How Jefferson Made His Bible. There was one book in this collection of the papers of Jefferson which im pressed me particularly. Jefferson had always been described as a free think er, or infidel, and yet here was a great, big. red morocco book, which he had made himself, and which had stamped upon it in gilt letters "The Life of Jesus of Nazareth." The reading matter, all that wasn't in Jefferson's handwriting, was made up of excerpts clipped from all sorts of publications, including the Bible, of everything which bore on the history of the Savior and his work. Jef ferson had gone laboriously over the Bible, clipped out everything which bore the remotest reference to the Sav ior, and then arranged it in something like sequence and pasted it in his book. There were also clippings in Latin, Greek, French, German and Italian. Everything which carried the story of the Savior, and especially anything of ancient date, no matter what language It appeared in, he had pasted in this book.—Dan Quinn. in Kunsas City Star. Respect for the Queen. The good Queen Victoria hopes for a peaceful adjustment of all differences between the United States and Great Britain. The good Queen has always had the good will and respect of the American republic.—Detroit Journal Rattled. To make a mad dog 10 order, tie a tin pan to hie tail. A man mude mad is one who. after suffering 10. 15, 20 years with rheuma tism, finds that ty the use of a bottle of St Jacobs Oil he is cured. He feels the waste of his life in pain, with tho 10-s of time, place and money, and then reflects that for the expense of 50c. he rouM have saved all this and lived free of pain; it is enough to make him mad. Most of our sufferings are in tensified by delav in seeking relief, andthtre is much worth knowing us regards the cure ot pain that we find out at last only bv the use of the best cure. It is worth knowing that for the cure of rheumatism there is special virtue in The Great Remedy for Pain. St. Jacobs Oil, aud as so much can be saved by its use, the cost is really nothing. A I.urge Telegraph System. The average number of messages handled everyday on the B. (). system is 53,(KM1, ex clusive of train orders. '1 he B. A O. has *2,2.>2 miles of telegraph wire, of which they use 7,240 for Company's business and the bal ance is leased to the Western Union. There arc;JS4 telegraph offices on the line, of which '£l4 are reporting Western Union offices. There is employed in this department 750 men. ex clusive of linemen. The service of the Com pany's plant is considerably augmented by the use of several multiplex systems. Shake Into Your shoes Allan's Foot-Ene, H pDwder for the feet. It cure- painful, swollen, smarting feet, and in stantly takes the sting out of earns and bun ions. Jt J the vre\tcst comfort th-cjoverv of the aae. Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fit ling or new shoe* feel easy. It n certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tirei, ach ing feet. Iry it to-.lay. Sold by all druggist 4 and snoe store-. Hv tn iil for 2V. in stamps. 1 rial package PUKE. Address, Allen S. Oiin- SLeti, Le Hoy, N. V. CASCAHFT-J stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c, flow's This? We offer One Hundred A) Hilars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bv Hairs Catarrh Cure. F- J. CHUNKY & Co., Toledo, O. " c. the undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney tor the .ast 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable in all business transactions aud tluancinliy able to carry out any obliga tion made by their firm. WKHT<FC TKUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WJJLDINO, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Dru/gists, Toledo, Ohio. Hail's Catarrh Cure is laker, internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces or the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 7 >r. per bat tie. Sold by all Druggists. Hull's Family Pills arc the best. The astonishing statement is made, but borne out by facts, that the difference of one mill jH'r ton per mile or. freight carried by all railroads in the United States, makes a differ ence in the revenue of eighty millions of dollars. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness alter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Ureal Nerve Kedorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dit. R. H. KI.INK, Ltd., 031 Arch St., Philu., Pa. Try Graiu.O! Try Oraln-O'. Ask your grocer to-day to show you a o\cfc* nge of Grain-U, the new .ood drink taac t *ke< the place of coffee. The children may drink it without Injury as well as the adult. Al. who try it like it. Gr.tin-0 boa that rich seal brown of Mo-jha or Java, out it is made from pure grains, and the m st delicate stomach re ceives it without distress. One-quarter the price ot coffee. 15 cts. and 25 cts. per package, bold by all grocers. We think Piso's Cure for Consumption is the only medicine for Coughs. JENNIE PINCKAKI), Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1,1891. JUPT try a lCc. box of Cascarets. the finest liver end wo ov • made. TriiA Bl °° d El £ Purifier Such a medicine you need at once to remove the impurities which have accumulated in your blood during winter. Such a medicine is Hood's Sarsaparilla. Therefore take Hood's Sarsaparilla now. It will do you wonderful good. It will purify your blood, give you an nppetite, and cure all humors. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is sold by all druggists. Price SI, six for $5. Hood's Pills W ° The f ° 0 The " Tho 111 | Best. Rest. Test. | There are two kinds of sarsaparilla: The best and the (Uli rest. Tho trouble is they look alike. And when tho rest (w) dress like tho best who's to tell them apart? Well, "tho tree Wf||) is known by its fruit." That's an old test aud a safe one. f.fc) And the taller tho tree tho deeper tho root. That's another ff-~\ (S||P test. What's tho root, tho record of theso sarsaparillas 1 Tho \S) ono with tho deepest root Is Aycr's. Tho ono with tho richest /©sjSt fruit; that, too, is Aycr's. Aycr's Sarsaparilla has a record of (l§h Ixalf a century of cures ; a record of many modals and awards— (flft culminating in tho medal of the Chicago World's Fair, which, ||||| admitting Aycr's Sarsaparilla as tho best—shut its doors against the rest. That was greater honor than the modal, to he tho only {Mm Sarsaparilla admitted as an exhibit r.t tho World's Fair. If you (pp) x; : - N want to get tho best sarsaparilla of your druggist, hero's an JS\ ((||P infallible rulo : Ask for tho best and you 'll get Ayer's. Ask (||p) for Aycr's and you'll get the best. A VETERAN'S WIFE. Affected With Heart Disease and Given Up to Die. Saved in a Wonderful Way. From the Press, Utica, JV. Y. There is no one better known or respected in the village of Brookfleld, Madison Co., New York, than Mrs. John Fisk, the wife ol an old resident and veteran of tho war of the Rebellion. In April of this year, Mrs. Fisk lay at death's door from neuralgia and heart disease, the family physician having recom mended her to settle all her worldly affairs, as she was liable to be taken at any minute, and inquiring friends expected at eaoh visit to hear that she had passed away. But Mrs. Fisk, to the surprise of her neigh bors aud physlciAns. suddenly began to mend, and now she is as strong and healthy a woman of her advanced age (76 years) as can be found., and really does not appear nearly as old as she is. The following is her own story of how she was cured: "I consider it is a duty to mvs-lf and the community to tell of my extraordinary re covery from what was thought by my physi cians. my husband and friends to' be a Jatal illness I had long been suffering Irom neuralgia in its worst form, enduring agonies that only those who huve und-rgone Such torments know, until my heart becume so affected functionally and organically, that the doctor said I was liab'e at auy time to pass away. He had done all in his power for me, and 1 thank him much for his kind ness aud attention, and believe him t > Lie a good, luiitiful physician. 1 was not disposed to die, however, if I could help it, aud lie having done all he could, I felt at liberty to use any other means that held out a chance of life, and determined to try a remedy that had been recommend* I by a friend who had been at death's door from rheumatism and heart disease, but who now is in good heali b. "Whatever doubt I may have had us to this remedy's efficacy iu a dissimilar disease, to that from which he had sufferM, was dis pelled on reading in the Press of a case iden tical with my own being cured, with the name and ad iresa of the person who hud been so benefited. So my husband who now was anxious that I should at once take tho treatment, purchased, for mo a box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I took them according to directions, and within a very short time the pains began to disappear, my heart's ac tions become normal, uud four weeks ago I ceased taking them, as I am entirely cured, and able to do my housework as well as when I was a young woman. "I had always, uutil I tried Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, looked with suspicion on uli ad vertised proprietary medicines, but now my ideas have uudergone a wondrous change in that direction, for under God's all wise Providence. 'Pink Pills' have renovated me, and apparently given mo a new lease of life. "This is no secret in this locality, and 1 hope this certificate maybe the means of other sufferers iu distant places securing the same benefits that I have received. "CLABIXDA FISK." Pink Pills are 9old in boxes (never in loose form by the dozen or hundred, and the pub lic ure cauiioned against numerous imita tions sold ia this shape) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Will iams' Medicine Company. WHEN bilious or costive, eat a Caonret, candy cathartic; cure guaranteed; 10c„ 25c. REMAIN UNCHANGED. Goldbeaters' Toole onil Cooke' Cape ns They Were in Ancient Times. In almost every kind of trade known to man the years have brought mani fold charges In the way of tools, Im proved machinery, advanced ideas as to the manipulation of material and numberless aids from the liehls of science, the workshop of the chemist, the inventor and the artist. But there is one trade in which no advance lias been made aud that Is in the goldbeat er's trade. The same tools and t lie same appliances are used now as in the days when Solomon built his temple and the art flourished in ancient times. When Tyre and Sldon ruled the was, when Carthage disputed with Rome the supremacy of the world, the gokllieat crs of those days worked with the same implements as those used nowadays. It Is a very singular thing that In all this endless change, this rearranging and shifting, the goldbeaters' trade should still be conducted on Its ancient basis and stand primitive in relations to the other trades and nrts that have progressed so steadily and Importantly. Another curious feature of the trades Is the badge of the cook's cap. It is the same cap nowadays as the cap worn by the cooks who served up nightin gales' brains for I.ucullus, Vltellius and the Roman epicures. The cooks of the days of Shakspeare, of Charlemagne, of all ancient time, wore the same shaped headgear—(lie Inevitable cook's cap that the chef of a fashionable mod ern hotel wears. The times change and people change with tltem, but iu this labyrinthian moving and changing it must be remembered that there still exist two symbols sent down through the ages as they were in the beginning, One-Cent. Newspapers. There are now $8,000,1)00 worth of one-cent pieces In circulation, and the call upon the mint is still for more. Not all these cents are wanted for the plate collection. It is one-cent Journalism more than anything else which keeps the wheels turning in the mint, as in the marts of trade.—PUlladedlphln Record. THE (THAN WOMEN PATRIOTS. Tho women of tho better class in Cuba are much more ardent in their sympathy with the revolution than the men, and a gentlemau who has recent ly spent several weeks in Havana says there is scarcely a Cuban woman who is not seriously contributing to the success of the cause, although her husband may be indifferently support ing the Spanish authorities. Many young men have been driven into the insurgent ranks by their sisters and sweethearts. It is a common thing for an able-bodied young man to re ceive a woman's chemise with a sarcas tic note saying, "Ifou should wear this as long as you remain at home aud re fuse to fight for Cuba libre." AP EASILY DRESSED AS A MAN, We are constantly hearing women express tho belief that they would be quite free from straiu in tho matter of dress if they could always be as sure of the proper thing to wear as a man. With a man, six o'clock meaos a dress suit or a Tuxedo. As a matter of fact, a woman may be equally free from doubt upon the subject. Iftßbe chooses, she can lay down a safe law unto her self. Six o'clock may always mean evening dress to her, when she is cer tain that she is not going to touch shoulders with the public. She dis criminates between a high and a low necked gown as a man between his full dress suit and his Tuxedo. No well dressed woman appears at tho theatre with her shoulders uncovered, but she may put on a low necked gown for the most informal dinner at a private house, privided the gown is not too elaborate. The fashion magazines have done muoh to give erroneous ideas of the manner in which New York women dress upon certain occasions. The well dressed woman in the city usually confines herself to three woll defined lines of dress. These are the striotly simple tailor made dress for morning and street wear, tho more extensively trimmed gown for the theatre and informal dinners, and the regulation evening apparel. With four gowns each winter, if she be iu modest cir cumstances, a woman may go any where, and yet be sure that she is always appropriately and becomingly attired. She is tho wise woman who, putting all of her outlay upon theso four dresses, has them well and rightly made, for she need give herßelf as little concern about her clothes as a man.—The Puritan. SHIRT WAIST'S RETURN. The shirt waist is back again. That means happiness to every woman that draws the breath of life. There is nothing in the world that a woman dotes on more than the inevitable shirt waist. Ask any one of them what she thinks of shirt waists. In variably she will answer: "Shirt waists? Why, I live in them when tho season permits." The new shirt waist for the op proachtng season has now reached the height of perfection. It has taken several seasons, however, of experi mentation to come to this crisis. The new models are beautiful. The sleeve ond the collar! They ore tho most important details of the shirt waist, and this season they aro going to be subjected to a new treat ment. In tho first place, that ugly, loose bishop sleeve that drooped so forlorny all last summer is absolutely dead and goue. In its place there will be a much more graceful and stylish substitute. The new sleove looks like an old abbreviated leg of mutton. It has a modest amount of fullness at the shoulder, aud when starched stands out about ten inches from the arm. Now for the cuff itself. The most fashionable cut will be the square one, made quite largo aud wide, and of the same material as the shirt body. In the golf waists, which are only slightly modified designs of the tailored waist", the cuff is built smaller and closes on itself, fastening with a button and button hole. The link caffs, however, seem more chic and aro far more con venient to adjust on account of the extreme stiffness. The new collar is not detachable as it was last season. It is constructed of the same material as tho goods, ond is the regular upright "choker." Tho turn-down collar is quite passe. But that does not constitute tho whole of the now collar. It is built with n extension so to speak. A whito linen "tip" comes with it that foldsoverthe upper edge uud is a kind of flap that adds a pretty finish to tho whole. These "tips" aro made for tho cuff's as well, apd are adjustable in both cases. They are kept in placo by tapo loops which aro put permanently on the in ner side of both eollnr and oufis. The body of the waist differs bnt slightly from last season's design. The shoulder yoke is still correct. The backs, however, in many of them are cut bias, as well as the front. Borne are cut cross-wise, but it is only the slender woman who can affordto jußglo with stripes and plaids.—Chicago Times-Herald. GOSSIP. New Orleans forbids high hats in its theatres. In Russia women householders vote for all elective olfioers and on all local matters. Miss C. C. Talbot is a commissioner ot deeds in Brooklyn. >Bhe is her father's partner in insurance and roal estate. In Tasmania there has been organ ized a lodge for female Oddfellows, and it is claimed to be tho first one in existence. Miss Clara Stimson, of Maine, is continuing her father's business as lumber manufacturer, and has been successful with her shingle mill. Miss Grace Hubbard, of lowa, is a civil engineer. She was given the con tract by the United States Government survey for the maps of Montana. Miss Nellie Patterson, of Connecti cut, is about to engage in toolmaking. With this object she has served a four years' apprenticeship to a machinist. It is one of the dainty customs of the time for a girl, when she gives a man a few violets from the bunch she wears, to tie them with a hair from her own head. Although the Revolution ended 115 years ago there are still, it has been found, no fewer than twenty-four daughters of Revolutionary soldiers now living in Connecticut. Of the fifty-five female Russian stu dents at the University of Berne, thirty-nino study medicine, while of the twenty-four Swiss female students, only throe take a medical course. Miss Daisy Barbee, a lawyer of St. Louis, Mo., was the couusel for tho defense in a criminal case tho other day, and got her client off. She is a pretty woman and addressed the jury in a soft voice. One Missouri mother has hit upon a successful plan to get her three daugh ters home at satisfactory hours from their various social diversions. She requires the last one in to ariso first and prepare breakfast. The Emperor of Russia, through Baron Mohrenheim, has presented to each of the sixteen girls who, on his laying the foundation stone of the new Paris bridge, presented him with a sil ver vase containing orchids. A Chinese girl, the daughter of a prominent magistrate in the province of Shantung, acts as her father's gen eral assistant in the business connected with his public office. She has proved herself a most successful accountant. Sorosis is emphatically a woman' clnb. Recently she celebrated her twenty-ninth birthday, and tho presi dent stated that they had held in that timo 030 meetings to only twenty eight of which men had been been in cited. In the Dominion of Canada women havo municipal suffrage in every pro vince and also in the northwest terri tories. In Ontario they vote for all elective officers, except in the election of members of the Legislature and Parliament. Mrs. Frank Lord, of Washington, was one of three ladies who were pres ent at the formal notification of Presi dent Lincoln of his renomination. Sho concealed herself behind a stairway in the ball when the committee entered tho East Room. Interesting evidence of woman's present prominence as a playwright was offered in London during Christ mas week, when three theatres in the Strand—the Globe, the Opera Comique and the Olympic—presented plays written by women. The women of St. Louis want rep resentation on the school board, and as the simplest way of securing it have a bill drawn up which, if passed, will put un end to existing masculine mo nopoly of school management in the State of Missouri. FASHION NOTES. The softest shades of tan are correct for gloves now that we have so much color in our gowns. The surplice effect, or any other crossed-over model, is rather leading the persistent little bolero, and in some instances tho surplice bodice has long scarf ends of lace, falling from the belt at the point where the waist fastens. Great favor is shown the double warp cashmeres that so closely resem ble drap d'ete. In colored goods the broken checks with several dyes hand somely blended seem to predominate, and these prove more serviceable than plain colors for general wear on any fabric but serge, which has proved itself to be the peer of any utility material known. A skirt litter which is bound to work, and is quite equal to the dispo sition of tho numerous godots in our lull skirts, is a practical novelty which is sure to appeal to every woman. It is a simple urrangmeut of black rib bon, silk braid, and tiny rings, which arc sewn on in eight places on tho in side of the skirt at the back, moro than half way down. By hooking tho end of the ribbon to tho waist band tho skirt is caught up evenly and gracefully all around. Veiling with large dots is decidedly passe, aud nil tho latest novelties have very tiuo dots, many of them none nf all, and aro very thin, fine, and fancy as to mesh, which is in nil sorts ol plaids, checks and waved lines. One style of veiling is a combination of fine white malino net under a black open meshed net with tinv black or white dots iastening tho nets together. And then there are veilings of black with white dots, and n colored mesh with fine white dots which costs $4 a yard. WISE WORDS. Behavior is a mirror in which every one displays his own image. To rob it of love is the greatest wrong that can be done a child. Every beginning is pleasant. The threshold is the place of expectation. The safest mode of acting is to em ploy ourselves with our nearest duty. If the crow has a creed, it is that all birds are heretics that do not wear black. The greatest obligation of the parent to the child is to give it a safe example. No poetry would be written if birds had to keep still and let frogs do all the singing. If you would bo strong when ad versity comes, be sure to pray while prosperous. What important it is to have a soul which loves truth and receives it wher ever it finds it. Misunderstandings and neglect oanse more mischief in this world than even malice and wickedness. If you are only a picket, try to be as faithful to your trust as if you were the commander of an army. There is a vast difference between being able to say piayers that sound fine and having a broken r.nd contrite heart. From near at hand one must not hope, but from afar. Let us trust in God; each one in himself and in the other, and so it will be well. The worst penalty of evil-doing is to grow into likeness with the bad; for each man's soul changes, accord ing to the nature of his deeds, for bet ter or for worse. If you hear a bad story, make a shorfc stop of yourself. Don't let it pass you. The one who tells it will no doubt tell it to others, and pass it on, but don't let it pass you. Never ask to be intrnsted with your friend's secret, for, no matter how faithfully you may keep it, you will be liable in a thousand contingencies to the suspicion of having betrayed it. Meekness is not a weakness; it is strength. Kindness, gentleness, meek ness, give a man power in this very self-possession. He is calm and qniet in the midst of threatened disaster. The Wolf in Europe. One of the greatest terrors of Europe is the wolf. In Russia during the last two years, according to official sources, the wolves have devoured 11,000 horses, 10,000 horned cattle, 32,000 sheep, 5000 swine, 1000 dogs and 18,000 iowl. Thov have also during the same period attacked sixty-eight persons, devouring two on the spot and inflicting fatal wounds on twelve others. In Franco it is estimated that 500,000 of these ani mals exist and the damage indicted by them is set down at. about 50,000,000 irancs annually. A regular body of men, numbering over 1000, called the Louveterie, is maintained to keep down wild boasts, and the force has a certain efficiency, but it is unequaled to keeping the country clear of them. From time to time high bounties for wolf scalps have been paid, as much as 200 francs iu the case of a known man eater, dreaded there as the man eating tiger is in the Hindoo villages; but the animal is never extirpated. In some years his ravage is greater and in others less, but he is always in evi dence. In this country he has been pretty well put down in the inhab itated parts. A few days ago a pro digious wolf drive was set on foot in Atchison County, Kansas, five square miles being covered and 700 persons participating. They rounded up 200 jack rabbits, but not a single wolf. Considering his fierce and predatory character abroad and his resistance to all efforts to destroy him, the Ameri can animal mnsfc bo set down as rather a meritorious creature, easily amenable to extinction and not so desperately destructive, even where it continues to maintain a foothold. A Historic Drawing Hoard. An engineer in the department of docks, New York City, thinks that he has discovered the old drawing-board on which Ericsson drew the plans for his famous monitor. The wood is stained by age, and it is filled with holes from the tho thumb tacks that have been driven into it. Ericsson was employed by tho Delnmater IronWorks when he designed the monitor. The company built a derrick for the city a few years later, and at that time the old drawing-board was taken from their office and placed iu the derrick. It was kicked around carelessly for several year?, and finally landed in the office of the dock department, where it has seen much service. Ilof.sc Meat Test. Some people are fearful that the horse meat so generously provided nowadays will be foisted upon them by their butchers. The Paris correspond ent of the Medical Record says that iI a bouillon is made of the meat it will color violet a reactiou paper that has been made a red brown by dipping iu iodine, while beef and mutton bouil lon mako a different shade. A Purveyor to the tjucen Fined. \ London butcher who put up the royal arms over his shop on the strength of having sold somo beef to Queen Victory has been prosecuted by the Incorporated Association of Hex Majesty's Warrant Holders (Limited), and fined. A Penny-a-Liner's Fortune. At least one of the ers" has had success in this world. It is stated that Emile Richebourg, the French novelist, has amassed a for tune of $400,000 in twenty years by writing sensational storien for the Petit Journal. London poihe have uncovered a big scheme of blackmnii, the victims were to be ; men in high life. Nn-To-liac lor Fifty Centn. Over 4C0.U4) cured. Why not Jet No-To-Bac regulate or remove your desire lor tobacco? Saves money, makes health and manhood. Cure guaranteed. 5U cents and iI.UJ, ut aIJ druggists. llussin exported more than 1,500,C00.000 eggs Inst year. Motherhood. A mother who is in good physical condition transmits to her children the blessings of a good constitution. The child fairly' drinks in health from its mother's robust constitution before birth, and from a healthy , Is not that an incentive to prepare for a healthy ' Kj. . Do you know the meanmg of what . •')7jjL is popularly called those "long ings." or cravings, which beset so There is something lacking in the gjfe > mother's blood. Nature cries out yfcs. and will be satisfied at all hazards. f ///fl One woman wants sour things, |ipp <A ' another wants sweets, another J|TJjyc wants salt things, and so on. Jl J\ V f tJf 4 The real need all the time is to enrich the blood so as to supply V nourishment for another life, and fiMb to build up the entire generative system, so that the birth may be Tm /\ possible and successful. \j/ A fit' If expectant mothers would fort- y \ js, 0 J ** ify themselves with Lydia E. Pink- *' " ham's Vegetable Compound, which f *y f for twenty years has sustained thousands of women in this condition, there would be fewer disappointments at birth, and they would not experience those annoying "longings." In the following letter to Mrs. Pinkham, Mrs. Whitney demonstrates the power of the Compound in such cases. She says: 14 From the time I was sixteen years old till I was twenty-three. I was troubled with weakness of the kidneys and terrible pains when my monthly periods came on. I made up my mind to try Lydia E. Pinkharas Vegetable Compound and was soon relieved. After 1 was married, the doctor said I would never be able to go my full time and have a living child, as 1 was constitutionally weak. I had lost a baby at seven months and a half. The next time I commenced at once and continued to take your Compound through the period of pregnancy, and 1 said then, if I went my full time and the baby lived to be three months eld. I should send a letter to you. My baby is now seven months old and is as healthy and hearty as one could wish "I am so thankful that 1 used your medicine, for it gave me the robust health to transmit to my child. I cannot express my gratitude to you: f never expected such a blessing. Praise God for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and may others who are suffering do as I did and find relit f. and may many homes he brightened as mine has been."—Mits. L. Z. WHITNEY, 5 George St., E. Somcrville, Mass. rftiOCLABASfTis^ # yyg&i IT WON'T RUB OFF. I k aM' ' ■ Trail Taper U Insacilnry. EAl.Kmxr IS A f P=j|j| ' TEMI'OIIJUV, lIOTS, BUBS OFF AM> SCALES, f 4 5 ~ - ft D fl 011 OTTB MC fa a pure, penn.-.DjDt and artistic si J AIABAb BiNt HM.* 8 bru3h J i J For Sale by Paint Dealers Everywhere* \ \ paper is have CDCZ A Tint Conl showing 12 desirable tints, also Aiabastine v throe here Baby may recover riiLl. Souvenir Rock sent free to any one mentioning this paper. A. cannot thrive " AIiAUAKTPVE OO m (irand AapKls. Slich. f THE STANDARD PAINT FOR STRUCTURAL PURPOSES. Pamphlet, "Suggestions for Exterior Decoration," Sample Card and Descriptive Prim List free by mail. Asbestos Itoofiiitf, Building Fell. Steam I'm king. Boiler Coverings. Flrr-Pronf i'uinix, Etc. Asbestos Non-Conductiug mid Fleetrienl Insuliniitg Material. n. W. JOHNS MANUFACTURING CO., 87 Maiden Lane, New York. CHICAGO: 240 & 242 Randolph St. PHILADELPHIA: 170 & 172 North 4th St. BOSTON; 77 A79 Pearl St. /©ANDY CATHARTIC nflfc. fI)RE J ,25* 50* DRUGGISTS ' ABSOLDTELY finSRSNTRRD l ? rßr * T<' j,| >rtoiiiipr.tioii. ritr(i ,r. th. i<ii i,, i .. ... UUnfton ICiDI/ t|„. „„ pr cr ip or iripr.bul tame taj iiMnnl rf.olu. K nm . , I ple.nd booklet 'The Best is, fiye, the Cheapest." Avoid Imitations of and Substitutes for SAPOLIO Jat the % \ muksjJ^K \RootbeeryCool-BnnKv i /wefl-^rinlk mUS^o^ 3 ! AGENTS. Huni.-lc on mm 1.. Wr r nv nl] tiwilf.. Ail.ll-ni I fSI.V/, A CIIHAI. CO.; \V u.liiiiclmw If. c. i A I U2S, H£?J uranuiatqg SfjHarm I AA I 41 no *b 1.00 CMMlM*le4 Whoifult 8. Co., Sift 8. f li.u, Bt.,Dpl. 28ffcl Wff o r N U 1 97 PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHNW MORRIS, WASHINGTON,D.6. Late Principal Examiner U. 8. Pension Bureau j>ru. in luct war, lo Fair Enongh. HUs fiancee —Are you sure you would love me just as tenderly if our condi tions were reversed—if you were rich and I were poor? He—Reverse our conditions and try me.—Harlem Life. Mrs. Winslow*s Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces ihfhunma- J tion. allays pain, cure- wind colic. iV.a bottle. SHOE' 3 BEST IN THE WORLD. ali J v A " 1 •: ■a>y ISrneLlou, Ainu. 1,340,000 CONSTANT WEARERS. Can Be Cured Of povepiv, if y ( ,u ran buy everything as low ay we offer Scales. I IJemember, JONES lie l'n.vs tlu> Freight. Address, JONES OF BINCHAMTON ni\I;UANTO%, V. v.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers