Elephants. Snmo elephants are said to bp pood climbers. They make 111011* way up and down mountains and through a country of steep cliffs, where mules would not dare to venture, and even where men find passage difficult. Their tracks have been found upon the very summit of mountains over seven thou sand feet high. In those journeys an elephant is often compelled to descend hills and mountain sides which are al most precipitous. This is the way in which It Is done. The elephant's first manoeuvre is to kneel down close to the declivity. One foreleg is then cau tiously passed over the edge and a short way down the slope, and if he finds there is no good spot for a firm foothold, he speedily forms one by stamping into the soil if it Is moist, or kicking out a footing if it is dry. If the elephant is now sure of a good foot hold, the other foreleg is brought down in the same way. Then he performs the same work over again with his feet, bringing both forelegs a little in advance of the first foothold. This leaves good places already made for the hind feet. Now. bracing himself up by bis huge, strong forelegs, he draws his hind legs, first one and then the other, carefully over the edge, where they oc cupy the first places made by the fore feet. This is the way the huge animal proceeds all the way down, zigzag, kneeling every time with the two hind legs while he makes footholes with his forefeet. Thus the center of gravity is preserved, and the huge beast pre vented from toppling over on iiis nose. IMPURE BLOOD Body Covered With Krupttonfl, but Hood'* Ha* Ctired. "My body was covered with eruptions r-aased by impure blood. I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and it entirely cured me. It has done so much for me that I recommend it to anyone troubled with impure blood." 8. J. Turp, Maryland, N. Y. Hood's oarilla Is thebest-—in fact the ot>6True Rlood Purifier. Hood's Pills with Hood's SHrsaparilla Curing tho Hons. Editor Terry, of tile Minden TTorald, xvli 11 Is to know how to keep Ids neigh bors' hens out of his garden. Well, Charley, lake a lot of small, stiff cards about 1 by 'J inches, write 011 them, "Please keep your darned old liens at home," tie a short string to eaeli card with a grain of corn at the oilier end of t lie string and scatter these where the hens congregate. When the hungry biddy gobbles lip tlie grain that draws the prize, she follows up the string, stoxving it away until she comes to the card, then you xvill see her pull out for home, carrying in her mouth your po lite request. Try it, brother, and let us know how it xvorks. —Brown City (Mleli.) Standard. Some Large Fruit Yields. An orchard of DO trees in Nexv Ca naan, Ct., produced MO barrels ol picked apples the eighth season from planting. A 15-year-old tree In the same neighborhood yielded 12 barrels of choice, picked apples. A grower in Onturlo county. New York, sold 37U barrels from ills orchard of 1% acres and in addition hail between 300 and 400 bushels of paring and cider apples. A tree in Glastonbury, Ct., produced 05 bushels of apples. In 1801 Hale Bros., of Connecticut sold about $24. 000 worth of peaches from 35 acres.— American Agriculturist. Glass Bangles. Both Hindoo and Mussulman women wear glass bangles, and in tho North west Provinces they are regarded as sacred objects. If a glass bangle be ac cidentally broken, its pieces must be gathered together and kissed three times. Every Hindoo woman wears these ornaments until her husband (dies, when she breaks them with a brick or a stone, and substitute gold or bllvnr ones, the sign in tile uortli of .India that the wearer is a widow. Thus it Is that the demand for glass bangles is never-failing. MRS. LYNESS ESCAPES y-v The Hospital and a Fearful Operation. Hospitalsin great cities are sad places to visit. Three fourths of the patients lying on those snow-white beds are women and girls. iMBy gHsr Why should this be the case ? Because they have neglected themselves! Women as a rule attach too little importance to first symp- iTM^amrvly toms of a certain kind. If they have toothache, they will try to save the tooth, though many leave J even this too late. They comfort thcmsclv;s with the thought that they can replace their teeth; but jHWBI they cannot replace their internal organs 1 Every one of those patients in the hospital beds y\ had plenty of warnings in the form of bearing-down V \ feelings, pain at the right or the leftof the womb, yjjjm yyS nervous dyspepsia, pain in the small of the back, the wB \j " blues,"or some other unnatural symptom, but they didT not heed them. " Don't drag along at home or in the shop until you are finally obliged to go to the hospital and submit to horrible examinations and operations! Build up the female organs. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will save you from the hospital. It will put new life into you. The following letter shows how Mrs. Lyness escaped the hospital and a operation. Her experience should encourage "I thank you very much for what you have Last February, I had a miscarriage caused by overwork. heart* caused for a week, and once a duy for four weeks[ jf7 IN then three or four timcs a week for four * P months. Finally he said I would have to un- IZ' fc ' I dergo an operation. Then I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and after one week I began to recover and steadily improved until I was cured completely. By taking the Pinkham medicine, I avoided an operation which the doctor said I would certainly have to undergo. I ain gaining every day and will cheerfully tell anyone what you have done for me."— MRS. THOS. Lynebs, 10 Frederick St., Rochester, N. Y. Woolen Ingrain Carpet, 3Sc. Imported Velvet Carpet, 89c. Our entire force is working day and nlglit lillinv orders. You. also, can save 60 to flit i>er cent, on a carpet by writing for our new Colored Carpet Catalogue which shows all goi ds in lithographed colors and with exact dis tinctness. The book costs you nothing. If yon wish quality samples, send Bc. In stamps. Our new 112 page general catalogue of Furniture. Draperies, Crockery, Stoves, etc.. xvill be ready after Nov. Ist. Write for it then, i JULIUS HINES & SON,' BALTIMORE, HI). Please mention this paper. j The last of the bunch of fifteen 21x26 i Consolidation locomotives built by the ■ Pittsburg Locomotive Works for the Baltimore & Ohio Bail Boat! have been delivered and are in service on the See ' ond Division betxveen Brunswick and I Cumberland. These locomotives excite ! very favorable comment by reason of their general design, excellent xvork -1 manship and efficient serx'iee and are further evidence of the great advance that is being made by the B. & O .in i its motive poxver. Thirty-five (26) of j tltis type of locomotives have been placed on the Second Division during the past year and xvith the reduction I in grades and in the increase in poxver ! the number of ears per train has been ! increased fully 40 per cent. Piso's Cure cured mo of a Throat and Lnng ; trouble of three years' standing.—E. Caiiy, Huntington. Ind., Nov. 12, 1894. How She Cured Him. "I thought I xvas going to sell a eof fin to one of my neighbors a few days l ago." said the undertaker. "A certain young man who had 1 -en dissipating considerably of late, and had got into debt, became desperate and threatened on several occasions to commit suicide if his widowed mother did not give liim some of the money she had bor rowed on their little home. Not long ago he went home with a desperate look on his face, and, ealling his moth er into the drawing room, said, as lie pulied a revolver from his hip pocket: 'I xvill have the money, or I will end j my miserable existence.' 'Wait! Wait!' screamed his mother, ns she rushed | from the room. A look of satisfaction overspread the young man's face as he j mumbled to himself about knoxving he xvould get it. Iu a moment his mother returned carrying a large rug. Quietly she spread it down on the carpet, and then, straightening up, said: 'Now, George, go ahead. I xvas ufraid you | xxould spoil my carpet with blood stains. Any choice about coffins?' The young man almost sank to the floor in liis astonishment and disappointment, I He was sure if he threatened to shoot himself his motlisr would accede to his unjust demands and give him the little I money she xvas saving to buy the neces saries of life with, but on the day before ; site had come over to my house and told | ray xvife about his threats. My wife put the idea into her head to chaff her I sou the next time ho threatened to eom ; init suicide. She xvas afraid to try, but, summoning nil her nerve, she carried out instructions, and succeeded. The young man hasn't said a xvord about dying since."—New Orleans Times- Democrat The following want advertisement appears in a New York paper: "Eight rooms, big enough to stretch out xvlth out breaking something; bath you can : get wet in; no trombone or roof garden singer next door; don't enjoy carbolic ! odor as we do perfume; elevator must j run more than three times daily; radi ators must xvork in xvinter; want unv- I light; xvnut peace; limit, $75." This ap ' pllcnnt lias evidently had experience. FIELDS OF ADVENTURE. THRILLING INCIDENTS AND DARING DEEDS ON LAND AND SEA. A Bicyclist llair-Kal*ini; Ride Down a {Steep Hill With Seven Turn*—Awful Experience of a Maine Cjuarryman Who Wears a Mask—He Choked a Leopard. Charles F. Cole, a Brooklyn cyclist, "took" the big bill on the Mouut Ar lington road near Hopateong, N. J., a distance of one and a quarter miles, xvith seven turns in its distance and a chop of 511 feet. The Nexv York Times thus tells the story: Wednesday afternoon at three o'clock found Mr. Cole xvheeling to xvard town. A fexv minutes before a native, in answer to a query, told him that the big hill xvas as much as a half mile further on. Instead of the hill being half a mile axvay, a few more turns of his pedals brought him right on the descent. A fexv more turns, and the xvheel xvas racing like a streak of greased lightning, for the pneumatic brake had refused to xvork. The xvheclmau's hair rose. Bringing his feet into play, he tried the old method of pressing the sole of his right foot against the tire. The sole was torn nil' in a jiffy by the frightful speed the xvheel had attained. Fences, trees and telegraph poles flexv by, and Cole took a fresh grip on the handle bars, with the sin gle thought of keeping the machine upright. Then he triod to catch the pedals, but the lirst attempt tore the heel off one of the shoes. In his fright he xvas nearly unseated. To make matters xvorse, just ahead of him was a carriage proceeding sloxvly doxvn the hill. Instinctively Cole swerved to the right and shot past like a bullet. As he xvas going by he heard some one shout and caught the xvords, "* • be killed." Cole knew that to jump oil' would be certain death, but it re quired all the nerve at his command to keep from jumping. Fortunately tho turns down the grade on either side were slight, but even the slight sxverving nearly un seated him. Around the turns and then down the tangents the xvheel flexv, gathering speed at every rex'olu tion. The wind scorched his face, and perspiration oozed from every pore. Finally the lack less rider approached the last turn. It xvas sharper than the others, and at the bottom of the hill his pi.isage seemed to bo blocked by a stone wall. Cole saxv hut one chance for salvation, and, leaning far to the right as he struck the bend, he drew his wheel doxvn so that the in side pedal dug into tho earth and the outside one barely grazed tho xvall. Just ahead xvas a stretch of sand and gravel roadxvay. His speed slackeuod xvith a jerk as the xvheel ploxved through it, scattering tho sand like xvavca on either side and throwiug hiin ten feet or more. Over the handle bars he went like a shot from a cata pult, spraxvling into the gravel more dead than alive, but having lived in those fexv seconds of descent a century or two. The people in the carriage reached tho spot a few seconds later, expecting to find parts of Cole scattered along the roadway. But they were pleasant ly disappointed. When the bexvildered wheelman took account of his injuries a fexv brusies 011 his hip and a severed small artery made up the sum total. The artery xvas closed by an im promptu tourniquet, and Colo sought a doctor and tbeu limped painfully to the train. He had had enough of wheeling for one day. Mac Donald*. Mask. A mysterious figure, with an inde scribable atmosphere of horror about it, may be seen in a quarry at North Jay, Me. It is that of a xvorkman who wears perpetually a black mask. He does his work almost like any other man, but never ntters a xvoril. The men move about him and speak to him and behave ns if he differed in uo xvise from one of them. But the stranger, when he sees this silent man xvith a black mask in place of a face, feels a cold chill run doxvn his back. The fexv -visitors who have seen him xvill never forget their exper ience. The truth is that he has no face. His name is John Mac Donald. Ten years ago when he xvas xvorkiug at his present trade he fell a victim to a ter rible blasting accident, A shower of broken stone driven by dynamite struck him. His face xvas literally blown off. Eyes, nose, teeili and a largo portion of both jaws xvere oarried axvay. It seemed a miracle that he should live, but he xvas a man of splendid physique anil he did. The pain, the exhaustion, the sloxv heeling of these terrible xvound xvould havo killed a dozen ordinary men. The doctors had a liberal education in treating him. They had a hotter opportunity than occurs once ill a century of studying the nerves, anatomy and pathology of a living human head. The shreds of flesh and skin that surrounded the wound xvere closed as well as possible over the great gap. But when the best had lioen done and the patient had practically recovered the sight was sickening. If Mac Do nald had gone abroad xvith that awful scar in place of a face, xvith the shat tered bones of tho jaxvs and nose half exposed, he would have horrified all persons xvith a vestige of sensibility. He xvould doubtless have excited pity, hut it would have been a miserable thing to do. A mask of light black material was made for him. It extends from the top of the forehead to the throat and is strapped on securely in two places, above the ears and around the throat. It serves both to spare the feelings of others and to protect the scar. The mask follows roughly the out lines of a face, leaving depressions for the eyes, a nose and a hole for the mouth. He is able to masticate food slightly with the remains of his jaw. lie Cholccd a Leopard to Death. C. E. Akely is said to be the only man in the world who ever killed a full-grown leopard in a contest upon equal terms —the man as weaponless as the beast. It happened in the Haud desert, South Africa. Mr. Akely, who is a taxidermist, was looking for speci mens upon which to exercise his art. The leopard may have been looking for supper; at any rate, he was look ing for a fight. Mr. Akely wasn't. The fight was on his hands before ho knew it. He had not even a knife. The premium on life insurance for Mr. Akely at the moment of the en counter would have been 100 per cent, and no takers; but he did not lose his nerve. He fastened his fingers around the leopard's throat and hung on. Ho had always been an athlete, and his gip was like iron. Man and beast rolled on the ground, the leop ard's claws tearing the man's flesh. Blood from fifty wounds began to flow, and Akcly's strength was failing. But his hands were locked in a clutch that even death might not have loosed. When help came the leopard was dead, the man barely conscious. He recov ered ipiiokly, except that he had to wear an arm in a sling for a month or more. Akely is now taxidermist of the Field-Columbian Museum in Chicago. He is just adding the dead leopard to the great collection of stuffed auimals. If the management could get hold of the skin of the wildcat that was stilled by a woman iu Sullivan, Me., some years ago it would make a good companion piece. It was a hard win ter, and an unprecedented number of wild beasts had been driven down from the northern woods. The wild cat iu question was one of them, and he was a monster. The woman was hanging out clothes. She had a sheet in her hands, when suddenly she saw the wildcat rushing toward her. She fell over on top of it with the sheet be tween them, and both went almost out of sight in a snow bank. The unex pected combination was too much for the wildcat, and he gave up the ghost. The woman was scarcely hurt at all. A Swim With Mnn-Eatlnc Sharks. When the cruiser Boston arrived at Honolulu on her way to China early last year, (liree of her men, seamen, deserted. The Boston went to China without them, but the cruiser Ben nington was stationed in the port, and the master-at-arms of her had no diffi culty iu getting the three deserters. They were brought aboard the Ben nington and put in double irons. One evoniug after dark the irons were taken off their feet and hands for some pur pose. The three men reached the top gallant forecastle, slid down the anchor chains into tho water and were off. The Bennington then was anchored about a mile from the Honolulu docks. Honolulu harbor is alive with man eating sharks. But sharks are natural cowards; they fear the splashing made by two or three men, and, down there at least, will only attack a man when he is alone iu the water. Half a dozen gigantio sharks followed these three deserting swimmers all the way to the docks; but the men, who were experts in the water, kept up a great to-do with hands and feet in the water, and the sharks kept at a distance of ten feet from them all the way. When they scrambled up onto the low docks, however, tho sharks, apparently losing their siowardliness, made a swoop from underneath for tho men iu a body, but got none of them. The men were safe; but whon they were captured for the second time they all said that they would not do the thing - over again for something handsome. The Count and the null. Count- Berberana, a wealthy noble man of Spain, recently nad a narrow escape from death at the horns of a bull. Two animals which were being driven to Burgos to take part in a bull fight broke away from their keepers. Among the wealthy young sportsmen who started in pursuit was Count Ber berana on the back of an Arabian horse. He overtook one of the ani mals after a race of nine miles, shot at it, but missed his mark. The beast turned, gored the horse to death, threw the Count iu the air, badly wounding him, and was about to jump on him again when the gendarmes killed the bull. A Color Scheme. Wanderer (returned after several years)—" Well, well, I'm mighty glad to see you. How are you and how are all the good people?" Stayathome—"Oh, we're all right and getting along as well as could be expected." Wanderer—"And how is tho Widow Green?" Stayathome- -"She isn't so Green as she was." Wauderer—"What's the matter. She isn't gray, I hope." Stayathome—"No, she's Brown." Wanderer—"Brown?" Stayathome—"Yes; married Samuel J. about five years ago, and she's been Widow Brown for the last two years or such a matter." Wanderer—"You don't say?" Stayathome—' 'Yes." Wanderer—"Well, by gosh, if she's willing to change color again, I'll ask her as stire's my name's Black."—New York Sun. Migrepresentation. "I ttoiuk," Haid the gentlemanly col lector, "that it is about time you were paying something on that press. It has been almost a year since you got it." "But," said the editor of the Jaze ville Gazette, "you told me that the darn press would pay for itself in six months."—Cincinnati Enquirer, j COME APART AND REST A WHILE. Come apart and rest a while; There are many coming, going, Whose dry lips forget to smile. Who forget th reap, for sowing: From the hot street's surging tide Rest is but one step aside. —A.Willis Colton, in Ladies' Home Journal. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Don't explain yourself too much; give the world a chance to think well of you.—Life. "She used to be so delicaate before she took to the wheel." "Well, she's indelicate enough now." Detroit Journal. For the Klondike fever The only cure—alack!— Is to drop a Klondike Icicle down the back. —Chicago Tribune. "You ought to go up to Alaska, Mr Staylate." "Why so?" "They have a night there two months long." He went.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. In the Butcher Shop: Customer —"I Rhould like to see a nice calf's head." Butcher Boy—"Yes, sir. Father will be down directly."—Boston Traveler, Though critics may condemn And prudes treat him with rigor, The sculptor, spite of them, Has cut a pretty Jlgure. —Judge. No matter how insignificant a man may bo there is a girl somewhere in the world who will consider him dis tinguished looking. Philadelphia Kecord. The people who regard croquet as a quiet, religious sort of a game never tried to cross the lawn after night where the wickets had been left stand ing.—Atchison Globe. "But if you must reduce your ex penses, why don't you discharge your private secretary?" "What! And meet all those creditors personally? 1 should say not!"— Detroit News. Private Moriarly (the raw recruit) — "Halt, will yez? Who goes there?" Captain Bighead (indignantly)— "Fool!" Private Mori arty (unabashed) -—"Advance, fool, an'give th'counter sign."—Judge. "I see a party of missionaries has started for Ivlonkike." "Yes. I sup pose they intend to operate on the people who are homeward bound with tales of their rich finds."—Philadel phia North American. "Do you consider Meeker a self made man?" "No; I think he was made to order." "Why so?" "Well, judging from the way his wife orders him around he must have been made for that purpose."—Chicago News. "A Frenchman says that love is a disease that closely resembles alcohol ism." "There may be some truth iu that. I have uoticed that the gold cure is frequently efficacious in both diseases."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. "That was a sensational prayer Dr. Gumma delivered the other Sunday. I wonder if he expected it to be an swered?" "Certainly. And it was, too. Why, nearly every paper in the country replied to it. "—Brooklyn Life. Nay, ohide him not, though sadness be re veal; Nor seek him out and ask him to be gay. He paid a hundred dollars for a wheel Whose price went down to seventy next day. —Washington Star. "Those St. Louis people are mak ing a great fuss over that one-pound baby that was born there the other day." "They have a right to. It counts just as much in the census as if it weighed a ton."—Chicago Tri bune. "Don't cry, Buster," said Jimmio boy, after the catastrophe. "Napole on didn't cry every time his brother hit him accidentally 011 the eye." "I know that," retorted Buster. "Na poleon did all the hittin' on the eyo hisself."—Harper's Bazar. "I wonder," said the emotional girl, "why men do not fight for a woman's love as they did in the days of chivalry." "Because," said the dis gustingly handsome young nun, "it is easier for a fellow to go to a summer resort."—Cincinnati Enquirer. "You say you want to marry my daughter; have you spoken to her?" "Yes, sir," replied the young man, "and have gained her consent." "Well, if she has said 'yes,' that set tles it." Then the young man goe* home and wonders if he isn't too young to marry such a girl.—Standard. Dabsley—"Well, I suppose your son will soon begin his last year in college?" Parks—"No, he isn't going back." Dabsley—"Oh, that's too bad. He ought to go through, now that he's got along to the last year. What's the matter?" Parks—"Why, didn't you kuow that he had a fever, and that his hair had all come out?"— Cleveland Leader. Shadow of a Sound Wave. On observing an explosion of one hundred pounds of a liitro-compound from a distance of three hundred yards, E. J. Ryers lately saw what he sup poses to have been the shadow of tho sound wave start from the point of de tonation and travel in the bright sun light for at least hall' a mile down the valley. This led to camera experi ments by Professor C. Y. Boys, the re sult being a series of pictures by au animatograpb, showing the wave us a complete circle instead of a semi-ellipse as it should be on the sound shadow theory. The "Byves ring" is aston ishingly black to the eye, though ap pearing as a circular light shading in the photographs. What is tho cause is still uncertain, but it is pointed out that the explanation given may be tested by noting whether the phenom enon appears when tho sun is clouded. An ludiHii Slut lon Agent. The Santa Fe Railroad lias selected a full-blooded Indian as station agent at Wilmore, Kan. He is C. H. Book out, who once worked as a section hand on the road, but learned telegraphy ei'd educated himself in English. WILL BE SAVED DY A SLAVE. An Old African to Use His Klondike Gold for His Former Mistress. Among: 1 lie lucky minors in the Klon- 1 dike is a former slave, a grizzled old African who bears the high-sounding j name of Sr. John Atherton. lie has j dug out $30,000 in gold, and has a cou- | pie of claims which may be reasonably expected to yield SIOO,OOO more. He is probably the one man in Alaska who Is planning to do a novel act of charity , when the time comes for him to aban don his mining work and return to the civilized world. Before the war Atherton was owned | by a Georgia family which had a large plantation near Atlanta. When he got his freedom he drifted about the | country doing odd jobs, and finally struck the Yukon valley, where he got work as a freighter. The ex-slave had a hard time of it for years, and when the Klondike excitement broke out he . made his way to the gold fields. There | he toiled in diggings which had been j abandoned by white men until he found a paying streak, since which he has been accumulating money very fast. When asked what he intended to do with the $30,000 which he has now on | deposit in Dawson City, Atherton said: 'Tin going back to Georgiu and buy ' the old plantation." "Buy the old plantation? Why, what J do you mean?" "When I was a slave my master was a rich man. He was Kind to me and his daughter was just like him. Things didn't go well with him after the war, j and some years ago he had to inort- • gage the plantation. Since then he died, and his daughter is now living on the old place alone. The time Is com ing when it must be sold If the mort gage is not paid, and then she will have uo home. What I want to cio is to get back to Georgia and buy up that mort gage. Then I will turn the plantation over to my old master's daughter and nolKKly can drive her away from it." "But she won't like the Idea of hav ing one of her former slaves for a boss." "Huh! I don't want to be a bos. I'll just stay around and look after things for her like I used to. Some body's got to do it, and I know she'd rather have me than a stranger. It j will take $30,(100 or $35,000, and the | rest of my money will keep me well as j long as I live." fTTT T T "▼* ~~v v *VV '"♦ *&*- - iri^*- s ' < pills stand without a rival as a reliable family 4 ■i medicine. They cure sick headache, biliousness, constipation, and keep the body in perfect health. ► ► In many homes no medicine is used except Dr. J. C. Ayer's I Pills. ;i S % * T'yyfvvfvvTVTVti'T rifb _^lb__Aj I (9 f LI DOI)F FCD THE W' stimulation you need- - the kind that is H TjUL*' ' 5 best. And all this for a Rj I ',(3|| Columbia | L\W% BICYCLE. I get—is it! No other bicycle is so good B B[ as the Columbia— fij I HARTFORD Standard of the World. | | BICYCLES, $75 To Ail Alike. | S SSO $45, S4O. ( 0 \ ■ POPE MFG COMFANY, Hartford, Conn N j If Columbias are not properly represented : n your vicinity, iet us know. M isxj^r FOIt IN VK ST.! IK NT, IN A iH AItANTKC!) PAYING COLORADO GOLD MINE. A limited amount of stock a* lor. u luirc. For full information address. lIKN. A. liI.OCK. Stork broker, Denver, Col. Member F.xehatige. tiotrr to Fir at National or Wcalcrii Hunk of Denver. ■"to Vto Q B All# ABDS can be raved vrifh- DRUNK WB& Co., 04 Broad WIT, N. T. Full Information (in plain wrapper! mailed free! LOOK AT THESE D " M-Watki'ns&Co. CATALOGUE FIIKK. PUOVIDKNCE. It. I. 'The More You Say the Less People Remember." One Word With You, SAPOLIO Annfli~r Thing. Wife—You siw Mrs. Browser Inst evening? Husband—Yes, but not to speak to | her. Wife—What a siory ! I heard you j were sitting with her for more than two hours. Husband—That's so; but it was she : who did tlie talking.—Up-to-Dnte. OuSen Sake ? i Quien Snbe—who knows—is a phrase in j very common use among the Hpaniurda, and holps over many, many difficulties. It is expressive. What the weather may be the coming Winter, who knows? It may be snowy, wet, stormy, cold, freezing, and full of sickness and pain, who knows? j Home of us to-day, hale and hearty, may j lie on beds of torture or hobble about on crutches, who knows. Before the Autumn merges into Winter many inoy have symp toms of approaching trouble; of the old : rheumatism coming on, or of first, attacks | begun; who knows? Who knows? That's a conundrum. But there is one thing | everybody knows, the best thing to do is to be ready for the weather coming i and to take hold of what is. Everybody knows what is best. With St. Jacobs Oil in ; the house, everybody knows they have a i sure cure for rheumatism, acute orehronic. Jt is likewise known that in any stage of it, the great remedy does its work of cure ! perfectly. If we suffer, wo need not ask who knows, when it is so well known what j is best. Try Grain.O ! Try Graln-O ! I Ask your grocer to-day to show you a pack age of Grain-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury us well as the adult. All who try It like it. Grain-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure (jrains, and the mostdelicate stomach re i ceives it without distress. One-quarter the • price of coffee. 15 eta. and 25 ots. per package. Hold by all grocers. STATE OP OFITO. CITY OF TOI-EDO, J LUCAS COUNTY. I FRANK J. CHKNRY makes oath thut he isthe senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY to Co., doing business i n the City of Toledo, County j and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of CATAKHII that cannot bo cured by the use of H ANN'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my (—■ j presence, this oth day of December, - SEA I. r A. D. 1800. A. W. GLEAKON, f v— 1 Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and nets directly on the blood and mucous surfaces ol the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. < HKNEY to Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. I Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise freo I DR. R. 11. KMKK. Ltd.. ttll Arch St.,Pliila..Pa. | Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reducing in Itamma* tiou, allays pain, cures wind colic. 200.a bottle. 1 INVESTORS! K,r I ■ advertising "No patent no pay," Prizes, medal* I j-reat j w c d<> A regular putem buMiieuM I j.oi(' win. Advice free. Highest references Write us. WATSON K. COI.K.tIAN, Soliei. | torn ol iiutenta, iktt F. btrvet, Wanhington, D.C I IrlfliPQ Dw'fftte your homes hv using Fnrnhnni'r i LUUICu I'm cut I.ace Curtain, Dinner' and Pillow Sham supporter* Kimpb. t r.wuneira . F.udoisedby J ~o' , l "I'h'x ' . Agents wanted, Uurdeu I City Supply Ci. It. 11. HM So. Clark St., Chicago. 11l PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHNW MORRIS, WASHINGTON,D.C Late Principal Examiner U. 8. Pension Bureau. •lyre, ia luet war, 1J adjudicating claims, utty. aiucu r N U 42 97. Best Cough Syrup. TaateeGood. ÜbcM in time. Sold by druggist*. |®i