"He is Wise Who Talks But Little " This is only a half truth. If •wise men hid held their tongues, <we should know nothing about the circulation of the blood. If it -were not for this advertisement you might never know that Hood's Sarsapa rilla is the best blood medicine. RAILWAY MAIL^S I I for Railway Mail, Postal, Custom House, etc. Send for particulars. CIVIL STRVICE SCHOOL.^ STATE OP OIUO, CITY OP TOLEDO, I LUCAS COUNTY. FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he istho nior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY A Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that saiu flrip will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DUI/- LARB for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot bo cured by the uso of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J.CHENEY. Sworn to before mo and subscribed in my i—- * 1 presence, this lith tiny of December, SEAL - A. D. 1886. A. w. ULEASON, X'—■') Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood und mucous surfaces •f the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY AC CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggist!*, 75c. Hall'B Family Pills are the best. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottlo and treatise free. Dr.IL^I.KLINE, Ltd. ( J3I Arch St.Phlla.Pa. I believe Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my boy's life last summer. Mrs. ALLIU DOUG LASS Le Key, Mich., Oct. 21), 18UL Fifty years ago six-year-old children were employed in New England mills, i I.ost higlit Restored and tho eyes cured by using Find ley's Eye Salve. No pain, sure cure or | money back. 25c. box. All druggists, or i by mail. J. P. HAYTEB, Decatur, Texas. THE FLAIL. Its Sound Has Departed from Nearly All the Farms. The sound of the flail has departed from nearly all the farmsteads and the calling of the thrasher has gone with it, says Notes and Queries. Yet for 6ome time after harvest was over there ■was no more familiar sound in the country places than the "thud! thud!" of the flails as they fell upon and beat out the grain on the barn-thrashing floors. There remain, however, some sayings In which "like the thrasher" occurs, but the use of these grow less and less. A short time ago some friends were in a country place where O part of the thrashing is done with tho flail. A couple of the implements were hanging on the barn wall and a (heap of straw was on the floor. The use of the flail was explained and demonstrated for the benefit of those who had never seen this "weapon" of husbandry. Incidentally it may be mentioned that the sayings, "Sings like a thrasher" and "Works like a thrasher," came from that occupation, and are "as old as Adam." "It looks easy enough; that can't be very hard work," said one of the company, a re mark which led to the flail being put Into his hands for a try at the "easy work." One swing was enough for the amateur, for t'other end" caught him "a friendly whaek" which probably he will remember to the end. It also doubtless impressed upon his memory that "working like a thrasher" as he had done had not led to "singing like a thrasher." "You'll get a good flail ing." Has any reader seen the flail employed as an effective When used by an old hand there is no standing against it Slaughter of Birds. One million five hundred and thirty eight thousand seven hundred and thir ty-eight is the precise number of birds estimated by the British consul in Venezuela to have been killed last year to provide aigrettes fvr ladies' hats. CC Y GAVElittle thought to my health," writes MRS. WM. V. J[ BELL, 330 N. Walnut St., Canton, 0., to Mrs. Pink ham. •' until I found myself unable to attend to my household duties. "I had had my days of not feeling well and my monthly but 1 thought all women had these ■ """WW• things and did not complain. # JT"©© "I had doctored for some time, but no medicine seemed to help me, and my fCM physician thought it best for me to go WW UrMwa £.l AW to the hospital for local treatment. I had read and heard so much of your Vegetable Compound that I made up t my mind to try it. I was troubled with falling of the womb, had sharp pains in ovaries, leucorrhoeaand painful menses. I was so weak and dizzy that I would often have severe fainting spells. I tool: in all several bottles of Lydia E. ''C jJitJsi Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier and used the Sanative Wac'a, and am now in u good health. I wish others to know of the wonderful good it has done me, andf have many friends taking it^ Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- j jP® table Compound. One bottle { JWr relieved me, and after tak- 1 ? ing eight bottles am now a I healthy woman; have gained in weight 95 pounds to 140 pounds, and everyone asks what makes me so stout." An Unfair Advantage. Mrs. Blank found herself In a rather embarrassing situation one day when she was dining for the first time at the home of a minister. Opposite her sat the minister's little boy, a sharp eyed little fellow of 4 years. While his father was asking a somewhat lengthy blessing the lady elevated her eyelids slightly and caught the eye of the little fellow opposite her. The In stant his father said "Amen" the boy pointed an accusing finger toward Mrs. Blank, and cried out, shrilly, "She peeked, papa! She peeked!"— Harper's Bazar. What Do You Want ? There is nothing that money can buy will ////I? that we do not sell, ex ifflWHWlHlkS cept locomotives, boats jguniiliii/ty an( l ii V e animals. We eg f/f can save you money on everything you buy at ft *4 all seasons of the year. t Our general Catalogue Fanrv Chair* 75c to t3O contains 304 pages, has fancy c/iairs,7oc 10 *3u. 10,000 illustrations, and , quotes wholesale prices T to consumers on over | looouodifferent articles. you will tind every tiling _ to Eat, Wear and Use, everything found In a borne, in a hotel, in an office, In a church, on a r.. r.. farm, In a barn, and Gang I low, $10.25. every kind of merchan dise for every possible need >Sr We issue n Llth ographod Catalogue *R U"B". Art Squares, Portieres ami Lace Curtains in their real colors. lining furnisliert free Nwasay ami freight prepaid. Our Made-to-Order Watches, 69c to $75. ~lv"loVl,' attached, offers suits and overcoats from flta.Bs to 920.00. (Sent C. O. I).) Kxpres- Kage paid oil clothing everywhere'. Wo also issuo a Special Gntalogue of Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machines and Itlcvclcs. There is nothing you buy that you cannot buv bought here ns cheap as your dealer can. All Catalogues are free. Which do you want? Address this way: JULIUS HINES & SON. BALTIMORE, Ml)., U. S. A. Dept. •' 1'? The use of track tanks by which loco motives of high speed passenger trains may take water without stopping is al most universal on the larger Eastern roads, where fast expresses are the rule. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad has a number between Washington and Philadelphia and intends to equip the entire Main Line In the future. This decision was recently arrived at through the use of passenger locomo tives, equipped with water scoops, on last freight trains. It was found that | much time was saved, danger from I stopping being reduced to a minimum I and cost of running lessened. The Transportation Officials made some cal j dilations and the figures showed a sav ing of no small sum, if track tanks are I used for slow freights on the divisions where business is very heavy. The extra stops for water take much time and the wear and tear on equip ment is no small matter, and if five stops on each train can be eliminated between Cumberland and Baltimore, where trains are the thickest, the sav ing will be quite large. If the experiment on this part of the road proves successful, track tanks will be installed on every division be tween Baltimore and Chicago. As a starter, the 50 new Vauclain Compound Engines recently ordered will be fitted with water scoops. The London underground railroad is losing popularity. During the last half year the falling off in the number of passengers carried amounted to 300,000. More Magnlllceut Than Niagara. A correspondent writing in The Spectator says the Gersoppa falls, on the Sharavatti river, in South Kanara, India, are larger and more magnificent than Niagara. He says: "The river is 250 yards wide; the clear fall is 830 feet. The Gersoppa falls in the rainy season are incomparably finer than Niagara in every respect. Tlio roar of the falling waters is simply terrific; the whole earth shakes, and the thun der is so great that it completely drowns the human voice. When I vis ited Niagara and told my American friends about Gersoppa they replied with polite incredulity, 'We never heard of Gersoppa.' I replied, 'Make your minds easy; the people at Ger soppa have never heard of Niagara.' If Niagara could see Gersoppa she would wrap her head in a mist." UNITY OF PURPOSE. DEMOCRATIC PARTY IS IN FIGHTING TRIM. Sever In Better Condition for a National Battle—Platform Already Made and Bryan as Good as Nominated—Re publican Press Confounded. While Republican editors are raking their brains to make trouble in the Democratic party and stirring up fac tional strife by the publication of false reports on this subject and that, the Democrats and their allies are quietly forming lines for the final battle for bimetallism in 1900. Just a few of our friends are disturbed by the false hoods purposely printed in Republican papers. As a matter of fact, the Dem ocratic party was never in better con dition than it is today. Those who a year ago set out to destroy its princi ples have been silenced. Secret con claves and the like have been held and would-be dictators have done their worst, but they have found the face, the heart and the conscience of De mocracy turned toward the rising sun. Not even in the far East durst the tongue of treason give utterance to even doubt of the eternal truths that find expression in our platform. From Maine to Mexico, and from the sands of Florida to the strands of Washington, there is complete unity, and Bryan and the Chicago platform is the cry. All the talk about new-found poli cies and new presidential possibilities comes from Republican papers. It is a noticeable fact, however, that these organs of Republicanism never make it clear to their readers just why they want the Democrats to abandon the Chicago platform. It certainly cannot be that they are anxious for the Dem ocratic party to win. Oh, no! They merely want it to forsake the only is sue on which it can win. Should the Democratic party adopt some sort of a negative platform, such as the elim ination of the ratio, meaningless planks against the trusts, etc., the Re publicans would carry nearly every state in the Union. That is what the Republican papers are driving at every time they lyingly assert that this Dem ocrat and that Democrat is in favor of abandoning 16 to 1. They have been so utterly regardless of the truth in this respect that they have even sought to place Bryan in a false posi tion. But the Republican press is not mak ing Democratic issues. The Chicago platform will he practically readopted next year, with a fuller and even clear er stand on the money question than was taken in 1596. The national bank ers' trust must be abolished utterly. The Republican party will be in a difficult position to make a campaign next year. It can no longer prate about standing for the American prin ciple of bimetallism, because since the adoption of the Janus-faced St. Louis platform the party has gone on record for gold alone. It was the uncertainty of what was meant by the financial plank of that platform that kept enough of the agriculturists of In diana, Ohio, Illinois, Michigan, lowa and Wisconsin (that had always been Republicans) in line to give them to McKinley. There will be none of this uncertainty next year. On the money issue alone the Democratic party can carry the country. But there will bo other issues on which the party has yet to speak. It is fair to presume that the trust issue will be met in the right way—that is, by a stand promising the government ownership of all the means of trans portation and communication. No cheap denunciation of trusts, without the offer of a specific remedy, will be tolerated in the next national plat form. The Anglo-American alliance that now exists is one of the direct results of the Republican victory of 1896. This, like the British financial system that has been forced upon us, is a bur den as well as an insult to the inde pendence of the American people. The Democratic party will undoubtedly take a decisive stand against the al liance. We are not so sure but that were it not for this alliance the Fili pinos never would have tired on our forces. It has resulted in our sending an army of 75.000 men to Luzon. This army is being used by England as a sort of a scarecrow to frighten the Russians, who have no doubt but that there is an alliance between England and the United States. While our American ambassador to England de nies that there is one, it is noticeable fact that British statesmen are ex ploiting it. In any case, our old friend Russia is being menaced in the far East, and the Republican administra tion is responsible. And other na tions are being insulted and bullied by England on the strength or the under standing that she has this country at an ally. Some of them are conse quently beginning to feel an emnlty toward us. A dirty international mud dle had been stirred up. Only by the return to power of the Democratic party can matters be straightened out. —Bulletin. CIVE YOUNG MEN A CHANCE. Has the young man of today any chance under the present tendency to ward industrial combinations? We have been discussing the "trust ques tion" from the standpoint of the pro ducer and consumer. We have been considering Its possible effect upon the future of political parties. Lawyers and politicians have also studied the question in its multitudinous legal phases, says the Chicago Chronicle. But what Is to be the effect of the present tendency to form trusts upon the young man who enters upon the struggle for existence with limited cap ital or no capital but his hands and brains? Has the young man a chance under the present conditions? These are the questions answered with trenchant and incisive vigor by ex- Senator W. D. Washburn of Minne sota. Mr. Washburn believes that the young man of today is being deprived of business opportunity by the forma tion of trusts. He says: "When I was a young man (I am now 68) I had the world before me, and there was absolutely a fair field for me. Take all of our most success ful business men of today, and tneir experience was like mine. They en tered the race without a handicap, and their grit and capacity won. Now, this building up of trusts puts a stop to fair and equal opportunities for the young men of today. The young man just out of college has no opening, as a rule. He cannot begin business on his own account against organized cap ital. He must join the procession. He must content himself with being a mere clerk, and the chances are that he will never get any farther, because there are so many in his class." It is difficult to escape the force of this strong arraignment of trusts. It will be conceded even by superficial students of the question that the for mation of powerful industrial com binations for the purpose of control ling the production of commodities must inevitably tend to crowd out small producers, and hence must dis courage individual initiative and enter prise. This means that the young man who is looking for an opportunity to engage in business is shut out from all lines of legitimate industrial endeavor, unless he can control enough capital to become a part of a great industrial organization. If he cannot do this, the only avenue of business activity for him is, as Mr. Washburn points out, a mere clerkship in some great estab lishment, where his personality is ob scured in the Clerical machinery that is necessary for the conduct of these combinations. The observations of ex-Senator Washburn are worthy of serious re flection. They wili suggest the ques tion as to whether anything is to be gained for society by combinations that are ostensibly formed "to cneapen the cost of production," but which de prive the young men of the land of all opportunity to become producers or to embark in business for themselves. Mr. Washburn does not speak as a pessi mist or a politician—although he warns the Republican party of the conse quences of a failure to take up the question aggressively and fearlessly. The ex-senator speaks as a business man of wide commercial experience as the head of great manufacturing in terests, who, during a business career of forty years, has enjoyed exceptional opportunities for studying industrial conditions. A nation should give its young men a chance. If present con ditions deprive them of all industrial opportunities, the conditions should be changed so far as is in the power of legislation to change them, and the party that takes up the cause of the young man will be the political power of the future. BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN FINDS. Undoubted Traces of Koinau Arcliltec turo In Scotland. An exceedingly interesting antiqua rian "find" has been made at Kirkin tilloch. While some workmen were engaged In cleaning the moat at the Peel a number of ancient stones were unearthed. The attention of McGregor Chalmers of Glasgow was directed to them, and he has now made an inves tigation of them, with the result that he has discovered that some bear un doubted traces of Roman architecture. They are distinctly marked by diag onal lines and other markings peculiar to Roman artisans, and had been used, it is believed, in the construction of a fort in the Antonine wall. Other atones bear markings, etc., which show them to be of the mediaeval period, and are believed to belong to Comyn's castle, which was demolished by King Robert the Bruce. The burgh commis sioners of Kirkintilloch have resolved to raise private subscriptions in order feo defray the expense of a complete and thorough investigation by experts. The chalk diggers at Bazley, White & Co.'s works at Swanscombe, Kent, found a human skeleton imbedded in ihe limestone. It was that of a short, very thick-set man, and the men in the laboratory, who have some expe rience of these finds, think he was probably a Roman. A careful search was made for coins or weapons or any thing that could give a clew to the pe riod or nationality of the skeleton, but nothing was found except some flints, rudely shaped, with some kind of split ting or chipping implement. The skeleton must have been where it was found for many hundreds of years. II was in the heart of a chalk hill which tad never been excavated before. —Pall tail Gazette. Modern Manna. In Arabia the Arabs sometimes Una in the sandy deserts a kind of fungus which apparently resembles the manna of the Bible, and which serves as food for both men and camels when no bet ter is to be had. It appears upon tho sand after every rain, sometimes in little heaps. It is of a grayish color, and the separate masses are about as big as peas. It has a sweetish taste, and is nutritious. Ife Wnnn't. From the Indianapolis Journal: Startled Housewife —Get away from here, you scarecrow! Dismal Dawson —I ain't no scarecrow. I jist traded slothes with one, that's all. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. The figures given in the London Coal and Iron Trades Review ehow that of the world's pig iron product of 1898, 78J per cent, was converted in to steel. In 1868 only four per cent, of the world's pig-iron product was ap plied to the manufacture of steel. The most powerful incandescent lamp ever manufactured was shown at a recent eleotrical exhibition. The lamp has two filaments iu parallel. The lamp bulb was over two teet long, and it succumbed after threo nights' work to the heat of the filament, which is said to have softened the glass at the neck. In some steel manufactories elec tro-magnets have been substituted in place of hooks for tiftiug plates and bars. The magnet being put into contract with the centre of a bar or or plate, the current is turned on and instantly the magnetic grip becomes efleetive. The crane carrying the magnet then swings its load to the required positiou, when, the current being turned off, the magnet imme diately releases its hold. Dr. Sydney Kuh finds that hypno tism is a pathological and not a physi ological oonditiou; that its use when resorted to too frequently is liable to bring on mental deterioration. Dr. Kuh cautions medical men to be ex tremely cautious iu placing persons under hypnotic influence, which may be the cause of chronic headache, or of an outbreak of hysteria. At times it has a most serions effect upon pre-oxisting mental disease, and it lias been known to even produce an attack of insanity. Acetate of cellulose is a new sub stance that somewhat resembles nitro cellulose, and may largely replace uelluloid. It is non-explosive, how ever, and will stand a high tempera ture without decompositiou. It is soluble in chloroform and nitro-ben zine, but not iu alcohol, ether, or acetone. As an electrical insulator, cellulose has a high value, its resist ance being higher than that of India rubber or gutta-percha. It has been found useful in many places where mica is now employed, audit will very likely take the placo of that mineral to a considerable extent. The Illinois Central is experiment ing with an inspection car run by a gasoline motor. Thus far the experi ments have been so successful that it is quite probable the road will adopt the car on all its divisions. The ex perimental car developed an average speed of twenty-five miles uu hour, but it is capable of greater speed. One of the inspectors of the road is said to have gone seventy-five miles in two hours. A gallon of gasoline will run the car more than seventy five miles, and there is a provision for carrrying four gallons, or enough for an unbroken run of 300 miles. Professor Campbell, through the great telescope at the Lick Observa tory, has definitely ascertained that Polaris, popularly known as the North Star, is really a triple system. Two of the bodies in this system revolve around eaoh other in a period of four days, and at the same time move in a much wider sweep around the third body in much the same way as do the Btars and moon around the sun. The separate bodies whioh compose the system cannot be seen with the tel escope, nor is it likely they will ever be seen by an instrument. Their existence is determined by the spec troscope. A number of similar cases are known, fourteen of which, includ ing the brilliant binary star, Capella, bavo been discovered at the Lick Ob servatory. Polaris now, however, is the most interesting of these. The velocity changes in a period of three days and twenty-three hours by about six kilometres, or nearly four miles every second. The longest period of the change has not as yot been de termined, so it may amount to several years. Ruilroiidlnt; In Java. A gentleman who has been travel ing iu Java thus writes about the Dutch colouial railways, ilo snyj "Trains are used iu Java not ou ao couut of their speed, but ou account of the long distances oue has to cover. If you are iu a hurry and you haven't more than five miles to go—walk You may find some difficulty iu keep ing up to the train if it isgoiug down a stiff' gradient, but you will more thau make this up ou the flat, and you'll romp past it ou coining to the slight est ascent. It is a solemn fact," he continues, "that once in the course of a mile walk along a highway running parallel with the railway line, I caught up to and passed a 'snell' (ox press train). Toward the eud of the walk I entered a shop to purchase some cigars, and only after I had been in the shop ten minutes did the train again pass mo."—Piuaug Gazette. ltHctarin in FH*il, riant* and Animal*. Fossil bacteria were found first by Van Tiegheui in I 779, in tho remains of plants. For a long timo the germs found in the Egyptian mummies were the oldest known bacteria, ltecently Renault has been working on the sub ject of fossil bacteria, aud ho found the oldest specimens iu Devon. They are, however, found in differeut per iods and are well preserved in detail. Bacteria were also found in the re mains of animals. Wished No Flowers After l>entn. Elizabeth Weuuagel, of Paris, was nu enthusiastic lover of mission work. Before her death she made a request that no flowers be sent for her grave, but that the sum wbiob her friends would spend in this way might bo given to the missions. As a result of her wish the sum of $379 was received at tha Bureau of Missions. | 1 "1 For the horse, as for his master, Ivory finds abundant scope; Galls and scratches heal much faster, When well cleansed with Ivory Soap. Where 'tis used, the work is lighter, Sleek and smooth the horses' coats, Harness softer, carriage brighter, And a final charm it floats. YOUTH With a Financial (icniim That Doom* IHm to Millionalrcdom. New Orleans Times-Democrat: "My roommate is a chap of extraordinary financial genius," remarked a railroad clerk of this city. "He is a native of California, and five or six years ago he spent a season on a sugar planta tion in Hawaii. He was engaged at the time, and while he was there he corresponded regularly with his fiancee. Afterward they quarreled and the match was broken off, but the poor girl thought his letters were beauti ful, and treasured them religiously. Quite recently he saw in a paper that Hawaiian stamps of the period of his Btay there had become very scare and valuable, and he immediately sat down and wrote to his old sweetheart de manding his letters. • He said he was poen to be married, and felt it his duty to destroy 'em; appealed to her 'bet ter feelings' and all that, and, to make ft lung story short, she sent them back. , They were yellow with age, and had siispicous stains that looked like tears, but he wasn't moved a bit. He prompt ly cut off all the stamps, sent them to a New York agency, and yesterday he got a check for $42. Our landlady, who knows about it, says he is a per fect brute, and will come to a bad end. I am afraid so myself. I think he is doomed to bfTomc a millionaire." Women of the Orient. A recent visitor to the Philippines •ays that some of the women of the island are remarkably pretty, having big, languishing eyes and an abun dance of long hair. This they fasten up with a big gold pin and then adorn with flowers. They do not wear hats, hut use sunshades, and do so very co quettishly; they wear very dainty shoes, but do not wear stockings. They are distinguished by grace of figure and movement, though according to our ideas not especially by refinement of habits, for both women and chil dren smoke huge cigars and indulge in betel chewing. It is their custom to keep the thumb nail of the right hand very long, as this assists them in playing their favorite instrument, the guitar. The use of the fan originated in China and sprang from the follow ing incident: A royal princess, very beautiful, was assisting at the feast of lanterns, her face covered with a mask, as usual. The excessive heat com pelled her to remove it, and in order to guard her features from the common gaze she moved it quickly to and fro in front of her face, thus simultaneous ly hiding her charms and cooling her brow. The idea was at once adopted throughout the kingdom. A few years ago there were as many , as 33 vegetarian restaurants in London. To-day there exists only about six. vm Sick headache. Food doesn'tdi gestwcll, appetite poor, bowels con stipated, tongue coated, it's your liver! Ayer's Pills are liver pills, easy and safe. They cure dyspep sia, biliousness. 25c. All Druggists. \\ant your' mijustuclio,, r b,. ;l ni ;i beuulitul BUCKINGHAM'S DYE WHISKERS WAN'I ED —Energetic man us County Su perintendent to manage our business In your own lyid adjoining counties; no can vassing; straight salary. ylft.uO per week and expenses. Yearly contract, rapid promotion, i Exceptional opportunity. Addv.— Manufac turer.-,, 1 \ o. I'inU.l ;; i.i i. lvnu. DR. RLCORD'S ESSENCE OF LIFE F^R.K.SS' arrt. n®\ .r-f.UIn, remedy for all ca-e. of nervoua, mental, tthyelral debility, lor vitality and rre in.tut. deesy In both eie: fiokmve. rermanant enra; fuU treatment $5, or ,1 bottle; rtaini for WroOlu. f. JAcgUEB, Agetit. Tttf ttroailway, N. Y. ] Tlte Antertcttn Manufacturer.. The idea of an exhibit of America* products and manufactures in St. Pet ersburg in 1901 is favorably -received and commented on in manufacturing circles. Russia is the most inviting field for American trade extension now in sight. That great empire is in the early stages of prodigious development, and a grand market is being created there for the innumerable devices and appliances for multiplying production and decreasing its cost, as well as lot developing the splendid resources of the nation. An exhibit such as indi cated will give the Russian an oppor tunity of seeing and of inquiring into the utility of American machinery and of American wares of all sorts. In the natural order of things America will be feeling for a broader market for her products within the next two years, and Russia will be an important outlet for the surplus manufactures of the republic. Organized steps will soon be taken to promote the St. Pet ersburg project for American trade ex tension, and congress will be asked to help it along with a substantial appro priation. If the exhibit should lead to practical results in the way desired, similar exhibits can be made in South America and in other parts of the world where the people have need of the things which the United States can furnish.—New York Letter. l'l> In a Tlnllnon. The occupants of a balloon a mile high command a radius of ninety-six miles. Br,Bull's COUCH SYRUP Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough Unexcelled for Consumptives. Givea quick, sure results. Refuse substitutes. Dr. BulVi Pillscureßiliousness. Trial, 20for$c s CARTERS INK Mukcs millions think. #1 OVELY SE.OO LAMPS U— j All hand-pain ted. No Sold at manufacturer's prices. We pay tub Makes a most acccpta rap?.* Wo present. tpffiLflXh Itcautlful colored cat* IARl.<>lt>r IIANOI FT |Ev'i'U I.amp truaran- Manufactured by we Pittsburg Glass Co., Tor buy direct. Pittsburg, l*a. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 A $3.50 SHOPS vniow 1 ■ .... IVIADE. Worth $4 to st> compared with other mal.es. m" s* Indorsed by ove* t- J5 1,000,000 wearers. pSjSSS all leathers, all styles Take no substitute claimed, Uiu!?" 1 kluu ot leather, jl/j* and wjdto. plain vr cap too- W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. ARNOLD'S COUGH iCILLER f|£NSION £Successfully Prosecutes Claims. j.Vraia'ub'lUwir. 1* "mfiuatii.Vrhiiii!"uttv hX5£ I DROPSY Jul! d 01m- lT r!t um Book of testimonials and lOrinvs tieatmeuft Free. Or. U. H. GREEN S SONS, Box U Atlanta, Ga. RHEUMATISM ALEX <m*tn Bkmkdy C0..-thti,e. I. IS 1. 1. .st.,K.y| P. a. u. 42 'yj
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers