WORN BY TJAVY OFFICERS. j When Commodore Dewey last winter was promoted Irom the rank of captain he had- to visit the tailor for clothes suitable to his new rank and was obliged to buy a full-dress coat and a cap. The latter cost sls. During the terrible storm at Samoa some years ago, when the naval oHI- ! cers lost their belongings, a bill was Introduced to reimburse them, and II was figured a lieutenant's wearing ap parel was worth $1,365, an ensign's $1,050, and a rear admiral's $2,000. An admiral's full-dress outfit,including the hat, Is worth $765. The epaulets alone cost $165. During the engagement at Manila Commodore Dewey, a3 be stood on the bridge directing his forces, wore what Is called the service coat, of dark blue sorge, shaped to the figure, with a silt on each hip extending on the right side as high as the sword belt. Plain gutta percha buttons and a high collar fin ished the coat. His trousers had a strip of gold lace down their outer seams one inch wide. The visor of his cap was trimmed with oak leaves. It takes most of a young naval ofil -cer's salary to keep his wardrobe la •cndition to suit his superiors. The first thing a naval cadet is taught is how to keep his uniforms In condition. He has a number of them tor different occasions, but the regulations are most exact. Naval officers are much more particular than army officers in regard to the making of their uniforms, for they are continually cruising about the world, entering foreign ports, and must uphold the honor of their coun try. Photography Under Water. A wonderful Invention has recentl! been devised by which photographs may be taken under water. The lighl for this purpose Is furnished by an ln candescent lamp placed In a steel case In the diver's headpiece,the luminous ra>3 being protected by a reflector paced In the rear of the steel case, and the electricity provided by means of a small dynamo carried in the boal above. The photographic apparatus Itself consists of a common camera placed within an India rubber envel ope, the front of which Is glass, and the machine Is regulated and pictures taken by pressing buttons through the India rubber covering. The result is such as to be pronounced an achieve ment, for it has been demonstrated that pletures can be taken under watei of objects at a distance of ten or twelve feet as easily as they can ba obtained above In the full light ol day. machine for Harvesting Grain* On a large wheat farm In California the grain Is cut from the stalks, the chaff thrashed out, and the kernels placed in sacks, which are sewed and piled ready for the mill —all by one buge machine, which Is drawn by and gets Its motive power from a team of thirty-eight mules. It Can 110 Marie to Go. "Tho melancholy days hnvo come;" has rheumatism cotno with thorn? It can bo made to go right off by the use of St. Jacobs 011, which euros and loaves no traoo be hind. Our cotton crop amounts to 11,199,901 bales. Erincato Your Dowels With Cascareta. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever 10c, 25c. If C. C- C fall, drucKistu ref uud money. Joachim Murat's remains, which have been resting since 1815 in the cas __tle church of Pizzo di Calabria, where he was shot, are to be transferred to Naples and buried in the Church of Santa Maria among the former Bour bon kings. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Hromo Quinine Tablets. All DrugglHth refund mouey II it fails to cure. 25a. The Japanese government has con cluded to establish at Toklo a univers ity library after the model of the Con gressional Library at Washington. It is to have room for 600,000 volumes and 600 places for readers. Dr. Seth Arnold's Cough Killer knocks Colds.—John Daugankll, 444 Fargo Ave., Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 17, 1808. 25c. a bottle. The shovel fish is so called because it uses its nose to turn over the mud at the bottom of the sea in quest of the worms and small shellfish on which it feeds. To Curo Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 250 If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money Liverpool has started the idea of giving concerts in the courtyards or the worst quarters of the city. How's Tills? WeofferOne Hundred Dollr< Reward for any ra e of Catarrh that cannot bj cured by H&H'b Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chenhy & Co., Piops., Toledo, O. Wo. tho undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney oi the la t 15 years, and believe h m pe fee tly honor ble in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion in de by their firm. West & Thuax,Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Oh o. Waluino, Kinnax & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall s Catarrh Cuie is taken In'ernally, not ing directly upon t.he blood and mucous snr- Jnces of th - system. Pi ic, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Dmggiats. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best. After physicians had given mo up, saved by Piso's Cure.—KALFII Liu eg, Wd liaiuspoit. Pa., Nov. EJ, 18tW. If kept continuously running a watch will tick 160,144,000 times in a year. Soldiers From the War Bring the germs of malaria, fevers and other diseases, which may prove oontaglous in their own families. Hood's Sarsaparilla is a special boon to soldiers, because it eradicates all disease germs, builds up the debilitated systom and brings back health, fcvery returned soldier and overy friend tnd relative of soldiers should take Hood's Sarsaparilla America'. Greatest Medicine. sl;six for $5. Mood's Pills our. tick headache, Sso. OUR BUDGET 0E HUMOR. LAUGHTER.PROVOKMG STORIES FOR LOVERS OF FUN. A Blrri Story—A Prehistoric Predicament —Tact—No Doubt of It—Unsuccessful —A Professional Dins—Matrimonial Necessities—Mother's Advice, Etc., Etc. '•You were wicked the little birds to steall" A stylish maiden said; "And bow do you think their mother will feel?" Tho urchin buns his head. And then lie an-were l in accents calm, As offering "tit for tat," "Supposln' as yor should ask her, ma'am, You've got her up on your hat." —Everywhere. A Prehistoric Predicament. Mastodon—"What's the Ornither inens Paradoxus so angry about?" Great Auk—"Ho can't remember how to spell his name." —Judge. Unsuccessful. "Did you get tho shoos that you weut to tho store to buy?" asked Sirs. Northside to her husband. "No, my precious. It was a boot less errand." —Pittsburg Chronicle. No Doubt of If. Friend—"l understand your wife's family trace their lineage back to William the Conqueror." Mr. Meek—"l guess that's so. Old William was a terrible fighter, wasn't he?" A Professional lllni. "That man Cutter has no business doing hospital work in a fever district." "Why not?" "He's sure to diagnose everything as appendicitis."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Tact. Nearpass—"l hope the minister didn't refer to tho creditors the de ceased left." Bennet—"He merely said that his loss would be felt wherever ha was known."—Puck. Matrimonial Necessities. "There are six necessities, you kuow, for a happy marriage." "What are they?" "First, a good husband." "And the others?" "The other fivo are money."—Tit- Bits. Mother's Advice. Mother—"Johnny, stop using such dreadful language!" Johnny—"Well, mother, Shake speare uses it." Mother—"Then don't play with him; lie's no fit companion for you." —Tit Bits. Useful Teetli. Tramp—"Called ter see, lady, if I could do sum work for ye." Kind Lady—"What can you do?" Tramp—"l'm asort of dentist, mum. I want ter advertise, so I'll put a set of teeth into a good pie for nothing." —Town and Country Journal. HI. Ideal.' She —"Have you ever met yonr ideal?" He—"Pardon mo. Is that your father's elevator over there?" She—"Yes. He owns eight others just like it, all fall of wheat." Ho (with a long tremendous sigh) —"Ah, yos, I have met my ideal at last." Open llouso. "Coma aud dine with us to-mor row," said tho old fellow, who had made his money and wanted to push his way into society. "Sorry," replied the elegant man, "I can't, I'm going to sco 'Hamlet."' "That's all right," said the hospit able old gentleman, "bring him with yon."—Tit-Bits. The Passim* of llornrlcli. Returned Tourist—"What has bo come of Borurich? He was a p lines of good fellows. Everybody liked liim. So gonial aud generous?" Resident—"Oh, he's got to bo a reg ular nuisance. Here ho comes now. Let's dodge into an alleyway." Tourist—"Spent all his money, eh?" —New York Weekly. Taking Her Down a Peg. Wife —"I have about made np my mind, John, that when I married you I married a fool." Husband—"That reminds mo of a remark you made just before we were married. You remember that you said it wouldn't be hard to find two people more alike than you and I."— Richmond Dispatch. Trying to Pool Iler. "Have you a soul for music?" she asked as sho turned from the piano. "For music, yes," he replied, and then he hastily changed the subject and neglected to ask her to sing again. But sho knew, l'ou can't nlwnys fool a girl, even if sho does think sho has a voice.—Chicago Post. Why Ho Declined. Little Girl (to small boy, who is strutting around with his hands iu his pockets)—" Come over and play with me, Johnnie." Small Boy—"Can't." Little Girl—"Go anl ask your mother if you can." Small Boy—"Can't ask her; she is out somewheres, looking for mo."— The Sketch. Good na Ills Word. "Paw, didn't you say that if ever a school teacher whipped a boy ef yours there' he trouble?" "I did." "Well, the teacher whipped me this afternoon, and I wasn't doin' noth in' but throwiu' paper wads again tho wall." "I never fail to keep a promise, my hoy. There's going to bo tronblo. Take off yonr coat."—Chicago Tri bune. ■ A SCHOOL INNOVATION. Rath I'ubs Introduced in Some European School Houses. A famous German professor of hy- I gieue declares that above all things j our schoolrooms should be provided wi th a good system of veutilation. And all of us agree with him. Wo want some arrangement whereby the impure air can he constantly swept out and | the pure air introduced. And yet wa who have stood in the schoolroom, sur rounded by nearly a hundred little un washed bodies, cannot feel satisfied with this arrangement alone. We know by experience that even the best ven tilating apparatus will fall short in producing exactly an ideal condition of tho atmosphere. We had often thought of making tho bath tub a part and portion of the education of the children intrusted to our care, iu for mer yeAs, says the Illustrated Home Journal, and yet we lacked the neces sary funds for making the experiment. I Many teachers have entertained the sam 6 views with the same results. But now we find to our surprise that the idea is very old, and, in fact, has been carried into excellent effect long ago in many of the schools of Europe. Warm shower baths, and pleuty of them, have been provided for tho chil dren, with whom this innovation seems to be extremely popular. These baths are practical and economical, as well as hygienic. A school iu Gotlingeu, Germany, took the lead in this direc tion in 1883, and now some forty cities in Germany, Switzerland and Scandi navia have such baths in their school buildings. Kefereuce is mnde to one foreign school where the facilities for bathing sixty children an hour cost only [5357. The Superintendent of Schools in Spriugfield, Mass., is urg ing the introduction of these facilities there, though the people of Springfield claim to use more private bathtubs than those of any other town in the Unitod States, population considered. The question is a fair one whether the character of the atmosphere iu onr popular assemblies, as well as our schoolrooms, is not more of a reflec tion on tho amount of our tubbing than upon deficient ventilating ap paratus. WORDS OF WISDOM. No men living are more worthy to be trusted thau those who toil up from poverty. A man who does know how to learn from his mistakes turns the best schoolmaster out of his life. It is not our failures that ruin us, but our fear and tardiness iu making new beginnings after failure. There are many who traverse the world in pursuit of happiness; hut it is within the reach of every man—a contented mind confers it. Useless fretting and worrying bring more gray hairs to the head, wrinkles to tho face and cares to tho mind, than old ago and actual trouble. It is continued temperance which sustains the body for tho longest period of time, and which most surely | preserves it free from sickness, j A life merely of pleasure cv jhiefly i of pleasure is always a poor and worth- I less life, not worth the living; always i unsatisfactory in its course; always I miserable in its end. It has been said that to tho pure all I things are pure. Just as thoroughly has it been proved that to the vile, all vileuess is of the vilest, and what is pnre is considered only a grade of vilenoss all the more reprehensible, j because it is obviously impossible of | comprehension by minds attuned to less harmonious chords. Tlie Hour of Dentil. Speaking of tho time of day at or near which most deaths occur, Finlay son, of Glasgow, says Le Journal da Medecine (Paris), believes that it is G a. in. His observations include 15,000 cases. "M. Beadles makes a differ ence between the sexes. He says it is 5 to 7 a. m. for men and the evening hours for women. M. Schneider, of Berlin, less vague in his affirmation, bases his statistics on 57,000 deaths, and gets 5 to 7 a. m., without distinc tion of sex. Mr. Baseri (25,171 ob servations) remarks that it is gen erally in the afternoon that people bid adieu to the fair land of Italy, Finally, M. C. Fere has collected 11,- 401 cases at the Salpctriere andßicetro hospitals, and finds that they take piace at all possible hours, but that there is a lull from 7 to 11 p. in." Dining OfiT Stories. A returned volunteer tells 3 Root story, which, by tho way, goes to show that oillcsi'3 wore not feasting while the men were living on ordinary army rations. One of our generals in Cuba entertained, it seems, some visiting officers at his Held quarters near the fighting lino before Santiago. Tho faro resembled in simplicity tlie legen dary roasted sweet potatoes of revolu tionary times, but tho host's hearty welcome and still more his wealth of good stories carried along tlie meager menu. At length, however, there came a pause, both gastronomic and conversational. The guests were await ing "what next" when tho old negro servant was heard to hiss into the general's ear: "Give 'em another big one, Geu'l. De cook dun Bcorch do hardtaQk. —Philadelphia Press. F Comical Account*. A milkmau who served a certain lady with milk, kept the account with out. the lady's knowledge, behind ouo of the kitchen doors. The gardener in whitewashing obliterated the memoranda. To straighten out the matter the milkman brought his hook to his customer. In glanoing over it j she found a charge of ' 'two quarts of I milk to the lady what como from iCanady." A little farther on was a charge of "three quarts of milk to tho woman that lives upstairs next door | to the lady what come from Cauady." ' —Philadelphia Press. A Nation of Dyspeptics. From, the Mo untaineer, Walha'.la. N. Dakota. Tho of a guilty stomaoh is what a largo majority of tho people aro suffering with to-day. Dyspepsia is a characteristic American disease an ! it Is frequently stated that "wo nrc a nation of dyspeptics." Improper food, hurried eating, mental worry, exhaustion—any of those produce a lack of vitality in tho system, by causing the blood to lose its life-sustaining ele ments. Tho blood is the vital element la our lives and should bo carefully nurtured. Restore it to its proper condition, dys pepsia will vanish and good health follow. For example, in the county of Pembina, North Dakota, a few miles from Walhalln, resides Mr. Earnest Bolder; a man of sterl ing integrity, whoso veracity cannot be doubted. lie saya: /wfii The Doctors Disagreed. " I became seriously ill three yoars ago. Tho doctor gavo me medicine tor indiges tion, but 1 continued to become worse. I bad several physicians at intervals who gavo me somo relief, but the disease would return witli all its accustomed severity. "I read in the newspapers articles re garding the wonderful curative powers of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo People, and Anally concluded to try the pills. Five months ago I bought six boxes. The first box gave me much relief, and after using four boxes I was cured." These pills are recognized everywhere as ft speolflc for diseases of the blood and nerves. For paralysis, locomotor ataxia, and other diseases long supposed incur able, they have proved their eflloaoy in thousunds of casea. It will take a snail 14 days and 5 hours to travel a mile. Just the Time. Thi9 is just the time of the year wo feel the muscles all sore and stiff, and then is just the time to uso St. Jacobs Oil to re lax them and to cure at once. Dawson City has two newspapers, weeklies; 50 cents a copy. Beauty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Ho beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring lip the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the bod v. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. The Baltimore & Ohio South Western Railroad has just received from the Baldwin Locomotive Works 10 new freight locomotives for use on the Ohio division from Cincinnati to Park ersburg. This portion of the road has some rather heavy grades and these are the lirst heavy engines to be used cn the line. It is expected they will increase the train haul about 40 per cent. The simple locomotives have 21x28 inch cylinders and the compound loVfc and 26x28 inch cylinders. The locomo tives were built from designs furnish ed by Superintendent of Motive Power Neufl'er. Eight are simple and two are compound. SNAKES IN PACIFIC ISLANDS. Eoiwall, Snmot. .n<] Now Zealand Go* Urol, Free from KoptllM. For the most part the Pacific Islands are destitute of snakea. That is abso lutely the case tn Hawaii. In New Zealand, equally free of these reptiles, the only knowledge which the Maoris had of snakes may be found in a le gend of a monster called the taniwha, concerning which the authorities differ as to whether It is the ancestral and dim recollection of a snake or of an al ligator. All tho eastern Islands of Polynesia between these two outposts are snakeless. Westward from Hawaii, down among the Gilberts and the Marshalls and the Carolines, the square-bodied water snake begins to make Its appearance In the lagoons and harbors. By the time the Phillipines are reached the water snake becomes both common and deadly and the Jungle of those Islands are abundant ly supplied with snakes. From the Phillipines as one follows down the chains of Islands snakes are found botli abundant and venomous. In tho wild lands of the western Pacific the reptiles are frequently objects of wor ship, and In some legends are credited with the creation of the world. Samoa seems to lie Just on the boundary line of snakes In the Pacific. In the east ern Islands of tho archipelago no snakes are to be found; In Upolu a few are seen at rare Intervals. In Sa vaii only a few miles to the westward they are common and attain great size. In the case of some kind at least. None of them is venomous and the islanders neither fear them nor exhibit any of that repugnance to their presence which is commonly called instinctive. This Indifference to the reptiles is made most markedly manifest at the hamlet of Iva on the northeast coast of Savatl. Here are to be found small snake 3 of the most brilliant red color. They are so common that a basketful may be easily picked up In any banana patch. Tho dancing girls of this town aro in tho habit of employing these gaudy enakee for personal adornment In their dances. They tie them about their necks, their ankles, and their wrists, festoon them In their headdresses, and tuck a few extra ones In their belt In readiness to replace such as escape In the dance. At their best these slvas danced by the Sa moans are either dull or revolting shows of savagery. It can be easily Imagined that they are made no more attractive when tho taupou or villago maid and her crew of attendant girls go careering about with an assortment of writhing red snakes. Still the Sa moans, who have no stock of snake prejudices, look upon this as one of tho most successful and artistic dances In their islands. Tho Eskimo's Hoot. There Is no craft BO difficult to han die aa the Eskimo kayak. The only boat familiar to us which In any way resembles It la tha racing shell, but If a crack oar3men of one of our col lores were tied Into a kayak and told to shift for himself he would have a hard time of It. It is entirely covered except for a round hole, into which tho owner slips, pushing his feet under neath the skin deck In front, the hole being fltted to the person for whom the boat la designed, so that hla thighs fill It completely. When he la seated In It. with his waterproof Jacket tied securely around the edge, he Is able to defy waves or rain. The moat expert are apt to be sometimes over turned, either by a careless movement or an unexpectedly large wavo, and, If he does not right himself at once. Is Inevitably drowned. . A Prediction Klglity Tears Old. The poet Keats wrote to his brothel George in Kentucky in ISIS as fol lows: "Russia may spread her con quest even to China; I think it a very likely thing that China itself may fall. Turkey certainly will. Meanwhile Eu ropean north Russia will hold Its horns against the rest of Europe, In triguing constantly with France." Forty per cent of the heat of an or dinary fire goes up the chimney. Whllo You Sloop. Do not have too much air blowing through your room at night, or neuralgia may creep upon you while you sleep. But If It come 9, use St. Jacobs Oil; it wurms, loothes and cures promptly. New York hop pickers get from 75 cents to $1.25 a day. Don't Tobacco Spit oud Smoke four T.lfo Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, bo mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bao, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 60c or fI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York Russia, with her population of 129,- 000,000, has only 743 newspapers—but little more than half the number pub lished In the State of Pennsylvania, which has 1,430. Five Cents. Everybody knows that Dobbins* Electrlo Soap Is the best in the world, and for 38 years It has sold at the highest price. Its price U now 5 cents, same as common brown soap. Bars full else and quailty.Order of grooer. Ado The Board of Aldermen of Somer ville, Mass., has passed a resolution in favor of the municipal ownership of the electric light plant. No-To-Boc for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c. 11. All druggists Germany has 5.782 associations of turners, with 578,102 members. Mr*. Wins low's Soothing Syrup forohildrcn teething, sol'tons the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle SINGULAR STATEMENT. From Mrs. Rank to Mrs. Pinkham. The following letter to Mrs. Pink ham from Mrs. M. RANK, NO. 2,354 r.ast Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, i Pa., is a remarkable statement of re lief from utter discouragement. She says: 44 1 never can find words with which to thank you for what Lydia B. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. 44 Some years ago I had womb trouble and doctored for a long- time, not see- j ing any improvement. At times I would feel well enough, and other j times was miserable. So it *vcnt on until last October, I felt something* ' terrible creeping* over me, I knew not ! what, but kept getting worse. I can j hardly explain my feeling 3 at that time. I was so depressed in spirits that I did not wish to live, although I had everything to live for. Had liys- | teria, was very nervous; could not sleep and was not safe to be left alone. " Indeed, I thought I would lose my mind. No one knows what I endured. " I continued this way until the last of February, when I saw in a paper a testimonial of a lady whose case was similar to mine, and who had been cured by Lydla E. Pinltham's Vegeta ble Compound. I determined to try it, and felt better after the first dose. I continued taking it, and to-day am a well woman, and can say from my heart, 'Thank God for such a medi cine.'" Mrs. Pfnkham invites all suffering women to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice. All such letters are seen and answered by women only. "J itsrc been using CASCAIIKTS for Insomnia, with which I have been afflicted Icr over twenty years, and I can say that Cascnrets have Ijlvea me more relief than any ether reme dy 1 havo ever tried. I shall certainly recom mend them to my friends as he ins nil thoy tiro represented.'' Taos Gillabu, Elgin, 111. CANDY m CATHARTIC TRAC3 MAAK RCGIOTSRCD Plefijant. Fn'.atnbte, Potent. Taste Good no Good, Never Sicken. Weaken. or Gripe. 10c, 25c CUc ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling n.iaody t'oapany, riilnrn. "Montreal. New York. 310 KQ-TO-tUO aP.Um suffers from the mischief of the substitute. A person S accustomed to Ivory Soap will not be satisfied with any I other. Ask for Ivory Soap and insist upon getting it. '■ A WORD OF WARNING —There are many white soaps, each represented to he " just S as good as the ' Ivorythey ARE NOT. but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and & remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for " Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting it fta Oeprr!*b.l9. by Th Procter 4 QnibUOo.,Otm.niu*. & ! I Fifty Cents a Year! j THE LEDGER j Is a richly illustrated and beautiful periodical, ij covering the whole field of popular reading. 3 ATTRACTIVE Th 9 covcrs of tlle LEDGER MONTHLY are J elegantly printed or lithographed in colors, making JR COVERS them worthy of preservation as works of art, and Si each cover is alone worth the price of the magazine. x THE ORANGE GIRL, by Sir Besant, rp:n; A1 and is now running. The short stories in each L ana A number will be by the most entertaining and SHORT STOPiES <1 distinguished writers of the day. ' J $ FASHION Up-to-date fashions are a strong feature of the 3 1C LEDGER MONTHLY. This department, witli j) K DEPARTMENT illustrations from original drawings by tiie best ir* designers of fashions, is a true guide for every SI p woman. SPECIAL DEPARTMENTS are devoted to Embroidery, & a Decorative Art, Home Employments for Women, etc, J. h The LEDGER MONTHLY is replete with PICTORIAI m p pictorial illustrations appertaining not only UKIAL v K to the reading matter, but with illustrations ILLUSTRATION'S 5 if of special beauty and interest, appealing to the Jf artistic taste and the desire for the beautiful, such as "The Prayer," S) I? by Jean Paul Selinger, recently purchased for IfSOO. ' llV/ B ■- bfl H ihafcg I'hPMN at M among friend* atl cents u pnekng*. Send name; *ri mntl gum. Wt.cn eolil cad money; wo will mall ring' fer A.ini".n'^"^l..^g" Farms for ©ale I Send f tamp, aetftrtl description and prion of 40 rliraprst farms In Aslitxhula l'o„ (>. best statu Intbe union; best nountv in the state. 11. N". HAN*CROFT, Jefferson, Ashtabula Co., Olilo. --PATENTS- Procured on cash, OR easy iiiitiliucuiN.\ OWLRS & UUllNb. Patent Attorneys, an: Broadway, fi. Y. C°oo AS GOLD fT'iT "••} T.ius v^u^r, o . r 'is!f;y ! 'tV' n oS p , o, ;s; ! vr;: