ticld, breaks hei swn horses and mules and chops her wn wood. Were I once hers all these duties would fall to my lot. She says that at the end of the year she can sell her potatoes for $500, ind that if I dig them 1 can have $50 (minus ¢85 for the divorce). “‘All the articles in the Examiner rive advice to young ladies. Can't iome one advise an unassuming young nan and solve the weighty problem, thall he work or shall he wed and work?” Those Wooden Nutmegs. There may possibly have been an original incident among the many peddlers trom Connecticut, of one who cheated by selling wooden nut- megs to his customers, but probably not, says the Ilartford Times. The gost in time and labor, of making such artistic frauds would more than balance the receipts. Doubtless the wooden nutmeg must go with the basswood hams. All the same, the joke has served the purpose ot giving the old-time tin peddlers and clock peddlers from Connecticut a bad name for superior cunning and trickishness. It served at least one good purpose in giving birth to one of the test toasts ever offered at a dinner—old now and well known but perfect in its way— "The Nutmeg State: Where Car We Find a Greater” “WHAT city has the largest float ing population?” inquired the teacher. “Cork!” answered the bright little boy at the foot of the class.—Chicago M=irune, ters. Beecham's—no others. 25 cents a box. The adult human hear: is five inches Jong, Ta Sarséijia Ww © i Lere is no mistake about Hood's Sarsapa- rilla. I want ta tell how quickly it cured me of sour stomach. I cou'd not even take a swallow of water but what I suf-/ fered from distress and acidity. 1 could sce good effects from the first three doses of Hood's Sarsaparvilla. I continued until I took 3 bottles and have been entirely cured.” * Mrs. T. W. HARKEW, {1 Chester Park, Boston: "Hood's Pills are the best after-dinner Pills. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ABSOLUTELY PURE Baking Powder An Amphibious Boat. A new Canadian invention for use in the lumber districts is coming into general use in Northern Ontario. It is called a steam warping tug. It propels itself onland as well as on water, and is used by lumbermen whose operations are carried on among small lakes connected by streams of uncertain navigation. The vessel has proved not only a success, but a great boon to the lum- ber trade. Six of these unique crafts bave been built by the inventors dur- Ing the past season, four completed at their yard in Ottawa, and two shipped, ready to be put together at their destination in the Nipissing district. They are built in scow shape, with steel-shod runners for moving over- land; are thirty-seven feet long, ten feet beam, decked all over, and have sleeping-room for four men in the bow; the bottom and up the bow is covered with steel boiler plate. An engine twenty-two horse power fur- nishes steam for ten hours’ work, with three quarters of a cord of wood. In the water it moves six miles an hour forward or backward, as re- quired, propelled by side wheels. On land it is propelled by having a cable drum on which is coiled flve- eighths of a mile of steel wire cable, which is fastened with pulleys to a tree or some object in front, the boat moving as the wire is coiled up. The boiler is hung on an axle in the cen. ter, and a screw arranged on the front enables the firemen to tip it forward or back, and keep it level going up or down hill. It will move over an elevation ot one foot in three on land, and draws about twenty-eight inches in the water. An Artist in Sand. A curious sight in the streets of Tokio is to see an old man seated on a smooth piece of ground having round him little piles of sand of dif- ferent colors, red, blue, yellow, black, etc. Placing a pinch from each pile in his right hand, he will draw on the smooth ground tae figure of a man or woman, the dress all properly colored, by the sand trickling through his tingers. It is done with great rapid- ity and shows remarkable dexterity. “August Flower” I have been troubled with dyspep- sia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble—]J. B. Young, Daughters College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had beadache one year steady. Onebottle of August Flower cured me. It was positively worth one hundred dollars to me—]J]. W. Smith, P.M. and Gen. Merchant, Townsend, Ont. I have used it myself for constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me, Itis the best seller I ever handled—C. Rugh, Druggist, Mechanicsburg, Pa. ® AT agreeable Laxative and NERVE TONIC. Bold by Druggists or sent by mail. 25c., and $1.00 per pacl-age. Samples free EO oO The Favorite TO0TR ruWDER forthe Teethand Breath, 256. This Trade Mark is on the best WATERPROOF COAT TNiustrated in: Sra in the World! Bree. A. J. TOWER, BOSTON, MASS. CH WALL PAPER MERCHANT RIT SELLS THE BEST, THE CHEAPEST ALL PAPER Good Papers 3c. and 5c. Gold Papers 5c. Se. and 10c. Send Sc. stamps tor samples, 541 Wood Street, rittsburgh, Pu. Ye = S 73 } «day made by active SHO. 00 our machines. Wanted the Best Typewriter in the world; exc given. Address N. TYPEWRITER CO. About Lightning. Althoongh lightning and thunder occur always simultaneously, an in- terval of shorter or longer duration is usually observed between these two phenomena, which is due to the fact that sound travels only at the rate of 1,100 feet per second, while the pass- age of light is almost instantaneous. Based fupon this fact it is an easy matter to tell, at least approximately, how many miles a thunder-storm is away. A normal pulse will beat about one stroke to the second, and by count- ing the pulse beats during the inter- val of the ligntning and the thunder the lapse of seconds is arrived av and consequently the number of feet, which can be reduced to miles. For example: If thirty seconds elapse between the flash of the light- ning and the crash of thunder, the storm center is at a distance of 33,- 000 feet, or about 64 miles. An al- most accurate calculation can be made by using a watch with a minute dial.—Leuisville Post-Dispatch. DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME AFTER TWENTY YEARS SUFFERING WITH Chronic Rheumatism. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. “For the past twenty years I had been troubled with Bheumatism and doctored a great deal without realizing any benefit. Two years ago my attention was called to Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP=- RE ROOT, which was highly recommended . to me. I thought I §, would try a bottle § and I used fourtcen §fo bottles. It has done § me more good @ than all the Doctors § and all the other med- § icines have cver $ taken in the past § twenty years. The past year has been one of eomfort in place of suffering. A great many are using your SW AMP = OOT in Van Wert. Yours respectfully, Feb. 19th, 1893. Van Wert, Ohio. At Druggists 50 cents and $1.00 Size, " Invalids’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. + Dr. Kilmer & Co., - Ringhamton, N.Y. Dr. Kilmer’s U & O%Anointment Cures Piles Trial Box Free. . — At Druggists, 60 cents. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH THOMSON'S SLOTTED 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 tor the Rivets. They are strom; tough and durable. Millions now in use. Ki Jengths, uniform or assorted, put up in boxes. sk your dealer for them, or send 40c. ia stamps for a box of 100, assorted sizes. Man'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO. | : WALTHABN, MASS. i PNU 39 ‘3 AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE For Indigestion, Biliousness, Ieadache, Constipation, Ba Complexion, Offensive Breath, ana all disorders of the Stomach, Liver and Bowelg by druggists or sent by mail. Box (6 vials), 7bc. Package (4 boxes), &2. For free samples-address RIPANS CHEMIOAL 00., New York. FRAZER AXLE SE If any one doubts that 8 we can cure the must ob- i stinate case in 20 to 60 # days, let him write for 3 particulars and investi- gate our reliab lity. Our 4 financlal backing is $500,000. When mercury, fodide potassium, sarsapurilla or Hot Springs fail, we guarantee a cure—and our Macic Cyphilene is the only thing that will cure permanently. Positive proof sens sealed, free. Coox REXEDY Co., Chicago, Ill. Bestinthe World! Getsthe Genuine! Sold Everywhere! | | | | | | ma 8 ant et RAT —EQ=20 1 gett yf DES - a@% TeoX Spe clock 5 LR iRo®m oY So bE S Ses OSE DEE. £ ozs" RA 2rE sg FRCEE S80 ER FEE £ SEES ° Baw S = 3 Cm 2 PE Hal 2 WoXN— 22 = — hd 8 mT EAB | ¥ —The— Largest makers in the world (in bus- iness for 58 years) 4 ht. Phila i 25S, 11th St. Phila. i. B. Segiey & Go., Send for book. DAT 2) INQ TRADE MARKS BE wamination PA I EN i J, and advice aso patentability of invention. Send ror Inventors Guide, or how to get 1( | a patent. PATRICK O’FARRELL, WasHINGTON, D.C. Ny Sra to mail circulars, do writing | stamped envelope to LADIE | | on em PENSION IRIS | at home, ete. Good wages nd self addressed CO-OPRRATIVE ) TOILET CO., Box i4l, P. U., MISHAWAKA, IND. Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Eureau. 3yrsinlast war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty siuce. i Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is the Ni Best. Fasiest to “Where rt Cathers, Waste Rules.” Creat Saving Results From the Use of AN i ! :