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Hood's^ Cures Terrible Headaches Distressed and Discouraged Health all Broken. Thoroughly Built up by Hood-s Sarsaparilla Mrs. Eva Covert Of Bath. N. Y. "I am glad to have my experience with Hood's Sarsaparilla widely known, because the medicine has doze me so much good, I think it will benefit others who are out of health- 1 was i?* a /lo t>udo:t-\rr and rflonftnrflxrfnff rnndi tion. I had no appetite whatever; could not . sleep well; suffered with excruciating headaches. I felt Tired and Languid. Bad no ambition and seemed all broken down. After I had taken medicine prescribed by two of our best physicians, a kind neighbor advised * me try Hood's Sarsaparilla. I followed her advice, and the result is, I am perfectly well. I do not have the headaches now, sleep well, that tired feeling is vanished, and I am bright and ambitious. I can eat heartily at every meal, and have gained in weight from 95 to 105 pounds. I do not have any distress in ... HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES my stomach, and epileptic fits, to which I was formerly subject, never trouble me now. I cheerfully recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla and do not wish to be without it." Mrs. Eva Covert, Bath, Stuben County, N. Y. , Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 20 cents. with Pastes, Enamels and Paints which stain the bands. Injure the Iron and burn red. ? The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorlees. Durable, and the consumer pays for no Un or glass package with every purchase. / Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT CURES A PHYSICAL WRECK! . Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingbamton, N. Y. Gentlemen:?I desire to tell you just how I was, so that the public may know of your wonderful Swamp-Root. Two years ago last October I bad spells of vomiting, I could Dot keep anything in my stomach; the Doctor mid I had consumption of the stomach and bowela; continued to run-down in weight; I was reduced to 60 lbs. I would vomit blood, and at one time as much as three pints; we had two of the best Physicians and they eaid, my case was hopeless. "Oh, my sufferings were terrible." A neighbor told us of your , Swamp-Root, and my husband got a bottle; I t ' took It to please him. I used six bottles of Bwamp-Root and I am now nearly as well as ever. I *c*irh 108 /&?., do my own work and B take care of my baby. Every one says, I teat Wf r*i?td from th* dtad, and many will not be^ lieve that I am still living until they come and ee me, and then they can't believe their own eyes, I am looking to will. Very gratefully. Mrs. Jobn Champine, Jan. 10th, 1893. Antwerp, N. Y. At Drngelitf, Price?50c. or $1.00. L R* JL~C/? R* DADWAY'S II nn i titt nm inn AV AMU I ALL1LI. CUBES AND PRETEXTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Frostbites, Chilblains, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS In from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reading this adver tlsement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. Bndvray'a Ready Relief la a Hare Cure for Every Pain, Spralna. Ilrniaea, Pain* in kike Bark. Ghent or Ktmba. It nti Iks First and l? (be Only PAIN KENEDY That Instantly stops tbe most excruciating pains. ai> lays Inflammation, and cures Congestions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels or other glands or or gaus, by one application. A half to a teaspoonf ut In half a tumbler of water will in a few minutes ctirc Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn. Nervuusness, Sleeplessness, Kick Headache, IHarrbceu, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency and all Internal palnx. There L? not a remedial ORent In the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bilious and other fevers, aided by RAD WAY'S PILLS. so quick as RADWAY'S READY i t , RELIEF. Fifty centn per bottle. Sold by Druggist* .% BE SURE TO <iET RADWAY'S. NOTHING LIKE ^ Wei SWIFTS SPECIFIC is totally unlike any other blood medicine. It cures diseases of ? the blood and skin by removing the poison, and at the same time supplies good olood to the wasted parts. Don't bo imposed on by substig . tntes, which are said to be just as good, it is ' not true. No medicine ||| TL|C VUAQI ft bas performed as many ||? I lib VfUilLII wonderful cures, or relieved so much suffering. " My blood was badly poisoned last year, which r)t my whole system out of order?diseased and constant source of suffering, no appetite and ho enjoyment of life. Two bottles of BRKKB brought me right out. There is no better remedy lor blood diseases. f ? "John Gavin, Dayton, Ohio." Twlffft ob blood and akin diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. t --Taj? ? CHOOSE TOUR COLOR. If you are a matron of forty or upward, says an authority, dress in white for evening costume; if a young married woman, in black tulle or net; if a very young girl, in rose pink. Only take care to keep these limitations in your mind, and be candid with yourself. Better consult your enemies than your friends as to what costume you belong to. a queen's hand. Queen Victoria's hand is not of fairylike proportion by any means. She wears gloves of the Bize of seven and a half. They are always black and always shorter than the fashion of the hour demands. She began at the beginning of her reign with one-button gloves, and has advanced to only four buttons since. She wears only about two dozen pairs a ??J *Vi o vArrol | year, auu tutu pan vu?w> >us wearer only $2.12.?New York World. A NEW COLOR. A new color has made its appearance. It is called chrysophrase," and is named after the gem which is the 1ad of the hour. Moonstones have had their day. They are now replaced by another stone, said to bring luck to the wearer?the chrysophrase. And a very becoming and lovely colored stone it is, something like the aquamarine, of a pale green color,' but less clear in tone. Velvets, silke, gauzes, nay, even gloves and shoes, are to be found in "chrysophrase" hues, and this delicate color has thrown purple and "chaudron" quite into the shade.? St. Louis Republic. 6HE SHOT A OAS "WELL. Mre. "William Walters, of Muccie, Ind., is said to be the only woman who ever undertook to shoot a gas well with nitroglycerine, an operation so dangerous that few men care to undertake it. Her husband is engaged in thj business, and as he was not on hand when the well was to be shot, she undertook to perform the duty for him. She carefully lowered sixty quarts of the dangerous explosive to the bottom of the well, 900 feet below the surface of the ground; then she dropped the weight into the well and ran away ta hard as she could. A trembling of the earth, a muffled roar and a puff of smoke from the well told that the operation had beca successfully performed.?Chicago Herald. MICR0SC0FI8TS ON THE SKIN. The first distinction the eye makes in meetiDg strange persons and tribes is their color. This in the darker races is found to be a black or very dark brown dust, deposited on the lower layers, on a ground the color of old ivory. This dust anatomists discover to be a fine soot or carbon deposit, and the point has a specific interest for women in that it is of a similar nature to the deposit which colors the disfiguring "blackheads." The received opinion that the black point in comedones is only dust held by the tallowy filling of the enlarged gland is now discovered in error. It is said by acute microscopists to be a pigment which in time extends to the lower lay era of tbe skin, a scale of the carbon or manganese infinitesimals of tbe blood and akin to tbe collection of sacb pigment as in tbe course of centuries has djed the Ethiop and Congo races.?New York Press. BLACK GOODS TO THE FRONT. Black goods are coming to tbe front this season in the handsomest weaves that have been offered for a long time. The silk warp Henrietta and tbe crystal rep goods are amoDg the most stylish of the season's goods. The all-wool poplins with raited figures are much admired and deservedly popular. These goods are made up with colored velvets, and for 6treet wear cannot be surpassed. They are made of the finest foreign wool, mixed with pure silk, are imported from the factory in England by their American designers and have that perfect toDe which is the result of experience and skill. I mention this for the benefit of the thousands of women who believe any piece of black goods will make up into a dress that will give them good Beivice. On the contrary, there is no greater waste cf money than investing a sum of it in a black dress that has not tbe imprint of a successful firm of manufacturers. Every yard should be warranted. A woman who is dressed in good black is always well-dressed.?Detroit Free ir'ress. BITTTONS "WITH ODD DEVICES. The fancy lor buttons with odd devices is revived for handsome gowns, especially those with Directoire coats and waistcoats. These vary from patterns of cut metal, mutching gold, silver ; and copper-bronze passementaries, to styles a3 costly as real gems. Some aie exceedingly elegant and artistic in sets both large and small, made of gold, silver and other genuine metals, and tinted in rich colorings of vines in relief or set with bits of glittering haifpiscious jewels. There arc many attitttive buttons in faceted silver, mother-o'-pearl, hammered gold, chased copper and Mexican onyx, with gold Bettings showing heads of Leander, Ataiant<\. Paris, Hero, Priam, Penelope, etc., i* moonstone, agate, cameo and van-cot&<-ed enamels. The new swallowtail Direcfoire coat above the shortened, expanded dress-skirt will he smartly worn this spring by slender women. In tbe feminine jyjrments the ends are greatly elongated sad likewise pointed. The seams up the back of a pale-gray coat of this description are overlaid witb fine narrow gray silk gimp. This trimming is also carried the whole length of the garment, and decorates the edges of the spreading revers on the fronts which op 5 over a rose-colored bengaline silk - dotted with gray silk figures. The BKirt is bordered with seven rows of the gimp.?New York Post. WOMEN IN BVSrNESS. In the social evolution of the Nine -* ? tm/ecth Century there is nothing more gratifying than the broadened opportunities for women in the human struggle for existence. It is all the more notable because nearly all the gain has been ' made within tne memory of the present generation. Twenty-five years ago the field of woman's effort in earning her living was chiefly confined io domestic and factory labor. To-day the field is | almost as broad as that of the sterner sax. , XXOW 11113 cuail^e WOO muu^u^ >uo 1Ufluences leading to it, and the future outlook, are matters of greatest interest to everybody. 1 Strange as it may seem, the growth of woman's opportunities in business in our j own city has been co-extensive with the < growth of the great shopping marts. It , was tbe aptitude and usefulness of young ; women, in the large retail stores that first i brought them face to lace with the pur* | chasing public, and success in this line . quickly led to the extension of their j business sphere. i Twenty-five years ago there were only ] about half a dozen stores at all comparable with the two or three score that we : have in this city now. There was not < one on Sixth avenue, Fourteenth or ; Twenty-thiid streat. Tliere were prac- , tioally no saleswomen in the big stores at , the former period. But when the new era began which led to the opening of enormous hives of traffic, one after another, the necessity for saleswomen be- 1 came manifest, and the opportunity was quickly grasped. Their keen perception, intelligence and natural adaptability -mVtof moo of flrof on ovnprimpnf. ft Luauc nuav nao aw mdv uu w pronounced and permanent success. This result of the employment of young women in the great stores was naturally followed by their appearance in the smaller stores and shops, and in fact in many capacities where only males had been previously employed. It would probably be a moderate estimate to place the number of women now employed in these various occupations, in this city at fifty thousand. All this is the outcome of the growth and expansion of the great retail marts. When the fact was once demonstrated that women were men's business equals in certain lines, the demand for their deft hands and clear intellects was widespread. And the most interesting feature in this progress is the fact that the scope of women's1 business usefulness is constantly broadening now, giving the most encouraging promise for the future. The most pronounced reformer cannot find much fault with the advancement made by the sex in tne last quarter 01 a century, at least so far a3 New York is concerned.?New York News. FASHI05 NOTES. Silk, cloth and velvet cloaks are elaborately trimmed with rich bead and silk embroidery. Light silks for spring wear are made up with accordion-plaited skirts and plaited waists. Bands of narrow velvet, with rosette bows, trim the skirts of semi-dress and evening costumes. The small boy will be seen to best advantage during the coming summer in the Fauntleroy suit. Dressy bonnets are made of jet and beads of all colors, and trimmed with rolls of velvet and aigrettes. A pretty ana Decoming utu is ui very fine net shirred over thick silk. The trimming is of puffs of lace, birds' wings and aigrettes. It will be a long time before the new, awkward-looking lengthened shoulder seams will appear anything but extremely old-fashioned and dowdy. Pink cloth vests dotted with bronze beads are noticed upon chic tailor gowns from Paris, made either of Venetian brown or dark-green cloth. New cushions and sacbet bags are made in saddle-bag fashion, and are of plush, silk or brocade. They are tied together with ribbons with large bows. For simple dresse3, red or blue cashmere, trimmed with dotted bands embroidered in black silk, and with a white nainsook guimpe, are worn by little girls. Enormous bows of padded silk are used to catch at the bust tiny little jackets with slashed edges, which finish so many of the newest negliges and house gowns. The new woolens for plain tailor N gowns arc the rough, rabbit haircloths, which are noteworthy for their soft, LCALUlCf auu -uuiiv/u) rough-looking surface. Cuffs worn outside the sleeves are among the new fancies, and are shown in lace, linen nod kid, while with outing gowns the kid cuffs are chosen to match a lace corselet of the same. A perfectly plain skirt of heavy silk, bengaline or velvet may be made up with a front of Borne contrasting material, or with the front of the same covered with embroidery or passementerie. The very wide revers, known as the "empire," are most effective on house dresses of scarlet, pink, or blue crepon, and though made of black satin, no other portion of the gown needs to be of the somber shade. The oddest buttons of fur, enamel, and queer Eastern work are used on the I Eton jackets, worn three on each side, or on thosfi jackets which cross diag- I oually in frout, three only are usci in simulated fastening. JNew stationery snows a paio mm;, j with address or monogram in darker j tones. Light and dark green are also i shown, and a dark blue, with white lettering, is a novelty, while gray in the softest dove? tints has the address in silver. Collarettes of bright ribbon plaited, or of two raffles of silk or scolloped on the edges and buttonholed with colored silk, are worn to brighten dark house dresses, and long bows of chiffon, shirred and tucked into shape, come in | all bright tints for indoor wear. In Apache Torture. In the summer of 1882, when the Apaches were raiding the ranches and haciendas of southern Arizona, said Thad R. Morris, I was a private in Company K, stationed at Whipple Barracks. Tho Indians had caused the department ceaseless trouble. We were kept on the march continually, but for two months we failed to get close enough to them to become engaged in a fight. One morning, while we were camped at the base of the Chiracon Mountains, a courier came to the camp bringing the information that a band of about 200 renegade bucks had attacked a email emigrant train about ten miles away and had killed the entire party. We were soon in our eaddles and were riding rapidly towards the scene. The day was almost insufferably hot. The *ky was not obscured b^ a single cloud and the sun beat down with excruciating fierceness upon the weary soldiers, when arrived upou the scene of the massacre, we found the bodies lying about on the burning sands horribly mutilated. We had made but a short stop and had mounted our horses to give chase to the redskins, when I heard faint groans. It was some time before we could locate ?,ne pkee whenco the agonizing sound came. Finally we found it. The Indians had skinned one of the dead borsea and bad sewed up a man (whose name was E. R. Tarieton from Ohio) tightly in tbe greon hide. His body was doubled up and tbe hide was closely tied around him. We released him as quickly as we could, and applied restoratives that soon brought him to himself. Bat when he gazed around at his murdered family, he drew a knile Irom bis pocket, and before any one could stop him cut bis throat. Tying a man up in a green hide was a ew mode of torture to the soldiers. They had never seen it before. But I have since learned that in the early days of that Territory it was not infrequently applied by the Chericans as well as tbe Apaches.?St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Cnrlouii Antics of Panama Pelicans. "One of the many singular sights that greet the eye of the traveler in the beautifully picturesque harbor of Panama," said J. F. Foster at tbe Riggs, "is the curious antics and tumblings of tbe big long-billed pelicans over a school of fish. "Tbe pelicans are found, of course, along the entire coast, but one clear, 6unny morning as we neared the islands which semi-circle tbe harbor we observed ahead a dock of probably 300 of the monster birds getting their breakfast. They would fly heavily, yet swiftly, a few hundred feet above the water, and then, head down, wings close to their sides, they would drop like shot, dead weight, splash into the placid blue waters of the Pacific, sending the spray high in the air and disappearing for a second from sight, reappearing with a fish in their bills or already out of sight in the pouch, struggling and splashing a moment on the surface, and rising awkwardly and slowly in the air to repeat Ui& upiaiiuu, "Some of the young ones would turn a somersault, landing on their backs, their big heads and heavy bills being too much for them to control always with certainty. To see a big flock of these huge birds splashing like fchot in the water, sometimes dropping their i?rey when in the air, but always making a close finish to the surface with the fish, is a most interesting eight."?Washington Star. Farmer agents make from f5 to $20 per day selling $17 Spray Pumps at $5.50, express&ge paid. Proof of this, together wii h illustrated catalogue, can be obtained by addressing P. C. Lewis Mfg. Co., Box A., Catskill, X. Y. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering It through.tbe mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hairs Catarrh Cure, manufactured by P.J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.,contains no mercury, aud 1b taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, ana made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. fW Sold by Druggists, price 76c. per bottle. We eat too much and take too little out-door exercise. This is the fault of our modern civilization. It is claimed that Garfield Tea, a cimnla "horVi rcmp^v hplrtc KatiiTA tn rtvprrnmfl these abuses. " "I have been occasionally troubled with Coughs, and in each case have used Bhown's Bronchial Thoches,which have never failed, and I must say t.h?v are scond to none in the world.1'?Felix A. May. C'ashler, St. Paul, Minn. Wanted.?5UUU Pale People to buy 50c. Hotties of Forestine Bloo l Bitters of all dealers for2!>c. Gives yon Strength and Vigor with the Freshness ot Youth. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr.lsaao Thompson' eEye-water. UmijtriBMieil <U inj.nsr bottle ONE ENJOYS Both tho method and results "when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts fently yet promptly on the Kidneys, <iver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels cold3, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and 81 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, Kr. HEW YORK. H.V. Priceless Find of a Stone Prospectoi Martin O'Neill, the well-known stoi prospector of this city, has made a pric< less find of lithographic stone, net Thebe9, Alexander County, 111. ' The tract contains 165 ncre?." sai Mr. O'Neil, "ull of which appears to i underlaid with the stone. I have drille through it, and find that it is 300 fe deep. There is enough lithograph there stone to supply the world for tt next 500 years. "Aside from the steep prices con manded by lithographic stone, as an ii ducemeit to persons of stone-stndyir proclivities to hunt after deposits of tt character* is the fact that the Bavarii lithographic stone quarries, from whn all now in use, with very few ex?e tions, was produced, are almost e hausted."?St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A Ri.miirtnhle HaIa in 1h? PfwliK. In Ireland, near Horn Head, County Donegal, Ireland, there is a i markable natural hole in the rocks of t seacoatt, which is known all over Britr as "McSwmey's gun." It is believed be connected with a sea cavern. Wh the sea "runs full" the *4gun" sends jets of water to a height of more than c hundred feet, each spouting bt'.ng f< lowed and preceded by loud explosio The "gun ij a perfectly smooth h about ten inches in diameter, and history can be traced back to the first s tling of the country. No one seems know, however, how it got the name "McSwin^y's gun."?Chicago Herald ALL THE S/ 8PRAIN8. Mt. Pleasakt, Texas, June 20,1888. QXjRS^ Buffered 8 months with train of back; could not ^^ walk straight; used two ^ bottles of St. Jacobs Oil, |PB9 H was cured. No pain in HI 18 months. UUI M. J. WALLACE. A PROMPT AND I J17 SPRAY PUMP $5.5 IF EXPRESS Paid,for W W? Will Spray a Ten Acre Orchard Per Di Endorsed by the leading Entomologists of the C 60,000 in une. Satisfaction ffuarantced or money funded. Illustrated catalogue on spraying. Free. <? ? raDitl nailer. Our farmer aire lit* are making to 825) per day. WE SESl) PROOF. Addi P. C. 1?EWI8MFC?. CO.. Box A. Catskhx, > "Ge?mar Syrup" Mr. Albert Hartley of Hudsc N. C., was taken with Pneumon: His brother had just died from When he found his doctor could n rally him he took one bottle of G< man Syrup and came out sound ai well. Mr. S. B. Gardiner, Cle with Druggist J. E. Barr, Auroi Texas, prevented a bad attack pneumonia by taking German Syn in time. He was in the busine and knew the danger. He used t great remedy?Boschee's Germ Syrup?for lung diseases. rA Powerful Flesh Maker. A process that kills the taste of cod-liver oil has done good service?but the process that both kills the taste and effects partial digestion has done much more. Scott's Emulsion stands alone in the field of fat-foods. It is easy of assimilation because partly digested before taken. Scott's Emulsion checks Consumption and all other wasting diseases. Pr?pared by Scott & Bowne, Che mint#, fiew York. Sold b/ druggiita verywbere.^^M B LEWIS M. EDMUNDS, South H*rtwlck, N. Y. boils, carbuncles" e= 7 s |j and g _ TORTURING ECZEMA, H Completely Cured! DANA SAB8AI>AIUUA CO., H G tNTfl:?Twoyf aja ago I had "La6rlppc"=c == which tnurt have poisoned my blood u I __ tUC hod the Shingles " ehortly of-H ^ 1 rlC tor in their woret fonn. J took a largess Eguiicunt of Dr.'? medicines but they left me worie== Hand not able to work. M i= !/ i M ri 1 was terribly afflicted with SB EglxIIlL^ boils, had six end two cnr-K Blbuncles at one time. I tried everything^* El could hear r.f but continued to have boill. = Htm at Added to ail this EczemaH H I llrt I tormented inc night and day, the Hi |= Itching ?n? intense. 1 hud severe pains in rights BekIi' and baek. oontJnuul headache. 1B| = ID CO wa* discouraged. At lurt IS LiUn C.O heard of DANA'S PaRSAPA-== ' RLLI.A, commenced u?ing it, and tile thlrtlH ssbottle completely cvred me. S Yours respectfully, = SI LEWIS M. EDMUNDS. S3 South Hartwick, N. Y. |s The truth of the above i* certified to by nu ? u. mui^ukuuiv, r. m. mm South Hartwick, N. Y. = (| Dana Sar?aparJlla Co., Belfast, Maine. fl CTlTtmCottMnmp11 on, Cooghn, Cronp, Son Ihromt, Sold by all DrunUta on a Guarentw p. A Scheme to Hake Good Indians. )e In Arizona there are now nearly 35,000 j. Indians, distributed nmong the various tribes as follows: Navajo*, 16,285; Mo| quis, 1976; Apaches, 4829; Pimos and j.a J Papagos, 8721; smaller tribes, 2911. Id )e i this large body of people there should ,J be material for the backbone of a laboret ing class of people adapted to the waDts jc of this country in a most admirable manie ner. They are natives to the soil and climate, hardy as a whole, energetic. They need, however, the opportunity to Q_ acquaint themselves with the more modig ? lis in :h I ~W~rr^ COSTS MOI IJJ^ ing Powder ths ingredients are expensive. But th reD dingly purer and higher J? and of greater money i to The difference in cost o up the others does not equ; ening strength, nor make jjj* of the cheaper powders, i its ties which such powders eto Where the best food of Baking Powder only can [me, always. BRUISES. FrrrsBCBG, Pa., , j!u^?7T0 302Wylie Ave., Jan. 29,"87 0 One of my workmen fell . _ from a ladder, he sprained ^ . I \ and bruised his arm very badly. He used III 8t. Jacobs Oil 1 I H Mj and was cured in four f I I HU^Hdays. FRANZ X. GOELZ. PERMANENT CURE. | CHEAPER HMTMIH'HIHIIFICTUBINB I m, AH cannot possess a ? $10,000 ! ^ (This mm was paid for the first W ra> in the shape of a coin, but many can h of art?only special coin evu issued bj 196 United States Government 1 World's Souven 5,000,000 of which were donated to th< Government, are being rapidly taken 1 As there early promised to be : would render them very valuable in tl Authorities decided to place the price 5 $T.OO for and sell them direct to the people, thu: additional money for the further de\ Considering the fact that there v distributed amomg 63,000,000 people, of the foreign demand,) and that man ing to purchase these mementoes of | grandest Exposition ever held, should r For 5ale 4 , aftc | Everywhere j and Banks. If not for sale in your to | five coins, by Post-office or Express M | Draft, with instructions how to send j Treasurer World's Columbi | When Hamlei Exclaimed: Could He Havi SAP( WORN NICHT AND DAY. i Holds the worst nip- | with eauc unr wtI BLAST IO^BBder a" circumstances. ?BL T R n n o Hn . ( iWt;8TBJVT, 0 Perfects cobfokt, i m New pftf Improvement ?5 f Must. Cat. and rules for 0 m. *W fflT ^self-measurement securely u ^90 sealed. G. V. House Mfg. (rinnxn.}' Ca? >44 Broadway,N.Y.Cltv. MS! IT PITERS!! BORROWERS ! ! ! If you want to own a home, it you want to pay olt a mortgage. If you want to invest your money at the highest rate of interest consistent with safety; if you want a permanent, lucrative agency for a building and loan association, with $l,UM,UXi assets and 8100,(Jl>U deposited with Banking Department; if any of ai>ove wants are yours then write the Granite Statu I'rovjpentAskociation, Pulitzer Building, New York. I pa AN OI'TICA l< ILLUSION: L, L amusing and Instructive. Send r r name, addrt ss and one cent stamp 1 11 t? PEEK A- S?OX, COUXEK 47f/t STREET ASP BROADWAY, SEW YORK finiTDC or Thick Neck Cure. Uy Mail, Si. QUI I Kb J. X. K l-.fc.lN. BclleTille. X. J. ? Y.N U?J0 I IConmmpttvea and people who hive weak longs or A?th- Hj aoa. should use PUo's Cure for Consumption. It ba? cared H (hontandi. It ts*? not Injur- M ed one. It is not bid to take. It Is the bast cough eynjp. JR B i r ' <gBBM V em ideas of agriculture and with horticulture, of which they know oothiaf, with the breeding and handling of flat stock, and, in fact, they neeo. to 1m taught in the ways of civilized life, whet they will become a useful factor of th? Southwest. It is the only solution ?f1 ; i?M the "Indian problem."?Pboonix (Axi* .. zona) Herald. There are some epicures la rabbit in<; who never touch any part but tto bind quarters. Others will eac tht shoulders only. IE to make Royal Bakin any other, because its more highly refined and le Royal is correspon in leavening strength, /alue to the consumer. f Royal over the best of il the difference in leav- $|j i good the inferior work nor remove the impurileave in the food. is required, the Royal , be used. . MEND TOUR OWN HARNESS I - :->m THOMSON'S! SLOTTED CLINCH RIVET3. | No tooU wqalrtd. Only a hammer neatad to?M anil clinch them eaallv and quicker, Uarin* ths aUaA abiolmety amooth. Eeqoirina no bo e to be malt 9 < ? I he leather nor burr for tin Blrata. They are MMA loaKh and durable. Million* now la M> A length*, uniform or aaeorted, pat up In boxM. ilk 7oar dealer for tbeai, or Mod ftl ttampa tor a box of 100, auorted aiiee. Mantaby , ' ? JUOSON L THOMSON MFQ. CO* \ walthah, mass. r fiur superior (our claim for HARTMAM ET FENCE) considering the ooat of JM> ' : v Minting. Ton will help your tiuulMfr )ok by buying no other. We sell more Lawn Fencing than all othot lanufacturera combined, because it la tbt . .':T HANDSOMEST AND BEST FENCE MAOt ' r|| CHEAPER THAN WOOD?- ' . ? The new EABTMAN WIBE PANEL FEW? - ^ lets leas than barbed wire, and la Hnmnw^ - ? irong,. Visible and Ornamental. "Via Our 8toeM?lcket Gates. Tree and Flows* >. narcis, and Flexible Steelwlxe Door Mala MB a equaled. A 40-page Illustrated catalojuam HARTMAN SPECIALTIES it lolled free on application. Mention this oapfl* Works: Beaver Falls, Pa. ft Branches: 108 Chamber 8t., New Yofftk MHO 8 State Street, Chicago. Il4i S South Forsyth St., Atlanta. Souvenir orld's Fair Souvenir Coin minted.) ave fac-slmlles of this valuable work y the U. S. Governmect?for $i each. ?Fair ^? ir Coins? The Official Souvenir of the Great Exposition?? i World's Columbian Exposition by the by an enthusiastically patriotic people. a demand for these Souvenirs that ie hands of speculators, the Exposition it Each Coin | s- realizing 15,000,000, and using the relopment of the Fair. yere but s, 000,000 of these coins to t* in this country alone (to say nothinf y have already been taken, those wishniir rrmntrv'c r>ic/v->v/?rv anrl nf tVi# secure as many as they desire at once. ; Realizing that eveiy patriotic American I want one or more of these coins, 1 in order to make it convenient for 1 to get them, we have made arrang* / nts to have them sold throughout country by all the leading Merchants wn, send #1.00 each for not less than oney-order, Registered Letteror Bank them to you, all charges frefaid, to [an Exposition, Chicago4; I1L "Aye, There's the Rub!" i Referred to DLIO ASHARPJOKE f YET fl POINTED FACT! i IN 4 ACT8. Act I (Morning.) Man buyi pap?r of Uek?? Km takra home and uw? a few?throwa paptr Into clOMt. , Act II. (Noon.; Wife goo to cIomI lor braafe? pills a tack on the floor. , Act III. (.Night.) MandlirobttLflndi tack vMiiok of hi* foot 1 Air ia blue. ? 8*? f Act IV. (Next da;.) Man tclla a merchant hli experience and u delighted to buy Home Tacks packed in a box of tlx apartment*, all dJfhrent-tized d fa r k a ?hii*K tr-11 a^v>pnm/v<<i?A ikanualwu t. .11 E iwant a box of Homt Tccki. "* . Mad a Mlaly by the Moval'.y D?pt, Atlaa ?*ct Corp'n. llartao, ,N.? Y?t FhlJ*J?lpJiU. CMnw. Milam. > Du FliaclMe. Ljm. PtttrlN - Turn ion, Nko. Paljbawa, wnf Wblosaa, Maia. . Daxkajj. Mua. yijuxiuifc. tin. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. ? > Garfield Tea CureeStck Headache.KeatoiwComplexlonJJftwa Doctor Bills. 8?molefre?. GAhnzu>TKaCo..31} W. ifithSt^N.Y. Cures Constipation SARE YOU PRETTY? iflf Are yon happy and hcalthr ? That I in caliber?you nay in by A?q ] (o dow 1 You may aaally j udja bjr ( IM THIfll- U you art 111, tlrtd oat, kara ?* Liecu ot Dior* or ooapJaxloo, wriU a* at MH \teraiWtc?, pb?to?, Jooroal?FEM. (Paa?a#?JfcjB %M. yoroan a Ow^onraal.