Newspaper Page Text
l>urchiiM»l at
Fact* Wanh knnnln,.
Q. 1« Alabaxtine nxpemivaf
A. No, it la the ohwqxwt article tor the
purpoac on the market,
Q. lion in that? Cannot I purchaao kat-
tomfnfrg at a few cents per pound?
A. \e\ kai«ominen can bo i
Aiinont any tirice.
V’ Why Mien is Alabastine lean cxpenaiva?
a. in the first, place a package of A In has-
line coating a few cents more, will cover
double the surface that a package of kalso*
mine will.
Q. What other advantage has AlaUntlno
tlirt ktiiwimines do not possess?
A. Alaba.tlne l« entirely different from
All kalsomines. It is manufactured from a
tmse In itself a cement^ and wheu applied to
A w all w,ts hard.
O. How do knlsominvs differ from this*
A. KfilHomines are made from whiting,
clays, cbaJks or some inert powder for a
t»n»e, and are entirely dnpondf-nt on animal
glue to hold them on the wall.
Q. What, are the results?
A. In one case tho Alabastino being a ce
ment hardens with age, and the kalsomlne
as soon ns the glue, which constitutes its
binding quality decays, rubs and scaI«* off,
ns it has nothing to hold it on the wall.
Q. Hoes Alsbastlne require washing and
temping off before coating?
A. No; Alabastino when once applied to
a clean surface can Im> recoated for any
length ot time without hnving to wash or
scrape the walls.
Q. Doom thin feature count for much?
A. Ask any practical housekeeper who
has Iwm driven from home to have walls
washed and scraped, wliother it will bode-
siruble to have all of this overcome, and
walls improved instead of spoiled by coat
ing them.
Q* How can 1 get Alaliastinc?
A. From your local paint dealer. If bo
does not k« oil it in stock, and trios to soli you
some-thing else, tell him you are determined
to try Alabastino, an I If ho will not keep it
3'OU WiJJ get it. elsewhere.
A Hindu bee, with all its industry,
energy and innumerable journoys it baa 1
to perform, will not collect more than u
tcaspoonful of honey in a Biuj'lo season. *
Laoibh needing a tonic, or children who
wani building up, should take Brown’s Iron
Hillers. II in pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
Indigestion. Ill I lo iniiess and Llvor (Jotn-
plaiute, makes tho Blood rich and pure.
'I iik Argentine Ilopuhlio has suspended
telegraphic communication.
Mr. Clarence O. Iityelow
Prescription Druggist,
iff!flth Avc., N. V. City, says
The People's Confidence
line been won by
HOOD’S
Sarsaparilla
In a Manner Never Kqunllcd.
“ J am, on general principles, aversod to ox-
prcHHlng my view’s, pro or con, in ronpret
to any proprietary article, but in the light
of Hood’# Sarsaparilla being the product
of a brother apothecary, will sky, Hood’s
HarsaimrlllalmsiKicured n place in the
public confidence never attained by
any proprietary medicine that I have
handled during an experience of more
than \ wenty yearn in the drug trade. It.
Must Possess True Merit
as a remedial agent to retain its increas
ing popularity as a hoiirehold mnody.
Thu sole of Hood's Snnmparllla exceeds
t hat of all similar preimrat Ioiir combined,
of which I keep in stock some fifteen or
twenty, its
Praises are Proclaimed
dally at my counter by those who have been
benefited by it. many of wlinni are |hm-
•*uml JU(|iiaint uin-ea.” i'i.amicnik t).
Bi(ii>:i.ow, A put la eary.
Every Month
many women suffer from Executive or
Scant Menstruation; they don't know 1
who to confide in to get proper advice.
Don’t confide in anybody but try
Br&dfield’s
Female Regulator
n Specific tor PAINFUL, pnOFUSE.
•CANTY, SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR
MENSTRUATION.
Until l. "WOMAN" mailed flee.
DHhH'lfie REGULATOR CO., Allinli, 0«.
Po'4 bjr all Urugilili,
.iXllA
The Useful Elephant.
Tho normal load for continuous travel
of n fair sized elephant is eight hundred
pounds, so the nnimnl is oqnnl to eight
ponies, smalt mules, or asses; to five
stout pack mules or bullocks, and to
three and ono-thlrd of a camel. Under
luch n load the elephant travels at a fair
speed, keeping well up with an ordinary
army or baggage train, requiring no mado
road, few guards, and occupying loss
depth in column than othor animals. lie
is invaluable in jungle country and all
The old saying that " con
sumption can be cured if
taken in time” was poor com
fort. It seemed to invite a
trial, but to anticipate failure.
The other one, not so old,
“consumption can be cured,"
is considered by many false.
Both are true and not
true ; the first is prudent—
one cannot begin too early.*
The means is careful liv
ing. Scott’s Emulsion of
cod-liver oil is sometimes an
important part of that.
Let us send you a book on
careful living—free.
Scorr&UoWMt, Chemist*. 131 South 5th Avttue,
New York.
Your druggist keep* S tott's Emulsion of cod-liver
ctl—all Urugguu everywhere do. ft.
Kennedy’s
MedicaiDiscovery
Takes hold in ihis order:
Bowels,
Liver,
Kidneys,
Inside Skin,
Outside Skin,
D -ivtag everything before It that oaffct to *h out
You know whether i
you need it or not.
••M by #rc«7 4ru«gUt. and manufactured by
•ONALO KENNEDY,
KI.BPIIANT CAIlllYIWI 1,009.
roadless regions where heavy loads are
to be moved. In Burmah, aud on the
cast and southeast frontier, elephants are
absolutely necessary fur military supply,
When once a good road Is made the beast
is, of course, easily bentcu liy wheeled
carriages.
He shines most as a special Providence
when the cattle of a baggage train or tho
horses of n battery are stalled in a bog or
struggling helplessly at asleep place. An
elephant’s tusk and trunk servo at once
as lever, screw-jack, dog-hooks, and
crane, quickly setting overturned carls
and gun-carriages right, lifting them by
main force or dragging thorn in narrow,
winding deities, where a long team can
not act; while his head, protected by a
pad, is is ram of immense force and supe
rior handiness.
A born forester, it is iu jungle- work
that the iuboring elephant, outside Gov-
eminent service, is seen at his best.
The ten planters of Amain and Ceylon
find him useful in forest clearing and as
a pack animal. They even yoke him to
the plow. Ho is the lending hand iu the
teak trade of Burmah—unrivaled iu the
heavy toll of the timber yard, where he
piles logs with wonderful neatness and
quickness. Hmall timbers are carried ou
the tusks, chipped over and hold fast by
tlie trunk. A log with a thick bult is
seized with judicious appreciation of
balance, while long and heavy balks arc
levered and pushed into place.—"Roust
and Atari iu India."
A Store 01 the Congo.
Tills is a picture of a sort of building
that, is very common at all tho missionary
stations along the Congo River. I* rep
resents the stove at Han/.a Mnntoke, one
of the largest stations ot the American
Baptist Missionary Union on tiro Congo.
Missionaries have found ilml trading is a
necessary part of their work. Tho Congo
Free Btnto has Issued a silver currency
which lias holes stamped through il, so
that the natives, who are not blessed
with pockets,cau thread (he coin on
strings and wear their money around
their necks. They, however, are not
taking very kindly to the medium of
exchange. They cannot see that tho
coins represent any value, and they de
cline to receivo them in oxchaugo either
for labor or I lie products of their little
farms. The missionaries are therefore
compelled to use merchandise as money.
These goods nro in considerable va
riety, including unbleached cottou cloth,
red blankets, bandanna handkerchiefs,
second-hand clothing, old red coats from
tiie British army stores, cheap bloc glass
heads, and mnny other articles. Tho
goods aro sent mostly from Liverpool,
and are packed away in stores like that
shown in the picture From Matadi, llio
head of navigation ou tho lowc. Congo,
caravans of men take the goods to
various stations up tha river.
Once every day the missionary opens
his store. In this picture, Mr. C. E.
Ingham, one of the best known of the
Congo missionaries, is lepresenied us
standing in the door. It is the hour
when tlie store is open, and Mr. Ingham
9T0ltE AT UAN7.A MANVKIiR, CONOO.
is exchanging goods for jams, fowls and
other articles of food. The missionaries
also use those goods to pay for native
labor in binding their kousos and ior
other purposes. -New York World.
A Curious l’liommienmi.
Russia's Czar and Czarina.
No monarch in the world to-day seems
to bo of toner a subject of discussion
Ibsn Alexander lit., Czar of all tlie
Kussius. No one can help talking about
ALEXANDER III. TEODOROVNA.
Cssr of Russia. Czarina ot Russia.
Itueslu as a country. It is so big, si)
silent) so inscrutuble and so restless.
Prison and plots—those you find every
where, as you find them in no other
country on the globe. Lately there Ims
happened in Russia the driving out of
the Hebrews, and tlieu the great famine.
But now there is talk of something more
dreadful than you cun imagiuo. It may
be only talk. No one really knows; so
let us hopo that it is. For the fear of
which men now speak of is this—that
tho Czar will insist on making tho peas,
ants serfs again, which Is really making
them slaves. You can understand how
much we pray that such things ure not
to he.
Alexander If.,tlie fatheroi tho present
Czar, proclaimed in 1801 the freedom of
the serfB. But these Russian peasants,
helpless and ignorant from long genera
tions of dependence on their masters,
have shown themselves little able to take
cure of themsclvo, getting into every
Kind of trouble. Bo Alexander III., at
men say, thinks the only thing now to do
!s to make the peasants serfs again.
Alexander III. was born at Bt. I’elers
burg on tho 10th of March, 1815, and
Hscended the throne on tiie 13th of March,
1H81. He cuino into possession of two
tilings not originally intended for turn—
tho crown of Russia and his wife. ' lie
was not, you see, born lieii to tlie Ibron:.
There was an elder brother, dearly loved
by his parents and carefully educated.
One day, in play, Alexander Innt Ins
elder brother, Nicolai, who on the 21th
of April, 1808, died from his injuries.
Nicolai was at that time engaged to the
1’riiiccss Dag mar, sister to the Princess
of Wales, and iu dying lie told Aloxandci
that, besides leaving him Iris kingdom,
he gave him non,"thing more precious
still—the hand of the beautiful wounu
who was to Imvo been his wife,
Home time u f ter Alexander and Dag-
mar were married and lie lias been the
best and kindest husband. We think
sometimes, knowing bow unhappy the.
Russians are, that Alexander must liu
cruel, but nobody, among all his nieces
and nephews, is love I so well ns he. Ho
is almost tho strongest man in Euro;m
and can bond a horse hoc in his hand,
tie is besides Ilia moil truthful man in
Russia, so they say. lie never forgives,
so they say, too, any untruth from one of
his friends. In his youth he was ne
glcctcd iu every nay, the love, tender
ness and cure of court and family all be
ing bestowed upon the cl<i"r brother, who
was heir. But all tho glory now is Ms,
though Ihc happiness may not he.—New
York World. ’
A Croat Wheel to Run Big Cabins.
Many people have looked into the
deep excavation made by the Third Ave
nue Cable'Railroad Company for its new
power-house, at Bayard streot. and the
1 2
.lohtinie with his mouth open ns wide
as he cau get it—ql) for medicine; (2)
for honey.—Judge.
The contract between Prussia and
Bremen for the enlargement of tho
Kaiser Harboi of Breraorhaven will he
begun at ont o and pushed on with en
ergy. The cost will be $3,750,1100.
Presenting Arms to a Cat.
Some fifty years ago a very high Eng-
lish ottieial died iu a fortnss, at a place
that is one of tho centers ot Hrahatnic
orthodoxy, and at the moment when the
news of his death reached tho Sepoy
guard at the main gate, a black cat
rushed out of it. Tire guard presented
arms to the eat as a salute to the flying
spirit o( the powerful Englishman, ami
tiie coincidence took so firm a hold of
the locality that up to a few years ago
neither exhortation uor orders could |n-e-
vent n Hindu (entry at Unit gate from
ne-eiitiug arms to any cat that passed
■ * «r niuht Itomhav flndiai i'uuM.
A GREAT HOPE TRACTION WHEEL.
Bowery, and wondered why it is necess
ary to make such a big hole. After a
glance at the accompanying illustration
they will know the leasuii.
Tho picture shows one ol the great
drive-wheels which will be used there to
turn tho cable. Four of these aie being
made for the work at Cleveland, U.iio.
Those immense wheels are th'rty-twu feet
in diameter, six feet one inch wide, on
tho face, and provided with twenty two
groves, each suitable for a 9) incli rope.
Tho finished weight of each wheel is
seventy-five tons and they are among (he
largest ever made.
The wheel, however, is only one purl
of the powerful and complicated ma
ehinery which supplies the power t > drive
the cables. This machinery must noces-
jurily have great power in order lo ,u-
eompUsh tho work upon the 'fluid avenue
road now done by the horses. Tlie con-
i tiugency of its breaking down and slop
ping truffle all along the line must, of
course bo provided for. I his w ill be
done with a duplicate plant.
The transportation of the big drive
wheels from the shops where they iru
made, and tho setting of them in place
in New York will be an expensive and
somewhat difficult job.—" New York
World.
A Colossal riuno.
Booker, the manufacturer of pianos for
the Imperial Court of Russia, has received
from the Court Chamberlain, famous
millionuaire, Neatchjeff-Maltzen, au or-
dor to make at a cost of 38,000 liu\ a
piano-forte which will truly bo colossal.
It will be supported on six legs, bound
I to one another by garlauds of sculptured
j wood, richly gilded, from designs by tho
I architect Beuois; and its power of tone
will be triple that of an ordinary piano.
' —St. Louis Repviblic.
Chicago has a legal bureau which givei
| legal advice free to the poor.
Words to the Deaf.
An old lady who has lost nearly all
reuse of hearing, and was also blind,
once said to me:' “I wish you would
write ami tell people how to talk to tho
do if, (or 1 cau always hear you,” It is
easy enough to speak slowly , articulate
distinctly, and in a line with the defec
tive ear, but not too near it. It seem*
to be a general idea, but it is a mistaken
one, that the louder the voice the more
easily it is to he heard by tho deaf.
Blow, distinct articulation is of far more
! importance. If these simple, natural
facts wen more generally borne in mind,
it would do much to alleviate the truth
ot lbt‘ deaf.—The Chautauquaa.
FOUli- FOOTED BENllNiiLSL
ANIMALS UTILIZED IN MILITARY
OPERATIONS.
Valuable Alda on the Battle Field—
Horses of the Cosaacka as Pickets
—Simian Sentries.
~T "v OOS Lave been utilized for
| J military purposes with great,
I / success ia Franco, Prussia and
Q~ Italy, but especially in Austria,
where regular drill barracks for tho
training of four-looted soldiers have
been established at -three different points
—one on the Militar Granze (tho "mili
tary frontier'' of the Turkish border),
one atTemesvar, and one near Wells on
tho Traun River, in tlie foothills of the
Austrian Alps.
At tho latter place surprising results
huve been obtained with Alpine collies,
who ruogo a territory of twenty and.
thirty square miles and contrive to.
discover "cripples” iu all sorts of hid
ing places.
Dogs of tlie same breed are also trained
to carry messages, ia a small leather bag
attached to a ring in the collar, between
different detachments of a corps engaged
in active service. On field maneuvers
these four-footed adjutants may bo seen
darting along the line of the imaginary
buttle front, heedless of the craah of big
und amall gun;, but withal taking tare
to confuse the aim of hostile marksmen
by running zigzag, or taking advantage
of every bit of cover the ground affords.
Knowing that tiie miniature mailbag is
not upt to be dotacheO by the scraping'
of a bush, the dog will prefer thickets to
open fields, but in default of a hotter
chanoe ho will run along the safe side of
rocks or fallen trees and occasionally stop
nud look about for a moment, as if cal
culating the best routo for avoiding an
encounter with a pariy of hostile skirm
ishers.
Arriving at tho post of the addresses
the shaggy mail carrier will look about
i for a coiniuissioued officer or a Bcrgeant,
apt to be stationed near a flugleman, but
privates attempting to touch the collaii
will be stood off with a warning growl,
j Should no nii3worbe needed the dog will
take a short rest, aad receuniter tlie
ground before running tho gauntlet of
another bullot shower. A reply depos-
jited in his collar bug is, however, tho
signal of instant departure, and within
half an hour the fleet messenger may thus
‘make a round trip of five or six miles.
Near Wells tlie operations of n train
ing party involved a considerable ex
pense of gunpowder to accustom the
four-fooled recruits to tho noiso of fire
arms. Horn signals guide tho scattered
skirmishers, and a stranger passing a
night, at tlie summer hotel of the little
town might easily ho led to believe
Dint tho neighboring highland must
ho tho favorito rampage ground of
ths wj^l huntsman, or that all the fox.
hunters of tiie Austro-Hungarian Empire
must have met in general conventicn.
An hour before da)break the echoes of
rifle snots nnd horn blasts may he beard
all along tlie river cliffs, aud soon tho
shouts of tiio skirmishes will be answered
by dog voices ns multitudinous as those
of a flrst-cluss bench show, tho object
being to conclude tho somewhat exlen-
•ivo maneuvers during tho cool of tho
morning. An average of four out of ton
recruits will prove intelligent enough to
graduate. Tlie rest are sold or returned
to their breeders, or possibly ussigned to
a different training poijt, since some ex
cellent messenger dogs are too deficient
in scent to make good scouts.
A brood of Hungarian dogs resembling,
our Spanish-American bloodhounds make,
the best sentries, and a competent Aus
trian army officer maintains that after
dark their efficiency surpasses that of
the best human sentinels by as much As
tho range of n good field-glass oxcoeds
that of tlie unassisted eyo.
Horses, loo, will scent, danger bofore
a man witli hit ear on Dio ground can
hour tho slightaui souut of an approach-
iug footstep. Tha Cossack ranges
habitually taint tjhaw pouves ou picket
duty, and mots ttna ouo of our Western
scouts owes Ills life to the timely snort
ing of his horse.
Still stranger sentries are employed by
tho Kultir nomnds of the Orange River.
Dugs being rather expensive pets in a
country where every scrap of animal food
is me.’dod for culinary purposes the na
tives huve bethought themselves of do
mesticating a species of their Darwinian
relatives, the clincma baboons that haunt
the rocks of Southern Africa aud whose
souses have been miraculously sharpened
liy the exigencies of their defensive war
fare against the prowling carnivora of
that wilderness, iu frosty nights, when
dogs curl themselves up on tho lee side
of a board wall, leopards may approach
a Kaffir village unporcoivod, but they
cannot baffle f ie vigilance of baboons
that seem to sleep with one eye open and
shriek out their alarm signal at tho
slightest intimation of danger. That
they are by no means deficient in the
faculty of scent is proved by (he circum
stances that they cau detect edible roots
under a four inch stratum of drift sand
and find hidden springs by nosing along
tho ground like dogs. Their lieariug,
loo, equals that of a eat, and altogether
they would make ideal sootries if their
hotter talents were not rivaled by their
capability for mischief, for in the course
ol a single night a pet oi that sort kopt
on a Transvaal plantation once managed
to turn fourteen liens and a dozen youug
ostriches into Platonic definition of s
human being "Biped without feathers
and without the power of tlight."—San
Francisco Chronicle.
Apes in na Inaccessible Fortress.
On tlie high, craggy cliffs of Gibraltar
there lives a large community of wort is
called the Barbery ape. They dwell in
the clefts of tlie rocks, aud are Ire-
qucntly seeu from the decks of vessels
passing througli tlie Strait of Gibraltar.
He grows to a height of nearly three leet,
wheu staudiug erect; hut how he finds
food among these barren rocks is quite a
problem for us. His abode is quite in
accessible to man, aud hence this com
munity bus defied the encroachments of
civilization witii impunity, a* the foitress
which crowns that mighty rock cau defy
the fleets oi the world. The same species
abounds iu the countries just opposite ou
Die north loa-t of Africa, and from
theuce it is supposed that the Gibradar
colony was first planted, aud Iron this
supposition aud its identity with those
of Barbary it gets its name, li is not,
however, a true ape iu ail respects, as
may bo said of some other inferior
species.—New York Independent.
Diamonds are bought and sold, the
world over, to tuoimipfmt of $2$,000,Qt)0
a rear.
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
Italy is experimenting with liquid fuel
for torpedo boats.
Thoro Is S thsianornetor at Johns IIop-
kins University iu Baltimore, Md., which
Is coilsidered worth $10,000,
The Hollerith electrical counting ap
paratus has saved the census bureaU
$600,000 in the expense bf enumerating
the population of the country.
Frost ha8 a variety of effeota upon
different products. Uuder the same in
fluence eggs will burst, apples contract
and potatoes will turn black.
It has been found that sandstone as an
*dgine foundation it far from perfect.
The atode soon becomes saturated with
Oil, making it soft and easily friable.
Broominakers dye their broomcorn sd'
green that housekeepers are afraid to
break off one of the splints to test a cake
with, fot fear they may be poisoned
with paris-green.
To Had the relative distance of the
■un and stars, suppose the earth and
sun but ouo inch apart. At the samo
relative distance the nearest fixed star
would be just olevon miles away.
It is said that the latest improved
guns aro able to give a velocity to their
E rojectiles of 2887 feat per second, which
St the rate Of 1968 miles an hour.
This is the highest velocity yet recorded,
It has been found by experiments that
ordinarily tho blood travels from tho
heart through the arterio3 at the rate of
about twelve inches a second and
through tho capillaries at about 3-100 of
an inch pur second.
The floating fire-engine, propelled by
steam, wbich has been lately built for
the service of the prefecture of tho port,
says the Levant Herald, made a short
trial trip in the Marmora recently. It
•teams twelve to thirteen intlesau hour.
A new Euglish pitterd df stair thread
Is made of alternate strips of lead find
steel, the lead furnishing loothold and
Dio steel preventing wear. The lead is
cast in grooves in a plate of steel, and
it is asserted that this form of step has
unusual durability, not wearing smooth
even under heavy travel.
The microphone Is ths latest absolute
lest for death. Recently a Bt. Pe
tersburg (Russia) woman, who was
subject to fits at catalepsy, apparently
ceased to breatbo, and wus looked Updri
by her friends as dead. Her medical
attendant, who knew tlv history of tho
case, applied tho microphone to tho re
gion over the heart, aud was thus
enabled to hear tho faint sounds of its
heats. After KtreuUoiU exertions tho
doctor was enabled to restore the woman
to consciousness.
A now moans ha, boon foun 1 for
shutting off au electrical current without
injuiy to the dynamo whoa wire, hap
ped to get crossed or there is overba d
ing from any cause. The essential
parts of tho apparatus are four noodle,
eo arranged that when tho Voltage in
the wire is increased above the limit
from any cause, one of tho noodle, will
emit sparks nnd so Imra through a tine
thread. This thread is connected With
springs which shut off the current when
tiie tension is broken.
The River's Beil Dried Up.
Boltava, in southern Russia, is famous
for the buttle in which l'eter the Great
of Russia conquered Charles Xff, ol
Btveden near that city in 1709. Tho
country around tho city is, to a great
distance, a bare prairie, except where a
river changes the ground into a fruitful
garden. Such was done until a short
time ago by the river Vonska, tho bed of
which is at present dried up. ft was
not a small stream, but a deep,navigable
river which lias there disappeared. No
ono knows what Ims become of the
mighty current of water that used to'ruu
to swell the mighty Dnieper. It is sup
posed to have boon suck' l up by tin'
sandy soil through which it had dug ils
bod. The whole regiou is sandy, nnd it
is only to the rivers that Die inhabitants
aro indebted for whatever fertility there
may be. Bo much the greater is tiie loss
which tho disappearance ot so large a
river must have caused.—Chicago Her
aid,
Kentui '• y produces nearly all the h":n
i < 1 in this country.
“German
Syrup”
I am a farmer at Edom, Texas. I
have used German Syrup- for six
years successfully for Sore Throat,
Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Pains iu
Chest aud Lungs and Spitting-up of
Blood. I have tried many kinds of
Cough Syrups in tny time, but let
me say to anyone wanting such a
medicine—German Syrup is the best.
We are subject to so many sudden
changes from cold to hot, damp
weather here, but in families where
German Syrup is used there is little
trouble from colds. John F.Jones.*
PATENTS
■ ri I hiiv I VJ 40. pm* book Iree
r ttU
M t!iRallied. f-‘ fet* for Increase '.>» yrara ex
perience. Write for Laws. a.W. McCormick
Bonn. Washington, P. C. A Cincinnati. O.
Private European Parties
Under tho patronngo of
Mrs. M. I>. Fraznr,
70 and 71 Qlobe Building. Boaton.
Tour* of eighty, sixty, tifiy anti forty i. v ,
I’arty for North Capo .sails June 15.
Svmtl for circulars and referenced.
•Tutt’sTiny Pills*
A single dose produce* lienHlrlat re-
^ suits, giving cheerfulness of mind and ^
• buoyancy of body to which you were ^
before a M ranger. They enjoy a pop- M
nlarlty unparalleled. Trice, *4ftct«.
Bill
the Htomach. lTrer rim! (torn-els,S
purify the blood, «••<» safe rjjiI pf ?
fectual. The best genera! family!
medicine known for rhliou*n<>6* X
Coustlpntiun, Dyspepsia. Foul*
Bretitb, Headache, ueaitburn. Lot*#
of Appetite, Mental Depression, •
Painnti Digestion, Pimples, Sallow*
Complexion, Tired Feeling, and*
~weajk* resulting from luipt
J b!o!3, orTfailure by
ted| EIU1ITY .
According to tho latest statistics,
Husain has 1418 archbishops, 34, 345
priests, 08iO deacons, 42,371 psalm
singers and some 6000 unofficial clergy*
men, with between 80,000,000 aud 90,-
000,000 adherents.
flow's Tills t
Wo offer One Huhflred Dollars reward for
Any caae of catarrh that cannot ho cured by
taking Hall’s Catarrh Cur 3.
F. J. CtifeNfir & Co., Prop*., Toledo, O.
We, the underfclgufcfl, hare known F. J.
Cheney for the Imtt 15 ycafg. a fid bullevo him
perfectly honorable In all oUHlnfcfia (mnbac-
lions, aud financially able to curry out any ob
ligations made by their firm.
West & Tbvax, Wholesale Drugglute, Toledo,
Wajldijto, Kjnnax <t Marvin, Wholesale
Druggiate. Toledo, O.
Hall's Cat arrh Cure iu taken internally, act
ing directly upon tho blood and mucous eur-
face8 of tho RyBletn. Testimonials sent freo.
Price ?5c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
Bngttsh people cat more butior than I
toy othai nation in tba worl J.
tke flair flue fctet FrlitlM.
CAN YOU rf.ND fHB WORD?
ttos* is a 3 inch display Advert isenciefft fh |
this paper, this week, which has no two words
alike except one word. Tlie same la true of
each new one appuaring each week, from The !
Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a
Crescent” on everything they mniutuna pub
lish. Look for if. send them 1 he in me of i be |
word and they will return you h iok, nrAt’n-
vtn t.nnoariAi’fLS or mamplkn ritEK.
There sre five Taylors in the House of
Representatives, ail Republicans.
I. H. Branham, editor Christian Index. At- ;
lanin, On., writes: “I have used Hradycrotino
with un foiling, prompt, decided relief for head-
Ache.'* AIJ druggists, flftv cent*
We are exporting between three and four !
millions btlsbels of wheat every week.
MAnV persons aro broken down from over
work or bOu-ehold cares. Brown's Iron Blt-
tVTs rebui els the system, al-U digestion, »e-
movos excess of bile, and cures iun.lft.1a. A
Spun did tonic for women anti child) en.
CutrfEs/c jept i s are occomkig numerous on
the Pacific Coast.
B. F. Allen Si Co.. 3rt5 ( and! street* New
York, are so'e a 'ent< in the United Stater, for
Beecham’s Pills, iii cents a Ihjx.
The border of the Cheyenne reservation te
lined with uux ho.ne-seekers.
ONI5 KJVJOY8
Both tlie Tm'thwl nml muiltn when
Syrup of Figgis takeii; it ia pleasant
and refreshingto the taste, andact*
f entiyyet promptly on tiie Kidneys,
aver atid Rowels, clennseg the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
Constipation, Hj-rnii ol Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
Its action and trulv beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy known
Hymp of Figs is for sale in 50c
Md 91 bottleB by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on band will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
B
tho It K.l)
or will
ll«‘d II nut
ED BUGS
drive out you i TIHa «|uerj
tonsil.v as Mu- warm weatlio
BUTCHER S DEAD SHOT
Kh poweriii! killer It . writs them up .m
nro »loe» « loaf; I a sure prev.-ullvn of return, him!
lea promoter of “ Hleep iu Pem;f.” Price
Ont*. ut stores or by nml/.
rimru outciiek x son*.
St. Album*, V(,
COPYRIGHT I8B<
The best thing to do
ie this : when you’re suffering from
Sick or Bilious Headaches, Consti
pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks,
or any derangement of the Liver,
Stomach, or Bowels, get something:
that relieves promptly and cure*
permanently. Don’t shock the sys
tem with tlie ordinary pills—get
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets.
They’re the smallest, for one thing
(but that’s a great thing), and the
easiest to take.
They’re the best, for they work
in Nature’s own way — mildly and
gently, but thoroughly and effec
tively.
They’re the cheapest, for they’re
guaranteed to give jatislactiou, or
your money is returned. You pay
only for the good you get. ,
What more can you ask? i
But don’t get something that the
dealer says is “ just as good.” It
may he better for him, hut it’s
pretty certain to he worso for you)’
Stove Polish
00 NOT BE DECEIVEO
wilh I’RRtfS, Enamels,
the hands. Inlure the In
and Paint* which stain
ami Beauty; Illustrated?
on skin, bt tilp. Nervous
ttticl Blood cl leases sent
aled for I Oc,; also
'Disfigurements, like
Birth Marks, Moles,
PVVaHs, India Ink und
Pt.wdri Murk*, Hcnru.FII-
iUw.,P .dm >« of Nose.au-
m*H1uonj Ifalr, Pimples-
r tLs J«hu II. WoodbUjT,
iCfS Dvi rnat-jloidst, P15 IV-
Bid :m.. New York City.
• it iiHmIoufree,at ofite®
©OLD MEDAL, PAHIS, 1878, \
W. BAKEIt & CO.’S '
Breakfast Cocoa
from which tho cxcer* of oil
li t* been removed,
it absolutely pure aiut
if is soluble.
No Chemicals
nre uaed In M* preparation. It
lias wore than three timet the
itrentjth of Cocoa mixed with
fit arch, Arrowroot or Bngar-
id in therefore far more eco-
^ Domical, cohtiny (ten than one
:i.p. Ills delicious, nour»
I lahitiy, idrcngthcning, easily
DieiftTRD, nud admirably adapted for in valid*
ax well os for pereotm In litMtb.
Sold by tiroeef* everywhere.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mast.
HO NOT OR'.fE NOB KICK!*
Bum rt.f9 for NICK HF.Al)-
At'HH. Imp* red difftwlloa,con*||.
ttou,t' n •! glamlM. T’hpynronna
ltal oryitns, ictnove iiuuttx. Klc-
Mbrinl tffrtt on Kid
neys and blmlder. Co nonet
hilioitrt uervott* dis
lurs. 'Jxtithlhth n(-
al Daily action.
wl.rrr. All genuine good* bear''Crescent.”
fiend t-cent etaiup. Tou get 32 pug? book with vamp)*.
MARTEH MEDICINE tO..St. Uula. M*.
LOVELL DIAMOND CYCLES
For Laidlen and Cents. Six styles
Pneumatic Cushion and Solid Tires.
, L'M-r.jnd f -dole Ster Drop Fct.'
Tuhinq AdluutaWnBdl Bearing--to il ; runnmrp
Strictly HIGH
r ft ACE iu Every Particular.
ur 100 pace ill . -(rated eafa-j
-10HN P. LOVELL ARMS CO , Mfrs.. 14/ Washington SI..80ST0N. MASS
W. L DOUGLAS S3.™ SHOE
For gentlemen is a fine Calf Shoe, made seamless, o!
tha best leather produced In this country There are no
taoka or wax threads to hurt the feet, and is made ns
smooth Inside as a hand sewed shoe It Is as stylish, easy
fitting and datable as custom made choea costing from
$4 .00 tr Jft.OO, and acknowledged to bo the
Best in the World for the price.
For GENTLEMEN.
•5.00
9 A Hani-bewea
4.00 Welt Shoo.
99 Eft Folic, and
•J.DU Farm. \
$ft Hf\ Extra Vulii.
C.9U Call Sho .
ftC Working-
man'. Shoe.
•2.00
For LADIES.
Hand-
•3.00
*2.50
Goodwear
8koe.
Dongols,
rtft u " sud
Ot.V v Dongolo.
®!.75 ™.
For BOYS' & YOUTH'S.
*2 & *i.75
SCHOOL SHOES.
take no"Substitutes.
IT IS A DUTY you owe to yourself and your family, uirim: Un. r- q.-rd
times, to get tlie most value for your money. You can economize in your foot
wear if you purchase \V. Douglas' .Shoes, which, without question, icq •• cut
a greater value for Utr money than any other makes.
A E ETE hJ *"• DOUGLAS’ name and tho price is stamped
WWU 1 I wla> on ihe bottom of each shoo, which protects tho
consumer against high prices and inferior shoes. Beware of dealers
who acknowledge the superiorly of W. L. Douglas' Shoes by attempt
ing to substitute other makes for them Such substitutions are fraud
ulent, and subject to prosecution by law, for obtaining money under
false pretences. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
II nut for -nil* In your |.lai-r .end direct In I H.’lnry, Milting litn.l, ,.iid wldrh
— « otcil. r Mi.gr tree. .4 RENTS H 4NTKD. \\ ill il>t> rittu.it. nil, in tl.nl.r.
i k»»« >• umi ..it i4T,rUs. Un free Is tm*i mu. *