Fall Medicine Is Fully as Important and Benefi cial as Spring Medicine. Hood's Sarsapnrilla is just the medicine to keep the blood rich and pure, create an appetite, gi.ve good digestion and tone and strengthen the great vital organs. It wards off malaria, fevers and other forms of illness which so readily overcome a weak and debilitated system. Hood's Sarsapnrilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Hood's Pills cure indigestion. 25 cents. The year 47 B. C. was the longest year on record. By order of Julius Caesar it contained 445 days. The ad ditional days were put in to make the seasons conform as near as possiblo with the solar year. How lie Foaglit- Dukane —Before war was declared Splffin was very anxious to fight. Gas well—Well, he fought all through the war. "Did he?" "Yes; he fought shy of the recruiting officers."—New York Journal. Forty-seven muscles are called Into play In the production of the human -voice. X® Cur. Constipation Forever. . o as . Cil r ets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25a xi L-. c. c. fall to cure, druggists refund money The cost of keeping up the drinking fountains and cattle troughs In London Is $8,500_ per annum. A single trough in a busy thoroughfare costs $250. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clenn blood means a clean 6kin. He peauty without it. Cascnrets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, bv stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking vascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Dry-Plato Photography. The first amateur pictures on dry plates were made something after the method employed by Charles Lamb's celebrated Chinaman in obtaining roast pig. The Chinaman burned his house to roast his pig; the amateur tore his camera to pieces to get his picture. The first hand camera was a pateboard box containing one plate. A pinhole served as a lens, and after the exposure of the plate the box was taken to the dark room, put open, and the plate extracted. This was rather expensive picture-making, and it was not long before a magazine ca mera was invented; and suddenly all the world began taking pictures. The date of the invention of the dry-plate dates back scarcely eighteen years; but in that short time the growth and application of photography have been so remarkable that it can be compared to nothing more aptly than to the -amazing development cf the genie which the unlucky fisherman released from the jar. In ISBO the outlay for photographic material was, in round numbers, $25,000. Ten years later it amounted to $2,500,000. During the first-named year perhaps one hundred and fifty persons were employed in it? manufacture. Today one single firm has fifteen hundred employes. This firm alone manufactures in a week so much sensitive film that, if made into one long strip seven inches wide, i! would measure over one hundred miles In length. Favorite Subject for Photography. Perhaps no celestial body has been photographed so many times as the moon. At Lick Observatory the "man In the moon" sits for his picture many times during the year. Jupiter and Saturn are also frequent subjects, and no day passes In which some sun-spot does not leave Its celestial autograph on the sensitive plate. Many astro nomical discoveries have been made through photography, the greatest of them being the discovery, by Professor Draper, of oxygen In the sun. The applications of photography are so many and so varied that a whole vol ume of the St. Nicholas would be re quired to describe them; for there Is no department of knowledge In which It has been so extensively used, and none to which it has been so universal iy helpful. YOUNG AT SIXTY. Serene comfort and happiness in ad vanced years are realized by compara tively few women. Their hard lives, inclr 1 lability to se rious troubles on account of their pecu liar organism and their profound igno rance concerning themselves, all com bine to shorten the period of usefulness and fill their later years with suffering. Mrs. I'inkham has done much to make women strong. She has given advice to many that has shown them how to guard against disease and retain vigor ous health in old age. From every cor ner of the earth there Is constantly com ing the most convincing statements from women, showing the cflicacy of Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable pound in overcoming female ills. Hero is a letter from Mrs. J. C. Orms, of 220 Horner St., Johnstown, Pa., which is earnest and straight to the point: "DEAR MRS. I'INKHAM:—I feel it my duty to tell all suffering women that I think your remedies are wonderful. I had trouble with my head, dizzy spells and hot flashes. Feet and hands were cold, was very nervous, could not sleep well, had kidney trouble, pain in ovaries and congestion of the womb. Since taking your remedies I am better every way My head trouble is all gone, have no pain in ovaries, and am cured of womb trouble. I can cat and sleep well and am gaining in flesh. I consider your medicine the best to he had for female troubles." The present Mrs. Pinkham's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal lelled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometime past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women during a single year. A SKILFUL BANKER. PRESIDENT RUSSELL OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. Knows How to Gather In the Fand* of the People and to Apply It to Good Account—Ue Began Life at the Bot tom of tlio Ladder. I eorge h. rus- SELL, president of LfliJWf ' — the American PflSlMlNj Cankers' Associa n | Ci'mrcpjll llf lion, is president of Jjl \%\ j the State Savings Dank of Detroit, Mlch ' Mr ' Russel is a self-made man, an( * ' las wor k e d his way up from pov erty and obscurity to fame and fortune. After a grammar school education he began life as yard foreman of the Detroit and Lake Supe rior Iron Manufacturing Company. Two years later he became bookkeeper and a couple of years afterward was elected secretary and treasurer of the Hamtramock Iron Works, and in 1872 also held the same position in the Detroit Car Works. Both concerns 'ailed in the panic of 1873, and Mr. Rus ?el started a small iron foundry, which has since grown into the great Russel Wheel and Foundry Company, one of the most important manufacturing in stitutions of the West. Mr. Russel was elected president of the State Savings Bank in 1889, and showed perfect mas tery of the business of banking. The institution has become recognized as one of the leaders in the state, and his ability a6 a banker won him the presi dency of the Michigan Bankers' Asso ciation in 1891. Mr. Russell has always been active in public affairs, though he has not taken any part in politics, and the presidency of the park com mission is the only office he has held. He was born Nov. 29, 1847, was mar ried in 1872 and has nine children. FIRE FROM WARSHIPS. Seeking Out the IVeak Spot, of the Enemy. Attack by light shot or shell upon a thtck armor belt would he ineffectual, however well directed, and, again, heavy shot or shell fired from the main armament ot a battleship would not be properly employed as a rule In attacking unarmored portions, says Cassler's Magazine. The only reason for-putting guns of different caliber upon a ship is that the target present ed to them by an enemy's vessels is not a homogeneous body. If It were it would much simplify matters to have all guns alike. The big guns are for the hard places and the small ones are for the soft ones. There ts a proper target upon every enemy's ship for GEORGE H. RUSSELL. each of the different calibers of guns carried, and these targets will vary ac cording to the type of ship attacked. So much will depend upon the first few minuteß of a close action that if a commander could give his Instructions to his different gun detachments before coming within close range as to the part of the ship upon which they sould direct their fire it might be of immense advantage to him. Before he can do this he must recognize his enemy, and every means would no doubt be taken to discover the iden tity of an opponent at the earliest pos sible moment. Let us suppose the enemy's ship, or at any rate, the class to which she belongs, is known. If the captain could turn to his notebook and find a prearranged plan of attack, suited to her construction, he could at once tell the guns' crews what their target was to be. It may be that duels between ships will be of rare occur rence. and that such actions as that at the Yalu will be the most frequent, where fleets will pass each other rap- Idly and where such rules as I propose for discriminating attack could not be put in practice. But Is there not still the chance that Individual ships may be pitted against each other, when it will be worth while to "fight with the head?" Gladstone a Common Aran. The atmosphere of a court was not agreeable to Mr. Gladstone. Lord Hca consfleld adapted himself to it with the ease and grace that come of stud led care and natural fitness. In tha last year of Ills life lie said to Mr. Mat thew Arnold, In a strange burst of con fidence which showed how completely he realized that his fall from power was final: "You have heard me ac cused of being a flatterer. I have found It useful. Every one likes flattery; and, when you come to royalty, you should lay it on with a trowel." A3 a courtier Lord Eeaconsfield excelled. Once, sitting at a dinner by the Prin cess of Wales, he was trying to cut a hard dinner roll. The knife slipped and cut his finger, which the princess, with her natural grace, instantly wrap ped up in her handkerchief. The old statesman gave a dramatic groan and exclaimed: "I asked for bread and they gave me a stone; but I had a princes to bind my wound." MR. KRUGER AT HOME. Oom Paul is a person of regular habits, and can be seen any day sit ting on his "stoep" (veranda), or vis iting the Raad in Pretoria, but he" is a difficult bird to entrap into an inter view. For the last few months he has assumed a little more of the pomp that doth hedge about a crowned or presidential head. He has an escort of seven troopers to accompany him HIS HONOR PRESIDENT KRUGER. to and from the government build ing 9. They wait at a respectful distance In the middle of Church square until his honor, attired in his invariable black frock coat and broad brimmed top ha! cf ancient design, hurries back to his beloved "stoep," in order to puff away at his enormous pipe of Transvaal to bacco and contemplate the New Dap per church opposite his residence. Here, also,since threatening letters and rumors of assassination have become more frequent, a guard has been sta tioned, and two sentries of somewhat casual bearing, with untidy cartridge belts, are posted to warn off any pos sible Intruder. The house is certainly an insignificant looking bungalow for the chief of the state. It is a one- storied building, with wooden trel lised veranda running along Its whole length, and abuts on the roadway without any intervening space. The only indications, besides the sentries and the flagstaff, that the abode is one out of the common are the two mottled white marble lions presented by Bar ney Barnato to the president. They are small and not particularly artis tic animals, but they are quite pets with the Krueger family. The house is to be torn down and a new one erected. The Scotch of It. A Scotch university professor, irri tated to find that the students had got into the habit of placing their hats and canes on his desk instead of in the cloakroom, announced that the next article of the kind placed there would be destroyed. Some days later the professor was called for a moment from the class-room. A student slipped into his private room and emerged with the professor's hat, which he placed conspicuously on the desk, while his fellows grinned ad trembled. The professor, .on returning, saw the hat, thought some rashly obstinate stu dent had been delivered into his hands, and, taking out }iis knife, he cut the offending article to pieces, while vainly attempting to conceal'the smile of triumph that played about his coun tenance. He was In a very bad tem per the next day. If paying one's debts is a virtue, very few men are strictly virtuous. EXPECTANCY. I don't want any op'ry music, tbrillin' out so grand. I don't want any fancy marches by the fnv'rite baud. I used to hauker for 'em. But my heart is kiud o' set On somethiu' that I know will be the very sweetest yet. The violins is tender and the horns is clear an' strong An' the clarinets give tunefulness that helps it all along. But I'm thinkin' of the boy that went 'mid battle scenes to roam I waut to hear the drums an' fifes a-playin' "Home, Sweet Ilome.'' I kin shut my eyes an' see 'em as they're passin' down the street, They're weary, but they're happy, 'cause a duty's done complete. An' tho windows will be opened an' there'll be a weloomin' cry From the loved ones of each hero, as they see him passin' by. The flags will smile to greet them as they ripple an' they How. They'll be just as proud to meet them here as when they faced the foe. An' the mighty cheers will waken an' they'll shake the distant < o ie— I want to hear the drums an' fifes a-playin' "Home, Sweet Home." HUMOROUS. "Hi, waiter! here's a piece of wood in my dessert." "That's all right, sir; it's a cabinet jmddiug." "This is the best thiug out," chuckled the accepted suitor, as he extinguished the parlor lamp. "Ma, is there any pie left in the pantry?" "Their is one piece, but you can't have it." "Ma, I've had it." Cholly—Dontcher know, Miss Dolly, I—aw—sometimes think— Dolly Dim ple—Do you really? I should never have suspected it. "Well, peace has beeu concluded," remarked Mrs. Sunggs. "I thought it was the war which had been con cluded," replied Mr. Snaggs. Tommy—Why are single w >nien called spinsters? Pa—l expect it's because they are always spinning a web to catch a man, my boy. Papa—Jack, what are you crying about? Jack—The conjurer at the circus today took five pigeons out of my hat and kept them for himself. "Hut you can learn to love me, Miss Kinsley—lsabel?" "I'm afraid not Mr. Greefe; I never could learn any thing that demanded application." "Papa, here are letters from three men who want to marry me." "Well, don't bother me new; tell them to mail their bids to me at the oiiice." Eaggs—lt is said that Dame For tune knocks once at every man's door. Jaggs—Well.it was her daugh ter, Mis-Fortune, who culled on me. Judge—Do I understand you to sa.y that the parties used high words? Witness—Their voices were usually high, but. their words were extremely low. He—What does "helpmeet" mean, anyway? Doesn't it meuu "help me eat?" She—No, indeed! If I know anything at all, it means, "help meet expenses." "80 we are to have peace at last," said the old party. "That is, the na tion—speaking of us collectively, and not individually," replied Hen Peck, with a sigh. Mrs. Youngling—John, do you sup pose you can hear the baby from where you are if he wakes up and cries? John (who is reading the newspaper) —I dim no. 1 hope not. "You know, after all," said the young father, "a baby does brighten up the house." Single Skeptic—l daresay; I've noticed the gas burning late in your room recently. "lour hunbaud painted the house this spring himself, didn't he?" "Well, yes, i suppose he got some oi the paint ou the house, but you wouldn't think so if you could see his clothes." "He," screamed the cross roads or ator, "who puts his hand to the plow must not turn back." "What's he to do when ho gits to the end of the furrer?" asked the auditor iu blue greeu overalls. The floorwalker bawled affably "Take the elevator, madame." "Don't get sarcastic,"said the shoplifter,with asperity. Thrusting a brass bedstead into her pocket, she turned away with a withering look. And She Didn't. "I shall liavotonsk you for a ticket for that boy, ma'am." "I guesa not." "He's too old to travel free. He occupies a whole seat, and the ear's crowded. There are people standing up." "That's all right." "I haven't time to argue the matter, ma'am. You'll have to pay for thai boy." "I've never paid for him yet, and I'm not going to begin to do it now." "You've got to begin doing it some time. If you haven't had to put up any fare for him you're mighty lucky, or else you dou't do much traveling*" "That's all right. "You'll pay for that boy, ma'am, or I'll Hlop the train and put him off." "That's all right. You put him off if you tkiuk that's the way to get anything out of me." "lon ought to know what the rules of this road are, madam. How old is that boy?" "I dou t. know. I never saw him before. If you waut a ticket for him you'd bettor ask that old gentleman down the aisle. He got on with him." —Philadelphia Press. EIIBII.II in Santiago. An enterprising native shopkeeper in Santiago displays over a great heap of headgear the sign, "These hats arc virtuous." It appears that iu search ing his c\ictionary for an English ren dering of the Spanish word "bueuo" (good) he selected "virtuous" as being the most elegant. A Domestic Incident." ~ From tie Observer, Flushinj, Mich. "Early In November, 19M," says Frank Long, who lives near Lounon, Mich., "on Itarting to get up from the dinner table, I was taken with a pain in my back. Tho pain increased nnd I was obliged to take to my bod. Thephysiolan who was summoned pronounced myoasemuscular rheumatism accompanied by lumbago. He gave rae remedies aud injected morphine Into my arm to ease the pain. "My dlsoasel gradually became worse un til I thought that death would be weUoine release from my sufferings. Besides my regular physician I ulso consulted another, bat bo gavo me no encouragement. rfx'Z) On Getting Up From the Table. "I was Anally induced through reading some accounts in the newspaper* regard ing the womUsrful cures wrought by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pule People, to try thetn. I took the pills according to direc tions and soon begun to notice an improve ment In my condition. Before the Arst box was used I could got about the house, and after using Ave boxes wus entirely cured. "Since that time I have felt no return of tho rheumatic pains. I am conAdent that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills saved ray life and I try to induce my friends wfco are sick to try the Mine to nedy. I will glaily answer inquiries concerning my sickness and won derful euro, provided stamp is enclosed for reoly. FRANK BONO." Sworn to before me at Venice, Mich., this 15th day of April, IS9B. G. B. GOLDSMITH. Justioe ofth 1 Peace, Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, nnd that is by constitu tional remedies. D afness is caused by an in named condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in ftumed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing. and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can ho taken out and this tube re stored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroy, d forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing butnn in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafnes-i (caused by catarrh) that can not bo cured by Hall's Catarrh cure. Send for circulars, free. ~ , F- J- CWiEVET & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 7fc. Hall's Family Pills are the best,. In many European galleries the pic tures are dusted by means of air syringes. Seems to Oct Itipe. One complaint seems to get ripe in au tumn, and that is neuralgia. To soothe tho pain, strengthen tho nervos and rid tho Bystem of it, uso St. Jucobs Oil, the best known cure. The Emperor of China has to fast 64 days in each year for the sake of re ligion. Don't Tobacco Spit 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 •trong. All druggists, 50c or fl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York Chinese coinage in the shape of a knife has been traced back as far as 2240 B. C. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. A cannon ball fired from one of the great Krupp or Armstrong guns travels 2,887 feet per second. DEAR EDITOR:-If you know of a solicitor or canvasser in your city or elsewhere, espe cially A man who has solicited for subscrip tions, insurance, nursery stuck, books or tail oring, or n man who can sell goods, you will confer a favor by tolling him to correspond with us; or if you will insert this notice in your paper and such parties will cut this no tice out ami mail to us, we may he able to fur nish them a good position in their own and adjoining counties. Address, AMERICAN WOOLENMILLS CO.. Chicago. At Kansas City 10 pounds of ice cost a cent. Ever Havo a Dog Hot her Yon When riding a wheel, making you wonder for a few minutes whetheror not you are to get a fnll nnd a broken neck ? Wouldn't vou have given a sinnli farm Just then for some means of driving off the beast? A few drops of am monia shot from a Liquid Pistol would do it effectually and Mill not permanently injure the animal. Such pistols sent postpaid for fifty cents In stamps by New York Union Supply Co., 135 Leonard St.. New York City. Every bicyclist at times wishes he had one Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness alter first clay's use of I)r. Kline's (ireat Nerve Restorer. trial bottle ami treatise free. Dr.R.H. KLINE, Ltd.,981 Arch BtPhila,Pa Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, sol tens the gums, reduces inliunuuiv tiou, allays uaiu, euros wiud colic. Jidc.a bottle TAPE WORMS "A tape worm eighteen feet long at loast came on tho scor.e after my taking two CASCARLIS. This lam cure has caused my bad hoalth for tho past three years. lam still taking Cascarets, tho only cathartic worthy of notieo by aonsihlo people " GEU. W. BOWLES, Baird, Mass. CANDY TRADE RBOISTCREO Pleasant. Palatable™ "" tent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Wcnkcn.or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 5Cc ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling tt.-niwlj Coßpacj. CMengo, Montreal. Kew Vert. 313 HQ-TO-BAG EXPECTANT MATHERS Why suffer untold pain and torture In childbirth when tt can be made safe, sure and easy by using MITCHELL A COMPOUND (Indorsed by lea<£ tng physicians. Thousands of testimonials). Henl prepaid on receipt of price. #I.OO. Write for ou* DOol, M (ilail Tidings to >lolliers," seut free. LADY AWE NTS WANTED—HOOD PAY. Address- DR. J. H. DYE MEDICAL INSTITUTE, Deut. A. BUFFALO. N. Y. Y¥T"AI4TED—Case of bad health that It I-P-A-SbR will not benefit Send ft eta. to Rlpans Chamical Go- NawYork. for 10 samples and loot) testimonials. Slang from tho Daja of Old Rome. j Passing through a vacant lot the other day where some boys were hav ing a game of ball, I heard ono of them whb had got a rap on the knuckles from : a "foul," exclaim, "Jiminy, that hurts!" and then, after rubbing his fingers a moment, he went back to his place on the field, little dreaming that he had just uttered a solemn invocation to the old Roman demigods Castor and Polllix. For our vulgar "jiminy" Is but a corruption of the Latin "gemini," twins, a name applied to Castor anil Pollux, the twin sons of Jupiter and Leda. These hero gods were the pa trons of games and festivals of all kinds, and the especial friends of trav elers; hence, when an old Roman ex claimed, "0 Gemini!" it was a devout appeal to the gods for help or protec tion, very much the same as when a knight of old called on his patron saint. —Miss E. F. Andrews. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Rheumatism. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Neuralgia. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Lumbago. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Sciatica. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Sprains. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Bruises. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Soreness. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Stiffness. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Backache. ST. JACOBS OIL cures Muscular acliea. For Whooping Cough, Piso's Cure Is a suc cessful remedy.—M.P. DIETER, 67 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov. 14.1804. Llamas are the chief freight carriers in Central Peru. The usual load for an animal is about 100 pounds. If you put upon his back more than lie can easily carry he quietly kneels and will not budge until the load is reduced. No-To-Uac for Fifty Cents, Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 81. Ail druggist* The pupil of the eye is so called be cause when looking in it a very small image of the observer may be seen, hence the term from the Latin "pupil lus," or little pupil. To Cur© A Cold In On© Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 35c. "Gyp" having proposed a general boycott of the Hebrews, her publishers, MM. Calmann-Levy, have informed her that they will no longer publish her books. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, hut also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the CALIFORNIA FIO 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 FIO SYRUI* CO. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding- the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The hig-h standing of the CALI FORNIA FIO 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, Cat. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YOKE. N. Y. 6 PER CEftflT. GOLD BONDS Payable semi-annually at the Globe Trust Co., Chicago, 111. These bonds are a first mortgage upon the entire plant, including buildings, land and other property of an Industrial Company located close to Chicago. The Company has been established for many years, is well known and doing a large and increasing business. The oflicers of the Company are men of high reputation, esteemed for their honesty and business ability. They have made so great a success of this business that the bonds of this Company are rarely ever offered for sale. A lew of these bonds came in to our hands during the hard times from parties who had purchased them several years ago. We offer them in issues of SIOO.OO each for SBO.OO and accrued interest. For security and a large interest rate these Industrial Bonds are recommended as being among the best. First-olass bonds and securities of all kinds bought and sold. Kendall & Whitlock, Bankers and Brokers, S A POLIO Is Like a Good Temper. "It Sheds a Brightness Everywhere." rsssnsfimm. # f . We usually advertise a specimen bargain from X ' ' one of our catalogues, but we don't do so in thia J i i advertisement because we're perplexed. Our A . furniture catalogue consists of 100 pages, every X ' page filled with bargains. Now, how arc we to ▼ i ) select one ? We say to you, if there's anything A . . on earth in the furniture or carpet line that X ' ' you want, you'll find it in our catalogues at ▼ i } least 40 per cent, cheaper than you can buy it A Would we spend our money advertising our ▼ { } furniture and carpet catalogues (they're ahso- A , . lutely free, not even a stamp necessary) if they X ' ' weren't worth having? Not much. If you ▼ 4 > get these catalogues you 11 see for yourself A , what an enormous amount you can save by X Y buying from mill owners and furniture nianu- ▼ Y That carpet catalogue that we are so anxious X Y you should have, is the finest thing an artist ▼ A ever designed, and you can select carpet from A Y it just as though you were in the sample room X y ofone of our mills, because it's lithographed in V A ten colors from hand painted plates. A Y We couldn't exaggerate the value of our fur- A ▼ niture cataloge if we tried. Just think of 160 w A large pages devoted to furniture, and every A Y page filled with bargains. Will you be a friend Y Yto yourself? Will you write for those cata- w A lugues at once? Address (exactly as below.) A ♦ JULIUS HINES & SON, i The Berlin Rundschau in an article concerning the war indemnity paid by Fiance to Germany at the Franco- Prussian War, says that the only mis take made by the French officials in notes a bogus 100 thaler bill (Prussian). Follow It Tp, Sit down and cool off suddenly, nnd then regret it, for stiffness and soreness is bound to follow. Follow it up with St. Jacobs Ol* and you will have nothing to regret from a prompt cure. The eye of the vulture is so con structed that it is a high-power tele scope, enabling the bird to see objects at an almost incredible distance. \"A Perfect Type of the Highest Order of * \ Excellence in Manufacture. " ' pjeSgs _| , • I | fj| | Absolutely Pure, f. . i Nutritious. 1, \ ..Costs Less Than OHE CEHT a Cop..} , Be sure that you get the Genuine Article, i \ made at DORCHESTER, MASS. by \ WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. • [ r ESTABLISHED 1780. X GOOD AS COLD Valuable Formula-*: gulden opportunity; most valuable secrets known f..r oftka, house, farms everyone needs them. Circular, ROWLAND, office EATON A 00., 27 Union fcquare, New York City, IF YOUR income is small, and you want to make u large amount of money, send Ten Cents for "(1 "!d 'lip-." No work. N. can vassing. Legitimate, profitable and easy, Huoil BAUKHLEIX, BOX 11J14, Deuver,Colorado. --PATENTS^ Procured on cash, or easy InMiiliueiilM.VOYV LKB & BURNS. Patent Attorneys, 287 Broadway. N. Y, The Best BOOR rVv. uonsly illn-trated price 82 >, free to anybody sending two animal subscriptions at 81 each to the 1 Iverlana Monthly, SAN FRANCISCO. Sample Overland. Av. D RO PSY NE T D i IB ( C0 y ERY: TOBon. B>-nd lor book of testimonials and lb days' tieatmeut Free. Dr. H U.GREEN 8 SONS. Atlanta. Oa. 11 ui.'' 1 : Thompson's Eye Water P. N. U. 41 '93
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers