OISTJ SNJOY Both tlio method and results -when Syrup of Figs is taken; it ia pleasant and refreshing to tlio tasto, and acts fently yet promptly on tho Kidneys, liver and Bo (vols, cleanses tho sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fcvois and cures habitual constipation. Fyrup of Figs is the only remedy ot its kind over pro duced, pleasing to tho tasto and ac ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the moat althy and agreeablo substances, its P-v excellent qualities commend it t0 ai and havo made it tho most popular .euie,iy known. iP'B3 ia for sale in 50o and 81 bottn by au ieading dru. gists. Any rublo druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly ft any ono ho TubstUute lU aeCept any CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO SAN FRANCISC" CAL. UWISVIUS, Kt NEW WRK, U.Y. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies on Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of . W. BAKER & CO.'S BreakfastCoco which is absolutely pure and soluble. Ith&smorethanthreetlmes the Strenath nf (InnnA TnlTa.l with Starcb, Arrowroot or nomical, costing less, than one cent a cup. It la delicious, nourishing, and. easily Sold br Grorera CTerynhert. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass. Beautiful book containing tho latest vocal mu sic, full sheet-musio plates, handsomo co?er. In Afterwards, 40 I've Worked 8 nours, 40 Uaby's Fast Asleep 40 I Whistle and Walt, 40 Comrades, 60 Love's Golden Dream 40 wwuicaeuur Ldixuuzo urn urgan mower. Go, Pretty Iloso, 50 Our Last Waltz i uaJ2 i9',l?S. 0 Over the Moonlit Sea, 40 ... - . w owuai. iutiu Connor. Mary ana John, 40 That Is Love, We give thl3 book to introduce to you KROUT'S BAKING POWDER And KnouT's Flavoring Extracts, Unsurpassed for PURITY and STRENOTB Your grocer will give you a circular contain' lag additional Premium List with fullpartlcu tar. hnio tn irat thi. - ALBERT KROUT, Chemist, Phila ABRAM HEEBNER CO., PORT CARBON, PA., Manufacturers ot Of Every Description. Flags, Badges, Caps, Regalias, &c. WFINESI GOODS-LOWEST PRICES.-W Write torcatalogues, Correspondence solicited. DOCTOR f!0 0 Nil r til Pnnl, Us . V . UOO ilfln .lu. ti. .( "fiaw urren, I'D.. a. En Urai ill fffeoli of Toothful IndUcr.-tlon (bolh kioi), Wood Pot tolOdaja. Tweot' m j f . - . nun , uurea .run nua In 1 r-re'i'l' "P'-'1"""- Ba 4 eti In atampa trua Mii l iff ,'.V "J; I'.! .'J."' WJ"r7. II u a - , - - ' iivHHiimi ewov I n? Thi rU.-l tha rrvata.l ot Ilour.,io3, Kiu,.,u. w.doBX.;Iiii.. lo0Bl)r.moT.30, BuoJ.vi, uu. WriMorwilU Q 1 1 DTI 1 0 C .We,.the anleiu!imed, were entirely mired of rupture by Pblladelnbla, Pa." H. Jones PufllSg KetineJ mm 1 m. nrnuu, Mount Alto, 1-a.: iiev. H. II Bher. per, Buubury,,Pa.! D. J, DelletU 214 A 12th SbnitSa?l.u."' -! Wm- SM AIontrSseHt Phlladelnliln; H. I.. ibo Vrnu i5u. ? Bt, Heading, Pa, Bend for circular Act on a new principle Jf raJsto the Lifer, etoruath oud bowels through ihs tiertft. Dr. Milis Pnxa tpeedlly curt tlUouenesg. torpid liver and constlpv tlon. t-'mallost, mlldcBt, cnreutl BOdoBea.aacts, hamples tree at atwtl&ta. Ur.lJiltillei Co.,rjUuut,uX OF MEN EASILY. QUICKLY. PFnuiiuVuT, vDr. veLu,i seiiz.r. ftulr .iron i T.il. !K""Ti " ttm fpluiolluBa and prw.ro. MoUd. iddrw ' " yt CITY llUt-ltlAl. CO. PkllilvkU, OHN If, COYLE, aiiitfucj-ai-uaw aau inn mm AgenL Ifflee Bedaall'jJullalnr. Shenindnu,. p.i . - WHERE IS THE PEDDLER Alleged Important Clew in the Fall River Mystery. A QUEER LETTER TO EMMA BORDEN. The Defense Itecnrd the Communication As of Grent MoninntIIrjarlng of jLIz- clu llonleu IlesiiineilDr. Uolau on tin MiinU Nearly All Day. Kali, EtVKn, Mass., Aug. 20. Lawyer Jennings, counsel for Lizzie Bordeu, has given out tho following letter, which is considered by the ilefonso to bo a most important oluo in tho murder mystery. It was mailed on Aug. 18, and received thosnmo dnyt "Waltham, Mass., Aug. 17, 1802. Hiss Emma Borden: Dkau Madam Vou must excuse that I tako the liberty in sending you those few lines. I ought to have written to you beforo this, but I was unablo to do so as I was traveliug every day. My name is Snniucl Kobiusky. I nm a Jew ish peddler. When the fatal murder in Fnll iUver occured I was only a few miles from Fall Iiiver that day. "Whilo sitting on tlio roadside toward New Bedford I met a man who was cov ered with blood. He told me that he worked on a farm and that ho could never get his wages, so he had a fight with the farmer, lie bald he ran away and did not get any money after all. All ho hud was a $!i bill. He bought from mo four handkerchiefs, one looking-glass, ono necktie, collar and shoo blacking. Ills boots were covered with blood and he put lots of blacking on them. "I helped him to fix up again and get cleaned, but by this time I did not know anything about the murder. I felt sorry for him and thought only ho gavo the farmer a good licking. I advised him to travel at night, which he said ho would do, as he feared arrest during tho day. "I gave him my lunch and he gave me a quarter and told mo not to say anything uat 1 mot him. Ho asked me what time the train lelt for Boston after 8 o'clock at night, and 1 told him. He hod also a bundle with him which was about two feet thick. "When I was peddling I did notrcad any papers only Sundays, &s I am studying tho English language. When I was in Boston last Sunday & friend of mine told mo about tho Fall River murder. I told him I was in Fall IUver and around tho neighborhood. I told him about my stranger and my friend said: 'But why did you not report this to tho police au thorities!' "I told him I was afraid, as they would lock me up as a witness, and another thing, I did not have any licensoj so I was afraid. I told my friend I would write to you.' Bobinsky goes on to say that he would know the man if he should see him again. Ho was of medium hoight, had dark brown hair, reddish whiskers and mus tache, and weighed about 185 pounds. Tho writer goes on to emphasize the fuct that the stranger was very nervous. Mr. Jennings inquired in Waltham, and the Mayor said that no such peddler lived there, but ho knew of such a mun in Bos ton. The counsel for tlio defense say thoy aro satisfied that such a mau is in existence and are making a search for him. Tho little court room never beforo neiu sucu a crowd as that which greeted Judge Blaisdell on the second day agreed upon for the hoaring of Miss Lizzlo A. Borden on tho chares of killinir h wiiu un axe. Clergymen, laymen, physicians and more than 150 ladies who were not direct ! v tuimcuucu wiiii me case were seated anil standing in all parts of tho room while insldo the roll was an extraml iiinro- ui tepuriera ana-otner newspaper Xadlos occunled mora than twn-tnlrila oi me seats usually occupied by the curl ous gang who usually flock into the lower courts. At 10:80 o'clock Charles J. Holmes nn pearea with Miss Emma Borden on his arm. foilowlne them camn Mm Brighom, Mrs. Holmes and T?nv rr uucK. Miss .Lizzie Borden came in last witn aiarsual iillllard. Miss Hnr.lr.n' lace gave evidence of extreme anxiety. tmc loon, u scut uoiwoen uor two legal ad' risers ami near her sister. The two women sat elbow to elbow. Not a won! passed uetweon them. Dr. Nolan described the crhastlv wmm.U wmcu mm ueen inuicteu on Mr. Hnnlon tvuuuus were inaue witu an axo or natcuet, ana could have beeu Inflicted by any person of ordinary strength, thn Doctor said. Dr. Dolan saw four axes in the cellar of the house. He examined one anu lound that It had been scraped and washed. The head cutting surface under the glass showed stains which look ed like blood. He saw somo hair on it also. Ho took some dress sktrtR nnil nn. dersklrts from the houso, the property o f ' uoruen, uio uerenuaut. Tliov wars given to xroi. woou. Ou a Delicate Diplomatic XUtlon. new ionic. Aucr. "(1 wi nm a Sutherland, of Kochestor. N. V . Nn. tional Hepublican Committeeman Bulled KurIW i" the Fuerst Bismarck. Ho lunn auout three weeks abroad, be' iiiK emuiovcd and wmimki,i.,o,i i, ti, State Department at Washington to at tend to n delicate dlnlnmitt will visit London first, then proceed to Paris and from thence he will go to Stock- uuuu aim jrom inero to Itome. He aigues in September tho Monroe county case to test the constitutionality of the now apportionment beforo the Court of Appeals, Wuahnuts on tha It., w, Jfc o. Watertown N. Y.. Autr. 2d serious washouts occurred on the Rome Watrtown & Ogdensburg Railroad in St.' Lawrence county yesterday. Both branch es of the road are affected. Tho rainfall In that (.ectlou has been unprecedented, amouutinu to over three iiiohaa ti,.. past 84 hours. Trains have touched Og donsburg -only via DeKalb and the O densburg & Luke Chauiplaln. The Cen tral Vermont liu lui luwn i..n troubled by waahouta. Gluditnnii Inform!! of Ireluuil'i Ieiuu,l Dublin, Aug. 20. In speaking here before the Irish National deration, John Dillon said that tho charge of re missness had been brought agniust Irish members of Parliament for not having forced Gladstone's hand. Mr. Dillon assured his audience, however, that Mr. Uladstonehad been Informed privately as to the demands of Irelaud. Much of this Information, Mr. Dillon ald, wai givon by himself. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report A&0LUYl2f PURE- HAS IT REACHED BERLIN t Fenra that the IHnease Has nrukan Out in That City. BEnfJS, Aug. 20. There are Berioui fears that' the cholera has broken out la this city. The wlfo of a merchant named Landrock, living at 10 Golden strasso, died at midnight with symptoms ol Asiatic cholera. At a conference of leading medical men, held yesterday, the opinion wai unanimously expressed that an epidemic of cholera was unlikely. It was sug gested, however, that everybody should take three drops of muriatic acid dally in a tumbler of water, and that great care should bo taken to keep flies away from the food. The authorities on the frontier have been admonished to redouble their pre cautions against the admission of porsons or articles suspected of infection, and everywhere the local sanitary officials are displaying tho utmost vigilance. The President of the Berlin police has made It known through the press that doctors and heads of families are bound Instantly to report all cases of illness suspected to be cholera aa long as tha epidemic shall continue. As letters and papers from Russia are not disinfected as they were during former epidemics, persons' receiving such things from places where the cholera pre vails are advised to burn them as soon as possible, and to take caro to cleanse their hands thoroughly. CHOLERA IN ENGLAND. Three Cntee Itepurted by Health Authorl. ties at GraTeaeml. London, Aug. 28. The steamship Gemma,, from Hamburg, arrived at Gravosend yesterday with 00 aliens, boius of whom are Eussiah Hebrews. Three of them were reported 111, and upon examination by health officers wer found to have symptoms of cholera. The steamer was quarantined. London, Aug. 20. A dispatch from Berlin to the "Telegraph" says that th assistants of a well-known physician said to-day that there had been 05 deaths from Asiatic cholera in the city lately. In all cases the true cause of ticath has been kept a secret. The story, probably, is a canard. Servlato Iluilda Vait Hoapltal. Vienna, Aug. 20. The Servian govern ment has voted tho sum of one hundred and fifty thousand francs to be used for j tho erection of an hospital for contagious diseases and temporary shelter for thoso attacked by tho cholera. At all ports on tne Servian Danube the entry of goods of Kussian manufacture is prohibited. DECLARED ILLEGAL. Chancellor Mcaill'a Ducislou In the Cm. or the Kbit Jersey Coal Combine. Trknto:, N. Y., Aug. 20. Chancellor McQlll's decision in the case of the State against the rnllroads forming the Read ing combine was filed at a late hour yesterday afternoon. The State's contentions lease of Central to the Port Reading is niegai; mat the Tripartite Agreement is in violation oi law, and tho combine is against the policy of the State, because ib tenus to tue monopoly of a publii necessity. President McLeod this morning gavo urn. a auiiemunt in reference to the in junction granted at Trenton. Ho says uv uuurumiiou as to tne con tents of the oninion filed bv tha m,0,,ni. lor, but if it is as I suppose, that he has restrained by injunction the operation of the Central Railroad of New Jersey by the Port Roadinc Comnanv. operations of tho property will be at onca aurrenuereu to the directors of the Cen tral, xnis cannot have the, Rtfent of changing or disarranging our trafllo rangemeuts in any way," DESERTING THE STRIKERS, BKiueu u iirmiien ltuturu to the Home lead AIUIMore Help Than la Wanted. homestead, I'a., Aug. 20. Four for mer employes of the Carnegie Steel Com' pany have broken away from the ranks oi tue strikers and this moraine went tn work in the mill. Thev were not mpm. tiers of the Amalgamated Association, uui Hre smiled workmen in the mechanl. cal department. bupt. Totter says that his force num bers between 2,100 and 2,200 men and everything is progressing satisfactorily to l -unmiiy. I'uriy-six sKineu mechan ics arrived from Puiladeliililn vnKtnr,l,.tr Mr. Potter says they nro getting more SKineu workmon than are needed; that mcy diuuoi, properly take care of more until tue new comnanv houses urn fin. 1SIICI1. Tho weeding out has beirn claimed that In a short time every Uepart- iiuiufc win uuve u mu lorco oi competent EYS8 DON'T DELAY ret r r.rii. It Cine CoMi,Ooatlii,8oreThrMt,Orp,Iallniia, mm for Contumption la fir.t .Ueti. and a aura rcUf Ik ftdvaBaod attfaa. Uaaalooaa. You will aa tba al aallaat affaat attar takisf tha first 1om. twt a 4alia avaijwBara, J.ai (a katUM, (9 aaula aul U)0 mum BALSAtSI What He .N'ecdcd. The New York druggists make a. Inrga percentage on tho money Invested. They aro very exorbitant. Recently a "Now York Invalid was told by his doc tor: "Your condition Is much worso than It was. You aro getting; weaker." "What am I to do about It?" "You must chango-your climate:" "I'll do it, do it at once, for if I havo to pay many, moro druggists' bills tho clhnato will bo tho only thing left for me to change." Texas Siftlngs. Forehanded. Jack There goes a man who owns over a hundred thousand dollars' worth of property. You would not think it to look at tho clothes ho wears. Tom Is that bo? Well, perhaps he's saving for a rainy day. Jack A rainy day? With that amount of property I should say that Iiq was saving up for a blizzard. Texas Sittings. An Ktperlnnced Asront. House Agent Flush around to 120 Bank street, quick, and get lastmonthV rent. Bookkeeper What's up? Agent As I passed there this morn ing I heard n baby. There won't bo any spare cash around that house for six weeks at least. I've had 'em my self. N. Y. Weekly. Why Hicks Hatei lioiton. "Didn't you tell mo that when tho robbers entered tho car each passenger held up their hands?" asked Hicks. "No," said the Bostonlan; "each held tip his hands." Truth. AV1U;UK IT GO MS. No more he takes hor to the play Or suppers late provides; His hard-earned cash now melts away On summer evenlnc drives. Judge, A Motive for Travel. . "It's funny "how many people travel In this country." "Yes?" "Go where you -will the cars are filled, and many of the people who aro travel ing havo no percentible motive bevond the mere desire to bo on tho move." "But there is another motive, never theless, that causes them to travoL" "What is it?" "Why, the locomotive." "Ohl" Chicago Mall. Sweeping Out. Fashionable Wife Did yen notice, dear, at the party last evening how grandly our daughter, Clara, swept into tho room? Husband (with a grunt) OhI yes, Clara can sweep into any room grandly enough, but when it comes to sweeping out, a room sne isn't there Texas sift, tags. IHdu't I.Ike Kni. Dreistein Dot gentleman is a panic cashier I yoost sold him a suit of clothes. Hoodlehelmer Ho vas in our shtoro, put dlt not puy. Dreistein Vy not? Hoodlehelmer Dot new clerk asked him if Uo ofer wore stripes. Puck. No Wonder, nusband How fresh and smllinir tne faco of nature is to-day! U ife (whoso last season costume ran. klcs) Why shouldn't nature smile? Every biassed thing sho wears is new and this year's stylo. I could look hat- py under such circumstances myself! urooiciyn t,uo. Mlsalue Change. nusband I think there must be a holoinmy trousois pocket, as I never seem to be ablo to keep any loose change in them. ife No, my dear, there Isn't, for I navo carefully examined them every I Tlotrnit Free Press. Fulully lnjui e,l hj uTruln. NEWAHK, N. J.. AUC. 28. Wllllnm T1..1 1 I.. 1, t , .r... -minimi, iwm Williams, ami a mnn known us "Jim," were drlvinir acrnjut tlin tracks of the Qreeuwood Lake Railroad, lit. Miillnritln Vlnw Int. .... ' jMniiuiij tiiiur-1 noon, wuen nu express train struck tin wagon anu mined the occupants many feet in the air. The throe men were hurled a distance of 80 feot and were un conscious when picked up. Baldwin and Williams wero taken to the Mount Ciulr Hospital and they will probably die. rifteeu Were Drowned. London, Auk. 80. A desnninh Calcutta says that the Anchor Line steamer, Anglla, bound from Calcutta to London, capsized in the Hooghly river, on the way to the seas and of fortv- snvnn persons on board fifteen were drowned. SOLDIERS GOING H0MEACMEBLACKLNGiBCheap- M- at 20 cents a bottle than any One Brigade Will Be Left to Guard the Yards. ARBITRATION BOARD ADJOURNS. It Will ItPsmue the Iiiveatlgat ion In Nan Tork--Solnnof the bwltchmen May Got Duck Their Join The Assault Sweeney Denounced. Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 20. Tho mill-' tary authorities are stirred up because of conflicting suggestions. Sherill Beck has asked for tho withdrawal of the troops, and some of the railroad odlclals urge their retention for the , present. A con servative policy is being pursued nnd. only about U.OUO of the men havo been or dered homo up to this morning. The 10th Battalion of Albany, with the Cth and 21st Separate companies of Troy, the 44th of Utlca nnd tho 40th of Amstcr-' dam, eft by special train on the Central road last oveuing, and wero followed shortly after by Troop A cavalry, who shared their train with the First Brigade Signal Corps. Tho 2!id Regiment, Col. Partridge, left on a speclnl over the West Shoro Railroad i at 10 p. m., and wero followed an hour lator on the same road by the 18th Regi ment, Col, Austin, of. Brooklyn. Tho CatskiU company, the 10th, went home on the regular 0 p. m. train on tho West Shore road. It Is expected that about the same num ber will be ordered home to-day and to morrow, providing no disturbance occurs. Tho regiments nnd companies of the 4th Brigade, Gen. Doyle's immediate com mand, will remain and garrison tho va cant posts. The question that Is now agitating the minds of the defeated switchmen is whether or not they will be able to get back their positions. It Is given out that on several roads an understanding to that effect has been ar rived at. Arbitration Commissioner Donovan is quoted as saying: "I had interviews with tho superin tendents of the principal roads involved and requested that in the event of the strike being declared oil they give em ployment to as many of the men who wero .out on strike as possible. Tho superintendents of the Lehigh and Erie assured mu that they would do so. "I am m . -. i ii.lu about the Central, but on the u: uvr roads where the strike was sympathetic the men will all be taken back, 1 am sure, extept such ns have violated the law and forfeited the confidence of their employers by riotous conduct. "Ou these assurances I recommended to Mr. Sweeney that the strike bo declared oil. Our interview followed tho confer ence which Mr. Sweeney had with Mcfsrs. Sargent, Clark and Wilkinson. Mr. Sweeney was lit first loth to givo up, but after laboring with him for two hours, he at last consented if he could get the ac quiescence of tho local switchmen." From other sources it was learned that tho Lackawanna people will probably take back nil their old men. The re instatement of the old men will prob ably be slow, aS the railroads do not feel like letting the new men go. General Superintendant Bartlett of the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg, said. "We have men engaged and on tho way to tako the strikers places and will havo no vacancies. We may take back some of our old men, but it would hardly be consistent. We granted our men everything they asked for, but it seemed that they were determined to strike. When they went out I discharged them and told them plainly that they had not acted fairly with the road." General Superintendant Canniff, of the Lake Shore, said: "The relations between the men and the company have always been pleasant and I regretted that they saw fit to leave the service of the company. We now have 85 men at work. When thoy wero employed it was with the understanding that their places would bo permanent. It would be unfair to these men to dis charge them to make room for former employes. They will givo us a full force." Thpre vent vnrxr 1 Itt la Hlaf.f.nnnn t. the military outposts during the night by strlknrs nr thoii- ,... i, i, wuL former were too much occupied with the weightier sublect of what tho roads would do In the matter of taking them back. A round of the hospitals was made this morning to ascertain the condition of the victims, in ono way or another, of the otvit-o ni,io. tii... , uvaswt wsi4bA VSIVUUUVV. Ul LIIO la. in New Yoik Is reported as doimr well i.narles liable, who was assaulted by Tom Manaher at tho Tlfft farm is im proving. Manaher is also Improving and will recover. Allen Richardson, the non union man from Boston, who was beaten Tuesday night, is doing well. William Moran, the striker who was shot through the leg nt the Tlfft Farm, will soon be discharged from the hospital. Charles Snyder, the soldier who foil from a car In a lit of epilepsy has recovered and re turned to his company. Timothy ColTee, the Erie, Pa., man who was uniuiii11,i hv Pat Dealey, the ex-baseball catcher, has ...l 1 11-.., . . ' .. ' iwtwai uuu uuuu msuuargeu irom tue hospital. Tho assault yesterday morning on Grand Miuter Swetney by Arthur Quinn, a striking Nickel Plato switchman, Is uiiurucienzeu oy me strikers as cowardly and brutal, and entirely unprovoked, Mr. Sweeney and 75 switohmen had been attending the investigation orderod by the State Board of Arbitration and hud loft the Jiall and wore standing at the corner of Swnun and Main streots. Qulnu approached and told Sweeney ho was responsible for tho loss of his job, Before Sweeney had time to answer n..i.... 1.1 . . . u mm a leuriui mow on the head and followed It up by several sledge- uuiuiuur punches in tue luce. Mr. Sweeney says he does not know why Quinn hit him, but supposes it was beoauae he had lost his job by the failure t ,ll. tr n . . . the first time iu tho history of tho order 41... 1... 1....1 1 .. .... . u nm oumu. jur. oweenev salil It was iuui. ua uaii uauu nssumieu or a striker or any member ot the switchmen's nr. ganiiation. lie bad often heard threats agniust him, but had never been touched by a man who was dhmppoiuted over the outcome of a strike. Arrests or Strikers lriibable, Philadelphia, Aug. 20. Nothing defl nlte cau he learned at the hendiiuttrtors ot the Philadelphia & Reading Railroad iu this city of he Lehigh Valley Com pany securiug evidonco agninst a large number of Buffalo strikers for the pur pose of prosecuting them. General Su iuteudent Swelcert. who linn rlmctrA nt tue matter, refuses to talk, but otheil (rfUcUU say early arrests aire probable. I other Dressing at $ cents. A LITTLE GOES A LONG WAYS because shoos once blackened with it can be kept clean by washing them with water. People in moderate circumstances find it prolitnblo to buy it at 20c. a bottle, because what they spend for Blacking they save in tlioo leather. It is the cheapest blacking considering it3 quality, and yet wo want 'jo sell it on cheaper if it can be done. "Wo will pay 10,000 Reward for a recipe that will enable us to make Wolff's Acme Dlackiko at such a prico that a retailer can profitably bell it at 10c a bottle. This offer is open until Jan. 1st, 1893. WOLFF & BANDOLFH, Philadelphia. Old furniture painted with (th!g h the Dame of tle jnt) looU gained and varnished new furniture. One coat will do it. A child can apply it. You can change a pine to a walnut, or a cherry I to mahogany; there is no limit to your ! fancies. All retailers sell it. Fun For Two. All children enjoy a drink of Mires' Root Beer. 6o docs every other member of the family, i A 1) cent pnckagoniakesSKollona of this delicious 'drink. Do a 't bo deceived If a dealer, for the sak J of larger profit, tells you some other kind Is ' "lust as good "'tis false. No Imitation Is aa good, ilio genuine IIiues'. Healthful, Agreeable, Cleansing. Cures Chapped Hands, Wounds, Burna, Etc liomovos and Prevents Dandruff. WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP. Soecially Adapted for Use in Hard Watet SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE. ,T'ie access of this Great Cough Cure b without a parallel in the historv of medicine. V1 dragRlsts a authorized to sell it on a pes- '"ve guarantee, a test that no other cure can suc s.tand- That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are Pla.cJn?,a..Sa,mcP, Botl,1e Jree jnto "ery k0 whe Vnl'e(1 S'a,tesa"d Canada. If you have f, CT.g ' t?1' 0r D?,nJctls af it will cure you. If vour ch Id has the Croun. . . ra " Jt ., " " ?r copmg Cough, use jt promptly, and rehcl is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druceist for SlIILOfPS CURE, Price 10 cts 50 cts. and 51.00. it your x.unRS are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts, For sale by O. H. Hageubuch. M S0 HAPPY! Oi BOTTLES frai OF Kellevcd me Ot a severe TllnnH trnniiU It has also caused my hair to grow out again, as it had been falling out by the handful. After trying many physicians in vain, I am so happy to find a cure in S. S. S. O. H. Elbert, Galveston, Tex. S CURES 1,yfore,,nl? t cerms of ilia caseanil Uio poison as well. g CP-H is entirely vegetable ami harmless. S Treatise on IHuo.1 anil Skin mailed free. Swift Si-ecifio Co., Atlanta, Ga. DR. SANDEN'S IATEST PATENTS- (flVS-iAWITH tttCTM- BEST J.W MAGNETIC IMPROVEMtHTS. Sj SUSrfNSOIT. Will tor Wlthaul nuartlrliiA all KaaWu. r..t.lt l. TirUllUB of Or tin, nvrvv force excv.ntii or tadisicrvtUm. ta tit) ej.tmu.tioi.. drain, lo-.e utrtuui di .lfl lt .MbMi, Itsfuftr, rl.vuiuaii.tu ki&utj, llrcr ai bikditr ct plluU, Utt. taok, luttilu4o. icUtica, fcmral lll-linHb.. CM. Tbii rU(f bell eontnluc tttitid.rl.tl tM.rafVinati otr atl r tr, tadgUii t tut rent tht li imisUitlr flt by tho wrl r Cut Ml 4, OUO.UO, n4 mit car .11 of (h ito? 41. t a Ml or bo py. l hoiuaadi iitra bao rur by Ihll EuafTtlou lor all oibor r-nir1io filid and v alt a fat rat tr Miiimoaiali (a tola and vvery aiati- atato. Our powarfal ituprorod fcLMlUIC MoPVlMmY U tW rtatut kooDovarotlttMd wtak moo. IHfcK Uli'IULL Ba'LlH. llafclth Asset tlnviuaai ialu..a s. (.i'iiiiiisuiii 1. ... plTS. Bond for lari Uiatratd tauithUu. oaalal. fra bj mall. Adclraia No.810 Broadway NEW VOltitV ICIRKS I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers