Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, April 11, 1898, Image 3

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PRICE S2.2S—READ ON!
No. 083. Brass Trimmed White En
ameled Bedstead, made in 54,48, 42nod
86 inch widths—length 75 inches. It has
one-inch pillars, two inch brass vases
and caps. This bed retails at from sto
6 dollars.
Buy of the maker and save the mid
dleman's profits. Our Catalogues are ■
mailed for the asking. Complete lines
of Furniture, Draperies, Crockery,
Pictures, Mirrors, Stoves, Refrigera
tors, Baby Carriages, Lamps, Bedding,
etc., are contained in these books. Our
Lithographed Carpet Catalogue show
ing all goods in hand-painted colors is
also free: if Carpet samples are wanted
mail us Bc. in stamps. Drop a postal at
once to the money-savers and remem
ber that we pay freight this
month on pnrehaneN of 4'arpeta,
Lace C'nrtalnn, Portlera and
Rags amounting to 99 and over.
Julius Hines A Son
BALTIMORE, BID*
Flattery on Ice,
He told her 6he was stunning,
Her smile was very sweet:
Just then, somehow, in turning.
They slipped and lost their feet I
He fell, and she fell on him,
And, as in pain he lay,
"Ah, yes, indeed, you're stunningP
Was all that be could say.
Itever Too Sure,
Against the probability or possibility of
mischance or accident we can never be too
sure. But if we should stop to oonsider
how great Is the chanoe of sudden death,
we would be made too timid and unhappy.
Caution is needed not to be foolhardy, and
precaution to know what is best to do* when
an accident happens. One day this winter
two men were walking and one said:
"We're too timid in treading on slippery
places. I tread ilrmly and never think
about them, and so escape a fall." "Never
be too sure," said the other; "it Is that that
throws you oft nnd makes the fall the
harder." Just then they came upon a
Elace covered with thin snow, where kids
ad been sliding. The llrst speaker slipped
and came down with his foot turned and
bndly sprained his ankle, lie was a cripple
on crutches until a short time ago, having
used many things without benoilt. Up to
that time he hud not used St. Jacobs Oil,
which, when used, cured him completely,
so that he walks as usual. There is a prob
ability that for the rest of the season ha
will walk cautiously, with the precaution
of having this great remedy ready for use.
The largest bell in France has been
hung in the belfry of the Church of the
Sacred Heart in Paris. It weighs 25
tons, can be heard at a distance of 25
miles, and its vibration lasts six min
utes.
To Cur© A Gold In On© Day*
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet©. All
Druggibts refund money if it fails to cure. 85c.
It is alleged that the use of the pince
nez in the place of spectacles is apt
to cause cancer. A gentleman recently
died of this disense, brought about by
pressure on the bridge of the nose.
Chew Star Tobacco—The Best.
Smoke Sledge Cigarette?.
Bottles Made of Paper.
A German paper-maker has recently
obtained letters patent on bottles made
of paper, for use on board of ships par
ticularly. It has been a cause of much
damage to steamer lines that in bad
weather a large number of bottles of
wine and other liquors are broken in
the storerooms, in spite of every pre
caution. The uew bottles arb made of
a composition which, with the solution
in which they are made water tight, la
still the inventor's secret. After being
Impregnated with this fluid the paper
bottles are slowly dried m gas stoves,
and this process of drying must be
watched carefully, for otherwise the
bottle© would remain porous and al
low the fluid to leak out. These bottles
can be handled roughly without the
least apprehension; neither tbe pitch
ing nor the rolling of a great steamer
during rough weather nor the break
irg down of a truck upon which they
are loaded loosely would be apt to
damage a single paper bottle.—New
York Herald.
~ CONSULTING A WOMAN.
Mrs. Pinkham's Advice Inspires
Confidence and Hope.
Examination by a male physician is
a hard trial to a delicately organized
woman.
She puts it off as long as she dare,
and is only driven to it by fear of can
cer, polypus, or some dreadful ill.
Most frequently such a woman leaveo
than better In consulting Mrs' rink
ham no hesitation need be felt, the
story is told to a woman and is wholly
confidential. Mrs. Pinkham's address
is Lynn, Mass., she offers sick women
her advice without charge.
Her intimate knowledge of women's
troubles makes her letter of advice a
wellspring of hope, and her wide experi
ence and skill point the way to health.
44 1 suffered with ovarian trouble for
leven years, and no doctor knew what
was the matter with me. I had spells
which would last for two days or more.
I thought I would try Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound. I have
taken seven bottles of it, and am en
tirely cured."— MßS. JOHN FOREMAN, 26
N. Woodberry Ave., Baltimore, Md. <
The above letter from Mrs. Foreman
la onLr one of thousands.
Miss Anthony's Medallions.
Plaster paris medallions about five
Inches in diameter of Susan B. Antho
ny are now being sold by the various
woman's suffrage leagues for the pur
pose of swelling the funds with which
to carry on their campaign work.
Doubtless the suffrage pioneer would
be quite horrified to learn that the
little scheme for which she has posed
Is quite in accord with a social fad
across the ocean which is accredited
to the Duchess of Marlborough.
Superstition About the Turquoise.
An ancient superstition connected
with the turquoise is even to-day
believed in. If it is given with love
it carries with it happiness and good
luck. If the well-being of the giver
is in peril the faithful turqnoise pales;
if, on the other hand, the giver proves
faithless, the stone tarns dark. It is
an emblem of prosperity and is also
dedicated to December. A cluster
composed of diamonds, loadstones and
sapphires combined is guaranteed by
the ancient faith to render the wearer
almost invincible and altogether irre
sistible.
New Jersey*. Woman lawyer.
Somerville, N. J., has the honor of
possessing the first woman Commis
sioner of Deeds in the State. Miss
Mary 51. Steele, (laughter of former
Congressman W. TV. Steele, was able,
in 1895, after a persistent struggle, to
secure the passage of a bill permitting
women to he appointed Commissioners
of Deeds in New Jersey. This bill
was approved by Governor Werts,
who appointedjMiss|Steele the first in
cumbent of that office under the new
law. While not in active practice
Jliss Steele has passed a legal exami
nation, received her certificate as an
attorney at-law and has been appointed
Master in Chancery, and has appeared
in several important cases in the local
courts.—New York Tribune.
A Woman Archaeologist,
slrs. Cornelius Y. Stevenson, prom
inent in fashionable society, has left
Philadelphia for a two months' tour of
investigation of the Upper Nile. It is
understood she goes as the represen
tative of the University of Pennsyl
vania and that she will conduct her
researches in company with Flanders
Petrie. Sirs. Stevenson comes of an
old Quaker City family, although 6he
was born in Paris, it eared in the
household of Achille Jubiual, as a girl
she imbibed from the noted antiqua
rian a thirst for archieological study.
When the university department was
created by Provost Pepper in ISB9the
choice of manager promptly fell upon
Mrs. Stevenson. She is the only fem
inine member of the Oriental Club,
and has lectured publicly on a num
ber of Egyptian themes. Mrs. Steven
son is secretary of the department of
Vchioology and at the
University of Pennsylvania and hon
orary curator of the Egyptian and
Mediterranean section of the museum.
Rose Leaf Wishes For the Bride.
A St. Louis belle, Miss Nellie Lee
Hull, introduced a unique feature on
the occasion of her marriage to Will
iam H. Wissing. After the ceremony,
while the bridal party were making
their preparations for traveling, the
bridesmaids were not idle. They ob
tained several rose jars full of the dried
petals of all the American Beauty roses
which the groom had sent the bride
three times each week during the
period of their engagement—six
months. These numbered 1000 roses
in all, and made a vast quantity of rose
petals. As the bride and groom walked
from the stairway to the door, they
were vigorously pelted with these frag
rant missiles, instead of the usual rice.
The costliest and most; unique gift
which the bride received was a square
box of heavy glass, mounted in gold
and set on a standard. Within it were
five and ten-dollar gold pieces to the
amount of 8"00, and in one corner was
a small card, which read: "Pin money
from Grandpa Hull."—St. Louis Re
public.
Wearing the Hair.
There are two ways to wear the hair. '
The way you like it best and the way
that is most fashionable. The fashion
able way depends upon your hat.
With the front tip-tilted hats the hair
is worn a little under the back of the
hat in the medium space that is so un
comfortable with all other hats. With
the front tip-tilted hats the hair worn
a little under the back oj the hat in
the medium space that is so uncom
fortable with all other hats. With the
hat that is worn way back the hair is
dropped to the back of the neck. It
is never scraped up under the hat.
That is a Bowery style not to he tol
erated on Fifth avenue. Yet there are
women who do it.
The hair, with a hat, is never worn
very high. The style of piling it up
on top of head and setting the hat
owex it is an abomination. The only
way, positively, in which it can be
worn on top, is when the hat is open
and tho hair is allowed to stick through
the top of the hat. This is sometimes
the case where a becoming bandeau is
worn. But it is never seen otherwise.
Of course the bandeau is only for very
full dress. si
The prettied way to wear the hair
is medium low. But with women with
regular features who wave the hair,
this has the curious look of a fashion
plate. An easy mode is the Langtry.
This is a low knot either loose or
braided and fastened so low in the
back of the neck that it seems to be
falling off. Doctors recommend this,
with as few hairpins as can be used
consistently with keeping the hair in
place.
Tho hats turned up in front allow
only one style, and that is the low
coiifnre. There is a side puff that
looks quite pretty but it is hard to ar
range and so is rarely successful.—
Trenton (N. J.) American.
The Women of Bnrmnh,
Women in Burmah are perhaps freer
and more contented than they are any
where else in the world. Although
Bnrmah is bordered on one side by
China, where women are held in con
tempt, and on the other side by India,
where they are kept in the strictest
seclusion, Burmese women have
achieved for themselves and have been
permitted by their men to attain a
freedom of life and action that has no
parallel among oriental peoples. The
secrect lies probably in the fact that
the Burmese woman is active and in
dustrious, while the Burmese man is
indolent and often a recluse. Becom
ing, therefore, both by'taste and habit,
the money earner, the bargainer and
the financier of the household, Bhe has
asserted and obtained for herself the
right to hold what she wins and the
respect due to one who can and does
direct and control. Things are
strangely reversed in Burmah. There
man is the religious soul of the Na
tion and woman its brain. Burmese
women are born traders, and it is
more often the wife than the husband
who drives the bargain with the Eng
lish bhyer for the poddy harvest, or at
any rate she is present on the occa
sion and helps her easy-going husband
to stand firm. .So highly is trading
esteemed that the daughter of well-to
do pareuts, and even a young mar
ried woman, will set up a booth in the
bazaar, and gowned in a bright skirt
and white jacket, with a flower jaunt
ily stuck into her coiled black tresses,
she will start every morning with a
tray of sweetmeats,fruit or toys on her
head,and,with a gayety and grace horn
of the sunshine and the bounteousness
of the land, will push a brisk trade all
through the short and sunny day. The
earnings made thus are the woman's,
and cannot be touched by her hus
band.—Chicago Times-Herald.
FAgliion Notes.
The latest ties for women are the
sailor knot 3 of silk with broad ends,
sometimes trimmed with tiny plaited
frills, i
Wide stock bands of white mousse
line de soie with huge bow knots are
worn around the throat, recalling old
portraits.
In fine buttons for bodices and
jackets some handsome novelties are
shown in celluloid, jet, steel and por
celain. The latter are especially
lovely, and often look like miniatures,
so exquisitely are ideal heads painted
npon them.
In fine buttons for bodices and
jackets some handsome novelties are
shown in celluloid, jet, steel and
porcelain. The latter are especially
lovely, and often look like miniatures,
so exquisitely are ideal heads painted
upon them.
Blouses of brown velvet, trimmed
with mink or sable, and showing ap
pliques of P.ussian lace, may be seen
ready-made in some of the large retail
stores. Different colors may be seen,
but brown, in its many lovely shades,
seems to be the favorite.
Poplin waists are fashionable, nnd
make a pretty, serviceable garment for
ordinary street and house wear. They
are made up in Norfolk style, with
box pleats in the front and back, and
a belt two inches wide. They can also
be made in regular shirt-waist style.
telack crepe do cliene gowns are
very much worn, and very prettily
trimmed with narrow ruffles of the
same, edged with black guipnre or
Chantilly lace. Bands of lace inser
tion, with frills of narrow lace on
either edge, stripe the blouse bodice.
The belt craze is on the increase,
and the most beautiful specimens are
shown made of leather, silk, velvet
nnd metal. sLiuy of the latter have
jewels set irregularly in the large
links, and the enamelled belts are
things of real beauty. The buckles
are also handsome.
An exquisite white velvet gown seen
at an afternoon reception was trimmed
with pearl passementerie. The blouse
_ front was of white net embroidered
with small pearls and silver threads.
Full ruehings of white chiffon finished
the edges of the blouse, and were worn
at the wrists and throat.
A very large number of evening
dresses are made with transparent
sleeves reaching to the wrist. The
. bodice proper may have a transparent
yoke, or guimpe to correspond, or be
cut low, or in three-quarter style,
either form being without doubt fash
ionable; nevertheless, a low bodice
with long sleeves in Victorian fashion
looks extremely odd, and it is rhrely
if every becoming.
FIGHT IN THE AIR.
Battle Royal Between a Gray and u
Bald Eagle.
A man sat on the sands n/t Capron In
let, opposite Fort Pierce, and admired
the graceful flight of an osprey, says
I the Jacksonville Florida Citizen. About
fifty yards above the blue water, he
wheeled on widespread pinions, dlrect
! lng his course by a motion of his tall or
a curve of the wing. Presently he bal
anced himself, the wings shut on the
[ body and ho plunged Into a long swell
and rose with a fish in his talons. With
i scream of exultation he shook him
self free of moisture, like a dog, and
circled to attain sufficient altitude to
clear the woods.
But a fishing eagle, twice his weight,
had seen the performance, and answer
ed the scream. He mounted to strike,
and the osprey, burdened as he was,
gave up the contest and dropped the
fish. With a swing, t&e fisher turned
aud caught it and flew low to regain
the blasted pine and feast,
j But out of the blue came another
scream and a dim spot detached Itself
from a cloud and moved straight on the
scene of action. The fisher heard the
cry of bartle, and he knew he was lost
If the bald eagle struck him with a
swoop. Hastily he turned and flew al
j most directly upward, still holding hi*
prize. The osprey soared back with
| shrill whistlings, as If he mocked the
efTorts of the robber.
The bald eagle screamed again and
wes answered by the gray. The bald
came with leveled head, like an arrow
i from the bow—the fisher still struggled
; for an equal position. Then tine bald
; curved the forward edge of his great
1 rans and started downward. The gray
' dropped the mullet and turned upside
| down In midair, with beak and talons
i ready. The osprey caught the mullet
and sailed homeward.
! Then the two great birds struck with
a thud, distinctly heard below, though
they must have been half a mile In the
air. Feathers flew as If you had rip
ped a pillow In a strong breeze, and
as the two fell, it could be seen that
the talons of the bald straddled the
body of the gray and were burled at
the roots of the wings. But the gray's
beak tore at the throat of the bald,
while his claws were busy tearing like
I the lawn of a wolf who Qerhts a bull
log. xueir Wiilgs mrn iftutrr as a
foose fights, and they tumbled over and
iver, slantingly to the sea. As they
touched the water each broke its hold
ind made for the shore. The gray fell
n the edge of the woods, the bald land
ed on a tree, nearly fell, and
igalnst the trunk for support as it sat
u the crotch.
An Overwork#*! Brain.
I From the liecord, Pierccton, Ind.
I Determined to rise in his chosen pro
! fession us un educator, Ernest Kemper, of
Pierceton, Ind., overtaxed himself men
tally and physically. He was ambitious,
his mind was always on his work. From
early morn until late at night he contin
ually pored over his books.
Few persons, even with the strongest
constitutions, can keop up under such a
strain.
In nddltion to his studios, Mr. Kemper
was teaching a school some throe miles
from his home. Finally, his excessive study
and the exposure of going to and from
school in all kinds of weather undermined
i his health.
I He was taken to his bed with pneumonia
| and his overworked brain almost collapsed.
' For several weeks he was seriously ill.
Catarrh had taken root in his system and
his mind was in a delicate condition. He
. —r wassenttoColorndowherehe
P months without
1 land treated
r "y=ll fil him without avail,
In ftD n tl ch a k° Sl)i "
[P \A\ [\\ tried, but all abso
ll 11 K W lutely without
I 111 L/Yftl benefit. Finally
U 1 his physician re-
VI BP commended Dr.
£? Williams' Pfnk
Ovcratudy. Pills Tor Pale Peo
ple, and from the first box he began to im
prove. When he had taken nine boxes he
was completely cured. This famous blood
and nerve medicine bad accomplished what
all bis former expensive treatment failed
to accomplish. Mr. Kemper says his ca
tarrh has entirely left him; he is strong
again and weighs nine pounds more than
he ever did. He gives tho pills the ontlre
credit. He is sturting teaching again and
(eels abundantly able to coutiuue the
work. To prove that the above is true in
every respect, Mr. Kemper made an uffl
davit as follows:
Subscribed and sworn to before mo this
die 10th day of September, 1897.
R. P. WATT, Notary Public.
We doubt if these pills have an equal In
all the range of medicine, for building up a
run down and debilitated system.
Shrewd Young Man.
The young man approached the elders
ly capitalist with a confident air.
"Sir," he saJd, "I love yonr daugh
ter. I ask you for her hand."
Tho old man turned pale with rage.
"You want my daughter," he snarled.
"Well, you'll get my foot." And h.
made a sudden advance on the youth.
The latter did not quail. On the con
trary he leaped in the air. He waved
his arms. He yelled "Kill him! kill
him! robber! robber!" He Jumped at
the old man, who trembled and shrank
back. He cowered before the savage
onslaught. "Kill him! Kill him!"
roared the youth.
"Wait, wait!" screamed the old man.
"I'll reverse my decision!"
"For it appears that the young man
trad In some way learned the fact that
In his early years the aged capitalist
was a base-ball umpire.
More Peer tlian Slicep In Maine.
Twenty-five years ago there were
rery few deer In Maine, especially lu
Franklin and Oxford Counties. They
were there unknown. In fact, X never
saw a deer track In tho State till about
1880. Since that time they have In
creased very faßt. I have no fear for
deer in the future. They are to-day In
every county of the State. Indeed, 1
may safely say, I am sure that there
are more deer than sheep In the State
to-day. And that this Is so Is due. In
my opinion, to protection afforded
tl~——ZCastoa Herald-
America's Greatest leiisiste
Tho following is a characteristic Ilood's i
Harsaparllla testimonial. Facts like these
have mado Hood's Sarsaparilhi America's
Greatest Medicine and endeared it to thou
sands of homes scattered all over this
broad land.
"We like to tell what Hood's Sarsapa
rilla has done for us. Our four children
had diphtheria. From the very first our
little boy Ralph, then seven years old, was
H@@cl pn ill i
Is America's Greatest Medicine becanse it accomplishes wonderful cures when all other medicines fail,
sold by all druggists. sl, six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
• 100 Howard. SIOO.
The renders ol this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis
ease that science has been able to cure tu all
Its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Core is the only positive euro now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally. acting d.roctly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy
ing the foundation of the disease, und giving
the patient strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to car*.
Scud for list of testimonials. Address
F. .T. Cheney <& Co., Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall'* Family Pills are the best.
Oh, What Splondid Coffee.
Mr. Goodman, Williams Co., 111.,
writes: "From one package Salzer a
German Coffer? Berry costing -5? 1 grew
200 rbs. of better coffee than 1 can buy
In stores at 30 cents alb." A. C. 6.
A package of this coffee and big seed
and plant catalogue la Bent you by
John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,
Wis., upon receipt of 15 cents stamps
and this notice.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness after lirst day's use Oi.' Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Itostorer. trial bottle and treatise free
Da K. 11. KniNK. Ltd- U3l Aroh St..Phiia..Pa.
Mrs. Window's Soothing Srrnn for chfWrem
teething, softens the gums.reducing inflamma
tiou. allays pain, cures wiud colic. 26c.a bott.%
Piso's Cure for Consumption has saved me
/nnny a doctor's bill. —fc*. V. Hakdy, llopkius
Place. Baltimore. Md„ Dec, 2,lbbL
The colored people of the United
States maintain 7 colleges, 17 academ
ies, and 50 high schools.
A Consoling Thought.
Even the best of mirrors is a libelous
iff air. The reflection we see there does
not accurately portray our likeness.
The hair is wrong In tone, the eyes art
hot correct In color, and as for the com
plexion—well, if the looking-glasses
tpoke the truth, the sale of various
complexion washes would decrease tc
half, for any fair skin looks grajr and
pallid in the glass. You may lie cer
tain that however plain your face
Beems, It is by no means so plain as 11
fippears In the telltale mirror. Second
y, you cannot assume your natural ex
pression whilo peering In the looking
glass. The eye must bo In a certain
position before you **an see at all, and
the eye, so far as egression Is con
rerned, governs the face. The conse
quence Is that you can see only one ol
your expressions in the glass, and thai
expression is one of attentive examina
tlon. All the other expressions bj
which your friends know you, favora
ble or unfavorable, you have never seeD
and never will see.
Founded 1,000 Years Ago.
The present year la said to be the
thousandth anniversary of the founda
tion of the British navy.
ONB ENJOY©
Both the method and reunite when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
oure it promptly for any ono who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO,
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. ± '
uuaviiu. a. new FORK. RX. \
j very sick and for several days It seemed as |
if he would never bo any hotter. After a
I whilo ho begaa to improve and in a few
weeks was able to go out, although weak
and miserable. Then, gradually
All Strength in Hl3 Limbs
gave out. Tho physicians told us It was
paralysis, which sometimes follows nn at
tack of diphtheria. Wo did everything
for him, but bo grow worse until be was in
a pitiful condition. Ho suffered terribly
at night and complained continually of
bis bead, and in what little sleep bo was
able to get, moaned unceasingly. He lost
all control of tho muscles of bis body and
limbs. Ho had no appotito and complained
of feeling sick at his stomach all the time.
After wo had triod many different reme
dies and had about given up all hope we
commenced giving hiin Hood's Sarsa
parilla. In a short time he ceased to com
plain, his appotito improved and at the
end of three months he was able to attend
school part of the time. Now he is well
and quite a strong aud rugged boy. You
Colli Elite Bicycles. |
J Price s i2s. I
f The Columbia cbninless bicyolo has already passed harder tests than Ml
> I any bicycle ever made, and has proved itselt the best. Other makers JU
'[ may decry the Columbia ohalnless, yet they oiler you an untried linita- '{l
I tion in the same breath. Bfl
'I ItEMEM RF.H THIS— We make but one quality of Columblas, and (l
■ that is the very best. There is no varying of material, construction or t]
| I quality. All Columblas are madeoi 5 per cent. Nickel Steel Tubing which jg
i costs twice as much and Is 30 per cent, stronger than any other tubing [fl
n known. Kl
1 Columbia Chain Wheals, - Price 575
Hartford Bicycles, ..... " QQ ft!
Vodotte Sicycios, - - Price S4O and 35
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. IS
Catalogue freo from any Columbia dealer, or by mail for one 2-cent stamp. m
IPJUNTSWALLMfIUNB
I HURALO WATER COLOR PAiSTTS
I roa MSCMTINB WALLS Mil CEILINGS
H your grocer or paint dealer anil do your own *' "A deco- !
[| rating. This material is a HARD FINISH to ho applied with n brush jj
n and becomes as hard as Cement. Milled in twenty-four tints and works ,
Eg equally as woll with cold or hot water. j6aT"SEAE> FOR SAMPLE |
H CARBS and if you cannot purchase this material from yonr local deal- |
gj ers let us know and we will put you in the way of obtaining it.
| THE MIIEALO CO., NEW BRIGHTON', S. 1., NEW YORK.
*•.*. Bun*y Hm-,. prlow, JIS.OO. *"'• Bend for lrf. frt Ko. fA*. Purrr. Prirtwlth enrt!n, lunr*. pn.
A A. good as soil, for |ii. Catalogue of All our ttjlet. abide a; ron uJ limderr At good a* mllitor |M.
ELKHART CACCIAGE AND UimaS SLFU. CO. W. B. PILATT, Sec'y, ELKIIABT, IXB. r
YUCE uu mention of thlt publication. THE DR. WIIITLiiALL liKGKIMi.NK CO.. South IJond. Indian*.
"DON'T BORROW TROUBLE.'' BUY
SAPOL.IO
'TIS CHEAPERJN THE END.
Established 1730.
I Baker's I
f> . <-
fi. <3
I Chocolate, S
s> I <?
,
& celebrated for more
£ than a century as a
Jfifcuj?) delicious, nutritious, *s'
and flesh-forming
beverage, has our
W Yellow Label V
Ijfl on the front of every
& klt lfvlSl package, and our
& jfPjjpF the
& 4
£, NONE OTHER GENUIN'B.
& <*
MADE ONLY BY <§;
| WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., g
| & Dorchester, Mass.
Swl 4 <$ 444 4 44 44 44 44 t J 4 44^5
are r.t liberty to use this testimonial if you
desire, as we feel we cannot say too much
in praise of Hood's Sarsaparilia as a blood
purifier und building lip medicine." Ma#
R. E. Andehson*, Cumberland, Maine.
Economy is also a characteristic of
Ilood's Sarsaparilia. Every bottle con
tains 109 Doses, and hence there is a
solid fact ooncisely stated in the*familiar
line, 100 Doses One Dollar.
irSEEOS\
fity Ro'.rrr'o Se?ds are Wtrraatrd to Prodnce. wk
LeßatiTllle. Pa.. atr.lsticd the irorld
fcl 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 10c. S3
|H 1 ptt(t of rare farm Hoy Pea. Sand Vateh. fIH
WjJ 1 ciu liny ouMTtamuioth Sie<l Catalogue, tcillng %\\ ffU
J 1 Potutor %)
Garden & Fhiwer
V
JAIULS J. H. GUiiCOiiT ASOajtorth'fcMj ■,
H Jb'lior or Patentee ftoThS'lu^Waihl
j ■■ lutfluu, 1). C. Correspondence Solicited.
! P (,K SAI.K-A 3-revolutlnn Babccok Opti
* mus Book and Newspaper Press, asi?ood na
| new. Address, ft(i Tower St., Allegheny. I'u.
' i Thompson'* Eye Water