The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, October 02, 1895, Image 7

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S& m K ' What Trained Senies Can Do. / It is remarkable how well a perfumer learns to recognize a scent. In jtesting a sweet-smelling liquid, he wets the base of his left thumb with a little of it. Then he rubs the place jrapidly with his right hand. The aljoohol in which the essence is dissolved, ! (being the more volatile, is at once Wapornted, and the substance which pr lemits the odor remaining, he can r.f ?mell it in its purity. I Of course, it is aa easy thing to riclognize the principal odors that are in pee, but when several are mixed, as is [common, his task becomes more difficult. Yet a skilled man cannot only ;tell you what three or four perfumes enter into the composition of the one ,he is testing, but also, roughly, the Relative proportions of each. ( It is easy to tell the relative amount of wool and ootton in a piece of colored underwear when you know how. :Hen who have made the subject a specialty can do this by holding the cloth in the light and looking along !it. The cotton and wool can be distinguished by the difference in their colors, which exists, although the same dye -was used for both. The untrained eye could hardly detect the lact that the cloth had two shades, [but the skill that comes from long practice makes the thing simple. | There are many men, too, who are able to tell an English book from an American book by the smell. The toooks printed in England in nearly every ctse have a pleasanter odor than those made in America. The kind of paste, ink, paper and binding used has probably something to do with it. ' There are ways of telling who the W' publishers of a given book are besides looking at the title page. Somehow every firm gives a certain characteristic look to every volume which it issues, and a skilled man, in nine cases cut of ten, merely by looking at the binding and at one of the pages, can tell from whose presses and bindery a work comes. This, of course, applies only to the larger firms and to books printed comparatively recently.? Pearson's Weekly. A Ring Foantl at Ball Baa. 11x1 ikan "POOM ' AliUUUgU UJV1V buau vum?; J have elapsed since the first and second tattles of Manassas, interesting articles are still'.found by the relic seek' : i. Only a few days ago visitors Ifonnd shells containing powder, pieces of canteens and whole bayonets, A young man, Laws Spencer, living on the old Logan farm (Catharpin Post-office), picked np a ring in the famoa9 3)eep Cut. The ring is of good gold, iWith a bloodstone scroll intaglio. The jdotto on it is, "Sic itur ad astra." Around the scroll is "V. M. I.," and ?t the base a pen anl sword crossed. Inside is engraved "One of the 29?0. C. Henderson, July 4,1859." Qener* si Scott Ship, Superintendent of Virginia Military Institute, 'says: "O. G. Henderson was a classmate of mine, and was wounded in the hand at second Manassas." He sends also the register of V, M. L, and it shows that 0. C. Hendersod was Captain of a Virginia battery. The Deep Cut witnessed bloody con- i tests. An officer who was in the engagement writes about the fight on I August 30, 1862: "Before the rail- < road cut the fight was most obstinate. 1 1 saw a Federal flag noia us position for a half hoar within ten yards of a flag of one of the Confederate regi- I mente, and after the fight 100 dead < men were lying twenty yards from the cnt, and some of them within two feet < of it. Some of the men fought with i etones, picked up out of the cut, long after their ammunition gavo out. Line after line surged up the hill time after time, led by their officers, but were repeatedly dashed back on one i another until the whole field was covered with a confused mass of strug- < gling, running, routed Federals,"? "Washington Star. Pr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root car* a all Kidney and Bladder troubles* , Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Bingharaton. N. Y. Spain's revenues from taxes have fallen off over $600,003 as compared with last year. Deofnea* Cannot be Cared by local application', as they cannot reach the tliseased portion of \ ho ear. There Is only one way to cure Deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused byanin,flamed condition of toe raucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearintr. and when it is entirely closed (Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can In taken out and this tube reStored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cas?*s out ten are -caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Ohinty & Co., Toledo, 0. fySold by Druggists, 75c. The Trne laxative Principle Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy. Syrup of Figs, has a permanently beneficial effect on the human system, while artrortc otwI mineral anln luo tuca?c^cw?u4v vAk>M>v?v *?..* tions, usually sold as medicines, are permanently Injurious. Being well informed, you ^ will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Ont Of Sorts. That is the way you feel as a result of th? headache you had when you awoke this morning. Get in your usual frame of mind and body by using Ri-mns Tabules, the standard remedy for all stomach and liver complaints FITS stopped free by Da. Kline's firicat ?euve Rkstoker. No tits after first day's use. arvelous cure?. Treatise and $2.0) trial bottle free. Dr. Kline. 'J31 Arch St., Phila.. Pa. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inaammai? lion, allays pain, t ures wind colic. 25c. a bottle Piso's Cure for Consumption relieves the most obstinate coughs.?Itev. 1). Hucumceller, Lexington, Mo., February 24,1?W. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomn win's Eye-water. Drucriristssell at 2."ic per bottle It is a Fact That Hood's Sarsaparilla has an unequalled record of euros, the largest sales in the world, and cures wheD all others fail. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier 5*Prominently in the public eye today. $1; six for $5; Be sure to get Hood's. (|AAJU Dil!?k harmoniously with HOOU S rlliS Hood's SarsHp trilla. fS3B^?B3ESBaa#| CURES WHIRE ALL ELSE FAILS. El Best Cough SjTup. Tiiui Good. Use In time. Sold by dragging j(4 A. S _ "WORLD'S CHESS CHAMP105. J Hoi Thi Career of the Yoonij American Who , Beat the World's Best Players. piant Henry Nelson Pillsbury, of Brook- inghc Ijn, N. Y., who won the international a chess masters' tournament at Hast- men> ings, England, has np to the present js reg piecei ceedi if 11' S v V?. I >bT' 1 Ak XT.X \ 7< y^U \ yZ/ X wase: X/l/llwii^Z^Sy few / woulc ''W^W Penci / J i?g tl x y in&11 amete Th? 7C% feet : /^JF preve I % any p n. s. pnLLSBUBT, chess champion. pressi ?? on tb enjoyed only a local reputation. His ring, career as a che6s player has not been ture ? of tbe brilliant order, but rather one minul of constant advancement. Pillsbury obtaii is twentj-two years old, and his chess Pittet playing dates from his sixteenth birthday, -when he first learned the moves of the game at which he has now proved himself to be the inter- Wh national champion. ditch Addison Smith, a leading member Perci1 of the Boston Chess Club, became in- Cham terested in the young man shortly they < after he began to play, and Pillsbury tracte was not slow to take advantage of attenl Smith's valuable experience. He be- tooth came an active member of the Boston four UUess UJud, ana onjoyea a repumnuu crowr among Boston enthusiasts as a coming pounc player. city ii Pillsbury's first important success cast o was gained over Champion Steinitz, versit who unsuccessfully tried to concede corref him the odds of pawn and move. He Burlij was entered in 1890 in the American Chess Congress, receiving odds from Burrille and other leading players. Young Pillsbury defeated Stone at evens with a score of 5 to 2. He also Q| played a match with Barry, a strong Wfl8 t( New England player, winning by a wjjog score of 5 to 4. returi All of the leading devotees of the a 6ma game played at Hastings. The cham- _____ pion Lasker, Tschigorin, Blackburne, Burn, Bird, Gunsberg, Tarrasch, Yergani, Tinsley, Yon Bardeleben, Teichmann, Albin, Mason, Janowski, Pollock and several others, among , them Walbrodt, also a very young A man, like Pillsbury, played. Lasker % was looked upon as a probable winner, with Tschigorin, Steinitz, Blackbume and Tarrasch as dangerous jS rivals, while Pillsbury and the others W were in the dark-horse category. jr Pillsbury's v'ctory against such an ./IV array of talent is therefore the more (MOs remarkable, as he was pitted against \lu\ men whose experience in tournaments i and matches was calculated to at least \\ft overcome the younger and leBS ex- \iYy perienced players. Pillsbury is an active member of the Brooklyn Chess Club, and on his yj* departure for the scene of his great S^ victory was the recipient of a cordial . ^ demonstration at the hands of that organization. He Was Puzzled. Every expression of the child showed eager curiosity. On the way downtown the boy frequently and persist ently asked questions. | t Finally the car passed Baldwin's, I and the youngster caught a glimpse of ' j* a locomotive boiler outside. ? . "Papa, papa, -what is that?" h6 < D 659. cried. slichl "That's a locomotive boiler, my cu^0l son." x Thus answered the juvenile was lost in reverie. He was thinking it over. - .. "Did you say that was a locomotive boiler, papa?" he suddenly blurted out. "Of course, I said so." It i "Well, then, why do they boil loco- poses motives?"?Philadelphia Call. rubb? . are ui A Land ol "Windmills. varinl Western Kansas is entirely unlike and n Holland because of the scarcity, al- cover most absence, of water, but is becom- ber c ing very like the Dutch lowlands in protei the great abundance of windmills or me which are becoming so numerous as to fill up the landscape. In the town of ? , Wilson a traveler counted seventy-two windmills in view from the hotel ver- Dr. anda. There is an excellent water cold i supply a few feet below the surface in almoe that region, and every man has an in- the p' dividual supply, raised by the wind- dred mills.?Chicago Tribune.. time. A HORSELESS CARRIAGE It came from Paris, says the Detroit Fr< York firm for delivering goods. A petrolei power and its maximum 6peed is sixteen ki claims that the -wagon'6 running expense dai in keeping of a horse. The wagon's appearance does not differ i employed. The engine is concealed in a eq is said to be almost noiseless. A crank in frc acy and three brakes keep it under control, wagon is light, stanch and trim. n a Great Steel Kin? TVas Made. s steel ring for generator No. 3 at Niagara Power Company's new is now at the shop of the Westmse Company, and is attracting at deal of attention from steel as well as from electricians. It A arded as one of the very finest a of work ever turned ont. It Drged at Bethlehem, Penn. The is considerably the largest of the ever cast. It ie eleven feet seven one-eighth inches in diameter, ; five feet high and weighs 27,000 As. It cost over 88000. 3 making of the ring was an exngly difficult task. A nickel *7 ingot fonr and a half feet in di- ~ >r at the bottom and six and a dl eet long was ca6t. A hole was ^ bored through it lengthwise. A . of the proper weight was then 15 om the ingot, and the cylinder obtained waE heated, and, under " Iraulic pressure of 14,000 tons tpanded to the present size. It 8* 1 be just like cutting from a lead ~~ 1 a section half an inch long, borie lead out of it and then expandle wood to a ring an inch in di* :r. i ring had to be forged to a per;ircle, and in Buch a way as to nt the possibility of weakness in iart, for, when the tremendous are of Niagara is brought to bear e turbine, which will turn the it will revolve around the armait the rate of 250 revolutions per te. The electrical energy thus aed will be 5000 horsepower.? >urg Dispatch. A Large Tooth. ile workmen were excavating a in a swamp on the farm of C. E. ral, in the southeastern part of paign County, a few days ago, lug a huge tooth which has atid considerable curiosity and the ;ion of scientific people. The measured ten inches in length, inches across the face of the. i and weighed seven and one-half It. When it was brought to this fc was compared with a plaster f a mastodon's tooth in the Uniy of Illinois, and it was found to jpond almost exactly with it.? Qgton (Iowa) Hawkeye. Richest American Woman. dt interesting sight for the people ce Hows Falls, Yt., the past summer > watch Hetty Green, the woman pj > fortune is way up in millions, aing from a shopping tour with j] 11 package of tea, a pound of rt C< w HETTT GREEN. ers and a bag of flour in her J|| They considered Mrs. Green a citizen, and said that she paid ixes with commendable promptbut she would not submit to the est extortion. She had the water 2 from her house at the cost of personal inconvenience because lought she was charged too much Will Use Molasses, s said a French chemist proto make a substitute for india ;r from the same ingredients as jed in the manufacture of print- i oilers, i. e., a mixture formed of ale proportions of glne, glycerine ^laoooo THiia nnmrinfliHnn in f.n ed with canvas, ordinary rubr "other suitable material," to; ct it against humidity, great heat chanical action.?Boston Globe. Id Water a Valuable Stimulant. Lauder Brinton declares ttiat vater is a valuable 6timulant to it everybody, and will often send alee from seventy-six to a hunwhen sipped, a wineglassful at a IN SEW TOUK. P0)'1 i ct V< -e Press, and is used by a New p: am air engine provides motive li ilometers an hour. The inventor [j ly ia less than half that required b< b; natorially from that of those now rc uare wooden box in the rear and e< rnt guides the vehicle with accur- m Tbe tires are of rubber and the fli to FASHION FANCIES. 'Z Thit EIREATEXED KESURRACTION wor; OF THE HOOPSKIRT. bro? Tendency to Individual Ideas as to Wliat to "Wear?Fall Wraps j?] and Cunes?Rlaelt Horse- ma* hair Hats. Wh< picti I TO longer doubt it, writes a **nc \ Paris correspondent; woman mer< ^ has issued her personal 6 declaration of independence. a, .? revolution is at hand. The slaves of T .1( e tyrant fashion are toiling, and the 1 .... essmaking dynasties tremble in their m. oes. They are to rule no longer. P c is the strictly personal style which to be the fashion. The movement began in England, "W here women have always been al- hats, wed a free choice concerning the ery : yle of their dress. Some fair young chap WMm'r fjr *? THE HOOPSKIRT OF 1850, WHICH THREA' ime with a vein of originality con- rhin lived the idea of the picture hat, up-f lilt after the fashion of some famoas the linting, and wore it, notwithstand- the ! g the fact that it was not mode, pree his slight departure from established dani lies spread far and wide, and it has Lou 3w come to Paris. bon Frenchwomen are quite open to the fane iggeBtion of individualism in fash- ? n, and women in prominent social jsitions who are fair, clever and adired have become advocates of the :w thought. They are now taking le "ideas" for the works of art in te wardrobe from the picture gallers. The great masters, whose works ;corate the Louvre, are made the ar- x itratorB of what is worn. cS The rule is to try the various' ? yles, and when one is accepted, it ig lould be worn at least two seasons. ^ Another chronicler of fashions asirts that the hoopskirt is bound to 3 with ns again before another six onths. We can only hope, adds the hicago Times-Herald, that the first oman to reappear in one will not share ie fate of her unfortunate sister who ore ono in the streets of New York 11840. She was arrested by the poce. FALL -VTKArS. It seems snch a pity to be obliged to >ver the pretty bodices of this season ^ ith a wrap of any sort, and were it at that the wraps are 60 very enticing ie fashionable girl would be apt to liver along the avenues with no'pro- -? bon YV A KEW FALL CAPE. the it f iction from the winds, saje the New p(lS? ork Recorder. aj(|e The capes are perfect loves, and j un(] eep right in the first rank of favor ^ ith women in general, for there is, 0I1 j or can there be, no more comfortable ej?( >vering than aloose cape. The sleeves ve?L re still tremendous, one of tho most Nvaj? arked features of tho fall bodice. reve id a jacket, even with the fullest jn ^ ind of a sleeve, seems crampy and out t order. One hates to crowd and reve ash a lovely big sleeve, all soft folds ;QO,. JU puns, iuiu a turn MCUYC) uu wuv- tll0 ;r of how big proportions; there is f|csj. ire to be more or less crushing. ajj"_" Velvet is, as was predicted, in espe- ftU(j al favor for fall wraps?but more of cej. lis later; there nre no end of lovely infections already seen in this rich id universally becoming fabric. p The sketch shows one of the new . ipeb in a dull, slate-colorcd Lyons jlvet, with 6uch n wonderfully thick ile, and showing such beautiful white ' ghts. It is circular in cut, falling j c.07e om the shoulders in rich fold?, and j ^ Drdered with straps of cream white > roadcloth. Broad revcrs and a high j l1 )lling collftr of white havo strapped j Iges. A double clasp of pearl orna- i A ents the front. With this is worn a with at, flaring brimmed hit, ol warm, brid m-color?d braid, eiuiplybut molislily Colg lmed with long, epikey wingi ized greens and reddish brow ! t-oilette is made complete w] q with a frock of cream-colo id-cloth, as is Bhown in the sket CHIC HATS FOR AUTUMN". 3e fall hat differs from the si one in one particular very strong sreas the Bummer hat had to aresque or lose all claim to < tion, autumn headgear has to sly chic. Broad brims, crown* y indentations and the like oed, ana tne mm uttie sna :h are most capable of develop: the "chic" beneath a skil iner's touches have taken th es. WOVEN HORSEHAIR FOR HATS. ovan horsehair remains a rage , and figures largely in the mill notions for fall. Black horseh >eans are trimmed elegantly w rENS TO RETURN TO FASHION. estone buckles and a single pel lare of flowers. In many cs trimming is very simple, but hat nf this material that the ari ents here the trimming is abi k +Vinra ia in frnnt ft 1ft' is XV. bow, made of rose pink i overlaid with black guipure wh y edges extend beyond the i HAT OF "WOVEN HOBSEHAIB. . The bow has double loops i oi/3o tVinf <iirnrm nvflf black ] arranged in puffs on the brim, it a few malmajson rose3 with b foliage show. CLOTH GOWX3, 'bile fashionable tailors will gh-surfaced fabrics?tweeds, ch and boucle cloths?for the grer iber of gowns, they will adhere smooth lady's cloth for their m lorate dresses, as thoy have alw e. he tailors who were slow to ad ;e sleeves and very wide skirts loudest in their praise, and 3 on commending them for win Certainly their long lines it suitable for the cloth and vel sses made by tailors, where dra; md flounces would not be effecti coat-waist will be used for go^ hese heavy fabrics, though rot waists will not be abandoned small slight women who And tl aming. An effort will be mad< tway with the godet back of th :s. commonly known as the "rip k," and substitute flat fanl ed pleats. The back is to be v rt, falling only a few inches be] waist, and is to have but i ns, though it is closely fitted. 1 it may be lapped slightly to al use of very eleprant buttons, or < -_l.i ,1 ? Kal ails open .luui^uc ? ied around the wai3t, going c the back but slipped inside er-arm seams, and fastening un open front. Square long tabs bese fronte, and they are mer 2d with fur. A novelty that - effective on litted 6ingle-breas ts is double rovers, the lot rs cut in slender point.* that . chu fashioo. jo trimmings for cloth gowns 1 rs and vest of cloth of a contra color, bias bauds of the cloth dres3 stitched on in rovzs or i; ^u, narrow bands of fur, and i tho very rich braiding iu g< othsr uiotaiH ia which tailorj i ?Harper's B.i/,ar. TRIMMINGS. issementerie waist trimmings i orled, and are very handsome a jnsivfc. There ia a standing col point*, i he entire sections ring th9 ahoulderaaad tops of 1 res, with a loug poiui for the fr< sides shaped like an Eton jack . a complete back of the garaitu railroad trestle l'JQC f<cl loi doable traces and a sti el dm ge, hao just beiri comj'deted o~\ ate- Creek, jMnrjluad. .! r. Z ?0 I Immenittj ( the Unlierse. ns. I . " , t!en ( To form some idea of the large nesi red of the earth, one may look upon the 0h. landscape from the top of an ordinary ohnrch steeple, and then bear in'mind that one must view 900,000 similar landscapes to get an approximately im* correct idea of the size of the earth, [ly. Bays London Pnblio Opinion. Place be 500 earths like ours side by side, yet, lis* , Saturn's outermost ring could easily t be I enclose them. Three hundred thou? of sand earth globes could be stored in* are aide the sun, if hollow. If a human pes eye were capable of looking upon a iag fresh measure of world material 5400 ful square miles large, that eye would eir need 55,000 yearB to overlook the surface of the sun. To reach the nearest fixed star, one must travel 26,000, 000,000 miles; and, if the velocity for were eqnal to that of a cannon ball, it jn. would require 5,000,000 years to a;r travel that distance. Besides single stars, we know of nov system of stars moving ronnd one another. Skill, we are bnt a short way into space yet. Ontside of onr limits of vision and imagination there are no doubt still i larger spaces. The Milky Way holds at least 21,191,000 stars, and as each is a sun, we presume it is enciroled by at least fifty planets. Counting up these figures, we arrive at the magnitude of 1,000,955,000 stars. A thousand million stars I Who can comprehend it? Still, this is only a part of the universe. The modern telescopes have discovered more and more Milky Waye still further cway. We know of some 3000 nebulae which represent Milky Ways like onrs. Let u& count 2000 of them as being of the size of our Milky Way; then 2000 by 20,191,000 equals 40,382,000,000 suns, or 2,019,100,000,000 heavenly bodies. ^ It took P. F. Rothermel, the artist who diei the other day, eighteen ? months to paint the "Battle of Gettys- I ^ .bur2'" ^ Highest of all in Leavening Po AB&OLU1 rky Early Use ot fcfcnpowder. ?S0S ' jn War destroys, and at tne same time .jst is the incentive for the creation of new things. War and iron are inr e separably linked together. The discovery of gunpowder caused a comose plete revolution in the manufacture of iron. The mixing of sulphur, salt- i .? petre and coal as a toy had been known for a long time. Hence, to speak of the discovery of gunpowder in the fourteenth oentury only refers to the application of powder during that oentury for the purposes of war. To credit the Monk Bertold Sohwarz (or Black) with the discovery of gun powder is incorrect. Ilowever, hit & investigations into the nature ol 0 powder and its constituents for use ai & an applicable force in guns produoed p a radical change in the then customari . warfare, and from that etandpoinl Bertold Schwarz deserves to be rec* ognized as the promoter of modern warfare. Many hundreds of years before Schwarz the Chinese used gun* powder. The invention of field gun? is oredited to the Chinese Emperor Vitey, or Wu-ti, who lived 140 yeara B. C. During the eleventh century the Tartars learned the use of gunpowder from the Chinese. The Arabs acquired the knowledge of gunpowder Y from the Tartars, and are said to have f used cannon at the siege of Lisbon, in 1147. The Greek fire was invented in 668 A. D., and besides setting fire to the enemies' ships and cities, was used to shoot leaden balls out of metal can on non. Marcus Gracous, who lived A. v D. 1204 1261, describes gunpowder as ' jn a mixture of two pounds of coal, one Q(j8 pound of sulphur and six pounds of saltpetre.?The Iron Age. "Honeymoon." nge The Neue Blatt informs us that the l0T. term "honeymoon" was not cuggested iter ky the sweetness of that period of j bliss, but originated through a custom ore of the Germans of old, which comftya pelled the newly wedded to drink nothing but mead made of honey Qpj. during the thirty days following tha ft{,0 marriage. in- _ ; lter W0MEN'S FACES 0,16 f V ?like flowers, fade iSt and wither with time; >ai>. the bloom of the rose Ji3 only known to the ive. :iT>' 1 healthy woman's vns A .-jeN, cheeks. The nervind >^V[pS8ra;|3r^\ ous strain caused by hv |(tv V Is?-^Cr/^VV the ailments ana ^ : ni IrZTT^/Jr Air pains peculiar to the iem ; (\p{/&MGLj}$s\*w sex, and the labor 5 to " and worry of rearing eB0 a family, can often . be tTaced by the lines in the woman's face. Ple Doll eyes, the sallow or wrinkled face and ike those feelings of weakness'' have their ery rise in the derangements and irregularities I JL peculiar to women. The functional de' rangements, painful disorders, and chronic Few weaknesses of women, can be cured with rhe Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. For the iow young girl just entering womanhood, for . the mother and those about to become ''30 mothers, and later in "the change of life," t is the "Prescription" is just what they need; ,at- ^ aids nature in preparing: the system for ,1 these events. It's a medicine prescribed , for thirty years, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief riflH U.'.M _ 1, A ?. 4t.A TT?*?1 tuuauiuji^ j;ujraiviou IU me liivauus aro and Surgical Institute, at Euffalo, N. Y. e]7 N Y N U-3S tod PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK pCr Can only bo accomplished with the very besC |3p of tools and ? . appliances. 1 With a Davis TW* Cream Separator on the /SsjT m farm you are ire sure of more " and hotter tst- butter, while the skimmed oi milk is aval- mg?gw uab'.e feed n c Farmers will tSgpT makenomisin take to get a Davis. Neat, )1L| illustrated cataiogus ,y. mailed fkeb Agents wanted DAVIS & RA1JHIN BLEG. & MFG. CO. da*. Randoloh & Dearborn Gts.,Ohlcaaa. 4% SBftl Great sale Parker, Baker and other {7^*8 Kkfi breech Loaders. Price waydowo. rirn Kl HLB IB U ^'nK'e barrel. $4.00; double, $<i.5C; 1 V \tr muzzle loaders, $2.U0; rifles, ?.1.73; Hl(l air rifles, $1.00; repeating, $1.50; revolvers, 8.1c.; bt1 cycles, half price; kodaks; boxlug gloves, tiel'verej, Jar $1.75, set oi lour. Send stamp* tor Jfj-pa/e plctorlul catalogue. H. & D. Folsom Arms Co., 314 B'way. X.Y. 1 SUt ' Cleanliness is Nas Pride, I re! mon Sense Qicfc t \ ' w 'r ' '' jfmjngs . I; yf'i "ijB '' Sif Djspepfia, Insomnia* From (he Herald, Baltimore, Mi. Mr. Isaac Hamburger Is a well-know? < cigar manufacturer and tobacco dealer at 1425 E. Baltimore street, Baltimore, MdL Hi Is a bale, robust man now. but a few month* ago he thought he was about to become a living skeleton If not a dead man. He now weighs about 200 pounds and steps about hJl factory as actively as do h's "stripper" boys. His present condition is due to the um of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which he considan . /> the beet medicine In the world for dyspepsia, loss of appetite, indigestion and lnsoim nia. When a Herald reporter recentlycalledon Mr. Hamburger he came jauntily in tb* store from his factory and In speaking oC the pills, said; "Yes, I have used Dr. Willlams'Pink Pills and can cheerfully reoom- , mend them. 8ome months since," he continued, "owing to confinement to business, I had an attack of dyspepsia accompanied by terrible and almost Incessant heart burn and torpid liver. I tried doctors and many remedies that friends advised me to take, b?t found no relief until I heard of and used Dn Williams' Pink Pills. I secured five boxag and began to improve perceptibly after taking a few doses, and when the five boxes wore gone i was compieieiy cureu. ju /? had seen me when I was sick and compared my condition then with what it 1b now jam. wonld join me in a song of praise of the marvelous merits ?f Fink Pills. I am a 11 viae, monument to their efficacy In curing the maladies from which I suffered. I weleh now nearly 200 pounds, sleep well, eat heartily and digest my food without any lnconveafrence and sleep as well as I did when a boy after a romp before bed time. I unhesitatingly and with confidence in their curative and Invigorating qualities recommend tfce Pink Fills to all sufferers and should I be w unfortunate as to be sick again I shall get another supply." ' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in a eo?densed forth, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore Shattered nerves. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to femalea such as suppressions, Irregularities and all forms of weakness. They build up the blood and restore the glow of health to pale and , sallow cheeks. In men they effect a radical cure In all cases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. Pink Pills are sold in boxes ("never in loose , ' bulk) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.5<^ and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mall from Dr. Williams' Mcdlcine Company, Schenectady, N. I. I | There were 17,864,714 bunches of bananas consumed in the' United States last year. t ...... TT p n >i T> wcr.? Juaicsi U.S. our i *\syu*v I Baking 1 Powder rELV PURE ' -l i ffiiA HW tfo matter how violent or excruciating the tain . Rheumatic, Bedridden, Infirm, Crippled, Narrow Keuralglc, or pros ira ted with diseases may suffer' RAD WAY'S READY RELIEF Will Afford Instant Ease. For headache (whether sick or nervous), toothach* neuralgia, rheumatism, lumoago. pains and weakness In the back, spine or kidneys, palna ar >uad Um liver, pleurisy, swelling or the Jjlnts and pains at all kinds, the application of Rad way's Ready Relief will afford Immediate ease, and Its continued om for a few days effect a permanent cure. INTEBNALL Y-Ahalf toaUospoonful takatt a tumbler or water will In a few minutes cat Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomltta^ Heartburn, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, CoUc, Flatulency and all Internal pains. Malaria In Its various forms cured and prevented. There Is not a remedial agent In the world that will cure Fever and A?ue and all other fevers (aide* by RADWAY'S PILI-8) so quickly as HADa nir n m rpt? W A X'O IVJjAli J| AlklilA?i STOPS S PAIN': *1 Sold by all Drnggists. 30 cents a Botil*. KAPWAY & CO.. NEW YORK. Waiter Bauer & Co. limften Til* Lvftft MiaaftCtOTm of ' PURE, HIGH CRADK Cocoas and Chocolates MjELjy _ On thli Conttnaat hart rcatoi HIGHE8T AWARD8 from tin fr?*t /NlMk Industrial and Food IS \WtiL expositions ? ? lm,N EUH0PE AHD AMERJCJL . .v Ha l?Cautlon: ? fa-ld Ifcfwl <>'th* UbtUtad vripperi on onr Qd eoMommihotHd ??* ? ? Ell rTf our ptacc of m?cnf?ctai?, <451 IBnlVn?m?1 j, Sorchciter, IUm. ii prinud on MCli pictifl. sold by grocers everywhere WAITER BAKER * CO. LTD. D0RCHE8TEB, UUL \ The Greatest rtedlcal Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical JJiscovery. I DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Ha9 dlsoorered Id one of onr commoa pasture weeds a remedy that cnrea every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common pimple. He b&s tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except In twocasei fboth thunder humor). He has now in bis possession over two hundred certificates of Its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. 8end postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from th? first bottle, and a perfect cure la warranted when the right quantity Is taken. I When the lungs are affected It causef shooting pains, like ' needles passing through tberai the same with the Livec or Bowels. This Is caused by the duett being stopped, and always disappears lo * week after taking it Bead the iabeL If the stomach Is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful In water at bedtime. Sold by olJ Druggists. Rockland Collegiate Institute N V A V K-0 N'.TIIE-HUDSON. The Cheapest and one of tne llmt UKJHGKADE M'ilOOLS for boys and youn< mea near New York. Full courses English, Academic; Scientific, Commercial. College Preparatory. Certltlcatj admits to BEST (.'()I, l?htit!>. Xa recomna'iiUed student has ever oeea refuseJ. complete EQUESTRIAN l?EPAItT.UhX'l' <?: Howes and Ponies. Sen I for Illustrated cm Mloiue. ( A I'T. J OEI, Wli.y'tX, A. ?!.. I'rii'r 1.1 jj case' pr*. aounced hopeless. From first dose ^ptomsfapldlyditipptifr Jnrt in ten days at least iwo-uiirn? 01 *u ??i .w, BOOK of testimonials of miraculous cures tent FREE* Sirt's Nae Honesty." Comifss the Use of 3LIO 's? i.J.v"'1