ean in 111 not ance. ims of y com-~ yy the 1 ten- n the asting God! verse. ce as ble up orrow cs for e sun- 1d the em as 11 the m into t him g it in- 11 the flelds, f that rlories uet, or ionian raoh’s rgiven ‘umpet wuapped Blow od in- ot one nehes. umpst divine, i, say— 11 I re- n! So ya cel- grave- stined. lasting rst text t. An- wring- me the equiem grand tear of ek has hier of 3 pro- r — . Inu Olden Times People overlooked the importance of perma- nently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action, but now that it is gener- ally known that Syrupof Figs will permanent- ly cure babitual constipation, well-informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finaly injure the system. A long, strong “thumb alway indicates Treat will power and force of character. faMicted with sore eves use Dr. Isaac saac Thomp - on's Eye-water. Druggists sell at2jc perbottle. Great Britain has 2,893 i pilots. HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES A Running Sore On my ankle grew worse, finally spreading over both feet, armsand hands. Bones came out of my {oes and fingers. I lost sleep and appetite. J was in bed when 1 began to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla Before [ finished the first bottle I could eat «nd sleep well. I continued with the Sarsapar- il'a and now the sores are all healed.” MRs. MARY SPEAKMAN, 272) Latona Street, Phila- delphia, Pa. Get only Hood’ s Sarsaparilla, 25 cents. PNU ss Ty “German Syrup” I am a farmer at Edom, Texas. have used German Syrup for years successfully for Sore Throat, Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Painsin Chest and Lungs and Spitting- up of Blood. I have tried many kinds of Cough Syrups in my time, but let me say to anyone wanting such a medicine—German Syrupisthe best. We are subject to so many sudden changes from cold to hot, damp weather here, but in families where German Syrup i isused there is little trouble from colds. John F.Jones.® SOUERS [hi Coat in the FISH BR AED WORLD ! SLICKER Hood's | Pills cure constipation. The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted a a Sone if the “Fish Brand] " ig not on it. Cata e free. A. OWER, Boston. Mase ited Catalogue free. A.J It is very difficult t o convince children that a medicine is “nice to take” —this trouble is not experi- enced In ad- ministering Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. It is almost as palatable as milk. reparation so rapidly bold up good flesh, strength and nerve force. Mothers the world over rely upon it in all wasting diseases that children are heir to. Prepared by Scott & Bowne, N. Y. All dropgiets. Cures Con Ls, Hoarscness Sore Throat, Croup, Whooping Cough and Asthma. For Comsunipe 2ien it has no rival; has cured thousands where a others jfaeay will cure you pif $aked tin Hime. 1d b: ruggists on a ntee, Back orp SHILOR'S P PLASTER. 2s5cts. you Catarrh? This remedy is guaran. teed to cure yous Price t0cts. Injector free, In 1886, my son suffered very much fron cance of the mouth. By advice of physicians, an of cration was performed, extending from the jaw bone, whic they scrare but the can- cer Te and grew i > I id Finally, man remedies in vain, I commended fie re yn S. S S.; after seven bottles had been take the cancer dis- gppsared enti: ely and though years hav e Japsed, Jes ha De pe 3 i retu en, ‘to Kile that heis permanently TS Hi cure isdue excusy sively to S. § . MURDOC X, Hu ntsville, Ala. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases Mailed Free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ba. is that no orders are on hand. TICKIN 6s OF THE TELEGRAPE Smeg FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC. eet What is Going On the World Over. Important Events Briefly Chronicled. gl Caviral. Labor and Industrial. The Pennsylvania steel works atSteelton, Pa., which have been running half time for the past three months, have resumed opera- tions in every department, giving employ- ment to about 4,200 men. The Thompscn giassworks at Uniontown, Pa., which shut down in July, resumed work Saturday, employing 200 men, At Steubenville, O., the Sumner Bottle Works, which have been idle for nice months; the Mingo Steel Weworks, after a two weeks’ shut down, and the Brilliant Steel and Iron Company, which has been sbut down for four months, have 1esumed operations. At Little Falls, N. Y., Titus S. Heard, proprietor of a knitting mill bas notified his 400 employees that he will suspend operations. The reason for the shut-down The Barton & Lyman cotton mills at Woonsocket, R. I., after four months’ sus- pension, have resumed operations, giving employment to 300 persons. A 15 per cent. reduction in wages has been announced in the Atlantic Cotton and Worsted Mills in Providence, R. IL The master painters in Indianapolis have reduced the wages of their workmen from 30 to 25 cents an hour. The Illinois Steel Works at Joliet, closed since December bave resumed operations, employing 2, 300 men. About 400 coal miners at Terra Haute, Ind., struck against an enlargement in the mesh of the screens. The Panhandle glass works at Wellsburg, W. Va. which have been idle several months, resumed work employing 200 bands. The Dueber-Hampden watch factoriesat Canton, O., which bhavs been running short handed for a long time, put several. bun- dred men to work. The North Wheeling Botcde works at Wheeling. W. V., resumed work, employ- ing 200 hands. The plant bad been closed since last June. x abl Ce Disasters. Accidents nnd Fatalities At Rock Island, Ill, the home of George Cooper, a farm laborer, was destrcyed by fire and his ¢hildren, Sadie, 4 years and Nell, 9 years of age, were burned to death. Cooper was badly burned while trying to save them. Near Reno, Cal.. «ne of the worst railroad wrecks that ever happened on the western division of the Central Pacific occurred, re- sulting in the death of Fred Leach, brake- man on the westbound, and Charles Givens fireman on the same train and four tramps not yet identitied and the serious, perhaps fatally injuring of three others—namely, James Bird, engineer of No. 7, Tom Morse- head, his fireman and a tramp named William E. Vos. The cause of the wreck was a misunderstanding cf orders. By the upsetting ofa yawl in New York bay Saturday John Crosby, Charles Drude, Edward Keony, Benjamin McGuire, Thom- as Hoey, Charles Smith, James Malley, Al- bert Norman and lLeunard Wanser, all workmen of New York were drowned. . 2 Crime and Penalsiea. Early Saturday morning John Daniels, Edward Waggoner, the latter's son William and daughter Eliza, all colored, were hang- ed to a tree by a mob near Lynchburg, Tenn. They were charged with a series of barn- burnings. Richard Savage, aged 27, shot his wife, Maggie, aged 26. his child Richard, aged 4 and then himself at Halifax, N.. S...Jeal- ousy was the cause. Five of the Oliphant, Ark., train robbers have been captured. Two are in jail at Batesville and three are being carried over- tand to Newport. A considerable part of the plunder was recovered from the two men in jail, including pock€tbooks, money, rings, and watches. A gang of burglars Tuesday night looted 11 business houses and residences in St, Joseph, Mo.. securing jewelry and silver- ware to the amount of $4,500. Four of them attackel Joel Feltenstein and beat so terribly that he will probably die. re Mortunry. Francis Parkman, the eminent historian, died at Boston. His last sickness was brief, peritonitis being the cause of death. Annie Pixley, the well known American actress, died in London of brain fever atthe residence of her brother-in-law, Mr. Edwin Fulford. Her husband was present at the time him ge ¢ Fires Halfa block of business and tenement houses were burned in Trenton, N. J., at a total loss of &20,000. ei Miscellaneous. The Coroner's jury investigating the drawbridge disaster at Portland,Ore., found that Motorman E. F. Terry was grossly negligent in allowing the car to run across the bridge at an excessive and reckless rate of speed. The trial of Patrick Eugene Prendergast, the murder of Mayor Carter H. Harrison, of Chicago, was set for Monday, November 27, by Judge Edward F. Dunness. Prender- gast’s brother has secured Attorneys R. A. Wade and Robert Essex as counsel for the murderer. They consented to act only after being requested to do so by the CookCounty Bar Association. Mr. Wade stated that the defense would be insanity. BEYOND OUR BORDERS. Official dispatches received at London from Cape Town confirm the reports that the Chartered company’s troops have de- feated the Masabele in several flights, have put Lobengula to flight and have occupied Buluwayo. Lobengula’s power is utterly gone. The losses of the British were slight. The losses of the Matabele is reported tc exceed 3.000 killed and wounded. Three persons lost their lives in the burn serpment there was virtually established by ‘asks: “Should not the great wrong done to .can scarcely be expected to recognize Havana Those lost are R. W. Bowen purser, Thomas Linden, qusrtermaster, and W.Foster,oiler. Two waiters and six Cubans are missing. Since November there were six new cases of cholera and three deaths in East Prussia, five new cases in and near Stettin, and six cases and one death in other cases in Pom- erania. A passenger train rolled over an embank- ment at Mikhailov, Russia, Six passengers were burned to death and 50 severly injur- ed. The engineer and fireman were scald- ed to death. The treaty between Norway and the Sweden, It ¢rovides for extradition of United States similar to that with was ratified. criminals. LATER NEWS. CAPITAL AND LABOR. At Johnstown, Pa., No. 2 rolling mill of the Cambria Iron company started up. The outiook is brightening there very consider- ably. At Wheeling. W. Va., the old Panhandle glass works, now called the West Virginia window glass works, aiter bein g idle for nine years, were started up again in full. Five of the iargest iron mineson the Lake Superior ranges have resumed operations or given notice of intention so to do. The 350 Ishpeming Mich.. striking fhin- ers whose demands caused the proprietors of the Pittsburg and Angeline mines to ord- er those mines to close for the winter have yielded. eta FOREIGN. The London House of Commons rejected oy a vote of 236 to 217 the amendment to the employer's liability bill permitting workingmen under certain conditions tu ex- empt themselves trom the;provisions of the bill. As the result of the carelessness of chem- ists a disastrous explosion of ether occurred at Brestlitovsek, a town of Russian Polland. A whole house was blown to pieces and 2) person were killed and a large number in- jured. Several adjoining houses were bad- ly damaged. Honduras has formerly apologized for firing upon the United States ag ~Novem- 3. The apology is entirely satisfactory and it is believed that this wiil end the inci- dent, ail FIRES, Geary’s theatre and the Aldine hotel at Ft. Wayne, Ind., were burned. Loss $70,- 000; insurance, partial, — > DISASTERS, ACCIDENTS AND FATALITIES. While entertaining friends, Berthena Pruitt, of Camden, N. J., died of an inter- nal hemorrhage caused by a fit of laugh- ter. hl a MISCELLANEOUS. The admission to theWorld's Fair grounds has been reduced to 25 cents. Gov, McKinley, of Ohio, has declined to attend jollification meetings on account of the fatigue of the campaigns. Healso sug- gests that the meetings be abolished and the money usen to aid the needy unemployed. TO RESTORE QUEEN LIL. Secretary Gresham Announces Administration’s Policy. The administration at Washington has decided on the restoration of Queen Liliuo- kalani to the Hawaiian throne. The correspondence on the Hawaiian matter and the report of Secretary of State Gresham, were made known to the public Saturday evening. The Secretary, after reviewing the history of ithe Hawaiian revolution, declares that the present gov- the United States intervention; that the treaty should not again be sent to the senate and a feeble, but independent state by an abuse of the authority of the United States be undone, by restoring the legitimate govern- ment” Anything short of this will not, | Tespestiniiy submit, satisfy the demands of justice.” Secretary Gresham claims that according to Commissioner Biount’'s report, the pro- visional government was established under protection oi United States troops from the man-of-war Boston, and that without this atd it could not have been accomplished. ‘The queen’s abdication was the result of this action and was merely temporarily, pending, as she officially expressed the hope, her restoration to the throne, which she claims she is constitutionally entitled to. He concludes that European powers the independence of ihe island if this country fails so to do. THE NOVEMBER CROP REPORT. Corn is Low, While Tobacco and Hay are High. - The November returns to the Department of Agriculture at Washington, of? the rates of yield per acre make the average for corn 22.6 bushels, which is the smallest !yield re- ported, excepting those of 1886, 1887 and 1890 lor the past 10 years. The yields for those years were respectively 22; 20.1 and 20.7 oushels. Tt is less than the average for the [0 years 1870 to 1879 by 4.5 bushels; less ‘han the succeeding decade 1880 to 1889 by 11 bushels, and less than 192 by a little over 1 bushel. Theresuit is in harmony with the reported indication daring the growing season. The July returns of con- iitions were high, being 93.2, from which point there wasa rapid decline, ending in ihe returns of October at 75.1. A fall of a little over 18 points, a result due in the main lo the severe, extensive and persistent irouth The rates of yield fr®m the principal corn Siates are reported as follows: New York, 29.3; Pennsy vania, 24.9; Ohio, 4.3; Michi zan 23.7; Indiana. 24 i: 1llinois );, Jowa, 2s Missouri, 27.5; Kansas, 20.3; Nebraska, ’ 25. The returns relative to po atoes give the :stimated average yield per acre for the whole country at 72.2 bushels. The con- solidated returns from the tobacco growing States make the estimated yield per acre 395.3 pounds, as against 682 pounds in 1892. The average yield of hay is reported at 1.32 One per acre, as against 1.17 tons 1892. The report as to the vield of buckwheat zive a general average of 14.7 bushels per acre, as against 14.1 in 1892 and 13.3 in L891. Lf nt Gold Reserve Getting Bigger. The net gold reserve of the National treasury has been picking up somewhatthe ing of the steamer City of Alexandria at Cough Sy up, Furnishing the Kitchen. Few women are strong enough to keep a bare floor properly scrubbed. and a carpet absorb.ng the odors and rreases of cooking is an abomination. therefore it is a good plan to buy brown oilcloth for tne kitchen floor. as it shows wear les: rapidly than utter colors, and blends better with the woodwork, writes Helen Jay, in an article on “Furnishicg a Modern Home,” in the Ladies’ Home Journal. To be sure this seems like a little thing, but attention to details is an rssential in the harmonious evo:u- tion of a home. ln buyinz this oil- cloth the housewife’s labors will be lessened if enough more be bought to cover the closet floors. Few kitchens are coinmodious—for this reason a flap table, which, when not in use, can be folded up and tast- zned against the wall, is a positive boon. If not obtainable in the shops, one ¢an be easily made by taking a dressmaker’s stationary cutting board as a model. The top of this table should be covered with white marble- tloth, and if the closet shelves are covered with the same material they can more easily be kept clean and sweet. Besides this table two chairs tre needed for the kitchen. They should be made entirely of wood, as rane seats are treacherous things and repairing them expensive work. Small cooking utems.is are kept io better condition if hung. A wide painted board, made after the model of the small keyracks sold in fancy shops, can be hung by means of picture hooks fastened in the top edge back of the table. On it small books, such as are used by upholster- ers, can be screwed in rows. There is no better harbor for knives, spoons and small tinwdré.” Back of the sink should hang the dishpan, seaprack and small*“serubbing broom. The ordinary kitchen has two or three closets. It simplifies the work to de- vote each of these to a definite pur- pose. I'or instance, in one place the ironing-board, irons, etec.; in another everything used in baking, and in the third the paraphernalia of ordinary work. Big and Little Postage Stamps. The largest postage stamp ever fssued measured 4 inches by 2—the size of the old United States 5-cent stamp, restricted to packages of newspapers and periodicals posted in bulk and never intended for letters. The penny Madagascar stamp, second in regard to size, 3 inches by 14 inches, was used to prepay postage on letters posted at the British consulate at Antananarivo, where there was no other postoffice in 1886. The private postage stamp of Robinson & Co.'s express, with its figure of a bear, is 2% by 14 inches. The stamp entitled “California penny postage, from the postoffice, care of Penny Post Co.” for 1885, is in size 24 inches by 1} inches. The quarter schilling stamp of Mecklenburg- Schwerin, which was issued in 1853, is the smallest ever issued-—less than one-fourth the size of the current penny English stamp —and it would ‘take about fifty of them to cover the surface of the largest issued by the United States. —Collector. It is believed there are 534, 848,924 sheep in the world; 106,969, 784 hogs; 267,424,468 cattle; 59, 427, 858 horses. [t is noticeable that the sheep outnum- oer hogs cattle and horses 91,026,014 eads. + $100 Reward. $10V The reader of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity, Catarrh being a constitu- tional disease, requires a constivutional ireat- ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucous sur. faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease,and giving the pa- tient strength by puiging up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Do lars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of test’ monials, Addr 88 & HENEY & Co.,Toledo EF Sold by Druggist«, 75¢. ? 20, Xylolith or Wood stone is extensively ased in Germany for flooring and other pur- poses. ao A Sore TAROAT OR Couan, it suffered to prozress, often results in an incurable throat or lung trouble. “*Brown’s Bronchial Troches £.ve instapt relief. eee i A popular dish in 1 Sparta was a mixture of cheese, garlic. eRRS and honey. Why so hoarse ? Ts se e Hatch’ ’s Universal 25 cents at druggists. A spider's eyes are not in his head, but in the upper part of the thorax. Mornin Beccham’s Pills with a drink ot water. Hoecham: 's—no others. 25 cents a box. The gold plant + was brought to Europe from Japan in 1783. and give as He Didn’t Know Her. Judge—Is this true, prisoner? Can vou really have so forgotten what is due to your wife as to throw a wind- | glass at her head? Prisoner—Does your Honor know my wife ? Judge—I have not that honor. Prisoner—1I thought not. If you did know her yon would ask why I didn’t throw the bottle at her.— London PickMe-Up. Should Do His Best. Not long ago, Quecen Victoria wished to make up a marriage be- tween a lady and gentleman of her court. The former proved rebel to the royal advice, quoting St. Paul's famous words: “lle who marries doeth well: but, he who does not marry doeth still better.” “My child,” said the Queen, ‘‘be content in doing well: let those who can do better,” .. ~~. JusT now v is the time when a man wishes he were a rumor. A rumor gains currency, which is more than most men can do in these panicky timas — Texas Siftines. ETHE KIND 10 RED JEROME BALL, Waterford, N. Y. a & 2 a _ TORTURING Headache for 10 Years!” : & RY Dana’s Sarsaparilla “I WAS CURED!" == MER. BALL WAS THE FIRST MAN TO PURCHASE i DANA'S Is ConoEg: LISTEN AS HE TELLS YOU THE RES = DANA SAGSAEARIILA Co.: GENTLEMEN :—-1 have been a sufferer fron = Headache the last ten years, im 1211 1 saw in one of our local oy an ene ment of your edelie; aud testimonials of its Ei wonder! ul ¢ res. decided to ri one bottle. The first hottle preacly relieved mie, and by Hi tinie I had taken =two more bottles k WAS CURED. 1 can recommend DAN SARSAPARILLA =asasafe and reliable medicine. Derperituly youre, ‘Waterford, N, JEROME BALL. The truth of Mr. Ball's Seswent ae Seiifed to M. McD. ; = = Cohoes, N. Y. EN w = Dana Sarsaparilia Co, Beilast, Maine. = Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO0.’S WBreakfastCocon which is absolutely pure and soludle. Ithasmorethan three times the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more eco- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers ocers everywhere. _W.B BAKER & CO., Dor Dorchester. Mas AN IDEAL FAMIL Y MEDICINE For Indigestion, Biliousness, eadache, Aptian Bad — lexion Utjensivelireath, and all disorders of the Stomach, wels, S LY S TTP ayes CHEMIOAL C@., New York. WEAK AND NERVOUS. | Sleepless Nights, All Unstrung. East Groyeland, N. Y. May 19, 1888. | Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Gentlemen: —Last March I suffered very bad | with heart and kidney | trouble. After using | two bottles of your | Swamp=-RBoot 1 be- gan to improve and I now feel like another person. I do not | have those terrible | Pains in my Back and across my kidneys. | My food does not dis- | tress me, 1 havea good appetite and sleep en nights; something I have not done in a long time. Now I do not have that tired dragging feeling that I used | to have before taking your medicine. After | sitting down awhile and getting on my feet } would have to stand and steady myself before I could place one foot before the other on ac- count of the pain across my back and kidneys. Swamp-Root Cured Me, I was troubled with constipation very much, but your medicine has regulated my bowels which were in a bad condition. I wil willingly answer any one who will write to me. Mrs. William Teter. At Druggists, 50 cents and $1.00 Siz, “Invalids’ Guide to Health” free--Copsultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., - Binghamton, N. Y. last few days and on Monday it was §88.. 410,149, an increase of about $225,006 since Saturday, | CoMPANY in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circue | Bo 0 % { PA’ I BE NT S TRADE MARKS Examination I 000 00 ACRES OF LAND 9 3 forsale by the Saint PaUL & DULUTH RAILROAD lare. They will be tent to you FREE. Address * 1 OPEWELL CLARKE, laud Couraitioner: iil Paul, Minn Treated free. Positively CCRED with Vegetable Remedies. lave cured many thou. sand cases pro less. From firstdoses proms rapidly disappear, gays atleast Spe hirdsot Fail ymproms sre removed. K of testimonial t FR nai TRF ATS TRAY MEAT FUkuishi fife ms fEENE WANTED ON SALARY nounced ho or commission to hand ew Patent Cnemi- cal Ink Erasing Poa making $5 per eek. Monre Eraser Mfg.Co.,X 701. La Crosse, Wis. ,and advice as to patentability of invention. Send for [uventors Guide,or how to get Nothing can be substituted for the Royal Baking Powder good results. No other leavening agent will make such light, sweet, delicious, wholesome food. The Chinese. | The Cliinesz are very particular | about lucky colors. They like Eng | lish sewing-needles, but will not buy - many of them becuse they are wrap- ped up in black paper—black being an unlucky color. A business-man developed a very good trade in print- ed Chinese calendars. ‘The trade continued good until he commenced printing his calendars on green pa- der, when his trade fell off. He then discovered that green was an un- lucky color. Thinly Populated. Though western Australia is near- 1y nine times the size of the United Kingdom, its population was esti- mated in March last at but 59,718, with 10,000 more males than females. A GAS METER never lets grass grow under its feet. Do Not Be Deceived . With Pastes, Enamels and Paints wi stain ands, injure the fron and bu ch o i e Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Cdor- less. Durable. and the consumer Says for no tin ase. Or glass package with every pure WEND YOU OWN HARNESS THomsoN's Ed SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hammer needed to drive and cinch them eusily and quickiy, leaving the clinch avsolutely smooth. Requiring no hoe to be made dn the leather nor burr for the Rivets. They are strom, tough and durable. Millions now in use. lengths, uniform or assorted, put up in boxes. sk your dealer for them, or send 40c. stamps for a box of 10), ussoried sizes. Man'fd by JUDSON A THOMSON MFG. Co, | ALTHAM, MASS. MIT SELLS THE BEST, THE CHEAPEST J WALL PAPER Good Lanes de nnd Si: Gold Papers je., Sc, and 10c. Send Je. sramps for samples. 541 Wood Sure . I Hinburgh, Pe. S 8 THE WALL PAPER MEKCHANL THE BEST RUBBER BOOT Fver inventel for Farmer: Miners, R. R. hands and otasrs. The outer or tan sole ex- tends the whoie length of the sole down to the heel, »PEGLOcTing the shank in ditching, digging and other wor BEST quality In os ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM HORSE OWNER ought to think enough o! his animal to wish to bs able to care for it properly in heslth and sicknees. Itis money out of his pocket it A for 25 cente. Tvteaches you % {0 Dick out a good Horse; know imp. rfeenons and go i guard against fraud; de- tect disease and effect a cure when same 1s Co ble: tell the age by the teeth; what to call the different parts of the ani- mal: how to shoe a Horse properly, etc., ete. All this and otlzer val- uable information can be obtained by reading our One Hundred Pa, ie trated Horre Book, which we will forward, post- paid, receipt of price in on Etamps. Aseuredly the Horse is too good a friend 10 man to be neglected for want of knowledge which ean be procured tor only twenty-tive cents. Book Pusrisnine House. 134 Leonard St., N.Y City. —— TE DL NL XUN. PIERRE Offers wonderful fine chances for small investments. $10 .0V invested here now will grow to thousands in the nexi ten yesrr. For ci culars, maps and special quotations adress Cat AS 1 INV EST- MENT BANKER, I’ Dakota QS ~ a day made by active agents selling Sol). ()¢ ) our machines. Wanted, agents to sell the Best Ty} ensier in the world; exclusive territory given. Address N . TYPEWRITER C( 0., Boston, Mass. PI1SO'S. CURE. FOR’ Consumptives and people f who have weak lungs or Asth- fl ma, should use Piso’s Cure for Consumption. it has enred thousands. [thas not injr. ed ope. Itisnot bad to take 1tis the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. 28c¢. CONSYMPY RON." a patent. PATRICK O’FARRELL, WasHiNGTON, D.C “Well Bred, Soon Wed.” Girls Who Use SAPOLIO Are Quickly Married.