Purw nml Whnlcnome Qnnllry romtnends to public approval tho California liquid laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs. It is pleasant to the taste and by acting gei tly on the kidney, liver and bowels to cleanse the sys tem effectually, it promotes the hoalth and •omfort of nil who use it, and with millions it hs the best and only remedy. The Chinese livo longer than people of any other nation. We Core Rupture. No matter of how long standing. Write for frco treatise, testimonials, etc., to S. J. Hollensworth Co., Owego, Tioga Co., N. Y. Fnce si; by math Sl.ifi. The Union Pacific Hail road crosses nine mountain ranges. Are your lungs sore ? Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup will euro Hi em. 25c at druggists. The anchors of the Campania weigh 8) tons each. if afflicted with soreeyesuse Dr. TsaaeThomp son's F ye-water. Druggists sell ut2sc per bottle. Rochester, N. Y., has a company of deaf mute soldiers. Bcecliam'fi Pills with a drink of nutur morn ings. Let chain s- no others, lio cunts a box. Distress in the Stomach Heartburn, Sick Hond toms of Dyspepsia J | taking Hood's Sar- I / 0 eaparilla all th s i* < H I changed. Dyspepsia > j me. 1 do not have hear - ( burn and I am free from 1 headache. 1 have va ? ncd In flesh and fe. l better in ' " ,Tim ever way." .Mus.J II. COOK. Martinsville, 11. IIOOII'M Pi II * are purely vegetable. 25 rents. . 1* N I! a 4 *tf3 DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. Doctors Said I Could Not Live. POOR HEALTH FOR YEARS. Mr. Willcox is a practical farmer and Post master iu the village where ho resides, and is well known for miles around. Ho writes:—"l I had boon in poor Dealt li for a long time. | Four years ago the crisis came, and a numlicr | of our best physicians tmld 1 would not 11 vo a year, I began using Dr. Kilmer's Bwainp-ltoot, Kidney, Liver and Madder Cure; then my doctor said it might help me for a time, but I would not bo hero a year hence. My diniculties, aggravated by Kheumatlsm, were so bad I could not get either hand to iny face. I continued the medicine nearly a year, and now I am as well an any man of my age— sixty-eight years. Swamp-Root Saved My Life A fIJ 1% anf * t,lc health I now en fcl lov is due to its use." At Iru*|Mii, oOr. or *I.OO (MM. riOO I Consultation Free. • sunuva*-wcr Dr. Kilmer A Co., Pingbamton, T. Dr. Kilmer's U & 0 Anointment Cures Piles Trial Box Free. At Druggists, BO cents. as ' fc!2Kl® „ An agreeable LllXßtive AND NEHVH TONTCJ, Bold by Druggists or sent bv mail. 25c. % BQo. and SI.OO per package. Samples free. ffik V £&v for tho Teeth and iireath,2so. rtSW WbosT Waterproof iln, 11UAKD watl!r proof, and will keep you dry In tho hardest storm. The new I'OMMKL fiLl' KElt Is u period riding < out, and covers the entire saddle. Uowuroof Imitations. Don't buy a coat if the "Fish brand" Is nut on It. jnii-tra ted Catalogue IW. A. .1. T<>_W Klt. P.ost..n. Mass. WALL PAPER Ound I'upern .Tc. and sc. Hold Paper* 5c., He. and llic. HeUD . MIIHII>H Cr *nmple*. 541 Wood Street. PittHburgli, lit. nn®<l°y undo by active ngentu Rolling o<>* 'U our machines. Wanted. Agents to sell the Ilost Typewriter I ■ the world ; exclusive territory given. Address X. TVI'K WHITE It CO.,lk>ston,3lasft. THE SECRET OF HAPPINESS. Are you almost disgusted | With life, little man? I will tell you a wonderful trick ( That will bring you contentment | If anything can— Do something for somobody, quick ; j Do something for somebody, quick' ! Are you awful tired | With play, little girl? , Weary, discouraged, and sick? I'll tell you the loveliest Qamo iu the world- Do something for somebodj*, quick; Do something for somebody, quick t Though it rains like the rain Of tho flood, little mon. And the clouds are forbidding au l thick, You can muke the sun shine Iu your soul, little man- Do something for somebody, quick ; Do something for somebody, quick! Though the skies are like brass Overhead, little girl, And tho walk like a well-heated brick ; Ami all earthly afTairs In a terrible whirl? Do something for somebody, quick | Do something for somebody, quick ! Christian Herald. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Be euro you're right, then agree with your wife.—Heading Times. It is generally a great blow to a can dle to have its light put out.—Roch ester Democrat. You never see an old man who as serts that he understands woman nature. —Milwaukee Journal. A dumb man frequently makes his presence in a community known by his calling.—Boston Courier. Almost any employe cau tell you that some one is liable to be tired when tho boss gets hot. —Troy Press. Maude—"Did he marry her for her money?" Leila "No ; for her father's." Kate Field's Washington. Hattie—"rfee Choi lie Softed over there, buried in thought." Hannah— "Whose?"—Detroit Free Press. All the world may love a lover, but before an average jury the maid's chances are as ten to one.—Life. When a man is about to fail he usually tries to work all of his friends into the trouble.---Atchison Globe. Speaking of hollow mockery, doesn't a hungry parrot come very near au sweriug that description? Buffalo Courier. Many may understand woman, but it generally puzzles her horse to tell what she is driving at.---Buffalo Courier. Our idea of a Christian is a man who doesn't laugh when it rains on a picnic party to which he was not invited.— Athison Globe. Mrs. Banks—"l do hate to discharge my servant." Mrs. Rivers—"l wish you had mine. You'd enjoy it."— Brooklyn Life. Tom—"How do you know she was out when you called ?" Jack —• 'I heard her iiHk the girl to tell me she was."— New York Times. Leave an order for work with a man and tell him that you are in no par ticular hurry and he will do it that day.—Atchison Globe. No matter how hopeless the future may bo to other men, the good mathe matician always has something to count on.—Troy Press. Hagson—"How are you, old fellow! What are you working at now?" Old iron (tired and cross) "My vaca tion."—Chicago Tribune. Miss Prim is of the opinion that no lady who had any claim to modesty would regard undressed food as a deli cacy. —Boston Transcript. "Is your friend Wilkins the sort ol a man who would borrow a dollar from you and never pay it back?" "Nixie ! Not from me." —Detroit Tribune. Mrs. Van Twiller (who mistakes Doc tor Jovial for a physician)—" And where do you practice, Doctor?" The Rev. Doctor Jovial—"Ah, madam, 3 do not practice; I only preach."— Harlem Life. Young Wife—"Now, sir, I've given you half my picnic pies, and yon promised to work for them—" Tramp --"Bless your sweet eyes, mum, I did—as 1 wuz eatin' of 'tin."—Cleve land Plain Dealer. Jess (iu restaurant) "l'm hungry enough to cat a horse and chase the rider." Bess—"What are you going to order?" Jess—"Waiter, bring me three cream puffs and a cup of cocoa,." —New York Times. She—"l never saw such a mau ! He never has any money but he fritters it awav." He—"Aren't you then afraid of marrying him?" She---"Oh, dear, no. After he has married me he'll never have any money."—-Boston Transcript. "You see that, young couple in front of us? Well, they're just married." "How do you know?" "Because he treads so carelessly on the skirt of her dress." "But that is no sign." "Oh, yes, it is; he'll be much more careful us soon as he finds out what her dresses cost."— Blaetter. Rain, But Xo Clouds. A curious natural phenomenon is re ported from the neighborhood of Pitts burg. It was ft bright clear day in Pleasant valley and the entire neigh borhood, when suddenly a heavy rain began to fall, without the slightest warning, and a dense black cloud ap peared over tho valley. For forty-five minutes the rain fell in torrents, swell ing the little stream that flows through the valley into a raging torrent, which inuudated houses, swept away several bridges and nearly drowned several people. Two miles away there was no rain at all aipl 00 signs of a etorm. — Picayune, HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. WOW-WOW SAUCE. Wow-wow sauce is the attractive name of a preparation which makes an excellent relish with stewed or boiled meats. Chop some parsley leaves fine; divide two or three pickled cucum bers or walnuts into small squares. Put into a saucepan a piece of butter tho size of an egg. When it is melted stir into it a tablespoonfui of fine flour and a half pint of beef broth. Add a tablespoonfui of vinegar and a tea spoonful of made mustard. Simmer together until pretty thick. Add the uarsley and cucumbers or walnuts. SALAD OF CAULIFLOWER. Put in a bowl two large cauliflowers which have been cut in pieces about an inch long, and one onion cut in very thin slices; add two tablespoon fuls of oil, two of vinegar and a pinch of salt and pepper. Mix all well to gether and serve. Or, if desired, a Mayonnaise sauce can bo used with cold cauliflower, which cau bo.made by this recipe: Put the yolks of'two eggs iu a bowl with salt, pepper and the juice of a lemon and half a teaspoonful of dry mustard. Stir with a wooden spoon, adding by degrees,in very small quantities, a tablespoonfui of vinegar, then a few drops of good olive oil, beating rapidly all the time until tho sauce thickens aud half a pint of oil has been absorbed.—New York Re corder. COLD POTATOES. Cold potatoes are not particularly appetizing as such, but they may bo quickly converted into delicious break fast or luncheon dishes. Potatoes nu Gratin—Slice your cold potatoes and stew gently in milk or broth. Season with pepper and salt. Grate some cheese and some bread, and sprinkle over the potatoes. Brown in the oven. Potato Hash—Heat together a table spoonful of butter and a cup of milk. Season with pepper and salt. Hash the cold potatoes, add to the milk, cover and simmer gently until the milk is about absorbed. Potato Provencal —Cut cold potatoes into balls with a vegetable scoop. Melt some butter, add a slice or two of onion to it and fry the balls. Mix hashed meat and hashed cold potatoes, moisten with milk for stock, season, roll and bake in a buttered dish in the oven.— Now York World. SICK-ROOM JELLIES. Arrowroot Jelly—Wet two heaping teaspoonfuls of Bermuda arrowroot iu a little cold water and rub smooth. Have on the stove boiling water aud in a cup of it melt two teaspoonfuls of white sugar. Pour this boiling water on to the arrowroot. Boil until clear, stirring all the time. Add a teaspoonful of lemon juice and mould in cold cups. Servo cold with cream and sugar. Tapioca Jelly—Soak a cup of tapioca in three cups of cold water for four hours. Set it in a Baucepan of boiling water. Add a little lukowarm water to the tapioca and heat, stirring fre quently. When it becomes clear, add a little sugar, a little grated lemon peel and the juice of a lemon. Pour into moulds and when cold eat with cream and sugar. Chicken Jelly—Pound half a raw chicken, bones and meat, until it forms u pulp; cover with cold water ; sim mer gently in a covered vessel until tho meat is in shreds and the liquid reduced about one-lialf. Strain and press through a collander ; then strain through a coarse bag ; salt and add a very little pepper ; return to the fire, simmer for about five minutes; cool and skim; keep on ice. Serve with unleavened wafers, or, in the conva lescent stage, between thin blices of bread. Iceland Moss Jelly—Wash n hand ful of eithor Iceland or Irish moss in several waters and soak for an hour. Stir it into a quart of boiling water j and allow it to simmer until dissolved. Sweeten, flavor with the juice of two lemons, a half teaspoonful of cinnu mon. Strain into moulds. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Wilted roses can be restored by placing tho stems in hot water for a minute. Coffee stains on white goods should be washed in warm water before placing in suds. A dish or plate of water set in the oven when baking cake will prevent scorched edges. Boil or roast n lemon, fill with sugar while hot and eat hot. It will often j check your cold. Don't clean brass articles with acids, i Use putty powder, with sweet oil. Wash oft* with soapsuds and dry. It will insure brightness. Pink and bine ginghams of a wash able make can be kept from fading by washing in a weak solution of vinegar and water. Rinse in the same way and dry in the shade. Ink stains on white goods can be re moved by soaking in water and then covering spot with pounded salts of lemon. Bleach in sun for half hour, wash in suds, rinse and dry. Those annoyed and wearied by inso mania on hot nights ean relieve their sufferings by following a few simple instructions. First of all, go to bed clean. No dirty face, bauds or feet. Wet tho top of the hend with cold water; wet the wrists, bathe the feet in warm or tepid water, in which some salt has been mixed. Dampen a hand kerchief or small piece of linen, fold lengthwise and place over eyes wlieu reposing. Don't think of business or household cares; leave thoughts ol notes, mortgages, soups, puddiugs, etc., on the outside of the mosquito aet, and sleep will como without, uyy wooing. Try it and be oonviuced BIG FOSSILS AT THE FAIR. RESTORBD FORMS OF COLOSSAL ANIMALS NOW EXTINCT. A Giant Shark From South C'aro- ' Una and a Great Li/.urd From New Jersey. PROFESSOR WARD'S natural | science exhibit from Roches- ! ter, N. Y., with its colossal anil ; Ct terrible objects, the immon.se skeletons anil restored forms of ani mals which roamed the earth in past geologic ages, although occupying the south gallery of the Anthropological Building at the World's Fair, is the first thing which strikos the eye and chains the attention upon entering | even at its extreme north end. Iu the centre, and most awe-inspir ing of all, is a gigantic mammoth, a hideous hairy monster of the elephant family, beside which the largest ele phant of the present day is a pigmv. On either side tower weird and fearful remains of ancient reptile life from i which one shrinks, thankful at net liv ing iu company with such creatures. 1 To get a clear idea of the exhibit one must begin at tho beginning. It is a collection from every division of na ture, except those of insect an l botaui cal life, the foundation being a large j cabinet of fossils. Starting with the j lowest forms of animal life known on our planet, it continues in regular or der from one geological formation to another, Silurian, Devonian, etc., up tho present time; from the humble sponge, coral, or trilobito by a series of cases to the more highly organized fishes and reptiles, birds and beasts. Theso are carefully arranged in geolo gic order, but against the walls on the pedestals of the central area are the "monsters vast of ages past" which iirst startle one. The largest of these, the mammoth, already montioneil, is a restoration from bones found a few yoars ago in Wurtemberg, Germany. Remains of this animal are found in all parts of Europe and Asia between the 40th and 70th parallels of latitude, and the bones are usually in such a good state of pres ervation that their position in the ani mal's anatomy may be easily deter mined. In northern Russia aud Siberia I the tusks occur iu such abundance as ! to supply no inconsiderable portion of i the ivory of commerce. The Royal Natural History Museum of Stuttgart haH the bones of over a hundred mam moths, probably the best collection in the world ; it was by a native of that city, Herr L. Martin, that the mam moth exhibited here was originally re constructed. It was subsequently bought by Professor Ward, taken to pieces, shipped to'this country and re mounted by him. For the original restoration the largest bones in the ] Stuttgart Museum were chosen,so that ! this specimen is even/above the average I size of a mammoth. Its dimensions, j as it stands on all fours, are : Height, sixteen feet; length,tfrom front of pen dant trunk to tail, feet; from front curve of tusks, four feet more, making a total l length of twenty six feet, while the girth in the largest part of the body is thirty-two feet. The two tusks, which bend outward with a double curve, are thirteen feet eight inches long and forty iuclies in circumference at the base, and the feet, nearly round, are quite a yard iu di ameter. The body is covered with long 1 wiry black liair; tho small eyes seem ! to shine vindictively ; the poso is life- ' like, and one almost expects tho great I beast to lift his destroying trunk. The I color and texture of the hair were copied from the mammoth now in the ' Imperial Museum at St. Petersburg, which when found fr >zan in the ice in 1799 was in such a remarkable ftate of preservation that, notwithstanding its thousands of years of imprisonment, tho flesh was greedily devoured by the Siberian dogs. Another tremendous piece is the megatherium, or fossil ground-sloth of the pampas of Bitenoe Ay res. Tt seems nearly twenty feet high, of truly dreadful appearance, and is repre sented in an erect attitude, tearing down a tree, on tho'branches of which it was accustomed to feed, a jxtiut in its habits said to be early proven by its anatomy. Another large piece is the colossal-chelys, or immense land turtle, nine feet in length and stand ing live feet high, which was found in tho upper tertiary bods on the tanks of the Himalayus about fifty years ago. By its side is the mogaeerus, or great Tri.sli elk. This specimen is/from a peat bog in County Limerick, Ire land. It is the king of nil thtvdeer family, its sutlers spreading eleven feet and being broad in proportion. Next is a mounted specimen of the' mastodon, the fossil elephant which once was so common in nearly nil parts of our country. By the side of this is a strange, res toration, the jaws of a fossil shark from the phosphate boils in thnnieigh borhood of Charleston, S. C. The largest man-eater shark of our-present i oceans has a gape of scarcely a loot, through which it might take n man or ' a dog with ettort; while this restore- 1 tion, carefully constructed with the j actual teeth in place to show its <\>r rectness, is more than six feet across from side to side of the jaws, so that its old-time aud no doubt ravenous possessor might easily have swallowed n full grown horse. Another specimen is a skull of the olephasganesa, or mammoth from the tertiary formations of tho Sewalik Hills of India. Tho tusks of this ex traordinary fossil are similar to those of an elephant, aud over twelve feet in length. On the adjacent wall is tho Plesiosauriis from the Lia* beds of Whitby, England. This is a great marine lizard belonging to a genus which filled the seas of th > Jurassic period and preyed upon th • llsli. They seem to have been the lords of creatine in that part of geological time. This specimen is ovey fc*,yynty-thrcQ Sect long. Distributed over tho walls arc I other smaller specimens of this genus ! ! and its cousin the icthyosaurus, while on pedestals are restorations of both of these classes of animals. Towering higher than all is the Hadriosaurus from the green sand beds of New Jersey. This was a great ( land lizard, standing over twenty feet when raised upon its hind legs, tho position it usually assumed both in resting and progression. It is tho great past representative of the present day iguana. The number of these pieces preclude further individual description, but they are very numerous, very interesting, and aro supplemented by colored maps and pictures showing in a realistic way the appearance of things in the various geological periods.—New York Tost. SCIENTIFIC AM) INDUSTRIAL, Many small animals cat their own weight in food a day. By means of the electrical current it is now possible to produce a higher temperature than ever before. A thousand millions of the Animal culae found in stagnant water do not collectively equal the size of a grain of sand. In severe paroxysms of coughing from whatever cause, a tablespoonful of glycerine in hot milk or cream will give speedy relief. Wool warehouses in Bradford, Eng land, are being titted with electric cranes, supplied with current from the city mains. Hydraulic cranes were formerly used. F. G. Flu miner, civil engineer, says that. Mount Tacoma is fifteen thousand feet high, just one hundred and two feet higher than Mount Whitney, sup posed to be the highest in the United States. An electrical engineer has suggested to a British Parliamentary Committee that tho marking of imported meat should be done by the electric current, and submitted a simple apparatus for doing the work. The infusoria, ono of the lowest forms of animal life, can propagate their species in three distinct ways. First, by budding, somewhat after the manner of plants : second, by the spon taneous division of the animal into two individuals, and third, from eggs. Tho English town of Widnes pro poses to dispose of its refuse by incin eration, and to utilize the heat thus I generated in operating an engine for running an electric lighting plant and [ furnishing light to various public iu i stitutions and some of the streets, j Au automatic switch has been ap I plied to the electric lamps of guests' rooms at hotels, by which the locking of the room door from the outside, but not from the inside, turns off tho lights. Many travelers leave tho the lights turned on when they go away from tho rooms, and this, in tho aggregate, counts up to a considerable expense to the hotel management. It is a familiar fact that persons born deaf are usually mute not from any congenital defect in the organs of speech, but from the fact that, never having heard others speak, they cannot imitate articulate utterance. It is probably true, too, that tho source of some current errors of speech among those who are not esteemed deaf lies in a defect of hearing. Many persons who habitually tack on the "r" sound to words ending in "w" say that they are unable to distinguish, for example, between "law" anil "lor." Statistics presented at the recent Congress of German Surgeons show that in a total of 157,815 persons who took some form of amesthetics while undergoing surgical operations, fifty three persons died, a ratio of one in j 2900. Not ono of these deaths oc ; curred with persons who took simple, ' unmixed ether, and hitherto none have happened with a mixture of chlo roform, ether and alcohol recommend ed by the great Viennese surgeon, Bil roth. The congress strongly indorsed ether as the best and safest nnnDsthetie. Shapes of Eggs. Various attempts have been mado to ! account for the diversity in shape seen jiu eggs. A recent study convinces i Doctor Nicolsky that the differences | may be all traced to gravity, anil he linds his idea continued by all the ggs in the zoological collection of tho St. Petersburg University. He supposes ♦hat pressure bv the sides of tho ovary tends to elongate the egg before the shell lias hardened. In birds which keep a vertical position while at rest, as do the falcon and the owl, tho soft egg is made short by the action of the weight of the body against the ovarian pressure; while in birds that, like the grebe, are nearly always swimming, the egg is lengthened because the bird's weight acts with the compression by the ovary. The egg is made more pointed at one end than at tho other m birds that, like the guillemot, are frequently changing their position sometimes swimming anil diving, some times perching on the rocks, etc.— Scientific American. 100,000,000 Pounds a Year. The number of pieces of metal, tech nically known as brake-shoes, which ure used in the course of a year in stop ping railway trains, is really aston ishing. The Master Car Builders' As sociation discussed the matter and it I was found that on the roads repre sented in the association probably 32,- 000,000 pounds of metal were used for this purpose on cars and tenders, while it was estimated that over 100,- 000,000 pounds were used on all tho cars, locomotives and tenders belong- ! ing to the roads represented. Approx- i imately two-tliirds of this metal was I worn out in service and the other third I was returned as scrap. Five-sixths of these shoes were cast iron and the others were of composite character, partly liar l and partly soft,.—Detroit Ure® Press. Trno Christianity. The fact Is coining to be more ani more recognized that religion doei hot consist so much lu ehurch-golng I as it does in Christian character, and ; that the man who publishes a news. paper Sunday may be doing more ! active service for God than he who occupies a front pew that day and ; squeezes his neighbor financially thi . rest of the week.—New York Herald THE storms of lire people talk about; in half of those that visit their wrath upon a man's head, he was his I own rain-maker. I== j The New Bread j A 0 I s As endorsed and recommended by 6 j $ the New-York Health Authorities. ][ 0 i> 0 Royal Unfermcntcd Bread is peptic, palatable, most p # healthful, and may be eaten warm and fresh without C J discomfort even by those of delicate digestion, which 0 is not true of bread made in any other way. <• $0 To make One Loaf of Royal Unfermented Bread: A V I quart flour, ■ teaspoonful salt, half a teaspoonful sugar, \ r 2 heaping teaspoonfuls Royal Baking Powder," cold boiled V J potato about the size of large hen's egg, and water. J Y Sift together thoroughly flour, salt, sugar, and baking powder; rub in the Y # potato; add sufficient water to mix smoothly and rapidly into a stiff batter, . # A about as soft as for pound-cake; about a pint of water to a quart of flour will # A be required—more or less, according to the brand and quality of the flour A 1 used. Do not make a stiff dough, like yeast bread. Pour the batter into a A A greased pan, 4 % by 8 inches, and 4 inches deep, filling about half full. The A loaf will rise to fill the pan when baked. Bake in very hot oven 45 minutes, J placing paper over first 15 minutes' baking, to prevent crusting too soon on J top. Bake immediately after mixing. Do not mix with milk. * J * Perfect success can be had only with the Royal Baiting Powder, because it is the J only powder in which the ingredients are prepared so as to give that continuous * ▼ action necessary to raise the larger bread loaf. - J 2 ★ * ★ ? 0 The best baking powder made is, as shown by analy- A r sis, the "Royal." Its leavening strength has been found # superior to other baking powders, and, as far as I know, J 0 it is the only powder which will raise large bread perfectly. # A Cyrus Edson, Jld. D. J 0 Com'r of Health, New-York City. 1 a # Brcadmakcrs using this receipt who will write the result # I ? of their experience will receive, free, the most practical cook J 0 book published, containing iooo receipts for all kinds of A J cooking. Address € 0 ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. A "East, West, Home is Eest," If Kept Clean With SAPOLIO ' "German Syrup" Boscliee's German Syrup is more successful in the treatment of Con sumption than any other remedy prescribed. It has been tried under every variety of climate. In the bleak, bitter North, in damp New England,in the fickle MiddleStatcs, in the hot, moist South —every- where. It lias been in demand by every nationality. It has been em ployed in every stage of Consump tion. In brief it has been used by millions and its the only true and It liable Consumption Remedy. ® MBS. MII.LV FERGUSON) Troy, N. Y. The fnllnwinii tribute to DANA'S • power 'or,-r OLD fl/ROXIO COM PLAIN TS.tnm sent n*bij I I'm. (/room cftlir inll-knoirn '•tUtoOM'S I'IIAK SIACY," JJO < 'engross St., Troy, X. GENTLEMEN —I have boon troubled with 1,1 vi; it < oni's.Ai.vr. <>\NTIIA TIOX iiikl WYNI'EI'SIA I'or a long time. I employed the best Doctors in the city; they tola me Old Chronic Complaints were Imril to cure. Their medicine did me no trooil. 1 gtopperl taking it and bought a bottle ot DANA'S SAIIS A I'AIiIL LA. Before 1 hadtakru half of it I Kit better. 1 have taheu threo bottlen ot DATA'S SARSAPARILLA! and am better than for yearn. IT HAN POM; >VO.M>MIN roll Ml.. ' 'tN CHI HllVl liintf I WIMT and it DORS not dlftii t ss me in die least. Yours Irulr, Troy, N'. Y. Mlts. Ml' i.Y f'KRUIJSON. DANA SARSAPARIUA Gl),, BELFAST, ME. jr bugc?£S ati Price -3R Qlfe il; Ml h's. BUQQV& 6 CAHT CO?* 0! H l*wrnu It,, ClntliHiti, 0, •100 Reward. SIOO. The reader of this paper will be pleased te learn that there is at, least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its Htanes, and that is Catarrh. Hall S Catarth Cure is the only positive cure knovm to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease. requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure i taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the pa t ;ent strongt h by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in Its curative power-*, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Bend for list of test xuonlals. Address _ , , P. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggist?", 75c. Lady bank cashiers abound in Finland. MEND YOUK OWN HARNESS fWITH THOMSON'S Bap SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tool! required. Only * hammer needed to drlr nn-i c inch th> m easily and quickly, Isaving the cllnoh absolutely •mouth. Requiring no ho e to he made In the leather nor htirr lor the Rivets. Thsy are strong. ifMiurli and (tumble. Millions now in use. All length*, uniform r assorted, put up In boxes. Ask your dealer for (hem, or send 40c. la ■tamps for a box of JOG, assorted sues. Man'fd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WALTHAM. MANN. I'NU 31 US FRAZER AXLE Best in the World! nfkV" SAP Get .the Genuine llvllf 1 A\r Sold Everywhere lUIILfIVIi WORN NICHT AND DAY. • Holds the worst nip -5 XJFE LAST XOFLJ icr all circumstance* T MB. rp T> rt q q R4 I AIMI'RTBMT, 0 jbaroaf. Y ( PATKKTKD.I T 44V nii'dway, N. Y. City. 1,000,000 JSSStMS ■ ■ A DDLUTH RAILROAD COMPANY In Minnesota. Bend for Msps and Circu* iars. They will be t>eut to you FREES. Add™. HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land CommissioDer, St. Paul, Minn. 1 BLOOD POISON 9 | A SPECIALTY. 1 Om S'oo,ooo. When mercury to-ide potassium, aaraap irilla or Dot Springs fall, w gu i ran tee a cute—and our Made ( yphllene Is the only thing thnt will cure permanently. IV, attire proof sent sealed, free, COOK RXMXDT Co., Chicago, 111. AN fb EA LF"AM.TVM E"D |C 7N E | For Indigestion, Biliousness, Headache, Cnnstlpatloji, Mud I ahd all disorders of Die Btomac^ Liver and Bowels. ! RIPANB TABULEB -- act gently yet promptly, perfect ■ digestion follows their use. Bold ?by druggists >r sent by mail Box Lmm Nl * K iL? Ncw^ork.^ I> \ Ti: YT< Mi.t I>F. M.'.IIKS. Examlnatloi 1 . \ 1 IJ-LY 1 Ll, and advico AS to patontablbtj of Invention. Send for Inventors Guide,or how to gw a patent. PATRICK O'FARRELL. WASHINGTON. DVO / J RAH v.M's SHORTHAND COLLEGE, 803 Smith 1 I fit-11l si i cot, I'lttaburg, P Open all yeat | ilay and evening ; catalogue free. MARRIAGE PAPER GUNNELS' MONTHLY, TOLEDO, OHIO. GOITRE CURED J. N Klf-Ui Jt.dlevlnez's W T B kflr^BPa ■ who have weak lungs or Asth- gw I thousands, ft has not Injur- II Hills the heat ce-jgh syrup. S
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers