When friends abuse you "behind your back," do not grieve too much. They do not mean all they say. They will smile as usual when they meet you. A Sale, SohikV Trirnt. Not corporations alone make the beet trusts, for morally speaking we place reliance In things most successful, and thereby estab lish a most substantial trust, and this is the Way to do it. ''My wife." says Mr J. W. Ames, Fairmont, Neb., suffered Intensely With sciatica, and was helpless. I tried many things to no purpose. Although the doctors laid 'no' i got r. bottle of Bt. Jacobs Oil and tried it. It stopped the pain and in a obort time she nad no use for crutches." Now here is a trust founded on the surety of cure from the experience of being cured. Let any loubting Thomas take the same oourse and (nake a truct for himself. There are 200 fishing clubs in London, with a membership of 12,000.' An IniporiHiii Difference. To mako it apparent to thousands,who think them-,elves 111, that they are not affected with any disease, but that the system simply needs cleansing, is to bring comfort homo to their hearts, as a costive condition is easily cured by using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. No SAI-BR Remedy can be hart for roughs and Colds, or any trouble of the Throat, than Brown b Bronchial lYochct." Price 26 cent* Sold only in bores. If affile ted with aoreoyo* use Dr. Isaac Thomp son a Eye-water. Druggists sell at26o per bottle. l M11 ", curo indigestion and eonstl potion. Beecham's-no others. 25 eta. a box. Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup costs no more than others and benefits rnoro. Itev. O. 11. I'owrr Symptoms of Cancer Appeared on my lip. Disagreeable eruptions came on my neck. After taking 4 bottles of Hood's Sarsnparilla, all the traces of disease have disappeared and the medicine lias given me renewed vigor and strength. I am now al most 73 years of age, and irork like n ti ger. And I know that Hood's Sarsoparilla bos had much to do with my vigor and strength. 1 recommended it to my wife, who has suffered so much with rheumatic troubles, aa also with femalo weakness. In two years Hood's s j> Cures she has used about 3 bottles of Hood's Sarsa parilla, and to-day, and for the last 0 months, •he seems liko a new being." REV. O. H. POW ER, 2t24 Hanover Street, Chicago, Illinois. Hood's PI I In euro all liver Ills, h llotisuena, Jauih> glee, Indigestion, sick lieuduelio. 26 ceuts. PNU 8 'O4 Id the Early Days of cod-liver oil its use was limited "£,s■, those far advanced in consumption. Science soon discovered in it the prevention and cure of consumption. Scott's Emulsion of cod-livcr oil with Ilypo phosphites of lime and soda has rendered the oil more effective, easy of digestion and pleasant to the taste. Prepared by Sentt,( Bowm., N. V. All drncgiitt. w. 1.. noiroi.As :t SHOE I >WELT, on the bottom. Every /t cSreV."'a ?p','p, rTfn>r'fi!!i ay/L-DotioiA^-j-^ P tnicfion. derby mail. Postage free. Von can get the best bargains of dealers who push our shoes. i nnn nnn arres of lawo for nale by the SAINT PAUL A DCLI'TII lIAILROiD Company in Mioaesota. Send for Maps and Cirou* igra. They will be oent to you FREE. Addresa HOPEWELL CLARKE, I*ud Commissioner, 6t. Paul. Minn. sl2 TO $35 SR.- TE.W&ISTFYFTFTI AUf CEIf the ."u.'icryV'.l Tim, If tCl\ {JS Ue JkcaSc°e° S ' | l '"'iown. y 'nd cities. Men and women of good character will find this an exceptional opportunity for profitable em ployment. Spare bou rs mas- be used to good advuu fa * e - • F. JOHNSON* dfc CO llHi and.llaln t*ta, Kielimoad, Vn. GOOD LUCK ' u ""- - A 'i > „ y ,TT <l '' B, Kn.r , r.wdirl , a(l and copy of pome Beautiful, a montlly <m Needlework, stomp- Ing, etc.,post paid, 26c. tnrnham'ri, ill \v. UthSt ,N.V BOYS AND CiRLS ZZrJSJPZSSX UUIU nam© and wo will tell you how; no money Willi tc 1. it if*!! a'to Stays Y?t ft Co., l'ro vl le !U 'e, It. i DATFNTft—ITHOMAH 1 THOMAH P. SIMPSON. MA I CI? I O Washlugtou, I). C. No aity's fei B until Patent obtained. Write for Inventor's Guide GET THE BEST. WITT I T?"D'QI 5 NEW DESIGNS ron ltlllJlJljil 0 at the lowest \KfSk 11 I )rices - Postage fl WW ttll ! cents. Perfect imita- ParkPP tion stained glass. AGENTS WANTED. J. K EH WIN Mil.LBIl 4 CO,, „ D 43 Minliliflfld itnevi. I'll I-bn >u l>, I'a. THE MERRY SIDE.OF LIFE, STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. Letting on Her Feelings—Drawing the Line —Harsli —Give Hint a Show—A Critical Period, Ktc. Thei maid was mad. and a frown she wore, When her mother reproved her with rigid air; & And, as she daro not hang the door Sne went upstairs and banged her hair. —Now York Press. HARSH. Cholly--"Doyou know, I'vccliauged my mind—" She "But wan it fair for the other fellow?" Truth. DRAWING THE LINE. Fweddy— "Aw—MissGinevwa, could you—aw- live in a flat?" Miss Ginevra -"Yes, but not with you." Chicago Tribune. A FRIEND OF GOOD LITER ATT TIE. Office Boy (to butcher) —"Mr. Serial wants ten cents' worth of sliced ham wrapped up in the continuation of the story you sent him with the sausages." —Puck. A CRITICAL PERIOD. Young Editor (reflectively) "lf I don t publish this poem Grace has written she will have nothing more to do with me. And if Ido publish it, I shall probably lose my position."— Life. ONLY ONE OBSTACLE. "He is madly infatuated with her." "Indeed?" "Yes. He even weut so far as to tell her that if she were only a few years younger ho would marry her." —Life. GIVE HIM A SHOW. Weary Willis—"Madam, I crave your mercy; I'm hungry enough to eat a dog." Madam—"All right. I'll just un chain him."—Browning, King & Co. s Monthly. BRIGHT—FOR M'COMMIOK. Clothier—"How can you expect us to make you a new suit of clothes when you haven't paid for the last?" McCommick—"Didn't know you re quired a last in making clothes."— Jo3epli Banister, in Browning's. BRIEF AND TO THE POINT. Cholly—"lt—aw—may be all wight, you know, but I—aw—And it doused hard to believe that we are descended from aw—monkeys." Miss Smart (after looking him over) —"1 don't."—New York Press. PROOF CONCLUSIVE. "Jones saved his mother-in-law from drowning." "That will stAnd him in good stead if he should ever get into trouble." "How so?" "He could prove insanity."—Hallo. A DRUMMER. Little Boy—"Who was that man who's been talkin' to you so loug?" Country Merchant—"He's a drum mer." Little Boy—"What sort of drums does he drum on?" "Ear drums."—Good News. WATER WORKED HIS RUIN. Dusty Rhodes —"No wonder I hate water, ma'am; it was water that ruined me." Mrs. Dogood—"How could that be?" Dusty Rhodes—"l invested all my money in a plant to build ships' an chors out of wood, before I discovered that the blamed things wouldn't sink." —Puck. RECOGNIZED HIM. Two men were travoling together, and one whiled away the hours with a lot of stories. At last the listener said ; "Is not your name Jones?" "Yes—William Jones!" "William Jones, of Spotswood, New Jersey?" # "Yes! Do you know me?" "No; but 1 know those stories. A man told them to me over twenty years ago, and he must have been your father!"— Hallo. THE FLOWER LANGUAGE. Mrs. Murray Hill—"There was a time when you called me a daisy, a sweet violet, and a lily of the valley." Mr. Murray Hill—"Yes, that was before you began jawing me every night. Now, the only flower 1 wish you were is a 'four o'clock.' That shut* up sometimes."—Texas Sittings. HOW HE LOVES LITTLE BOYS. Squire Crabb (who loves little boys) --"So you're going shooting, eh, boys? Well, don't forget to keep both hammers full-cock and lingers on both triggers, and walk single file. Always remember after crawling through a fence to pull your guns after you, muzzle first. Good-bye, boys. Good luck '."—Judge. SURE OF HIMSELF. City Editor —"Well, what did you learn about that accident on the P., I). & Q. Railroad?" New Reporter —"Oil, it was noth- City Editor —"Nothing! Why the dispatches sav it was terrible." New Reporter—"Well, I just came ■ rom the President of the road, and he ought to know."—Life. EVIDENCE AT HAND. '' hni titers is discouraged about his !.> :r'nir." ' • Win's happened?" "He was in the act of propoiing lait I night when the girl's father and mother came in." "What did Smithers do?" "Stopped short, of course.' "What did the girl do?" "She said, 'What were you saying, Mr. Smithers?'"—Life. THEY BOTH SNORED. Hotel Clerk "Good morning, Colonel, how did you sleep?" Colonel —"I did sleep some, I sup pose ; but I was awake most of the night listening to the snoring of the man in the next room. He is a good one at it. He makes more noise than a steam whistle." Another gentleman approaches. Hotel Clerk "Good morning, Major; how did you sleep?" Major—"l got sleep occasionally during the night, but there was a fci low iu the next room to me whosnorod as if he was filling a contract to saw forty cords of wood before daylight. At least that's the way it sounded." Colonel—"That's just what I had to listen to all night long. What is the number of your room !" Major—"No. 22. What is the number of yours?" Colonol—"And mine is No. 23. Tableau—Texas Sittings. A MIST. She blushed in sweet confusion. "And what, papa," she faltered, shyly, "did you think of Lord Eus tace?" The old man contemplated her bowed head for a moment in silence. "My child," he answered, slowly, after a time, "it seems to me that his mind is decidedly foggy." "Papa." She was kneeling at his feet. "Forgivo me, my pet—" The father had risen to his feet in alarm. " if I have spoken hastily." "Papa, lam sure you are right. 1 had the same impression but I feared I might be mistaken. And isn't it—" She rnised her streaming eyes to his. " too lovely for anything. Fogs are so awfully English, you know." In her rapture she insisted that she did not envy a soul on earth.—Truth. Horses Willi Long Tails. I see that there is again an attempt being made to introduce the fashion of long-tailed horses. I doubt very much if it will succeed. Fashion has practi cally removed the raisou d'etre for these caudal appendages. The work ing horse or the horse in the couutry, of course, needs liis tail to protect liini j self from the flies. The fashionable j coach horse these days, on the other ■ hand, has more careful attention than used to be bestowed upon a child a , few years ago. Wheu in the stable he is carefully blanketed to protect him from the cold draughts ot from the ! annoyance of the insects, and when be ' ing driven is protected from the flies ;by the driver, especially if he be of a nervous disposition and easily worried by the pests. In fact, the fashionable teams are almost uninterruptedly un der the most careful supervision. The only trouble is that when the horses get old and broken down and are turned over to the tender mercies of some ! liuskster or horse car line, then the | lack of care will lay them open to the I attacks of the horse flies, ami on this account the objection to docking ia very evident. Every one who is wealthy enough to cut off his horses' tails Hhould be humane enough to blow the animals brains out when their days of useful ness in high life are over. As to theeruelty of the docking pro i cess, it is not as bad as the humani j tarian would lead one to suppose. 1 | once bought a team of dock-tailed ! horses at a big auction sale, and it was not until the succeding day that the coachman discovered that the opera tion was of so recont a date that the stumps were still raw. The horses suf fered in uo way nervously, as far as could be seen, nor did it affect their I appetites or general behavior in the slightest. Old cavalry officers will call to mind in the battles of the late war that it was not uuusual to see horses with broken legs, or with a hoof shot off, grazing around after the bat tle comparatively comfortable. There is a good deal of difference between the nervous orgauizatiou of a horse and that of a man. Docking has objectionn ble features, it is true, but'the custom has undoubtedly come to stay. The growth of the fad in England and on j the Coutinent proves it.—New York Mail and Express. The Heat of the Nun. ; The mechanical energy of one square | yard of the sun's surface would keep an ocean steamship under full head j way. If all the coal in the earth were ! put into one large heap and kindled with an unlimited supply of oxygen for its combustion, it would not give out lieat sufficient to replace that lost by the sun in one-thousandth part of a second of time. In the ball of flam ing matter which we call the sun, clouds of carbon are continually ris ing to the surface, and remain there j to glow with, inconceivable intensity. By the help of photography, aided by the spectroscope, the cloudy sur j face of the sun can now Vie examined, i Previously, the corona, which really is a crown of fiery tongues of flame | many of the fifty thousand miles in ; length—conld ouly be seen during an eclipse, but now we have photographs which show these flames to be ever darting forth and flickering from the sun's disk. These mighty flames oc cupy a quarter of a hour in perform ing a single flicker.—New York Led ger. _____ A woman in Portland, Me., de posited S3OO iu a savings bank in 1804 uud has seen the amount grow to 81268 by the accumulation of intereit, No woman ever kissed the Blarney etone. Of the 563 convicts in Michigan penitentiaries not ono is a woman. Lady Constance Lytton is among the most able women in English jour nalism. It has become current among fash ionable criticH to say "she dresses very intelligently." The number of women among tho immigrants arriving at New York in 1892 is 124,280. Anna Louise Cary, Mme. Nordica and Mme. Eames, all groat singers, are all natives of Maine. Mrs. Johu Jacob Astor's fine new house on Uppor Fifth avenue, New York City, is being built of white soap stone. Mrs. Richard Watson Gilder, wife of the poet, is bending all her energies at this time toward tho development of the kindergarten school system. Lady Griselda Ogilvie, sister of the Earl of Airlie, is studying to bo a nurse. She is at present a probationer in the Children 1 * Hospital, in Edin burgh. Following tho example of George Eliot, George Saiul and George Flem ing, Mrs. Clairmonte, who is coming into prominence as a novelist, calls herself "George Egertou." There's a bold schoolma'm in North Waldoboro, Me. Tho big boys locked her out of the school-house one day, but she broke the door down, and bus iness was continued at tho old stand. The Portia Law Club has been or ganized in San Francisco, Cal. Only women are to be members. The ob ject of the club is to aid women in acquiring a more general knowledge of law. The Princesses Maud and Victoria Df Wales gave their mother a piano on her recent birthday. It had been used by Paderewski when ho crossed tho oceau on the Teutonic, and was recom mended by Signor Tosti. Ono of tho prettiest women in Lou don society is said to plunge a towel in very hot water, wring it out and leave it on her face for half an hour every night beforo going to bed in stead of washing, and this lady has no wrinkles. Queen Victoria is a great lover of animals. It is said she has fifty-five dogs of all sizes, breeds and colors in her palace. Thov are housed and fed with great care, properly groomed, and in every way better cared for than a good many of her subjects. Miss Ella Weed, who died recently in New York, was one of tho first women in this country to interest her self in the higher education of women. Bhe was born in Newburg, N. Y., in 1854, and was graduated from Vassal 1 College with honors in 1873. Grant Allen dissents energetically from Sir Frederick Boyle's dictum that English women aro not as hand some as they were when ho was a youngster. His gallant contention is that the girls of the present timo— especially the middle-class girls—aro tho comeliest evor seen on the foggy little island. Miss Laura Yorke Stevenson has the oputation of being Philadelphia's greatest woman scholar. She is the curator of the Archaeological and Palaeontological Museum of tho Uni versity of Pennsylvania, and to her energetic labors is due the fact that these museums take their high rank in the museums of the world. Beautiful houso dresses aro made this winter of peacock blue, amber, crimson, silver, blue or old rose India cashmere, trimmed in some cases with black chantilly insertion and edging, in others with white silk braiding, and again with bisc or ecru lace, elaborate Persian gimps or Russian galloons the color of tho gown, with bronze and gold glints through the pattern. Miss Agnes Murphy is an enterpris ing young woman. She is tho editor of the Melbourne Pun eh, is a member of all the leading women's clubs of that city, and writes authoritatively on "Victoria and Its Resources." She calmly says that she expects to bo quite independent, financially, by tho time she is thirty, when she intends to tako up literary work in London. The Princess Bismarck has written to ono of her London friends a letter in which she says: "I cannot refrain from repeating what I have often said, 'Know that if I had had the choice of a Nationality, I should have chosen to be a free Englishwoman—fresh, culti vated, trained in liberty for an active life and looked upon by my husband as something more than a zero or a plaything.' " Kate Sanborn, who usually says very pertinent things when she talks, has made a few remarks concerning wo men's clubs. Of the papers read at tho meetings she says: "These efforts are usually too long-winded and too labored. They are exhaustive, usually going back to the beginning of the world to explain the present subject. There is too much of everything in women's clubs but fresh air, elbow room and sincere altruism." It is interesting to read of Lucy Stone's experiences in college during her four years' study at Oberliu, Ohio. She never lost a day from ill health, and she took the college course with tho men and held fair rank in her class. Nearly all the girls in college at that time were poor and worked to earn their way through. They did their own cooking, their own washing and ironing, and some of them paid their way by doing washing for tho men. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. OUT A STOOL, Women who have much housework to do should provide themselves with a cheap stool, high enough to allow a free use of the arms. In this way they may spare themselves much unneces sary standing, as ironing, dish-wash ing and multitudinous household duties that are generally gone through with while upon the feet may be dis posed of epiite as satisfactorily in a sitting posture. It is a rest, too, from time to time, to draw the feet up upon the rounds of the stool, taking all the weight of the body off the floor.—New York Journal. CARE OP FINE NEEDLEWORK. It is noticeable that in the best nee dlework the wrong side of the article looks nearly as smooth and well fin ished as the right. There are no ends and knots and no unnecessary stitches crossing the surfaces where tho right side is plain. Where these faults do occur they will be sure to show on the right side after the article has beeu laundered. It has beeu found, too, that the best imported silks are the most economical, because they wash best. Very hot water will make even these run; so if your work is mussy after it is finished, dip it in cold water, and if soap is necessary use only the best eastile on tho wrong side of tho embroidery. Rinse in cold water and bo sure that the powder used in stamping is all out. Squeeze gently when washing, and if soiled use at first a tepid water. After washing, lay the embroideries, while still damp, on a clean, thick flannel, cover with a clean cloth and press on the wrong side, ironing from tho centre of tho design toward the edges. When tho figure is woll pressed out and the linen dry, go over the plain part on the right side with a small iron. Embroideries worked in a frame wash better than those that aro not.—New York Post. HOW TO WASH TABLE LINEN. Be sure that your linen goes into no [ vessel that is not clean and freshly rinsed. See that it is put to boil in- ! side a bag of clean cheeso cloth. It' stained, wet the spots with alcohol, and wash out in clear cold water before allowing suds to touch it. Stains of milk or soft eggs must be soaked in clear cold water for ten minutes when washed. Use a mild white soap, or tho Brown Windsor that comes in long bars. Make a strong lather, only let ting the soap touch tho fabric at some obstinate grease spot. Tea cloths or others with delicate colors wash brighter if a handful of salt is added to the first suds, which should be bare ly lukewarm. Tne second may be hot ter. Wash quickly through both. Fold smoothly for tho wringer, then pop into your bag and sot to boil in cold water for ten minutes. Rinse first in hot, then in lukewarm water. Have your bluing water cold mid free from specks of color. Dip your linen in very thin starch containing a sus picion of bluing, and hang, if possible, in the sun. See that the line is clean. Take pains to hang each piece square, as if dried awry it will bo very hard to make it even again. Let everything dry thoroughly and do not dampen or fold until a little before ironing time. After a cloth is properly wet, pull tho diagonal cor ners as hard as possible and fold with a length-wise crease through tho mid dle. Roll smooth and tight and let it lie for twenty minutes. For rich da mask or embroidered cloths put an extra blanket on the ironing table under its muslin cover. Lay the em broidered part smoothly over it, right side down and press with a heavy iron just bolow scorching heat. When al most dry and very smooth, turn and iron on the right side, using very light irons on the embroidery and heavier ones on the plain round. Stretch the fabric well with the hands before pressing embroidery. When the right side is properly done, fold it lengthwise along the mid dle, then begin nt ono end and lay about six inches-lightly over ; do not fold it down but roll until all the length is coiled. Go over the cloth twice or thrice with a hot iron, chang ing irons freequeutly. Iron till the pattern shows plain on a glossy whito surface. If not thoroughly dry when ironed, hang upon tho horse for nil hour or two, then fold or roll to such compnss as required for the closet. — Mirror and Farmer. RECIPES. Rissoles of Lobsters—Mince up the meat of a boiled lobster very fine, sea son it with a little powdered mace, pepper nnd salt; qpld two onnees ol butter melted, and n sufficient quan tity of bread crumbs to make it into balls. Dip them in the well-beaten yolk of an egg, roll in bread crumbs and fry in boiling fat a nice brown. Serve them in a dish with half a pin) of good gravy. Welsh Rabbit—Grate some Glouces ter or Gruyere cheese, and pepper il with cayenne pepper. Fry some slices of bread in a little butter (on one side only) until perfectly yellow. Spread a thick coating of the grated cheese on the fried side of the bread, place the slices in a baking pan, put them in a pretty hot oven, take them out when the chesso begins to melt, and serve hot. Mashed Potato—Peel, quarter and boil about three pints of potatoes; drain thoroughly, and shako for a few minutes in an open doorway to make them mealy. Mash them well, and mix with them two ounces of butter, two yolks of eggs, salt, pepper and milk enough to make them of aproper thickness. Set on tho fire for two or throe minutes, stirring constantly, and servo hot. When on the dish smooth them with the back of a knife or scal lop them according to fancy. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—T.atest U. S. Gov't Report. R>wder PURE Beware of Oinfmenf for Catarrh That Coutain Mercury. ns mercury will surely <lestrov the sense of smell and completHyaprangethe wholesystera when entering it through t he mucous surfaces. Such articles should never bo used except on proscriptions I rom reputable physicians, as the damage t hey will do is ten fold t< t he good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh <'ure manufactured by F. J. Cheney <fe Co., i Toledo, ()., contains no mercury, ami is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood an I mucous surfaces of the system. • 111 buying Hall's ('atarrh Cure be sure toget. the genuine. ■ It is taken internally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by P. J. Cheney & <'n. Te-tiinonials free, old by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle. In this country 50,000 electric incandes cent lamps are made each day. Grimi nnd Clover Heed. The largest gtower of Urass and Ulover Seed in the world Is tialzer, La Crosse, Wis. Over 60 hardy varieties, with lowest pricesl Special low froight tp New York, Pa. and the East. IK' VOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT with 14c postage to tbo John A. Salzer Seed Co.. La Crosse, Wis., you will rec jive eleven packages grass and clover sorts and his m mini > ii farm seed catalogue: fu.lof good things for the far mer, the gardener and the citizen, A Von Moltke's Serenade. Von Moltke once wont to Lindau, is he thought, Incognito. Ho ordered i room on the ground floor In the "Bayerische Hot'' and went to bed early, but forgot to draw his blinds down. When he was just g ling to ileep he heard music drawing near. He had been recognized, alter all, and was going to be serenaded again. The difficulty was how to get dressed without being seen. He dared not I strike a light. But presently the glare of torches lit tin his room and ful. At last ho said, "Do you know, Jean Jacques, it is very strange, but 1 really thought that 1 should b< pleased to see you again? lam not. Do you think of returning to liornf to-day?" And this was when the journey between Paris and Home meant at least a fortnight's hard traveling. WATTS—I wonder how this world will get along when you and I have left it? Pot.ls—Vou'il better bewun lering how we'll get along Those @1 a Pimples 1 I Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not right—full of im- I purities, causing a sluggish and unsightly complexion. A few gji B bottles of S. S. S. will remove all foreign and impure matter, Pg p cleanse the blood thoroughly and give a clear and rosy com- Ba g plexion. It is most effectual, and entirely harmless. I (.'has. Heaton, 78 Laurel St., Phil a., says: m my blood which made me dread to shave, as small boils or pimples wonld lv cut £ thus causing shaving tr be a great annoyant Aftei taking i 1 of .§| j* m y ace clear and smooth as it should be—appetite E splendid, sleep well and feel like running a foot race, all I 11hnd' 2 T,".ofpioci"!" skin "tZI SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, Atbata, Ox & -fif - .-d.. .'ikj. .—I " Thoughtless Folks Fave t'lo Rardssl Work, Gut Quick Wilted Peoplo Uua WALTER BAKER & CO. (Th COCOA and CHOCOLATE Highest Awards World's Columbian V WA Exposition. ffjff j. m following article*, j l| 'i'|abreakfast COCOA, A f wP.I'IIKAII Jl No. 1 (IKIfOUTF, I Hi! MLuEsnu mixr okouk, m fif'TJi VANILLA CHOCOLATE, COCOA ULTTLIt, SOLD DY CROCERP EVERYWHERE. WALTER RAKER & CO., DORCHESTER, MASS. r y ▼ * -r v? t m 4 * Progressive America. :< . The most entertaining and instructive game of the century. It delightfully A teaches American geography, while it ► . is to young and old as fascinating as whist. Can be played by anynura- A ber of players. Sent fey mail, postage A prepaid, for fifteen 2-cent stamps. The Trade Company, Boston, Mass. <4 „> V T T ▼ T ▼ \ Ak A A A ~ gkTHE WALL PAPER MKKOH.\* \ Si IT 15 SELLS THE REST, Oifli I It) THE CHEAPEST I WALL PAPER Pn iter, 1.-. ..,,,1 V (iol.l Li-. nil,l Hl.' Hi'ii'l ., •■ -1118111. Or nini>lu. ■lll Woiml Slrrrt. Cllt.burgh. Pn. JAPANESE TOOTH Xr n A %.:'- uialle.l t. i i"*. l-ftpp l>rug L o.,l'iiil'<i iiln.. i'a. 1> i T 1 ' V TC TRADKMAUKB K\ imlnatl n I \ I I - ' I mi.l advice .. it. patent.i •; I:y of Invention Send fu lu vcukh-.a i.iulde.or now : -t u patent PATRICK OT ARRELL, WtHWHiITON,D O. t Worthy or Tartarln at HU nest. A posthumous anecdote of the in* i I mortal Tartarln Is related by tin | "Gaulois." It was in the gun-room, and Tartarln, after regaling ids audi ence with various thrilling tales ol I his exploits and adventures in ths chase, described the following terrifll experience: "The other day," he said, ! "in a fearful snowstorm, I found my self, without a gun or any weapon, face to face with three wolves." "Well, what did you do?" "Well, 1 simply stared at thi-m, with my hands In my pockets, and whistled." "Ho you mean to say they didn't attack you?" "They couldn't; they were In a cage." In Professor Garner's cass the conditions were reversed.—Lon don Globe. IT is staled that a millionaire who died recently at Vienna had such an antipathy io darkness that lie left in structions ill his will for the illumina tion of his tomb. An elcelrie.light is to be kept burning in (he vault during a wholo year, and even the interior of i the coilin is to be electrically lighted. TIIE MICROSCOPE. A careful microscopical TPS examination aivl chemical 1 valuable aid in determining lISL the nature of many chronic rv-M diseases, particularly these I R I of the nervous system, fif-S j blood, liver, kidneys, and ÜBj if I ! tbo Bladder, Gravel, uyd ixortß** 2 * other Diseases of the Uri- 3jp nary Organs uro success- # -tvvcVv fully treated; Nervous Do -1 bility, Exhaustion. Dropsy, t other Chronic Maladies are 1 ' cured without seeing the pntient. Write for ; question blanks, treatise, and other informa tion, describing case, ami inclose ill cents, in stamps, to pay postage. Address, WORLD'S Drsi-K.N-SAI- , MEDICAC- Asso, IATIOIV, No. IsW Main St reel, iiuf falo, N. Y. " COLCHESTER " Sf^NGiCOT i- ,iL.< '' ' n- <1 ottt.-r-. I sole extends ti:. wir. i. n. ; ' •- w +\ of tho hm' n 1.. ■>; i. • ; proMM'tillg I fir liiinli 111 , 7' r, "" u ' 1 gingt *V '-. I I -1 A/Utility Tliroilglioul. V N I 8 'O4 ?m |WORLDi \ FAIR ( r I t r H AWARDS MEDALS j and "mo Diploma for lli aim - 1 1 ••, j . - hii'lp.' liiiriimit. i j ALLIANCE CARRIAOB CO.. CINCINNATI. o. H thtni• ijn<l n. ft Ipi . 'nof I,',,,> r ' jJ
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers