Bees' Venom for Rhournatiom. Dr. Terc, a medical man of much repute in Vienna,, advocates as an effective remedy for rheumatism the saturating of the patient's body with the venom of bees. For the purpose he extracts the venom, treasuring it up in quantity, and applying it arti ficially in the way of punctures. He founds this treatment on his discov ery that rheumatic patients do not suffer from a bee's sting to anything like the same degree a3 other people, lie found that the tumefaction or swelling that follows the stinging of a bee does not appear in the rhumatic patient unless he has been stung sev eral times, while in some cases the stinging is hardly felt. When t'ne patient suffers himself to be stung re poatedly his immunity against the poi son of tho bee becomes complete and lie feol3 no pain whatsoever. What is more, he gets cured of his rheumatism. Romans Brought Apples to England. Of all the productions of the vege table world which the skill and inge- nuity of man nave rendered conducive to his happiness and to the increase of his enjoyments, the apple Btands for v., ward as the moot conspicuous. It is now a fruit crop of universal growth, and although the most beautiful sun stained examples roach us at various periods of the year from Canada and California and the temperato regions of our great Australian colonies, for flavor none of them equal those grown in England. Tho garden apple is be lieved to have been introduced iuto Britain by the Romans, and the wild apple of our hedgerows 13 the typo of the fruit when left to degenerate, and to which it would speedily return but for constant culture. Brooklyn. N.T., Nov. 39--Gurflald n>adacbft Povlm's are told shown tli it people rualiso tho value of & remedy at ouoo harmless and effective. The Powders are of undoubted value in curiuj kiadaohoAof a!l kuub, and in building up tho nut YOUR bya tem. Inveatigatu every grade of rem#die* of fered for the cure of Headache* and tho Gar fleld Headache Powders will be found to hold g first place. Writo Gmiield Tea Co. for oamplec, ' New Orleans, La., a city of nearly 300,- 000 population, consume* less than 15,000,- 000 gallons of water daily. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kliue's Great Rorve Restorer. $ 2 trial bottle and treatise freo Dr. It. 11. Kuwa.Ltd., 31 Arch St., Fhila. Pa. The fellow with a poor memory seldom forgets his troubles. Mrs. Wins low's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften thu gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays puin, c nxu, wind colic. 20 J a bottle. Tact is away of getting what you want without letting others know you want it. I am Hu.re Piso'u Ours for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—MRS. TUOIIAJI Boa- BiMS, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, I?|sl Ft. TABASCO P N U 49, 'Ol jS Hcit Pyrup. Twrr* (Inni. Oro UNFAMILIAR MINERALS; 37RANCE USES FOUND FOR CRYO- ! I LITE, BEAUXITE AND SELENIUM. ! I I Cryolite Used a<* on Important AnxHfury In ; tho Manufacture of Aluminum—J?ranx ite Mined in Alabama, Georgia and Ar kansas—"lnfusorial Earth'* a I'aisle. i The announcement made a few (lays n.£o by the press of the loss of a ship which had prone to Greenland for a i cargo of cryolite brought into fresh i notice a mineral with a rather unfa ! miliar name, and one which is now rather less In demand than It was a j ! few years ago. Cryolite, or kryollte, j I as it is sometimes spelled, is a salt containing both sodium and aluminum, j Both of the latter and some of their j compounds have been obtained from that source. Colorado and the Ural j Mountains produce it in limited quan | titles, but the largest and most avail i able deposits yet found are in Green land, near the west coast, and this rc ! gion has been the chief, If not the Hole, reliance of commerce. I Aluminum is made from alumina, the oxide of aluminum, and the pro ! cess of getting rid of the oxygen Is i called reducing. In this country the ; business is controlled by the Pittsburg \ Reduction Company, which for a long j time purchased its alumina from the Pennsylvania Salt Company, and the j latter manufactured the article from ! cryolite, which it imported from Ivig ; tut, Greenland. At present, however, practically all of the alumina made in ; this country—at least, that which is i converted into aluminum—is derived ! from an entirely different ore, beaux | itc, of which more anon. ! Still in the final separation of the ■ aluminum and oxygen by the Arueri ! can system cryolite is used as an Jm ; portant auxiliary. The alumina to he treated is dissolved in a bath of the Greenland mineral molted, and an j electric current of enormous volumt* i passed through the fluid. In this op i oration there is little or no waste of cryolite. It is the alumina which needs constant renewal. Caustic soda, or the hydra ted oxide i of sodium, much used iu the indus tries, and especially in the production ! of lye l'or soap, was formerly made by | boiling slaked lime with cryolite. But the Solvay and other modem pro i cesses of manufacturing soda from ! common salt —chloride of sodium—are j now rapidly displacing that method. ! Again, the pure metal sodium is ob j tallied more cheaply from cryolite than ! from other sources, j Cryolite Is a lustrous material, often j of a pure or grayish white, but some ! times possessing a yellow tint. Com i bined with silica by melting, it is ! wrought into a glass resembling porce j lain, and variously known as "hot j cast porcelain" and "cryolite glass." ; Beauxite, sometimes spelled bauxite, takes ils name from the place where it was first discovered in considerable 1 quantities, Beaux, France. It is now | found abundantly In the southern part ! of this country. A few years ago Ala bama and Georgia were the chief pro- I ducers. But Edward W. Parker, man j aging editor of the Engineering and ! Mining Journal, remarked that the j supply in that quarter was falling off, • while Arkansas is yielding bountifully j and seems to have almost unlimited I deposits. I Another mineral which has come | into notice within the last few years j in consequence of its Industrial nppli- I cations Is monazite, from which are j obtained the rare metals thorium, lan | thanum and dldymium, used in the i manufacture of mantles for gas light- J lng. Monailte Is found in the form of j small crystals, mixed with sand, in the j beds of streams where a certain class | of granite rocks have disintegrated, j and both In Europe and America It I seems to be confined to those regions i which have escaped glacial action. I Something of a sensation was created In England a year or so ago by t lie l widespread sickness which apparent j ly resulted from drinking cheap beer. ! It was believed that the trouble came j from the use by the brewers of glu i cose from which the sulphuric acid [ had not been altogether eliminated. I The acid, in turn, was suspected of | being tainted with arsenic, a common I impurity in that article when mami | factured out of Spanish pyrites. Since j the first sensation over the trouble j subsided the theory has been advanced J that it was selenium and not arsenic | which poisoned the beer. That sub ! stance is also present ir. Spanish py rites, and has been recently found lu , some of the products of British brew cries. Thus another comparatively i unknown metal has been brought to ■ p ibllc attention. Selenium Is not only ! very rare, but thus far has found lit i tie use in the arts. One of its quali ! ties, the variability of its electric con ductivity under the influence of light, ! has been turned to account by many inventors who were trying to transmit | pictures by telegraph. Selenium costs ; about sl3 a pov.'iid just now. and IP, ! therefore, more valuable than silver. ! In the whole catalogue of "cheml i cals, minerals and rare elements," the ! prices of which are quoted every week by trade journals, perhaps no name is more puzzling to the uninitiated than j "Infusorial earth." Still, If he known ! much about dynamite, be Is aware that this is the stuff employed as an a jorbent to hold the uitro-glycerine i cf that famous explosive. It was No j bel. the great Swedish engineer, who founded a number of attractive prizes I to encourage scientific progress, who I first discovered the trick by which ui ! tvo-glyccr!ne could lie safely handled, j Infusorial earth is composed of the I sillclous shells of minute vegetable or i ganlsms, diatoms which reveal won | derfully complicated and beautiful j structures under the microscope.—New i York Tribune. I Steam motor sprinklers are now lu one on the ■treats of Bails. A St. Louis man died of appendicitis, and an autopsy showed that all of his organs which normally should have been on his right side were on his left side, and vice versa. It was the unu sual location of the appendix that mis led the physician and made the case fatal. A new restaurant opened in New York City the other day displayed the Announcement: "All you can eat for ten rents." An immense stock of edi ble* was on hand, but at 2 p. m. the door* had to be closed. There wasn't u crumb left on the premises. Here after the prices are to be regular. The Koreans have great reverence for bald heads, believing they are to kens of wisdom, and that, as tin? hair decreases the vigor of the understand ing Increases. Their superstitions are picturesque. When a new moon is ex pected they go out with torchlight pro cessions to propitiate her and bring l.ck. In Haroldswiek, in the Shetlands, a whalebone Viking drinking horn iu good condition was found recently in a grave that contained human bones together with those of horses and dogs. The grave Is probably that of a sea king buried with h!s horse and dog in the time of llarold Harfagr, a thousand years ago. Attached to the door at the parish church of Scale, near Farnham, Eng land, is the following notice: "Be in time. Come straight Into church. Kneel down. Do not look around every time the door opens. Stand up directly the hymns are given out. Do not whisper to your neighbor. Keep your thoughts fixed." Many watches beat five times each ccond, 300 each minute, 13,000 every hour, 432,000 per day. A few turns of the key once a day stores up a power in the spring which is thus divided into nearly 500,000 beats. Multiply the daily beats by Sfifd-i. the number of days in a year, and AVC find that the watch ticks 157,788,000 times while ; tho earth U making one journey round the oun. When an Arabian horse finds itself wounded and perceives that it will not be able to bear its rider much long er. it quickly retires from the conflict, j carrying Its master to a place of snfe ! ty while It has still sufficient strength, j But if the to tho ground, the. faithful animal re mains beside him, unmindful of dan ger, neighing until assistance Is brought. A novel condition in railroad engi neering was presented recently by the sinking of the roadbed on tin; Monon Railway, in Lake County. 111. About 800 feet of bed settled, and in a little over two months the depression had reached an estimated depth of 100 feet. For months the company has been filling the hole, over 7500 car loads of rubble and timber having been dumped In it. The bottom seems to have been reached. Exhaustion of natural gas is said to have caused the phenomenon. The Dltlie Kim Tree. "I?epsimiats may talk all they please," said an elderly widow In a little coterie of women who were dis cussing human nature in general, "but there is a vast deal of genuine kind ness all along the way through life. "We have recently planted a littlo elm tree bordering our sidewalk to re place ;i fine maple ilia; was killed by the electric wires, an& I noticed not long ago that tire tree needed trimming. As a woman cannot very well trim trees along the public highway I waited uutii I could got a man to do it. In a day or two the elm tree looked better; and so I decided that L must have imagined that it needed trimming. The next day it looked still more symmetrical, and I began to wonder what had happened to It. "The problem was solved by an eld erly German neighbor, who lived two blocks up the street, stopping me at our gate one day: " 'Mrs. Brown,' he said, in his quaint broken English, 'I trimmt dose tree.' " 'What tree, Mr. Schmitt?' I wou deringly inquired. " 'Dose leetle elm tree,' he answered, pointing to it; "it was need some trim mings. I knowed you ain't got man 'bout d? place, so I trimmt it w'en I goes down town; and I trimmt it some more w'cu I goe.; up town. Now it grows all right, ain't it?' "Surely, it is not a liopeiesely un friendly world of which such kind deeds may be chronicled."-—Detroit Free Press. Onrdeiiti - * Wanted la Almka. The chances for young men to en gage in trade iu AlnsXa arc Mill abundant. Tho dairyman at Juneau is getting rich. The gardener made S4OOO this season from a little two acre patch of ground, despite the fact that there are a groat many regota hles that will not thrive iu thin local ity. Toinatoeo vrill not mature. Tho vinos thrive well, but will not pro duce fruit. Cabbages grow until they become Immense in size, hut the heads will not get hard. Potatoes grow out of the ground and are not palatable. Corn, squash, beans and cucumbers will not grow on account of the exces sive moisture and cool nights. Nearly everything else In the way of vegeta bles can bo produced it? large quan tities. Wash lag to u Star. A MATRIMONIAL PSALM. Toll mo not in idl jmpjie Marriage is an empty dream. For the pirl is dead that's single, And things are not as they seem. Life is real, life is earnest, Single blessedness a fib; "Man thou art; to man returneth." Hath not been spoken of the rib. Not enjoyment and not sorrow Js our destined end or way, But to net that each to-morrow Finds us nearer marriage day. Life is short and youth is fleeting, And our hearts, though light and gay, Still like pleasant dreams are beating Wedding marches all the way. In the world's broad field of battle, In the bivouac of life, Be not like dumb driven cattle, Be a heroine and a wife. Lives of married folks remind us We can make our lives a ; well, And departing, leave behind us Such examples as shall "tell;" Such examples that another, Wasting life in idle sport. A forlorn unmarried brother. Seeing, shall take heart and court. Let us then be up and doing. With a heart on triumph set, Still contriving, still pursuing And each one a husband get. —The Outburst, Spokane, Wash. He—"Do you know I ar.i fixing to fall in love with you?" She—"Well, be careful. The man I marry will have to be pretty well fixed."—Smart Set. Cholly—"I shot a fine deer while iu Maine. I'll tell you just: how it hap pened." Ethel —"Oh, I can guess. You didn't know the gun was loaded."— Judge. At humorous things I fain would roar; A jest, I truly prize it. But, if we've never met before, How shall I recognize it? —Washington Star. "How vain you are, Effie! Looking at yourself iu the glass!" "Vain, Aunt Emma? Me vain? Why, I don't think myself half as good looking as I really am!"—Tit-Bits. Would you see milk and honey flow? You have another irues3, Man wants but little here below, And gets a little less. —Philadelphia Record. Baboouy—"Me hoy, you look as if you had just stepped out of a fashion plate." Grinkletou —"That so? I knew I had rheumatism, but I didn't sup pose I was as stiff as that!"— Harlem Life. Kitty—"My dressmaker says it is such a pleasure to fit a gown to me." Edith—"Considers it a sort of artistic triumph, I suppose? The true artist delights in difficulties."—Boston Tran script. "He is dying very calmly," observed tho physician, as he felt the pulse of the sufferer. "So like John," softly spoke the prospective widow, "lie al ways was an easy-going uuan."—Balti more American. "Doesn't this boat tip a great deal?" asked a timid young woman of the steward. "The vessel, ma'am," re plied the steward blandly, "Is trying to set a good example to the passen gers."—Manchester Times. "I'm nobody's fool, I'd have you know. Miss Northside," said young Mr. Fitzgoober. "Indeed!" replied Miss Northside; "that's odd! Every body says you belong to Miss Spilfins." —Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. "No," said a fond mother, speaking of her tweuty-flve-year-old daughter, "no, May isn't old enough to marry yet. She cries whenever any one scolds her, and until she becomes hardened enough to reply vigorously she isn't fit for a wife."—Tit-Bits. "Willie," said the father as he pro ceeded with tire laying on of his hands, "1 am sorry to have to do this— it hurts me more than it does you." "Well," returned the precocious youngster, resignedly, "I never did be lieve in these here sympathetic strikes anyhow. They always do more harm than good."—Chicago Post. One of Davy Crockett's Guns. History does not state how many guns the froutlersmuu, l)m id Crockett, owned. Mr. C. W. Gallaghan, proprie tor of the Hotel Maryland, has been presented by Mr. Robert ISlair, of Wytheviile, Va., with n guu which the donor says was made for Davy and was his favorite weapon. Mr. Blair ■was lately nominated for the Lieuten ant-Governorship of his State, hut could not accept because lie is not yet thirty years old. He is a sou of the late Drank S. Blair, a former attorney general of Virginia. Mr. Blair says the gun was given to his father by members of David Crock ett's family. It is a flintlock of about forty calibre. It is Ave and one-half I'eeC long, and the barrel is nearly a half inch thick. The workmanship, all by hand, is excellent. The stock is light, the wood part extending clear to tlie muzzle on the under side. There is a brass slide over the patch box in the stock. In londiug these rifles the ball was wrapped in a cloth patch which was greased. Then it was driven home with a ramrod. Running down the side of the barrel is a brass telescope about us heavy as the modern rifle. The atoek and woodwork under the barrel are dec orated with brass trimmings. On one side of the stock is a brass eagle. The maker's name docs not appear.— Baltimore Sun. A Wealtnrsß of f.oril lloborU'f. The best of men have their little weaknesses, and both in India and .u South Africa Lord Roberts showed, according to all reports, an amazing weakness for officers more or less con nected with "society," and his pen gonal staff was entirely composed of them.—London Tratli. The German Navy Leagu,. In pursuit of her ambition to be come a world power, Germany has de vised an agency which is exerting a widespread educational influence in favor of a great navy. The prime object of the German Navy League Is to unite the German people in sup port of a broad, continuous policy of naval expansion. Each member, on election and annually thereafter, pays a sum of money into the treasury fixed by the member himself. Each member receives free of chargo a periodical describing the progress of the league's work. The member who brings in 50 new members is reward ed with a diploma cf honor, arid this diploma has already been awarded to moro than five hundred persons. For 1,000 marks—about two hundred and fifty dollars—one may become a lite member, and there are more than 40 members in this class. It is esti mated that the income of the league for 11)01—derived largely from mem bership contributions —will exceed $125,000. Tli league enjoys the im mediate support of the government. Its chief patron is Princo Henry of Prussia. In every State the rulers are at the head of the movement and it is the declared purpose of its lead ers to establish a branch of the league in every village and parish of Ger many. Bridging a Great Canon. In the transportation of logs from the heart of the California timber belt to the mills an important engineering feat has been accomplished. A canon on the south fork cf the Ameri can river had to be traversed, and a3 I it was 1.000 feet deep it was determ- 1 ined to build a steel wire suspension I tramway. The distance across the I canon is 2.550 feet. Between the j two terr.dnal towers the space i 3 2,650 j feet. Two parallel cables span the j immense gap, without support be tween the towers. On these cables runs a cage conveying a car capable of carrying 3,000 feet of green, and, thorofore, very heavy, timber on each trip. Tho tower terminals are anchored in the solid rock, supporting i the cables. Traction Company's New Defense. i A rather curious contention on the j part of a traction company eamo to I light when a Station Island road in- j torposed as a defense to a suit, on | appeal, Uiat open ear side bars were not installed for the purpose of pre venting passengers from falling out of cars. The plaintiff in the case had been thrown from a car while round ins a cuive. It was contended by the company that the use of the Bide bar was no to prevent passengers from falling out, primarily, but in or- j der that passengers might not enter j the tar or get off on the side where , tho bar was in .place. As it was not I proved by plaintiff's evidence that this ' was not the case tho verdict was set j asida and a new trial was ordered. I IpißaßaanacswßEßTrrimmmnwM Asthma I i "One of my daughters had R J terrible case of asthma. We tried $ § almost everything, but without re- f§ | lief. We then tried Ayer'3 Cherry a Pectoral and three end one-half is § bottles cured her." Emma jane D S Entsminger, Langsviile, O. I Ayer's Cherry Pectoral sj | certainly cures many cases | | of asthma. I And it cures bronchitis, p | hoarseness, weak, lungs, ?■ I whooping-cough, croup, | | winter coughs, night | I coughs, and hard colds. 8 hi' vi'silt' i vrre- A H t.e.lcotlM, Vtt.: gl. vn,~ v lf L 9 l'orcnroulccaars r. cl to l:o-pt.'n • • ■ \- gj J. O. AYER s , f ' ' . r j - aJ| j: ml : : / ,/; : - . | : : g| K&f J ""siics 2£?.5 end Sr.s Ft. j Weight 28 and 23 His, NO N¥!TCOi' \ HPKOJAL HOOUt J nltf. on dnnc ir libr .rv -.hi* or tlie fold- I Ultra*Pli ; ttwiiv in s: i< ~r ni 1. Very wcrcmriy m.i,10 m-.h-.* vnv frtmo liuv tstorn.- j ly In boa; QH-.litvi.-.Ue *:j.| < On eat en-a Oft Vns.4 inijd-.Mr.rnts with Übb.; nitont "T'b'HtrUftlb'n I'llK.ib Jin; po'.ota, fi.i. k <>.' nil.* >• . jrotlii (TUTIM I ally ;us <1 e.ruble triblo for hmi on <. rt iur ILS OHO •• Bl " | 1 • A-•-ruts of Holom,:!.' pisylTwr. HKS f "M ' HTAu | iW-riptic:: u. i .-..lormi PlV,m VkEl'. on n yauttt. Wnto /or louil wren to' tt.i.lrome <*. THU K. T. BCKHOWi:* CO., 186 Ht*r!nn Strei-t. Cortland, ,flo. New York, i? 77 Ilnm.iway. San Frautilaiiii, 403 (lattery St. L ■! I ■ GREATEST GUN BARGAINS IN YEARS. SIB.GO GUN FOR 5U.95. Owing to the very uunsnal iliv spell _ during th "n-ni-ner .\nd early full in this free- Hon, wo fi'.'d we have r.-.ore GUNS, HVltllhO CLOiNiNC, fi'JCYS. LQADLO SHELLS A.y.O SrCET/NG GODJS J *V? „ in *er..Mi than we can sell so we pTopoGoto make home Ptfextra-tcllnary low prices. Frirca which will nave von Utf-fy 5, 'v .■ ■• i *V-fpy}'A money. \V c pn rati lee overy articleas rep f. ! The above gun .+''*••£>. '■ .s* 'ls* .£ y< ; ,f*. '•' • .'V in *©M ly mer chant:# ail n fs •; •* ■'••/• %■'•;•'•; - ..*• -•■ • • ' -t.\ * . -' ">w IVI •" m£7. ... ft "ft ■ ' .' " • It i id3 ■ tU> ft/ r.itro ft ji 'W ■' ; • . v-M YV"**,&- :-.t■.H.H.I.-K/ •A-Ai est quality foi smokelers or " "'-.SvIJ '• > -. Sfjt".;3 black porvder, full toper ****** JiT .SO ft)£-;jhj•>* choVe bored, fitted with genuine It. Pctper reinforces hrr?--.. l *,\\ v W&mtfPi'i gunge 80in., 7 1-2 to 3 in., lor relmiintHiir; lock* nteol works pistol * grip stock and fore cud checkered, matted extcn.inni ri., c;se ha;-.. . REMINGTON pattern frame, a gun exactly an tho picture above (from n pho'.orrnph) v.ows lor $11.05 sent to any part ... f the U. S. on receipt of fI.M balance C. O. D.. subject to inspection We are the largest ami choapeat sporting goods bouse in the world, forty-five years in business; rcXcrtnc-, -cy baufcor ex'prr ™ eitiipn.iy Complete (un Catalogue mailed tree. SCHRSELZER ARMS CO., Kancao City, Mo. IANOPEBETTER j Address to Women fey the Treas urer of the W. C. T. U. of Kansas City, Mrs. E. C. Smith. "MY DEAR SISTKIKI: — I BELIE™ ia advocating and upholding' everything that will lift up and help women. : au but little use appears all knowledge and learning if you have not the health to enjoy it. k/'t. J ' 'x; W 1 I , j J - m X... . ; *v-v X MR 1 ?. K. C. SMITH. " Ilaving found by pcrponal experi ence that Bydia *E. Pinkham's Vegetable CompoiUKl is a medi cine of rare virtue, and having seen dozens of cures where my suffering sinters have been dragged back. to lii'o and usefulness from an untimely gravo simply by the use of a few bottles of that Compound, I mutt proclaim its virtues, or I should not be doing my i duty to suffering mothers and drugged j out housekeepers. 44 Dear Sister, is your health poor, ! do you feel worn out and u;,od up, ' especially do you have e.ny of the i troubles which, beset our sex. take my advice; let ilie doctors alone, try j Lytlia E. Pinldmia's Vegetable | Compound; it is better than any I and all doctors, for it euros and they j do not." —MRS. E. C. fiurru, 1212 Oak j fit., Treasurer W. C. T. U., Kansas 05 ty, Mo.— ssooo fur/alt if above testimonial is j net l/enu/ne. Mrs. Fi aklsum advises sick wo men free. Address, Lynn, luaus. : id* w iky ii a FERFECT LIQUID DENTIFRICE FOR THE TEETH *" BS2EATH fcLvCtj#' EACH v.- iosa v--.' VKu a PHWBii MALL&RUCKEL, NEWVouk | New and Eaiargeil Edition II Wlfecteli.fi i glnternatilQEial 11 BiSioaary | aaarawwr-" . . UotMe akin. Tba pain nll.vy,u}} an t cur.itlvo q*.v. it.on o( : Ihtnarti le aro woridorful. It will atop the t otuajlio at once, ne by mail. Ho article should bo aceeplefl by the public unless the same carries our label, as o.iierwi.u it is not | genuine;. CUEESESTIOUGH TIANUFACTURING CO., 17 St.to Sheet, New York City* | - ........ S9OO TO $' "00 A YEA>< We want Intelligent Men and Women aa j Traveling Representatives cr 1.0cr.l Ma lingers; , salary S9OO to Jd<-o n year and all •■.•xpen es, neeording to experience nad ability. 'Ac atoo 1 want local representatives* salary *9 to fiv a week and commiasiou, depending uroii the time 1 dtvoted. Send atnrup lor lull pKriieulars uud itfiic position preiVrtd. Ad-ress, Dept. 11. THE BELL, COMPANY, Pliiladeluhia, Pa. ! Rffi EiSHT | F 1.521^55. A // BCO lb. Plalfer.Ti Scslc. 1 // Oiher slaoi wpwlly low. Xiy