Newspaper Page Text
JfEWS AND NOTE# FOR WOMEN.
Queen Victoria’s favorite color is blue.
One of the coal weighers in Boston is
a woman.
The bustle must go. Mrs. Cleveland
is it.
A. woman has arrived at Long Branch
.with 128 dresses.
Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt pays her J
.physician SIO,OOO a year.
Boston University has women in its
highest governing board.
Mrs. Ernest Hart has taught the
peasantry of Donegal to weave woolen
goods.
White gowns must have some trim
ming of metal galloon in order to be
stylish.
In Japan 128 new schools and societies
foi girls and women were established
during last year.
The open-mesh point d’esprit net is
more fashionable just now for a bride's
veil than illusion.
Miss Harriet P. Haine, seventy years
of age, is a clerk in the Treasury Depart
ment at Washington.
Gilt, silver, steel, white or red braids
are used to trim boating dresses, usually
in graduated widths.
A novel color combination is reseda
with terra-cotta, and both these colors
are combined with black.
Miss E. T. Wragg, of Charleston. S.
C., is gaining a reputation as the leading
, woman engraver of America.
. No heavy trimmings of any sort are
used. Velvets and plushes have no
place on this season’s bonnets.
Bias folds of crape or foulard are
chosen in Paris for neckwear in prefer
ence to either linen or ribbon.
For once fashion is patriotic, and
chooses the red, white and blue, either
all together or a combination of any two.
Susan B. Anthony says she is willing
to retire frcm active work as a woman
luffragist in favor of some one younger.
Many of the newest shot stuffs of woo'
or silk are of red and orange, and the
result is a brown altogether indescriba
ble.
Mme. Nilsson, the operatic artist, ha s
, just recovered from a long and annoying
deafness caused by abscesses in both
ears.
Lace nets in all sorts of colors, dotted
with gold or silver, are very stylish for
bonnets, and have a very light, cool
affect.
The Dircctoire styles have extended
?ven to morning dresses, which even for
summer are composed of rich, heavy
materials.
r Sirs. Julia Noyes Stickney goes with
the National educational Association on
its California trip as a newspaper cor
respondent.
Vassar College has conferred the de-
■ grec of LL.D, on Mrs. Catherine L.
Franklin, a Fellow of Johns Hopkins
University.
Black and gold is seen in some elegant
combinations o i bonnets and hats th s
season. Bright blossoms always tt imming
such head gear.
Suede color is a tan which combines
very successfully with gold, and is a
favorite color this season in both woolen
and silken fabrics.
Dressy costumes of silk are often made
with pinked-out edges, and a plastron
composed of silk scallops in layers com
pletes the corsage.
New Orleans has a bachelors’ benevo
lent association with a good bank ac
count. Its investment is now a question
with the members.
Pretty frocks for little girls are made
of surah or other soft silks, and deco
rated with smocking and Torchon lace
' of the finest quality.
F Ribbons from four to eight inches wide
are now used upon hats and bonnets, and
. some of the arrangements are astonish
ing, to say the least.
Some of the daintiest summer bonnets
L are made of rows of straw insertion di
* vided by puffings of black, white, cream
or pearl colored gauze.
| Many entire bonnets are composed of a
single large bow of ribbon, with a full
p front of gathered velvet, lace or lisse,
and a garniture of flowers.
f Some forty-throe descendants of Ile
«becca Nourse, “the pious witch of 16V2, ”
in her honor at Danvers
Centre, Mass., the other day.
Wraps of shot faille beaded in cash
’ uncre colors are newer than beautiful,
.and should be chosen only by those who
have quieter garments in plenty.
Mrs. Moses Fraley, the wife of a mill
ionaire speculator of St. Louis, wears
four gowns a day at Long Branch, and
never repeats a gown for three week-.
Mrs. Ormiston Chant says her experi
ence as matron in a lunatic asylum has
been of great assistance to her in pre
siding over woman suffrage meetings.
J.arge flowers are a conspicuous feat
ure of many summer bonnets, often
times thec’.owqf are nearly concealed by
Loose petals of poppies, asters,rose-, etc.
Belts of Russia leather or tan un
dressed kid, or tine kid in pa'e gray or
blue shades, are now imported. These
have buckles of cut steel, dull silver or
gilt.
t eutimental London ladies,to help the
starving Hindus, are sending out stud
\for their next season’s frocks, to be en
riched with the marvelous Oriental em
broidery.
Pearls have never been so popular as
now, fashion’s demands including those
of >ail colors, pink, brown, gray, black
and other shades, except the inferior
yellow ones.
Many new stulls show stripes of rose
wood and lead color, cream, and peach,
plum and rose color, brick red and old
gold, and the effect is delightfully soft
and hiuunoniaus.
Burial Shoes.
_iiat there is nothing small about Chi
cago has been so frequently demonstrat
ed as to need no reiteration. But that
Chicago supplies an article in the produc
tion of which it has no rival in the
world may be news to many readers. It
is an article for which there will be a
ceaseless demand so long as people die
and are buried in the prevailing style.
If cremation should become general, or
if the Stanford idea of squeezing the re
mains of beloved relatives into symbolic
figures should prevail, the article spoken
of would, of course, become useless. To
the present funeral, if it is carried out in
the height of fashion, belongs a burial
>'-‘H
THE BURIAL SHOE.
jlioe. It is as necessary as any other
part of the garments worn on the last
journey by youngorold of either sex.
The fact that the rigor mortis made
the feet of dead persons so unwieldly as
to necessitate a foot-gear several sizes
too large had for a long time painfully
impressed a Joliet dressmaker, a Miss
Loomis. She went to work and con
structed a shoe which not only did away
with clumsy leather incasements, but,
in true feminine style, she brought her
ingenuity to such a point that the corpse
of a persen may be buried in number 2s
while the wearer in life required number
4s. Os course the invention was prompt
ly patented, and in the course of time a
company wae incorporated which sup
plies two-thirds of all the manufacture:.s
of and jobbers in funeral supplies
throughout the United States, and sends
the product of the Joliet dressmaker’s
inventive genius even across the ocean.
The invention is, like many others, so
simple that the wonder is why burial
shoes have not begn made before there
were patent offices. The shoe consists
of knitted pieces of wool or silk, which
are inserted at the heels and at the in
steps, making it possible to cover the
rigid “understanding” of dead persons
not only with a snug fit but in becoming
style. In a block on Dearborn street a
dozen or fifteen girls are at work from
morning until night of each working day
to manufacture nothing but burial shoes
of all sizes—from those for tiny babies to
the ones for the oldest inhabitant.
They are made in four colors—white,
cream-colored, brown and black
and three grades—brocaded satin,
quilted satin and fell. Os the la'ter,
which is the cheapest grade, but three
of the colors arc being manufactured,
the natural felt being a sort of cross be
tween white and ( ream-color. The brown
color is principally demanded for the
funeral of Catholics, and whffe and
cream-colored for babies and women.
Material, as well as ornamentation, are
of such a variety and style as—to use a
business man’s phrase—to suit the most
fastidious. The firm turns out from fifty
to a hundred pairs a day, and they are
all taken rapidly, because burial shoes
have, since the last year or two,, become
a necessary part of the outfit of the dead.
Chicago Herald.
Summer In a Block of Ice.
A large block of ioo was taken to the
South Carolina Railway station this
morning to supply tho “coolers” on the
outgoing trains—and thereby hangs a
tale. Agent Wells and his corps of as
sistants, when they proceeded to crack
the ice—which melts so soon these hot
days that it is not what it’s“cracked up to
be”—made a discovery which would
have set the New York papers, fresh in
their attacks on the bacteria in the
Hudson River, agog with excitment and
indignation. It was not a homeless
little bacterium, invisible to tho naked
eye and demanding a microscopic in
vestigation to tell what it was. It was a
live, wriggly, squirmy earthworn, four
inches in length, in full possession of
his powers of wriggling, and in fact
i seeming not a little refreshed by his re j
sidence in his crystal citadel. It was a
cool retreat and showed a discriminate
ing taste in the worm, if, indeed, he gol
into such a crystal palaeo by his own
volition. It was probably thrust upon
him, a “cold wave” sweeping down the
Hudson and embedding him, like a pre-
Adamite shell or fossil, in a glacier, and
tho icemen, gleaning the frozen fields,
brought him to tho warm South. When
the block was split open there lay th*
worm in his icy atmosphere
The license fees which were collected
from saloons in England and Wales dur
; ing the Inst fiscal year, aggregated $7,-
i 761,695, those for the city of London
j amounting to $1,234,535.
—— -
Safe and Effective.
Bhaxdretii’s are the safest and most
; effe.live remedy for Indigestion, Irregularity
of tile Howels, Constipation,Biliousness.Head-
• ache, Diz.oness, Malaria, or any disease ari -
' ing from an impure state of iho b.ood. They
i ie ve been in use in this country for over fifty
i j ears,and the thousands of unimpeachable tes
! inion:a st'rom tho-e who have used them, an 1
their constantly increasing sale, is incontro
vertible evidence that they perform all that is
1 claimed for them.
Bhamuieth’s i’ti.i s are purely vegetable,
| absolutely harmless and safe to take at any
time.
Sold in evert- drug and medicine store,either
pia n or sugar-coated.
The U. S. Gov.has confiscated nearly SI,OOO -
KX) worth of the proper, y of Mormon officials.
Tickling the Pniaie.
I The only trouble with Hamburg Figs is that
i they are svpleasant to the palate that children
i ar • apt to eat them when not absolutely net os-
I sar. .if they can get hold of them sum ptjtlous
ly. I hey will injure no one, but medicine
| should not be taken unless needed. Doso one
.fig. Muck Drug Co- S. Y.
j The best cough inAuclne U Piso’s (’ure for
.ousuinption. Sold e>*ry where. 25c.
Immense Crops.
The wheat crop of Minnesota and Da
kota this year will, the St. Paul Pioneer
Press estimates, aggregate the immense
quantity of 100,000,000 bushels. Allow
ing an average of 400 bushels to the car,
this will represent no less than 250,000
car loads or 8.33 trains of thirty cars each.
This shows that the railways of that sec
tion will have a prodigious amount of
traffic to handle within the next few
months.
“I know that you love me,” she said,
“because when I lay my head against
your breast your heart beats so loud I can
hear it.” “That,” gasped the poor fel
low, as the truth dawned upon him—
“that is not my heart. That’s my
watch.”
Don’t Give up the Ship.
sou have been told that consumption is in
curable; that when the lungs are attacked by
this terrible malady, the sufferer is past all help,
and the end is a, mere question of time. You
have noted with alarm the unmistakable
symptoms of the disease; you have tried all
manner of so-called cures in vain, and you are
now despondent and preparing for the worst.
But don’t give up the ship while Dr. Pieroe’s
Golden Medical Discovery remains untried. It
is not a cure-all, nor will it. perform miracles,
but it has cured thousands of cases of con
sumption, in its earlier stages, where all other
means had faied. Try it, and obtain a new
lease of life.
The latest news from England is to the ef
fect that the wheat crop is poor.
A Dish of New P’s.
P stands for Pudding, for Peach and for Pear,
And likewise for Poetry and Prose;
The Parot, the Pigeon that flies in the air.
The Pig with a ring in his nose;
For Paper and Pen, for Printer and Press,
For Physic, and People who sell it;
But when you are sick, to relieve vour distress
Take at once Pierce’s Purgative‘pellet.
Oh, yes, indeed! These are the P’s for you,
j poor, sick man or woman. Nothing like them
for keeping the. bowels and stomach regulated
and in order—tiny, sugar-coated granules,
scarcely larger than mustard seeds. They
work gently but thoroughly.
A man has invented a flatiron that rings a
little bell when the iron is hot enough.
Many imitators, but no equal, has Dr. Sage’s
Catarrh Remedy.
To study human nature, Evangelist Moody
advises young men to act as book agents.
Try Long’s Pearl Tooth Soap for cleansing
your teeth and perfuming your breath.
if afflicted with r ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
i son’s Eye-Water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
/ fwOrl
I fROtRS I
Brilliant I
Durable!
Economical!
Diamond Dyes excel all others
in Strength, Purity and Fastness.
None other are just as good. Be
ware of imitations, because they
are made of cheap and inferior
materials, and give poor, weak,
crocky colors. To be sure of
success, use only the Diamond
I Dyes for coloring Dresses, Stock
ings, Yarns, Carpets, Feathers,
. Ribbons, &c., &c. We warrant
them to color more goods, pack
age for package, than any other
dyes ever made, and to give more
brilliant and durable colors. Ask
for the Diamond and take no other.
4 Dress Dyed |
4 Coat Colored :•
Garments Renewed ) cents.
A Child can use them!
At Druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & C 0
BURLINGTON, VERMONT.
i The Log Cabins of
I America have been birth-
• . |f y-T pl ;,ce ' some of the
' grandest men. Lincoln,
! Grant, Sheridan, first saw
. J the light of day through
; the chinks o£ a Log
i Cabin. Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsaparilla
, also originated in a Log Cabin and
i stands pre-eminent among the blood
purifiers of to-day as AS timer's “Tippe-
I canoe” does as a stomach tonic.
B iffs CREAM Balm
Gives relief nt once for
Cold in I lead
-|CUBES|-
CATA R RH.
Not a Liquid or Snuff
Ypplv Balm into each nostril. ;
ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N.Y. ,
I ■ —-■ II - I
IV 1 . \ U n j’.. <1 Women uindi'STKONG.
v ▼ Our R/iuvdy <. Bi.’i.n and .Nerve Troubles and ;
all Blood biws, v..nm:i;B n» p pure'y vegeta
. ble, but n powerful reiut ly. Pcriuanvni cure of Con- ;
■ btipaiion and I'ot tho I r«utr> Organs »S'nt •
i free on trial <u receipt <»f p elage, which !•» Laront*.
; Address Ti! : Haul Mi.ihui.Mu Ct ~ C.iiunvi. . , u. in.
£* ’r* ’‘l’* •J’ •J* *1" ’’l* •J* •J* ’J' •J’ *l* **• *■*'* •J* •»• •I* *l’ ’l* ’i” *l* *•■* *l* *?• **' i
The man w If> .ms invested from throe JUk We oiler the man al:o wants service
to five Cars m a KuhOer Coat, anil ■“1 (not style) a garment that will keep
at Ins first ha t hour'. experience tn * a • M9M BESSa him dry in the hardest st.rut. It is
a storm finds to h.s sorrow that it is tt/'KiW Bm B called TOWER’S FISH BRAND
hat y.i I: r; r •teetiun than a nios- W W E•• >. i< K t.lt. a . :.t. i •ir i•• <u ry
quito nett a. t t only feels chagrined K ” ”*** “ Ctav-li v all over the ami. With them
at being so i>. ly taken in, but also JJ ■ |HB pi « the only perfect Wml and Waterproof
teels If lie ik s not look exactly like Rf&K Coat t.’“ rower’s F-l. Brand > eker.”
Ask lor t.ie •• ■ .-11 BRAN j»•» Sit. axil B 11 uST £tS an 1 take no other. Itwnrsr drepr
d.n-s not! i vet <>i i ittsn. semi for descriptive catalogue. .t.J. 1\ > nun ti' st.. I 105 t.,.. _m
*l* ** '■ **• *!' “** »% »J« ►'« •*< ►’« e% ►*< »J« ►*< •£« s »’a «i« ►’< ■-*< >£» ►£•
10,000 AGENTS WANTED to supply FIFTY MILLIONS people with
thk life of By the author of
BEN,HARRISON . BEN HUR.
f.'wn, Z,ew Anrlu*. Hutivmw, Diplomat, and Vijadet Gan. Harn»<«n. i» wnuv
the <»*Uy«tu/A / Hutgraphy " '»•» *».»** »n-/ w» •• ’’ Ki-Got I vttar. us Ind .tllHtoißn
rand Ben llurandwtui Hen llnrrl*»«»«i byratno autfcor. SelLng !*%»»«•»•* ■ . M. mad $2.00. GroaAeiJl
Mauo MnklttM Mm CUiui. uUa. HI BBAWI) flllO*., 723 C lieainul FMIa. I
. » il <
irrwytl
_ w
A. P. STEWART & CO.,
69 Whitehall Street,
ATLANT A, - - GE ORGIA.
ACIDITY.— Dr. Schenck’s Mandrake
Pills stop fermentation and start sweet
digestion.
AGQE. — Both Liver r*id Stomach are
congested. Dr. Schenck’s Mandrake
Pills reduce all congested conditions.
Bl LI OUS N ESS.— Liver not purifying
the blood. Set it to work by using
Dr. Schenck’s Mandrake Pills.
BLOOD -POISON. — Stomach and
Liver at fault. Clean them and start
healthy action with Dr. Schenck’s
Mandrake Pills.
CH ILLS.— No chills without congestion.
All congestions yield to Dr. Schenck’s
Mandrake Pills.
CONGESTION .—Vessels of Liver or
Stomach gorged. Unload them by use
of Dr. Schenck’s Mandrake Pills.
COSTIVENESS.— Bad digestion tell
ing on the bowels. Correct all by using
Dr. Schenck’s Mandrake Pills.
DYSPE PSI A.— Stomach congested and
inflamed. Cleanse and treat with
Dr. Schenck’s Mandrake Pills and
Seaweed Tonic.
ERUPTIONS.—BoiIs, carbuncles, &c.,
show impure blood. Cleanse and
purify with Dr. Schenck’s Mandrake
Pills.
For Sale by all Druggists. Price 25 cts. per box;
8 boxes fur 65 cts.; or sent by mail, pustago free,
On receipt of price. Dr. J. H. Schenck & Suu, Phils,
w FWf’ W
If ADA A
piiNo-poms.
ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE.
Prices as reasonable and terms as easy as consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WAREROOMS,
Fifth Avenue, cor. 16thSt.,N. Y.
Ajax Engine on Conisn Boiler. m
The cheapest, first.- v
- •• '-a
G rist Mills, I hre-
shing Machines, c
etc., a spec ial ty.
Send fnr Illustrated . ‘>4 *3
Catalogue- A* /-
A.B.FAKQUII AR,
York, Peuna.
cn
U. /©r Pries List. GitaWoika, Pittab
Seines, Tents, Breech lon-diag doubl? Shotgun at $9.00;
■ barrel Breech loaders at $4 to sl2 ; Breech-loading
Elites to sls: Double-barrwl Muzzle loaders at s.\so
to Repoatin!* Rill •>-, Hi shooter, sl4 to S3O: Revolver?,
Bl to $2) -, Flobert RiHrs, $2.50 to Guns sent C. O. D. to
examine. Revolvers bv mail to any P. O. Address JOHN
ITO VSGKEAT U E XTERN GUX WORKS. I’UUburjr, Fenaa.
a WE SELb ALL AMERICAN
BICYCLES,
And guarantee LOWEST PRICES.
A. W. GUMP <V CO.. Dnytou. O.
Largest rctnii stock in America.
52 in OTTO, factory price &W.OO, our priqe 540.00
50 in. “ “ “ 55.00, “ “ 35.00
48 iu. “ “ “ 50 00, “ “ 33.00
46 in. “ “ “ 45.00, “ " 30.00
41 in. “ ’’ “ 40. W. “ ’’ 27.00
Order quick. A 150250 second-hand Wheels. Repair
in<rA Nickelin'-. Ri."-'-. onn« t-.v-H In
FARMERS ‘M-h'EN ”-■«
SAW MILL Ah
liege's Improved ’ 1 -ljj@^L_.
Circular Saw .Hill,’,
With Universal
Log- Beam Recti- jraS&jgSwW
linear Simulta- '■
nw>us Set
and Double E.'-‘«*T
centric Friction 1 Gs™;ei’"’'’
Feed. Mauufac- —r,
SALEH IRON WORKS. SALb-M, N. C.
JONES
PAYSthe FREIGHT
5 Ton Waaon Scales,
Iron Levers, Steel Bearings,
L. Tare Beam ard Beam Box for
Seo.
VC&f Ever* siie Scale for free price list
\ ’ Bienttoa thin paner and addresb
4 < V ’O”” OF aiUBHAMTON,
HI’’GILA IfTON. N. y.
I y lke your ice by the ’ delpy
Hvll (. • E 31A <’! 11N E. Ice, Ice cream. Ice waters,
! etc., in a few minutes. Price ineigniticant, the sa t
j feervmg indefinitely. Ice machine making by operation
I from hiW pounds to 18 p >unds of ice Price $6 to $l3O.
Ask t\>r circular-. L. !>ER 'IUmN Y A. CO., 126
Wt-Ht 25i!i Sirerf, New York.
G reat English Gout anj
SnisSi Rheumatic Remoiy.
Ova! iioxi-ll; round* 11 Pills.
I
RRf tt ’.-vc at home and make nwrv money w<>rWn*fc turhnn
VUiial! at enythin? else in the world Either s-x Coolly
FJIXX. Tcriu* kULL. Addre**, iiilKi. <<>., Augusta. Mamu,
FAMILIES we offer the
LADIES’
HOME JOURMLI
AND j
PRACTICAL HOUSEKEEPER g
From NOW
Ito J A NY, 7SSSS
Four months—balance of this year,®
ON RECEIPT OF
ONLYinCEHTS 3 “r|
■W—WFIW B
l.n'OK. liU- X- B
Breakfast and Dinner" Parties—Homeß
Cooking, Dainties and Desserts. Teas, Sup-B
pers. Luncheons and Receptions. Gives ex-M
plicilly all the little details women want toE
know. Tells how to entertain guests, how to|J
serve refreshments, what to have and how to
make it. Everything new and original, practi
cal and vzell tested by experts. Accompanying
the recipes will be remarks upon pretty table ad
juncts, methods cf serving and waiting, gar
nishing, table manners and etiquette.
Children's Page—lllustrated Stories.
Flowers and House Plants--finely illus
trated articles, edited by Eben E. Rexford,
with “Answers to Correspondents.”
Mother’s Corner—A page devoted to. the
care of infants and young children. Interesting
letters from subscribers giving views and meth
ods of management. Original articles from the
best writers. Illustrated articles on Games and
Home-made Toys. Amusements for Sick
KjChildren. Illustrated. Kindergarten. II-
Blustrated articles by Anna W. Barnard.
g gW 7/5 /57/W9 CO.,
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE
EKm Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use
Em in time. Sold by druggists. IM
I believe Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved
my life. —A. 11. Dowell,
Editor Enquirer, Eden-
S ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. |j
Mio
The best Cough Medi- M
cine is Piso’s Cure fob ■
E Consumption. Children E
gs take it without objection. M
By all druggists. 25c.
gsT CURES WHERE ALL ELSE
Ssia Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use M
in time. Sold by druggists. M
■zST CiiMMOr SEUSS
hl U OTJZII3
V ( \ For CATARRH, bay fever,
y \ Colds. Asthma, Bronchitis,
\vW diseases of the Head. Throife
\Lir and Lungs. Ingenious comblna
A ( tion of medical science and coa>
J mon sense. Continuous cuit
ozonized air penetrating, pu«.
fving and healing. It cures when
\ all (.then remedies fad. Bad Head*
aehe Cared in Five Minute*.
Yov ran be cured while sleep- SENT ON
Ing; you can be cured while
reading, or jierforming any 30 DA T 3 fRIAL
kind of labor. Illustrated
book showing origin of and gti.iJj ?l ,;i’J k.
how to cure all diseases of the
Head. Throat aud J.imps sent
FREE upon receipt of 2 cent
Sham p. .
Common Sense Cure Co.,
56 State St., Chicago. 111. -—f
WiAKVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
Auy book learned in one Trading.
Mind wondering cured.
Speaking without notes.
Wholly unlike artificial Hystents.
Piracy condemned by Supreme Court.
Great inducements to correspondence classes.
Prospe-'tus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A Hain
moixi. the w< rid-famed Specialist in Mind diseases,
i eniel Greenleaf Th out vson, the great Psychol
ogist. and others, sent post free by
PROF. A. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New York.
Alai Engine on Comlsli Baller.
The cheapest, first-
Jas*, horizontal El- .*>«-
glue in the market. 7,
Engines es all kind*,
forßawing. Thresh
lug, aud Ginning, a x*' l ?' -*
FpccialtT. Saw uud/y - ’ ll* ' - mt&l
G rist M ills, Th re- :
dhing Machines,
u\. \ r's * . ‘
fork, Renas.
Pennsylvania Agricnltnral Woris, Tori, Pa.
Farquhar's Standard Engines and Saw Mill*.
, . A Send for Catalogue. Port,sle Sts-
JW tiouary. Trsctien «nd Automine Ila-
t.'ijy''-.* . *- epec'.ntly. WanutH tq Mln
?S . I ivperiorta
AX”* 4 *
■ .....
Addreti A. B. FABCL’iLtB & SOM, York, Pa.
K'~ 'm- •
AfttLma < ’ure net togi ve tw
tc / in wor»t ctiio.U'Uuret:
efi'oets cure’* win-re a1 n* herd fail B
rt-s s’.F-ptical. 1/nce
I’r..
>4, “. «t. i .
u* m « < men Ihem nkve with
£8 I Signer's Sticky Fly
E paper sold by all druf
t or ina leti, imstaye paid, on receipt
oi V cent- T- K- DAU LEY. .Uunufac
torer. 5 7 Bcei-muu eel, Sew York.
klfllJlT I’ainlessly cured in 10 to 20
r-istW Nm9il Days, sanitarium or Homo
rn-tmeitt. I'rial Free. No Cure. So Pay. The
HuHinuc It .tn e<l> t ti.. L.t I- itveiie. Ind.
■ rMiesT I 1> Y. Book-k. ■ pinif. Business Form*
iU‘. rentuanship. Arithmetic. Short-hand, etc M
TEXAS LANDMS
"a lr.'< GODLUV A PORTElt.Hnlln*.Tex.
MV" tu SM n day. Bamplo* «ortt» *l.s', FRKB
y£ M Liues not under tho horao'* feet. Write
yu .< ,-w.ier Sttocy Hein tlolder Co.. 1 > c. ' le»i
A. N. U Thirty-six, 88.
*