44 In Union There is Strength." True strength consists in the union, the ! harmonious working together, of every part of the human organism. This strength can never be obtained if the blood is im pure. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the standard prescription for purifying the blood. A. M. Priost. Druggist, Rholbyville, Ind.. pay?: "Hall's Catarrh Cure gi.es the host of satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials, asltcures every one who takes it." Druggists sell it 75c. We think Piso's Cure for Consumption is the only medicine for Coughs. .1 unml: PACK ARD, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1,159 L In the last three years tho United States luls sold abroad $1,300,000,000 more than it has bought. Beatify is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarcts, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by 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 Casca rets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Wages in the locomotive department of the English and Welsh railway lines increased 5.2 per cent during the last half year, and the cost of coal was augmented by 18 per cent. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, at the request of numerous business or ganizations of Baltimore and Philadel phia, has arranged for a ten days stop over at each of those cities under the usual procedure of the passenger de positing the ticket with the ticket ten days stop-overs at Washington, Baltimore and Philadelphia. M rs. Winslnw's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a buttle. European Signs. Notes from a letter just received from an observing American who no ticed these signs on a trip from Liv erpool to Naples. In Liverpool a sign reading: "Shaving, Id.; shaving, with clean water, 2d." In the Anglo-Amer ican bar, at the Grand Hotel, in Rome, the popular American drink thus masquerade on a sign: "Handsome Cooler, 1 lire." Travelers on a train from Paris to Rome were informed by placards that "Travelers may not put their heads and hands from the win dow in case of accident." To what straits a nation with no W in its lan guage is reduced is shown by theatri cal posters on the walls and fences about Naples which stare one In the face, reading: "Teatro Mercadante, Etc., Etc., Etc., Amletto, 5 attl., etc., ttc., G. Shakispare." Shades of the departed William! —New York Times. Ben Water for Street Sprinkling. The Merchants' Association ot San Francisco, says the Popular Science Monthly, has been trying the experi ment of sprinkling a street with sea water, and finds that such water binds the dirt together between the paving stones, so that when it is dry no loose dust Is formed to be raised by the wind; that sea water does not dry so quickly as fresh water, so that it has been claimed when salt water has Veen used one load of It Is equal to threo loads of fresh water. The salt water which is deposited on the street ab sorbs moisture from the air during ths night, whereby the street is thoroughly moist during the early morning and has the appearance ot having been freshly sprinkled. BACKACHE is a symptom. Something makes the backache and that something requires attention or the backache can never be perma nently stopped. " I suffered for years with a long list of troubles," writes Mr.s. C. KLENK, of Wells, Minn. (Box 151), to Sirs. Pinkham, "and I want to WEARINESS table Compound is a wonderful A medicine for women. OJr" " I had severe female complaints _ Kjy ta /T& aajp° causing terrible backache and ner- GLff muSt, vous prostration; was dizzy most of the time, had headache and such a tired feeling. I now have taken seven bottles of your Compound and have also used the Sanative Wash and feel like a new woman. I must say I never had anything help me so much. 1 have better health than I ever had in my life. I sleep well at night, and can work all day without feeling tired. I give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege | I was a little frightened and sent for the doctor; and he said that it was for tunate for me that it came away. I got quite well after that and have your Compound alone to thank for my recovery." Multitudes of women suffer constantly with backache. Other grateful multitudes have been relieved of it by Mrs. Pinkham's advice and medicine. " Cleanliness is Mae Pride, Dirt's Mae honesty. Com mon Sense Dictates the Use of SAPOLIO Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Eane, A powder to shake into your shoes; rest the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Itching, Sweuttng Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Eas® makes new or tight*Bhoes easy. At all drug gists and shoe Stores, 25 cts. Sample muiled FREE. Adr's Allen 8. Olmstead. Lußoy, N.Y. Late advices from the Niger says the deserters from the French regiments are constantly arriving at 110. They allege as their reason for leaving the service that they got no pay. Educate Your Bowels With Cuscareta. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. The Wisconsin Legislature has for bidden the use of living rooms for manufacturing purposes. No-To-Bao for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, sl. All druggists. TH3 "GUIDES" OF INDIA. A Famous and Bplendad Corps—Th# Regimental Spirit. Before 1805 our frontier post was Mardan —"Mardan, where the Guides Rre." Here, ever since its foundation, that famous ami splendid corps ha 3 been quartered In tho Intervals of campaigns which have consistently added to the luster of its record, says G. W. Steevens in the London Mail. The only corps in India, except tho Gurkha battalion, which has perma nent quarters, the Guides have mado Mardan less of a station than a regi mental home. Here are Its family heirlooms—tho mess-walls covered with heads of buffalo and ibex, ante j lope and mountain sheep, with ban | n ers taken from the enemy, and queer j Greco-Buddhist statuary excavated [ out of the neighboring hills. Here is the regimental cemetery—full now ; and overflowing into a new one—and ;an arch and little garden tardily I created by government to the mem ory of tho handful of the corps who I died at post round Cavagnari in Ka : bul. Also the little swimming bath i in the officers' garden, the fort with sentries of many types—here a Sikh, ' there an Afridi, a Gurkha, a Rajput, ; a Dogra—for "God's Own" is composed I of the pick of all the fighting races of India. In enormous long white , trousers Sepoys and Sowars walk placidly about their home and tho home of their fathers; for the fight ing native puts down his young son for the Guides as you might at home for the Travelers. You come across a native officer of forty-two years' service—straight away to before the mutiny—a smiling little old gentle j man, whose dyed beard only just matches the mahogany of his skin. 1 He regrets, politely, that the Guides I were not able to appear at Omdurman, I and remarks, as an incentive to my future efforts, that he himself saw a | war correspondent killed at Landakai. j Every officer or man you meet has ' the air of a gentleman taking his ease |in his own house. Mardan is the con crete epitome of the spirit that makes a regiment—the only satisfactory translation I ever met of the words esprit do corps. Solidified Sptrltn for Fuel, A new idea in candles has been evolved by a German chemical manu facturer. It is simply a mass of solld -1 ified spirits pressed into cylindrical form and distributed in round tin boxes. The solid spirits burn readily and need no wick to make them appli cable for heating or cooking purposes. I The flame can be extinguished like j that of a chafing-dish lamp, aftei j which the little surface spirits, which ' became liquefied by the heat of the j flame, resume their hard and waxy I consistency in a few minutes. GAMBLING STRATAGEMS. CLEVER DEVICES TO ENABLE CAME STERS TO ROB THEIR VICTIMS. One of These Social Highwaymen Flcece<l Guests by Means of a Specially-Con structed Caril-lloom—lngenious Con trivance of n European Dressmaker. Considering that gambling is only a polite form of thieving, it is not very remarkable that confirmed gamesters should stoop to fraud as a means of enhancing their chances of winning; but it is remarkable that other game sters should be so blind to the devices invented by more ingenious fellows. I It is not often that a gambler is suf : ficieutly enterprising and mean to have | a card-room specially constructed to facilitate his fleecing his victims and visitors; but to even this length went a man now deceased, who, despite his vast private fortune, systematically preyed upon the pockets of his wealthy acquaintances. The room was constructed so small that only sufficient space was allowed for a square table and the chairs of four players, the object of this being to prevent onlookers or anyone stand ing behind the particular chair which the host always took. The room was magnificently decor ated, and hidden in the deeply-carved black oak panelingwere two spy-holes, from which a person on the other side of the wall could see every card of the person sittiDg opposite the host. When cards were being played a con federate of tho host was always watch ing unseen from these holes, having his finger upon an electric button. This button communicated with a larger button hidden under the carpet just in front of the host's chair, and by this means the confederate was able to communicate with his master what cards were in the hand of his tete-a-tete player. Sitting down in his chair, the arch soundrel put his toe on the invisi ble button under the table and re ceived the news. It was the confed erate's duty to first wire what was strongest suit in "hand" before him. Thus, with one push the button in formed the arch-thief that his tete-a tete's strongest suit was hearts, and so on. When it had been communi cated how the suits stood in strength, it was the confederate's duty to wire what the cards were starting with the highest in the highest suit, and going to the lowest in the lowest. So quick ly could this scheme be worked that very often the host knew his teto-a tete's cards beforo the latter had prop erly arranged his "hand." After the strength of the suits had been communicated iu this way, the host felt twelve rapid taps on the sole of his shoe, and he knew this meant the queen of hearts. A short pause, and thou ten rapid taps told him the next highest card was the ten of hearts. And so on. It is said that, thanks to this ingenious scheme, which was never discovered during the in ventor's life, many wealthy persons were brought to the verge of ruin, whilo their host entertained them in regal style. A somewhat similar, but less suc cessful, scheme was that in the prac tice of which a certain Continental dressmaker was detected. This wom an, like many others of her calling, made it a custom to entertain her customers at gambling in the secrecy of her private apartments, and she probably found it infinitely more lu crative than her professed trade, to which it attracted customers. Her plan was to stand liw husband out side the room, which was built in an other room, so that a passage ran be tween the two walls on three sides and through [an unseen opening all round the edge of the ceiling the man could see the cards of all players but his wife, who sat with her back to the single wall. Walking in the passage the man ex amined the cards of the unsuspecting players, and opening a small trap in the wall exhibited similar cards drawn from a pack he carried. Owing to the light which was thrown down upon the table and into the faces of ail players but the dressmaker, the exhibited card could be seen by her only. Her eyes shaded from the glare of the lamp were accustomed to the dim light in which the cards wore exhibited, but to the other players glancing from the glare such dimness would have been as impenetrable as the darkness of night. In this way the mau was able to show his wife ex actly what cards were in the "hand" of the player behind whom he stood, and when one hand had been disclosed in this manner he moved on to the next. But it was too clumsy to bo entire ly successful; victims became suspi cious of the dressmaker's extraordin ary runs of luck and her habit of con stantly looking up at the walls; and one day a victim contrived during her hostess's absence to fix the gas shade to suit her own eyes, and dur ing the game followed tho schemer's eyes the moment she saw them rise. Then the cat had escaped. The dress maker vanished. Many attempts have been made to invent a system of ornamenting the backs of cards in such away that a person knowing the secret can rend them. But the difficulties in tho way aro manifest, and gamblers who have attempted such frauds have generally been speedily detected. It is a pretty well-known fact, how ever, that a notorious American crook, who died in jail not long ago, was successful in this connection. He in vented a pack of cards', and' demon stated how readily ho could read them by the backs, while no one 6lse could discover anything in the least suspi cious or suggestive about them. They are now in the hauds of the police, and have been examined by hundreds of persons, but no ono has been able to read their secret. Tho crook Lis reported to have declared that the se cret was worth 84000 a year to him for five years, and that he sold two similar packs for SSOOO each. —Tit- Bits. Iloyal Illnnor Parties. The Queen's dinner hour is nine o'clock, hut royal dinners are served with commendablo rapidity, so, in spite of the lateness of the hour, the banquet is over by ten. Her Majesty precedes her family and gnests into the dining room, aud again heads the procession on leaving the room. This, by the way, is the arrangement in all royal households. Even when the Duke and Duchess of Fife give a din ner in their Portman Square estab lishment, tho Duchess of Fife goes in to dinner alone aud before (instead of after) all her guests. When the Queen 13 entertaining, and the party has reassembled iu the draw ing room or reception corridor, she addresses a'ifew remarks to each guest in turn. Tlio latter in every case wait for tho sovereign to initiate the con versation, and merely respon d briefly to her remarks. By eleven o'clock the function is at an end. At the "dine aud sleep" parties at Windsor or Osborne, and also at San dringhain, departing guests are ex pected to leave by an early train, not later than eleven. No formal farewell is accorded them; in fact, they are sup posed to disappear as silently as spirits. The Huge Trees of California. Tlio writer on first visiting timber yards in Northern Europe, could not j get rid of the impression that tho round timber was all culls or waste. A raftload of logs iu the Gotba River iu Sweden was thought to consist of telegraph poles. It happened to bo a collection of small timber even for there, and a visit to the Pacific Coast of North America, Jsoon after, still further emphasized the enormous dif ference in tho timber resources of the two countries. Soon after arriving in San Francisco there was encountered in the street a squared beam of fir more than 100 feet in length, being hauled to a factory iu course of erec tion. Following this beam to its des tination—a woolen factory the3 being built—it was a matter of astouisbmeut to find all the longitudinal beams, or "stringers," of the same length. This astonishment was increased when the contractor said: "We never bother about dimensions, and just ortler what we want." A section eight feet in diameter, cut from a redwood tree, completed a new impression of Ameri can forest timber.—-The Engineering Magazine. Labor In Madafiascar. In Madagascar there has been a marked rise in wages since the Fran co-Malagasy War, blacksmiths receiv ing one dollar and forty-five cents a day, although carpenters receive only from nineteen to forty-eight cents a day. Native Creole carpenters receive a little more, the average ranging from twenty-eight to seventy-seven cents a day. Nativo dressmakers aud seam stresses can be hired from two dollars and forty-one cents to four dollars and eighty-three cents a month, although creole dressmakers and seamstresses receive from five dollars and seventy nine cents to fourteen dollars and for ty-eight cents a mouth. Notwithstanding these comparative ly high wages in Madagascar, prices, on the whole, are very low, and of course living is fairly cheap. Beef and mutton can l>o bought, in the in terior from one to four cents a pound, although beef at Tamatave costs from ten to eighteen cents a pound,— Youth's Companion. llow flip Moon Climbs Mount Hood. From the point of view of most Portlanders tho moon was launched the other evening on its journey to tho zenith squarly from tho peak of Mount Hood. The glow of the sot ting sun had hardly faded from the big mountain when his substitute poked his nose over tho north slope and sat for a second ou the shoulder half way up to the summit, like the earth ou the shoulder of Atlas. Then it journeyed diagonally up the slope till it reached the peak, dipping a lit tle, so that the rugged outlines of the mountain stood out sharply against the deep-red sphere. Tho moou left the summit like a vast balloon, mak ing a little something all the while. It seemed to hang suspended a few minutes before going farther, but soon gathered headway aud journeyed forth into the sky. Tho picture is one which is not often eeon, but which is worth crossing a continent to witness.—Morning Oregonian. The I'sriutiKo Figli. The paradise fish, perhaps the most beautiful of all Ashes, is a member of the macropas family. The length is about ten centimetres, and the back is brown, changing to greenish gray on tho belly, but marked with change able yellowish green and blue and red cross-lines. The fins are large in pro portion to the body, but are less in females. They are natives of China, where they are usually kept as orna mental creatures; but little is known about them iu a wild state. They are peculiarly adapted for being house hold pets, as they live iu very little water, and can be kept out of the water for twenty minutes at a time without injury. They feed ou craw fish, insect larvae, worms, mussels, flies, and so on. Their nest consists Q( if, congeries of small air bubbles, in which they deposit the sperm. "Where Death Mate Varies. While London has a lower death rate than auy other English town of over 200,000 inhabitants, it varies very much in the different districts, .being as low as 13.3 in Hempstead as thigh as '27.8 in Limehonse. Artificial flowers are first mentioned in the fourteenth century, in Italy. HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. . A Closet For Children's Drmsea. An impromptu closet for the chil dren's dresses may be made by put ; ting up a three-cornered shelf about six feet from the floor in one corner of the room. Cover the shelf with figured denim, which is a yard wide and costs about twenty-Ave cents a yard, and hang curtains of the same from it. Have two strips of wood fastened inside with a number of double hooks screwed into thein and you will have a most useful wardrobe. Two other strips with hooks may be nailed below the first, three feet from the floor, if desired. —Ladies' Home Journal. A Good Rule With Linoleum. Linoleum should never be touched with either soap or a scrubbing brush. Have it well wiped over with a soft flannel cloth and warm water, drying it carefully with another clean cloth. Skim milk is also a very good thing to wash it with, as it gives it the gloss you wish for. The great rule is to wash linoleum as seldom as possible unless you use skim or sour milk for the purpose, and every uow aud then polish it with linseed oil or occasion ally with beeswax and turpentine furniture polish. Kept in this way it will both look nicer aud wear infinite ly better, for scrubbing wears it out and too much water rots it. The Proper Cure of Cutlery. Before putting away knives rub well with a bit of newspaper. Lay knife on a piece of paper, fold its edge over the knife, then another knife, laying them hand to blade, with paper over each. Put each half dozen in separate ' paper. Then wrap in chamois or flannel, and put into a dry place. They will never rust. To remove rust from knives and forks, wrap article in a cloth soaked in kerosene twenty-four hours, then scour them ; with a bath brick. Next rub with ; whiting, then with sweet oil, finally wash in hot soap suds; dry well. Deep spots of rod rust on cutlery can be eradicted by rubbing with salt and vinegar. To clean knives use bath brick or well powdered ashes. Use a largo cork to rub the moistened powder ou, then another cork to dry-dust the article. Wipe with paper, as a cloth would leave dampness or streaks. Twice a week spread cutlery ou a tray in the sun for an hour. Never let cutlery lie in water, aud never throw it into hot water, as it spoils tho handles. Hold by handles while you wash the blades. Never use table cutlery in cooking. Emery powder will remove ordinary staius from ivory knife haudles.—New York Journal. How to Clean Glassware. The water cannot be too hot for your glasses, and uo matter how frail they are they will not break in the coldest weather provide you manage rightly. Heat expands, cold con tracts; and the unequal expansion of the inner aud outer surfaces of your glass will cause a fracture. Thus, if you pour a hot liquid into a cold glass the inner surfaco expands more rapidly than tho outer; while if you set a cold glass into hot water the re verse takes place—breaking the vessel in pitlior case. Therefore, dip your glasses into tho water sideways, and roll them around as you do so with a quick twist of tho hand, so that the expansion is equal. Merely observe this simple law of physics and you may wash your glasses with safety iu the hottest water. Glasses cannot bo clean unless washed in clean, hot water; moreover, they should be wiped as soon as they are taken out of tho water, using a clean dry towel. If allowed to stand and drain the water will dry on them in cloudy streaks. Glasses which have been used only for water need no soap; it is only necessary to rinse them in hot water. Tho superstition that glass washed in liot water becomes brittle probably originated iu the fact. that, if it. is allowed to standin a draft, directly after being taken out of tho water, the sudden contraction of its outer surface breaks tho glass, In the same man ner a pitcher, which has held iced lemonade ou a liot day, has been known to crack from top to bottom immediately after being suddenly emptied.—American Queen. Recipes. Cottage Sauce—Cream one-fourth cup of butter, add one-half cup ol sugar, one-half teaspoonful of vanilla or lemon extract; stir in one-half cup ful of boiling milk. It will bo of a creamy consistency. Fruit Jelly—Oue-half box gelatine dissolved, add juice of two lemons and strain; when partly thick enough add two oranges, cut up; two bauangs, one-quarter pound figs and one quarter pound of English walnuts, aud set away to cool. Eggs a la Mar nay—Prepare a mix ture of white cream sauce, white pep per, and salt, and grated Parmesan cheese. "Upon half this mixture place some soft poached eggs, cover their with tho other half of the sauce and sprinkle with grated Parmesan cheese aud a few drops of melted butter. Brown the whole lightly iu the oven aud serve hot. Puff Pudding—Add to ono cup of i boiling milk one-half a enp of butter; j sift in one-half onp of flour, stirring rapidly Ave minutes. When cool, add 1 three -well beaten eggs and stir ten minutes, and after adding one tea spoonful of baking powder drop by I spoonfuls into well buttered gem tins. | Bake in a quick oven. Serve hot with \ cream sauce. Baked Indian Pudding—lleat ono pint of milk, mix in a little cold water, : one-half cupful of Indian meal; add to ' this the scalding milk, with one-fourth teaspoonful of salt. Lev boil Ave miu i utea. Let cool, and add one egg, well beaten, and one-half cupful of sugar and a little grated nutmeg. Bake oldwly: three-quarters of an boar, j Serva with cottage sauce. y-j J||f, I Some persons say they are never influenced by an advertisement. It is not expected that any one will buy Ivory Soap solely because it is suggested by an advertisement, but if you have never used Ivory Soap, you may be induced to ask some friend about it; should you find —as you probably will that she is enthusiastic in its praise, then you may try it. Millions of people use Ivory Soap; they use it because they like it. You too will like it. There is a difference in soaps. LARGEST KITCHEN IN WORLD. | Unlit by George IV at Windsor Castle In 18558. Tho last of the works of the much maligned George IV. to be mentioned here is the enlarged and improved royal kitchen (at Windsor castle). It stands—perhaps the largest single kitchen in the world—on ground where royal kitchens have stood from time immemorial. George JV. it was who in IS2S gave it its lofty roof and top-light ventilators, its splendid clock let into the stone walls, and its generally me dieval appearance. At the other end of the kitchen is fixed an immense and venerable smokestack, whose or igin is lost in the mists of antiquity. One of these annually has the honor of roasting her majesty's baron of beef. The hot-plate table in the center of the kitchen measures no less than 14 feet by nine feet. The batterie de cuisine, in its brilliant array of glittering cop per, is large enough to cheer the hearts of a small army of gourmands; and to show its office is no sinecure, one may mention that it has to make an annual visit to the manufacturer for restora tion and repair. Lady Bloomfield says ! of this kitchen in 1842: "The fire was more like Nebuchadnezzar's 'burning iiery furnace' than anything else I can think of now; and though there is now no company at Windsor, there were at least 15 or 20 large joints of meat roasting. Charles Murray (comptrol ler of the household) told me that last year they fed at dinner 113,000 people." ! —Pall Mall Magazine. There was nothing Napoleon was so fond of as boiled mutton with onion sauce, and he frequently indulged his taste to such an extent as to make himself ill. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke lour I.IFe 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, SO© or Cl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling licujcdy Ca Chicago or New York. The Samuel J. residence at Grammercy Park the other clay for SISO,OOO, which was $320,000 less than it cost. To Curo Constipation Forever# Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 100 or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. The capital of Herzegovina has a man named Gjugja. who is 100 years I old, and boasts of 130 descendants. Fits rermnnrntlv cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's UFO of I)r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. ?2 trial bottle ami treatise tree. Pr.IUI.Ki.iM . Ltd. fHI Arch StPhila.Pa "1 have gono 1-4 days ct a time without n movement of tho bowels, not being nble to atovo thein except by using bot water injections. Chronic constipation for seven years placed mo in tills terrible condition; during Unit, time 1 did ev erything 1 heard of but never lound any relief; such was my case until 1 began using CASCARETS. 1 now havo from one to three passages a duy, and if I was rich 1 would give §11X1.01) lor each movement; it is such a relief. " Avi.MEU L. HUNT, IGS3 Russell St.. Detroit. Mich. B CATHARTIC HIM TRADe MARK RIO!3TtRCD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tasto flood. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. lUe, 20c. 5Uc. > ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Itemed)' torn pan), Chicago, Montreal, New York. 322 j GOLDEN CROWN | LAMP CHIMNEYS Aro tho host. Ask for tliom. Cost 110 more than common chimney*. All dealers. PITTS 111 RG GI.ASS ., Allegheny, Pa. Prosecutes Claims;. j 3yra iu civil war, 13udjudivutiiig< initn.s.utty tduca P N. U. 22 'W lITANTRD-< td health that H-I-P-A-N-B I VV will not benefit. Bend 6 eta. to Ri pan* Chemical I Co.. >• York, for ltiaamploa and laoo teatimomaK I FARQUHAR RAKE^^maR durable, perfect In operation and eheupeat. Farquhar Vibrator Separator greatest m parity; wastes no k>-t. Specially adapted for merchant threshing and large crops. Threshes rice, I'"* nnd millet. Received *V"<u2i / world's fairs. Farquhar Celeferaiad Ajax Engine . Received medal and litmblun Kx^iosltloii.^^Far- foot brakes and • iVw made as light as is consis tent with safety. There la no record of a Farquhar boiler over exploding. Farquhar Variable Friction Feed Saw Mill. works made. Quick re ceding head blocks and Engines Boilers Saw Mills and Agricultural Implements Generally. Send lor illustrated catalog. A,B. Farquhar Co., Ltd. YORK. F= A. | HARTFIRDsVEDETTE f \ BICYCLES | | 5 25. ?J '0 5 75" I 1 <2 MODELS OF NEW WHS. | 4 Catalogue, Booklets, L \ Folders, etc., free of u any Columbia dealer, Q Jt or by mail for a two- C J cent stamp. Jt '1 POPE MFG. CO., Harlford, Oann. " BIG FOUR" "THESEA LEVEL ROUTE" TO NEW YORK. DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE. WACNER SLEEPINC CARS. DININC CARS. M. E. INGALLS, E. 0. Mr.COP.MICK, President, Pass. Traffic Mgr. WARREN J. LYNCH, Asst. Gen'l Pass. & Ticket Agt. , CARTER'S INK CO., BOSTON, MASS. ' I | . DROP SYJ&WBKSISSPJKS I ruse*. Book of toutimonialMand 1() <|„ VN ' trntran , Free. Dr. H. H. oitEEH B BONB. Box D. Atlanta, da ; RHEUMATISM AWPEH Remedy C 0.,246 Greenwich Bt.. N. y! ' g ELSE FAILS. jj "
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers