The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, October 05, 1893, Image 7

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How He Trapped Her,
Dr. John Erskine, a well-known
Bcottish divine, was remarkable "tor
for his simplicity of manner and
gentle temper.
He returned so often from the pul-
pit minus his pocket handkerch.ef
that Mrs. Erskine at last began te
suspect that the handkerchiefs were
stolen by some of the old women who
lined the pulpit stairs. So both to
balk and detect the culprit she sewed
a corner of the handkerchief to one
of the pockets of his coat-tails.
Half way up the stairs the good
doctor felt a tug, whereupon he
turned round and caught hold of the
hand of the guilty old woman, saying.
with great tenderness and simplicity:
**No’ the day, honest woman, no
the day, Mrs. Erskine has sewed it
in.” —Spare Moments.
Swears He Se''s at Cost.
I offer at cost my entire stock tor 30 days.
Tam over stocked. Goli paper, 1ct.; finer, 2,
3, 4cis; Lagrain. Hoos. OT leTS same price as
piper Send 2ct,stamp for 100 samples. all
prices. F. J. RErr, Wall Paper Jobber, Roch-
ester Pa. .
Sworn and subseribed to before me this
Lith cay of Septem: er, 1893.
Cras, W, Hu st, Notary Public.
I'0 SAVE annoyance, a man should
use the telephone just as he uses his
revolver; only in cases of absolute
necessity.
$100 Reward. $100.
The readers of this poner will be pleared” to
learn that there is at least one dreaded Gisease
at science has been able to cure in oll i
stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's @-tarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con-
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in-
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de-
Sirosing the foundation of the disease, and
giving the patient strength by boilaing up the
constitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. - The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun.
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure,
Send for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. CHENEY & C0,, Toledo, Q.
* EF Sold by Druggists, 5c.
Belgium is :'he first country to make
hypno ism a crime.
When Nature
Needs assistance it may be best to render it
promptly,but one should remember to use even
the most perfect remedies only when needed.
The best and most simple and gentle remedy is
the Syrup of Figs manufactured by the Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup Co.
Wa'er lillies are used for food in India,
China and Japan.
In every community there are a number of
men whose whole time is not occupied, such as
teachers, ministers, farmers’ sons and others
To these clases especially we would say, if you
wish to make several hundred dollars during
the next 1ew months, write at once to B. r,
Johnson & Co., of Richmond, Va., and they
will show you how to do it.
Shaving pots are elec rically heated now:
ays.
Impaired digestion cured by Beecham’s
Pulls. Beecham’s—no others, 23 cents a box.
About 750 languages are spoken on this
continent.
Cough nights ? On going to bed take a dose
of Hatch’s Universal Cough Syrup.
—Of 10,00) British seamen 66 are lost
every year.
Ifafflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp-
son’s lye-water. Druggistssell at 2ic per bottles
Eating in Haste
At times whi. serving as constable and
deputy sheriff brought on dyspeptic trouble,
although I was natural
ly healthy. Eight
>\months ago I com.
SP jmenced taking Hood's
Sarsaparilla. It has
cured my dyspeptic
trouble and set me
back in my age about
fifteen years. 1 advised
others to take Hood's
Sarsapariila and they
now rejoice over the
good effect it has had
Za
um
AN f
Mr. Shumway.
. upon them. My wife had suffered from severe
headaches, general prostration and loss of ap-
petite. Shehas taken two bottles and her head
b/ a”
Sarssaja 3
Hood's w= Cures
is now free from pain and she is enjoying ex-
cellent health and renewed strength.” S.
SHUMWAY, Webster, Mass. Get Hoop's.
Hood's Pills assist digestion. 25 cents.
PNY ae
Unlike the Dutch Process
No Alkalies
—OR—
Other Chemicals
No fig are used in the
aie preparation of
W. BAKER & C0.’S
\BreakfastCocoa
which is absolutely
pure and solulle.
| It has morethan three times
i the strength of Cocoa mixed
lg with Starch, Arrowroot or
Sugar, aud is far more eco-
g less than one cent a cup.
nourishing, and EASILY
BEER
nomical, costin,
It is delicious,
DIGESTED. et
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
W.BAKER & C0., Dorchester, Mass.
«The Best
Waterproof
5 a
ie FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted water-
lis and will keep you dry in the hardeststorm. The]
new POMMEL SLICKER is a perfect riding coat, and
covers the entire saddle. Bewareof imitations. Don t
buy a coat if the ** Fish Brand” is not on it. Ilustra-
ted Catalogue free, A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass,
ted Calnoruio ITER aki
FRAZER AXLE
Best inthe World! 1
Get.the Genuine!
Sold Everywhere!" Y's
MOCKING BIRDS .....:
CANARIE vaiaasls Decks, on their nie
men lS An e care penn 1 o
PRO TT ER
FRE y mail, by Dr. FRONEFIZLD,
DOCS & COWS. Kisii a
DEPARTMENT OF HINES.
GOLD NUGGETS AND METEOR-
ITES AT THE FAIR.
Iae-Similes of Huge Chunks of the
Precious Metal Worth Many Thou-
sands of Dollars—A Collection of
Meteorites ¥rom Various Quar-
ters of the World.
Tor the benefit of the uninitiated’ Chief
Skiff, of the Mining Department at the World's
Fair, has on exhibition a collection of fac-
similes of great nuggets. The cass contain-
ing them is in the southest corner of the gal-
lery.
When the people come past and see the
shining chunks of what seems to be pure geld
they stop to investigate, says the Chicago
Record. Most of them overlook the card
‘*Fac-Similes” that shows the nature of the
display. When they see the small signs,
reading ‘‘Value $20,000,” they gasp at the
thought of such wealth concentrated in one
spot. Then they get out note-books and take
the full description of every rich piece in the
case. And the descriptions tell very inter-
esting stories of vaiuable discoveries.
Apparently the department was unable to
secure data from which to illustrate the his-
tory of the American gold fields in this par-
ticular line. Most of the specimens shown
are from Victoria, Austria, Australia and
from the Siberian mines. One of the largest
pieces is called the ‘“Welcome!' nugget, and
is from Ballarat, Victoria, one of the great
centers of gold production in Australia. It
is a huge; rugged mass. reminding one of
the cypress trees in a Southern swamp. Look-
ing at it and picturing the feelings of the
man who found it one can imagine the name
given the find expressed the whole situation.
The miner had been working for months,
probably, and making little more than the
ordinary wages. Then came the wonderful
stroke that unveiled gold worth just $41.883,
and weighing 2166 ounces. It is not difficult
to suppose that it was a ‘‘welcome” nugget.
Close by this is another mass, weighing
I717 ounces, worth $31,577 and called the
“Precious.” It also came from Victoria, in
the Berlin district, where fortunes innumer-
Mexico, Kentucky, Arkansas, East Tennes- |
see, Colorado are in company with Green-'
land, East India and Continental Europe,
In some cases are cross-section exhibits,
showing the peculiar steel-like stratification
of the meteorite. Some of the sections have
been polished, bringing out the figuring on
the metal which in some instances looks very
much like Damascus work and in others is
almost exactly identical with the markings
shown on laminated steel, such as is used
for gun barrels.
The contribution from Babb’s Mill, Green
County, Tenn., is a grotesque imitation of a
mugkallonge fish, while the one from Wichita
County, in the Rio Brazos region of Texas,
bears a card saying it was once regarded and
cherished by the Comanches as an object of
worship. The Indians thought that since it !
came out of the sky and got into their camp '
it must have been sent to them direct by
their deity to serve as a warning and token
of divine guidance.
MODEL SUNDAY SCHOOL BUILDING.
The model unday School Building
erected in connection with the World’s Fair
is thus described by the Chicago Record :
High in the air floats a flag with an in-
scription strange to Stony Island avenue.
Beneat: it on the dust-clad sidewalks drift
the restless crowd that ceaselessly moves
back and forth outside the Fair grounds.
From the south come the sharp cries of
fakirs and “‘barlgers’” who stand before the
parasitical sideshows which have fastened
themselves to the great Exposition. Itis a
common thing for some one in the endless
column that is ever marching on Stony
Island avenue to stop abruptly and look up
at the flag. Usually he reads the inserip-
tion aloud, something of astonisament and
something of reverence in his voice: ‘‘Jesus
Christ, the Lord.” The words stand out
prominently. They catch the eye first, and
hold the attention longest, so that a second
giance is needed to grasp the significance
of the strange flag. Another line of words
over the first gives its full meaning. This
linereads. ‘‘Sunday School Building.”
Tne parliament of religions has given
greater prominence than usual to the build-
ing which stands on Stony Island avenue
just opposite the north end of the California
Building. All last week D. L. Moody's
presence filled the building with thousands,
drawn from the big hotels which are
grouped around it. Every day Sunday-
school workers and church people from all
over the world pass through the doors, for
the building is a working exhibit of a Sun-
day-school, although it is not inside the
FAC-SIMILES OF GICANTIC GOLD NUGGETS.
able were turned up along in the '70s. An-
other Berlin treasure came in the famous
Jobn’s paddock and was found October 3,
1870. It weighed 1121 ounces and brought
$17,450, It looks like the rolls of putty that
glaziers take when they have a big job on
hand.
Russia's gold mines are the property of the
Czar, and that monarch sees to it that the
big discoveries are preserved either in the
original form or in measurements and fac-
similes that make valuable historic memen-
toes. One of the greatest of the Russian dis-
coveries is shown in duplicate. It was found
in the valley of Taschkee Targanka, Ural
mountains, Siberia, and the nugget itself is
part of the collection in the Royal School of
Mines at St. Petersburg. Its weight is put at
an even hundred pounds, with a cash value
of $22,000. It is very different in form from
the Australian nuggets. They all tako the
solid outline, while this is rather thin and
flat, afterthe fashion of a huge pancake, with
warty protuberances.
These are the best of the exhibits, Others
there are with values ranging from $500 up,
and varying in shape from the likeness to a
molar tooth to fantastic copies of toadstools.
Just back of the array of gold is another col-
lection of considerable value, though it might
be hard to realize much from it in a financial
emergency. That is because the value is
scientific rather than coin current. It is a
collection of meteorites and fac-similes of
meteorites from the Ward museum. After a
man has seen them he is inclined to think
FALLEN METEORITES.
that shooting stars are good things to dodge.
One of these aerial wanderers from Chupa-
deros, in the State of Chihuahua, Mexico. is
as big as one of the Java summer homes on
the Plaisance. Ata rough guess it might
weight two or three tons. Its outer surface
is seamed and punctured with holes such as
one sees in bread when it ‘rises’ very rapidly.
The holes doubtless owe their existence to
just such an escape of gas from the inside as
marks the process of bread-making. If a
timid man had been in the neighborhood of
that Mexican meteor when it broke loose and
started for the earth he would have thought
some heavenly farmer had tipped over a load
of hay that had caught fire on the way down.
San Gregorio, which is also in Chihuahua.
sends a contribution that draws astronomers
and mineralogists as a molasses barrel draws
flies on a hot summer day. Itis an almost
perfect cone, and could easily be mistaken
ior a gigantic sugar-loaf painted black. Like
the other meteorites it shows where the gas
has bubbled out of the molten mass, leaving
the irregular holes that look like miniature
voleano craters. It weighs about a ton. Its
shape is attributed to the crushing effect of
contact with the earth when it came hurling
out of the sky. It struck on rocky forma-
tion, flattening the base and driving down
the apex into the shape of a cone, just as
bullets sometimes spread at the base and take
a conical outline.
Mexico has plenty of company in the me-
teor business. Cases are ranged all about
the giants of the southern republic and rep-
resent numerous States of this country, as
well as widely separated regions on old con-
tinents, Chile sends a small specimen ; New
fence. The ¢‘‘model Sunday-school build-
ing” as itis called, is the result of a meeting
of the Executive Committee of the Interna-
tional Sunday-school Convention and a con-
ference of the Sunday-school workers held at
Chautauqua, N. Y., in August, 1891. It was
there decided to request the Sunday-school
workers of America to unite in erecting a
model Sunday-school building in connection
with the World’s Fair, first, as an illustra-
tion of Sunday-school work and as a speci-
men tq be copied ; second, to show the pres-
ent condition of the Sunday-sehool work in
the different parts of the world, and third,
to illustrate the growth and progress of Sun-
day-schools.
When the proposition was made before the
Sunday-school workers of Chicago they
greeted it enthusiastically, and voted to
raise $10,000 as Chicago's contribution.
Four prizes were offered to architects for the
best four plans, the first prize going to H.
Curtiss Hoffman and Frank Upman, of Chi-
cago.
Sunday-schools throughout the country
responded to the request sent out from
Chautaaqua, Illinois, outside of Chicago,
giving $1800, Massachusetts $1000, Pennsyl-
vania $1364, New York £886. New Jersey
$541, Ohio $263, Michigan $267, Rhode Isl-
and $122 and other States more or less
amounts. Quebec sent $100, Ontario $122,
and $2 came from little Prince Edward Isl-
and. The total amount required to build,
equip and carry the enterprise to a success-
ful end was £30,000. and of this $20,000 was
raised, leaving $10,000 to be gathered. This
deficiency is being gradually taken up.
The building combines an ornamental ex-
terior with a remarkably well-arranged in-
terior. Architecturally it is a handsome
structure, although there is little about it to
suggest a Sunday-school or charch, for, in
reality, the building is a church which can
be thrown open for a Sunday-school in a
few minutes. On either side of the main
auditorium are polygonal wings divided from
it by sliding partitions. Lxtending under
the rear gallery is another section separated
from the main room by sliding partitions.
Thus, when all the partitions are down, the
auditorium is of the conventional oblong
shape, with a spacious gallery extending
around three sides.
In use, the partitions’ are raised. They
slide up and under the gallery seats, giving
the main floor three times the seating capac-
ity it had before the partitions were raised.
For Sunday-school work the auditorium is
used for the intermediate department, the
junior and senior departments are in the
polygonal wings, and the primary depart-
ment is under the rear gallery. All these
departments can be subdivided into class-
rooms by curtains hung on brass rods sus-
pended from the gallery The gallery itself
can be used for class-rooms if desired. This
flexible arrangement throws the entire Sun-
day-school into one body or divides it into
classes, each class having its own individual
room when desired, the changes being made
in a few minutes.
Every Sunday afternoon, beginning at 3
o'clock, a Sunday-school is held in the
building. The pupils are adults, ior the
Sunday-school is something of a normal-
school order. It teaches teachers. The les-
son for the day is taught by some noted
worker, and is printed on leaflets, upon
which are also printed something which is to
make people think.
The library, between the two entrances, is
large enougin to be used as a reading-room,
and the stairs, halls and lobbies are broad,to
afford easy exit in case of fire. Toilet-rooms
are provided for visitors aswell as scholars,
andto all appearances there is all that can
be desired in the way of light and air. The
building will easily seat 1500, but twice that
number can be accommodated, for there is
scarcely a place under the roo: that canno:
be seen from the platform.
mse Eee ereeee
Tre Wisconsin forest fires have covered an |
area of about two hundred square miles, a
surface one-fifth as large as Rhode Island.
A Matter of Health,
Housekeepers faintly realize the
danger of an indiscriminate use of the
numerous baking powders nowadays
found upon every hand, and which are
urged upon consumers with such per-
sistency by peddlers and many grocers
on account of the big profits made in
their sale. Most of these powders are
' made from sharp and caustic acids and
alkalies which burn and inflame the
alimentary organs and cause indiges-
tion, heartburn, diarrhoeal diseases,
etc. Sulphuric acid, caustic potash,
burnt alum, all are used as gas-produc-
ing agents in such baking powders.
Most housekeepers are aware of the
painful effects produced when these
chemicals are applied to the external
flesh. How much more acute must be
their action upon the delicate internal
membranes! Yet unscrupulous man-
ufacturers do not hesitate to use them,
because they make a very low-cost pow-
der, nor to urge the use of their pow-
dersso made, by all kinds of alluring ad-
vertisements and false representations.
All the low priced or so-called cheap
baking powders, and all powders sold
with a gift or prize, belong to this
class.
Baking powders made from chem-
ically pure cream of tartar and bi-car-
bonate of soda are among the most
useful of modern culinary devices.
They not only make the preparation
of finer and more delicious cookery
possible, but they have added to the
digestibility and wholesomeness of
our food. Dut baking powders must
be composed of such pure and whole-
some ingredients or they must be ta-
booed entirely.
Dr. Edson, Commissioner of Health
of New York, in an article in the
“Doctor of Hygiene,” indicates that
the advantages of a good baking pow-
der and the exemption from the dan-
gers of bad ones in which the harsh
‘and caustic chemicals are used, are to
be secured by the use of Royal Baking
Powder exclusively, and he recom-
mends this to all consumers. ‘‘The
Royal,” he says, ‘‘contains nothing
but cream of tartar and soda
refined to a chemical purity, which
when combined under the influence of
heat and moisture produce pure car-
bonie, or leavening, gas. The two
materials used, cream of tartar and
soda, are perfectly harmless even when
eaten, but in this preparation they are
combined in exact compensating
weights, so that when chemical action
begins between them in the dough they
practically disappear, the substance of
both having been taken to form car-
bonic-acid ges.”” Hence it is, he says,
that the Royal Baking Powder is the
most perfect of all conceivable agents
for leavening purposes.
It seems almost incredible that any
manufacturer or dealer should urge the
sale of baking powders containing in-
jurious chemicals in place of those of
a well-known, pure and wholesome
character simply for the sake of a few
cents a pound greater profit; but since
they do, a few words of warning seem
to be necessary.
BOSSY ON A WINE JAG.
A Florida Cow Overcome After Eating a
Claret-Soaked Watermelon.
Not long ago, when the mercury
down at Ocala, Fla., was climbing
near the top of the tube, two young
men decided to agreeably surprise
their young lady friends by a treat of
iced watermelon for dinner, says the
Capitol. After studying over the
matter awhile they decided that an
ice-cold melon was not good enough
—did not begin to show their appre-
ciation of the young ladies—so they
went down into their pockets and
purchased two bottles of the finest
claret in the city, emptied them into
the melon, then sent it to the hotel,
with instructions to place it in a
cooler place. This was done, and all
would have been well had not the
hotel folks decided to treat the guests
to a fine melon the same day. The
rich, wine-fllled melon lay side by
side with the melon flavored only by
naiure, and yet the sameness on the
outside remained undisturbed. At
the proper time the colored factotum
was ordered to prepare the hotel
melon for the table. (No one except
the young men knew anything about
the wine being put in the melon.)
As soon as the knife laid the melon
open the peculiar odor satisfled the
waiter that it was spoiled. A brief
consultation was held and the unani-
mous verdict was that it was no good.
It was taken out and placed in the
cow lot, where a mild-eyed Jersey lay
dreaming the hours away. The bo-
vine, knowing a good thing when she
saw it, was soon on the outside o! the
melon, wine and all. Now, two
quarts of wine is a pretty stiff drink |
began to !
a time she mude !
WALL PAPER
for even a cow, and it sobn
téll on her, and for
things lively, trying to stand on her
head, kicking her heels, trying to
waltz, tugging at the fence with her
horns and acting as if she was half
crazy to paint the town red in her
own way. Finally the beavy de-
bauch proved too much for her. She
took the hiccoughs, staggered around
a while, fell down and began snoring
just the same as any other bum.
Since then she has refused to eat
olain melon.
Then and Now.
The first printing press, with the
utmost diligence, could be made to
print from twenty to thirty-five
sheets an hour on one side only; the
printing presses of to-day print from.
25,000 to 30,000 in the same time on’
both ~ides.
Soda for Moxriar.
Ordinary soda of commerce has
been successfully used in France as a
substitute for salt water in mixing
cement or mortar during cold
weather. The results have been very
satisfactory.
"THE man who has ro use for the
temperance pledge very frequently
has for the pawnbreker’s.—Buffulo
| Courier.
| NO HARD TIMES
é.
Like Sick Times.
Swamp-Root Cured Fe.
Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 1, 1883.
Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.
Gentlemen: —I am happy to state that by the
use of Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root I
have been cured of
bladder and kid=-
ney trouble, J
had used many
other remedies with-
out avail. If you
are disposed to use
this letter so that
others may know of
your wonderful
Swamp-Root you
are at liberty to do
20. The remedy was recommended to me by
Mr. E. B. Morgan, of Langdorne, Pa., who had
been cured by its use. Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamj-Root Cured Me
and it affords me pleasure to recommend it to
others. I sm notin the habit of giving testi-
monials, but when a medicine possesses such
merits as yours, others should know it.
Samuel A. Stager, 621 Race Street.
At Druggists, 50 cent and $1,00 Size.
“Invalids’ Guide to Health” frec—Consultation free.
Dr. Kilmer & Co., - Binghamton, N. Y.
Dr. Kitmer’s U & 0 Aneintment Cures Piles.
Trial Bex Free. — At Druggists 60 Cents.
An agreeable Laxative and NERVE TONIC,
Bold by Druggists or gent by mail. 25c., 500
and $1.00 pcr package. Samples free.
KD FO atria tee oo
The Rugged Child
is largely an
“outdoor”
product.
Fresh air
and exercise
usually pro-
duee sound
appetite and
sound sleep.
Sickly chil-
dren obtain
great benefit from
Scott's Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with Hypo-
phosphites, a fat-food rapid
of assimilation and almost
as palatable as milk.
Prepared by Scott & Bowne. N.Y. All druggist
RA AR re mee TG
STHE KIND
= THAT CURES
1 EE
E11
MRS. P. J. CROMWELL,
Esperance, N. Y.
A WORLD OF JOY IN
FOUR WORDS! j
“Two Bottles Cured Me!” =
DANA SARSAPARILLA CO.:
DEAR SIRS:—For years I have been troubled==
ive Ba
ney Trouble. Nothing seemed to help me
== permanently until I tried =
A’S
E11
F015)
and two bottles CURED ME.
Y ours respectfully,
Z Esverance, N.Y. MRS. P. J. CROMWELL.
SCIOMARIE CO. 88.
= This certifies that I know the above Mrs. P. J.
omwell to be trustworthy, and one upon
A whose word you ean rely.
A. H. MCKEE, Justice of the Peace.
Esperance, N. Y.
Dana Sarsaparilla Co., Belfast, Maine.
Sul WALL PAPER MERCHANY
R ITH SELLS THE BEST, |
Vai THE CHEAPEST |
Good Paners 3c, and 5¢. Gold Papers 5e., |
Se. and 10c¢. Send gc. stamps for samples, i
041 Wood Street, vitesburgh, Pa, |
1,000,000
Si —————————
CoMPANY in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circus |
lars. They will be cent to you
FREE. |
ACRES OF LAND |
for saleby the SAINT PAUL |
& DULUTH RAILROAD |
Address HOPEWELL CLARKE,
T.and Commissioner, 8t. Paul, Minn,
>A MITA TQ TRADE MARKS Examination
I A i EN I SIE advice as 1c patentability
of invention. Send for I ventors Guide,or how to get
a pat nt. PATRICK O’FARRELL, WASHINGTON, D.C.
+
|
|
ie
Dr a day made by active agents selling
S00. GO « hines. Wanted, A 188 to sell |
; WY a ’ i
|
1
the Best Tvpewri
given, Address N.
To 8 @ can be made monthly |
S75 00 working for B. F. Johnson & Co., |
a No ?South 11th St..Richmond,Va !
Syrup”
William McKeekan, Druggist at
Bloomingdale, Mich. ‘Ihave had
the Asthma badly ever since I came
out of the army and though I have
been in the drug business for fifteen
years, and have tried nearly every-
thing on the market, nothing has
given me the slightest relief until a
few months ago, when I used Bo-
schee’s German Syrup. Iam now
glad to acknowledge the great good
it has doneme. Iam greatly relicv-
ed during the day and at nightgo to
sleep without the least trouble.”” ®
PNU4O
WEBSTER’S
INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
Successor of the
“Unabridged.”
Ten years spent in
evising, 100 editors
mploved, more than
$300,000 expended.
ETH
Gia
©
| A Grand Educator
Abreast of the Times
A Library in Itself
CTA
| Invaluable in the
Zz household, and to the
teacher, professional
man, self-educator.
Published b;
G.& C.MERRIAD CO., SPRINGFIELD, Mass. U.S.A.
iS for free prospectus containing specimen
pages. illustrations, testimonials, ete. .
[ZF "Do not buy reprints of ancient editions.
~aammaned
Sa (8
Do Not Be Decsived i
With Pagstes, Enamels and Paints which
ands, injure the iron and burn
REE Ee AR
tain the
red. 2
Risinz Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Cdor-
less, Durable, and the consumer pays for n
or glass package with every Poroae on
COV VODVVS
Do You Sleep Peacefully?
DO YOU SLEEP ON ond
¢ IMITATION
¢Pilgrim
OR ON A GENUINE
TESTIMONIALS:
Spring Bed ?
oY I have tried many, but never found perfec-
Qin until I slept on the Pilgrim * pring Bed.”
(Signed) C. H. GOOU WIN,
Ao. 42 Crest Ave., Beachmont, Mass.
Inexpensive.
“ The lilgrim Spring Fed is the very best
spring bed which has ever entered ow: home, and
is equal in every way to beds which have cost
five times as much.’
(Signed) THOS. P. FROST,
82 Do: chester Ave., Boston.
_Exhibited at No. 31 Warren Strest, New
York; No. 2 Hamilton Place, Boston.
Forsale by all reliable dealers everywhere
b as: tag registered trademark on all gen-
See ¢
uine Pilgrims. $
11g Yim Spring 5
; Chal oa
SEND FOR MONEY-SAVING PRIMER FREE.
A11L.AS TACK CORPORATION, Boston.
& VV DV VDP
(SRG 5h
The Best Rubber Boot ever invente for Farm-
ers, Miners. R. R. hand< and others. The outer or
tap sole extends the whole length of the sole down
to the heel, protecting (he snank in ditching, digging
BEST quality throughout,
DEALER FOit THEM.
OWN HARNESS
and other work.
ASK YOUR
MEND YOUR
WITH
THOMSON'S
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tools required. Only a hammer needed to drive
and clinch them easily and quickly, leaving the clinch
abgolutely smooth. Requiring no hole to be made in
the leather nor burr for the Rivets. They are strong
tough and durable. Millions now in use. Al
lengths, uniform or assorted, put up in boxes.
sk your dealer for them, or send 40c. in
stamps for a box of 100, assorted sizes. Man'fd by
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.,
WALTHAM, MASS.
TE
11 ER 11 Ll LS er
AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICIN
Tor Indigestion, Biliousncss
Headache, Censtipation, Ha
Complexion, Offensive Breath,
and ail disorders of the Stomach,
Liver and Bowels,
RIPANS TABULES
ect gently yet prowptly. Perfect
digestion follows their use. Sold
by druggists or sent by mail. Box
6 vials), 75¢. Package (4 boxes), $2.
for free samples-address
RIPANS CHEMIOAL ©0., New York.
Er
{ Sat mmm me
Coneumptives and peopl
who have weak lungs or Asth- §§
na, should use Piso’s Cure for 8
Con=umption. It bus cured §&§
"i thousands. (thas not injur-
jaf ed one. Itisnot bad to tase.
Ex 1t is the best coagh syrup.
iv
an
“Know edge is Folly Unless
Put to Use.” You Know
repent
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drscodhs,