rren(Sn the most tlegant form THE LAXATIVE AND.NUTRITIOUB JUICE OF TUB FIGS OF CALIFORNIA, Combined with the medicinal virtues of plants known to be most beneficial to the human system, forming an agreeable and effective laxative to perma nently cure Habitual Const.- iM i Potion, and the many Ms tie 's pending on a weak or inactive condition of the KIDNEYS, LIVER RND BOWELS. It Is the most ejtcelUnt remedy known to CLEANSE THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY When one is Unions or Constipated so THAT PURE BLOOD, FlEFrtESrllNO SLEEP, HEALTH and STRENGTH MATUnALLY FOLLOW. Every one is using it and all arc delighted with it. ASK VOUIT DRUGGIST FOR MANUFAOtUnEP ONLY1 BV CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN rKANCISCO, OAL. IOUISVIUE. KV NEW YORK. v. r. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878. I. Baker & Co.'s from which tho excess of oil has been removed, is Absolutely Pure and it is Soluble. No Chemicals aro used in its preparation. It has more than three times the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is therefore far moro economical, costing less than one cent t cxtp. It is delicious, nourishing, strengthening, easily digested, and1 admirably adapted for invalids as well as for persons in health. Sold by Grocers ovorywhoro. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass. fock Headache and relieve all tho troubles lncf dent to a bilious state of tho iiystem, suoli ad Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness. Distress after eating, l'aln in tho Side, 4e. Whilo their mcaS jrcjn irtaMo success baa been shown la cmlng foeaaacho, yet Carter's TJtllo Liver Pills M8 fiqually valuableln Constipation, curing and pro Ten ting this annoyingcomplalnt, whilo they also correctalldisordersoftbestoniach,stlmulalotha liver and regulate tho bowels. Evan If they calj surca Mien they would boalmoetprlcelos3 to thosowha Gaiter from this distressing complain t; but fortu nately their goodness docs notend here,and those) who once try them will And theso llttlo pills vala 'cble In eo many wayB that they will not bo wll diss to do without thun. But after ajlolclt head mm Is tho bane of so many lives that hero fa where ,we make our great boast. Our pills cure It while) others do not. Carter's Wtue liver rnia ara very smau ana very easy to take. Ono or two pills make a dose. Thnu nrn utrlctl tvw etAhln and do not oxlod or. ;purgo, but by their gen tle action please all who 'Use them. Invialsat25conts; Uvoforfl. Bold 'by druggists everywhere, or scut by malL OARTER renmiHE CO.. New York: SMALL PILL. SHALL DQSE. SMALL PRICE Bank Counters, Tyler System, Port able, Unequatetl in Stylos, Cost and Finish. ISO rB0 Catalogue of foiinltni, Drala etc., Illaitrltea la Colon. Itnnk.. Fr.a rmi... l&r.nti. Also j jieri jwi-. flnlA Hk. nnd Tvue writer I'libtuet., KlfclB. 11.-st nnd cheap- 1 est on earth, with great reduction la prices. 180 par. taulofue Free, ro.l.Re 12 ell. I'ull Mara of lla.Ml Chain, Tablri, Itook Cain, Cal.la.ta, Letal Want. Cable.!., elr,, alwata la alock, fiu.rlal work mada lo order. Tll.i:K DESKCO., Hl.l.oula, M.,V.,A. C'M.he.lar'n Eacllah Illanaaiid Brand. 'ennyrqyal fills MFC tlirtyi rlUble. umis 11k fi Jrogit M rii iWu'iH A motut JlranJ la KM wd -id m!-umVft7 ItMtM, aio4 with Lit iltibao. ToLe Vjf , surapi iur pixiKuittra iitviioniit man fold r U UxiA Dr-afiUU. "K Wahaveibl'OMUIteCiirA for thoetfectiof abu r,f lia.il. I'nW.F. imUOIUill KG! DUKI." SaftaowewVllsendon Breakfast Cocoa 1 iii 1 CARTERS! IVER IMi 1 PIUS. TiiEDAfiBUKY NEWSMAN JAMES MONTGOMERY BAILEY AND HIS GENIAL PERSONALITY. TIio Well Known Humorist ns lln Ap pears xt Homo How Ho Cume to Write II In Sketches find bd Account of LIU Career. Almost the first tiling yon seo after coining out of tho Daubury railway sta tion is a plain red brick building which stands up tho street on the other side, with "Tho Danbnry News" in gilt let ters across its face. If if ou should cross tho muddy street, as 1 Aid, with the rain beating down in torrents, yon would be doubly glad to feel the kindly smile of welcome which Mr, Bailey bestows on all newcomers. They tell me in Dan bury that when a tramp comes to town J. M. BA1LKY. he makes a bee line for "Monto" Bailey, as everybody calls tho gonial editor, and Monto has never been known to turn any needy one nway empty handed. Mr, Bailey's face is one of thoso to which a photosrrnph cannot do justice, because in the photograph you miss tho humorous and kindly cordiality that illuminates it Then there is a peculiar twinkle of the eye, accompanied by the faintest suggestion of a movement of tho body, as if in imagination he poked you in the ribs and bail to hold himself in from doing it in reality. This hap pens when Air. Bailey says something which might be called.a Baileyism. It is a genial kind of humor that ho has, and because it is unstudied it is good and never flat. Wfftial he is truly mod est, like Bill Nye and other great men. lie took me into his back office, put me in his own chair and then sat down by the side of the desk and began to talk. Whilo we were thus occupied a friend came in, and Monte turned on him with the kindly shafts of his wit, rallying him about everything that came into his head. This gentleman told me afterward that Mr. Bailey was always the same. "I never enjoyed myself so much in my life as 1 have with Monto Bailey," ho said, "and 1 must say that, while he has written somo mighty fun ny things, I like him better than his books." And yet, when 1 asked him why he didn't write any more, his reply was: "1 am played out. It any ono asks vou. tell them that." He continued: "If there is anything which 1 disbelieve in, it is for a humorist to allow the machine to enter into his work, and tho moment that ho feels it he had better stop." I handed him one ot his books, which was lying on his desk, and asked him if lie would indicate those sketches which had been tho most popular. He stood tliero with tho book in his hand and started on a train of reminiscences. Both of us forgot tho object of my visit, and for more than an hour he ran on. "You aro too young," be t.aid, "to ap preciate how we used to live in the old days in New England when I was a boy. Now that sketch of the boy carrying in wood. Of course, 1 was that boy. I was the eldest of a family, and it seemed to mo as if wo were always moving. My stepfather had tho kindest heart in the world, but a terrible temper. 1 remem ber myself standing in the kitchen one day whilo he was trying to move the stove. Although 1 was but a child, it was so extremely funny to me to seo the varvinc expressions on his tace that every once in n while I was obliged to run out in the back yara ana roll over. all doubled np with laughter." These early imprebsions evidently clunc to Mr. Bailey with great tenacity and gave a peculiar vividness to his sketches. One of his associates at the time when he was writing them said that when Monto was writing in his den ho could always tell when a happy thought struck him by a peculiar chuckle that came through the cracks of the door, and when be heard this he would say to himself, "There, Monte's getting off a cood thing." I asked Mr. Bailey about his experience as a lecturer. He laid down his book on the desk and standing up with his hands in his pockets and swaying gently backward anu tor ward, he replied: "That's where 1 made a big mistake; but, the fact is, 1 never thought I could do it At one time 1 was offered $25,000 for a course of lectures, but I never bad much experience with an audience, and 1 was afraid that what 1 saw wouiu tan fiat Somo time afterward Bret Harte mive a lecture here, and 1 introduced him to the audience. 1 felt keenly the solemnity of the occasion, and suppose 1 had some diffidence aDout it, anu per haps this very thing is what caught them: and then 1 felt rather abashed in the presence of such a great writer as Bret Harte. When I got through speak- inor Harte turned to me and whispered D n you, Bailey, you have taken all the wind out of mv sails. In 1874 be visited England, Scotland; Ireland and France, and on his return lectured on "Encland from a Back Win dow." While he was traveling in Eng land one day on the train his wife wanted to buy a book to read. The boy handed him one and he said, as he gave it to her, "Here, my dear, is a book that I think you will be much interested in. It was a copy a "Ute in uanDnry, riignest ot all in leavening rower. u. sj. uovt report, Aug. 17, 1S89, UnV9k Dawns A & sxmm i owner ABSQLUTEOf PURE Tills book, by tho way, is the first Mr. Bailey published, nnd was compiled from tho sketches which appeared in The Nows. The principal events in Mr. Bai ley's ltf are as follows: He was born Sept. 25, 1841, in Albany, his people afterward moving to Rome, N. Y., where ho received a common school education and learned the carpenter's trade. At eighteen be went to Daubury, where ho worked at his trade for two years, and In 1802 enlisted in the Seventeenth Con necticut volunteers, serving three years, until the end of the war. His first liter ary work was done on the New York Mercury, in 1800. While he was in the army he corre sponded with tho Danbury Times. In 180j he bought this paper, nnd in 18 iO consolidated it with The Jeffersoniau, calling the new paper The News. It was In 18G8-9 that his paragraphs wero cop ied in other papers, but it was not until 1873 that the circulation of Tho News was affected. January of that year the circulation was 1,020. On tho 1st of September following the edition was over S0.000. In addition to "Liff In Danbury" he has published "Tho Dan bury News Man's Almanac" (1874), "England from a Back Window" (1878), "Thoy All Do It" (1878), "Mr. Phillips' Goneness" (1879) and "Tho Danbury Boom" (1830). "Whenever I saw anything that struck mo as funny," continued Mr. Bailoy, "1 would wnto it down just as it occurred to mo. One of the most widely ipioted things I over wroto was 'The Wheel barrow. 1 was looking out of my office window one day when a man went by with a wheelbarrow. He slipped some how and fell, and tho way he and that, wheelbarrow got tangled up'wasoneof the funniest things 1 ever saw. I laughed till I cried, and then 1 sat down and wrote the sketch." He called my atten tion also to the Italian peanut vender, who is still plying his trade across tho 6treet from Tho News office, just as ho was when Mr. Bailey wrote about him. As 1 passed out of The News offico and raised my umbrella 1 saw Mr. Bailey's faco pressed against tho window pane sending me a last farewell through the Danbury mist, and on my way down to the station, as I stopped in to chat for a moment with one of Danbnry's most prominent citizens, ho said, as ho held out his hand: "I understand that you have been having a talk with Monte Bailey, Monte Bailey, young man, is one of the best hearted fellows that ever lived." Tom Musson. It goes back all the money you've spent for it if there's neither benefit nor cure. That's what owht to bo said of every jjnedioino. It would bo if tho medicine wero good enough. But it is said of only one medicino of its kind Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It's tho guar anteed blood-puriiicr. JNot only in March, April and May, when tho sarsaparillas claim to do good, but in every season and in every caBO it cures all diseases arising from a torpid liver or from impuro blood. lor all Serotinous, fakm and iseaip Diseases, Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Biliousness, it is a positivo remedy. Nothing elso is as cheap, no mat ter how many hundred doses are olTcreiWor a dollar. "With this, you pay only for tho good you get. And nothinc elso is "lust as cood." It mnv bo "better" for the dealer ; but you aro tho ono that's 00 helped. A FINE SHOW If you want to ceo n flue display of BooUand W, 8, SNYDER'S Boot and Shoe Store, (Masteller's old stand,) corner Coal nncl Jiircilii Htfi. Custom "WorUaiul Repairing Done in the host ityle. JOHN H. EVANS' SALOON, dOE.OENTW2 BT..BHENANDOAH FRESH BEER. PORTER, ALE. Finest brands of cltrura always on hand I The best temperance drinks. COPWjltrlY 1011 u Somo Difference. There Is a vast difference in tho conduct of a man and a woman in new clothes. When a woman gets a new suit sho Im mediately prances down town, nnd for hours will walk contentedly along u crowded thoroughfare, receiving fresh impulses of joy every time another worn nn scans her wardrobe. But a man is so differentl Ho won't put on bis new clothes for tho first time until it is dark; then ho goes down town so cautiously as to almost creato tho impression that he is sneaking along. If ho sees a crowd on a corner he will slip across tho way to avoid them, anil when he goes into his grocery lie tries to get behind as many barrels and boxes as he can. All tho timo ho is trying his lcjvel best to appear as if the suit was sii months old, and all the while realizes that he is making an infernal failure of it. Wo hope the time will come when now pauls will be so folded by tho man ufacturer tint they won't show a ridge along the front of each leg when the wearer dons them. 3. M. Bailey. Babioa Oau't Eat Apple Dumplinsr, Hui they c.i 11 Imvo gill-eded uttack& of Wind Colic. Dr. Hand's Colic Cure al ways cures it. 1 roe samples for a pow days at J. M. Hillan and 0. J. McCarthy's drujr store. The man who refuses to vote this full neglects an impoiUut duty. Alva'H Brazilian Nneclllo Co. : I wish to hear my gr.i'ol'iil tOKtlmony to tile virtues tf y mr magic ii cure ftr plug's evil. JUy napticw, now nine youra old, born scrofulous, dud ulll.cteJ witli hwellluifft, hore eyes, etc., lu b lit-, oi doct rn and idood purl, flers, kept growing worse, his health beoA'ne broken, his nerK wiw lull of lumps tv e lirgHone.ii ruuulnghore uod Incense Heemert bopl0H,i. Ouo month's use of the tlHctus Cure, to tui astonlshnwBt of overybo ly, drove nvav the lumps, healed the Foro, and cured Hie eyes lie lias never felt or annenred so well In yenrs, .rid w feel thai Ills HIiMoub troubles aro under cnu roi or your w.inriariui medi cine, lor which we cannot be ton thankful lt("..'ctiui y. Mil-!. .TivN.sIhl WVN, 2ii West 27th St., Newborn, Sold at Klrlln'B DriigBlore.KeiuUHOn House B10CK, oiiemitKioaL. A ciil who givei tip chewing cum shows alie litis gum shun. A Fatal Mistake. 1'hyslclnnH make no moro fatal mistake than when thoy Inform pillKUts that nervous heart troubles como from tho Blomaoii und are of little consequence. Dr. Franklin .Mllei-, the noted Indiana spectalis', has proven the contrary In his new book on "Hnnrt Dtsense," which may be had free at C. II. ILigentmch's dnu slore who uiurantees and recoiii mends I)r. Miles u ifanilled New Heart Cure, which' lias tli- largest, hhIb oi anv heait remedy In the world. - It curet nervous und organic heart disease, khort breath, (lutierlng, pain or tenderness Irtithe side, arm or slioulUir.lrregiilar pulse faint I nil, smother tng, dropsy, etc. His Uestoratlvo Nervine ernes headache, tits, etc. The winter quarters is in a meat store. for ground heg Miles' Nerve una Lilver Pills Act on a now principle regulating the liver, stomach and bowels thrnuuh the nervet newdlfcoovery. ur. sine- I'liw speedily sme bllloUBU&is. ikiiI taste, torpid, liver, plies, aonstl nation. Unenuated lor men. wouMti. childten. Smallest, mll'lest, surest I fridoos, 15otfi. KamiUes Free, at O. II. Hugenbnch's drug store. Indian summer with its line weather is yet looked for. How to Suoeood. This is the ere vt problem of Ule which few satisfactorily solve, home lall because ol poor U4U11U, oiners want oi inci:, oui. too majority from deficient grit want of nerve, iluv are nervous, irreMJium, i-iuuihcuuiu, easily get tlie Dlues una "uiae ine Bpirus down to Keep the spirits up," inns wasting money, time, opportunity and uerve lorce. There Is nothing like thu Restorative Nervine, dls overed ny the great specialist, Dr. Miles, to cure all nervous di-easos, us he'idacho, the blues, nervous prostiatlon, sleeplessness, neuralgia, Ht. Vitus dance, fits, and liyHoita. Trial bottles and due book of testimonials tico at C. II. Ilageubucu's drug store, illlllners say this is to be a feather winter. Oh, What a Cough. Will yon heed the warning? The signal per ansof tbi sure apnroach of that more ter rible disease. Consumption. Ask yourselves r you can anora lor me saae oi Having ou enin. Lo run the risk and do nothing for it. Ve know fron experience that Billion's Cure will Curs yonr Cough. It never falls. This iixplnlus why more than a Million Mottles wero sold the nasi year. It relieves Croup ud WhopplUB Cough at once Mothers do not be without It. r'or Lams Back, Hide or Chest, useSlilloh's l'orous Master. Hold by A 11. ixa'-jenuucn, is. r.. curuer nuiu ttuu uioyu stream. The trees aro rapidly losing their leaver. Shiloh's Consumption Cure. This Is beyond question the most no- 36lul Cough Medicine we have ever nolo, 1 ihw iIohms Invarlablv cure the wot st oases oi Oough, Croup, and Bronchitis, while Its won- tenui suwwss i" me cure 01 ixiusumpiiou is vlthouia p.imllel lu the history of mtdlclne. siniM It's nrNt discover? It has been sold on n foarantee, a test which no other medicine an stand. It you have a Dough we earnestly you to try It. 1'rloe 10 cents, 50 cents, anil 11.00. If your Langs aro Bore, Chut or liac lame, use Hhlloh's l'orous Piaster. Hold by O. II. Hftgenbuch, N. K. corner Main and 'Jos;il streets. The hunters are getting their guns In order. To Our Readers. Are you troubled with Consumption or a live in open air, usa i-.iu xinu uougn nun Consumption (lure, and be cuiod. Don I delay. Trial bottles free at Klrllu's drug store Electricity la now used In the heat ing of tnllor Irons. Considerable building Is going on over the town this full. October Is giving us a little of nil kinds of weather. The Thanksgiving turkey will soon be selected. DEMOCRATS REVOLT. MoAloer - Gordon - Stengcr Oom- bino to Knife Harrity's Tiokot, DEMORALIZED ORGANIZATION. Philadelphia Republicans Jubilant Over tlie Outlook Tlio JInjorlty forGroRfrnnd Morrison la tin; Quaker City 5Iny Kxccetl Ml, OOO, mid ltcls of U to 1 Aro Freely Mmlu thnt tlio Sln Jorlty for tlie llcpiibll enn Hlnto Ticket will bo Over 2.1,000. ISpeclal Correspondence. Philadelphia, Oct, Democrats of this city 27. The have gotten themselves into a terrible state of demoralization. Their organization is disrupted through factional wrangling: and jealousies nmong tho leaders. Whilo Harrity has been in Hatriaburg running tlie Pattison campaign in tho state, his enemies havo been secretly scheming to clip his wings here at home. Republicans ure jubilant over tho prospects for election day. While their organization has been Kottinu stronger every day and interest has been aroused among independent Republicans in favor of both the state and city nominees, the Democracy has all the while been going to the dogs. The out look is for at least 80,000 majority for tho Itepublican state candidates. Harrity has had a corps of hnruion- izers going from ward to ward in a dee perato effort to straighten out his or ganization. His reports get worse every time he returns to town. He sees ahead a repetition of the cutting the Demo cratic state ticket got when Boyer car ried this city by over 40,000 majority for state treasurer. The combined Influ ence of tho following of Congressman McAleer in the old Itandall district, and tne uisaueeteii menus or ex-secretary Stenger and Judge Gordon, is arrayed ngainst his plans. Efforts to harmonize McAleer have been in vain. The Har rity men cannot go near either Gordon or Stenger. With this stato of affair confronting thein, the Harrity men, who style themselves the regulars, have been going about to- .11 weeding out men from the ward committees whom they suspect of treachery to tho party candidates. This has only served to intensify the feeling. In some wards where McAUvr's friends are strong, as many as twi nty men have been thrown out of n committee at a time. AVhat would tie practically a new committee has been formed from men never elected from the precincts in which they nve. ine result 01 tins pian or cam paign, particularly in tho third congres sional district, and up in the Nineteenth anil Thirty-lust wards, where Dnviil Martin has many friends among the Democrats, con bo imagined. M'ALUElt KNIVES OUT. 'Squiro McMullin's friends in the Fourth ward havo been refused admis sion to the city committee. As McMul lin gavo this ward to Boyer when Big ler might just as well havo had a thou sand majority, there can bo no doubt uf tho icoult Loro ncnt Tuesday. Mc Mullin and McAleer are staunch friends. Tho Fifth ward is not in much botttr shape, as McAleor's followers here havo also been shut out. "Al" Crawford has 11 big following in tlie Eleventh ward, who will resent what they term Wright's persecution of this, tho only Democratic mercantile appraiser. In the Twelfth, Sixteenth anil Seventeenth wards, which comprise tlie upper end of the Third district, tlie McAleer men, who aro mostly tho old Raudallites; Ladner, who feels that he was badly treated when he ran for mayor; Ches ter, who was Randall's private secre tary, Bradley, Eagan, Boyle and" others of that wing havo knives out for the Harrity state tickot. John H. Fow's friends in the Seventeenth ward aro in dignant over the imputation put upon l'ow s Democracy by Hurrity s man, City Treasurer Wright. OLD WALLACE MEN KICK. Down in tho First ward, tho men who followed Robert S. Pattison when he led the fight for Wallace refuse to fol low him into the Patlison camp since he was appointed harbor master by Hur rity. Tho b'ink hero is only exceeded uy tne Doit i.tiie secouu warn, wnero (ieorge McGowan is hot because his rivals, the Hagan faction, are being recognized by Harrity. This, too, will mean the loss of many votes to tne Har rity ticket. Up m the northeast, where, in tho Nineteenth ward, some of the strongest anti-IIarrity men have been accused of treason, refused admission to the city committee, and then shut out trom the wurd committee, the Democratic vote is oxpected to dwindle uway almost to nothing. Many Deiurcrats declare they will vote the straight Republican ticket to resent this interference with home rule. Thirty-two of tho fifty-seven regularly elected ward committeemen wero turned down in this ward, and mennever elected in their divisions picked out to run the organization. the aonnos and stenqek men. In the Twenty-fourth, Twenty-seventh and Thirty-fourth wards, comprising West Philadelphia, where Stenger lives and where Gallagher, whose sou is a tipstaff appointed by Judge Gordon, is active in Democratic politics, tho Har rity ticket will be fairly slaughtered. Theso men look upon the defeat of Wright and Tildeu us their only salva tion. An explanation of much of the Demo cratic disaffection is invon in the charce that tho Harrity men have been setting up the organization in order to capture tho delegates to the next national con vention. The McAleer-Gordon-Stencor combination say they do not propose to quietly submit to being bowled out completely, There is but ono thing for them to do. They will bo heard from on election day. Republicans are betting 5 to 1 thnt Philadelphia will give the Republican 6tate ticket 20,000 majority, and 3 to 1 that the majority for Gregg and Morri son will be over 25,000. McCreary, the uepuniicun canuiaate tor city Treas urer, is also a sure winner, the McAleer men being ull bitterly against Wright, his opponent, on account of his having taken an acuve nana in ine vaux cam paign against McAleer for congress. Tliostar at. linuio Kcpulilloiuia aro tlio best allies oflho Doiuoorncr. Xfeel ffco aytg something JiADt COOTS asd S1IOK8 DltLBBLDwiTH Wolffs Blacking JIEVER OCT HARD AND STIFF. TCltl'RIHII' nnd wsrrsntfd to lirrnci Li'llthcr. nnd K"p it holt and (tumble 10C Will pay for the Coat 10c IfrO f CllMaulllK 1'lnhi AVhlto irtn JS1" ilulrvlto Hubv. yC iUC Kmcrnlil, Opnl. 1UC 10C or "'ci' Costly tilnsa, Qf B FOR GLASS Tjk WILL DO IT. WOLFF tt RANDOI.I'H. Philadelphia. CACTUS BLOOD CURE. SUPERIOR 10 SARSAPARILLA Purifies tho blood by ex pelling the impurities through the proper channels and never causes eruptions on the skin. Regulates tho.bowels. Cures dyspepsia, liver and kidney troubles, tones up tho system and gives you anlippetite, Never fails f 0 euro any con dition produced by impure or impoverished blood, or a dis ordered stato of stomach, liver or kidneys. Sold at Klrlin's Druj Store, Ferguson's Hotel Block, Shenandoah, Pa. AhU my nceutH for AV. I.. Pniialn Sliocn. If not lor sale lu jour plucc n!l your (Ifitlcr to kcihI for cntulnirui'i securu tho ugl'iicy, anil xet thein lor ou. HO XAIWi AO M.I1S11TUTL. THE BOUCLAS S3 SHOE cEHfLriEN THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY? It H a Si-uinlcss shot', with mi tacks or wax threat! to hurt tho feet; inalu of the bent Hue calf, ntjlUli nntl ensv, ami because nr make more time of this unule than any other munufaetxner, it equal1 baud Bcwoil shoes roHtliiK from st.tn) to 8.VU0. SSK UI) (it'iiitlui' llainl-Mi'd, tho finest calf PJr hhoo over ofli-n-il for gTi.tXC; equals Frcucll Imported rth.H-1 whk-li eost from 8H.uito12.i)0. 00 llumUSM'WCtl Writ Hior. fluo calf. Cp6! ht Huh. i-onif., table ami durable. '1 he best ohoo ewr oftereil at thH prh'o ; same k ratio as cus tom Hindi KtKM'4 rosthiK from 6 tut to SlUX). 50 Police Hi ort runners, Uallroad Men POa uud Letter t 'ui rlcrsiill wear them; Hue calf ( ppaml''na, hiuooth Inside. hc.ty three soles, exten sion edue. Ouo pair will wear u jear. !! 50 line! calft no better Bhoo ever offered at this prleo; one trial will convince thoso who want a shoe for comfort and nervleo. ami rr.MM) Worliintziiiiiu'fl shoes 9aEie arc very Htromr, nnd durable. Those who hao given them a trial will wear no other make. ESrtVttt' &-.00 nod 81. 7.1 hehool shoes arn DUj9 worn by the )o)severwlierc; they sell nn itwTr mor-ltu dm I hi' Itiervnuhur miles fcllOW. B QrilAC "IK' liaiKt-MCMtMl ou, ueiu. tUoiS JZ Uontiolu. very htvlUh; rnuats French imported shoes costlmr fiom to 8.mi. Misses aro tho bent flue Donaola. st Ilsh and durable. t'limloii. See that W. I.. Douglas' namo and prlctjaro stamped on thelMittom of each shoe. Lit UKJl' VJ-La.lO, iJll.l,kVUa UJ.U3 DR.THEEL. coo North Fourth St., UtjO btl l.rwn, rHiLAimrin, ths oui, genuloa Ui-rnian Aniirtcaa ttpedall.l lo tb. Villus Blalfi .tola able to cur, Blood Polaon, Nervous Debility anJ Spe cial Diseases 'u'i " hktn Pl.ea.ra Krd hpo" Fall" O" bumi.SoroThront Mouth, Muu-lH'., I'lmpl' a, I rupUoni, aort ar harj llnrri, Bw.lUDga, Irritation,. Inflammation! and Kannlna, blrtaturu,, WeakneM and Tarlj Jrear loat maraorr, waak mental aniWtj. "l " Illall.r IU.a.a and all IH.a..a t.-uHln "?'" ', ""J In ll..TitloTi or Ot.rwork Htftnt earn curio" 10 ,",110 1 V ri-lW at nnre. Bo nn Imo hop, no matter ltal urn Uilna liwtor. l)alr, tauill. er Il.iiltal Pn.lilen ba lalira. nr. HUM. eur a riO.ltively and without d. unon mm Uiloi a cm. rot-Mi uror.ia A.ian aD rni """""'" u.kiiu la rl 'h or (vtnr i.ni .i.'i'i' "truth," "P"-'-.?ri'. .o: .'.'rs-r'..7Kt r'.l. 6 lo 10 Sun.la, 0 llll U Writ or fall and l a or lUftrouooaaeUdn '-d Kalurd.J Phlla. dallj TUM 1001 OF MEN enaiiy, vuicki, t-ermanoniiy ntiuiwu. AVeukiiHii. NervouilitM. llebllltr. and all tho train of evlli Irora early orroraorlater excesses, the result of overwork. Blckuess. worry. etc. rull btretitith, developmont, and tono given to every orir&n nnd portion or tho body. Simple, natural metuoae. luimeaiate improvement ruuure impossible, z.ono references, xmiok, oxpiauauuui n& proofs mailed (sealed) free. Address Rllltt ITll&kflWMla VW( BWri HI.W, ! , AnOHHtY-Ar-LHW. mia-.stjlairbull(llo mrner Mln ' Vhsti trjubl.l with Ibmon! ..li -' lir"u! Hie rnquentlr folliwim. ii cili "p, -I'lo, 01 nfi.Miin. Utational WBttknMH" t' ulijr ui thtlr f . tUryld UfcO DR OuO't INK'S CaMfl.j.-BteaB TMALE REGULATING PILLS. "liemro Ktrni.Btl.fi lor t . ihi intlr. m.li-r . ' to. iuoruiKl ruti li t r f . to all fitnt'l tojiBiii ' xT linl"d, Bern i .ni'vuult ii, f L .U;a.J, ACME WHY IS ii. BlUOKEP., M. D., PHTSIOIAN AJND S DM0 XON, . 9 Kact OnWe HI,; MattBatOltT,Pm Will 0 1 fHI mva Httw. aWlIIV p M.J1AMILTON, M.B., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offlce-Hl west Lloyd 'Street, Blienanaoaii hi