Ifcttr'n This I Qtfflf Ono Humlroil Dollars Reward foi tWoanuot by F, J.TJftttNET Ss Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, the updefsigned, htp-o known F. J. Che ney for tl\o UKt 15 years, and believe him nor tßJ"! honorable in all business transactions •la financially awn to oari-y out uny obllga fiohmode by thdlr firm. WESTS: THUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio, *■ WALKING, *FNVAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Toledo, Qhio. IXa i's Catafrh Cure is takon Internally, act ing directly upon tho blood una irtucous sur faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle, bold by all Jruggists. Testimonials free. —The peanut grows wild in Africa, KHfiWLEDGB. Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who livo bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by 'more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the valuo to health of tho pure liquid laxativo principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is duo to its presenting iu the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, tho refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a jierfect lax ative; effectually cleansing tho system, dispelling colds, headaches and levers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with tho approval of tho medical profession, because it acts on tho 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 all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by tho California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed 011 every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept auy substitute if ofiered. FN I! a 7 >3 „ An agreeable Bold l>y Drufrirlr.ta or sent by tnnil. 25c.,50c. and SI.OO per package. Samples free. K# Tho Favorite TOOTH POWIU Hlw IXw forthoTeethaiid LreaUi,26, 'August Flower" "I am ready to testify under oath tliat if it had not been for August Flower I should have died before this. Eight years ago I was taken sick, and suffered as no one but a dyspeptic can, I employed three of our best doctors and received no benefit. They told me that I had heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me so that I had to throw it up. August Flower cured me. There is no med icine equal to it." LORENZO F. SLEEPER, Appleton, Maine. CD This Trado Mailt is on UlO heat WATERPROOF COAT §a"aio r g a io d i" the World I HTo ' 3 ' A. J. TRI\Y:;;\ V> -ST( MASS. [AN ID L"A L "F%LI| I.Y 'M E*DTCTHE" |For Indigent lon, iilllouanof. I S Headache, Constipation, Bit J ? (Complexion. Oil', tlvo Breath, i and all diaordci3 CF tlto STOMACH, I v-,' tfV'r* UALCO,, J Hi mi pd ■ noun, td honel<-. From first dose d,apftar. •nd in ten .lavs ~t >-1 t two-thirds "I all vmpt are R--MOVR.L. BOOK nf TO' inn ni th I f RUIN M v.ir- " seilt FREE. TEH DAYS TBELTKEIiT Fl)fit(l£H£D fREF by n.all ok. a. d. emsuM .vst)NS,#i>c.i:nt., AtUntc,... ST. QEORUE S HALL OLjgft Prof. J. C. Klueur, A. M , I'rim-IJ.UL. ..:| go or bus lncutation, unsur passed CniTß" pgiuril : ' KN * T) f° r FRKB Circular. QUI I tic ICJ 5V E fj J. N. K loin, Belleville, N. -1. m ).< X) tin-RestTVJK-w rltcrl . tho v > I tr-.-liisi v.-territory 11 \. n. Ml.lr.wxN. I'Vl'! Will'! 0 ton, Mass. h Tim Bisii,' f iitt stow' Polish is RHHlant, Odor- I Ipb. IJurabU', au.l the i onuir.er uayd fyr Uo tin ( or glaas pMkatv with errrv |IU/CLCI?„ | r SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. When glow worms go courting tho females sit on the grass while the males dance around them in a circle, flashing their lights. Heavy, shaggy, overhanging eye brows, with lower forehead prominent, show great powers of reasoning from premise to conclusion. Darwin had such brows. O. P. Anderson, the engineer, has by triangulation established the height of Glacier Peak, Snohomish County, Washington, as 11,500 feet; Mouut Ranier is 15,000 feet high; Mount Baker, 11,000 feet. Mount Shuksan, Whatcom County, is said to be taller than Mount Baker. Deposits of a metallic lustre aro found on the teeth of certain rumin ating animals in the Levant and other parts of southern Europe and the East. Herr Graebner has proved the yellow enamel to have its seat in tho mod erately thickened cell membranes of tho tissues affected; but tho lustre comes from a thick deposit of wax on the epidermis. It is reported that a largo industry is being built up at Barrow, England, in the production of stool barrels for tho conveyance of petroleum. The barrels are made in halves by means of compression iu a mold, when hot. Afterward they are wedded together by means of electricity. The barrels ara intended for use by the large oil carrying companies engaged in tho oil trade in the East, where the tem perature has a great effect on wood casks, and results in so much leakage. The registration and sanitary com mittee of the board of health of Phila delphia has issued tho following sig nificant notice: Physicians are re quested not to place on any certificate "heart failure" as the cause of death, but the disease of which the patieut was suffering prior to the heart fail ure. This term has never been placed on the list of diseases adopted by this board, it being looked upon as a result of some other illness from which the patient was suffering. Furthermore, if furnishes an opportunity to conceal contagious diseases, and thus permits the ignoring of the rules of this board, either innocently or designedly. The study of the hair upon human species offers au extensive field for in quiry, aud one which presents many unsolved problems of the first order of importance. Why man, ns a species, should present tho kind and the amount of hair which he does is vari ously explained, and tho differences between the varieties of tho human race are so great in this respect that one of the most popular subdivisions of species is founded upon it. That the human family have the longest hair of any species of animal is a well known fact, but why they lost it over most of the body is a subject for much curious conjecture and speculation. How Camphor Is Made. Camphor is the result of evaporating as essential oil found in two different trees, the cinnamomum camphora, which grows in China and Japan, ami tho dipterocarpus camphora, of Suma tra and Borneo; from those two trees it is obtained in very different man ners. In the cinnamomum it exists iu root and branch, stems and leaves, which aro chopped small and put into sarthern vessels, which aro heated; these vessels are covered with hoods iud rice straw is placed in them ; tho camphor is volatilized and rises; it 3ondenses on the straw, from which it is afterward cleared. Jn the dip terocarpus it is found in the trunk in A solid form, and it is obtained by cut ting the tree down and splitting it open; it is found in pieces from one to two feet long and about as thick as a man's arm. A moderate sized tree will yield about ten pounds of camphor, a arger one about twice that quantity. This kind is more highly esteemed than the other, so that in Japan two hun dred pounds of native camphor are valued at one pound of the Borneuu.— Now York Telegram. Dangers in Droughts. Long droughts carry iu their train certain inevitable dangers to the pub lic health. The first of these evils is the scarcity of water —itself a great source of anxiety to those whose busi ness it is to supervise the sanitary welfare. Then conies the inadequate flushing of sewers aud the risk, through water saving practices, of drains be coming befouled. The tendency for certain diseases of cholera type to in crease in intensity—the heat and want of water being conditions for their diffusion—in a hot, dry season is well known. Finally we get tho river courses of the laud, which aro used as huge sewers by the towns in their neighborhood, becoming pestiferous channels. Any one who of late days has been in the neighborhood of the Midland * Railway Station at Leeds must have had practical proof of the pestilential state of the Aire. Sewer gnses, acting on relaxed or ordinary sore throats, may produce diphtheria. The drains, sewers and rivers should be purified.—New Y'ork Telegram. Found n Volcano. A party of bicyclists doing Nebraska found a volcano, or what they took for a volcano, the other day. It is situated some four miles south of Ponca. Tho party heard a peculiar whistling noise, which they could not understand. They undertook to investigate it, and came upon a fissure iu the rocks of a bluff, from which issued a strong blast of air, so hot that one of the party, who inadvertently exposed Ilia face to it, found his skin blistered. The air had no odor, and nothing else but the hot air came from the fissure. There is an extinct volcano somo twelve miles from tho place, and the explorers con cluded that the fissurowas a vent fyoin the Mume # ~"Now Xoyk World, HIE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. ITOKIES THAT ARE TOLD BT THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. 1 MflUlen's ROHUKE-SLIP Anticipated 111 in—She Wanted Some of Them— Carrying Out the Metaphor, Etc. If I was you and you was me, And you knew I was true. When no ono elso wero near." sdld he, "Now what—er—would you do?" Her red lips curled. "If I were you, I'd not stand there and stammer , I'd go to night-school, or somewhere, And learn n little grammar." —New York Mercury. SITE WANTED HOME OP THEM. Husband—"l saw some nice trout in the market this morning." Wife —"Did you? Well, I wish f-ou'd go tishing this afternoon."— Truth. OBVIOUS. "Evolution is interesting, but some how or other it isn't satisfactory. Granting that back of man was the monkey, what was back of the mon key ?" "His tail, of course." —Harper'sßa- fcar. RHP ANTICIPATED HIM. Ben Trite—"A penny for your thoughts, dear." May Cutting—"Where is the penny? Thanks! I was thinking it was just about time for you to make that very remark."—Puck. THE WANING HONEYMOON. Miss Fig--"Does your husband love jou as much as he did when you first were wed?" Young Mrs. Fitts —"I guess sc. I haven't asked him about it in the last throe or lour weeks."—lndianapolis •Journal. CARRYING OUT THE METAPHOR. Hicks—"Our cook has gone Wife enuglit her loaded with goods for her sisters and cousins." Wicks—"And, us she was loaded, you discharged her?" Hicks— 4 'But she kicked awfully."— Boston Transcript. TATTLED ON BROTHER. Bessie—"Can't you come withme to Kitty's this afternoon?" Jack—"l can't. I have to go to see my tailor." Bessie—"Why do you have to go to see your tailor? My brother's tailor jomcs to see him."--Life. YES, SHE HAD A BEAU. "Ts any one waiting on you?" asked a polite iloor walker of a timid maiden in a dry goods emporium recently. "Yep, sir," replied the awkward damsel, pointing to the door and in dicating a still more bashful youth. "That's him. He's keeping company with m<\ but he's afraid to come in." j —New York Herald. A TRAINING-SCHOOL FOR RULERS. "Why," inquired the grand vizier, "since your daughter must one day rule this realm, do you not place her in such a position that she will have absolute power, and become accus tomed to the exercise thereof?" "Because," rejoined the king, "she rebels at the idea of hiring out to do housework."—Puck. WHERE FINANCIAL CALM PREVAILS. "Baggsy," said Tired Thomas the Tramp to his companion, "do papers ?ays there's a finanshul convulsion in our midst." "That's only a newspaper sensation, [ guess, Tummy. I ain't felt no un easiness in the money market myself. Coin's as plenty with me now ns ever. Will you join mo in a glarss of tl > well-water V"—Harper's Bazar. THE COMPLETE LETTER-WRITER. Mistress—"l found in your room a letter of mine that had been taken out of writing-case; what is tho meaning oi' this?" Cook —"Oh ! ma'am, I only want to copy it for my sweetheart!" Mistress "What can he want with it?" Cook —"Please, ma'am, he's in the army, and doesn't know how toswrite oie a love-letter." USED THE WRONG FUEL. Youu "I toldJßridget Hint we'd have some eggs for break fast, and what do you think? I went out in the kitchen and found her cook ing them with chestnut coal." Husband—"Well, there was nothing wrong about that, was there?" Young Housekeeper—"Why, von silly fellow, I'd like to know what we've got egg coal in the cellar for?" i —Trado Mark Beview. NEIGHBORLY MANAGING. Mr. Suburb—"Well, we won't be troubled any more with those young sters of Mr. Xexdoor's racing over our garden. Mr. Nexdoor is going to (>ut up a high board fence between the (>roperti(?B." Mrs. S.—"That's lovely. But how did you persuade him to do it? ' Mr. S."—"l got a frieud of mino'to tuggesi: him that a high board fence Would keep us from stealing his vegetables." A CLEVER RUSE. A servant-girl had pricked lier finger with the prong of a fork, aud seemed greatly distressed about it. "Only think, ma'am," she said to her mistress, "if it was German silver, in flammation or blood-poisoning might set in." '"Don't, alarm yourself, child, tho forks r.re real silver, take my word for it." "■> u:i nra qnito sure?" ''Positive," Next morning the silver and the girl had gone off by the first train. RIGHTING A WRONG. Doliber (the artist) —"I hare called, Mr. Gotrox, to make a confession to which I am driven by the pangs of a gnawing conscience. I grossly de ceived you in regard to that pastoral picture you purchased from mo two months ago." Old Gotrox—"Did, hey? How, may I ask?" Dobbler—"Those blotches in the foreground of the painting—you spoke of them as barberry bushes—Mr. Go trox, I—l can not conceal the truth uuy longer; they are cows!"— Puck. A HOPELESS JOB. "Did you get the swag?" whispered the burglar who had stood on guard while his comrade went in the house. The latter shook his head gloomily. "Well, I know he took it home with him in his pants' pocket, because I saw him get the money nud it was too late to put it in the bank. Couldn't you find his room?" "Yes; found that all right." "Weren't his clothes there?" "Yes." "Then what was the trouble?" "Well, just as I was about to open I the door I heard a slight noise in tho j room. I opened it a little way and by the light of the moon I could see his wife going through his pockets. X watched her transfer the roll of bills from his pocket to her own dress pocket. Then I knew it was useless to try to find it and gave up the job."— Town Topics. SOMETHING HE HAD FORGOTTEN. "Sq you enjoyed your European trip, did you?" inquired the simple old gentleman. "I haven't been over since '53, but my recollections arc still vivid. 1 remember once standing on Mont Plane, watching tho sun sink to | rest behind the blue waters of the J Mediterranean, while to my right the noble Bhine rushed onward to tho Black Sea, and the Pyrenees, still hold ! iug the snows of winter, were on tho | lett. I remember whilst standing there—" "But, Mr. Gray," feebly inter rupted his listener. "I was on Mont Blanc myself, and really—you'll ex j cuso me—but you really must be mis i taken in your geography." "Mistaken?" returned the old man, lightly. "Not a bit of it. But I for j get--it's different now. You know, j my dear boy, that since my day the entire map of Europe lias been changed bv these awful wars, and so, ! of course, you can't appreciate w hat it ' was in 's3."—Albany Argus. NOT IF SHE KNEW IT. A few weeks ago a railway collir-.ion killed, among others, a passenger liv • ing in a country town. His remains ! were sent home, and a few days after tho funeral the solicitor to the com pany called upon the widow to effect a settlement. She placed her damages at §25,000. i "Oh, that sum is unreasonable !" re ; plied tho solicitor. "Your husband was nearly fifty years old?" "Yes, sir." *,And lame?" "Yes." "And bis general health was poor?" "Very." "And lie, probably, wou'd not have lived nore than five years?" "Probably not, sir." j "Then it seems tome that two or j three thousand dollars would be a fair compensation." [ "Two or three thousand?" oho i echoed. | "Why, sir, I courted that man for ; feu years, ran after him for ten more, | and then ha l to chase him down with a shotgun to get him to marry me. Do you suppsse that I'm go'ng to set l tie for hare cost of shoe leather and J ammunition." i The man of law concluded that sho deserved all she could got.— -Sparo Moments. An Immense Drill. There lias lately been constructed at one of the Massachusetts establish ments for manufacturing machinists' ' tools, drills and general iron working | machinery, a massive radial drill of immense proportions, pronounced to bo the largest of its kind in the United States, and of correspondingly super ior workmanship for operations oil so vast a scale. The radial drill weighs some 30,000 pounds, is sixteen feet from top to base, and lias a radial arm j eight and one-half feet long. By means | of this powerful mechanism a hole •five inches in diameter can lie bored •and a hole drilled to the centre of a licircle thirteen feet in diameter, and, f though the machine is designated for ! accomplishing the heaviest description of work, it is so constructed that one man can operate it. There is mechan ism for moving the radial arm, and the head is moved by a spiral gearing with a quick nud easy motion. The machine'is also adapted to giving from three to ten different speds.—Detroit | Free Press. Cotton Manufacturing. An interesting discovery has been j made by two young chemists of Lon j don which will doubtless have a very j important bearing on the manufacture jof cotton. Cotton waste is trans ! formed by a new process into nitrate ! of cellulose, and cotton fabrics can bo covered with a solution of it which will add materially to the weight, strength and value of the material. Thin, j lightweight fabrics can bo filled up I with t his preparation, which costs littlo more than sizing and fuller's earth. 1 The cellulose thus prepared is also ap i plieable to pinny different purposes. I The cost is very little more than the • raw material, being elieup and the 1 process of mmmfnoturo inexpensive, —a Yyrlf Witness. A Princess ol Method. Although a good listener, says an | English paper, the Princess May never hesitates to ask questions if she does not thoroughly understand tha line of arguineut. She seldom dis cusses a charity scheme without se curing a supporter. No matter whether it be in a country house oi at home, if the opportunity offers, tht wants and wishes of her proteges are always put forward, and tho result is generally a check or promise of help. But it must not be supposed that she accepts other people's facts and fig ures. On the contrary, she makes her own inquiries and marshals them In away that would do credit to a financier or a stateman. Order and regularity are with her principles of lite—never is anything hut of place, never is an opportunity missed. There is a tlmo fur getting hp In the morning, and, when pos-i --ile, a time for retiring to rost at light. Part of the day Is always set iside for reading aud being read to. No matter how dis l astcful the task, if it be necessary to do it, it is done, md done, too, in time, and in proper form and order. In her boudoir you will find the books properly classified. Pens and pencils are neatly arranged an the wiiting tabic. In short, there Is a place for everylhing, and every thing is In Its place. These arc qual ities indispensable to people of great position, and it must he very gratify ing to the public to know that Prin cess May possesses them. Umbrellas as Tests of Character. An umbrella, it is said, can be takeu as a test of character. The man who always takes an um brella out with him Is a cautious fel low, who abstains from all specula tion and is sure to die rich. Tho man who is always leaving his umbrella behind him Is one who g n erally makes no provision fir the morrow. He is reckless, thoughtless, always late for tho train, leaves tho street door open when he goes homo late at night, and is absent minded to such a degree as to speak ill of a baby in the presence of its mother. The man who is always losing his Is an unlucky dog, whose bills are not mot, whose boots split, whose gloves crack, whose buttons aivj com ing off, and whose change is apt to have some bad money in it. Be cau tious how you lend a live-dollar nolo to such a man. The man who is perpetually ex pressing a nervous anxiety about his umbrella and wondering if it is safe Is full of uneasiness and low suspicion. Lot him lie ever so rich, give not .our daughter to him, for he will un loubtcdly take more care of his um brella than his wife. Curlosltton or Judgment. There is a good deal of fun in get tng up tests of people's lowers of lodgment, or, rather of their individ ual powers of vision. One of these is tho familiar one or getting a number of people to give their ideas upon tho size of the moon. Some will sav it looks as large as a hogshead; others that it is no bigger than a soup plate. Distance is another thing which people are apt to miscalculate, if they judge by means of their eyesight City dwellers generally know that a rortain number of blocks make a mile, and plod contentedly along on that knowledge wilhout ever looking far enough away to see how tho dis tance appears. When they get into the country the stretches of fields md hills are deceptive. A point HVti miles away wiil appear but one when icen across a flat distance and the ttranger will start off on a short walk which turns into long one.— Brooklyn Standard Union. CtirfouH Cnrrcnev, Sheets of paper are used for money In Corfu,ono sheet purchas ng a quart of rice, twenty sheets a piece ol'heiuf cloth, etc. Wo, 100, use.sheets of pa per for money, but they are pretty well covered by (he Government wilh original designs in green ink lie ort they acquire any purchasing value. illbby Prison In I MM. * I bnve been a 'iiflVrer from chronic diar rlnpw ever since I came out of Libby Prison in 18fl5 and at times it wa very severe, and my last attack of it lasted mo over six weeks, dur ing w 11' ell time I tried all the remedies I bad previously used ami had several doctors treat mo for the same, but nothing would stop it. I was induced to tr. n bottle of Thurston's Hlackber.y Cordial, and after using less than hall a bottle was relieved, and am once more icutler. Thanks to your Cordial, I cheerfully recommend it to all the* old boys ' who are troubled with that <1 leaded disease or anyone else for summer complaints. This testimony in unsolicited." Yours truly. J. L. Styron, Traveling Salesman. Thurston's lilacknerry 1 onlla lis prepared by Tnurston Chemical Co., Grand Ha pi s Ohio. —There is enough iron in the blood of -P men to make a 24 pound plowshare. We Cure llupriir*. So matter of how long standing- Write for frco treatise, testimonials, etc., to H. J. Jlollensworth & o//Wa. I tri- d almost im Aft en-ri mi-dtcinv- ami al- M Ji """ t Kv up hope ol 7rv* v ever 1 eing any better. Mrs. J. Fonton. j 'i<11- St-I'lMUOiuvfi'ttl Hood's 5 ?*"" Cures i It part's Pill# #P! wli'i Vl Promptly, I I | The United States Government reports ROYAL a pure cream of tartar baking powder, highest of all I in leavening strength. | | | "The Royal Baking Powder is undouotedly | jj the purest and most reliable baking powder of- i| jj fered to the public." I Late United States /f' 0 aovernment Chemist. jj 9 | IL, M| , , , , R ° YAI ; B *^ ING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-VORK. Jj "Watch Stopped, Has It?" "Watch stopped, has it?'' ask. d one traveler of another. "Nov?, 1 sup pose you'll pay a dollar to clean it. XJut let me give you a tip. Open both | of the hack cases so, lio'd It with open side down and tap it with your linger-uiila dozen times. Don't, bo afraid. Knap it again. Now move I the second hand. Is it all right? X ; thought so. A drummer put me up 1 to that trick. I'rolrably there were only a few spooks of diDt in the , works and you've lapped them out. Very likely it will now run lor a year and you've saved your dollar, if it ' doesn't run after tho little jar that you gave it, then it is time to take it to the jeweler." Amur ST every one who isn't sixteen and pretty, looks very lonesome at . times. IDEw. KILMER'S Clf RED ME. Dropsical Swelling, Cold as ice. LIFE WAS A BURDEN. "Sivnmp-Vlool" rnvctl ray life after 1 had ulTcretl everything but death. (send you uiy pho- oyrrapli and thistles •nd you run use it if "\l •on wish. kfy ¥ v I.v hands were an Jr J vj M old us Ice; flrewould U/ ?d M'onsieal Hweilings V& I %r\ r w f tint lower limbs; 1T Tlr ' / f Y oul l not butio'i my >U 101-S. IlxerlitMi coin lefcely < xlintistod : "]Hi Liy ■JO; death seemed so try near, The swell .nga have gone and liU ray troubles have diranpr uied. >Jy licuitii is better now t!in:i it has been for years. " SWAMP-ROOT CURED RiE.' Tell doubting ones to write rac I will tell them all about it." Mas. It. j. CITBINOER, Jan. 15,11.03. Marietta, BUclby Co., Ind. At DrugalMtft GOe rents and sl,OOt:lr.c, ••Invalid'.' Guide t< Health" frcc-Consullnlloa fn . Pf. Kilmer & Co., - Einghamton, N. V. Dr. Kilmer's U &0 Anointment Cures Piles • "Trial Box Froo —AI Driirglstc CO cents. MEND YOUK OWN HARNESS f THOMSON'S KQc SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No toola required. Only a hammer needed ttlrlvc an hoe to te made In the leather nor itirr i.r usenrtt d. put up la boae*. Ank four dealer for them, .r nend 40c. In •tamps lor a u>& ol loj, assorted alzes. MuuTd by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WAIiTIIAK, MASS. ffcTHE WALL PATER MERCHANT \ 01 If 85 SELLS THE BEST, Ifll 9SB THE CHEAPEST i; nfl i| Cnpet- :lr. nd a.'. (ii.NI Pnpcr.Ac., s. find I Re. Send tor icimplon. ."54*1 Wood Siroet. IMcisbnrgli, 1 n. UirriCV'fl are©ndnrped by the moat emt- VmLLi.I *? rent Kiirgeiinii HARD PUBUER 3ond for book on TRUSSES •"•"JTSssiSES'"''"' 1.8. UI.EV A' CO., cr. S. 1 I il,. I'hill.da. If any one doubts flint lo lido enraapirllla or i ■•Mh.ria/-' f.i.l, wo JM • ran too a CUP -i.i.d our Ibfi ic ( yj-hih • I thorn y tbln-r thr.t w II euro p"i ::nncntly. i' .-i;iv j root sent ainUA. frnv , luui. Co.. Ci,lo.i|io. 111. I oi-XT.-MI-II .111.1 I\I"> ' V ■>""AXA'S I & sahsaparillal ssH"'ii it in.i.cm, me so such" Kit. . ' 2, J? "''"F 0 thut VM taken.g| la ii.v\ ><• " N v JOHN Mill, L. v, :\„L aii SSIIALNLI-'L 111 Mr. Itirki'.v, anil KNI.IV LLUIT Ll<'r=; .*l.l*l not 1,1,11,, V 1,1(,.1.|,.|,| L 111, I—. "■""i-v si'CAiissis.vArrii, BH I i-q -Ma.sum, N. Y. JJnigglin. ®3 ■ fH _! DANA'S LIVER AND KIDNEY PILLS areffl Kcnorlli their wolsht In Gold. They aroi? )V P- O. D. s.-DANA'S DISEASE DE-ga STriOYEfiS. Try a bottle at our risk. B S5 Dana Sarsaparllla Co.. Delias!, Maine, gjj 1' N U ,17 H3 Besc in the World!n|a Get.the Genuine Sold Everywhere !"■ nENSIONJ^ BF® Successtullv Proconuts-; Claims. ■ Late Principal !D:;ftmtner U.H. .lon Uttronu. B l yrslulust wur, idmUiidicatiiijjc'niiUß, nttyfiime. I* A T 1' \ 'I'S TbADKMAHKR Kxantlr.ntlon I \ v< d navU-o ns to pntuMt.iiilii'v ..i In vontlon. Sondfor In vent -.J-K Uuldo'or how b j-t i I 4TRIQK O'FARI K1.1., WAtIUKdTOX, 1 rißo'B lloinody for Catarrh In the CR*j T;_B; KIISIOM in Re. ami NIEAPI'-t. ■ *aaEasasx3E# Hold by