Your nt'rvus upon rich, red blood and you will not be nervous. Biood is made rich and pure by ' rh? One True Rlood Purifier. Alldrugjlsts. SI. Hood's Pills are always reliable. ~5 cento- Harold In Annoyed. Harold Frederic is much annoyed bj the betrayal of his Identity with "George Forth," under which name he published his clever book, "March Hares." The book has already estab lished Itself as a favorite In London Mr. Frederic resorted to anonymity in |this cose because he did not want to Interfere with the sale of his more am bitious book, the novel "Illumination." Society Women Who Collect Fans. One of the fans which Mrs. Almeric Paget inherited from her mother. Mrs. Whitney, lias gold and Ivory sticks, a lace mount, and is valued at the trifling Bum of SI,OOO. Among enthusiastic col lectors of fans are Mrs. Sloane, Mrs. Whitelaw Iteid, Mrs. Cornelius Van flerbilt and Mr®. Seward Webb, who own fortunes in these fluttering bau bles. WOMEN WANT TO KNOW. TO WHOM CAN THEY TELL THEIR TROUBLES? A Woman Answers "To MeAnxious Inquirers Intelligently Answered—Thou sands of Grateful Letters. Women regard it as a blessing- that they can talk to a woman who fully Understands their every ailment, aud fl the examina ments and the of knowing by pts them to seek 3 constantly. Female diseases yield to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound at once. Inflammation, ulcera tion, falling and displacement of the womb, ovarian troubles, spinal weak ness and kidney complaints, all have their symptoms, and should be "nipped in the bud." Hearing-down pains, back ache, headache, nervousness, pains in groins, lassitude, whites, irregularities, dread of impending evil, blues, sleep lessness, faintness, etc. Here is testimony right to the point: " The doctors told rae that unless I went to the hospital and had an opera tion performed, I could not live. I had falling, enlargement and ulceration of the womb. 44 1 was in constant misery all the time; my back ached; was always tired. It was impossible -X \ for me to walk uVJ far or stand long '\ at a time. Sanative a trial. 44 1 took three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and used two packages of Sanative Wash, and I am now almost well. I am stouter and healthier than I have ever been in my life. My friends and neigh bors and the doctors are surprised at my rapid improvement. I have told them all what I have been taking." —Mrs. Annetta Bickmeier, Bellaire, Belmont Co., 0. Why pay the same price for the inferior " just A as good " when you *s*Jj(A, can get &JLP >■ > b,as VELVETEEN * SKIRT BINDING by asking and insisting? If your dealer WILL NOT supply you we will. Samples shewing labels and materials mailed free. " Home Dressmaking Made Easy." a new 72 pag. book by Miss Emma M. Hooper, of the Ladies' Hom< Journal, tells in plain words hov/ to make dresses a home without previous training ; mailed for 25c. S. H. & M. Co., P. O. Box 699, N. Y. City, PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W MORRIS. WASHINGTON,D.G. Late Principal Examiner U. S. Pension Bureau. Syrs. iu last war, 15 adjudicating claims, ntty. since. T 1:1. I S VOl K FORTI NK with i-.-n pi-tui .■ .j your future husband or wife. Sent! 10c silver, date of birth,to Astrologer, box 1772,Boston,Mass PNU 33 0 THE SWEETEST SONG. [ asked a famous singer who had sung The songs which half a listening world had stirred, What was tho song that touched his heart the most — What was tho sweetest song he overheard? The singer mused a moment then replied: "In tropic climesourgoodshipiaybecalmod? The sea was glass, the sky a blazing fire. Malignant fever hold me in its toils 'Till in a mad delirium I raved Of quenohless flames, and burning, endless thirst. "One day I woke, though still I seemed to dream: I hoard the gurgling waters sweeping past. The cool winds fanned my koad yet hot from pain; Delicious rest and languor (filed my soul; "And, then, O! welcome sound, The cry "Land ho!" The sailors gathered on the deck to see, And us the good ship ,bounded through the foam They sang tho sweetest song on earth to me, 'Twos " 'Home, Sweet Home.'" STORY OF A MUTINY. irci* , ~/ITH all the brutal (if \/ \f savagery of the V stories occasion v/wA ally brought in /J Mai -o from sea, it is doubtful if there is iBVWA one reo ° r d 6 d i-r ■ which has a more surprismg com vi bination of fiend )y{A ish courage, abject cowardice and un daunted pluek and nerve than that which was told to the world early in 1886. Tho story of the mutiny ou board the American ship Frank N. Thayer, the murder of three of the crew and two officers, and the frightful wounds inflicted on Captain Robert K. Clarke, followed by the firing of the ship and the escape of tho captain and his wife and daughter and the survivors of the crew in an open boat, which finally reached St. Helona, sent a shudder through the civilized world, and was the occasion of newspaper stories and investigations almost with out number. Captain Clarke will never recover from the offets of that terrible fight; but he is still con nected with the sea, serving as shore captain for the ships that are left of the fleet to which the Thayer be longed. He has a charming home in Port Chester, where the brave woman who saved him from death and the little daughter who was on the vessel during the awful affair, but who is now a stately young lady of twenty years, do all they can to blot out the memory of the tragedy. The ship, which wars owned by Ed ward Lawrence, of Boston, and was laden wtth 10,000 bales of hemp, valued at over $250,000, sailed from Mauila for New York in November, 1885, carrying a crew of twenty-two men, inoluding two Malays and two Chinamen. The Malays were Manila men, shipped at tho last moment to take the places of two men who had decided to remain in the Phillippine Islands, and thoy were the ones who committed the crimes. There was nothing remarkable about the voyage until the night of January 2, 18S0, when tho ship was about seven hun dred miles northeast of St. Helena. The captaiu had gone below and fallen asleep, and every soul ou board, ex cept thoso two bloodthirsty savages from Manila, was free from uuy thought or danger or suspioion. It was this feeling of security which was a fatal circumstance, for to it may be traced the panic and bewilderment which unnerved the crew so that they wore the victims of tho two wretches who had been their messmates for more than two months. In the St. Helona Guardian, Jamos A. MiKnight, who was then the American Consul at St. Helena, gave the following account of the happonings of that night and those which followed: "Tho two mates (E. Holmos and W. Davis) wero sitting on the after hatoh talking whon the two coolies came along, one of them saying he was siok. At tho first word spoken they fell on the mates with sharp kuivos in each hand, cutting them both to death, the second mato being able after the blow to run to the cabin door and call, 'Captain Clarke, Captain Clarke," twioe beforo ho fell dead, and the mate dy ing in the forecastle three hours later. Captain Clarke sprang from his bed and half asleep started up the after companionway, thinking the mate had called him to see a vessel which was ahead in the evening and whioh they had been afraid they might overhaul. As soon as he roached the top of the steps he received a stab on the top of the head and felt a hand grab him by the throat. He was in his nightelothes and empty handed, hut seeing the murderous intent of his antagonist, and that he was one of the coolies, ho struok out with all his might, hitting the murderer in tho eyes and tempor ary blinding him so that he could not see to strike. Tho Malay continued to hack at the captain with his knife, however, till they went down the stops together, where the captain would have overcome him had ho not slipped in a pool of his own blood and fallen to the floor. The coolie then gave him a terrible slash in the left side, and, thinking he was dead, went up the steps to tho deck. The captain was not dead, however, but obtained a revolver and again approaohed the door, calling to the man at the wheel, a sailor named Malone, to shut the outside door at the head of the com panionway. 'I can't sir,' was the re ply. 'Why not?' demanded the cap tain. 'There's somebody there, sir,' replied Malone. 'Who is it?' asked the captain, but the mau could not tell him." This was only the beginning of the itruggk', and the remainder of tbe story tells bow the captain, returning to the forward part of the cabin, found the second mate dead on the floor and one of the sailors so paralyzed by fear that all he could do was to beg the captain to hide him from the Malays. Captain Clarke did not know whether the man was to be trusted, and told him to go away, and the craven then looked himself into the bathroom, where the Malay from whom ho was escaping found him and triod to induce him to open the door. He would not, and the next thing was an attack on the man at the wheel, who was stabbed and thrown overboard while still yell ing for help. A moment after this one of the murderers smashed in one of the cabin windows, and as he was about to enter through tho aperture the captain fired two shots, striking one of tho men in the foot and putting them to flight. Then, with the doors and windows barricaded, Captain Clarke was placed in a corner where he could command all the entrances to the little fort and his wife began to dress his wounds. His head and face were almost hacked to pieces, and from that terrible wound in the left side the lower lobe of his lung pro truded nearly four inches. With the coolness and courage born of dospera tion she pushed the lung back into place and sewed up the wouud with a needle and thread, and stopped the bleeding which was rapidly taking away the captain's life. All this time they were entirely ig norant as to who were engaged in the mutiny or what had caused it, and ex . pected at every moment that the cabin door would be lorced and the murder ous work completed. In the mean time affairs at the forecastle were by no means peaceful. Holmes, the mate, had reached there and told the men that one of the East Indians had cut him all to pieces. Six of the men made a sortie with capstan bars as weapons, but four of the party were stabbed to death, two escaping, one to the rig ging and the other to the bathroom. All this had taken less than half an hour, and then the Malays barricaded the forecastle door from tho outside. Having made both ends of the ship se cure from the decks, the Malays next turned their attention to E. Boothke, the carpenter, and the man on the lookout, whom they butchered, and then they had t he decks to themselves, save for the Chinese cook, Ah Say, who was worse than useless, and ho they imprisoned in his galley. The next day, Sunday, the captain fired a few shots through the skylight of the cabin in the hope of hitting the mutineers and attracting tho attention of the men who might be faithful to the ship. The day and tho night passed, and on Monday morning, the wator in the cabin being exhausted, the captain made his way to the bathroom, where the cowardly sailor had taken refuge, and then learned for the first time that the ship was at the mercy of two half wild Malays, The captain then determined to make a desperate effort to regain control of his vessel, but the Malays had prepared for battle, and had built a barricade on the roof of the foreca'oin and armed themselves with harpoons and javelins, made by lashing knives to the ends of long pcles. The sailors, by order of the captain, kept up such a fusilade of revolver shots that the Malays were finally dis lodged from their breastworks, and the captaiu, firing through the cabin to where he knew they were standing, struck one of them, wound ing him so badly that ho ran to the forward part of the ship, and, after putting a plank overboard, went over himself. Then a man who had been concealed in the upper rigging came down to the deck, the captain having forced open tho companionway, and tho sailor who was with him reaohing the deck through the skylight, the men in the forecastle wero released. While the men were rejoioing over their rolease, smoke was seen coming from the after hatoh where the mates had been killed, and it was found that the companion of the Malay who had jumped overboard had secreted him self there and sot fire to the hemp. The crew did all that was possible to fight the fire, but without avail, and while they were running a line of hose into the hatoh the Malay came out with a jump and went overboard. The ship was doomed, and after one boat had bcon swamped by the men who had been assigned to it all hands were crowded into another boat, and after rigging a sail of blankets on a mast made of three oars lashed to gether, the captain pointed tho nose of tho little vessel for St. Helena, 700 miles away, and finally reached the island. He and his wife and child reached the United States by steamer, and the sailors were cared for by the authorities. Eor dramatio completeness, grim romanoe and heart-freezing terror, there are few tales ot the sea which equal that of the Frank N. Thayer, as there are few which reflect so much credit on the noble qualities of one sea oaptain's wife, for there oan be little doubt that with the death of Captain Clarke the terrible story would never have been told, and the loss of the Thayer would have been put down as one of those mysteries of which the annals of tho sea are full.— New York Tribune. Guarding Royalty's Gold Plato. About 10,000 pieces of gold plate came up to town from Windsor for tho State concert. It was brought by special train under a guard of soldiers, and was hedged round at every stop with as elaborate a system of reooipts as tho heirloom jewels of the Empress of Austria. There is about $10,000,. 000 worth of plate in the care of the gold pantry department.—London Leader. There are 1087 papers in tho United States in the German language. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. A POLISH FOR LINES. A laundry polish for shirts, collars nod cult's may be made as follows: Melt together one ounoe of white wax and two ounces of spermaceti with a large spoonful of salt. Dissolve these ingredients over a slow tire and pour into a wet cup to cool. Make boiled starch in the usual way, cooking it slowly ior twenty minutes, and for every tablespnonfui of dry starch used put in alum of the above prepara tion about as large as a cherry. Use no cold starch and do not sprinkle. When the starched pieces are dry, lay them in a wet towel for two hours and bring up the gloss by rubbing evenly with the heel of a polishing iron. The great secret in glazing starched gooiis is to use the polishing iron properly. HOUSEWIVES SHO ULD. Try keeping vogetablo with the stalks in water till cooked. Try keeping eggs by burying in salt. Try keeping carrots and turnips by burying in layors in a box of snnd. Try for seeding raisins pouring boil ing water over tliem and then drain ing. Try roasting or boiling meat over as hot a fire as possible. Try roasting potatoes with meat by paring and putting on a rack in the pan. Try hickory nut macaroons made of five unbeaten eggs, one pound of ohopped nuts, one pound of powdered sugar, one tablespoonful of flour, two small teaspoonfuls of baking powder, dropped in tiny cakes in waxed paper in the pan. Try rubbing irons with a little wax to prevent starch sticking. Try rubbing ink stains from wash goods by rubbing with yolk of egg before washing. Try adding a pinch of salt to the white of ogg in beating to inako it froth. SOFT SHELL CRABS. "There is no danger of eating soft shelled crabs," observed an epicure, "if they are fresh, but they aie poison if they are not. They should bo well seasoned, and an extra lot of peppei put on them as a precaution, especially if tho weather is vory hot when they are eaten, or if they are eaten shortly before one retires. It is the habit of many persons to eat soft shelled crabs at night time. I do not know but that they taste better tl\cn. It is somewhat dangerous to many to drink milk after eating crabs. Milk seems to develop the colio that follows eat ing soft shelled crabs with some per sons. "Another thing that should be re membered, and that is a sharp thunder storm will kill soft-shell crabs, and even the hard-shelled crab at times. Unless the soft-shelled crab has been cooked before the thunder storm, I think the safer plan would bo to de cline to eat it. Under all other con ditions there is no danger in partak ing of them, for I do not think any one would be criminal enough to cook a dead crab, hard or soft shell. The proper way to kill a crab is to throw him into a kettle of boiling water. I know that some people think this is cruel, but it is no more cruel than it is to stab them with a needle or kill them with chloroform, as I have known some extra sensitive porsons to do."— Washington Star. RECirES. Hominy Croquettes—To a oupful of small-grained boiled hominy add a tablespoonful melted butter aud stir hard, moistening by degrees with a teacupful of milk. Put in a teaspoon ful of sugar and a well-beaten egg. Roll into oval balls with floured hands, dip in beaten egg, then cracker crumbs, and fry in hot lard. Ramakins—Beat together two eggs, one tablespoonful melted butter, one teaspoonful anctovy sauce, one-half saltspooufnl salt and half ns much oayenno; then add three tablespoon fuls grated cheese, and, lastly, one tablespoonful flour wet with cream. Spread thickly upon rounds of lightly toasted bread and brown lightly. Chicken Fricassee—Keep the chick ep hot in the cupful of broth. Put it into a dish. Add to the broth a well beaten egg and a tablespoonful of but ter ; boil this for a moment; put in a teaspoonful chopped parsley, salt spoonful of salt, half as much pepper and thicken with a teaspoonful of flour. Pour over tho chicken and garnish with hard-boiled eggs and curled parsley. Corn Soup—Cut a chicken into pieces aud boil in one gallon water till tender. Take out the chicken with one cupful of tho liquid. Cut the kernels from eight ears of corn, pat into tho pot and stew gently for an hour longer. Season witb a tea spoonful of salt, saltspoonful of pep per and a sprig of parsley. Thicken with a tablespoonful of rice flour and send to the table without straining. Potatoes a l'ltalienne —Whip six hot medium-sized boilod potatoes light with a silver fork. Beat in four tea spoonfuls of milk, a tablespoonful of butter, the yolks of two well-beaten eggs, a small teaspoonful of salt and saltspoonful of pepper. Whip into a cieamy heap beforo adding, with a few dextrous strokes, the beaten whites of tho two eggs. Pile roughly on a dish and brown in a quick oven. Crumpets—Three cupfuls warm milk, half cup yeast, two tablespoon fuls melted butter, one saltspoonful salt and the same of soda. Flour to make a good batter. Set these in gredients as a sponge, leaving out the butter aud soda. In the morning beat in the melted butter and the soda dis solved in a littlo water, and a half cupful sifted flour. Pill patty pans or muftin rings with tho mixture. Let them stand fifteen minutes and "bake. Cost of Wild Animals. People in need of wild animals, either to replenish their spring stock or to start a menagerie, will lie interested in a price list .just issued by a company Unit makes it its business to scour llie jungles and hunt through the forests for speeimeus of natuial history. The prices quoted in the original are in pounds sterling, but we reduce litem to dollars in the follow- The lion comes first on the list, us he fits the king of beasts. Tho most ex pensive var.o y is the South African lion, which is quoted at 41,1500. llis wife is marked down to 450(V The North Af rican lion comes cheaper, at just half the price, while the Asiatic lion is worth 4125. The lionesses are put at 4400 and $375, Royal Bengal tigers can be had tit 4750 each: tigercsses at 4450, and cubs at $250. A serviceable hippopotamus may tie had for $1,650. Buctriau camels come at $250 each and dromedaries at $l5O. The kangaroo varies greatly in price, and so does the chimpanzee, both being quoted ut from $75 to SI,OOO. The ourang outang is marked at SSOO straight: baboons from SSOO to $750; Brazilian apes from $2 0 to SSOO, while monkeys may be hud at prices varying from $5 lo $25 each. The most expensive bear quoted is the grizzly, wbicli ranges from $-itJO to $000; then comes the polar bear at $250, and the brown bear at SSO each. libinoceroses coine high this spring. You can't expect to get a good one of the African variety under SB,OOO, but the In dian rhinoceros is priced ut $2,000. El ephants are worth from $1,500 to $2,500, and giraffes are put down at SO,OOO per pair. Ostriches are worth S4OO per pair. Very few wild beasts, birds or reptiles are ou the bargain counter. Sucill alliga tors may be had as low as $2.50, and older and tougher ones as high as SIOO. The range in crocodile prices is the same. Ireals arc quoted at $25, but we do not advise ladies to purchase tliem with the idea of raising their own sealskin sacques. Satisfactory rattlesnakes can lie had as low us sls, while pythons range from that figure up to SIOO. Cranes and storks The price list puts the value of a full grown gorilla at $50,00:1, but the com pany does not guarantee lo produce one even at that figure. That is only an es timate of what the creature w. uld he worth if the dealer had him to sell. ADOPTS AMERICAN MODES. Wife of New Japanese Minister Has Discarded Native Dress. Among the recent additions to diplo matic circles in Washington are Min ister Hoslii of Japan and Ills wife. Mine. Hoshl is about 33 years of age and of the most pleasing personal ap pearance. She is short, probably 4 feet 10 Inches in height. Her dark hair is very abundant, her large brown eyes are soft, yet bright, and her com plexion is clear and rosy. In dress, her costume Is that of the American woman, yet as she hns only recently laid aside her native gowns, her ward robe of western robes Is limited. She has placed herself in the hands of a tutor, In order to master the intricacies of the English language, and by next winter will no doubt be able to pre side at a tea in the most approved style, as far as conversational ability is con cerned. Mme. Hoshl has been married ten years, but there is only one ehiid in the JAPANESE MINISTER AND FAMILY, family, a boy of 6 years of age. His name is Hoshi Kikaru, aud he is a bright little fellow, wandering about the house In evident loneliness for his many playmates in the East. The wife of the minister is a fine musician and devotes much of her time to that art. Like Resets Like. Like begets like, and that is the foun dation of merit in all breeds. The fact that a breed had fixed characteristics, which can be transmitted front genera tion to generation, enables the farmer who uses pure breeds to Improve ids animals every year. Even when he lias apparently reached perfection the care ful selection of the best every year will further increaso the productive capac ity of the herd. It costs more to keep a bicycle in re pair than it does to keep an old girl looking young. . a line !to tell you that if you want to < | i • do your washing easily, in the "up ] i 11 to date" way, tho Sunlight way,] 1 1 , without rubbing your clothes all to .' ] • pieces (and your hands too) you must", 11 Cleanses clothes and most rv i I „ everything else-with B>| |J , leas Inbor aud greater ■ i; comfort. k ever Bros., Ltd., Hudson Jt Harrison Sts., N. Y. ' 1 Ornamental Swallows. A flight of swallows made of the | ! most glittering brilliants is one of the ' newest ornaments with which the sum mer matron delights to adorn herself. Each of the Ave jeweled birds can be I separated and worn either as a brooch or as an ornament for the hair. To [ those who find the swallow too modest r. device the robin redbreast is a fash- I ionahle substitute. The robin is mount- ( cd on a branch of leaves and berries, and has gay, jeweled wings nnd a breast of enameled iridescent red. A conceit i that is move odd than beautiful takes ' the form of a white rabbit, his body I all pearly, his pink eyes of the bains j ruby, and his long ears are pearls with J suggestions of pink about their tips. ! Often, byway of further elaboration, the little rabbit is mounted upon his ; hind legs upon a gold bar, and is gaz ing upon a butterfly glistening with golden beryls and purple amethysts. Britain's Railwny Clearing-House. ' The railway clearing-house is one of j the largest offices in Britain. It has a j staff of 1,600 clerks and 450 out-of j door officers. 'Tenny wlsa unit ponn-l foolish" are thosi* I Who think II economy to use cheap soda nnd ; ronin soaps, instead of the itood old Dobbins' ' Electric Soap; for sale by all trrocera since j i. Try it ouce. lie sure, buy genuine. The Microscopical Association at a meet ing in Pittsburg upheld and indorsed the practice of vivisection. BTATE or onto, ( ITT OF TOLEDO, 1 LUCAS COUNTY. J M * FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. ( HINEY A CO.,doing business in theOityofToledo. County End .State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for eacn and every case of CATAKKH that cannot be cured by the use HALL'S CATAKKH CURE. C . . . FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my I < —'—"i presence, this 6th day of December. ■JBEAL.- A. D. 1866. A. W. GLEASON, tTTTT , , Notary Public. i Hull's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and 1 acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces ! of the system. Send for testimonials, free. t J - CHUNKY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. FJTSstopped freeand permanentfycured. No fits after first day's use of DK. KLINE'S GREAT NERVE RESTORED. Free SB trial bottieand treat ise. Send to Dr. Kline. il Arch St., Phila.. Pu. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothing Syrupfor Children teething, softens the gums, reduces iullamma tion, ullays paiu; cures wind colic. ~sc u bottle. I cannot speak too highly of Piso's Cure for j Consumption.—MßS. FRANK MODUS, 21 .j \V. ud £U.-Niiiv ilork. Oct. ~l>. 'l4, BIG AND GOOD. ( PLUC^I t Sometimes quality is sacrificed in the effort to give big quantity for little money. No doubt about that. A But once in a while it isn't. For instance, there's" BATTLE AX." F=L . The piece is bigger than you ever saw py r before for 5 cents. And the quality is, as many a man has said, 44 mighty good." 'Y~r Tnere's no guess work in this statement. isf It is just a plain fact. You can prove it by investing 5 cents in " BATTLE AX." TW IF SILVER [fa I TCI i ? AERMOTOR double In price, then metals must also double in price. VttV. 5 aggr COMPANY. as diey are gjjS labor. If labor doubles in cost and the prod- ® KSlfw- *Ba o CAMO ■ Pran- nct °' m ' no doubles in cost, Aermotors, lumps. Spiral fli iHf siico (M ■ t. Worth P'P®. Fittings, Cylinders, Tanks and Substructures, being the Wo T'flPra rrT San Antomo, Tet.; Lin' product of the mine ana labor, must nlso double in cost and n| gtfu uM city,' SMD'.Uoi', same dollars if silver wins, or if people think it Will win. MM L'Wt pffl Mo.; Bioox Cltr, 4MB?>)MKLurar?t fiV BC 9 "FIU I in favor of buying now. The DH qllSo. IH Dul,ul ' l,,n * vw "sßa^£^ N A > H 1 tu iv I advance may come in a month HI PO *• R6 '."hJi*" nr * n a Aermotor prices will not advance unless KB HI iio Tijl o compelled by an advance in labor and material. Onr jW rt Sfl ern 'wu.- prices on Brnss Cylinders are 40* below anything ever nuoted. £Mf PeoTta.Dt.'iDetroit W7|l> """' ® ur otilur Ijopds are as low as they can be produced, mm 111 oh.: Buffalo. N Y.; CI even with our splendid facilities. A general rush to cover Kw Tftrlt 0,l fll future needs, while $i buys so much, may nnlcklv exhaust our a* Bwna.liMi. till immense atock and compel the advanoe. Great sa vine can . I EVERY FARMER IN THE NORTH CAN MAKE MORE MONEY IN THE MIDDLE SOUTH. He ran make twice as much. n can sell tils Northern farm and get twice as many acres for his money down here. We sell improved farma for $N to s2(l nn acre, l'leuty of railroads-four ol them No droughts. Neither too hot nor too cold—climate just right. Northern farmers are coining every week. If you are mterested write for FItKE pamphlet ami ask all the questions you want to. li it a pleasure to us to answer them. KOUTUEKN HOMESP.EIvEItS' LAM) COMPANY, JSomervUle, Tenn. You Will Realize that " They Live Well Who Live Cleanly," if You Use SAPOLIO Comes With a better understanding cf the transient nature of the many phys ical ills which vanish before proper ef forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in ! the knowledge that so many forms of j sickness are not due to any actual dis j ease, but simply to a constipated conai j tion of the system, which the pleasant : family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only i remedy with millions of families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly by all ! who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the | one remedy which promotes internal l cleanliness, without debilitating the , organs on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pur* chase, that you have the genuine which is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all rep* Utable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, then laxa tives or other remedies are not needed- If afflicted with any actual disease, ode may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, and with j the well-informed everywhere, Svrupof j Figs stands highest and is most largely j used and gives most general satisfaction. THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DiME NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. Classics, Letters, Science, Law, Civil, Me chanical and Electrical Engine erin w . TIIOIOIIKII Preparatory and Commercial Courses. Ecclesiastical students at special ratee. Rooms Free. Junior or Senior Year, Collegiate Courses. St. Edward's Hall, lor boys under 18. The 105 th Term will open September Nth, JSWtt. Catalogues sent Free on application to Very Rev. A. .Vlorrissej, C. S. C., President. 1* N U 33 HD Hill dn<l WHISKY hai.lt cured, book t-eat Ul lUffl UIUL. Dr. 13. M. WOOLLKV. Atlauiu.lia
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers