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"HEADQUARTERS." WHERE TWO PARTIES CARRY OX THE CAMPAIGN. The Buildings Occupied by the Democratic and Republican National Committees in New York? How They Are Furnished. f <-;TT two unpreten k?A?rn cfftno I ^^1^ UlU??u ovvmv | ij frl houses onTitth ave[n nue? 'lea(*ers ?* ^:vP5feiaa^the *wo sreat P?* * d'lfffftli fF / parties will conduct the Presi^ w'/V dential campaign. x Within the walls ?* ^ese tw0 houses wj^^pllllP M there gather daily the most able campaigners, the greatest statesmen, the most brilliant orators and i the trained leaders of each party, for the 1 Dumose of lavinir down plans for carry- | ing on the battle. From New York City and the respec- | tive headquarters the wires are laid I which will traverse the entire country and I which will daily convey to the managers of the campaign accurate reports of the situation in every nook and corner. The building Irom which Chairman W. F. Harrity and his staff of lieutenants carries on the battle for Democratic principles is situated at No. 130 Fifth avenue, between Twentieth and Twentyfirst streets, on the east side of the avenue, and is readily distinguished by reason of the display of American banners with which Superintendent W. Duff Haynie has adorned the outer walls. It j is a broad-fronted, hi?h-stooped b%jild- I ing of brown stone, with a wide balcony on the parlor floor. The house is four stories high, with an English basement, and is a good type of the old-time fashionable residence on the lower section of the avenue. Of the interior, much has been said of the "$2000 bronzes" and the "$1000 mirrors." While these fixtures are undoubtedly exceedingly handsome and lend an air ot general beauty to what would otherwise be prosaic business .. il ; _ll? quarters, mere is uuuiiu^ icawjr icmovliable about them. Ascending the stoop, entrance is gained to a wide hall paved with black and white marble. To the right are the reception room3, consisting of three big parlors with a combined depth of seventy-five feet, and containing the much-talked-of mirrors. In the first of these rooms Superintendent Haynie has his desk and cordially welcomes the manv Democrats who drop in daily to discuss the political situation. Mr. Haycie is a Dakota man and was Adlai E. Stevenson's right hand man in the Postoflice Departm ent during the Cleveland Administration. THS DEMOCRATIC HE A.DQUATtTEUS. One of the parlor* is set apart for the members of tbe press nud is ia charge of Colonel Tracey, a well-known New York i nowananpr writer. Returning to the I ... O | hall the stranger would be instantly pointed out two of the conspicuous Democrats of New York in the persons of the Hon. "Jimmy" Oliver, the idol of Paradise Park, who tills the offics of 8ergeant-at-Arms, and the other the Hon. Frank Dutfy, of Fort Hamilton, who revels in the distinction of being official messenger to Chairman Hamty. The approach to the stairway is guarded by a big railing of brass, with spikes along the top and little gates that shut with a click and a snap. Just the same sort of an arrangement can be found at Republican National Headquarters, and to the mailing department. The Republican leader, Mr. Thomas H. Carter, of Montana, has pitched his political camp at No. 518 Fifth avenue, ! just above Forty-third street, and on , the west side of the avenue. This is | mere than a mile from the Fifth Avenue | Botel and the general haunts of New i York and visiting politicians. It is near i the Union League and Republican I ' THE REPUBLICAN HEADQUARTERS. Dlubs, and also near the Grand Central Station. the explanation givun is that the wire partitions are to protect the leaders from the army of clam chowder and summer picnic politicians. A broad, winding staircase leads up to Chairman Harrity's apartments. Chairman Harrity has a nice breezy room in the front of the house, where he sits at a j desk in the southwest corner of the room. In a smaller room to tne rignt i have been placed a couple of dozen j chairs and a table. This is Chairman 1 Harrity's council chamber. A large room in the rear is reserved ! for the use of Secretary Sheerin, and j alongside of this is the headquarters of the Committee on Campaign Speakers, with Bradley B. Smalley, of Vermont, j in charge. The two upper stories of the building are devoted to the literary bureau, over J which and a large force of clerks Con- j gressman Josiah Quincy, of Massachu- 1 setts, presides. Tiie basement is devoted j From the top story window flosts at enormous flag, and all over the front of the buildintr arc big campaign placards and signs representing a sheaf of wheal and a sickle, a strong arm holding a blacksmith's hammer and a spread eagle i ij(wr IN THE KEPOBLICAN* HEADQUARTERS. j cluching in its talons a scroll with the legend, "Protection and Reciprocity." The reception rooms on the fir3t floor arc fitted up in similar style to those at Democratic headquarters, with the ex .* I" ? I CCpMOQ lllttb lUClC 19 ft tvuoiubkuvij larger proportion of wire fencing and spring lock gates. Colonel Sword*, a veteran campaigner, is in charge, and carries around a big bunch of keys with which to let himself in and out of the mjriads of iron gates. Proceeding up one flight of stairs the visitor win nna uaairman carters room in the front of the house, with a smaller room adjoining, for the purpose of holding conferences. There is a desk, a tabl9, sofa and : chairs in the room, which is partly occupied by Jacob M. Patterson, the Chairman of the Republican County Committee. The rear room is devoted to the occu IN THE DEMOCRATIC HEADQUARTERS. pancy of Treasurer Cornelias N. Bliss. On this floor Secretary McComas, the Adonis of the Republican officials, has his quarters. Upstairs again is the literary bureau, and downstairs in the bftement the mailing department.?New York Journal. Onions as Medicine. TVio carMt Tf-.alinn nr the Ttermilda onions, are the ones to be eaten au naturel, the flavor being much more delicate than the common varieties. But onions are really sweeteners of the breath after the local effects have passed away, as they correct stomach disorders and carry off the accumulated poisons of the system. They provide a blood purifier that all may freely use, and do perfect work in constipation troubles. As a vermifuge the oniou cannot be surpassed, and, eaten raw, wil' often check a violent cold iu the head. One small onion eaten every night before retiring is a wellknown doctor's prescription for numerous affections of the head, and is highly recommended for sleeplessness; it acts on the nerves in a soothing way, without the injurious effects of the drugs so often applied. The heart of an onion, heated and placed in the ear, will often relieve the agony of earache, while the syrup procured from sprinkling r. sliced onipn with 3Ugar and baking in the oven, will work wonders in a "croupy" child. ?New York World. The First Gerrymander. Elbridge Gerry was a signer of the Declaration and sponsor of the "gerryr TOE ORIGINAL GERRYMANDER. mnnder." He was Governor of Massachusetts in 1812, and his party majority was dangerously small in the Legislature. so he cut Essex County into two districts in a way the Federalists despised. A wit said it looked like a salamander. "Say rather a Gerrymander," said another, and the word was born. Governor Gerry that same year of 1812 was elected to the Vice-Presidency of the ticket with James Madison, and in 1814 died suddenly in his carriage in Washinirtnii Hitr 'Rut thf> crprrumanrlpr still WJ. ?- o ?/ "" lives. Another Automatic Milker. An American inventor has secured a patent for the new form of cow milker frl'A JJU^ 9^? " " shown in the accompanying illustration. It consists of a number of cups to l>e connected with the teats of the animal, mi air exhaustion withdrawing the milk. After passing from the animal it is collected in the milk reservoir shown in the cut. The inventor considers the dev ice a great improvement over the present hand method, saving considerable time and doing the work more thoroughly. A St. Louis stable supplies each of its carnages with a can cf ice-water in warm weather. Gladstone's autograph is more familiar in Europe than that of uuy other hviug m&u. THE REALM OF FASHION WHAT TO WEAR AND HOW THEY MAKE IT. The Waning Season ?A Late Summer Gown and Some Early Fall Suggestions. > Q EPTEMBER brings y. T*5 ^Nbrings out fall syles f"\* Jnit'a^ 'llustra 7,! r lion sets forth a very f ^ .* W^Mv^ seaso?able out-door > A'jw^nVK Kown for a young r^girl.the material of .yvc* h/f ,v H?/ jr' the skirt beinc: a ll frRwiv'i I /WTF"Inauve crepon trim wmu J/M,|V| mea wnn jci ga.iuun Ax yJiij anc*a blous-in 8i,r* r:2|ffll'\ //I ' I "k- made up over V [Ml W '"I [it adiuste(1 lining, and 'kchIIIW 'Hi %also trimme(J with 'LLthe galloon. The belt is sewed to the skirt _jgr /1 1 ' and hooks on one s-ide. The sleeves aro ? crunvim c nmrv tieht from thetlbow. The picture represents two charming outr door toilets for early autumn. The one on the right is a silver gray serge with an amber colored surah blouse, and sleeves with ied and black spots The bottom oi the skirt is set ofi' with three bias strips oi black and yellow. The lower sleeves are ir plain surah, embroidered. The blouse i? embroidered with black silk. The costum? j EARLY AUTUMN FTYLE8. on the left is an apple green foulard, covered with black lace, the embroidery being on the silk in black stitching. The corsage is of the silk, but the sleeves are ot velvet m a darker shade. At the back the lace simulates a figaro; in front it falls epaulet-style and covers the whole front. The straight collar is also covered with lace, and the sleeves have lace cuffs. There is also a belt and plastron of galloon, embroidered with dull green silk ou a peach colored background. Af * .* Mt. ? *%? A LATE SUMMER GOWN. It is very common at this period of the season to see sleeves differing in color and material from the Btuff of which the gown is made. As in the dress just described for you, velvet seeins to be the favorite material for such sleeves, the folded belt and collar being of the same material,. Such sleeves are usually in pale colors, and add a pecu liar charm to an artistic toilet. The velvet sleeve invariably ends in a deep flaring lace cuff, or else there is a long cuff of guipure or pleated gauze. Still another style calls for a long tight sleeve of the dress material with a puffed velvet sleeve ending at the elbow, where it is held by a band and a bow of ribbons. Strange as it may seem these velvet sleeves are particularly effective in combination with soft gauze, filmy materials. like chiffons, crepons. silk gauzes, silk muslins and the whole long lists of summer stuffs. The wide flaring cuffs of guipure are strikingly becoming to a fine hand and arm. of the<e miffed sleeves are divided in the middle by bands of silver galloon. In all cases belts and collars should present the same scheme of ornamentation. In the illustration yon will find pictured on the right an altogether charming toilet for a fete or af ternoon occasion. The material made use of is a flower-figured batiste, cream ground, with shaded pink carnations. The large colar, which is put on separately, is finished with a deep flounce of lace, and falls in epaulets over the puffed sleeves. The straight collar, ornamented with pink velvet ribbon, is sewe.l to the large collar. The lower sleeves is >et off with bracelet bands of ribbon. The wide belt is formed of the stuff pleated, or with the ribbon lined with stiff material and boned. In the figure on the left 1 show you a very stylish wrap in striped beige crepe garnitured with lace. Chaiitilly lace and black moire ribbons artused for this purpose, a!s > jet passementerie and beige velvet for the yoke. At the back there is only one large pleat. A deep flounce of ''hantilly finishes the wrap at the bottom surrounded by a deep galloon. At the back the yoke is rounded, and the lace which edges it is caught up on each shoulder with a bow. At the waist line at the back there is a bow with long ends. A novelty in late summer gowns is shown in the illustration?a terra cotta glace serge. I'l.. _ -... , .1 ?r iuc uuuuia oiinesKiri Das uireu ruws ui satin ribbon of the same shade separated by ( pen work gold g-iloon. The corsage is trimmed in the same manner, and also lias pleated lace collarette bise color. The collarette has a straight collar covered with ribbon and ornamented with ribbon loops falling over lace. The deep cuffs are garnitured like the skirt and corsage. Whisperings are heard about the fall styles. Green is to be a prime favorite, not dull shades, ( , but vivid tints and tones, and browns, too, are to be very mi'dish in strong colors. Purplish reds known as magentas, will be : in high favor, as also dablia, hyacinth and all the purples that get their brilliancy from 'red. Bonnets and hats will be relieved by velvet ribbons in cherry and poppy, hut there must be nothing loud or glaring; all must be rich, elegant and artitstic. ! A stylish traveling dress, something that should be in the summer outfit of every fashionable woman, is shown in the illustration. It is made up in a striped woolen material lined with silk, the skirt on the inside being finished with a flounce of the same stuff as the dress. The pointed corsage T0 JP?^ Www ftil TWO rRF.TTY TOILETS. has coat-tails, a velvet collar and revers ol the woolen material. The vest may be buttoned to the corsage. The sleeves have flaring velvet cuffs. Such a costume as this comes in very well for knockabout service during the summer, and its masculine characteristics give it a neatness and trimness very becoming to a good figure. With it may be worn a tourist's hat in rough straw, as nearly as possible of the same shade as the dress. In no one particular do:s the well dressed woman show her good taste in always wearing the right sort of a gown on the right occasion than when traveling 01 moving about in public places There is a great (leal in this. Jt enables her to preserve h?r nervous equilibrium under trying circumstances. It is astonishing how some women begin to fret and fume the moment they set out on a journey. I attribute it largely to the fact that they are not properly dressed, they ure too warmly clad, or they wear a dress that wrinkles or spots easily, and before they have gone 50 miles they present an untidy and mussed up appearance. Not so with the woman who is attired in a neat and suitable traveling dress. 11 I WWUHUIIIMIII I ' A 8TYLI8H TRAVELING DRESS. Nothing disturbs her srrenity. The very dust refuses to stick to her, and at the end of her journey she alights from the train "iV ? V??l ia n/?mfnrtinr? fa IaaIt Willi & BiUUC UlUi JO i,i;iUiuutug Vvy -w?k upon. Her friends welcome her with great cordiality, for they feel instinctively that she will fit into the household and add to the general comfort of all. On the other hand, the woman who is 6weltering in a heavy and unsuitable dress loses her temper, her satchel, her baggage checks and her patience, and usually succeeds in robbing other people of much of tVipir comfort. I once knew a woman who made a 500-mile trip in a black velvet dress trimmed with black la^e, There was not a person in the same car who did not heave a eigh of relief when she reached her destination; they had been made thorougly uncomfortable by her restlessness and peevishness. She had averaged 10 questions and 15 complaints for each half hour, and even then it had been necessary to toss her black bag out of the window to her. ??r I Fishing In the North west. Whoever passes along the main retail street of Seattle and happens to notice the counters on the principal fish store will be astonished. In the chromatic display of the captive creatures of the 6ea is the text for another chapter ou future wealth for Washington. Thej have tie salmon, though that catch is I credited to Oregon and Alaska. Tnere are in the northern waters cod banks thousands of miles in extent; halibut, codfish, rock cod, sole, sen bass, smelts, shrimps, herrings, and oysters are all abundant. Apparently the fisheries outweigh those of the east as the timber belt excels that which once enclosed the great lakes. Candor compels me to say thut the Pacific fish, with one exception, are inferior to the same kinds of fish in the East, yet they are not wanting in line | qualities. The halibut of Washington and the nnrsh is, I believe, the finest sea fish for the table that is known in America. The tiny raudily oysters, the size of a dime or quarter, are the meanest product of that sea, but they find a ready sale and are admired. Since that is so, hope for all the rest should be rampant. Their crabs, on tho contrary, are not mere samples; they are wholesale products, regular marine monsters; and all the better for that, since they make good food. The fishing that must in a few years fleck the waters of the Pacific with sails is scarcely begun. 'I here is only a million invested iu it, and only a millijn - -1 J 1 li. fT a year is proauccu uy u.?iaarpci a Magazine. "Maud, run over to Mrs. De Swelle's and tell her her chimney is on fire." "I can't papa. This is Wednesday, and Mrs. De Swelle's day is Thursday. I'll go to-morrow." ?Harper's Bazar. A DARING APTENTUREtt. Cnptain William ... Andrews, already famous for his daring adventures in small boats on the stormy Atlantic, has again set sail on a novel and interesting voyaje. He crossed the ocean twice bafore, first in the "Nautilus," when he was accompanied by his brother, who has since died, and gain in the "Mermaid," both of these tripi" i J. . - T lt_ T??rrlonr1 A LVJUg IIJHUB tu JUtUIU O J-.LIU, . felP years ago he again attempted the Das sage in a boat called the "Dark Secret," ( but, after battling with contrary winds, high seas and terrific ?torm<=, he reluctantly consented to give up bis efforts alter a struggle of sixty-two days, an i returned to America on a bark which kinJlv consented to take him and his 9?a-beaten boat back to New York. The captain is a very interesting character. He is a man of fixed purposes, very hard to turn from the obj'jct he has in view. He has made the subject of small boat sail[ ing such a study that he is prepared to meet every argument against the risks | which spring to the minds of his critics, yet the New York Herald put tne case in a nutshell when it said: "The fact that Capt. inrlrawa mn nrnss t.hfi OCBan in a COCkle shell merely proves that small boats are saf? when a Capt. Andrews sails thorn. Amateurs should remember this wheu the wind begins to sin?." The Captain himself says that "half the people who are drowned lose their lives because they do not realize that a boat cannot sink. An iron vessel might, or a ship loaded with a heavy cargo, but a row boat, sail boat or ordinary wooden vessel may capsize, but will, nevertheless, flo it. The passengers on the great ocean steamers run some risk when they go to sea, butall around the deck they see wooden floats hung up on which they are taught to depend for their lives if the big tteaaer goes down. These bo^ts are often crushed against the great vessel or are capsitfd in lowering. I am alone in a wooden boat entirely under my own con trol, an:i, in my opinion, far safer than others." An ingenious theory but hardly a fair one. Capt. Andrews is by trade a piano maker. He built the "Sapolio" at Atlantic City in the preseucj of hundreds of people, ani exhibited it on the Long Pier for several weeks. It is a canvas folding boat lined with half inch cedar and decked over with the same. In order to fold it there must be three long canvas hinge* from stem to stern, and the daring Captain writes by an incoming ship (when be is hundreds of miles from shore) that he finds the " 'Sapolio' in a seaway is a scrubber but very leaky." No better proof of his coolness and pluck "ould t* given. The start was made at 4:'i0 Wednesday, July 20tb, the destination being Palos, I Snain. CaDtain Anirew* ha9 instructions to scour the seas until he discover* thit port and the starting poiut of Columbus It is believed that, sailing in a fourteen foot boat without so much as a hut cup of co^e to ary his di-t of biscuits aad cxnne i goods, he will, sio'le-han led, eclipsj tha record of thatSpanisbltaliio alventurir who al nost failed to cross ths great ociaa with three ships, 153 men, after s^curin^ the Queen's jewels to pawn and having the blessinj of the Church throwa in. This Columbus is ? :ir arhinh ha 1 navnr heen in btlHUJg iu a uwuu " ? .w? . the water until thi hour when ho started on his 4000 mile trip. Ha has bdea spoken in mid-ocean sereral ti?:-s. scoraing all assistance and confident of uitira ite success. His effort shou.d interest all Americans as [ a test of olucic, endurancs an 1 good sea| manship. That it is not a foolhardy affaif is proved by his former sucsrss aai by the notable trip in wnich h*b?ttlilfor sixtytwo days without rea.'hinj; the other si le. ot' neools saw ths start, his presence at different points on the ocjan has been noted by large numbers of vessels, and bis landing on the otber side will no doubt be male a matter of public demonstration and rejoicing. As he stilei from the pier he said, "In sixty days I will be in Spain," and up to the last reports be hai made better time thin ha aacicipital. the voyage a bottle will be thrown overboard noting tje lojaton and other information abouttha trip If Capt. Andrews succeeds in reachin; Spain anil joining in ths Ojtober caleoritions which will be held in honor of the discovery of America, he will then return in one of the great stea ners ani arran^a to exhibit his boat and tha log which ha wr.tes up day by day, at the World's Pair in Caicago, where he will be one of the featured oi the magnificent display which the manufacturers of Sapolio are now perfecting The as?urai:ca, we might almost say theisnpudence, of these aignr-sive m in ufacturers in securing a Co u nbus of their own is probably without preca le it in advertKing The liatli in Japan. The English woman's uioruing "tub" is, as every one knows, a plunge in coia or slightly warm water und a vigorous rubbing down after it, which wives her skin the brilliancy of white ivory and the smoothness of velvet, aud which gives her, too, the blush tints in youth that blossom out later in life, alas! to fullblown roses of crimson hue. The bath which gives the almond-eyed doll woman of Japan her exquisite softness and suppleness of skin is a nightly bath and j morning wash in writer that is as hot as can be borne. In the buth she takes prolonged soaking, the washing proper beiDg done on the bathroom floor, followed by a second and final soaking, J ? " -?UK enff rnwpk und r Inuncc uryjuj^ UII " in a bath wrapper. The poorest bear of the cold bath with amazement and a lowering in their estimation of the woman who indulges in it. Yalnable Old Floors. The Bmelting and refining of the floorof the factory of a. watch company's establishment, on Bond street, near Broadway, was completed the other day and I proved to be one of the largest contracts ' of the kind ever undertaken in America. When the watch company decided last spring to abandon case making the proprietors agreed with the refiners to have the floors of the building on Bond >treet, where they had been for nineteen years, worked up for the precious metals they might contain, and contracted tne job on a percentage of the value of the gold and silver reclaimed. The contractors took up three floors and part of another, cut the boards into lengths that would admit of their being easilj handled, and .carted them off to their 'works. Htre the boards were burned and the ashes subjected to the process of refining. Altogether about 60,000 square feet of lumber was destroyed, and after deducting the amnunt due them on the contract, Messrs. GWieux & Woolsey turned over to the v ate company more than $66,000 wortli o. gold and silver.?New York Mail aud Express. Catching Seals With Ilookr. Mr. Dyer, who lives on a small island near Seven Hundred Acre Island, IslesI borousrh. Me., has a unitme way of catch ing seals. He takes a pole several feet in length, to which are attached a number of common codfish, hootcs with lanyards several feet in length. The hooks are baited with herring. This contrivance is anchored end buoyed, the hooks being just below the surface. The seals in swallowing tbe herring become hooked and are caught. Mr. Dyer has taken a large number in this manner. BDaoow* liron liouicri And the chill evenings produce Hoarsness, Tight Barking Coughs, Inflamed Throats ana Bronchitis. Check all these attacks by prompt use of Dr. Hoxsie's Certain Croup Cure, the one remedy for colds and coughs tfiat contain* no -pium in aim mrm. Sola by prominent druggists. 50c. Manufactured by A. P. Hoxsie, Buffalo, N.JY. Christianity was introduced into Japan in 1549. The True .Laxative Prlnclpl* Of tbe plants used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy, Syrup ?f Fig", has a permaI nenily beneficial effect on the hum.-tn system. while the cheap regetsb e extracts and mineral : olutinny. umialiy sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. >elujcwell informed, yon will n.-e the true r?m?ly only. .Manufactured bv th? K ? ?? ? > To. We will give $100 reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured witb Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. j. Cheney A Co., Proprg., Toledo, 0, The principal causes of sick headache, biliousness and cold chills are found in the stomach and liver. Cured by Heeclturn's Fills. Have you Rheumatism? Atkinson's Gout and Rheumatic Remedy will surely cure it. For sale by all first-class druggists. ?* - ? ? i?- i?_ rv?mKi iT TlJCTf?n wiin pure rvo ?*-?*> . u ? foii16Sye-vrater.l)rueflr1*ti??*ii it iV.oop bottl?. Simply Awful " * ^ad the doctors called the worsl SB ease o f Scrofula fv *vn they ever saw. II hL_/v ffj was on my arms,facc and BrMfc. neck and was simply awI fall Ifive years ago 1 bejjfcfgap to take Hood'f ^HO^^^^Sarsaparilla a n d vv Tnvnnr found the sores gradualW. Turner. began t0 heal j (ooh " * *'? T/\? Vin t\o uf 10bottle*Rna wasperiecuy tu.cu.iw 4 years I have had good health and no ores." G.W.Tpbseb, tarmer, Galway, >. Y, Hood's Pills cure liver Uls,oonBtlration, biliousness, Jaundice, sick headache, indigestion . evebymotheb Should H?t? It In The Bonse. Dropped on Sugar. Children Love to take JoHjrsoif*? Ahodtxi Lhomht tor Cropp.Colds, Sore Throat, Tonsilltls, Colic, Cramps ana Fains. R? llercs all Summer Complalnta, Cuts and Bruises lixe LLk J AUgUSl Flower" " I am ready to testify under oath that if it had not been for Augusl Flower I should have died before this. Eight years ago I was taken sick, and suffered as no one but a dyspeptic can. I employed three of our Dest doctors and received no benefit They told me that I had heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me so I that I had to throw it up. Augus' I Flower cured me. There is no medicine equal to it." Lorenzo F. Sleeper, Appleton, Maine. 8 I tbe'hanu.v Injure thMro^and^jurtfoff?1 ^ | I Tbe KlBlnR Sun Steve PoJUJa u Brilliant, Odor- I II leas OuraDie and the consumer pay* tot no tin I I or glas* peonage wltn orery purcbaso. i ( MkV1!" Illustrated Publications, R r t "K 3 B? IH.hn WMhiDi-ton *nd Oregon. th* FREE GOVERNMENT AND LOW PRICE | ll|n|" ijmUND) ?-The b?*t A^ctilrtrtl. QmiM ?nd Timber E?d. row optn to .culert. Mailed FREE. Addrea 1 OUS. 11. 1A?B0K.1,L??Q /CAUTION.?Beware of dealew Mb stltutinc shoes without \\ . L. Douglas U name and the price stamped ou bottom. j^uch substitutions are fraudulent and subject to prosecution by law for ob_ tninlnv money un> Jfk 4 '?&k der false pretences. ' Will give c*clu?lve unle to tliflf J' nonecnie. Write for catalogue. lfnotloi stating kind* ?i*c and width wanted, roi ? , SWIFT'8 SPECIFIC FOR renovating tkt entire system, eliminating all Poisons from the Blood, whether of scrofulous or malarial origin. this Prefr aration has no equal. . . M For eighteen months I had in toting sore on my tongue. / war treated by best local physiciamx but obtained no relief; the sort gradually grew worst. I finally took S. S. Sand was entirely cured after using cfew bottles" 't'- : CC. ?. McLemore, Henderson, Tex. pREATISE on Blood and SBt. 9Lv The Swift Specific CoAtlanta, G?- f ^ ? DR. KILMER'S ? iS? Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cur?. Rheumatism, Lumbago, pain In Joints or back, brick dust IB urine, frequent calls, irritation, intiamatian, rravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder. Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, gout, bllllous-beadaob& SWAMP-ROOT cures kidney difficulties La Grippe, urinary trouble, bright's dfafatf6. Impure Blood, Scrofula, malaria, genl weakness ordebllltyt C?e content* of On* Bottlo. it nottMDtf ef.ted, Druggixta will refund to you tho pric? paid. At Drnetlitt, 50c. Size, $1.00 llM MInTalidf' Guide to H**lth"fre??OoBsaltadaB &w Dr. Kilmkb & Co., Bxwohamtqw, N. Y. I Going to Buy 'r'18 ! A Dictionary? ;; ? GET THEBB8T. < : l^yl 1 ! Folly Abreaat of th? Timta. ? [ J A Choice Clft.^ ^ ^ | a a Iiranu ravvniy tu%?v??wi. The Standard Authority. * Succe??or> of the authentic "Una-2 . X bridged." Ten years spent in revfcinE, i + 100 editor* employed, over $300,000 ^ + expended. _______ SOLD BY ALL B00K8IIIEM. J A Do not bny reprint* of obsolete edlUow.A -y i 6. & C. MHRRIAM CO., Publishers, X a Srrinftfield, M?l?., U. 8. A- + WORM N1CHT AND DAY! :-Ji S, M'Jg Ml Hold* the wont rap- ''.v 1 rT tare with eaae ua> 2 Wrn B L A 8T I OH der aU circumstance*. KD >? ? *T,/~ D (ADJCITMOT, 0 ^J^^SS^raPerfect] $K?BT' k N^^9H9HP^Sv New ImprcrreaiM \k Hlu?tr?ted 0*t and rake Q \ M tor ??lf-ni?iiiar meat? (fATixnD.) w?y, New rork City. PIT PEOPLE REDUCE L II I your weight V BB I ten or fifteen pound* g |LB 9 every month. This remH edy Is purely vegetable and Is perfectly harmless. For particulars send two cent stamp to ??. o. Ifctoac 8818, City of New York. <jk?| FRAZERgreaIe 1 1 BEST IN THE wuhlii. its wearing qualities are unsurpasisl, actually outlasting three ooxes of any other brand. Hot * netted by beat PT GET THE GENUINE. FOR SALE BY DEALERS GENERALLY. MflNSSfN'S 1 310 Broadway. N. Y. " BESl GOODS A1LOWKS1 PRICES." < Celebrated R Q |_ |) Bicycles All part* and repairing. Athletic and Bicycle Uniforms, Tennis, Base ball and F<x>t Ball Clothing and Supplies, Cap*, Belts, Shoes, Bath Robes and Sweat* erg. Photographic Supplies and Printing. Estimate* furnished. Fifteen voars' experience. _ _ FREDERICK W. JANtfSEN CO.nrA.H, Q 4 f| 310 Broadway, N. Y., 041 U IU Manufacturers, Importers, Exporters. 0 11 1 - RJPAN* TABULES, ?*uiaii} the stomach, aver *nd bow*la, i j purify the olood. am afi and ?f| recto*. Cb* bte , ffarertu runlirl a medicine down for HUioujaxes, j o/^^^L.vy Con?ripation Drspwosia Foul# Breath Headaohe. hoar-tburn Uxsi (W ol Appetite .Heni*. Depression,* Painful Dlfrestloa Plmplei SaOow* Complexion Tlreo fMhaq sod* {every symptom ot disease resulting ?rom impure? ? blood, or a failure o* the stomach, Urer or InteauaeeJ J to perform their proper functions hereon* jrirantoT !orer-eatinware benefitedby taklnra*1A81 LF afterz each meal Price, ny mall 2 jri-ossT? 11 bottle lie Ad X ?drew THE RIFAlisCHEMICAJLCO..10dpruoeBt. J?.Y 1 Arenti Wanted* KlttHTl per cent profit. X - - r isob ueinecy tor Catarrh 13 the ifcM Best. Easiest to t'so, and Cheapest. Jg flg ?old by drucglsta or sent by tnSU, M 80c. E. T. Haeeltlne, Warren, Pit. VI V. L. DOUGLAS 8 SHOE GENTLEMEN. cnuine Mewed *liocthnt will not rip j One Calf. ess. smooth tnskle, flexible, more comfortable, smlin lurnble than any other stioe ever tola at lue pnc?. s custom-made shoes costing from $4 to $5. only 83.00 Shoe mnde with two complete , securely sewed at the outside edge (as shown in cut), gives double the wear of cheap welt shoes soM at th? le price, for such easily rip, having only one sole sewed l narrow ctrlp of leather on the edge, and when once rn through are worthless. be two MoJeoof the \V. L. DOUGLAS $3.00Shoo hen worn through can be repaired as many time* aa fcessary,as thev will neverrlpor loosenfrom theupper. Purchasers of iootwear desiring to economize, should consider the superior ou.illtlee ^ of these shoes, and uot bo Influenced L to buy cheup welt shoes sold e.t $3.00, SShfe. having only appearance to commend iv. i)(ii:i;i.as aieu's Si and 9,\ Fine Calf, Hand ''sMDWkfv Sewed;S3.oO Police and Fanncrs; S4.JS0 Fine Cuif; 82.*8 V?-^^ and flvJ.OO WorklDamen'ai \ m(L Eovs' 9 i. OO and Youthr 81.1.1 School ShocG; Ladler \ yTOk $3.00 Hand Seircd;8^..50, "i?n ' ^ 3k, 82.00 and lllMMr .r:.8 1 . 7-5 Bc?t DOIlKOUl, ::3Skw aro of the lomo nl?h ^ |jy ^ ftanJtrdofmerlt. alera and central merchant* where I h**? r aale In yowr place send direct to Factory. ? g