"I'mSoTired!" As tired In the morning as when I go to bed I Why is It? Simply because yoai blood Is in such A poor, thin, sluggish condition it does not keep up your strength and you do not get the benefit of your sleep. To feel strong and keep Itrong just try tho tonlo and purifying affects of Hood's Sarsnparilla. Our word for it, 't will do you good. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Hood's Pills cure all liver Ills. 25cents. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup forohildren teething, softens the gums, reducing in flammution. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Conductor E. D. Loomis, Detroit, Mich.. ksays: "The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure ie wonderful." W rite him abdut it. Hold by Druggists, 75c. Piso's Cure for Consumption relieves the most obstinate coughs.—He v. D. BUCHMUEL LEI:, Lexington. Mo., Feb. 24, '94. William Moore, a Kentuckian, 71 years of age. has not left his bod for G3 years. He was injured by a horse when a child. Educate Your Dowels With Casraret*. Candy Cathartic, curoconstipition forever ICc, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Byway of intimidating tramps, the women of Joharfhesburg have formed a South African Revolver Club. The members practice daily, and always carry a weapon when they walk or ride beyond the boundaries of the city. No-To-Ilac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, sl. All druggists. A brggar died at Auxerro, France, not long ago. and in his trunk were found stock securities valued at a mil lion francs. In his cellar were found 400 bottles of rare wines. Five Cent*. Everybody knows that Dobbins' Electric Soap is tho best in tho world, and for 33 years It has sold at the highest price. Its price Is l& row b cents, same as common brown soap. Bars full size and quailty.Order of grocer. Adv w Among the many expenses borne by Railroad companies the ice bill figures quite prominently. For instance, on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad it is expected it will take over 50,000 tons of Ice this year to meet the requirements of the service. The greater portion is used in connection with shipment of perishable goods; the balance in the passenger train service. A great d'ciff of this ice is put up by the company in its own Ice houses, but as the past win ter has been so warm a very large pro portion will have to be purchased. To Euro Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or2sc. IfC.C.C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Congo negroes are remarkable for their thick skin. A case is mentioned of a black slash with a razor in a scuille. The hospital surgeon broke two needles In trying to put in the stitches, and at last was driven to use a brad awl. Sierra Leone* Africa. The settlement of Sierra Leone at ftne time consisted only of the penin sula terminating in Cape Sierra Leone, with an area of about 300 square miles. >, The colony, with its protectorate, now h Includes a large extent of country, es timated at 4,000 square miles. The capital, Freetown, possesses the best harbor in West Africa. The scenery of Sierra Leone is said to be very simi lar to that of the West Indies. The soil is fertile and there Is an abund ance of pure fresh water. Tropical fruits grow luxuriantly. Pineapples especially aro produced very abund antly, while bananas, plantains, avoca do pears, mangoes, limes and oranges are not only consumed locally, but are also exported to Gambia Goree and Senegal. THEY - WANT TO TELL Thoso Grateful Women Who Have Been Helped by Mrs. Pinkham. Women who have suffered severely and been relieved of their ills by Mrs. Pinkham's advice and medicine are L constantly urging publication of their statements for the benefit of other wo men. Here are two such letters: Mrs. LIZZIE BEVERLY, 253 Merrimac St., Lowell, Mass., writes: 44 It affords mc great pleasure to tell all suffering women of the benefit I have received from taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. I can hard ly find words to express my gratitude for what she has done forme. My troublo was ulceration of the womb. I was un der the doctor's care. Upon examina tion he found fifteen very large ulcers, but he failed to do me good. 1 took sev eral bottlesof Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, also used tho Sanative Wash, and am cured. Mrs. Pinkham's medicine saved my life, and I would recommend it to all suffering women." Mrs. AMOS TROMDLEAY, Ellenburgh Ctr., N. Y.. writes: 44 1 took cold at the time my baby was born, causing me to have milk legs, and was sick in bed for eight _ weeks. Doctors did me no good. I mm surely thought I would die. I was al so troubled with falling of the womb. I could not cat, had faint spells as often as ten times a day. One day a lady eainc to sec me and told me of tho benefit she had derived from taking Lydia E. Pinkham's medicine, and ad vised me to try it. I did so, and had taken only half a bottle before I was able to sit in a chair. After taking three bottles I could do my own w ork. I am now in perfect health." R N. U. 28 '93 rIENSION^K^ 3yrlulo4t war, atty amce. FRANK H. BATTLES, eert. Tree Agents. Farmers HU<l Hustlers Aguntc make ft te sl2 per day. Article wanted on every farm. Write quick for terms and territory. H Best Xo ugh SyrupVTMtes Good. Use 0 ROENTGEN RAYS IN WAR. A PORTABLE APPARATUS FOR THE USE OF ARMY SURCEONS. Reunite of the Employment of X liny 9 In Militnrv Surgery on the Recent Fron tier Expedition In India—Working the Apparatus at the Front. At the Koyal United Service Insti tution, London, Surgeon Major W. C. Beevor, Army Medical Staff, delivered an address on "The Working of the Roentgen Rays in Warfare." The lec ture was based on the result of experi ences the officer gained during the re cent operations on the northwest fron tier in India. Surgeon Major Beevor at the outset said his object was to give the results of the employment of the Roentgen ray in military surgery on the recent fron tier expedition in India, and then to lay before them some modifications in the construction of tho appliances for generating tho X ray, which had sug gested themselves to him after work ing among the wounded on the field qf battle and its ndjacent hospitals. He invited their criticism in the hope that Some useful advance in the science might be originated, and additions mado to our efforts toward alleviating human suffering, nnd proving that fcurgeons were aiming, ns our illus trious forefathers ever aimed, at plac ing at least one more niche in the Temple of .Esculapius. He proceeded, with the aid of magic lantern slides thrown upon n screeD, to give repre sentations of enses of interest from the campaign. These consisted of bullet wounds sustained by officers nnd men who had injured bones, joints, and in ternal organs, baffling the skill of sur geons to ascertain their exact position, and which, but for the application of the X rays, mast have resulted in amputation of limbs and probable loss of life. The pictures shown included wounds in the arm, leg, chest, back, finger, and other parts of the body. The most remarkable results ob tained by tho Roentgen rays were per haps those in the cases of a bullet im bedded in tbe backbone, another in the hip, and an Indian soldier, who, at Rawal Pindi, wa3 shot in the foot, pieces of the bullet finally lodging in tho back of the heel, and the case of General Woodhouse, who received bullet wounds in the leg and arm at Dargai. In every one of the instances enumerated, the bullets were, by tbe use of the rays, successfully removed, the men subsequently rejoining their comrades at tbe front. One great de sideratum in tbe construction of all apparatus for military work was that they should be "get-at-able," thus en abling them to renovate the inevitable defects of wear and tear. Every por tion of their apparatus should un doubtedly be easy of access; the coil, the condenser, connections, etc., should all be packed in cases that conld be opened nnd inspected at a moment's notice without tho necessity of special instruments, and, with a view to obtaining this desirable con dition, the Medical Department of the army spared no expense or trouble, having, after due consideration, or dered the latest and most-improved apparatus, a specimen of which he ex hibited. Considering the most desirable means of transport for tlieir appara tus, he pointed out that it was not only possible, but quite easy, to have an X ray appratna working at the front; that the cases already exhibited contained indisputable proof that even in savage warfare, where the Geueva Convention was unknown, the X ray could be brought under control and an immensity of human suffering ob viated. It was not necessary that every field hospital or bearer company should be supplied with an apparatus, as it could be readily transported from one part to another of the field of operations. He maintained it was now the duty of every civilized Nation to supply its wounded in war with an X ray apparatus, among other snrgi cal aids, not only at base hospitals, but close at hand, wherever they might be fighting and exposing them selves to injury in the performance of their hazardous duty. (Cheers.) After trying every kind of transport in In dia—mules, camels, wheeled vehicles, etc.—he came to the conclusion that by far the safest and most satisfactory in every respect was human transport; coolie labor oould be obtained in most places, and where not, any Eu ropean could be employed. As the portable apparatus should not weigh more than from eighty to 100 pounds, two men were all that was required for the moment, and a reserve of two more, with reserve equipment, completed the transport. A bamboo pole or hollow steel bar of about six feet in length was what he found the best construction from which to suspend tho boxes; each end of the pole was carried on the heads or shoulders of the bearers, and the boxes were slung from the pole. In Tirah he employed a disused Dhoolie pole and Dhoolie bearers to convey his npparatus; they willingly volun teered for the service, nnd carried the whole apparatus from Bngh Camp, in Tirah, down tb defile to Dwatoi, and down the Bar.. Valley to I'eshownr, without injury; parts of this march were beset with difficulties seldom experienced in any kind of warfare, and yet these faithful followers landed their charge in good working order at a time when it was sorely needed. A few photographs he took during this march served to show the difficul ties of transport in such a country; yet photography could not adequately exhibit the conditions, for rocks, icy cold water, rapid torrents, frost and snow did not come entirely within the grip of their photographic lenses. Mules, camels, and wheeled transport were too uncertain conveyances for delicate materials', except, of cdtlrse, >here they had good roads and plenty of room; but our military ap- paratus. should be independent ol these luxuries, and it seemed to him that this transport fill filled the neces sary conditions. He then dealt with the difficulties specially involved in working the apparatus at the front. The Pecan Nut. What the chestnut is to Italy the pecan is becoming to the United States. Most of the nuts come from Texas, where the pecan groves have nlreadj brought wealth to their owners. Al though the supply has increased with great rapidity from year to year, it if still behind the demand, which comef not only from the United States and Canada, but of late years from Eng land-npd the Continent. The tree is very handsome and prolific, and be gins to bear when quite young. Its popularity is appreciated by the Texni farmers, who aro planting thousands of acres at the present time to increan the output in the immediate future! Professor Kellogg declares the pecan nut to be an ideal food, and Miss Cor nelia C. Bedford, the President of the Teachers' Association, recommends it in many forms. In one of her lec tures upon the subject she employs it in the making of ice-cream, in salads, in the stuffing of birds, in cake-mak ing, in candy and other culinary shapes. The latest use of the pecan i 3 grinding it into a meal about as fine as medium cornmeal. In this form it can be made into simple biscuits, rolla and bread just as is done with corn meal.—New York Mail and Express. L.l II line Chan&'ii Latest Escape. A private despatch from Pekin to a high Chinese ex-official states that as Li Hnng Chang was on the point of entering the precincts of the Grand Audience Hall three minutes aftei midnight, to have an interview with the Emperor, and just as he was passing through the double line of Im perial Guards at tho Palace gates, a man dressed entirely in black, who it appeared had been concealing him self behind the Guards, suddenly broke through the line and, getting withing striking distance of the old statesman, launched a blow at his head. Fortunately Li Hung Chang had noticed the commotion made by the man breaking through the Guards —possibly he had been informed 61 the probability of such attacks and therefore was on the qui vive—and managed to partially evade the blow. The assailant was cut down by a Guardsman.—North China Gazette. One Way to Efmpe Trouble. A singular custom prevails among the Tartars or Kurds. If a man gets into difficulties —i. e., loses his cattle or other movable property—he pours a little brown sugar into a piece of colored cloth, tie 3 it up and carries one such parcel to each of his friends and acquaintances. In return he is presented, according to circumstances, with a cow or sheep, or a sum of money. He is thus at once set on his legs again. The same method is adopted when a young man wishes tc marry, but is not in a position to sat isfy the parents of his intended bride in the matter of the "bashlyg"—i. e., marriage dower. Only in this case he does not go round himself, but sends a friend or a servant. A Fruit l>let* * A fruit diet has often been known to cure where every other remedy has failed. Thousands of cases which have been given up as hopeless have been cured throngh this means. To fruit feeders such things as rheuma tism, gout, lumbago, sciatica, gravel, etc., are seldom known. Dyspepsia, nervous irritability, to say nothing of numbers of other diseases, can, more or less, be traced to a wrong diet, and are removable when a correot, frugiv orous one is adopted. If, therefore, a fruit diet has indeed nothing else to recommend it, its curative powers would be great enough to insist upon its value. A Dwarf Tainting. What is perhaps the smallest paint ing in the world is the work of a Flemish artist. The canvas is the smooth side of a kernel of common white corn. So skillfully has the ar tist worked that eveu in this small space there is painted a pictnre of considerable latitude. There is a mill on a terrace, a miller with a sack of grain on his back. By the building stands a horse and car, and in the roadway is a group of peasants. Dark Women Most Popular. (scientific experiments conducted on a small scale indicate that dark wom en are more sought as wive 3 than fair. Seven bundled and thirty-seven wom en chosen at random were examined for this purpose. Of those who had red, flaxen or light brown hair, 55} per cent, were married. Of those who had dark brown or black hair seventy-nine per cent, were married. A Now Carpet Cleoncr. Carpets can bo cleaned without re moving tliein from the floor by a new machine which has metal strips set inside a casing to beat the carpet as the cleaner runs over the floor, n fan being mounted in the top of the casing to draw the dust into a water com partment which has an air passage covered by a moistened screen to re tain tho dust particles. The Revolving Atlantic Ocenn. Experiments have been going on for the past twelve years for the purpose of trying to learn something of the characteristics of the Atlantic Ocean as a great moving body of water. As a result the whole Atlantic is shown to be slowly circulating round and round like an enormous pool. New Kind of Window Fane. A novel sort of window glass has been invented. Persons on the in side of the bouse can see through it, but it is opaque to those on the out j side. HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. , To Remove Taper From Walls. Steara seems the most efficacious agent for removing pictures which have been, in an evil moment, pasted to a wall. The little five-o'clock tea kettle may be used. Hot water dabbed on the paper usually only brings it away in spots. For Suminei* Cooking. Tlie oil-stove is a great convenience and comfort in hot months, when it does away with the long-continued heat of coal. Two small ones aro to recommended rather than one of larger size. They are moved more easily, and both burners can bo usod better. A Baby*. Table. A bread-nnd-milk-table is an at tractive piece of nursery furniture in oak or enameled wood. * It consists of a child's low table with vis-a-vis seats, the three pieces held together at the bottom by a wooden rail. No mis haps of bowls or pitcher tumbling in to children's laps is possible, and a naughty baby's efforts to kick over the table cannot succeed in this in stance. How to Tress Fin broidery Troperly. In ail cases of embroidery on linen the work should be carefully pressed when finished, and it is important for every embroiderer to know how this may be done in the simplest and safest manner. The proper way to press the finished work is to lay the embroidery face down on a clean cloth spread over au ironing blanket or two or three thicknesses of flannel. IMace a thin, dampened cloth on the back of the article to he pressed and then use a hot iron deftly on the wet surface until it is perfectly dry. A steaming process is thus engendered wh?rehy the embroidered linen is rendered smooth and the effectiveness of the work much enhanced.—The Bouquet. Banishing the Troublesome Fly. In a recent treatise on injurious insects the writer suggests a simple mode of clearing a room of flies. They will naturally be found at the windows, where they are attracted by the light. The lower sash should be drawn down to shut closely, the upper lowered perhaps a foot from the top. Then pull the shade down, and the flies, following their natural instiuct, crawl up the glass to the top, and, finding the opening, fly out and off. After wards closed blinds or screens keep them out. The book says further that a house-fly does not bite, but merely puts its proboscis on men and animals to absorb the moisture of the skin. Biting may not he the scientific word for the fly's performance, but "absorb ing moisture," it may be said, doe 3 not begin to describe suitably his nag ging little way of a summer morning when one's final nap is dependent on relief from him. Ilntl.elioM Don't.,. Don't put border on carpets for small rooms. Don't bang chandeliers cr lamps in low ceiled rooms. Don't be chary of rich warm tints in northern rooms. Don't buy what suits the fancy re gardless of their combined effects. Don't select anything because it is fashionable, hut because it is good. Don't have any apparent, much loss any regular, arrangement of furniture. Don't believe for a minute that ex pensiveness is essential to beautiful effects. Don't make the table a pivotal point from which the rest of the furniture radiates. Don't make a narrow door narrower with a heavy drapery. We drape too much. Don't use decided pntterns for up holstery, if you have done so for wall and floor coverings. Don't use long-patterned wall-paper in small rooms, or a deep border with low ceilings. Don't have any fanciful, fixed ar rangement of window draperies in rooms in daily use. Don't bny chairs which are not well made and comfortable, or lounges which are not long and broad. Recipes. Honey Frnit-Cake—Fonr eggs, five cups of flour, two cups of honey, one cup of butter, one cup of sweet milk, two teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, one teaspoonful of soda, one pound of raisins, one pound of currants, half a pound of citron, one teaspoonful each of cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg. Hake in a slow oven. Liver r Witk Tomato Sauce—Slice and fry liver as usual. Place in hot platter without gravy. While the liver is frying bring to the boiling point one teacupful of finely cut fresh tomatoes, or canned tomatoes when these are out of season, two table spoonfuls of butter and one-half tea spoonful each of pepper and salt. Boil this sauce ten minutes, pour over the liver and serve immediately. Cream of Celery Soup—One bunch of celery, one pint of water, one pint of milk, one teaspoonful minced lemon peeling, one iablespoonful minced onion, one tahlespoonful of butter, one tablespoonful flour, one-half teaspoon ful salt, one-fourth teaspoonful white pepper. Cook the celery twenty min utes in the water, the onions minced very fine iu the luilk. Combine them with the seasoning and serve quickly after three minutes together. Frothed Eggs—Separate as many eggs as are desired, keeping the yolks perfectly whole and allowing them to remain in half the shell while you beat the whites to a stiif froth. Ar range the whites in individual egg cups, leaving a little well in the cen ter like a nest. Into this center put the yolks of the eggs unbroken, stand the cups in a pr.n of boiling water, cover with another pan, cook about two minutes, serv'e in the cups with a little salt, pepper and butter. Cold. Fish. In a store wbere liome aquarium sup plies are sold there are, besides the usual varied assortment of glass globes, a number of larger tanks of va rious shapes and sizes, In which stock U kept for sale. The tanks themselves are, of course, sold If there Is a de mand for them. Lying across the corner of the largest of these tanks is a little net, the hoop no more than five or six Inches in diam eter, and the handle about a foot long. This Is to scoop up the gold fishes when they are sold. When a new out fit is sold complete the fishes are de livered In the globe or tank. It often happens, however, that the person al ready owning a globe wants to replace fish that have been lost, or to add to his stock, and he goes to the store where such things are sold and buys one or more gold fishes, Just as he would buy any merchandise, except that Instead of sitting down at a coun ter to make his selections, he bends over a tank and indicates among the fishes swimming about the ones he As he makes his selections the dealer scoops them out with the little net, and as likely as not the purchaser carries the fish he has bought, a single fish or half a dozen, or whatever the number may be, right away with him in a tin pall. Little gold fish of the commoner kinds can be bought for a few cents apiece. Some of the rarer varieties cost dollars.—New York Sun. A Long Tramp Baolr. Smith—Pshaw, man. You mustn't be flaunted by trifles. The distance to the Klondike Is no obstacle whatever. Brown—l know that. It's not the dis tance up there that I'm thinking about. Smith—What is it, then? Brown—The distance from here. The Suez Canal took 13 yean to build. A Startled Mother. From the Freeport (III.) Bulletin. While busy at work in her home, Mrs. William S'uay, corner ot Taylor and Han sock Avenues, Freeport, 111., was startled by hearing a noise just behlud her. Turning t , quickly she I ' saw creeping V 5 im - toward her tv her four-year- CVn (/A i " old (laughter, // Beatrice. Theism _/ child "7 \ v ( over the floor. _ ( \\ with an effortQ but. seemed fe II vA rtgrN filled with ioy T I \y at finding her 1 U mother. The \ \ — ro3t of the j happening is r r best told in Mrß. Shay Has Startled. Uie mother's own words. Bhe suid: "On the 2Sth of Sept., 18'JG, while In the bloom of health, Beatrice was suddenly hud severely nfflicted with spinal menin gitis. Strong and vigorous before, In five weeks she became feeble and sutiered from a paralytic stroke which twbded her head back to the side and made it impossible for her to move a limb. Her speech how over. was not affected. We called in our family doctor, one of the most experienced and successful practitioners in the city. He considered the ease a very grave one. Before long little Beatrice was compelled to wear a plaster paris jacket. Prominent physicians were consulted, olsctric bat teries were applied, but no benefit was no ticed until we tried I)r. Williams' Pink Pills. "Busy in my kitchen one afternoon I was startled by the cry of 'Mamma' from little Beatrice who was creeping towards me. I had placed her on an improvised bod in the parlor comfortably close to the fireside and given her some books and playthings. Hhe became tired of waiting for me to come back and made up her mind to go to me, so ber story, 'My Pink Pills made me walk,' which she tells everyone who comes to our house, was then for the first time verified. Site has walked ever since. She lias now taken about nine boxes ot the Cills and her pale and pinched face has een growing rosy, and her limbs gained strength day by day. She sleeps all night long now, while beforo taking the pills she could rest but a few hours at a time." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pule People uro sold by all druggists. Mr. Balfour is one of the fastest speakers in the House of Co.nmons, uttering an average of 100 words a minute. Don't Tobacco Bpit and Smoke Your Life Away- To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or sl. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address terling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York The mines in Manchuria, according to the report of a Chinese official, are situated in a country covered 12 feet deep with snow in winter, and Infested in summer and autumn with an insect which makes life unbearable. To Care a Cola IB One Day. Take Daxatlve Broxno Quinine Tablet®. All Druggists refund money if It falls to cure. Sc. In a Lady's Autograph Album. A valuable lady's album was recently offered for sale In London. It was the ordinary quarto volume, with embossed pages, gilt-edged, and nicely bound like those with which our grandmotli ers used to victimize their friends year* ago. It was an ordinary book, but It had extraordinary contributors. Amon£ the writers might be found I>ouglaf Jerrold, Mark Lemon- William Mac ready, Mrs. Amelia Opie, Mrs. Howitt and \V. M. Thackeray. The artists com prised Sir David Wilkle, Westnil, Sli Edwin Landseer, Cattermolo, Trout John Leech, Sir John Tenniel and Thackeray. There were many sketches by the last-named, In which might be recognized some of the original de signs for "Fendennis" and other of his books. After a spirited competition, the volume was knocked down at £ISO. -Tit-Rita When a man's business runs down the sheriff comes along and winds It up. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without It. Cascareta, Candy Cathartic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring np the lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body. Begin to day to banish pimples, bolls, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cas carets,-beauty for 10 tents. All druggists, satisfaction guaranteed. 1 c. 20c, 25c, r>oc. The working classes form CD per cent the middle class 28 per cent, and the upper cjass 3 per cent ot the population of this country. s Maybe the grocer is "just out of Ivory | Soap but has another just as good." No I other soap is just as good. Insist that he g get Ivory Soap for you, S> .. A OF WARNING.—There are many white soaps, each represented to be V as * ood as the'lvory';" they ARE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack the O peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for " Ivory " Soap and insist x upon getting it. O Cooyrt<bt. 19M. by Th Proet* A OoaM* Co.. ClocinoUt PAINT WALLS 3 CEILINGS I MURALO WATER COLOR PAINTS H FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS SSSfEfSK?;? MURALOI paint dealer and do your own decorating. This material is a IIARI) FINISH to !e applied B with a brusb ami becomes as bard as Cement. Milled lu twenty-four tints and works equally as Bf well with cold or bot water. B IVSEND FOR SAMPLE CO! OR CARDS and If yon cannot purchase this material K from your local dealers let us Know and we will put you in tile way of obtaining it. !■ THE MI IMLO CO., XKW KKICiHTOX, S, 1., \K\V YORK. | x NS* SHOOTS. AMMONIA, WATER,COLOGNE, \V\ $ OR OTHER LIQUID. It is a weapon which rrotectg bicyclists against vicious dog* and foot-pads: travelers against rl>- *is and toughs; homes against thieves a d tra.n| s, and is adapted to many other situations. It di.es not kill ■ r injure; it is perfectly „ H |e to haudle: makes 110 noise or smoke; breaks no law and creates no lasting regrets, us di.es tl.e bullet pwn 1. It simply and amply protects, by couipelliug tiia too to give undivided attention to l.imselt t r awhile instead of to the intended victim. It is the only real weapon which pr teots and also makes fun. laughter aud lo's • f it; it shoots, nt once, but many times without reloading; ami will protect by its appearance in time of danger, although loaded only with liquid. If d< es not get out of order; is durable, handsome, and nickel plated. —- Kent boxed an l post paid by mail with full direction*how to Use fur 5Uc. iu lie. Pus age Stamp*. Post-office Money Order, or Express Money < rder. As to our reliability, reler to it. O. Dun's or Bradstreet's mercantile agencies. XEW YOltK IMO\ SII'I'I.V CO.. 1 Leonard St.. Kcw York. Bear in Kind That "The Gods Kelp Those Who Help Theirselves." Self Kelp Should Teach You to Use SAPOLIO PILES "Isnfffered the torture* of tlie damned with protruding piles brought on by constipa tion with which I was afflicted for twenty years. I ran across your CASCARF.TS in the town of Newell. la.. and never found anything to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from piles and feel like a new man." C. H. Kkit/., 1411 Jones St., Sioux C.t£. la. m CATHARTIC TRADE MASS fftOISTVKCO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Po Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 35c, 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... lUrll.f R.a.d, Cap..., rhlru.. Rn.trv.l, T0.,. Sll w-TO-wrasfds'vwwf^^io'aA'sf gyr pays iNL FR AYT BEST SCALES- LEAST MONEY JONES OF BINGHAMTON N. Y. Anm B I Reliable agents wanted In every SPECI r u Khf^rShf. given. Goods guaranteed. Rerannerative employ ment. Both sexto*. Wri*e giving age and previous •mplovment. Enclose d'mnp. G. F. Afcuaxaxuuaa, tf becelejr tit.. Rochester, It.Y. .•All.—— ■ i' i ■i ■ i ■ — | Beel-Ger /fDAfrJsp' Chainless Bicycle® MAKE HILL CLIMEING EASY. 5125 BPBP*nMotly Cmt ■ ■ ■ UMHtty PnuW kp ■ SB U KLINE'S UUI Bf ■ ■ W IERVE RESTORE* ■ g^wssa ■ *">•' wortyad. u> Pj. *Ua. Ltd. Mtens ■■ lusuuiu or HIIMM. m Arot St-.pi\la^slsfcir
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers