lie iinep m Blood If you ant to be well, gee to it that your Kidneys and Blood ar In healthy condition. It is an easy matter to learn what state your Kidneys are in. t'lace some of your urine in a bottle or ttimbler, and leave it stand one day and night. A sediment at the bottom shows thnt you have a dangerous Kidney disease. Tains in the small of the. back indicate the same thing. So does a desire to pass water often, particularly at night, and a Scalding pain in urinating is still another certain sign. .;'''! J am greatly I ij'jS 1 praise it too n J VS'j Favorit p 'iw? IT Liver and Vi ' raliria. Dvsne i Favorite las never failed where the direccions were followed. Jt is also a specific for the troubles peculiar to females. All druggists sell it at $1.00 a bottle. sample Cgc free I If you to the Rondout, N. Y., and mention this paper, we will forward you, prepaid, free sample bottle of the Favorite Remedy, together with full directions for its use. You can depend upon this offer being genuine, and should write at aw for a free trial bottle. r 11 BYBIY HOUI Ts an cfVort put forth to deserve, obtain and retain your pationajre. GOME with your very best 10 suit thoughts and se cure one of these Men's Winter Suits at $6.98. Broken lots of Men's 'Winter Ov ercoats reduced to less than cost. GUNNING & FLANAGAN, Cor. Front and Sussex St's. Pout Jkuvis X. Y. h. j mmHING TO MAUL 5TA50T1 LtlJOYAbLL AND ATSMALL COST. Paid Purchase of will be sent FREIGHT I to any railroad station In I NEW HAMPSHIRE, VERMONT, MASSACHUSETTS, RHODE IS LAND, CONNECTICUT, NEW YORK, PENNSYLVANIA, and airtai jrosiv SI. Rend for our Book, "A Bird's Ere View of New York" and lu flratet Store Si iiatfes beHiitilully illustrftred and very inleretttiDg. Telia you all about New York aod bow to ko about. Free for tbb askino. T. Armstrong & Co., Successors to BROWN & ARMSTRONG. We offer a line of .UNSURPASSED Our point is thnt yon need not go away from home to empply all your needs, or to secure lmrtrninH. We expect to satisfy you in both particulars. DRY GOODS, new and sty Huh. GROCERIES, fresh and g()d. HARDWARE, BOOTS, SHOES, AND CLOTH ING. Any thing in any line at bottom prices. To accomplish this end we have adopted a new system. All our prices are fixed on a basis of cash payment. This obviates the necessity to allow a margin for bad debts and interest. To accommodate responsible parties we cheer fully open monthly accounts, and expect prompt payment monthly, as our prices will not enable us to carry accounts longer. Statements rendered the lirst of every month, and if paid within three days from ilute of bill, a cash discount of 2 is allowed. The same discounts given on all caHh pur chases exceeding tl.OO. Goods sent out will be C. O. D. unless otherwise previously urrangod. T. ARMSTRONG & CO., Brown's Building, Dr. rtavtd Kennedy' Favorite Remedy is what you need. It will cure you surely if you do not delay too Ion;; in taking it. Kidney diseases are dan gereus, and should not be neglected a single moment. Read what P. H. Kipp, of Union, N. Y., a prom. lnnt member of the G. A. R., says: "I was troubled with my Kidney9 and Urinary Organs and suffered great annoyance day and night, but since using T)r. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy I have greatly im proved, and that dreadful burning sensa tion has entirely gone. I had on my lip what was called a pipe '. ancer, which spread 'most across my lip, and was exceeding painful; now that is almost well. 7. also had severe heart trouble, so that it was difficult to work; that is a great deal better. I have gained nine pounds since I commenced taking the Favorite Remedy benefited in every way, and cannot much." Remedy is a specific for Kidney, "rinary troubles. In Rheumatism, Neu ralgia. Dyspepsia, and Skin and Blood Diseases, it will send your full postortice address Dr. David Kenneuv Coriokation, WE MAKE A SPECIALITY. of fine DINNER and TOIL ET SETS which means the LATEST DESIGNS; NEW EST SHAPES. You find with us the largest assortment of "fivrvner Sets v4.98 Cuiad uip. dcilct cctc v1.49 Cwiad tip. It takes 2200 square feet of floor space to show our stock the largest in this section. Farmers Produce wanted. HOAGLANDS PonJ :vis N. Y. JPTOWN. THE iSlLGrajFmCD. new Spring Goods, AND COMPLETE. Miltord, Pa. A TIGER TALE. Ttit'i-e ns an ani-lcnt Qrwlan boy Wlio plnyi'i! nion the flcldlt", Sometimes IiIrIi. inmetlmes low. Sometime In the middle. And all dny lonn beneath the shade He nnini'lied on prunes and marma liule. But what the tunes were which he plityiMl ts certainly a riddle. Three timers gaunt and ravenous, f'nnie from the irlonmy wood Intent to slay the llddler bold, But his nmslr was too good. So round nliout him once they filed Till, by the melody beguiled. They sat them softly down and smiled As only tigers could. And thus beguiled, those tigers smiled Throughout the livelong day i'iitil at length there was not left Another tune to plav. What happened then I do not know I was not there to see But when a man rons short of tunes Can tigers he appeased with prunes Or marmalade and silver sHions? That's what perplexes me. BILLY'S ADVENTURE. BY MARTHA M. WILLIAMS. If there was anything under the sun Billy hated It was hauling water. Not that the work Itself was hard, or In any way disagreeable, but because he loved the spring and the sprltTslde so, and his mother was sure to call after him as he started: "Hurry back, Billy! we can't do a thing, not evu put on the pudding, until the water conies." The spring came out half way to a tall bluff and danced down over sheer rocks richly embroidered with lichen and mitss and fern. Some part of the water was led Into a trough hollowed from long, slender logs, which was fixed In crocheted uprights some ten feet from the ground. The troughs went quite to the roadside. Billy drove his barrel underneath It and let the spouting stream go plump into the sipiared bunghole. So the fillllng was ridiculously easy; and as for driving the slide, that was ns good ns play. It was no load at all for Merry Tom, the chunky pony. Go ing sprlngward, Billy Boy rode him: coming home, he walked beside, flour ishing and cracking his plaite. leather whip. I'pon a certain October Wednesday the whip cracked so loudly as the out fit reached the spring any one who knew Billy would have been certain he had a new and especially acute grievance. All the mile betwixt spring and house he had been muttering. "Think they might a let me stayed to hear the last," or "Beckon they think a boy, a big boy. don't keer notliln' about hearln' nothln' lu the world." Still, he had heard something enough, at least, to tell vaguely. So he brightened perceptibly as he drew to the spring, for other thirsty folkc were there two men Id a very dusty buggy, with a tired looking 1'orse. As he came up one of them haPcd Billy: "Howdy, sonny! Dear bless my soul, but I'm glad to see you. I've been clean lost this half hour It's good to find myself anywhere about Squire Clark's." "Howdy, brother Amos! It's funny yon gettln' lost! Brother Amos, the colporteur, a worn-out Itinerant, was a prime favorite with all the boys, he had Mich a knack of fetching exactly the books they wanted, books that had blood and fighting In them, and good boys who did not die young of their own goodness. "It Is funny. I never hit on this cross road before I've often heard of your spring." Brother Amos returned. "What's the good word up at the house, Billy? Any chance for travelers to stay all night?" "I'lenty at least I reckon so," Billy answered, his sense of news to tell sud denly checking hospitality. "Benson I say that. 1 don't Just know how things '11 be when we get there. I left the sheriff there and 'bout a dorr-n more men nnd they were tellln' how the man they were after had stole 'bout $1,000,000 in town last night- and gone chasln' off In a buggy this mcrnln' as If he liadn t done a thing." "Dear me, why we came from town We beard nothln of all this!" Brother Amos said, turning to his companion who yawned and shook his head Then suddenly he sat uprght and looked at Billy with a very keen pair o' eyes. The barrel was by this time underneath the spout and tll'lng very fast. The stranger rot out of the bug gy and went beside it, peering into its depths as though It were something out of the common. 'Here's a new style of water works h, Brother Amos," be said, with a gurgling laugh, then to Billy, "Tell me how you get the water out? "Easy enough! Don't you see the spile there at the bottom?" Billy-Boy retorted, over his shoulder. Be was busy cutting dog-wood boughs to shade the barrel In transit and keep the water cool. As he turned with both hands full a vicious fly mad'- Merry Tom dance so the slide was In dancer of upsetting. "Here, tilve me the buehes I'll fix them while you hold the horse," the the stranger said, fetching a l aud out his pocket. There was a kn!f In It so keen end sharp when It was opened it awoke Billy to covetonsnesg. By help or it, in a trice the DoughJ were In place, though Billy-Boy couH not un derstand why In the placing the stran ger meddled so much with the wedge shaped board that went into the bung. "I'll tell mother who's couiin' she'll be sure to have a place for you," he shouted to Brother Amos, determined ly taking the road ahead of him. The BhcrltT, riding out of the Clark gate, almost swore at the sigl t of Brother Amos' companion. "To think of ketchin' blm, when we'd about glvt him up!" he said to the man at bis el ffTALISHtu -.CyrrTV ie.- Js LAHtf., TftAOl .", Marks? t , 0ISK.NS. CoevmcHTs'. Thirty-one jtrj sotiv practice. Opinion u to validity aua patentability. Write tor look ol lniruvr. snd relirni. EPWN BUOiufM FMrirt, WiuhiPitwi, p. 6. (lisiiii PROOF TO THE CONTRARY. 11 Rasllr Lookril Thonjh the Raid Young MM Hail Mail. The prematurely bald young man, with a downy white mustache, had been doing his best to make a pro found Impression on his rural relatives There was no reason why he should do this except In obedience to a natu ral tendency which Is second only to that of self-preservation, the desire to show o!T. The old gentleman with heavy-soled boots and a black string necktie had listened silently for a long time. He broke In on the series of travelers' talcs with the remark. : "It kind o' bents my time that the west end o' this continent should be so different from the east." "Oh, If you haven't traveled much and don't know the (inference, this part of the world Is nil right." was the answer. "Yes. But It onglitn' to be so misre presented. They ought not to com plain thnt the Knst has gone an' organized monopolies to gobble every thing worth hnvin, when the West has all the geysers an' the petrified forests and the trees tunt you can drive a hore nnd wagon through. If yon can tiu'l an augur big enough to make the hole. 1 know Its all truth fur I've seen pictures of those things in the geogra phies. But this hike you was telling about I can't help thinklu' you got Imposed on snmhow there." "You mean the iiivnt Salt hike In tTtah. It's there. I saw It with my own eyes. "The lake that's so salt fish can't live in It?" "Certainly." "An' when you went bnthln' you found the water so salt that you couldn't sink if you tried." "Yes 'Indeed. And wlial's more ' "Hold on. I'm not doubting your veracity. I don't say yon don't tell every bit of this In good faith. I've had the same kind of experiences. One time I was In a room where breakfast had just been set, and although I was a stranger In the house, 1 walked up nnd took a fried egg off the plate with a spoon mid put It in my mouth. Iniuglne my surprise when I Immediately began to raise up and toward the cellln'. It was aninzlu' how fine I tlonUt. My wife an' the girls were Just as surprised as I was when they came In au' saw me, and I'll never forget ow funny they looked hopplu' up Into the nir tryln- to do the same thing After a while I wanted to get down, but I couldn't make It. I liognn to get worried. I started to call for help nnd accident ally bit into the egg, As soon as 1 did so I was gently lowered till I had the use of both feet as usual. And it all seemed so real that when I got up the next morning 1 thought eatlu' break fast an' feedin' the pigs must be a dream." "But. my dear sir " "It's all right. I don't attach any blame to you. But you can't make me believe that anybody could bathe In wnter as salt ns you say that was and come home so uncommon fresh. It couldn't be done." Washington Even ing Star. Tha Offlcar'a Hall. Kara rnmpllinetit. "These are remarkably fine biscuits of yours, my dear,' said Mr. North side, as he bulaiK'ed a specimen on the tip of his finger. Mrs. Northslde flushed with pride. "it Is so good of you to say so," she murmured. "Yes, Indeed," the wicked man went on, "I hnve rarely seen any so heavy for their size." Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. No Doubt mt It. "Say," asked the (Jovernor, on meet ing a warm admirer from a rural vil luge, "has that Incendiary that I par doned at your request shown satisfac tory evidence o reform'.'" "The very strongest possible. Gover nor. He's at the head of our volun teer lire company." Detroit Free Press. Klght. "Tommy," said the teacher to pupil In the Juvenile class, "what Is syntax t "I guess It must lie a tax on whis key," replied Tommy. And the teacher thought lie was en titled to a credit of 100 per tent. Buf falo News. Aaoortment. Mrs. Brown I was in the new drug store to-day. It's just lovely! Mrs. Jones Yes? Mrs. Brown Yes: they have six dif ferent shades of pills! A Womaa'a Anawai. "Evelyn, would you rather be right or be popular?" "I would rather be good Itoklng and rich." Valambla. "Do you believe In the value of fresh air?" "I do, Indeed. I spent a week In the n-duntulns, and it cost me $Uoo." Chulaa; tha Growlar. "I will now," said Weary Watklns. as be crawled out of the loft and seized bis trusty can, "I will now In dulge In the pleasure of the chase." A l ong Fait Want. Delinquent Patient (quietly entering doctor's office) I Judge, Doctor, by that array of drugs before you, that you are trying to devise some new medical comouud. Doctor I am; I'm trylug to study out a new form of emetic much need ed by our profession. Delinquent Patient A new form of emetic, did you say? Doctor Ye. Something to operate on the pocket of our oatleuu, LAMENT OF A LITTLE GIRL My brother Will, he used to bi The nicest kind of girl. H. wore a little dress like me And had his hair In curl. Wo played with dolls and teasetsthen, And every kind of toy: But all those good old times are gone; Will turned Into a boy. Mnmnm had made htm Uttlr- suits. With pockets In the pants, And cut off nil his yellow curls And sent them to my aunts, And Will, he was ao pleased. I believe He almost dauceij with joy; But I must own 1 didn't like Will turned Into n boy. I have to wear frocks just the same, And now they're mostly white. I have to sit and Jiist be good, Wlille Will can climb anil tight. But I must keep my dresses nice And wear my hair In curl: Anil, worse oil, worstest tiling of nil I have to stay a girl! GEN. LEE AND THE CIRCUS. low Going to tha Sltoiv llecame a I'roper Amlmaiiiont. 'ieneral Hubert E. I.ee. he famous Confederate commander, was ns kind hearted mid slniile-uianiierei lis he was brave and aide. While president of Washington and I.ee t'plverslty, Virginia, In the laller years of his life, he was greatly beloved by the children, whom he loved in return. It was his delight to give the little ones pleasure. Professor Nelson's two little girls were great favorites. The (ieneral would turn nnd ride with them when they met. encourage them to talk of theii dolls and playthings, and then es cort them home with ns much gallan try ns If they were young ladles, lie would alight, and. helping 1'ieiii down from the gentle old liorse they both rude, he would part with n kiss from each. Once the strict Presbyterln rule of the Nelson household was rudely shocked by the (Ieneral. A circus was coining to town. nnd. as Professor and Mrs. Nelson left for a visit or several days, they charged the children on no account to go. So the two little girls hung over the fence, listened to the music, and envied the children that passed on their way to that tented pa radise, but they never once hoped to go. Presently n larger crowd of chil dren than ever came along, nnd In their midst was (ieneral I.e. keenly enjoying the happiness of his Pttle pro teges The little .Nelson girls joined the party without a word when he asked them to come along with him. Soon they were all lu the tent, and when the performance began all were given reserved seats by the owner of the cir cus. "Mother, we went to the circus," was the greeting of the children on their parents' return. "Why, children, didn't I tell you you must not go?" said their mother. "But (ieneral I.ee took us." "Oh, well." said their mother. "If (ieneral Lee took you that's all right." After that going to the circus was a legitimate amusement for children. Tlia VConcI Sfttlor flanif. A very ninuslng game Is the wood seller, and it Is callable of several vari ations. Including the ever-popular for felts. Any number of persons may Join In the game. The person who starts the game writes the name of some kind of wood on a paper, and folds the paper so that no one can see the word written upon it. He then goes around, nil Hit rest of the players being seated and says: "1 have n load of wood to sell." Each person in turn asks: "What kind;" The answer Is: Kind out." Then the person mentions one kind, and If It happens to be the wrong one, the woodseller goes to the nej t. and so on, until It is finally guessed right. When the right one is iiamo.l, the one miming It becomes woodseller. All who make mistakes must pay a forfeit to be redeemed nt th end of the game. Those who nam.- n wood twice pay. The list of woods Is a long one, but the best known one nre the very ones thnt the players are most apt to overlook In miming them. A clever person can make much fun by the manner of calling ofit his wares, and another by witty rejoinders. Know Tlia-r Wwntad .Tain. The Duke of Wellington, the grent general who defeated the Emperor Napoleon lit the battle of Waterloo, was very fond of children. He loved to have them lis his guest-), nnd they loved li i in . for he seemed to under stand without being told just what Utile boys and girls liked. One day when some small visitors happened to be In the nursery nt Strathtteldsnye, his home, he walked up and found the youngsters nt ten He glanced at the table nnd noticed that there was no jam ther. Without a word he rang the bell vio lently. A footman appeare-1 and stood petrified. "Have the goodness to understand," r.i lil the duke in a voice of thunder, "that when children nre Invited to my house to tea they are always to have jam!" Then he departed, anil befiiie he was out of earshot n shout went up that must have reminded him of Waterloo. A IMaaaant Kama. A competition in picking up and car rying potatoes causes much merri ment at a party. Hnve four rows, six In a row, of raw Irish potatoes. Four children are called out at a time and each assigned a row. The object is to pick up with a small silver spoon each apple of the Emerald Isle, and. walk ing the length of the room with it. to deposit it safely on a plate. A difficult matter, indeed! and great is the temp tation In a crisis to give the potato a little shove with the finger or any thing one may hold in the other hand. This, however, is not allowable. At the eud of three minutes' "time" Is called and the four contestants give place to four others, after the po'utues have been arranged a.-alu. oattlaff Soma "Trim ol III. "Where la your old man this morn ing, Auntie t" "He done gone down to the tavern, sab, to git some trinimln'a" "Trimmings? The tavern Is a queer place to go for anything of that sort, Isn't It?" "I reckon not, sab. Dats de on y place he eblier go tcr ijit e kiue he done use; 1 meuu de kino wW de doc tor call dcllruiu tiiiuuiia's" NEARLY Fifty-eight Years Old!! lug Nnlloiml Family Newspaper Itecegniing It value in i hne who desire all the news of the state nnd Nation, the publisher of 'Tin-I'll l:ss" ( vim r own favoriti' h tii.' paper I lias entered into ail all1 llllrc with "The New-York Weekly Tltl III N K ' which e nables him to furnish both papers at the t' illing cosi of sil,ll. per year. K.very fanner iinil every vlllner owes to liltnsrir. to liis family and to the commu nity ill which he lives a cordial support of his let a! newspaper, as il works constantly and ltiiilritifriy for his interests In vvry way. hrinjrs to his home all the news and hail pen i ii fjs of liis neiirliliorlinod. the doings of his f ri -nils, i he (m mil it ion and prospec'. for different crops the prices lii home niHikets and ill fuel is a weekly visitor which should be found in every wlile-nwiike progressive family .lust thlnk'of It Both of these papers for'only Kl.il.l a year Send all subscriptions to "TC L'I'KSS" V I l.l'iiltli, I'KNNA. DO YOU EXPEHT TO BUILD ? THEN SEE A. D. BROWN and SON, Manufacturers and dealers in all kinds of Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work guaranteed. OFFICE, Brown's Building-, Milford, Pa. MEW CUMMER ROODS.. W & G. MITCHELL, MILFORD, PA. !3B RAILRDAE TIME TABLE. Corrected to Date. Solid Piiiltnnn trains to IbilTnlo, Niag ara Kalis. CliMMtaiiqua Lake, Cleveland, ('liii-afxo and Cincinnati. Tickets in sale at I'orr. Jervis to all points in the West anil Southwest at lower rales than via any oilier lirst-class line. Trains Xnw Lkavk I'oiit .Ifiivis as Follows. EASTWARD. No. 13, Daily Express 3 24 A M. " 10, Daily Express ft in " " Hi, Daily Except Sunday . 2H " " as, " " " 7 4i " " (Km, Sundav fllllv 7 45 " " Its. Daily Except Sunday . 10 07 " " II, Daily Way Train 12 15 P.M. " ao, Way Except Sunday .. :t " " 4. Express Except Sunday 2.','."i 11 ' 2, Daily Express 4 2o " " two, Sunday Duly 4 : " ' K, Daily Express a 20 " " 18, Sunday only 5 45 " " 23. Daily Except Sunday . 5u " " liis. Express Sunday Only 7 13 ' " 14. Daily 10 W " WESTWARD. No. 3, Dally Express 12 .in a.m. " 17, Daily Milk Train H 05 " " 1, Daily Express 11 " " 11, For Ho dale E'pt Sun . 12 Hi P. M " M, J,ocal Except, Sunday 13.30 ' " 5. Chiraffo Limited Daily 5 no ' Way Saturday Only 5 3o " " 27, Doiiy Except Sunday . . 5 50 " " 7, Daily Express lu 15 " Trains leave ('IwuiiIhts street, New York for Fort .Tervis on week days at 4 (in, 7 45, H Ml, M 15. 10 an A. M. Inn. 8 00, 4 :m, I) !, 7 lio, 9 15 P. M On Sniidivs, 4 on, 7 :i, 0 on, 11 15 . in.; 12 '. 3 'no, 7 30 and a 15 P. M. 1. I. Roberts, General FasseiiKcr Aent, New York, .Dr. David Kennedys Favorite Remedy CURES ALL KIDNEY. STOMACH '-AND LIVER TROUBLES. 60 YEARS' - 'EXPERIENCE a Trade Marks fa. Designs Copyrights Ac. An Tone sending a abet Hi mix! rter-rmtlon quit quickly ancertaiii our it'tion tr whether an Invention i iirittiHldy paleinat'lu. t'nnimiitiHH-tli)iutriutlVtwi-IlleiitliLL liundb wik on t'nteuta Kit; tiuj (llde. luzeney for neeuniitf mtuli. 1'uti'iita taneti ilir-iuuh alumi A Cu. receive iperuU otitic, without cli'irne. lit the Scientific American. A hndaome!f lllii-trated weekly. Lamest etr culaium of miy (iriennrie l-iunml. lermii.-i a year: fur month. L Sola by nil nwd.-alur. MUNN & Co,38,Bro",-New Ycrk . IVauub Oat Ir Itt., WaahiWiiuu, D. t II s a lomz 11T". but dcvolimi to the true Interests and prosperity of the Amei inin people has won for it new friends as tin years rolled by and the original mciiibeii of It family passed to their reward, and these admirers nre loyal and steadfast to-day, with faith in its teachings nnd con fidence In the Information which it hilngf to I heir homes and firesides. As a natural eonseoiience it enjoys In its old age all the vilullly and vigor of lis youth strengthened and ripened by the ex periences of overhulf a century. It luis lived on Its mcrrlts nnd on the col dial support of preKi-esslve Americans. II Is 11. e "New York Weekly Trillium," nckinm leduetl the country over as the lead Dress Goods, Wash Fabrics in Ging hams Seersuckers, Lawns, Jaconets etc etc. Summer Underwear, Flannels Hats and Caps, Ladies Gents and Childrens Shoes, Mattings and Carpets, Wall Pap er, Groceries, Provisions, Crockery, Glass Ware, Paints and Oils, Gasoline and blue Flame Stoves. Agents For Listers Fertilizers. Hi Caveat,and Trade-Marks obtained and all VaxA Cent bir.iino-s conducted lor MODERATE FtCS. lOuBOrnct is Opposite U, S. Patent Office 5 i.m 1 wc canst' ure c.itcut itt itb Uiau lliuii tuusc? irenvie frum WaliiiiLTton. 5 ruind model, drawini of photo., with dewrii- ptmn. We advise, if patcr.talile or rot, fne of? chat-ire. Our fee not due till patent is nerurcd. i A CiUbui r-r ' How to Otit.-iin l';itf nt." with cost tit sunie in' the U. S. and loreign countriehj JsenC free. At1. dress, J !C.A.SNOW&CO. Off. Patent Office, Washington. D. C. 5 " I have bfn utln CAHfAR FT and mm a mild nnd nflKeilve laxative Uwy are sltnuly won drrtiil. My daiiKhtur and 1 were notln'iea wlih ki-U stoniin h and our breath wtih very had. After M Kin.! a ii'W il'isci nf Cat t'tirets we hnve Improved Wonderfully. 'l'tit'T are a ureal help In the fuuitly." Wii.hki.miva Naoki.. tl.TI Kiiteuhouse St.. Cincinnati, Ohio. Pli'nrnnt. P:lla;ul.!i.. I'oo-nt. T.lKte Onod. TV Uoj.l, Nev.-r Nii ktMi. WoaKen. t,r GripH. 10c . &c. 4)0. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... ltll,.r t'.,..pnw.. Chirav. NnNtrrat, N. Xark. all Nfl.TQ.AC So'li nrt cnr.inniMl hy all druv W6ViWiVrt"ciyiiViV,vrtIVrT.V..).n.rty,; 3 CTYLI5M. RELIABLE! ? ARTI3TIC-. 5 tttcommtniei by Leading $ Orcuttitkrr j tf; Ttacjr Aiwayt Pleatc S MS CALL a ,N0Nt lib I I LK A I ANY FKItt : ? tr i... ir .....n C'l" "1 ! T Ht v'uili't '-'ov 5 If ; 4 t 4- ( it.i . ', Jt I ie Cm UM ib.ubi iei.ltf)d I J K&irf fcut tfai'rti p".l ; THE M:CALL COMPANY. : 1 30 to Ub ' Mm Siittt. kt lot, I 1 aa a orn :-a .80 Filth A . - . in 1051 JHarkct St.. bi. t-ramiictf. ' bIS CALLS hl&QAffllt ; brightest Mgia f utlltt4 ! CoQ'alnt iPAj-nyl Clcre1 Ir4'. iz l. ittf'.B wt t'4;.ciui. fata- ln. Pacy Wnt. Z ! Arnn warn; - i tila In twrj 5. 1 voih "tin inwi i. ini yatti ; 1 !. Kin Hj(i 50tt ml trig 4 FHtb F.ntta t Ado THE McC ALL CO., Si ij to i46 W. i4tto St.. Ntw Vork vMmvwrmv.'mviVrWA.vMW y&p&k CANDY li CATHARTIC j,a tarn