Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, August 22, 1898, Image 3

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    Salt Rheum
That Terrible Itching, Burning*
Smarting, Swelling
Which ralofl pleasure, luterferes with
work, prevents sleep—yields to the blood
rurlfylng effects of Hood's Bareaparllla.
It has cured thousands of cuses, it will
cure yours. Remember that
Hood's parilla
Us America's Greatest Medicine.
Hood's Pills easy to tak;>. easy to upcrato.
Fit. permanently cured. Xo flts or nprvo'i.
Sees artyrflrstday'e use of Dr. Kline's Great
erve Restorer 92 trial bottle and treatise
free. Dr.R.H. KLINE, Ltd.,031 Aruh BtPhlla,Pa
Three pints of liquid a day are suffi
cient for the average adult.
Scanty U Blood Deep.
Clean blood meana a clean Bkln. No beauty
without It. Cascarets, Candy Catbartio clean
your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up
the lazy Uver and driving all Impurities
from the body. Begin to day to banish
pimple*, boils, bloUh >s, blackheads, and that
sickly bilious complexion by taking Cas
carete,—beauty for 10 cents. All druggists,
satisfaction guaranteed. 1 c. 30c, Ski, 50c.
Bow They ntae,
▲ borse always gets up on Its fore
logs first, and a cow directly the op
posite.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoko Your Life Away
To quit tobaoco easily and forever, be mag
getic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
ac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak
men strong. All droggiets, 50c or sl. Cure
guaranteed. Booklet and snmple free. Addross
Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New York.
An Experiment avith the Memory.
Btartlng with the word Washington
■write down one hundred words just at
they occur to you. Let your second
word be the one which Washington
naturally suggests to you. Possibly li
will be capltol. It may be Fresident.
Take the word which first comes Into
your mind. In the same manner let
the third word be suggested by the sec
ond, the fourth by the third, and so oa
Be careful that the third word Is not
suggested by both the first and second
Drop the first entirely, and let youi
mind go from the second alone to the
third. Having written this list ol
words, you will have furnished your
self with a cheap but very useful mir
ror of your mind. If you nro able to
use this mirror, you may discover some
very serious defects In your mental
processes. You may discover that you
think along certain llDes too frequent
ly. You may discover that you are
using superficial principles quite too
much to the neglect of more Important
laws of mind. Y'ou will be led to avoid
eertaln Unkings and to encourage oth
ers of a more philosophical nature.—
Saturday Evening Post.
Peru's anthropology has been the
theme of 3,000 books.
TWO GRATEFUL WOMEN
Restored to Health by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
••Can Do My Own Work.**
Mrs. PATRICK DANEIIY,
West Winsted, Conn., writes:
"DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM: —It is with
pleasure that I write to you of the
benefit I have derived from using your
wonderful Vegetable Compound. I was
very ill, suffered with female weak
ness and displacement of the womb.
"I could not sleep at night, had to walk
the floor, I suffered so with pain in my
aide and small of my back. Was trou
bled with bloating, and at times would
faint away; had a terrible pain in iny
heart, a bad taste in my mouth all the
time and would vomit; but now, thanks
to Mrs. Pinkham and her Vegetable
Compound, I feel well and sleep well,
can do my work without feeling tired;
do not bloat or have any trouble
whatever.
"I sincerely thank you for the good
advice you gave me and for what your
medicine has done for me."
••Cannot Praise It Enough.*
Miss GERTIE DUNKIN,
Franklin, Neb., writes:
" I suffered for some time with pain
ful and irregular menstruation, falling
of the womb and pain in the back. I
tried physicians, but found no relief.
" I was at last persuaded to try Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
and cannot praise it enough for what
it has done for me. I feel like a new
person, and would not part with your
medicine. I have recommended it to
several of my friends."
TAPE
WORf¥BS
"A Capo worm eighteen feet long at
least came on the sceuo after my taking two
CASCARETS. This lum sure has caused my
bud health for the past three yours. lam stiil
taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy at
notice by sensible people."
GEO. W. BOWLES, Baird, Maas.
CANDY
M.CATHARTIC
ccaeto
TftADK MANN RIOISTtRCD
Pleasant. Taste Good. Do
Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Rpwedj Company, Chicago, Montreal, Kew York. 313
NO-TO-BAC gists to BaWt?
ELECTRIC BELL OUTFIT'S^
Including a 2V6 Inch Iron Box Bell, Dry
battery, Bronze push Button, 75 feet of
wire, Ataplee, ecrewa and instructions,
fl outfit* for $5.00. Agentn wanted to
handle Electrical goods. Send for out
fit and secure agency. Empire Electric
Co., 419 Granite Bldg.,Rochester,N.Y.
Five-Inch Ilelts.
The latest thing in belts to wear
with shirt waists is a soft taffeta rib
bon, live inches wide, made tight
enough to wrinkle into half that width,
and fastened with a pretty silver gilt
buckle.
Dainty Pctticontß.
Petticoats for wear under thin silk
or lawn gowns are of all sorts and
descriptions, and quite as varied in
style and adornment as the dress skirts
which will hide them. Dimity petti
coats are a novelty; they are made of
the same striped and flowered stuff as
the dainty little morning frocks that
so many women are having made up
just now. Three frills at the bottom
or a deep flounce, headed with lace in
sertion or comet ribbon beading, is the
usual way these pretty skirts are
trimmed. Petticoats or colored linen
—buff color is the most popular—are
very serviceable for country wear, the
colored linen keeping presentable
longer than white—and is there any
thing so awful ns a soiled white skirt?
—and washing beautifully.
Khaki 1. the Tliiiij*.
Khaki is about the sturdiest, most
wear-resisting fabric among the sea
sou's novelties. As khaki plain and
simple or as khaki serge it is utilized
both for boys and girls. Though it is
far enough from having nautical asso
ciations, it is handy stuff for the mak
ing of sailor dresses. These have blue
linen, hemstitched collars or plain
ones of white pique. More elaborate
samples are of white serge with collars
and Bashes of Roman striped silk.
Khaki is almost the best material for
bicycle dresses during the warm sea
sou, Coat and skirt suits for girls of
ten and over are made of it. The reefer
coats are trimmed with red braid. Bi
cycle skirts for girls are usually plain,
but rows of braid may be used for or
nament.
The Sunshiny Woman.
When the sunshiny woman be
comes a wife she brings into her hus
band's life an element of joy that no
future calamity can entirely eliminate.
She is a helpmate in very truth,
though she may not be able to make
a loaf of bread and has the most extraor
dinary ideas on the subject of do
mestic economy. She is a sort of
mental bracer, the effervescence of
the sunbeams brightening all within a
radius of their influence. Life to her
is never so gloomy but that it could
be gloomier. She revels iu the very
joy of living, and even when physical
misfortune pursues her the beautiful
soul smiles forth from the patient eyes
until we inwardly remark, "God bless
her," and know that the world would
be better if there were mere like her.
A Talented Daughter of Austria.
Mine. Jindriska Peskova, of Prague,
is the most distinguished woman in
the Anstriau empire, and was recently
decorated by the Emperor in acknowl
edgment of her great work among
women, being the second Austrian wo
man to be so honored. Her chief
work has been the building in Praguo
of a magnificent woman's building,
which cost 3200,000, and which is the
centre of woman's activities in that
empire. Every year 2000 Bohemian
young women are here prepared for
the University of Praguo, the doors of
which institution were opened to
women throifgh the untiring efforts of
Mme. Peskova. She is also the fore
most woman pcet of her country, edi
tor of a woman's journal, translator of
many languages, and a writer on edu
cational matters.
A Popular Hat.
A style of hot that is popular has a
low crown and a medium broad brim.
It is trimmed with long ostrich feath
ers laid flat on the brim on each
side. The plumes start from the front
under a buckle or Bhortbow, and, be
ing carried to the hack, fall over the
edge and curve down upon the hair.
The plumes this year have little curl
iu them, so that damp weather will not
affect thorn to any extent. Black hats
never looked so attractive as in these
dnys of brilliant effects. They also
present a kaleidoscope effect, not only
of colors, but of materials aud shapes.
Hats of every known color are seen by
the thousands of startling green, scar
let, orange, yellow, purple, pink and
blue. Garnitures of flowers compose
the trimming of many of the hats, and
where the brims turn up are placed
choux of velvet or ribbon.
Sniulah Worn Again.
The sandal is the very latest in foot
wear. It is intended to be worn in
the privacy of your own boudoir, either
with or without stockings, as fancy
and immunity from colds may dictate.
If worn constantly in the house it im
proves the circulation immensely and
banishes the vexations of corns and
cold feet.
The sandals were resnrreeted from
the shades of antiqnity by some women
artists in England, who spent long
hours in their studios and did not like
the idea of having their pretty little
feet imprisoned in stiff boots all day
long.
They accordingly made some draw
iugs from old prints and designs found
iu obscure places while engaged in
their researches. They had the vil
age shoemaker oarry out their favorite
designs and all that summer those
girls painted in sandals, even walking
from tlieir studio along the country
road in tlieui to the cottage where they
boarded.
Of course, their feet grew as pretty
and soft and flexible as their hands,
and the style was adoptod by their
friends. An American girl brought it
over to this country ami it is gradually
making headway among the women
who desire comfort and good feet.
They are much in favor with trained
nurses, who find the absolute freedom
of the foot tremendously restful dur
ing the long hours. Mothers who
realize the value of a pretty foot put
them on their children, without stock
ings, during the warmer months.
They are becoming, if the loot has not
been distorted by shoes.
When a Maiden Marries.
Slio must not expect to And the
married state an enchanted garden of
happiness, where never a weed nor o
thorn grow. She will certainly have
many times of trouble and weariness;
but she must, with brave heart and
indomitable courage, face the new,
unbroken life which, along with fuller
joy than she lias hitherto known, lies
before us. She should novor allow
even her mother to criticise and find
fault with the behavior of the man she
has taken for better, for worse. She
should do all in her power to make
the home the daintiest, cosiest little
nest imaginable, so that the husband
shall be only too glad to spend his
evenings there, instead of going off to
"his club." She must bear in mind
that no man, even the "dearest fellow
in the world," can bear with good
temper being kept waiting twenty
minutes for his dinner, or finding his
shirts minus their complement of but
tons, and his socks full of holes. They
should not forget that well-cooked,
daintily served meals gc far to ensure
household peace. No time is wasted
that is spent as a means to this desir
able end. Everything put on the
table should look as nice as it tnstes.
She should strive to be always as fresh
and suitably adorned as n newly
opened daisy sparkling with the morn
ing dew; and as sweet-tempered and
loving a little wife as ever gladdened
the heart of a husband. She must
not place implicit trust in the arith
metic of her tradesmen. She should
add up the books herself, and pay
bills weekly. She must persevere in
taking the liveliest interest in domes
tic duties, and not be disheartened
and downcast at the mistakes she will
inevitably make during the first year
or so of her marriage. She should
never think herself too tired or dis
inclined to make a minute daily inspec
tion of the conteuts of the larder, etc.,
writing down the orders directly after
breakfast; or, better still, when pos
sible, doing the marketing herself.
She should take for the motto, "Nil
Desperandum," and remember that
though many a dark day will come, the
sun still shines behind the clouds.—
Home Comfort.
Seen in the Stores.
Fonlard cravats of a white ground
and colored design.
Waist fronts of embroidered batiste
with lace jabots.
Coaching parasols of a solid color
with a contrasting border.
Girls' pique coats having a deep
cape of Hamburg embroidery.
Girls' yellow straw hat crowns with
a frilled brim of bright red chiffon.
Heavy cotton cushion squares print
ed with the United States and Cuban
flags.
White organdie gowns ruffled from
neck to feet and every ruffle edged
with No. 1 black velvet ribbon.
Flag and red, white and blue cush
ions of every description.
Black pique for the season's Bkirts
and mourning jacket suits.
Gold and silver woven belto having
army or navy buckles.
Fointed silk capes having eimulette
ruffles of mousseline frills.
Belts of enamelled pennants with a
flag for the larger buckle.
Black kid and leather belts decor
ated with sprays of cut steel.
Leather purses and card-cases with
flowers in enamel upon them.
Heavy cotton cushion covers having
playing cars appliqued on.
Red, white and blue silk for cush
ions and blue having white stars.
Capes of white chiffon frills and long
throat bow of satin ribbon.
Narrow flat braids in gold for mili
tary effects on woollen costumes.
Tall, slender dinner baskets for
carrying dishes that are to be kept
warm.
Cerise velvet and taffeta for acces
sories on navy blue and black gowns.
Cloth capes embroidered with jet
and edged with plaited frills of taffeta.
Silver ladles to heat wax in rather
than the candle and stick usually seen.
Sailors in white and yellow straw
with white wings, doves and gauze
scarfs. •
Evening toques of a twist of gauze
with a buckle and aigrette on the side.
Tiny capes of colored silk and
plaited chiffon frills in white or the
same color.—Dry Goods Economist
CURIOUS FACTS;
London was the first city to use coal.
Bamboo is of universal use in China.
Several people living have clonblo
rows of natural teeth.
"Within the antarctic circle there has
never been found a flowering plant.
The steam power of Great Britain
represents the combined strength of
1,000,000,000 men.
As early as the year 47 B. C. the
great Alexandrian library contained
ov.er 40,000 valuable books.
It is a curious circumstance that
some of the most important inventions
have been discovered by lunatics.
It is said that in some of the fann
ing districts of China pigs are har
nessed to small wagons and made to
draw them.
London has now a Society for tlio
Supressiou of Street Nuisances as well
ash Society for the Suppression of
Street Noises.
At the beginning of n recent thun
der-storm electrified drops were ob
served that cracked faintly on reach
ing the ground and emitted sparks.
In the palace of the Senate in tho
capitol at Borne a number of medieval
frescoes were discovered recently by
workmen who were tearing down a
partition wall.
The City of Ghent, in Belgium, is
built on twenty-six islands. These
islands are connected with each other
by eighty bridges. The city has 300
Btreets and thirty pnblic squares.
An English officer discovered in In
dia a working telephone (not electric)
between two temples of Jatij about a
mile apart. The system is said to
have been in operation at this place for
over 2000 years.
Anthropologists have ascertained
that the Andamau Islanders, the
smallest rnce of people in the world,
average less than four feet in height,
while few of them weigh more than
seventy-five pounds.
It is claimed for Netley Hospital
that it is the longest building in Eng
land, being nearly a quarter of a mile
long. The next to this particular
dimension is "Wentworth Wodehouse,
in Yorkshire, the seat of Lord Fitz
william.
Squirrel Hunters til War.
One captious critic who comments
npon the fact that tho volunteer troops
at Chickamauga are unprepared for
war sneeriugly remarks: ".Many of
these raw soldiers know nothing about
handling a gun, except such experi
ence as they hove had in shooting
squirrels."
That criticism maybe deseivod, but
the squirrel-hunting point is not well
taken. Anyone who knows nugkt of
sport or woodcraft knows that ho who
can shoot squirrels can shoot any
thing else. To be a squirrel hunter
one must have a quick eye, an un
erring aim and good judgment.
Spaniard shooting is an infinitely
easier task.
The squirrel hunter already has won
an euviablo position in tho military
history of this country. The "squir-
Tel hunters" of New Englaud were
the first to try their marksmanship
on British red-coats iii 1776. Com
panies of "squirrel hunters," organ
ized throughout the Eastern Stntes,
also rendered highly efficient service
during the war of 1812; Jackson's
"squirrel hunters" at New Orleans
won the greatest victory of the entire
war, and taught the British General
Pakenham to respect American ninrks
manship. In tho great Civil Wur
many companies of expert riflemen,
detailed for service as sharpshooters,
were known as "squirrel hunters,"
and if the boys at Chickamauga equal
their record on tho battlefield, the
Notion will have good cause to remem
ber them gratefully. The boys who
can shoot squirrels are all right.—
Chicago Times-Herald.
"Ail Hands Abandon Ship."
A naval officer thus describes the
realistic "All hands abnndou ship 1"
drill: "Two minutes after the word
has been passed every Bhip's boat has
swung from its davits into the water,
and a minuto later every boat is thor
oughly provisioned and watered.
Within four minutes, and often in
much quicker time, every man of the
ship's company, from tho commanding
officer down, is occupying the station
in the boat called for by his ship's
number, and then the comuinnd
'Sheer oil'!' is given. The boats are
hauled away a couple of hundred feet
from tho deserted vessel, and sho
rides without a human soul aboard
her, often when the drill is gone
through in midocean, in a sea that
the landsman would account terrific.
Then the word 'Board!' is passed, and
within eight minutes at the most all
hands are not only on board again,
but every boat has been relashcd to
the davits, nil of the provisions,
water instruments and other gear have
been removed and the ship's company
is in a fair way to get to sleep again."
—New York Tribune.
"Staggcrweed" a Perennial Plant.
Sneezewced, or sneezewort, other
wise known as "staggerweed," is n
smooth, branching perennial plant,
one to three feet high, with thick,
lance-shaped leaves and showy yellow
flowers. It grows commonly in moist
ground. The whole plant, especially
the flower, is acrid and pungent.
When powdered, it causes violent
sneezing, and is used in medicine to
produce that effect. Sheep, cattle
and horses are often poisoned by it.
One iustnnce is recorded whore sev
eral persons were poisoned by eating
bread contaminated with the seeds of
sneezeweed. The nature of the poison
is not known, but it exists principally,
in the flowers. Symptoms are diffi
cult breathing, staggering, extreme
sensitiveness to the touch, and con
vulsions.—New York Sun.
stone in Her Stotn&cTi.
From the Gazette, Blandinsville, IR
The wife of the Rev. A. It. Adams, pastor
of the Bedford Christian Church at Bland
insville, 111., wai for years compelled to
live a life of torture from disease. Her
case bafQed the physicians, but to-day sho
is alive and well, and tolls the story of her
recovery as follows:
"About six years ago," said Mrs. Adams,
"I weighed übout 140 pounds, but my
health began to Tail and I lost flosh. My
food did not agree with me and felt like a
stone in my stomach. I began to bloat all
over until I thought I hud dropsy.
"I had pains and soreness in rnv left side
which extended clear across my back and
also into the r- gion of my heart. During
these spoils a hard ridge would appear iu
tlie left side of my stomach and around
the left side.
"Those attacks left me sore and exhaust
ed. All last summer I was so nervous that
the children laughing and playing nearly
drove me wild. I suffered also Iroin female
troubles and doctored with ten different
physicians without receiving any help.
ing rend in
pie, induced
'mm/ I i\\' VV ci. I b®*
flllll/iWAV * an taking
oA' \ them last
Novom her
hut experi
"My Husband Head." eneed no re
lief until I had taken six boxes. I am now
taking tho box and have been
greatly benefited.
"I was also troubled with nervous pros
tration and numbness of my right arm and
hand so that at times I could hardly en
dure the pain, but that has all passed
away. I now have A good appetite and am
able to do my own work. Have done more
this summer than in the past four years
put together. I)r. Williams' Pink Pills for
Pale Toople cured mo and I think it my
duty tc let other sufferers know it."
Hundreds of equally remarkable cases
have been cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
Within the past month the first Iron
bridge erected in the State of Ohio has
been removed. This bridge was over
Salt Creek on the Central Ohio division
9f the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road
■n Muskingum County and was built
in 1851. It was a single span, 71 feet in
length and was known as a "Bollman
leek truss bridge with plate girders."
Bollman was at that time Chief En
gineer of Construction of the Balti
more and Ohio Railroad.
Steel wire cables, moistened with wet
sand and passing in an endless rope
over a series of pulleys, are used in the
French quarries of St. Triphon for the
sawing of stone. The wire runs at a
rate of from 1,000 to 1,200 feet rer min
ute, and is charged as it enters the
cut with a jet of water and sillcious
sand, which forms the cutting material.
A running cable 500 feet in length can
make a cut 100 feet long.
To Cure a Cold la One Day.
Take Laxative Dromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money it it fails to cure. 25c.
No" one can tell where the diamond
goes to in combustion. Burn it and it
leaves no ashes the flame is exterior,
like that of a cork, and when it has
blazed itself out there remains abso
lutely no trace of it.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c. sl. All druggists.
Boston claims to have the longest
paved street in the world—Washington
street—which is 17% miles in length.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or23c.
IfC.C.C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
Her Method.
Uncle Bob—Yes, my wife alius
b'lieved in tyin' a string to her linger
to remember things.
Uncle Bill—She has one on her finger
most of the time, I notice.
Uncle Bob—Yes, 'coptln' when she
has somethin' very pertikler to remem
ber. Then she leaves off the string,
an' when It ain't there she remembers
why."—Odds and Ends.
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par
ties. The high standing of the CALI
FORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. with the medi
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, Col.
LOUISVILLE, Kjr. NEW YORK, N. T.
I'M VE RSITYOR NOTRE DAME
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA.
Classics, Letter*, Science, Law, Civil, Me
chanical and Electrical Engineering.
Thorough Preparatory and Commercial
Courses. Ecclesiastical students at special
rates. Booms. Free, Junior or Senior Year.
Collegiate Courses. St. Edwards Hull, for
bovs under 13.
The loßth Term will open September Otli,
1808. catalogue sent Free.on application to
REV. A. MOKKISBEY f. S. C., President.
Vanity of Dummy Shoe*.
It Is said that a coquettish trick pre
vails among the women at the seaside
and watering-place hotels In Europe.
They have extra sets of tiny boots and
shoes made, not for wear, but to ba
'left outside tlieir bedroom doors. It
seems that foreigners, particularly
Frenchmen, are In the habit of scrutin
ising closely the ladies' boots in the
corridors of hotels. The furnishing ol
such tiny sets Is a recognized part of
the boot and shoe trade In Paris. It
is also said that similar sets of very
Small boots, and shoes, and slippery
are sold by the big shoe houses of Faris
to be placed on exhibition with the
bride's trousseau. The French boot
tnakers say that the Madrid ladles
have the smallest feet, the Peruvian
and Chilian ladles next. Ladies from
the United States are also remarkable
for their small feet. Russian ladles
have heavy, splay feet. In Northern
Europe the best-shaped feet are those
of the women of Sweden. In Paris, the
Jewesses are noted for their small feet,
and are very particular about their
chaussure. German women have large,
flat feet, and English women are noted
qo the Continent for nwkwardly made
boots and shoes. Dona Bertha, wife
of Don Carlos, the Pretender, wears a
flvc-and-a-half. Lady Malet, wife of
the. ambassador, has a phenomenally
small foot.—Saturday Evening Post
A Fortune From a Scare.
| An inventive genius who suffered
j from attacks by stray dogs when riding
his wheel, set his wits to work to devise
something which would bo an effica
cious, ami yet comparatively harmless,
means of defense. As a result he has
brought out and patented a pocket
pistol which will shoct ammonia,
water or other liquid. The most vic
ious dog cannot withstand a few drops
of ammonia in his mouth or eyes, and
yet there is no danger of actually in
juring a valuable animal which might
playfully annoy a rider. The weapon
has proved so much of a success as a
means of defense as well as fun-mak
ing, that the lucky inventor is realizing
much money from his device.
In the Crimean war 95,615 lives were
sacrificed, and at Borodino, when the
French and Russians fought, 78,000
men were left dead on the battlefield.
Educate Your Hotrels With Casearets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever
10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
The lamp mostly used in Africa is
a simple contrivance. In a cocoanut
shell filled with palm oil, a bit of rag
is placed to serve as a wick, and this
gives all the light that the natives re
quire.
Piso's Cure is the medicine to break tip
children's Coughs and ('olds. Mrs. M. G.
BLUNT, Spraguc, Wash., March 8, '94.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchlldren
teething, softens the gums, reducing in
flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 250
a bottle.
Albert Burch, West Toledo, Ohio, says:
"Hall's Catarrh Cure saved my life." Write
him lor particulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
LIQUID
AMMONIA, W~~"
WATER,COLOGNE,
OR OTHER LIQUID.
It ia a -weapon which protects bicyclists against
vicious dogs and loot-pads; travelers against robbers
and toughs; homes against thieves and tramps, and is
adapted to many other situations.
It does not kill or injure; it is perfectly safe to
handle; makes no noise or smoke; breaks no law and
creates no lasting regrets, as does the bullet pistol. It
simply and amply protects, by compelling the foe to
give undivided attention to himself for awhile instead
of to the intended victim.
It is the only real weapon which protects and also
makes fun, laughter and lots of it; it shoots, not once,
but many times without reloading; and will protect
by its appearance in time ol danger, although loaded
only with liquid. It does not get out of order; is dur
able, handsome, and nickel plated.
Sent boxed and post paid by mail with full direct
tions how to use for
I f \ f "i , A . 1" 2c. Postage Stnirms,
{ J I I 1 J I ; [ I [.Q Post-office Money Order,
*— N — / V or Express Money Order.
As to our reliability, refer to R. G. DUN'S or J3TIAD
STREET'S mercantile agencies.
NEW YORK~UNiONSUPPLY CO.,
135 Leonard Street, New York.
"Say Aye No' and Ye'll Ne'er be Married." Don't
Refuse All Qur Advice to Use
SAPOLIO
fej WE SELL B|
E DIRECT TO S
CJNiU^ E " s '
B ssp r B
afe Our mammoth general catalogue, ga
i*-*s the great Household educator is mail- CT*
tree ou request. Our Clothing cata- BEa
logue and Cloth samples is also mail- Erf
figs cd free. Expressage paid on ali Clothing. EEa
Er Owing to an over pro- CARPETS
Es| duction at our Haiti- Itl.Dl'l fii) tela
more mills, we are of- fe.
Els fering many specials Jtflih'jo F=sa
this month. Our Car- Wv'ftSp K
PS pet catalogue iu hand- QkyfeELy Es|
painted colors ii ymira
FS for the asking. This
month we sew Carpets, fb' S
FSg| furnish wadded lining IBBJ.CISQ f El
free, and pay freight Cjj
EK on all $9 Carpet pur■ *(
chases and over. A<l-Ft/,w XT'
dress (exactly as below) /.i'p§|
MjulinsHines&Soa^
|Hs Dept. M'. BALTIMORE, !!>. fe
Bevel-Gear
Chai n less
Bicycles
MAKE HILL CLIMBING EASY.
Columbia . A ,
Chain \Ylieels, 575 n J* VlVh
Hartfords, . . 50 HiSpJpt-'H
Vedettes, $-tO &35 ¥?."? j,
ARPAI A I R.lUble apanta wantafl In avaa-y
NHpIJIKI I'-ialny to aril my Tena, C.fTeaa,
T' "Wlflfcß|ii,-n. Etc. KxrlnaWe right*
given. Goods guaranteed. RemunerativH employ
ment. lit.th SUM. Write giving age anil previous
employment. Knt'kse stamp.
G. P. Augfe.TßiNui-.il, 6 Reikley Bt., Rochester. N.Y.
Thompson's Eye Water
P. N. U. 29 '93