(loth at Fault. She —"You don't kiss me like you did before we were married." H* — "No? And before we were married you never tried to kise me when you had a mouthful of pins."—lndianapo lis Press. Whnt Do tIK* Children Drinkt Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried tho now food drink called Giunr-O? It Is delicious and nourishing, and takes the place of col Tee. The more (TBAIN-0 you give the children the more health you distribute through their sys tems. GBAIN-0 IS made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like tlie choice grades of coffee, but costs about as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. In Scotland plowing matches arc taking place all over the country. The chances for practice, lately, however, have been few. Jcll-O, the New Denert, Pleases nil the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 ots. Russian law allows a man to marry only four times, and he must marry be fore 8o or not at all. ANIC Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Fase. A powder to shake into your shoes: rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and In growing Nails. Allen's Foot-Enso makes new or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and shoe stores, L's cts. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmttead, Leltoy, N. Y. The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine has organized a second ex pedition to West Africa for the study of malaria. The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever Is a bottle of UHOVK'S TASTBLKBB CHII.L TONIC. It Is Simply iron nnd quinine In a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 500. Spain has more sunshine than any country in Europe. The yearly aver age is 3,000 hours; in England it is i, 400. M. L. Thompson A Co., Druggists. Couriers, port, Pa., say Hall's Catarrh Cure is the best and only sure c ure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it, 75c. More than 500 Portuguese immi grants arrived in New York one day re cently. Mrs Wi nsl ow' s Sooth Ing Py t .1 p for eh iltl r#n teething, sol tens the gums, reduces i nils 111 inn tion, allays pain. cures wind colic.&>c a bottle. Dogs in Hamburg are taxed accord ing to size—the bigger the dog, the higher the tax. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take LAXATIVB PROMO QCFNINB TABLETS. All druggists refund tho money If it falls to cure. K. W. UHOVB'S signature is 011 each box. 26c, The Canadian Pacific railway is sur veying a new route front Ottawa to Arnprior. Plso's Cure cannot bo too highly spoken of as a cough cure.—J. W. O'Hnncx, 322 Thlid Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 9, 1900. Cures Talk Great Fame of a Great Medicine Won by Actual Merit. The fame of Hood's Sarasparllla has been won by the good it has done to those who were suffering from disease. Its euros have excited wonder and admiration. It has caused thousands to rejoice iu the enjoy ment of good health, and it will do you tho same good it has done others. It will ox pel from your blood all impurities; will give you a goo.l appotlto and make you strong aud vigorous. It is just tho medi cine to help you now, whet your system Is In need of a tonlo and iuvigorator. Eruotior.s—"An eruption ail over my body caused a burning sensation so I could not sleep nights. By taking Hood's Sir saparllla I was complotelv cured." .TKMNIK THOMPSON, P. O. Box 36, O.iksville, N. Y. Hood's Sarsapariila Is America's Greatest Medicine. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES B,JJjg Jyj\ with other makes. / w* A LA]/> 1,000,000 wearers, kgj M ■ I /• genuine have W. L. yn 1 V wR stamped on Take extra for carriage. State kind or leather. ^xT^iW ßi7 " e • antl w 'dth, plain or cap toe. Cat. free. SSMUTS W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. Save Labels •nd write for list of premiums we offcr free for them. HIRES The f, TO rite summer WALL PAPER. Edwin G. Diehl, 519 WOOD STREET, PITTSBURG Agents wanted to pell from sample books. M■ | ■■ A R you have got the FILES, I I VV you have not used DANIELS § I ■ r Sen* PILE UC/HE, or you ■ Imm ■■ would not nave them NOW. The only Luaramood Cure. No detention from business, no operation, uo o*>iuru oi morphine. 12 Suppositories 50c. 0r24 and box of ointment SLOI, postpaid by mail. Send for took ot valu able information on Piles, FREE,whether you no© our remedy or not. THE DANIELS SURE PILE CURE CO., 284 Asylum St., Hartford, Conn. P. N. U. 19, 'OO. DROP S Y mbh Rook of testimonial* and 10 iluym'ti oatmsi.t Free. Dr. H. H GREEN'S BOMB, BOX B. Atlanta. Qa. MPOnIO days' trial ;.iairynitn invesuipit** bei'uro p| u h { Thompson's F.yeWater THE SEEDLESS ORANGE A FORTUNATE SERIES OF ACCIDENTS CAVE IT TO CALIFORNIA. An liHlMftrv Revolutionized Within Twenty-live Year* ly Shoots Brought f roii. ltrazll—Cities Unlit and Mill tons oT Wealth Created. Twenty-five years ago there were no seedless or navel oranges grown. A few oranges were raised in Florida, but, the bulk of the supply in America came from the Mediterranean ports aud the fruit was expensive. The to tal annual yield of California oranges was less than live carloads. Now the anunal orange yield in California is upward of 15,000 carloads, and next year it may exceed 20,000 carloads, writes a corespondent of the New York Sun from Pomona. Tha total amount invested in orange properties in Cali fornia twenty-five years ago was about $23,000. Now something like $13,000,000 is invested in the orange industry in this State, aud the amount is increasing by about $2,000,000 every year. The introduction of the seedless navel orange has caused these changes. It has revolutionized the orange industry of the United States. It has drawn 13,000 men out of other pursuits. It has transformed vast areas of sunbaked land iu Cali fornia into the most beautiful orange groves that over grew. It has boon tho prime factor in the growth from nothing of a dozen towns o! 5000, 8000 and 10,000 peoplo iu southern California, and it has added directly more than $43,000,000 and indirectly $30,000,000 more to the taxable wealth of this State. The first seedless orange trees were apparently freaks of nature. Their counterparts have novel' been found. In the summer of 1872 William P. .Ttidsou, United States Consul at Bahia, Brazil, hoard an account from natives of a few trees in the swamps ou the north bank of the Amazon some sixty miles inland that bore oranges without seeds. Ho was of scientific bent and a Consul that knew his business. He had heard of the startiug of orange groves in Florida nud he believed that seedless orange trees wore well worth experimenting with there. So he sent a native up the river to cut some shoots of the trees and get some of the fruit. When the native returned the Consul was delighted with the specimens. Forth with he sent six of the orange tree shoots, carefully packed in wet moss and clay, to tho Agricultural Depart ment at Washington for propagation. Tho trees did not exoite as much at tention in the Department us the enthusiastic Consul had expected. Two of the shcots, which were no bigger than horsewhips, died from lack of caro in the Department, grounds, and the others were almost forgotten in n few mouths. In the winter of 1873 Mrs. Horatio Tibbetts, a native of Maine, was visiting the family of her cousin, General Ben jamin F. Butler, then a Congressman from Massachusetts. Her husband bad recently removed from Boston to Los Augelos, Cal., and was about to pre-empt a tract of Government land in the San Bernardino Valley. The scbemo was an uncertain oue, but anyhow he intended to grow somi tropioal fruits there. Ho asked Mrs. Tibbetts to get from General Butler an introduction at tho Agricultural Department. She was then to ask for speoimeus of fruits and shrubs suit able for experimental propagation in southern California. Among other things Mrs. Tibbetts got from the De partment grounds the four surviving orange tree shoots from Brazil. The trees reached Mr. Tibbetts safely at Riverside, Cal., a week later and were immediately planted. That was in December, 1873. Olio of the shoots died from uoglect and another wns broken and chewed up by a cow. Five years passed and the two sur viving trees came into bearing. In the winter of 1878-79 they bore six teen oranges, the first seedless oranges ever grown in North Amerioa. The specimens were carried about south ern California and shown to all ranch men and fruit growers. There wero many who doubted whether the trees would annually bear such royal speci mens of orange culture. Nearly every one bolieved that tho fruit would be come coarse and tough in a few years more. So the second crop was awaited with curiosity among the neighbors. There were about a box of oranges in the second yield, and they were even better than those of the first crop. Tho fame of the Tibbetts seedless oranges went far and wide in south ern California. People who were grow ing tho old-faßhioued ornnges traveled hundreds of miles in wagons to see tho trees. Still there were less than half a dozen people who believed that such a freak us a seedless fruit could ever be propagated into an estab lished industry. "I remember the time I saw some of the second crop of Tibbetts's seed less naval oranges," said ex-Senator .T. E. McComas. "Several of us seed ling orange growers went over to Riverside purposely to see what truth there wasiu tho statement that Horatio Tibbetts had trees that grew oranges without seeds. Wo looked the two trees over and over, sampled the fruit and wondered how it coijld be. Larger, juicier and more pungent fruit we had never known. But it all seemed so freaky that no oue dnrod risk sovoral thousand dollars and six or seven years in trying to grow naval oranges for market. Moreover, none of us knew how to go about having a grove of seedless oranges because there wns no seed to stud it." Mr. Tibbetts was sure that there was a fortune in his now variety of oranges. For two years he experi mented with propagating trees from shoots and cuttings from his two seod. less orange trees. But all his at tempts were failures. Finally hs hit upon the scheme of budding from th seedless naval trees upon seedling trees. Experiments along that hup were successful. It was found that a bud taken from one of Tibbetts's two naval orange trees and grafted into the bark of a seedling tree would grow to be a limb, which bore seed less naval oranges. Then Mr. Tib betts grew tiny seedling orange trees, just as had been done by orange growers for ages, and budded into the trunk of each little tree several naval orange buds. When the buds had become branches of the trees, he cut away all the original or seedling branches,leaving only the naval orange branches to bear fruit. In this way he easily created naval orange trees, and the problem of growing seedless orauges was solved. The planting of groves of seedless orange trees propagated from buds from the two original trees on the Tibbets place began in earnest throughout southern California iu the winter of 1832. Iu the following year the demand for buds from the Tibbetts trees was so large that a dozen buds .sold frequently Jo* $5, and some growers, desirous of getting navel orange buds of genuine quality,, paid $1 each for buds. In 1884 the two Tibbetts trees furnished buds that sold for SISOO, and a tall fonce was built about them to keep peoplo from stealing buds. A year or two later the orange trees that had beeu propagated from the Tibbetts trees be gan to bear, and they themselves furnished tens of thousands of navel buds as good as those from the orig inal trees. Then the first navel or ange groves began to bear fruit, and from that time the boom in navel orange groves has continued. No oue plants seedliug orange trees nowa days, aud tons of thousands of seed ling trees have beeu budded into na vel orange trees. Tho two trees from which have come, directly and indirectly, all the navel orauges iu the world, are still on the old Tibbetts ranch in River side. Since Mr. Tibbetts received tho shoots from the Agricultural De partment and begau propagating seed less oranges, Riverside has grown from a hamlet of less than thirty American residonts to a beautiful, prosperous city of 11,000 population, with an assessed valuation of $8,275,- 000. It is the greatest orang-pro dueing locality in tho world. Some 10,000 aoros of land is devoted to orange growing. Tho nverage annual shipments of oranges from Riversido are 1,000,000 boxes, valued at $2,100,- 000. All this has come from the in troduction of Tibbetts's seedless na vel orauges, and just now the River side Press and the leading citizens are urging that tho two trees should be removed to the public park and thero surrounded by an irou fenoe, so that the interesting history of the seedless navel orange may be the bet ter preserved iu another goueration. Looking After It* Soldier*. A young army officer, who has seen service on the Arizona plains and on the Muino coast, and who is now iu Cuba, tells two stories out of his own expericuoc, to show the accuracy with which the War Department follows tho movements of officers. "I was with a small scouting party in Arizona," he says, "and after two weeks iu tho desert my squad came to the railroad near a small station. Within teu minutes a dispatch from Washington was brought to me by the station agent. It asked if I wished to be transferred to ono of the two new artillery regiments then forming. "I answered by telegraph that I should bo glad to enter either of them. Then we set oil aguiu across tho desert. "It was six days later when we again struck tho railroad, this time eighty milos from the point at which wo had previously orossod it. But my reply from the department was awaiting me. It had been telegraphed to every station within two hundred miies. "A more striking instanco of accur acy occurred after my transfer to the East. I was traveling home on leave, aud as the regulations require, I had notified the department of the day, hour and probablo route of my jour ney. After I hnd beon ou the train for eight hours, at a smail station tho portor entered with u telegram, ask ing if any oue of my name was pres ent. On opening the dispatch, I found that it was from the adjutant general's office, ordering mo ou de tached duty, "Exactness of detail could not bo carried much farther. The depart ment knew tho whereabouts of an iu significant second lieutenant, oven when he is traveling ou leave of ab sence." l*'hii>pltie: nt an lu*cct' Wing*. Tho slow flapping of a butterfly's wiugs, according to Sir John Lub bock, produces no sound, but when the movements are rapid a noiso is produced, which iucreasos in shrill ness with tho number of vibrations. Thus tho house fly, which produces the sound F, vibrates it wings 21,120 times a minute, and tho bee, which makes a sound of A, as many as 26,- 400 times. Professor Narey, tho nat uralist, has succeeded by a delicate mechanism iu confirming these num bers graphically. He flxed a fly so that the tip of the wing just touched a cylinder which was moved by clock work. Cut Until Ways. In an interval in tho drilling one of the volunteers belonging to a crack regiment stepped out from the ranks to light a cigar from tkatof hisofficor. The latter took this evidence of tho democratic spirit of freedom iu good part, but said byway of a hint: "In the regular army you couldn't have done this to an officer, Brown." "Right you are," responded the private, "but in tho regular army you could not be an officer." RUSSELL SACEiAND THE NEWSBOI*. JLart Who Tried to Fool the Financier Brought Bp With a Sharp Tarn. Rnssell Sage, the groat New York financier, was trudging homeward through Forty-aeoond street at 7.45 o'clock p. m., when he was surrounded by four or five newsboys, each eager to sell him a paper. The boys knew hiai well apparently, for three or four times he was addressed as "jVXr. Sage" and "Russell Sage" by the twisting, bustling and noisy littlo fellows. Mr. Sage asked for a certain edition of 3 certain paper, and the smallest boy in the hunch thrust upon him what Was thought at the time to be the de sired paper. Mr. Sage paid him and slowly walked on toward his home. He reached the corner of Madison avenue, glanced at his purchase, looked about, hesitated an instant aud thon grimly and slowly walked back to where the "newsies" were taking. Peering about till he identi fied the lad he had patronized, he said: "Here, boy! This isn't the paper I asked for." Crestfallen, the lad took back the paper, aud Mr. Sage held out his baud, saying: "Come, sir! I want my money back." The grimmy littlo baud went down into the trousers pocket aud brought back a cent, which finally found lodg ment in Mr. Sage's palm. Mr. Sage somewhat wearily hunted up another urchin with the right edition of the right paper, and then retraced his steps homeward. "What did yon try to cheat Mr. Sago for?" asked the reporter. "Well," said "Skinny" Martin, the newsboy, hesitatingly, as if half ashamed of his wrong, "y' see; biz ness wnz on de bum wid me ter-dny, 'n' den, besides, Russell Sage, w'eu he buys a pape off'n mo, he alius does dis—he alius presses de penny down tight in de middle of me ban', an' I t'iuks I'se got five or ten eonts, till I looks at it, all' den I see dat I'se only got a cent. T'ain't cheatin' 't 'do' a man wot does dat to yuso, is it? "I wuzu't tryin' to do ltusseil Sage, though. Mr. Sage come along here t'roo Forty-second street las'night on his way homo to supper, an' th' hull five of us chased him atoug th' block an' says: 'Hey, there, Mister Sage, want de extree-extror? Paper dere, boss?' So he says: 'Rov, give me a sporting special extra.' I seen he didn't have no specs on, so I hands him a 4 o'clock edition. He takes it an' walks away, an' me an' th' rest o th' gang give him th' laugh for bein' so easy. "I kep' watching th' old man till he'd gone more'n a block an' den I t'ought I wnz safe. It must 'a' been fivo minutes later wo'n aomethin' gits hold o' me Bhoulder an' I t'onglit I was pinched. I wuz jist goin' ter cry so a crowd o' soft marks'd come 'round an' make th' cop leggo o' me w'en I looks up an' sees it wuz Mr. Sage. " 'Boy,' he says, 'this is not a sporting special extra.' " 'Ah,' I says, 'thein ain't out yet. You got th' extree-extror all right.' " 'Boy,' he says, 'give me back iny money.' "I e'd feel his fingers squoezin' right in amongst me shoulder bones, o I gives him his penny an' he giin mo back mo pape. Say, I'll bet dere ain't no one setliu' him 110 gold bricks ner not'iu' like dat. I kin feel a sore spot in mo shoulder yet w'ere he hung on to me fer dat cent." Over 11 Geyaer. Tho author of "A Ramble Ronno the Globe" tells of some surprising experiences encountered in the region of geysers and hot springs in Now Zealand. One day he patronized the photographer in Whakarewarewa. Being inteiested in photography, he went into tho dark room to soe the negative developod, aud there experi enced a'new sensation. Just as the photographer wns begin ning operations, the wooden floor, which was about a foot from the ground, seemed to get unsteady, aud there was an ominous bump, bump, bump, directly underneath, that was the reverse of reassuring. The pho tographer explained matters. "That's only a small geyser begin ning to work," said he. "I have three below hero that work at regular inter vals—tho one just starting, another 0110 thore"—pointing to a corner— "and the other one just underneath whore you are standing." Geysers! Starting! I could see them bettor outside, so outside I went. I don't quite remember now whether I opened the door, or whether it opened of its own accord, or whether it foil down; but I know that in my anxiety to see the marvelous sight, I didn't take long in getting out of that dark room. The photographer went on with his work coolly, and let the baby geyser bubble and gurgle under bis floor in its own sweet way, while I, watching it from a position of advautago, ex pected every minute to see the "dark apartment" lifted high into the air on the summit of a boiling column. But no; tho building stood firm, tho photogrnphor doveloyedthe plate, aud the infantile geyser gurgled aud fizzed itself out. How Criminals Baffin Rloofflioanffs. The Mouut St. Heloua stage robber is still at large, and his chances of es cape are pretty good. The dog tracked him to within four miles' of Outhill, nnd in fact was within about four liundred yards of tho bandit at one time. Ho heard the dog barking viciously at his heels, and at onee covered his traoks with red pepper, and the dog, after gotting a few good whiffs of this, refused to work any further.—San Francisco Chronicle. Work of boring a tunnel through the Chilkoot pass has begun. It will be the passage way of a thirty-soven-mUe electrio road. Both at Fault. She —"You don't kiss me like you did before we were married." He— "No? And before we were married you never tried to kiss me when you had a mouthful of pins."—lndiauapo lis Press. ALABASTINIB is the original and only durable wall coating, entirely different from all kal somines. Ready for use in white or fourteen beautiful tints by adding cold water. L ADIES naturally prefer ADA BASTINE for walls and ceil ings, because it Is pure, clean, durable. Put up in dry pow dered form, in five-pound pack- j ages, with full directions. ALB kalsomlnes are cheap, tem porary preparations made from whiting, chalks, clays, etc., and stuck on walls with de caying animal glue. ALABAS- ! TINE Is not a kalsomlne. BEWARE of the dealer who | says ho can sell you the "same j thing" as ALABASTINE or . "something just as good." He ; , is either not posted or is try- j lng to deceive you. AND IN OFFERING something : he has bought cheap and tries to sell on ALABASTINE'S de- ! mands, he may not realize the I damago you will suffer by & kalsomlne on your walls. SENSIBLE dealers will not buy a lawsuit. Dealers risk on© by selling and consumers by using infringement. Alabastine Co. own right to make wall coat ing to mix with cold water. THE INTERIOR WALLS of ■ every church and school should be coated only with pure, dur- . able ALABASTINE. It safe- 1 guards health. Hundreds of < tons used yearly for this work. IN BUYING ALABASTINE, customers should avoid get ting cheap kalsomines under different names. Insist on having our goods In packages and properly labeled i NUISANCE of wall r is ob viated by ALALIA' : INE. It can be used on pla -red walls, wood ceilings, bn lc or can vas. A child can brush It on. i It does not rub or -jcale off. ESTABLISHED in favor, shun all imitations. Ask paint deal er or druggist for tint card. Write us for interesting book let. free. ALABASTINE CO., Grand ltaoids. Mich. P .cX a „, FRIENDS' OATS FREE! This only shows a few of the THE ROUND TRADE MARKS premiums. We have many more. ARE VALUABLE. A Complete Premium List jjp j Many Valuable Premiums to sent on application to Mi&LA allusersof FRIENDS'OATS. FRIENDS OATS, BlpftlsM jLjajpl Save the ROUND TRADE MARK IVIUSCATINE, IOWA. °° Every a-lK Paekage—— and Charms. Sterling Silver Darning Ball. Silver Salt I Five Different Sterling Silver Toilet Articles. ar| d Pepper Shakers. Spring Body Cleaning Every spring you clean the house you |Sj£i> Bve in, to get rid of the dust and dirt which collected in the winter. Your body, the j ■§g||l house your soul lives in, also becomes filled U P during the winter with all manner of filth, which should have been removed from i day to day, but was not. Your body needs cleaning inside. If your bowels, your liver, yOUr kidneys are full of puind filth, and y°u don't clean them out in the spring, yOU ' U ke ' n kad odor wkk yourself and i / ever ybody else all summer. MB DON T USE A HOSE to clean your v\/w I Jo- I y' body inside, but sweet, fragrant, mild but x N I I positive and forceful CASCARETS, that i vm\ work while you sleep, prepare all the filth | \ collected in your body for removal, and j drive it off softly, gently, but none the less surely, leaving your blood pure and nourishing, your stomach and bowels clean and i lively, and your liver and kidneys healthy and active. Try a 10-cent box today, and if not satisfied get your money back—but you'll see how the cleaning of your body is /^ADE EASY BY CANDY CATHARTIC 25c. 50c. il'llf I m DRUGGISTS To any needy mortal suffering from bowel troubles and too poor to buy CASCARETS we will send a box free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, mentioning and paper. 428 Sudan Raby. In the Church of All Saints in Cairo took place lately an interesting cere mony, where an Infant memorial of the overthrow of khalifadom In Africa was christened in the presence of a large gathering of English people and under the auspices of Queen Victoria. The small heroine of the gathering was the daughter of Col. Sir Reginald Wingate (pasha, sirdar of the Egyptian army and governor of the Sudani and of Lady Wingate. The queen, represented by the Hon. Mrs. Talbot, was the prin cipal godmother. The child was born the day after Sir Reginald Wingate's victory over the khalifa at Dm Debrikat, where the dervishes were routdd and the khalifa killed. Her majesty presented a diamond pendant to her godchild, who also received a handsome cup from Lord Cromer, a golden cross from the bishop of Jeru salem, who performed the ceremony, and a diamond cross from Sir R. Slatin. The child was christened Victoria Alex andrina Catherine. What Sliall We Have For Deiiortl This question arises in the family dally. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared In 3 min. Mo boiling! uobaklng! Simply add a little hot wator A set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 100. The Canadian Pacific railway is sur veying a new route from Ottawa to Arnprior. Frey's Vermifuge saves the lives of tho lit tle ones. Druggists and country stores, 35c, or by mail from E. A 8. Froy, Baltimore,Md. No man is considered smart after people discover how he did it. Piso'a Cure cannot be too highly spoken ol as a oough cure.—J. W. O'BBIEN, 322 Thitd Ave., N„ Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 9, 1900. Seattle's death rate last year was eight per 1,000. B^EZ^SaHfEBHsnaSl s CURES WHERE ALL LLSE FAILS. pi Best Cough Syrup. Tauten good. Uso 5 £ in time. Sold by druggists. • ■ j 1 1 Serious iiis of yifomen The derangements of the female organism thai breed all kinds of trouble and which ordinary prac tice does not cure, are the very things that give way promptly to Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Com pound. Uterine and ovarian troubles, kidney troubles, i ulcerations, tumors, un usual discharges, hack aches and painful periods these are the ills that hang on and wreck health and happiness and dis position. has a wonderful record of absolute cures of these troubles a constant series of successes for i thirty years. Thousands 1 of women vouch for this. \ Their letters constantly ; appear in this paper. I PAT i ■ t* laJl. SI I ' 5?" a ".. , ?. I , p .!W n " , biMly. H.ii.l for "Inventonf Primer,;' FREE, UN.o N. MTUVKNS A- to.. Latah., ISH. 817 1 Sill St., WuNliiiuiton, D, (J, Branches: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit.