The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, October 23, 1895, Image 7

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They Don't Pay Small Checkf. A seaside hotel proprietor wishing to olose his season's account with one of the largest upholstering establishments in this city wrote for his balance a few days ago, requesting a oheck for the $4.32 that stood to his credit. He was surprised the day following to receive a registered letter containing four one dollar bills and sixteen two cent postage stamps. He made inquiries of his neighbors and learned that not only this particular business house, but many others in New York City, were in the habit of paying small amounts in cash, rather than by check. "The reason for mailing cash instead of checks in settlement of small accounts," taid the manager of one of these houses, in answer to my question, "i3 twofold. For one thing, our banks object to small checks. We have accounts only with big banks, doing a business of many hundreds of thousands or millions a year, and a mass of small checks would tend to bother iiam nrrootir Snnifl banks won't take accounts except with the understanding that small checks will not be drawn upon them, except occasionally. "The principal reason, though, is to guard us against the raising of checks. Any check under S10 is very easily raised, and there are so many petty sharpers engaged in that business that we are apt to be greatly bothered and fretted by these little frauds. We find that it is mueh cheaper for ns, in these days of cheap registry, to settle such acconnts in bills and postage stamps, and pay the registry charges, than to run the risk of loss and trouble by sending a lot of little checks all over the country."?New York Herald. ">'otliinsr Like Leather." Those who hoped for a revolution in the art of great gun making, in the interest of the cattle-raising industry, when reports of the success of the raw-hide canuon were received recently from Sandy Hook, are probably doomed to disappointment. An excellent authority has now pointed out the fact that the two objects achieved by the use of raw-hide as an outer surface for the gun are, in reality, elements of weakness. He states that, in the first place, lightness, which is primarily secured by the use of the leather, detracts from the range and accuracy of the piece, for, as he says, these are dependent upon the record, inasmuch as the explosion of the powder merely parts the shot from the gun. If, therefore, the gun is eo light as to recoil smartly and freely, the shot loses a proportionate amount . of force. Much of the weight of great guns, he declares, could be dispensed with as a mere matter of strength, but the pieces would be rendered too light for effective use. The other end secured by the leather is 6aid to be the low temperature of the piece after shots are fired. But this, he claims, is a danger, for by no possibility can tha real amount of heat generated by the shot be reduced and the use of the raw-hide cover only retains it?being a non-conductor of heat?within the inner tube. On the other hand, the use of an all-metal tube permits the beat to escape to the outer layers and thus to the air and prevents that greatest of dangers, over-heating, to a much higher degree than does the raw-hide gun.?Washington Star. There is a one-armed man in Georgia who can plow, jerk and goad a mule, swear and smoke a pipe all at 1 once. Pots and Stove*. The flres of energy are lighted very eoon in life and the struggle begins, as the saying is, to keep the pot boiling." But speaking literally, flres are still kindled.with kerosene, and many a pot boils over or is overturned. Frightful burns and scalds result in spite of warning and suffering. The thing is then not to preach but to practice, and the practice is. for a sure cure, to use St. Jacobs Oil according to directions. A host of caterpillars is devouring everything green around Berlin and in Silesia. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation frea Laboratory Binighamton. N. Y. The horse meat packing-house at Hammond, Ind., has been declare! a nuisance. How's This ! We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any caxe of Catarrh that caauot be cured by HaH's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chkket & Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che fectly honorable in all business transactions and financ;ally ablo to carry oat any obligation made by their firm. West & Trcax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Waldiso, Kisvan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Ha'l's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blooil and mucous surfaces of the svstem. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. To Avoid constipation is to prolong life. Ripans Tabules re gentle, yet positive in their cure of constipation. On* tsnnl* srive? relief. FITS stopped iree oy Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Rkstuker. No lits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and 82.00 trial bottle free. Dr. lvline. 9U1 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Mrs. Winslow'g Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 26c. a bottle We have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for 20 years.?Lizzir Fkrhel, Camp St., Harrisburg, Pa., May 4,1894. A Dose in Time Saves Nine of Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar for Coughs. Pike's Tootbuche Drops Cure in one minute. Nerves /and Blood Are inseparably connected. The former depend simply, solely, solidly upon the latter. If it is pure they are properly fed and tbere is no nervousness." If it is impure they are fed on refuse and the horrors of nervous prostration result. Feed the nerves on pure blood. Make pure blood and keep it pure by taking Hood's Ofctrstipfcirih The One True Blood Purifier. UmmiI'? D!I!o tbe after-dinnerpil^HH HOOU S ? IllS family cathartic. lltr CURL S WHtKt AL L t LSEF ARS. ' Kf B(*t Cough Syrup. Tuiei Good. Cio fi II I maktha, the yivanihere. A Peruvian Woman Who Has Became Famous as a Soldier. From Lima comes a portrait of a remarkable Peruvian 'woman who has become a celebrity in the country from her bravery and attention to the wounded during the recent revolutionary campaign which culminated in the attack and capture of Lima on March 17th, 18th and 19th last. To-day the name of Martha, the Vivandiere. who accompanied the division of the coalition, army under the command of Colonel Philip Ore, is a household word in Lima. Martha is a woman of about thirty five years ol age ana 01 anaian dioou. She is rather tall for one of her race and notat all bad looking. Frorafirstto last 6ince Colonel Ore encamped in Lurin, about twenty miles from Lima, Martha, in a brilliant uniform and mounted MARTHA, THE YXVANDIERE. on a splendid horse, was always to be seen when lighting was going on, sometimes at the front urging on the soldiers, at other times at the rear assisting the wounded. During the fierce fighting at the entrance to Lima Martha -was wounded by a bullet in the right foot. She mortgaged a small house which she owned in Callao, and when the coalition forces commenced what was vir tually the aiege of ljima 6ne employed her little fund in the purchase of revolvers and other articles. There were three days' tremendous fighting in Lima, over 1000 men lying dead in the streets. About fifty per cent, of the combatants engaged were placed hors de combat. By this it will be easily understood how the conduct of MartUa, the Vivandiere, has made her famoue. liody Turned to Stoue. The bodies of four Chinese were exhumed at Columbus, Ohio, and placed in zinc boxes to be shipped to China. Great consternation was caused when it was found that the body of one of them, Me Lung, who had embraced the Christian religion before he died, had turned to stone. As the box provided for it was not half as long as the body, it became nece6Bary to break the petrified corpse. To do this the Chinese indulged in a tug-of-war with the corpse, breaking the legs, arms and head off in that way.?San Francisco Chronicle. Oldest Yacht in the World. The accompanying illustration is made from a photograph by Emile Brugsch-Bey, of an ancient Egyptian boat, the original being found in the course of excavations conducted by M. de Morgan and Meir, and now at Gizeh. The sails of this boat were probably not made of ramie cloth, and it is evident that they do not set with that graceful smoothness that characterizes the sails of the present * era; still, the striking similarity in the general model of the hull will be apparent to every one. This ancient a tacht of 5000 vears afio. boat is, bo far as known, the only one which has been preserved with its original rigging, and dates from the Eleventh or Twelfth Dynasty, or about 3060 years B. C. Everything about yacht building that is known must not be credited to the nineteenth century. Anarchists in European Countries. About 2000 persons in France are marked as Anarchists, and are constantly watched by the police of the various European countries,according to La Figaro, of whom 500 are French and 1500 are foreigners, Italy leading with 510, followed by Switzerland with 300, Germany and Russia with 240 each, Austria and Belgium with I sixty eactj. as regnrus ocripatiou. shoemakers, carpenters ami day laborers of all Nations furnish large proportions of the Anarchists, while the educated professions hardly appear. German tailors and printers, fc^Kswatchmakers and farmers,Italian BHw^riftLbakers, and French waiters avowed business chv than those of nfflnRDnHL^he Kussi^^ FASHION'S WHIMS. FALL AND WINTER NOVELTIES IN WOMAN'S WEAR. Waist Trimmings Are Getting Elaborate?How to Wear VeilsStyles in Jackets and Capes. WAIST trimmings are growing more and more elaborate, if that were possible, until there is no telling where this extreme will end. i i. A new costume nas an arraugtuueut ut i fichu and drapery that illustrates the excesses to which this fashion is being carried. A narrow section of the material extends over each shoulder from the waist line at the back to the bodice point in front. This is laid in plaits that are caught down or pressed to hold them in place. From the front of this plaiting long tabs fall almost to the hem of the skirt in front. Around this and the waist section is a plaiting made extremely full and graduated. Over the shoulders it i6 about eight inches wide arid grows narrower to the waist line, where it is but about an inch and a half in width. The 6ame order is observed in the tabs. At the lower portion the plaiting is very wide; a large, loose bow is placed at the waist line in front and covers the meeting point of the plaitings that pass over the shoulders. This arrangement i6 made of taffeta silk and crepon, and is large enough to almost entirely cover the waist and the tops of the sleeves nearly to the elbows. Another waist trimming has double ruffle i of taffeta silk on a wool material. These ruffles are set in jiut over the shoulder.", and are graduated to the waist line, where they form a surplice eUect. Over these double ruffles arc very wide pointed revers of the dress fabric. These revers are opened on the shoulder like a lapel, one point running in front of the sleeve, the other in the back. NEWEST STYLE OF A FAL Another dress has the waist eutirely J covered with ruffles of very finely j crimpled chiffon or crepe lisse. There j " " aa! In* A W/-J trol Ttftf o>l notroo I IS t% YCiYClI UUUQX auu o*v,wvwo ; and belt, the thin ruffles veiling the 1 entire figure with the exception of a j single wide box plait of velvet that passes over the ruffles and is caught in at the waist line. HO'V TO WEAR VEILS. There are many little details of fashion that the woTld at large knows not of, but of which it merely sees the effect. To the woman who is always well gowne;!, 6ays the New York Her- : I ol/J tliocii camo litflo .lotnila moon o I great deal. There is a marked diflerence in how veils should be worn. They are no longer tied so close across the face that the eyelashes protrude, but are loose and flowing. A box plait or gathered fulness at the top of the veil | has been in vogue for some time, but; the ends have still been fastened' tight. Now only the upper part of j the veil is fastened and the rest is allowed to hang as it will, and if care- 1 fully arranged the folds will form a i sort of jabot effect that is quite | pretty. The embroidered chiffon is the, latest novelty, and the dark colors are ' preferred. The white, with bluck : chenille dots, which has been so fush- ' lonable and so blindinsr. is a trifle ! pat-be, but it is too becoming to go en- : tirely out of style. X \ DAINTX CAPE?. Wee capes that are not altogether unlike those of last season are to be 5( stylishly worn in the theatre and concert room, and it is a dainty example jj of this 6ort of garment that is pre- ^ sented here. Of white gros grain, it ^ is composed of a series of panels cut into points at the lower ends and embroidered with tiny spangles in diagonal lines. The lower edge is finished with an accordion plaited black I mousseline de soie frill, and a very ? delicate pale bine silk lines the whole. . Around the neck comes a full ruche of black chiffon with long black iibbon ends. The accompanying hat i6 of A FASHIONABLE CAPE. a fancy jet with coronet crown, is " trimmed with black aigrettes and " black plumes, and is lined with the pale blue silk. , 1 tl inn SEASON'S JACKETS. a Jackets imported from Paris are 81 from twenty-two to twenty-four inches ^ long?an effective length, slightly ^ deeper than those made by London tailors. They are made with box front, in reefer fashion, and with , fitted back. The newest backs omit T JLI c; p Cj > t( b b N. 6< '2 t< y ' b L AND WINTER COSTUME. jjjj the middle seam, throwing two forms V into one; and this single broad form, P aft?r being tapered to the waist line, a AwnAn/lfl a1 a m nn<l 10 fnl/lArl in o ^ C.\|;i\uun uciu >tj uuu ao x\jiuou jlu a _ triple box plait and kept quite flit. A j* kind of fan plaiting is thus made in ^ the two back seams. A single side J* form reaches far forward under the arms. The front i6 quite straight, or ?c else is fitted partly by single darts. Revers are rather short and widely pointed. Often there are two or three revers each side of the front, and the collar is formed of similar pointed ti pieces. One feature is that of cutting m the coat much lower about tho throat w than any worn in many years. id Sleeves are large, and are usually of di the shape now prevalent. They are w given a new effect, however, by the ti way they are put in the armhole, the pi space directly at the top being left ei plaiD, in order to increase the appear- ti unce of very long shoulders. All the ic fullness is then massed in plaits on ai the side and underneath. This also hi makes sleeves droop about the elbow, k: Other sleeves are shaped by seams gi from top to bottom, giving a melon tr puff m sections, rather thau the bal- te loon puff of last year. Both smooth and rough finished fT clothes are used. The latter for jack- oi eis of medium price, while those of et cloth with velvet like finish are good fa enough to wear with the best calling w toilettes. These are imported in dark m tan, golden brown, and green, whilo lo navy blue and black are more often bi chosen for the rough woolens.?Hur- a\ iter's Bazar. vr Si PLAID GOWNS. There seems to be quite a fancy for ?! piaids of every description this season, anil they certainly do brighten up tho ^ somber dark blues and browns and greens which so many women affect re just now. Of c.'urse, the plaid is mtro.luced more in the way of timming and accessories than anything el9e, A whole plaid dress on a large woman always looks a little incongruous. kl One of the prettiest ways to use plaid ar ic in a. Vilnnqp wftittf. Knf. pv^n that is I fo too loud for a woman of more than or- Ja ilinary stature, so she has to oonfino lier choicet^iM^iLofjt. P1 and HnHHikj Chauncey Dcpeir's Adventure. Chauncey Depew, to whom blessin Dme by hnndfuls, once had liis pock icked. "These yacht races," sa e, "remind me of a time when I \r ooked for a race. I was to sail acht against another yacht, and tl award was not a silver cup, but retty hand. "It was in this way: We were a isiting in Boston. There was a hou arty, and we young men were riva jr the attentions of a certain vei eantiful young woman, whose nan ; would be very interesting now lention. Oui hostess owned two fii ulboats. One day she announced: "1 am going to give you yachtsmi chance to sail the boats for a priz Whoever wins over the Beacon cour idll lead the cotillion with any la< e chooses." The ladies laughing greed. And well the men knew th ie winner wouia cnoose miss u., wi as the most beautiful girl of the se 3D. "I was Secretary of New York Sta t the time, and I had to go home f< few daye, but I promised to join t] arty on Saturday night. The da ragged along slowly, for I was all ii atience for Saturday. Being a era achtsman, I felt sure I would win t rize and lead the cotillion wi lies C. "Saturday I got away late and fl< ver to Broadway, where I had t'. 10k to catch a stage. It was goi ist, and we were all hanging on traps as well as we could. As ^ ounderl the curve at Madison Squa man got off. He upset me, steppii n everybody's feet and made a gre eal ol trouble. But I didn't care. "A minute later I felt in my pock ir the necessary nickel. It was n here. Not a cent did I have. J wkward friend, in getting out of t tage, had completely emptied my h ocket, also my vest, pocket, where ept my change. Like lightning sit in my watch pocket, and beholi :, too, was empty. "I stopped the stage and got out. andred dollars gone! And the watc t was a souvenir from a political s iety, and I loved it. I advertise at detectives on the track, and got Ine of the watch. The day my d jctives were to get it?just two hot] efore?the thief melted it up ai >ld the works. I was making thin 50 hot for him. "In the excitement I forgot fc aoht race, and when I recalled it n ostedfl and the pretty joungwomi ere both too nettled to forgive me -New Tork World. Sand Mups. A vote of thanks is due to th lever and devont church worker, Mi ulietE. Dimock, for introducing t; ind map into the curriculum of t unday-school. It will interest ai istruct children when other mod f teaching fall flat. She has developi graduated system cf instruction wil le contrivance, which will meet wi 1 cnrtorrnJ IB appruYtti vii c?ciJ unday-sohool work. The sand mi i not properly appreciated in th Duntry, although it has long been : ogue in Germany and Switzerlan ad also, strange to say, in Japan ai hina. In its best form it consists of a tra aree, four, or five feet square, with nooth,level and waterproof floor ai a edging round the four sides on vo or three inohes in height. T1 oor is covered with clean, white sa: ot less than half an inch nor mo 2an one inch deep. With t.he mple materials it is easy to tea< y number of lessons. Any lette ord or drawing can be swiftly dra* ith the finger or a small stick, ai ny error can be promptly rectifi ithout trace of the correction. Maps can be outlined on a plai rojection or can be made so as low the mountains,plains,rivers, se aasts, roads and cities. By wettic le sand it is easy to make city wall uildings, ravines and precipices. ? latter whether wet or dry, the sai oes not soil, neither does it stick le operator. The hand or a flat stic romptly erases everything and leav clean, flat surface for the ne orker. It is an excellent contrivani >r young scholars in geography ar istory. It cultivates their power ee hand drawing, and thus educat ath eye ani hand. In the Sunda :hool it cannot fail to be of equ anefit.?New York Mail and Expres Enormous Heat of the Sao. We believe that we are speaking tl nth when we eay that there is n< ore than one person in each 10,0( ho has anything like the corre lea what an icicle forty-five miles i iameter and 200,000 miles in lengt oula look like. It is also true thi lere is no necessity for one bein rovided with a mind that woul lable him to form a correct concej on of such a gigantic cylinder < e, for there is no probability thi ly one will ever live to see an icic ilf so large, yet it is interesting 1 ow that Sir John Herschel, th reat astronomer, used such an iiiu ation in one of bis articles on the 12 insity of the sun's heat. After giviDg the diameter of th reat blazing orb, and a calculatio 1 the amount of heat radiated b ich square foot of' its immense sui ,?e, he closed by saying that if ere possible for an icicle forty-fir iles in diameter and 200,000 mite ng to plunge into the sun's gret lrning sea of gas it would be melte vay and utterly consumed even to il ipor, in less than one second of time ich an icicle would contain more ic lan has formed on the rivers and lakf the United States during the pa> 10 years; its base would cover th 'erage Missouri country and it ngth would be almost sufficient t acli to the moon.?St. .Louis J/U xblic. The Kuo.it Still Swislie?. The cat-o'-nine-tails still cuts il ood way in Russia. The poor peai its are often whipped uuinercifull r paltry offenses. Lately the legii tiv? body of th<? Government o scheringotr pe'ifi<u^d the Czar t ohibit the use ->f the knout in th mishment of offenders who hav >no through the full course at th lblic school. The petitioners state! at, in many instances, intelligen asants have preferred suicide to th nomiDy of corporeal punishment le petition was answered negatively \ Highest of all in Leaveping Power.?Lat IB m iigsssa P E ABSOLUTELY - ??? ae Mother the Potent Influence. t? A pathetic story is told regarding a ae pardon recently granted by the Presi- - ^ dent. An army officer had been tried Sn , 311 by court-martial. He was sent to , w ' e* prison. A member of Congress did all J flI, .1 30 in his power to have him pardoned. ?. a rl( *7 All sorts of argument and every possily ble influence were resorted to, but to Wft^e_ at no avail. This member went to the qD 19 White House regularly every two worj a* weeks for about a year to make a formal petition for pardon. The PresitlG /lonf woo ftlTrorH -firm anrl Paftll fimp or gave the same answer. Then it came he about that Mr. Cleveland in an ad- ^hinami ya dress uttered some moving sentiments 2,/ar^e concerning his mother. The Con- w gressmar read the address in the pabe pers and went at once to the White tb House. c?mPa?; "I have come," he said to the Presi- ' JW dent, "to ask for the pardon of?" he "x know," replied Mr. Cleveland. "I know what always brings you." fl to "Yesterday morning," the Con- p< gressman continued, "I read your re beautiful reference to your mother. Lies Qg This young man has a mother. She at is now dying of a broken heart. Unless this only son is pardoned and efc goes to her at once he will not eee her ot alive. She loves him above all things But Jy on earth. His pardon may prolong be her life a short while, and it will ren- gg ip der her dying hoars happy. In the 11 name of your own mother?the moth- FeCC I er of whom you spoke so lovingly?I ask you to grant the pardon." _ "I will," was all the President re- A J A plied and the pardon was granted. - ML h! Chicago Times-Herald. d, ;a No More "Bad Men." T*> g e" "In the evolution of modern civil ization the bad man, namely, the des perado and tougn, wno gioais over > killing his fellowmaD, disappears," , said Colonel F. B. Jenkins, of Cialifornia. "A few years ago we heard a ______ great deal of characters like Sam Bass, Jesse James, Ben Thompson and Rube | ?y,L0 Burrows, but to-day there is not ifa the 5 1 \ United States a single individual with t T I a National reputation for wickedness | . such as any of these acquired. | * a* "There are a few men left who hare iss records for desperate courage, and g iljr , h? nerve in trying emergencies, men of ? fc *1 he the Bat Masterson order, but they can | IS V id be counted on the fingers of one hand. 5 ???* es Masterson never flgureti as a bandit or ISCCI sd reckless taker of human life. He is a ? when th peaceable man, and if left alone will 2 ^ th harm no one. In Denver and all over j lrPA1 in the West and South, he has a host of | KCC] lP friends. The day of the desperado is ? sow is ended, and monstrosities like Thompm son, who boasted when in his caps of the number of victims he had nflNxt l<* slain, will henceforth cease to afflict Hare you humanity."?Washington Post. Putaiittie yiUK the ne ' you may m L a l seldom hi Jo oJEWJQYO |TW Both the method and results when ? Sjrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant * and refreshing to the ta*te, and acta rri>? 4,li xt gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, "<}th,0b?t5 :e Liver and Bowels, cleanses the aysid tem effectually, dispels colds, head~c aches and fevers and cures habitual es constipation. Syrup of Figs is the re" y- only remedy of its kind ever pro- "rrmnnir al duced, pleasing to the taste and ac i? ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its ShT^j effects, prepared only from the most [ ie healthy and agreeable substances, its | at many excellent qualities commend it ' \jF )0 to aJl and have made it the most r ct popular remedy known. # teaitdbyc in Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 i h cent bottles by all leading drug- | at gists. Any reliable druggist who ! Vjbk [2 may not have it on hand will pro- ; cure it promptly for any one who 1 3" wishes to try it. Do not accept any j ? iubstitute. _,a lo CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. QP ;0 SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. I |7at?UI?f e LOUISVILLE, KV. NEW rORK, N-Y. , l3.vn.luh <ff.\ Out ) ~artd 110 woni ? I . j uiiiuii u: uiua*y / to wash clothe \\ the old-lasl tired'v i ' o ""'flflm' ' \ is coming tc !* to it now, faster than ever. Every grows and its patrons increase in n millions of packages have been used t?l want to make washing easy. ! SiMill! e -' I " A Fair Face Cannot Atone for ! Use SAPOL # est U.S. Gov't Report aking bwder PURE fig An Odd Bridge. f the oddest bridge "bents," s, in this country, is to be / . }.< a Sonoma County, California, je redwood trees growing side support the timbers and raile ige which crosses a small racreek at a place where the is seventy-live feet above the Califormans refer to it M ... ly natural wooden bridge in J i Id." Ilali l)eaJ,Talf Price. ling from a cart, a Melbourne y'/% in, whose life was insured for amount, was seriously hurt. as some doubt as to hfj ever better, and at length one of M inds wrote to the insurance y: "Hong Wahg Lee half kee half money." E turnpike road to f sople's hearts I find, through their ouths or I mistake ankind. the surest way to, > t there is I say, I them; "* 'ke/Cei? I 1 i jckwheat Evciy day. ' ;;'|S rid'* Fair! "HIGHEST AWARD. 4PERIAL Ji GrRANUM M it when the digestion m yEAK and no FOOD ns to nourish. Tryitj 111 seems impossible to { j? 3 FOOD stomach! by DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE I ' ' $ ohti Carle & Sons, Naw York. , ra RVATitfE? RESPONSIBLE, '# money la boak earning bat 4 per cent? f* ^^flOOD STOCKS month* take many times that amount of Interest. are to good a market to trade la, and ad- - M poise is should enable me to make a great oney for my customer! dating the next . V V d for references and fall Information. BP SLADE, 74 Broadway, N.Y.Qlty. iFITABLE DAIRY WORK be accomplished with the rery bMl ? ,nd n1 appliaacaa, vis TW> Cream 8ep?- | ihe gH mhm* 'arm yon lr! ore j and better >Ue mL/ the skimmed -aJ? ftgW* cable feed. Till (V make no ml*lta wsl Da7ls* Neat? !,;J5 ted JmjBtopJ' catalogue ee Agents wanted i 'iSs fe BANEIN BLDQ. & aura. uv> . ,< Randoloh A Dearborn Gts., Chleaflo. Baphael, Aagelo, Rnbena, TuM NEN'E" are the Best and Most Economlintl Cuffs worn: they are made of fine 1 sides il dished alike, and bein* reYerat* liar is equal to two of any other rind. tctll, iciar melt and look tcoll. A box of . a or Five Pairs of Cnffa for Twenty-Fire ?Collar and Pair of Cuffs by maQ for 81s me style and size. Addreaa 'EB3IBLE COLLAR COMPACT, i St., New York. 27 Klltry St., Bostes. M : J^RIIPTIIRECiireil | ^TT<l H r POSITIVEl.Y ^ I U88> JBhOMIS RITPTlHtB BSIJWorn night and da} . Has 't-'Lxjjj an Adjustable Patf which M 0411 1)6 madfl Wargtr or u amaller to?uiVehajiiriB> Ve^ condition of fllCPTURE. ATEXTto. Mn*. Cat. sejt securely v l.V. House Mfg. Co. 744 Broadway, N.Y.Clty s tQOAYlURt.u^ f lujkej^adnr: ab-olutfff *ur*; #elnr' ninh the work and teach you iree jrou ^ work in the locality ?here tou fi+ei L-Mfc KD'J Ul Tf.ur >not nnil "Ui U| (he basinet* fully; rememrer we trn?rfW aat? a clear prodt of $3 for every ?.aj'r> wnrk; at>?olut?ly ?uiv: writ. at ITAfTlBIMfi rojipixr. Ron LB. l)flr.ll, *kk- V ? ICIAAIJOHNVr.iUOBRlS, > l^ium Washington, B.C. jessfully Prosecutes Claims. ncipal Examiner D.B. Pension Bureau. ibt war. 15 adj udlcatiu? claims attj tinea. 1 of sorts 'Jf der. Think of the conpoor women who have :s and clean house in lioned way. They're exed, discouraged, out Drts, with aching backs id aching hearts. rhey must be out of sir wits. Why dc.Vt y use Pearline ? That hat every woman who ler health and strength ?. And they're coming day, Pearline's fame lumber. Hundreds of by bright women who 481 mJM an Untidy House." . 4 JO I ) ;< * It-!* *.> * *