The first manufacturing enterprise in America wua a glass factory at Jamestown. Va. W. H. Gi iffin, Jackson, Michigan, writes: ** Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen years, Hall's Catarrh Care cure<l me." Sold by Drug. iloO. The owner of a hairless calf at Bradley, Me., refused a showman's offer of foOO for it. Pore throat cured at once by Hatch's Uni rersal Cough Syrup. y> cents at druggists. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. Tho many, who livo bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by moro promptly adapting tho world's best products to the needs of phyuical being, will attest the value to health of the puro liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is duo to its presenting In tho form most acceptable aud pleas ant to tho taste, the refreshing and truly beuetlcial properties of a [lerfect lax ativo ; effectually idealising tho system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of tho medical profession, because it nets on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by ail 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 pnekage, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. PN D 31 'M~ ■THE KIISSD I jj ft MRS. REV. A. J. DAY, S ! " No. KB at on, N. Y I SCROFULOUS ECZEMA | Lj FOR 20 YEARS I ■ DANA BABBAPAII.I.A CO., ■ MM9BB:—My wifo van born of parents predlr ■posed to €!ONTAI' M I'TPO.Y. Six of IMR ■ brothers and si.hr died of M'XO SU S-=J ■ KASIIH, My wife's health wua unusually pnlg Hup to the nee of about 40 yrrrs; at that timcM g= Si ' HO Fl' I.OIS taint manifested itself in t.'icll ■ formal KCZKM A on marly all parts of thejß Kjbody; after a time it yielded to the remedies used,Hi HE except on front of right shoulder where it haifUs ■ remained for VtO years with almost S'on-M gyatiiut Irritation mid Ilehlng. Since u'-/=? w DANA'S ■ ■ SARSAPARILL.A g ■a WEST on her head has brokri^and^li.-'iar;:. -1 jjgj Balo greatly relieved* * ■wlth*buV Hule'resuir, but DANA? KARSAPA-H BBltll.LA has proved o effectual in relieving my S3 ■ wife of liC/KHA and M ItOFI I. t H in the hlooiUhut I must njdt U a grand comblno-^8 fj? I have taken ono bottle myself and find It aS| ■Splendid Alterative. ■ ■ Respectfully, REV. A. J. DAY, =3 [j Pa A-it M. £. Church, No. Boston, N. Y.B ■j Only one Sarsaparllla sold on the " Noll PAY " plan. Only one could Jj jp: stand the tea*. end that one Is DANA'S. jj| ■ RZIME2&BZiA THIS. Hi Dana Sarsaparllla Co., Belfast, Malno. ■ teOTop Bufgy..|37i. W Cut the -BT. p)5 Pbkoton .. .|(M I KICKS and Vf®)Q Wxf 816 Road Car?. .|BUO| Roy *7O jid f/d "em an' ■ X+MML twy *°r' e VßaddleSl'oolfi Pa ? t * .JEjl. U.T BUGGY & CART CO?*" 01 8. Lawrence Bt., Cincinnati, 0. QaJJ'Hjj) pui Trwwtmeut of lluptur* and Price List." Arid rem L B.SIiELKY A CO., 26 8.11 Lh St., I*iuicilclpjii*,P A. with Paste*, Enamel* lesa. Durable, and the consumer pays for'DO tin I or glass package with every purcU::q. I CURES" R KSgNG .. BREAST .. "MOTHER'S FRIEND" offered child-bearing woman. I liavo been a mid-wife for many year*, anil in each ease where "Mother's Friend" had been need ifchns accomplished woptlers and relieved much suffering. It is tho best remedy for rising of the breast known, ami worth the price for that alone. MRS. M. M. BRUSTEB, Montgomery, Ala Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, f 1.50 per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Bold by all druggists. ATLANTA, GA. THE TIME TO CUT BUSHES. Any time is a good one to cnt bushes to destroy the growth. If the leaves can "be prevented from growing one season, the bushes will die, but other wise they may be cut down to l"ie roots every year for a lifetime and every spring they will sprout again. The cutting should begin at once, and as fast as the new sprouts appear these should be removed. But the most effective way to rid the land of any kind of brush is to take out the roots by means of a heavy plow aud a mat tock. It is more work at tho begin ning, but a saving in the end. —New York Times. ANAESTHETICS FOR NORSES. A correspondent of tho London Live Stock Journal writes: "In extremely painful operations on the human sub ject amestlietics are almost invariably employed. The patient is rendered insensible. This not only renders the operation painless, but affords the operator every facility for conducting his work, in consequence of the per fect placidity of his subject. "It is a sign of tho times that chloro form is coming into use in operations on the lower animals as well. In the practice of gelding it has been freely adopted, and with great success, by several veterinary practitioners during the last few years. "It is to be hoped tho system will become general. Licensed vivisec tionists are instructed to use annes thetics when conducting their Investi gations. The time iH probably not far off when humanitarians—or rather 'beastarians,' as they have been called —will bo strong enough to pass a law that colts operated upon to destroy their fertility shall be duly chloro formed or rendered insensible by some other efficacious anresthetic. It would therefore be well if those who now op erate in the old fashion would pursue the new and better way so as to be prepared for future regulations. Tho adminibtration of chloroform is a simple matter in skilled hands and in expensive as well." RAISING FARM TEAMS. Farmers too often sell the best horses and content themselves with any sort of a team on the farm as being of little consequence, and too often even sell good grade mares that would raise a fine colt and do better work than any other horse on the farm, but the buyer offers a good prico and the best producer on the farm is sold. English and French farmers have pure bred draught mares to profitably do tho farm work and raise a colt every year that pays the rent. Mr. MoLain, at a Kaunas Farmers' Insti tute, advocated breeding high class horses and having good teams on the farm. Ho said : it is impossible to estimate the difference between a good and poor team on a farm. One means success, the other means failure. I am asked to say which breed of horses I con sider the most promising to raise for sale. I suppose, of course, they mean for the farmers in this section, engaged, as they are, in profitable farming. I would say that if one-half of tho farmers here kept an account anil knew just what their horses cost them when grown and ready to work they would find that they have cost j them more than they could be sold for. i I would say, for most farmers, to raise (if for sale) draught horses. My reasons are the following: 1. Early maturity. Draught horses can bo gotten on the market one year younger than a warm blooded horse. 2. They are easily broken. It takes less time to fit them for market. They do not'require such perfect condition as a driving horse. 3. Then, too, if by chance they have a slight blemish they will pass muster where such a blemish would unfit a driver for market. 4. It don't require any more feed to raise a big draught horse than it does a smooth, warm blooded h % He. Now, to sum up, I would say, if you raise horses at all raise good ones of some pure breed. lam anxious that our neighborhood should excel in everything. lam in favor of special farming. I think one-half of us ought to quit raising horses. Let those who do, raise a higher grade of horses and raise them better and worth much more money than those wo are now raising. The mongrel, mixed up breeds we have been raising must go. They ought, ' to liavo gone twenty years ago. The little splinter skinned drivers are of no value—so called warm blood. If you raise drivers raise horses sixteen hands high, weighing eleven to thir teen hundred pounds, that can draw two persons in a buggy six to eight miles per hour without oiipressing them. Life is too short and business too pressing to go plodding along the road after a plug horse.—Western Agriculturist. MODERN HAY-MAKING. On our largo Western farms, where the hay harvest continues for nny con siderable length of time, the four-foot mower lias lit en replaced by one with u six or a seven foot cutter bar. The eight-foot roko has given way to one of twico the width. Other ifaiplementr have been added. Clover grows in nch luxuriance in the fertile lowa soil hat the tedder is indispensable. Tho loader eaves time and bard labor. Stacking in the open air has proved to be a very costly method of preserving b a y and our prairies are becoming thickly dotted with hay barns, into which the hay is placed by horse power. Brain has supplanted brawn in a great measure, and haying may now be justly considered an art. By utilizing the improved machinery, and following improved methods, one man can now do the work that formerly re quired two men. Where the hay is placed on the wagon by a hay loader, and taken off with a fork or sling, a good working crew for a large farm consists of four men, and two boys ton to fourteen years old. With the wide cut-mower, it is not necessary to begin cutting be fore 4 o'clock in the afternoon. This is easier lor the horses, more comfort able to the man who drives them, and much better for the hay if it contains much clover. Enough can be cut be tween 4 and 8 o'clock to keep ahead of the wagons until the next afternoon. One man does the mowing and tedding, and what little raking there is to do, and still has time to help considerably in mowing away the hay in the barn. The boys drive the wagons. Two men stay in the field and do the loading, and one 6tays at the barn to manage the horse fork and keep the hay mowed back. Three teams and one good horse are necessary, the latter being used at the barrffor unloading. When the boy comes in with a load, he leads the horse, which is attached to the fork, taking the load off his wagon while the other one is being loaded in the fields. The time consumed in loading is a little more than that for unloading, and this allows the man at the barn to scatter the hay in the mow. Whether ho can keep up this end of the work depends on the distance to haul and the amount of hay in the barn. Hay is made very rapidly and cheap ly in this way. With the force men tioned there is very littlo time lost. Everything runs smoothly, and little energy is wasted. The hay is put in the barn at the rate of fifteen to twenty tons per day, and at a cost of forty-five to sixty cents per ton, varying, of course, with the weather. On the farms of the Atlantic aud Central States this tedder, loader and horse fork are com ing into increasing favor, but the av erage farmers of those regions manage the work with two, or at most three, horses and two men. The tedder and the loader not only save time and inonej', but the hay is secured in much better condition. The tedder shakes the grass, and gives tho air a chance to circulate through it, and dry it evenly and quickly, without burning. Tho loader follows, and takes the hay out of the swath, hence the leaves arc not shaken off, as when it is raked. Hay barns are Incoming deservedly popular. No buildings on the farm so quickly repay tho money invested. A good hay barn, holding fifty tons of hay, can be erected for one hundred to one hundred and twenty-five dollars, and not infrequently enough is saved by its use in one year to entirely cover the cost. The saving occurs in three ways. First, the time and labor saved during the harvest season, to say noth ing of the advantage of putting every load under a roof, and having no open stacks to be caught by sudden showers. Second, the elimination of tho largo waste on top and sides that follows I stacking. There is practically no waste ; whatever with the hay barn. Third, ! the saving of labor in feeding tho hay | during the winter. This last is a con siderable item, for it often means the board and wages of one man during the winter months. By putting a plain, strong manger or rack around the barn, one man can do tho work of two work ing in the old way.—American Agri cuiturist. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. The Houghton is a good variety ol gooseberry. For currant worms spray with white hellebore and water. Sugar beets are better than mangel wurzels for feeding stock. The hog is a good animal to keep io connection with tho dairy. The clover crop is very valuable both as a feed and as a soil renovator. To avoid thumps diminish the amount of food and give regular exeroiso. The Kiefer pear is commended foi its keeping and canning qualities. Sheep would pay better if a superioi grade were kept. Tho trouble has been the inferior quality of the stock. Pinching back the new growth on the berry vines increases the hearing surface and keeps the bushes low. The bees get a great deal of honey from the locust blossoms. Tho honey is of a pale red gold color, and keeps well. Many a low, marshy piece of ground can be made into a harvest field for i the bees by plunting willows, asters, 1 or mint. Ewes that have proved themselves good mothers, and especially if they I produce twins, should be kept in tho llock until they are at least five ycurs old. It if? much easier to keep a sheep in good, thrifty order than to get it up .11 flesh again after it has grown poor, iemember, "a sheep well summered s half wintered," and tho reverse of this, a sheep welllwintercd is half sum mered, is equally true. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS, SWEET-PICKLED WATERMELON RINLDT Peel the rinds with a sharp knifo that will take off the green skin evenly. Trim off also every trace of tho pink flesh of the fruit, because it is too juicy to make a firm, crisp pickle. Then cut I the strips of rind into small pieces two j to three inches long, and placing them in a large earthen dish, sprinkle them lightly and evenly with salt. Cover the dish, and let it stand overnight. In the morning drain off the water that will have formed, rinse the rinds in cold water, anil cook them in a steamer until a broom splint will readily pierce them. Cooking the rinds by steam is an easy method, as they are less liable to burn than when cooked in the spiced vinegar. When the rinds are tender, take them ont carefully with a skim mer, and put them into a stono jar. Take good cider vinegar for the basis of the pickle. Allow a pound of sugar to a pint of vinegar, and add also half an ounce of stick cinnamon broken into inch pieces, and it half-teaspoonful each of whole cloves and blades of 'maeo. The whole amount of vinegar, sugar and Bpiccs used must of course depend on tho quantity of rinds to bo pickled, but a quart of vinegar is usu ally sufficient for tho rinds of a medium sized melon. Boil the vinegar, sugar aud spices together vigiqpausly half an hour, skimming off the froth, anil pour the pickle boiling hot over the rinds. Press the rinds down under the piekle by means of an earthen plate or saucer, fasten the cover on, and tie a cloth over the wholo. These pickles will be ready for use m two weeks.—Harper's Tazar. TOMATOES RIFE AND RED. It is not so very many years since tomatoes, or "love apples," as they were then called, might be seen ranged along the country mantelpiece, divid ing the honors with shell flowers and wax wreaths. They woro considered then as rank poison, unfit for the proud position they now occupy on the table. Even after that belief was disproved, they were widely suspected of being the subtle cause of cancer, and their pop ularity suffered not a little thereby. But now they are recognized as one of the chief of vegetables, and new ways of preparing them nro being constant ly devised by knowing cooks. To make "tomato eggs" cut three or four good sized aud not too ripe to matoes into halves. Take out a little of the inside, lay them in a pan con taining two ounces of heated buttor, and fry them lightly; when nearly, done carefully drop a raw egg from the shell into each tomato; watch till it has set perfectly, then take each one separately from tho pan and lay it on a slice of buttered toast cut to the side of tho fruit. Bust over them a littio corallino pepper, and sprinkle a little finely grated ham on the white of each egg. Servo on a hot dish, and garnish with the loaves of the tomato. 1 Here is another way of making a dish that will he a feast to the eye as well as to tho palate. At the blossom end of six ripe tomatoes make a stoall hole of sufficient size to hold a diae shapeil piece of butter that lias been dipped in pepper, salt, and grated nut meg (mixed). Placo them in a cup shaped mushroom, previously soused in heated butter and slightly dusted with pepper. Arrange them on a well oiled dish and sot them in a hot oven to eook. Take the soft roes from six bloaters, season them with oil and pepper, curl them round, and grill quickly on buttered paper over a clonr fire. AVhcn tho tomatoes and mush rooms are cooked remove them from tho oven and place a roe on each one. Bound the whole pour a gill of ham colli is. To make tomato fritters, boil, peel and pound to a pulp four tomatoes. Beat this pulp up with tho yolks of four and tho whites of two eggs, four tahlespoonfuls of cream ; season with a little grated nutmeg and a dash of {cinnamon. Beat tho whole till tho bat tel' is very light, then divide it into small fritters, and fry quickly in a pan of heated butter. Brain on kitchen paper and send to table with tho fol lowing sauce : Melt nn ounce of butter in a clean saucepan, skim it well, add the juice from two lemons aud a lable- Bpoonful of caster sugar. When all is thoroughly heated send the sauce to table in a turoon. —New York bun. COOLINO SUMMER DRINKS. Bottled Coffee Syrup—Simmer to gether three cups of sugar and one o! water for five minutes; add this to a cup and a half of strong coffee; strain und bottle. Mix with soda water and cream, or with plain cold water and cream. Hot Milk—This can scarcely ho called a cooling drink, aud yet its im mediate effect is to iniltioe perspiration which tends to reduce the temper ature. Patients who are troubled with sleeplessness can often be put to sleep by a glass of sterilized milk served I hot. Barley Water—A very safe and I nutritious drink in summer, and one that is pleasant as well, is made by boiling a tablespoonful of barley or rice iiour for fifteen minutes with a quart of water; then let it get ice cold and add lemon juice and sugar to taste. Pearl liarley or rice may bo used in stead of the Hour, but it requires to be cooked in u double boiler, and for at least an hour, and then strained. Boiled Lemonade—The juice of three lemons, five tablespoonsful of sugar and ono cup of water. Add the water boiling hot to tho lemon and sngar. When ice cold dilute to taste with cold water, aud serve with hulf a dozen strawberries or raspberries floating 011 it. Lemonade made with boiling water has a better flavor than if made with cold water.—American Agricul turist. | A Poet's Torn of Luclr. J When eix jean ajjo Joaquin Millef | went to California and bought a tract of land a milo east of Oakland people laughed, writes E. W. Bok. And for a number of years tho poet himself al most believed that the people were right. Miller bought at that time what was probably one of the most unpromising pieces of property in California. The tract consisted of 100 acres, and nearly all of it lay on a steep and stony mouu , tain side. The eccenlric poet went at the cultivation of his new possession with a will. And he did mostly all of bis work alone. Boon the property began ! to show the hand of progress. But it I required work of the hardest kind. And i during all this time the land was fast ; proving, even the poet almost believed, j the worst type of on "elephant." Now, however, the land is almost a park of the I most picturesque order. On it the poet ' has planted 23,000 fruit trees, hundreds , of olive trees, and miles of rare roses. Springs were introduced; trout brooks were stocked; walks aad drives were | made. Water is plentiful on the place, ' and that counts for everything on a Cali | fornian place. The poet is now, I am ! told, beginning to see the rewards for i his labors. He ships his roses to Den- I ver in tho winter, and four weeks ago | one of his first shipments came to the i New York market. The roses are of tho ' finest specimens, command good prices, and from this branch of his possessions j alono it is not unlikely that Joaquin ! Miller may soon acquire a neat little in i come. Ilis p'ace is in the direct grow ing fine of Oakland, and the city is ; gradually approaching the poet's habita , tion. He docs lut littio work with the pen, but devotes nearly all his time to the further cultivation of his place and the development of the industries possi ble from its products.—-New York lie eorder. Tho Yolo. A. H. McPherson, in the Zoologi , quotes an interesting passage from Aristotle to show that the great phi losopher was as well acquainted as we are with the peculiarities and habits of the field vole, whoso destructiveness is a cause of much tribulation to farmers in Scotland as well as in the Pelopon neso. He speaks of their depredations as "so scrioup that some small farmers Laving on one day observed that tlieir corn was ready for harvest, when they went tho following day to cut tlieir corn, found it all eaten. The manner of their disappearance, also," he con tinues, "is unaccountable, for in a few days they all vanish, although before hand they could not bo exterminated by smoking and digging them out, nor by hunting them and turning swine among tliem to root up their runs. Foxes also hunt them out, and wild weasels are very ready to destroy them ; but they cannot prevail over their numbers and tho rapidity of their in crease, nor, indeed, can anything pre vail over them but rain, and when this oomes they disatmpar verv poon." susrl' from cotton seed* The cotton plant, which has for so mauy centuries furnished a large part of the population of the globe with cloth ing, seems to be almost without limit in its usefulness, remarks u tcloutific au thority. From the seed a valuable oil is ex pressed, whilo the husks form an article of food for cattle in the shape of cakes. From the lint which clings to the seed aftor it has passed through tho "giu" felt is made, wbilo the oil cxlracled from tho seed is applied to quite a largo num. ber of purposes. But, according to tho British Consul, Mr. Porta!, of Zanzibar, Africa, cotton seed is also capable of yielding sugar, A process Ims been dis covered for extracting sugar from cotton : seed meal, aud, though tho details of | this process have not been disclosed, it ; Is said that tho product obtained is of j very superior grade, being fi teen times j sweeter than cane sugar and twenty times I more so than sugar made from beot. | 1 bis indicates that sweetness is not due j to cane sugar, but to some other chemi cal.—Scientific American. ih>lil v.g Mater JU an Litroltpe. "My wife •'•and I," gays a traveling man, "wera ouco in a hotel where we i couldn't get auy boiling water. After we had discussed the situation my wife asked me if I had an envelope in my •atchel. I got one out, when she told me to fill it with water and hold it over ths gns jot. I hesitated, but finally did it, and expected to sco the onvelono bhize up every moment, But it didn't blase. The envelop© took on a little soot but that was all. Tho water boiled iu time, and tho envelope wus us good as ever when tho experiment was at an end. I don't know the chemistry of tho pro ces?, but try it yourself and see if it will not work."—Chicago Herald. Jnst fioj Jt"t 80. Tho subtlo lino dividing genius nn 1 Insanity is so dolloa'e that In ninny In stances it ounnotbe defined, It enn only be felt. Lven the deep researches of physiological-psychology nro unable to uostgnato principles on which the judg nn nt oan depend for logical ilcduoiions on the subject, and tho scan hlng analy ses and arguments of many erudtle students und philosophers are na Incom prehensible and meaningless to the or dinary mind as the vain vaporings of a mind unhiugod,—New Yirk iluil and Ex press. IT is one tiling to ten a roan no can't sing, and another to maUe hint believe it. RICH RED GL.OOD " For feeling of ilSHit ffijttjji 'aWf* l. lUtis Hood's Sarsapar- Ma 1 have iiood.r oil, red y-i'/'r, iluod.nnd do not bloat as .<T, „ si .d . Hood's Sarsa- MrsMirYFToms\ nr j|i„ has proved its merit to me as it wl 1 to all who take .t fair ly." MKS. M. F. TOMS, Niantic, C!t. HOOP'SSASSAP&aiLLA CURE 0 , j llovd'a Fills Otjre Spit Uoa.la.-ue. giecuu. D; iprpila I'revenfativ©. An experienced physician U credited by the Western Rural with the following gratuitous prescription, faithful use of which, he avers, would do away with dyspepsia eleven times out of twelve: "People not habitually great eaten ■re guilty of seiious indiscretion in the time and maimer of taking food. Half the people I know haro violent attacks of indigestion because they persist in eating hearty meals when In an exhausted condition. They seem never able or Willing to realize that tbors aro times when the system is in no fit state to grapple with a full meal. They coma in tired and hungry, almost ravenous, not thinking that maybe a good deal of what they consider hunger is gastric irritation, then sit down to a table and overtax the already strained vital powers. As a rule no person should eat when very hungry. The wise thing to do is to drink a cup of water with three or J four tablespoonfuls of milk in, sit down five minutes and then begin slowly to eat j and eat very sparintdv." I 1 " | At Chicago | 1 Royal Leads All. | i l' J As the result of my tests, I find the A ROYAL BAKING POWDER superior to all jt, A the others in every respect. It is entirely j| free from all adulteration and unwhole- |j '|f some impurity, and in baking it gives off a greater volume of leavening gas than A any other powder. It is therefore not only m A the purest, but also the strongest powder £, % with which lam acquainted. K 1 I 1 M - WALTER S. HAINES, M. D., I, £ Prof, of Chemistry, Rush Medical College, t© Consulting Chemist, Chicago Board of Health. ST t| I, A All other baking powders are shown t] by analysis to contain alum, § £ lime or ammonia. $ w. s>' Q ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. I ' " ' V/hen Yea Want to Look on the Bright Side of Things, Uso SA PO LIO "August I used August Flower for Loss of vitality and general debility. After taking two bottles I gained 69 lbs. I have sold more of your August Flower since I have been iu business than any other medicine I ever kept. Mr. Peter Zinville says he was made a new man by the use of August Flower, recommended by me. I have hundreds tell me that August Flower has done them more good than any other medicine they ever took. Gborgb W. Dye, Sardis, Mason Co., Ky. c _ AN Bold byjprosftfata or tscnt bv ttia'l. Soc.oQo. and SI.OO per pai'kairo. P;:m*plc3 l'ree. The rnvorite TOCTB ?07?VZJ1 '" ■ > P< " £ for t.h Teeth and UICHTIX, e Wonderful Patch Piute A nrw nml "eirmlfle pi Inrlplr LOR mendf ng Tin. ItriiM.OpiK'r, Iron it ml Leu tl. vv li hum ffan lino til nrlif or no do lug iron. One plate routing 1." cents will tin ml i( > <U(l!i fry li nks, which cents rtioh. Poire 1•> conin, *S lor 23 cents. An.Minr con use It. Full directions with each pi.ito. Ad.lr. ssTil K PATUiI I'I.ATKCO.. ltf l-l Hiisqiipliniinn Ave., I liilti dolphin. Pa. MARIETTA COLLEGE. Academy of Marictt a College Marietta Co'lege for Women. Full term In all departments begins Sept. 12th. For cut .logucK and Information, uddrrss Pres. JOHN \V SIMPSON. Mitrictin, O. M WONKY IN OlftOKKNf* %f %ONZ'JI.'Z:'ZISI jpssfa 1,1 , |, IT .forii.it. nn : whirl, fowls to saTe for n \o . A Mpia HOOK fi B. lint •.. I.'i hMasrd at.. X T. City. "Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lato Principal Fuuinlnorl' S. Pension Bureau. 3yraiuliM-t war. 15udjudii:ntliicla.:u.s, atlj aiuoo. I> a fprVTC! TItADF.MARKS. Examination A I l"a i\ I i* iiihl ml* See u s '< pntuutahll ty MARRIAGE PAPER ™E*.ff,£SsW£ GUNNELS' rfONTULY. TOLEDO, OHIO. r\f\ To S'J.IR can be made monthly C / K fllfl | working for B. K. Johnson A Co., i vw L ' '.suukU Uth^t..Uiaiimoud.Va I Ik now recognized u the btar.dard nxl greaaa of the U. S.; ib old in every Slate and cquuty In tho Union, ar.d is to-day without a rival Im itations have been made, all <-i& ming to b as I good us tlx* Fr. zer, thus virtually admitting itH nuperioritv. Evtry genuine pack ago bears the trado mark. 1 ouler* an i consumers can thus distinguish the genuine from the imita tion, aud protect themaelv-'S against fraud. A veti rin of 92 years at Albany, N, Y., is clearing a farm. \t e Cure Rupture. No mntter of how long standing. Write for free treatise, testimonials, etc., to B. J. Ilollensworth & Co., Owego, Tioga Co., N. Y. Price 91; by mail, $1.15. _ Carp and eel don't move so much as a fin all winter. Students, Teachers (male or female), Clergy men and others in need of change of employ ment, should not fail to write to H. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va. Their gnat success allows that they have got tho true ideas about making money. They can show you how to employ odd hours profitably. A resident of Burton county, Mo., has a beard seven feet long. Beecham's Pills are better than mineral wa ters. Beet ham's—no others. 25 cents a box. The score of a baseball game at Brenham, [ Tex., was 111 to 11, DRINK JL. THAN root 1 ofls. —Teiijtoo n ful . ' 11 J mixed with |l <- f-ir two bottles, by e*prc, prepaid,— enough to make several gallons. (Agent, make big pay with ue.) FRANK E.HQUSHI CO. 235 Wiih'i it Boston, lan. p n u~ai -ST MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS fWITH THOMSON'S^^te SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hammer needed to driv# an . c Inch On in easily and quickly, leaving the eilnoh ahso'utcly eraoi.th. lb-quiring no ho e to be made in ihu leather nor burr tor the 111 ret i. They are atronsr, touch and durable*. Millions now In uso. All leiik'tha. uniform or assorted, puf tip hi boxes. Aak yonr denier hr (liens, or send 40c. in stamps lor a box of ion, assorted sizes. klan'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., IVti.TIIAM, AIASN. F.RHER AXLE Bestinthe World!fsj" s np Get the Genuine .'flvUp jfn\p Sold Everywhere !"■ ILUvt TAN , id"ea"l""Kmi'ly' medTcTn'e ■ For Indigestion, UlUousßese. £ jlendm-ke, t onwtlputlon, Hud Pand nil disorders of the btoiuucilt I For free sampler add reus L.,J! , ££&!IS& 1 £&! DO '?, Nev York - If any one doubts that | BLOOD POISOH | $ .00,000. When meretiry, tolldopotimsium. aaraap.rillaor Hotß.irlngs fall, we K't \ ran tee a cure—and our Ma' lo typhliene t the only thing thnt will euro permanently. P sitlve proof seat waled, froo. ( ook Kbhfdt Co.. Chicago. 111. MITRE CBBlblT^^^ C 9 Ptao'a Remedy for Catarrh Is the UR IH Kl ' Hueelttna, Warren. Ta. fi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers