Tattoo. About the year 1768 the boats and calls ot the drum then used In the tervice were put Into a permanent chape. The tattoo, or beat of the drum calling soldiers to their quar ters at night, was once called "tap too," from the Dutch word signifying "no more drink to be tapped or sold." SWELLINGS IN THE NECK Or o#Pr, made my neck fully twice it natu ral sisp. For three years all my strength seemed to go into the swelling. I took Hood'n Sarsaparilla, a which gave m-> strength, - J relieved distress in my stomach, and best of all, emtirt ly removed the goitre. lam now sir.. Mwtaef.rd. In the bust of hoalth, weigh 193 lbs." Mhs. H. O.SwwsroKn, Union County, Miffllnbur/.Pa. Hood's"p>Cures Hoed'* I*ll In act easily, yet promptly autl eftt sk-utly, on the liver and bowels. 25 cent*. P h V ill* -US gfotinca f MJMr iHaiMI fcVWree cafe it w i i.l not cue An agreeable laxative and Jfxavx Toaio, Bold byhruggtita or sent by ntaiL 25c., 60a, and SI.OO per package. Sample, free. OTA HA The Favorite TOOTH WWSHI nil lIU for the Teeth and Breath. Win. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS VWITH THOMSON'S lagiS SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. Mo tools required. Only a hammer needed t-< drive an i cilnch th. m easily and quickly, tearing the cltuoh sbsoiately smooth. K. quiring no ho e to be niHtle la the leather nor burr lor the Rlrets. They are strung, lunula and durable. Mllliona now in uae. AU length*, uniform r >rted, pat up In boxes. Ask roar dealer for Ihem, or sead 40c. In Itsmpa for a box ol 1(K), assorted sizes. Man'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.. WALTHASI, MASS. ■THE KIND " DANIEL C. EGGLKSTON, Corinth, N. Y. HELPLESS AND SUFFERING, FAINT AND WEAK FROM RHEUMATIC TORMENT, DANA'S. DANA Sarsatarili.A CO.* B GKNTI.kmf.N.—I am OH years old, hy lion a fanner. For the last A years I have been a grout sufferer with Rheumatism, bod at times I could not stir my arm. constant pain In my shoulders. One arm wnH so had that nnr flu sera were draws out shape, was also nfflirted with s burnings sensation in my stomit-h with severe trains, would be faint und weak, so I could hardly =F3 sit up. 1 have taken DANA'S " SARSAPARILLA | and my stomach is WKI.Va, no pain in myMl shoulders and arms. I tin Indeed gmb'ful. --i Yourttruly, DAXIF.I, C. EGQLESTON. m The above testimonial was sent us by W. It. 3 Clayton, the well-known Druggist', Maple St.,S Corinth, N. Y.,which la aufficicnfguarautce thutH it la true. Dana Saraaparllla Co., Belfast, Maine- jjp {BUGGIES at $ Prica gSSk CARTS * HARNESS * g Ha^.-.:Kvßß>iffa: 4 ALL *tj~H lie Road Cart. .58.061 Hay of fiae ftcty Hsrnßnl3.BS|tri an.t uuWo' po Buggy " 14 75 Middleman's x-aAllfc Ut. Team M lia.aoprofit. CfjGTfi jCorgan BaddloSl.e&lCauktfrasfroa. .7s U. 8. BUGGY & CART CO. 61 ft. Uwrsnce St., Cincinnati, 6. Ihhhhhhhhhh BLOOD roisoslSHH'H * SPECIALTY. IKKilnSi fln mrlsl barking • 00,000. When mercury lodide potassium, sarwap rills or Hot Springs fall, ws guarantee a euro—and our Ma to Cyphilcno Is tho on'j thing that will euro permanently. P sitlve proof soal sealed, free, COOK Rkmkdt Co.. Chicago, 111. , QfIITRF PII PC II SEND for FREE Circular. WUI I WC UullEli J.N.KlHn.ollevllle,h.J. For ladlgestlsn, Hillousneaa. Headache, Coiiatlpstloil, Had Cosilulu, Offensive Breath, and sol disorders of the Stomach, liver and Bowels, digestion follows their uae. Bold by druggists or sent by mall. Box HIP ANA CHEMICAL CO., New York. "HOTHER'S -. FRIEND".- Is a scientifically prepared Liniment and harmless; every Ingredient is of recognized value and in constant uso by the medical profession. It short ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to life of Mother and Child. Book 'To Mothers" mailed free, con taining valuable information and voluntary test imonials. Bent by express, charges prepaid, on receiot of price, ,1.60 per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Qa. Sold by all druggists. THE FAIR'S "BIG THINGS." EXHIBITS OP ENORMOUS SIZE AT THE EXPOSITION. A Clieese Weighing 22,000 Pounds, i t* Gold Nugget Worth S6OOO, I Three Enormous Hides, Etc. THE love of things enormous with which Americans are credited should find satisfac tion if not surfeit at the Fair. ! Abnormal size seems to be the central idea of the whole conception, and al most every building contains, besides j exhibits collectively great, single ob ' jects eclipsing all others of the kind yet known. In structures themselves, this type is shown by the Manufactures ! and Liberal Arts Building, which pos sesses dimensions hitherto unap j proached in the history of architec ture. It is 1687 feet, or nearly one-third of a mile, in length, by 787 feet in width ; the ground floor has an area of over thirty acres; the central hall is 1280 feet by 380 feet, and this space is covered by one tremendous roof 237 • feet high in the middle and wholly in dependent of central support. The great trusses sustaining it have a span of 382 feet. The building is three times as large as St. Peter's in Rome. The pyramid of Cheops could be piled up inside its walls, and the RomAn Colosseum, which seated 80,000 per sons, would occupy but one-sixth of its space. To look even casually at half the exhibits in such a place is out of the question ; both mind and body are unequal to it. The roof is reached by elevators, naturally of the world's greatest. As one ascends, the throng below is no longer of human beings, but pigmies moving in and out of toy bazaars. Upon the roof is the great promenade, half a mile in length. At the corners are the four largest search lights yet made, one of which has an illuminating power equal to that of 194,000,000 candles. It throws its light upon Milwaukee, ninety miles to the north, and for Lincoln Park, but fifteen miles distant, it is almost a noonday sun. Everything is immense—fearfully and wonderfully immense. Over in the Agricultural Building, across the Grand Basin, one is reduced relatively to about the size of a rat before a monster cheese weighing 22,000 pounds. This was made at one of the Government experimental dairy stations in the Dominion of Canada. It was brought to Chicago on a special train, timed to stop at various places en route, and bear upon its outer case the autographs and affectionate god speed of thousands of farmers who went to see its triumphal progress. From Chicago it goes to the great house of Lipton & Co., and will then travel over the British Isles, the wonder of won ders to the English yokel. It is rather remarkable, considering its size, that its quality should grade up, as it does, with the best fancy cheese. In the Dominion there aro over 1500 success ful co-operative factories. The Gov ernment has five large experimental stations, and does much to advance the industry. Perhaps that accounts for tho fact of Canada's exporting more cheese than tne United States. A little distance on is another enormity. This is a temple, thirty eight feet high, made of 30,000 pounds of chocolate. Under the dome sits a finely executed figure of Germania after the famous bronze statue at the Kie derwald, on the Rhine. Near one entrance in the Transpor tation Building is the mode), to all ap pearance real, of the largest steam ham mer in the world. It represents the one used by the Bethlehem Steel Com pany of Pennsy vania. The fall'ing part of the hammer alon9 weighs 125 tons and has a drop of 16f feet. With this hammer the largest armor plates are made, exceeding in size, probably, any manufactured by rolling. Further on in tho Baldwin Locomo tive Works exhibit is the last and great est of railway engines. This is a kind known as a decapod, and is several Bizes above the big engine*- called mo guls. It has five connecting driving ; wheels on either side and weighs 100 tons. After the Fair it will be used on the Erie Road. In the Mining Building may be seen the largest nugget of gold in existence, the Maitlandßar nugget, which weighs ! 344.78 ounces, contains 313 ounces of fine gold, and has a value of S6OOO. Several larger nuggets have been found and are shown by model, but this is the real metal. In the same building • is the largest piece of coal ever taken out. The block weighs twelve tons and hasl>een shipped here from Wigan, • England, where it was mined. In the Machinery Hall is the enor mous Westinghouse electric lighting plant. This is the largest installation . in the world, and consists of twelve ! dynamos, each supplying electricity ( for 10,000 lights of 16-caudle power, or for 15,000 when forced to the ut- I most capacity. The Westinghouse , Company has also the largest' and most | perfect switch-board ever used. This is made up of 20 dynamo panels and 40 feeder panels, i Near by is a marvel in the way of a belt. It is of three-ply, oak-tanned leather, 8J feet wide by 203 feet long. | One can scarcely imagine what giant machinery such a belt is to turn, yet it has its use, as with few exceptions these great things are made under contract, and not primarily for exhi bition. I They represent the growing needs and powers of the times. I In the Shoe and Leather Building the objects most noticeable for size are three hides. One, that of a bullock, contains 250 square feet of leather. It is split into four layers, bnt left joined it the neck, and while so intact each layer has been beautifully dressed in a different color. The whole may be I [airly considered the highest point yet ittaiaiid in tanning and dressing. I Another is that of a walrus, and weighs, tanned, 300 pounds. On ac count of its great thickness of one and a half inches the tanning required three years. The third and largest hide ever tanned is that of an enor* mous elephant. This weighs 500 pounds, iB 20 feet from trnnk to tail, and 17 feet at its greatest width. These extremely thick hides are used by such companies as the Meriden Britannia in polishing plate. In the same building is the largest piece of bark ever scaled, a piece of hemlock bark 12 feet 5 inches by 6 feet 1 inches. In the Forestry Building is a ma hogony log from Mexico 42 inches square and 41 feet in length, which, considering both length and thickness, is very remarkable. If the wood were figured instead of having a straight grain the one log would have a value of over #30,000. Tho largest plank in existence is that of a finely finished piece of Cali fornia redwood sixteen feet five inches wide, twelve feet nine inches lung, and five inches thick. It is very doubtful if a tree will be found to yield such an other. A cross-section of a California redwoad tree exhibited, fourteen feet in diameter, shows from its rings that it was already six feet six inches in thickness when Columbus discovered America. In the Krupp exhibit, which has s building to itself, is the much-talked of greatest gun of the age, a 120-ton rifled gnn, sixteen-inch calibre and forty-six feet in length. The gnn is for land fortification and is reputed to be destined ultimately for Italy. It is said to be able to throw a projectile weighing one ton a distance of twenty miles. In the castle of Dover is an old gun bearing the legend: "Swab me out and keep me clean, and I'll carry a ball to Calaiß green." Modern war engines are realizing the bravado ol ancient times. At the end of the Flaisanco near the Fifty-ninth street exit is the Ferris wheel, the gigantio iron circle which supplies the place of the Eiffel Tower. Here the wheel of the country fair hat developed into a vast metal structure 250 feet in diameter. To its rim great cars are attached, and in them one seems to sweep through the heavens. Lea-ving the wheel one goes home op pressed and exhausted by the great things he has seen, the leagues he has wearily wandered, and dreams perhaps that he is chained nnder the mighty hammer, or hides trembling from hideous Cyclops, whose one terrible eye is the colossal search light.—Key York Post. SELEL'T SIFTINGS. Vandyke brought portraiture to the highest degreq of perfection. The wealth of the Russian State Church is almost incalculable. James Frost and Annie "Winter were married in North Missouri recently. The best specimens of alabaster carvings have been exhumed at Nine veb. The bones or tombs of over 200 giants have been found in various part? of Europe. The rate of pulsation is 120 per min ute in infancy, eighty in manhocd and sixty in old age. The very first pages of human his tory, the annal of the Egyptians, re cord that the progenitors of our race were worshipers of the dog. The first savings bank was instituted at Berne, in Switzerland, in 1787. It was intended for servants ouly. In 1792 another was opened at Basel for persons of any class. A railroad built to run from Hot Springs, Tenn., to Laurel, S. C., a distance of twenty-four miles, has a gauge of only twenty inches, making it the narrowest gauged road in the world. In the reign of Queen Elizabeth, if bad fish was sold to the poor, the knav ish fishmonger was decorated with a necklace of his unsavory commodity, and was then perched on a stand in the market. From the Amphictyonio league, 1498 B. C , to tho treaty of Zurich, in 1859, no fewer than 8697 treaties have been concluded, out of which only one has been respected- the Methuen, be tween England and Portugal. Australia has sent to the World's Fair a gold nugget weighing 3010 ounces, and an astronomical clock forty-five feet high which shows the movements of tho sun, Mercury, Venus, the earth and the moon. In India a huge funnel of wicker work is planted in a stream below a waterfall, and every finny creature coming down drops into it, the water straining out and leaving the flappy prey in the receptacle, all ready to be gathered in. Wedgewood's investigations of the action of light on chloride of silver were begun in 1802. Daguerre's ex periments began in 1821; his inven tion of daguerreotype plates was made public in 1839, when a pension wan granted him by the French chamber of deputies. The town in England best provided with places of worship is the ancient one of Rochester, where there are 143 churches and chapels. Fifty belong to the Church of. England and ninety five to the Nonconformists. The Church of England accommodates 24, 449, and the Nonconformist's 61,850 persons in sittings. An Oregon Girl's Good Deed, An unknown girl saved a train with 259 passengers from destruction in Oregon. She was on her way home from a party when she discovered that * rail had been removed on a high trestle, and then she procured a lan torn and sigraledan approaching train. She then went modestiy on her way and never waited for thanks.—Detroit Frae Press. New York and Buffalo havo each three women architects. Fifty-two flounces from skirt hem to bodice line by actual count are on a recent Paris gown seen in New York. A novel insurance company has been started in France, with the object of supplying girls with dowries when they marry. Miss Kate Smitn, a pretty and highly educated young lady of Lousville, Kv., has received a diploma as a professional embalmer. A fashion in stationery for out-of town use is a rustic paper with the name of your house printed in rustic letters at the top. Lady Burdett-Coutts is editing a volume dealing with the philanthropic work of English women. There is no one who knows the subject better. Bombay has a sorosis and a cooking class. Kecently at a competitive ex amination over 100 Parsee girls cooked A long list of Indian delicacies to show their proficiency. The three essentials for a pleasant room, says Alice Donlevy, are space, the opposite of crowd and clutter; form, the opposite of chaos and con fusion ; and color, the opposite of black. The late female candidate for Mayor of Topeks, Kan., Mrs. Anna Potter, is alleged to wear a calico dresß and brogan shoes, while her fingers and hei ears glisten with SIO,OOO worth of dia monds. Mme. Ida Lane Ney, of Vienna, has discovered a new use for cigar ribbons. She made a gown of 3000 narrow ones, with strips of plain black dress goods. This gorgeous robe was greatly ad mired at a soiree in Vienna. The daughters of Mrs. Jefferson Davis have decided to settle in Rich mond, Va. Winnie will write for the papers and magazines, and the othei daughter, who is married, will have her household to fill up her time. Mrs. Davis also will pass her old age there with her daughters. Miss Elizabeth Green, of Detroit, seems to be the representative of Ameri can beauty in Europe just now; she if turning Parisian heads at present, while at the silver wedding festivitiei the Queen of Italy had her nephew sent away on military service to keep him safe from the pretty American. Dainty girls not only line their bureau drawers with silk delicately scented, but they also keep a large sachet to cover over the entire drawer after it is filled with its miscellaneous contents. A pretty one is of pale lav ender embroidered with violets, and another of white brocade and rose buds. Euphra Dunn, of West Point, Ga., five years old, is the youngest tele graph operator in America. Sho has been about the railroad station, where her lather is agent, a great deal and quickly picked up the Morse alphabet. She can call up operators along thf line and talk with them in childist fashion. Mrs. Tyack is an English lady who has explored what were hitherto deemed inaccessible parts of the Him alayas. She is an ardent sports woman and has accumulated a great number of bear, leopard and tiger skins as trophies of her skill. She is about to publish a record of her ad ventures. The ex-Empress Eugenie of France is the godmother of 3834 French chil dren who were born on March 16, 1856, the day of the birth of her son, the Prince Imperial, who was killed by the Zulus. The ex-Empress had prom ised to stand in that relation to the children born on the same day as the Prince Imperial. Mme. Madeleine Lemaire, who is perhaps the best known water colorist in Europe,, is said to make a larger in come than %ny other female artist io the world. She was commissioned to illustrate Halevy's '"L'Abbe Con stAntin," for whiohshe received $8093, tho largest sum ever received by a woman illustrator. Mrs. Curry, who was envied by all the women in Washington because the Infanta Eulalia kissed her when she arrived at the capital, is the wife of the ex-Minister to Spain and the daughter of the late James Thomas, of Virginia, formerly a wealthy citizen of Richmond. She met the Infanta in Spain and they are excellent friends. The Queen of the Belgians is said to be one of the finest harpists now liv ing. A few days ago, on the occasion of her lady in waiting, the Countess Marie de Limburg Stirum, becoming a nun, she acted as sponsor, and after presenting the postulant at the altar, played a solo on the harp, to the great delight of the Sisters who thronged the convent chapel. The newest hats are extremely sim ple, of coarse straw and a trimming of flowers and velvet, while the latest re ceipts for a stylish bonne is "a little lace, a few jewels and much taste." A small square of guipure fitted to the head and trimmed with a panache of feathers is a new idea; and for dres9 toilettes a simple wreath of flowers with a velvet bow in front is bonnet enough for a married womau. The girl whose proud title is the lady champion of England at tennis is Miss Dod. Sho won the position in 1887, when she was sixteen years old, nd again in 1888. Then she retired from active work for a yeor or two, but when she resumed in 1891 there iras no lack of skill in her playing, and ihe won her position of champion tgain. Sho is also an enthusiastic cyclist and a aolf nlaver of note. [Shortening untBOM Eait and West. The on'y surprising thing about /eduction of the time between New , York and Chicago is that it has come I to late. Twenty hours are ample for 1 s little less than a thousand miles. I The waste of time that has deferred until so late a day the arrangement of this new table between the lakes ' and the seaboard has been at sta tions wh-re the switching of rolling itork, the transfer of baggage and ' malls and the appointing of coachei have been done without that dis patch that has characterized the run ning of the fast expresses. An aver, i sgc of fifty miles an hour is fairly I good, but It is not phenomenal. ID fact, the American railway system , has BC .rcely kept paca with the do- I rclopment of tha ocean steamshi[ '■ torv.ee. Passengers arrived In Chi | I eago Saturday who took ship at Queenstown the previous Sunday. All the difficulties of ocoan travel I taken Into account, this Is more Ira presslve than making 1,000 miles lo twenty bout without a mountain range to cross and with no engineer | Ing problems of any perplexing nature. I The railroads throughout the conn try are likely to be stimulated to Im provement of their schedules by tin oew express trains between the lake! j ind the Atlantic. The Southern see I vice, so far as it is controlled ii Southern centers, is in urgent need 'of speeding. The Southern planteri ought to insist on better time for th valuable bui perishable freights they send to Northern markets. Southert bu Iness men have everything to gals by bringing South and North mors closely together. There has been Considerable Improvement during tht past year in means of communicatloi between Chicago and the Gulf; bui the manipulation of neither passengci nor fast freight trains Is yet what intelligence, energy and a little mors outlay of money would easily make It The next stup for No thern and Eastern, as well as Western and Southern iailway management, ought to te popularize the improved servlct by lowering the rates. Travel is liks postal servlee—the cheaper the stam| the greater the number of letters The lower the railroad ticket thi more the thousands that will use It -Ohipacrn Herald Woman's Influence In China. The laws and social customs of China make a woman's life a most restricted one in every way; and yet, in spite of | all disadvantages, in no country is fe male influence more powerful. The women of China are the very backbone of the Nation, seeming to be born with a natural sense of honesty which is conspicuously absent among the men. While the mendacity of Chinamen is proverbial, the women are, as a rule, truthful, and have great strength of | character. They make good wives, struggling bravely to restrain their husbands from ramshu drinking, opium smoking and immoderate gambling, vices for some of which most of them have a propensity. They are dutiful daughters and devoted mothers. It is only surprising that there are nol more good men to be found among their sons. A Chinaman's most re deeming quality, however, is the warm affection and respect he generally feels for his mother. Their filial obedience is indeed remarkable. A mandarin some forty years of age will calmly re mark that he must go here, or that hs cannot go there, because his mother has bidden or forbidden him to do so I And woman's influence is not alone confined to the domestic circle. It is well known that Li-Hung-Chang, the great man of China, consults "Lady Li" on matters of importance, and to her credit let it be said that he is al ways foremost in favor of progress and a more enlightened way of governing the country. The Empress Dowager is also a woman of great intelligence; indeed, when the disadvantages of her education and mode of life are taken into consideration, it must be admitted that she is one of the most remarkable women of the age. That she iB not, however, quite exempt from ferainino vanity is shown by the fact that sho was not long since admonished by the Board of Censors for dressing too vouthfnlly.—New York Post. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy l ife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's Ijest products to the needs of physical being, will attest the valuo to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a |>crfect lax ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it i 3 perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Svrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every pact ige, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well Informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. Tho Vegetarian Tlieorj. Vemetarians say it is ft popular fal lacy that meat is needed for strength. One prominent exponent of the faith eays it is a fact that tho strongest ani mals in the world are vegetarian and not carnivorous. It is the ferocity oi the lion rather than his strength that makes him formidable. An elephant is a match for several lions, and is a vegetarian. The animals with most speed and endurance—the horse, the reindeer, the antelope and others—are also vegetarians. I)og trainers, says the authority, always feed their trick animals on a strict vegetarian diet, and many hunters do the came thing.— Chic&co Herald. .During a cyclone in Oxfcrd. N. C., a two-room dwelling was carried off 200 yards without injuring the occu pants. i None but Royal j Baking Powder is absolutely pure. No other fc equals it, or approaches it in leavening 4 strength, purity, or wholesomcness. (See Y U. S. Gov't Reports.) No other is made 4 from cream of tartar specially refined for it and chemically pure No other makes such * light, sweet, finely-flavored, and wholesome food. No other will maintain its strength * without loss until used, or will make bread r or cake that will keep fresh so long, or that v can be eaten hot with impunity, even by T dyspeptics. No other is so economical. ri If you want the Best Food, \ * Royal Baking* Powder j? i is indispensable. A Ik |k lb |b Ik |b Ik Ik lb lb | " The best is, Aye, fin Cheapest." Avoid Imitations of and Substitutes for SAPOLIO with Pastes, Enamel* hands. Injure the Iron ami hum red. I legs. Durable, and the consumer pay"'f"r noVln I or Rlasa package with every purchase. ! "August Flower" "lam Post Master here and keep a Store. I have kept August Flower for sale for some time. I think it is a splendid medicine." E. A. Bond, P. M., Pavilion Centre, N. Y. The stomach is the reservoir. It it fails, everything fails. The liver, the kidneys, the lungs, the' heart, the head, the blood, the nerves all go wrong. If you feel wrong, look to the stomach first. Put that right at once by using August Flower. It assures a good appetite and a good digestion. tt DRINK > EASIER MADE (JgY tpoonfiil aiigsr, mixed with WCOOIS til* Blood. I either cold or hot water. Ak BQttenc hes Thlist-I IHIU!'"* xw? n ::,W7c. fUmpi foraemple,by n.all. or 11.CO lor two Ma. bottlee, lw expres*. prepaid,—enough to make aeverai gallon*. (Agent* make big pay with u.) FRANK E. HOUSHTCOT23S Wash'n si, Boston, Mitt MFMeiOM JOIINW - lno, ißiv, |IBLLLDL\/RI WHHIIIIISICII, D.C. ■ 3yrsiulast war, 15 udjudkuting claims, atty suite. SOUTHERNIARMSSB Interest; write for descriptive price list. CAI.DWEI.I. A JUDAH, MEMPHIS, TF.N.V. P A TVTM'I C TRADE marks. ExAmlnation I A 1 Piii I O. and advice us to patentahll ty of Invention. Send for Inventors Guide,or how to (ret a patent. PATRICK O'FARRELL. WASHINGTON. D.C. nOl I.TII V I KKII IK Vol* ARK IIAISIM; X chicken*, mv MEAT AND BOXE MEAI. will help you very much. Catalogue tells all alwnit It. Send for It. C. A RARTLKTI', Wow KBTKR. MASS BICYCIiKH Ord norles flO, Safeties a in s|(i US Inch s'2\ Cushions A4. I'i eiiinatlc grin. List and Catl. free. KNIGHT CYCLE CO.. St. Louis, Mo. HEAYF.It COI.I.KOi: AND MI'SKAI. INSTITt'TK for young girls a d young ladles S nd for Illus trated catalogue to REV. R. T. TAYLOR, Reaver, Pa. ■ Plso's Remedy fbr Catarrh Is the B| Rest. Easiest to t'*e. and Cheapest. ■ Sold by druggists or sent by loailTl MAC. & T Uazcltlne. Warren. Pa. H We Cure Rupture. No matter of liow long standing. Writ* ■ for free treatise, testimonials, etc., to 8. J. ' Hoi lens worth & Co., Owego, Tioga Co., N. Y. , Price SI; by aiall. |l.\s. A lute made in Paris 113 years ago can bo I seen in a New York store. Conductor E. D. Loorais, Detroit, -Mich., says: "The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is wonderful." Write him about it. Bold by Druggists, 76c. The surface of Lake Superior is 001 feet above the ocean's level. 1 I The first plaster cast was made by Terro i cliio in 147(1 ■ ! Cough nights? On going to bed take a dose [ of Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup. Advertisements first appeared in news -1 papers in 1052. Beecham's Pills instead of sloshy mineral , waters. Beecham's—no others. 25 eta a box. The growth of the average finger nail is J an inch and a half per year. You Sleep Peucefo'ly 1 J I \ •• Tired Nnlire'i incrl rr.t.r.r, balm, { a sleep! A I 5 •• He, like the wor d, liie ready vlalt > { pay* J J " Where fortune smiles " J £ Upon him that owns that best of beds, the i iF*ilgrim I {Spring | \ Bed j J Whloh is made of highly tempered atecl > 5 w.re, is tin* PERFECTION of EASE, a*d will \ > last a LIFETIME. Avoid all common wire lm > £ Rations, for they are tike unto J A villi in with n smiling cheek i A A " A goodly apple rotten at the hear i > * "O, what n goodly outside falsehood A * It (b * J " A quicksand of deceit#'* | {THE PILCRIM j CHARMS ft ACEFUL SLEEP. { {A CHILD CAN LIFT IT AND { TURN IT OVER. ; ' Exhibited at No. 31 Warren Street, New York; { J No. 2 Hamilton Plaoe, Boston. ' J For sale by all reliable Dealers. \ t bee Brass Tag Registered Trademark on all A * Genuine Pilgrims. # J tend for Money Saving Primer, Free. j * Allits Tnck Corporation, Boeton. \ I WARgnovsas—Boston, New York, Philadelphia, 5 4 Chicago, Raltlmore, San Francisco, Lynn. S D FACTORIES— Taunton, Mass.; Falrhaven, Mass.; \ * Whltmau, Maas.; Duxbury, Mass.; Plymouth, € J MUSA. { Kvwwvvwvwwx.vwvv-vvwww V W WW pn t' 'if# 'i#J Is- Send 6c. in stamps tor I I illustrated catalogue of bicycles, gun a, I I and sporting goods of every description. I | John P. Lovofl Arms Co. Eootem. MSMJ s Wonderful Patch Plate A new nnd scientific pi Inclple lor mending Tin. ItrusH, Copper, 1i nn nnd Lead, wI. liout fnc unc ot nctd or an do ing Iron. One pla costing 15 con la will mend 100 ordinary leaks, which would cost to repair MI nuy tinsmith's Irom fi to 10 cents each. Price 1.1 cents, 'A for '25 fi ma. Anyone cau use It. Full directions with each puita. Address THE PATCiI PLATE CO., 1614Wuaiiuehnnnn Ave., i hll.idclphla. I'a. MARRIAGE PAPER GUNNELS' MONTHLY, TOLEDO. OHIO. WORLD'S FAIR & RETURN £sl.m The Traveler-' Mar. Game will explain how todo It. SamuUconv 50c. O.Win. Balat.W
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers