Newspaper Page Text
LADIES’ DEPARTMENT.
VEU. FASTENER.
Among recent devices for the taring
of trouble in completing the feminine
toilet is a patent veil fastener. The
veilholder consists of two separate
pieces formed of wire. Each piece
has a loop at one end in which the end
tvf the veil is fastened. The other end
of the pieces terminates in the one case
in a hook and in the other in an eye,
and these are brought together when
the veil requires to bo adjusted.—
[Commercial Advertiser.
TI1K BEST BRAIDS ARE MOST ECONOMICAL
A great many women are annoyed
by the rapidity with which braid wears
off their dress skirts. The best quali¬
ties of skirt braid arc finer and often
do net-wear as long as tho cheaper,
coarser ones, The very best material
for binding a dress skirt is a bias band
of good velvet put on as a roll. It
will outlast three pieces of worsted
braid, and, moreover, will savo more
than its cost in saving line walking
shoes from (lie wear on the instep
caused by tho friction of braid; this
often causes tho shoo to bo shabby
here before any other part of it is
perceptibly worn.— [N. Y. Tribune.
RETURN OF THE CHIGNON.
One of the Wabash avenue hair
men, who lias lately been abroad,
makes the provisional prediction that
women will soon return to the chig¬
non.
“They arc talking about it,” ho said,
“over there. 1 don’t know why, and
they don’t, except on the ground that
everything elso has been tried, and
that fashion, like history, is a repeat¬
er. It depends somewhat upon the
sort of a bonnet which we will have.
I don’t know whether you are posted
on such matters or not, but there are
some bonnets which cannot be worn
with a chignon. I trust that sort of
bonnet will prevail. Of course, we
had tho chignon once, and I suppose
we could stand it again. But it was
the ungainliest of all the styles in hair
that wc ever hud.”—[Chicago Tribune.
THE QUEEN OF KOUMANIA.
The life of Carmen SyJva is more
interesting than tiiat of most Queens,
because she would have been more in¬
teresting than most women if she had
not been a Queen. It is a fascinating
little story told by the Baroness Staek
elberg of her running away when she
was a little girl to go to school with
the bailiff’s children. There was the
small poet's lack of family pride. Site
wrote verses when she was ten years
old and boldly began u novel at twelve.
She wished to know a great deal, to
be able to pass difficult examinations,
nnd she achieved it. Carmen Sylva
knows languages and history aud lit¬
erature and philosophy and economics
enough to hold her own with tho clev¬
erest Sophomore girl to bo found in
any college within 200 miles of Bos¬
ton.-—[New York Telegram.
NEW FADS IN PARIS.
Feminine Paris has several new fads,
which will therefore, of course, make
a strong Lid for popular favor in New
York. One of these is tie use of cut
steel in combs anu bonnet, trimmings.
Beside the bow-knot design there is a
hand of cut steel, witli balls of Ihe
fame and a series of small pins, for
holding the hair, Jeweled belts arc
also a novelty, and the fronts of fad
bodices are trimmed with a jeweled
plustern, which fils tho figure nnd is
like an elaborate embroidery of small
diamonds.
A new necklace is a heavy white
silk cord, which encircles the throat,
is hold by a rich diamond slide, and
the cords hang down, finished with
diamond mountings. Yellow is the
new color in writing paper, stamped
with silver and lead aud periwinkle
blue with silver stamps. There is
little change in form, but some of the
envelopes are long, with a square flap.
A caprice is to slump the paper with
the day of the weak in Spanish or
Arabic; the foreign letters in red or
yellow have a peculiar effect.—[New
York Mail anil Express.
AN AUSTRIAN IV J.WAN DOCTOR.
Dr. Uosa lverschbautncr has been
granted penni«sion by the Emperor of
Austria to practice as a doctor for
affections of the eye and to manage a
hospital for eye complaints. Dr. Uosa
Kerschbaumer isof Russian extraction,
and belongs to a well-known family.
Her father was life physician to the
late Emperor of Russia. She has
•tuddjod in Switzerland, and afterward
married Dr. Kerschbaumer of Vienna,
who wa* then assistant doctor at Pro¬
fessor Aril’s hospital. The newly mar¬
ried couple removed to Salzburg, and
Raided a inaison de sante, which they
managed together. Professor Ar'.t
often visited the establishment, and
wo* loud ia hi* prnlie of Mmc. Kcr
ichbftuincr, „ho wm very »uc esgfui
at a number of operations. llitherU,
thegified lady has worked in a quiet
and private manner; her work has
been tolerated, but ladies are not al¬
lowed to practice ns dc^tprs in Austria.
Dr. Rosa Kct-schbaumcr has, however,
written a great deal about the desira¬
bility of ladies being allowed jus
practicants in Austria, and she could
not very well have received a hand¬
somer reward for her labor than being
herself the first lady to receive official
permission to practice in Austria.—
[New York Telegram.
A WOMAN WINDOW DRESSER.
There is a jeweller’s window on
Broadway, just above Tiffany’s, which
attracts a good deal of attention. The
trinkets shown in it are beautiful, but
this is not uncommon; the noticeable
feature is rather the skill with which
they are displayed. The softest, most
exquisite colors arc chosen as back¬
grounds, and against silk or brocade
or airy gauze the flashing gems are
wonderfully combined. I have not
passed this particular window in two
years without stopping to look at it,
but it w r as not until yesterday that I
learned, so to speak, its history. The
window dresser’s position in
all large city establishments is
important and well paid. The
dresser attached to this jewelry house
fell ill and in his absence a young
woman who sometimes brought paint¬
ed plaques and other trifles for sale
asked to be allowed to experiment.
Permission was given without much
enthusiasm, but the results were such
that the dresser had to seek another
situation on recovery. Since that time
the young artist has given every Mon¬
day to a fresh design for the jeweller’s
window, and it pays her much better
than plaque painting. Window dress¬
ing is a business hardly as yet invaded
by women, but one in which it might
be supposed their taste would come
excellently in play.—[New York
Commercial Advertiser
FASHION NOTES.
French modistes advise the use of
t
old skirts for the carriage,as anew one
i3 ruined by sitting in it. With a
bodice or a new corsage any skirt will
pass iu a box or carriage.
For the nonce iron and brass bed¬
steads are out of favor, the substitute
being a French bod of white wood,
dressed with a rolled bolster and a
Chinese spread of white crape, em¬
broidered with flying birds and but¬
terflies.
A eltair tidy of pink in yellow Can¬
ton silk is finished at the ends with
gold tinsel put on in diamond shape
any depth that may suit tho worker.
Over this is grouped at eaeli end and
in the centre gold sequins in diamond
shape the depth of the tinsel.
Japanese gold thread is now exten¬
sively introduced into decorative needle
work. When line, it is often doubled,
which is indeed more effective than a
single thread of the coarser kind. Tiny
stitches of self-colored silk are passed
over it in the stylo known as “couch
ing.”
So many of the so-called new stitches
are very familiar to those who are old
enough to remember the lace work
which was the craze about twenty
years ago. Many specimens of needle¬
work show a variety which lias been
copied from the old German “filling
in stitches.”
Lightning Strokes Statistics.
The statistics of lightning strokes in
Germany during th. past 26 years
have been investigated bv Herr Kast
ner, who shows that the annual num¬
ber of cases lias more than doubled in
that time. Last year there were no
fewer than 1145 strokes. They are
most frequent in the hottest months of
the year, June and July, anil in the
hottest hours of the day, or those fol¬
lowing them (from 3 to 4 p. m.). It
appears that the thunderstorms pro¬
ceed from the hills, and tho parts of
their course most liable to bo struck
are woodless and flat place*, valleys
of rivers, and low meadows, near
lakes, while wooded and hilly districts
generally escape. This last deduction
is hardly in accordance with our pop¬
ular ideas on the subject. — [London
Globe.
The Life of George Washington.
T--, a little boy of nine, handed
in the following composition on George
Washington.
“George Washington was the father
of hi* country one day he went in his
farthers yard and cut down a tree.
What arc you doing asked his father i
nin trying to tell a lie and cannot when
he grTW up he was president and was
killed by a man named getto who was
jcllisli of him and the no 9 engine
house was draped in black.—[Harper’*
Bazar.
FOB THE HOUSEWIFE.
TO BOIL CORNED BEEF.
Pat the beef in water enough to
cover it, and let it heat slowly, and
boil slowly, and be carefnl to take oil
the grease. Allow about twenty min¬
utes of boiling for each pound of meat.
Put with it a small carrot, a piece of
turnip, one large ouion peeled, in
which stick half-a-dozen cloves. These
vegetables arc not to be served, but are
merely to give a flavor to the meat.
If the beef is to be eaten cold, take
the kettle off the fire, carefully cover
and leave the beef to get cold in .the
liquor in which it is cooked; this wifi
make it deliciously tender, If too
much saltpetre has been used in the
picklo, a small piece of charcoal with
salt meat will remove the unpleasant
flavor.
LEG OF MUTTON.
Mutton cooked in this way has a
very superior flavor and a juiciness
quite unknown to an ordinary roast.
Have the butcher bone the leg; in
place of the bone insert a stuffing
made of four ounces of butter, minced
parsley, and a very little finely-minced
onion, salt, pepper, and flour enough
to bind together. Tie the leg in place
and roll it in melted butter, covering
R as thickly as possible with fine, dry
bread-crumbs. Put it in the oven,
and, as soon as the fat begins to run
from it, baste well. The next time
yon baste it sprinkle with flour. Do
this several times in order that tho
crust may form which will keep In all
juices. Fifteen minutes to tho pound
will be sufficient fora rare roast. Lay
the meat in the baking pan on a trivet
to prevent any possibility of scorch¬
ing.— [American Agriculturist.
A GOOSEBERRY BATTER PUDDING.
Green gooseberries call to mind tho
delights of a fruit batter-pudding
made of gooseberries. An English
batter-pudding is a delicious dessert,
especially when made with fruit; but
it requires care in preparation. Tho
ingredients are a pint of milk, a tea¬
cup of pastry flour, livo eggs, half a
teuspoonful of salt and a pint of fruit.
If gooseberries are used simply head
and tail them, and set them aside
till the batter is prepared. Separate
the whites and yolks of the eggs. Mix
the flour with enough milk to make a
smooth batter, add the yolks of the
eggs beaten thoroughly, and then tho
rest of the milk and the salt, and
finally the whites of the eggs. Turn
half the batter into a well-greased tin
mould, add the gooseberries and tho
remainder of the batter. Suspend tho
mould in a pot of boiling water, and
keep the water boiling around it for
an hour and a half. Serve it with a
nice hard sauce.—[New York Tribuiio.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
A good wool dress is better than a
cheap silk.
Soak machine .oil stains in cold
water before washing.
An old glove of undressed kid makes
a good silver polisher.
A little powdered borax added to
starch gives increased stillness.
Glass fruit jars may well be utilized
as tea and coffee receptacles.
Leather chair seats may be revived
by rubbing with egg white, well
beaten.
Wash white paint with whiting and
water which is not so trying to tho
hands as ammonia.
No matter how sharp a knife may
be, cutting bread with it or dipping it
iu hot fat will dull the edge.
When acid of any kind gets on
clothing, spirits of ammonia will kill
it. Apply chloroform to restore the
color.
A saturated solution made by dis¬
solving alum in boiling water will
keep ants out of closets if used fre¬
quently.
X he toughest fowl can be made eat¬
able if put in cold water, plenty of it,
nnd cooked very slowly from fivo to
six hours.
After taking cake from tho oven,
let it remain in the pan about five min¬
utes ; it will then come out easily with¬
out breaking.
Discolored rattan chairs are made
pretty by a coating of black or golden
brown paint and finished with a hand¬
some cushion.
Ready-made clothing, whether outer
or inner garments, should have all the
buttons sewed on more securely beforo
they are worn.
I
Mark the children’s wash clothe*
with red cotton and seo that they are
put in the wadi every week, just as the
nursery towels arc.
Plenty of clothespins should be
kept handy. Havo a box for these
and drop them in the suds once in
a while, and then wipe them dry, as
they are apt to get dusty and soil the
clothes.
Oelatine,
A gnat many who use gelatine and
Who are very fond of It when made into
dishes, tempting which jellies and other delightful
and prominently appear at ail
parties receptions, are not aware made. of
what materials this substance is
A great many dealers, who sell hundreds
of pounds of it annually, are wholly un¬
aware of its process of manufacture.
When pure it has very little taste, and to
be made palatable must be mixed with
wine or other substances. Pro perly pre¬
duct,and pared, it is a very agreeable food pro
is recommended for invalids, not
only on account of its “masticability,”
but its easiness of digestion. It is
recommended by physicians as being nu¬
tritious and healthful, giving vital action
to the blood and strength to the body.
The purest kind of gelatine is obtained
from the refuse of the sturgeon. '1 h : s has
a clear,almost a colorless apperance. great jelly
thickening power, and produces a
much superior to the ordinary gelatine,
which is manufactured from hoofs, skins
and bones of auimals. But let it be said
that the materials used must be per¬
fectly employed fresh, and the most cleanly gelatine, pro¬
cesses and in purifying it, in producing in order to mak it
e
sweet and palatable. Great skill and care
are required to separate the pure gelatine
from the other substances which arc gen¬
erally found with it. The character of
gelatine is very much the same as the
white of an egg, though it possesses less
nutritive material. A substance some¬
what similar to gelatine is found in sea¬
weeds. In China it is made of birds’
nests, and is considered a greut luxury.
A knowledge of chemistry aud ingenious
methods have brought to the use of the
world many economical and valuable
food products that in primitive days
would have been allowed to go tt> waste
and decay. increasing The use of gelatine is con¬
stantly in the larders of our
principal heteis and restaurants, and our
leading caterers would hardly think of
getting up a feast without using it in
some of their choice preparations one
way or another.
A Railway to Jerusalem.
A railway from Jaffa to Jerusalem has
at length been actually begun, and there
will be stations at Emmaus, Ajalon,
Kirjath Jcarim, or rather at the places
that ouce bore those names. At Jerusa¬
lem the railway will eventually join a lino
which is to be built thither from Alex¬
andria, and which will ran through Ka
desh-llarnea and Beershebu. Here the
old order of things and the new will
strangely meet. Already they do so at
the pyramids, to which tin English four
horse coach now runs daily from Cairo.
Almost beneath the shadow of the ven¬
erable monuments*Euglish British young officers ladies
play lawn tennis, while
sit and sip sodas and brandies on the
veranda of the Payramids Hotel.
Tms is the time for degrees, but you
do not want to find the thermometer
registering too many of them in the
morning.
Timber Lauds and Machinery
are bought and sold extensively by Thomas
Camp, manager for Joe S. Nix, of Atlanta,
Ga., who, with an experience of twenty-two
years, has sold more Steam Engines, Sawmills,
Cotton Gins and other machinery thau any
house In Georgia. Our patrons who desire to
buy machinery or sell lands will do well to
write to Mr. Camp.
day, Habit and is at a last cable; cannot we weave break a It. thread each
we
Children Enjoy
The pleasant flavor, gentle action and sooth¬
ing effects of Syrup of Figs, when In need of a
laxative and if the father or mother he costive
or bilious the most gratifying results follow
its use, so that It is the best family remedy
known and every family Bhould have a bottle.
With whom do mermaids probably flirt?
With swells of the ocean
Smith’s Tonic SjTiip^Kivcs^perfect , Ruiseille, satlsfnc
hid.
Flannel certainly shirts are red. almost rlpo. Some of
them are
E. A. Boorl, Toledo, Ohio, says • "Hall's
Catarrh Cure cured my wife of catarrh fifteen
years ago arid she has had no return ol it. It’s
a Bure cure.” Sold by Druggists, 75o.
There has been no inquiry for fur-liaed over¬
coats this week.
_
Uric Rail way.
This popular Eastern Line is running solid
Vestibulod trains, consisting of beautiful dining day
coaches, between Pullman Cincinnati, sleeping Chicago, nnd New York cars, and
Boston. during the All trains run nnd via passengers ljike Chautauqua holding
season, privileged stop off at this
through tickets are to read
world-famed resort, lie sure your tie loots
via N. Y.. L. E. & W. R. B.
Summer
Weakness
Loss of Appetite.
Sick Headache,
Quickly Cured by
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
THE BREAT ENGLISH REMtOY.
BEECHAM’S PILLS
For Bilious sM Horans Disorders.
“■Worth » (Joinwi a B#t" but told
for 25 Cents,
BY ALL BnttiBISTS.
MONEY ■wl THIS Made and Easily Think and It Rapidly. Over l
HEAD
***Ws*int lOO men wliu)^»o iu aiisrgrsyOrrit. they
We will them sitiintiuiiB wine" light and etnplo»iu*Ht «»B
mtme y rapidly—the round. labor Require* being uo capital greet edu¬
■di (lie year or
cation Home of our be 6 t *a or men are count quick r/ bojrs. and
Younc roen or old will do. Remuneration is
aura We have need l’or 1<I0 men within the neat thirty
tsjssa&sim sfflF
nniiite BFW mJ$$s | H ■■■ 8 HMH b'q'V'i nnd Whiskey i l imnie Habits with
»
AUanla.Ua. uilice 104% Whitehall St
PENSIONS OLD (HAIMS SETTL.su
UNDER NEW LAW.
Soldiers. Widows, Parents, sand
for blank applications faaitea and Information. Fatuok
. Ac«at W ashmen** it Ck
Water Ai a Soltent.
Water dissolves various substance*,
such as sugar, because its atoms are very
minute, add, therefore, permeate the
pores or spaces between the atoms of those
substances, and overcoming their attrac
tion for each other, cause them to sepa
rate. But hot water dissolves them more
quickly, because the water as it is heated
srasr™Tn,rdU;$rr; another and Thus
heat require less room.
assists in making the particle of
water is undergoing repel those of the substance which
solution, and gives the
water a freer passage between the atoms
of the sugar or other melting substance.
Cold water dissolves three times its own
weight of sugiir, hot water a little more,
the increase of temperature influencing
to than a greater the extent of the substance rapidity of dissolved, solution
amount
stirring liquid also hastens thd solution,
Watch Your Health,
When you feel chilly and feverish, take
pound warning. An ounce A dose of preventive of Smith’s is worth Tonic a
of cure. or two
Syrup, Ky., taken made by this Ur. time Joha Bull, of Louisville,
at may ward ott a dan¬
gerous or beneficial probably fatal illness. It the has an im¬
mediate effect upon mucous
membrane and circulatory system. Its timely
pneumonia. use will frequently slight cold ward will off l>e an attack the of
A gone in
morning night. It if is a truly dose of this household remedy necessity is taken at
a and
no family can afford to be without it. It pastes
good and children will ask for it. It 1 b in fact
of a great quinine discovery, and having its all the qualities. good effects
none of evil Jt is
harmless to the most delicate invalid and will
not derange the system. It is a certain cure
for chills and fever, colds, influenza, la grippe
and all other effects of malarial influence.
A Welsh rarebit at night is better than a
hair in the butter at breakft ait.
sickly That and bright delicate and lively beforo little his mother hoy used to he
gave him
Ur. “good Bull’s candies.” Worm Destroyers. He calls them
Life 1s a comedy to those who think, a
tragedy to those who feel,
FITS stopped free by J)b. Kune's Gjikat
Nkuve Rkstoker. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise oml *3 trial
Lottie free. Dr. Kline, Kil Arch St., Phila., Pa
THE LARGEST
STOCK
AND
LOWEST PRICES.
Diamonds
J.P. STEVENS &*BR0.,
47 WHITEHALL STREET.
FOE DYSENTERY.
BILE BEANS.
Try “BILE BEANS SMALL” (40 lit¬
tle beans In each bottle). Very
email—easy to take. Price of
either size, 25 cents.
*rBUY OF YOUR DRUGGIST.
"Bile Cartsh, Tex., Jan. 19.
We have nsa<! Beans" fora long time, and
they have given perfect satisfaction 1, m each case.
C. McIUnxlu
WALL PAPER
BARGAINS!
We will ftuarantec all these clean new the goods rolL just
le, aud full length—S yards to
An H-vd. roll White buck Paper, 3 to Gc.
A« roll Gi|t Paper, 3 10 10c.
Ap S-y«D roll Enjboxsc ;l (Jilt Paper, 8to 15c.
Gilt Border*, 4 Ip IS inches wide, 2 and
Sc. P«r yqril,
Border. Without (HI,, 't t(* 0 indie, lc. per
yard.
Sen I fa. ip stamps for samples of the best and
great st Parsnips in the country.
to*, 3E3C, cj^vso-st,
1103 mail STREET,
Montlon this paper- I'ruvidence. K. I.
BORE WEILS I MAKE
Our 'V'ul| gappiilft am (he (Rost MONEY!
^sMmssvA- other. FAIL! Any t|z S
e ,
inches to 44 inches diameter.
LOOMIS & NYMAN,, Catalogue
TIFFIN, - OHIO.4 W£a FREE!
ATTENTION
MEN and BOYS!
Don’t run your Boots and Shoes
over «t the Heel. Buy a pair of
feu'er* Mur|iynV from Counter dealer, A: If eel e»tlf- send
*i»e. your an# leoeivea or pair
in $tajups
by mail. We guarantee them to
ni*w«. MORTON Any HEELStIFFENES boy can put them on. CO
!*!) Chambers St., Npw York.
ji IF YOU WANT A
Ejf . COTrCN PRESS,
/ i . ket, Cheapest Hieel on the Lined Mar
or a
■ f Hav Press, Description
L 11 jgh rAmWOUKHs / ft'lvK’lRoS^ and Price Seuc Cuattanoo- by WOfID Ite
a. Tenu. Box ZOO.
(SAVJt IB IB PAPKH.)
If you want your ootton free from
higheat briecs being for knapped it, or gin ginned out, and ro
wive the nave it on a gin
shsrpenwl w ith the Fa rmern 9 Uln Haw U. (inturner
Hbarpener. No tiling. Write to J. No, FALLS
«fc CO., Memphis, 300 Tenii., li» Ro Usm id frj the 19 Ol. Cotton Mills
hX- (or circular*. Machines u*e.
throughout the South shipped on trial.
KBim SSSS
Ml and Fathers are an
you get ffukbguia, your money. ^
AUy, |>.
Pennsyfvanfa Agricultural Works,York, Pa
/-• Farquhar’* Standard Engines, Saw WiH*. Rhinal*
a »a.TO! , jsas?i2t_
t
, I
i
Address A. B. FAROUHAR CO.. York. Pa.
Don't read! Don't think!
Don’t bdievC I Now. 4T0 VOU *
better ? *
You women who think that
patent medicines are a hum
& ^HCl Ur. r\ PierCC , S r- Favor*
ite . Prescription biggest
the
U S best knowfl ^ of all)—does
your lack-of-faiith Cure COme ?
T *t , S Very easy to “ don , t ”
world. in
this Suspicion alwaVS ’
____.« more easily than COn
fidence. But doubt — little
faith 1 — never never made maae a a SICS sirb
woman well — and the “ Fa- ■
vorite Prescription ” has cured
thousands of delicate, weak
women, which makes us think
that our “ Prescription ” i£
better than your don’t believe.
We’re both honest. Let us
come Pierce’s together. You tiy Dr.
Favorite Prescription.
If it doesn’t do as represented,
you get your money again.
Where proof’s so easy, can
you afford to doubt?
Little but active—are Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets.
Best Lives Pills made; gen¬
tle, yet thorough. They regu¬
late and invigorate the liver,
stomach and bowels.
jjj GOING NORTH
—OR
-TAKE ONE OF THE- WEST
BURLINGTON ROUTE
-THROUGH TRAINS £*iOM
ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO
Kansas Paul City, and St. Joseph, Minneapolis* Perrver, St.
The Beet IJne for all Point* North nnd
West and the Pacific (oast.
CHEi!LP XjANUS.
hru'.hn, A't.ngthe Colorado. Linos of the Burlington Wyoming Route and North- In No
western liaml Kan sit*, there is still some <*«Vern«
meut cheap land held awaiting b* individuals. settlement, These ai lands well as other
are among
the beat to be had anywhere in the ooupgry for agri¬
cultural end grazing purposes, and in tho compara¬
tively new purchased districts are mupv improved tAmis which
can be at a very low rate.
For descriptive land pamphlets, Burlington mg-ps, folders, etc,,
call on any agent of the use, or
address
HOWARD TtVmV. BLUOTT, a£:; 8t Lou, Mo
H. R. - *> *
CHAS. II. K. 151.AH UUDIAJM, K, Trav.T'relirlit ie Posh. Ait.,
1811 F. Market Trnv. Pass. Apt.,
North St., Nashville, Teun.
1 IF YOU WISH A /s/tifflUkfSSW T
GOOD
REVOLVER
purchase one of the cele¬
brated SMITH A WK8SON (( ^
arms. The finest small arms
r manufactured and the JJ »
first choice of all exports.
Manufactured in calibres 32 ,38 and 44-1U). 8in
gleor double action. Constructed Safety Hammerlesa entirely and
Target ity wrought models. etcel, carefully inspected of beet for Qual¬
manship and stock, t hey unrivaled for work¬
durability and are Donotbedeccivodby finish*
cheap malleable accuracy.
for the caat~fron Imitation* which
are onlv often sold genuine dangerous. article ami are nod
WESSON unreliable, Revolvers but The SMITH \
are address all stamped upon the bar¬
rels with Ann’s name, and d*to9 of patent*
and are guaranteed perfect in every detail. Iq.
aist upon having the genuine article, and if your
dealer cannot supply you an Order sent to adareM
below will receive prompt and careful attention.
Deacrptlvecataloc-no plicaton. an 1 oricea furnished upon &p
SMITH & WESSON,
IV“Mention this paper. Wprin gHfld, [1 Im||
2 IPK wmm 1 OF —allNVALlTiN— FU RNITURE. (VV
RIM; ,1 I bV.WV'OK-'S.l/ II
. and r
S3@fki£\WHEEL ■**
STY _I jCHAIRS M m
We retail atthe loiceet A«to«iiie Brake
P “-FREE
LuucTtG uru. co„ 14 * NTsth St. ruufe.. f*
honorably discharged Soldiers and Sailors of the utf
war, who are Incapacitated from earning a support.
Widows the same, without regard to cause of death.
Dependent Parents and Minor Children also inter¬
ested. Over 20 years’ experience. References in all
parts of the country. No charge If unsuccessful.
Write at once for "Copy of Law," blanks aud full in¬
structions all fbkk to R, Me A LIjI ST PH *fc Cl*.
(Successors 713, Waahington, to Wm. Conard 1>. & CoA JP. O. Dak *
C.
WM. FITCH & CO. f
10’J Corcoran Building, Washington, D. C,
PENSION ATTORNEYS
ofovertf.l years’ experience. Successfully pros*
cute peusions and claims or all kinds in shorten
possible time. HTNo KB L P,LE3s si ccBsssyu
Make Your Own Rugs.
Oteros, Tripe List of Rug Machines, Rug
SMI
■ • thoroughly lAUghc by MAiL. Circulars xrea.
Bryant'* tal (ege, 437 Mwu buttaJo, N. f,
opium sauneaus
—
25 CTS,
ESI TOMBSMy* ¥r4s»!J*Jdi« We have eold Big G lor
VBk Ohio, * I>. R. DVCHB ft CO.,
Sf .00. Bold by Broggliti
L M-P..... ••**♦«»»» • * •• .... 18011
tot CURES S t WHERE s, asa nTltSOffi?*® Ufie
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