The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, November 06, 1895, Image 7

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=- ' ' > Snbject to Electric Shocks. Mre. Archibald RankiD, liviDf? i: Hickory Township, Penn., two mile east of Sharon, was subjected to ai electrical shock last Friday that par alyzed her left 6ide, and she is in i critical condition. Her case is phe nomeual, says the New Orleans Times Democrat. She seems to be a humai ? AA-~-A- ? t? oriil in prpr BlU WiHUU lUr CJCtli lVivj , ? ?t electrical storm 6he is more or les shocked by lightning. About tei years ago she suffered a shock from i bolt of lightning that rendered he powerless. Every year since then sh has suffered, and it is a common oc currence for physicians to be dis patched from Sharon to revive her. S< regular has this phenomenon becom< that she has been provided with i chair that rests on glass insulators, commonly used on telegraph poles Mrs. Rankin considers herself fre< from danger in the chair, where sh< remains until the storm is over. Whei she suffered the shock on Friday she had abandoned the chair, not suspect ing that she would be subjected to another shock. Th? Karlv llirdR. It's the early birds that catch the worm Baith the proverb, bat what a foolish wore it is to get up so early and be caught. Som( of our farmers are the early birds. They g< forth at dawo to catch up, as they call if and they catch something else. Tramping through wet grass and stubble on cold . damp, frosty mornings like these, and goinj thus all day thereafter, brings to scores o: them what they were not looking for. The\ come home in the evening to suffer all nighl with rheumatism. Sow. while men musl work, they need not suffer. Why should they when a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil will keep them all right? A good rub at night with il will so strengthen and heal the muscles they will resist the influence of the cold and dampness, and a man will be cured before he knows it. Let this be tried for a while, and If the man is not cured it is only because h hasn't the patience to rub the pain out. "Pqrnifn "Ivinrr nf Kaffira." is eaid to be the ugliest man in London. Dr. Kilmer's S*a?p-Root eure3 all Kidney .and Bladder troubles* Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y. Es-Speaker Keed manipulates the typeWriter as skillfully as he rides the bicycle. State or Ohio, City of Toledo, ? Lucas County. f85* Frank J. Chenev makes oath that he is th? senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney <S Co., doing business la tbe City of Toledo County and State aforesaid, and that said tirn will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for cach and every case of Catarrh thai cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarri Cube. Frank J. Cheney. .'worn to >>efore me and subscribed in m3 presence, this 6th day cf December, A. D. 1S8& , ???, A. W. Uleasgn, i' -l seal f ' ?'' Nntnru Puh'ie Hall's Catarrh Cure istaken internally and acti directly on the blood and mucous surfaces o the svstem. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. 0. t^^Sold by Druggists, 75c. At The Office yon may have a sudden bilious attack or headache when it is impossible for you to leave youi work. If you have a box of Ripans Tabules in your desk a tabule taken at the first sympton will relieve you. FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline's Greai Nerve Restorer. No fits after first day's use Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bot. tie free. Dr. Kllnp. H3I Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for cbildrer teethincr, softens the pums, reduces inflamma lion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2oc. a bottl< Pifo's Cure for Consumption has no equa as a Cough medicine.?F. M. Abbott, 383 Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, lb94. Fortify Feeble Ludrs Aeainst Winter witl Bale's Honey of Horebound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute Health Built on the solid foundation of pure, healthy blood is real and lasting. With riol red blood you will have no sickness. When you allow your blood to beconn thin, depleted, robbed of the little red cor puscles which indicate its quality, you wil become tired, worn out, lose your appetifc and strength, and disease will soon have yot JIX 11.3 Purify, vitalize and enrich your blood, an J keep it pure by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier prominently ii the public eye. f 1. All druggistf. 11**4'* D!ll* cure habitual constipn noon S (IIS tion. Price 25c. per box ? World's FairI HIGHEST AWARD. J IMPERIAL! x <arRANUM i n mrtft! giMwquiMiuiiduiy awuoi jvaluable FOOD & sick froom,where either little [one or adult needs delineate, nourishing diet!! I Sold by DRUGOISTS EVERYWHERE ! r John Carle & Sons, New York. ?If your wife over= worked, Do at! you can to lighten her household cares. Begin to-morrow by sending home a package of iIEi?/pJyflpfr /f? Buckwheat. It treans for her a hell hour no re *Ittp in the morning. A buck* heat breakfast can be prcptred in a Biomect you know* n X Y y u-43 Guaranteed Installment Debenture Bonds Vo ? ? i>' $1 permoutb for 72 months, wecuaranteeSlO'J. Writ us. English-American Lnuti & Truxt Co., Atlanta, G; ITCHING PILES trncr Witch llazV P cur?** uirxu. HI uru^irnv ? mm Die mailed F It F. B. .? J. KI.Ef'K. flffln- C d&BEBBpgajfEMfil ia CUR?S WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Kfi ISI Beet Cough Syrup. Ta?e? Good. Use W RH io time. Sola by drucrpistp. pbi NEW FASHIONS. a 8 THEY ARE RAPID, KANTASTl * A.NU CHARMING. a i Skirts Arc Immensely wiue-^ieeve as Voluminous as Kver a Styles In Culls an? p Collars. 8 . 1 r~~*Y ALIENT alterations in Bliape 9 an'^ outlines do not take plac r iQ the middle of a season, am at present changes are chiefl. seen in matters of detail. People c good taste who wiBh to be nicel 3 dressed and exercise a little ecoiiom; 0 would do well to occupy their time ii 1 renovating their dresses of last ye? > to make them smart enough for every day wear at home, or out of doors ij 5 the morning. Evening toilets, says the Season 1 should also pass review, and may bi J freshened up in the most charmin) styles, now that fashions are so rapi< ' and fantastic. Sleeves appear as voluminous a ever, and are still set out with hors< i : I ) ^ i > ^ s t J 1 LADIES r hair and other stiff stuff?, yet do no answer the skirt or even the bodice o the dress, but are made of anothei stuff aud oolor. The sleeve is sewn tc ? an underblouse of a perfectly differ ent hue, or blouse shape draped ii various ways, or a round or fichu col lar is ptit on. The latter form wil probably take a prominent place ii ; the fashions for winter, either as i cape with long scarf ends, widenins the shoulders considerably or fittiu^ close to the same, so that the puff o r the sleeve is slipped nearer to the el bow in the Marie Antoinette style. A new style of bodice has appeared , for the evening. This is a slashed blouse worn over another blouse of f 3 light thin material and in a diSereul t color. Some of these elegant blousei are trimmed round the slashinge witl tiny buttons, beaded bordering, o: 1 nonoamoforio ftntl thA p.liiffon. lawn Ol lace of the under blouse puffs ou through the openings. Dark woolen dresses are made up ir the same way, only that the founda tion bodice must be of light colorec silk, and the slashes trimmed witl [ black or dark braid set on plain, a also in a small fancy design ; indeed , the idea is excellent for remodeling corsages of all kinds to be worn witl 1 plain skirts. j Eton jackets hare made way for th< j half-wide-opep jacket with smal pocketB, and close-fitting backs fin ished off with a very short circulai basque, the top of the shoulder being cut out in a long or rather epanle pomt. A dainty model of this kind has th< back and epaulets made entirely o one piece stretched across. ; Another plainer jacket is embrcftd ered except the sleeves with cord of i 1 dark color sewn on in close rows 01 one side, and the hem of the skirt or aamented to answer with a border a L l Grecqne. j The fnshionable skirts which an y cut so immensely wide are beginning ? iU 1 to lose tDeir plain appearance, iu< j hem is stitohed out two or three time; \ with silk in a contrasting color, or i I border answering the trimming 01 f the bodice is worked in chain anc \ fancy stitches halfway up to the knee The skirts of handsome walking J costumes are also trimmed to matcl j the broad pointed epaulets and lowe; i tight-fitting part of the sleeve. J I pretty co3tume for youug marrie< 1 ladies to be worn in the country i j made ol dark cloth, and has tbe skirl ? and loose, double-breasted jacke \ ornamented with appliques of ligh 7 cloth of the same color. u 0 MISSE i. - ? Young girls may adopt the sain style by choosing a tight-fitting jacke ^ with sailor collar instead of the sacqu I coat. 1 I ' FASHIONS IN CUFFS AND COLTERS. . Among the many things so small ant I . yet so significant which help to mat a plain toilet a very attractive one ^ are the white collars and cuffs which at present are in such high favor. 0 0 They are worn all the year round Sometimes there is only the narrow M edge of the cufi showing from under tras the sleeve, bnt the wide ones turned nigl back over the sleeve are worn the gett most. They are made of the plain The white linen or the yellow, and some usee are edged with different colors, and ting others are in stripes or figured, and s Daintier ones are of linen and edged swal e with embroidery and rows of insertion, utes 3 and others are of the finest cambric tion y and the moat costly lace. With all of The t ttiooii hnwo nnllaxs to match, and unti y all of them are turned over. We have appi y not yet come to the plain little stand- begi q up collar, which shows just the edge larg r above the neck of the dress. No, tit tl - they are wide and deep. The sailor y&rc a collars are very popular and are made in a dozen different ways. There are , square ones in the back and front, 3 square ones in tbe back and pointed ? I in t"he front, and those that reach 1 clear to the belt, and some forming ' ? wide revers, and then some cut in s points all around and cut squ&re in ? 2 the back and front, and with points ' SLEEVE8. fly r t on the shoulders and extending over f the sleeves. Some of them have rufr fles around the edge and some have ^ ) lace and embroidery and insertion, - and some are scalloped and button- ou? 1 hole stitched. Then there are others w which are entirely of lace, varying F1*" 1 from very pretty bnt quite cheap one3 ^ to those of Irish point and .Ducuesse i ? lace, costing a fabulous amount and in8' only to be looked at by the little woman with an unlimited amount of pin ei occr m0Iley- Mai HATS OF FELT OR VELVET. Hits of felt or velvet are to be al- ^ most exclusively worn this winter. ^ The shapes are large or else quite on j small toques. Picture hats of black velvet are profusely trimmed with 03trich feathers- Black cocks' plames ^onj are very fashionable. They are pretty, too, with their shimmeriug gleams of dark green, besides being suitable in all weathers. jje j A charming black velvet hat for the rQW) autumu is raised at one side with a bandeau of steel studded with emer- ^ aid cabochons, while knots of black moE 8 satin ribbon rest upon the hair. arQ| ?l Thflftiirved brim edtred with a nar- ^ > row line of steel shows a lining of 1 emerald green velvet. To the left o\ wy( the crown cluster upstanding loops of * satin and a wealth of black ostrich j0_fl feathers. Green flowers composed of silk and velvet are the latest idea in r Paris. 1 THE VEIL. A part of one's costume which is by 3{ no means unimportant is the veil. There is a something about it which provides a very pleasing finishing touch to the toilet. The handsomest 1 new veils are of rather light net with ^ 1 a real lace design covering the entire ^5 surface. They are very pretty in the ^1] 1 hand, very costly and very unbecom- -A'\ ing, which will render them unpopu? 1 - - ?? /lnmnninn nnnTl fchfl 1 lflbl. y CTO IUDU uauiugiug vuvvw ? ? * eyeB is inconceivable. 3 / CHARMISG WHITR LISLE THKEAD GLOVES. V j The most cbarmiug white Lisle ' j thread gloves are being sold iu nil the /? beat Paris shops. They are of such jJL! perfect make that they .vould mold j the hand like suede. Nothing else is ^ r worn at tho fashionable watering ^ places. ^ 1 8 THE KNACK OF MAKING A BOW. i The knack of making a bow is not t possessed by all amatenr milliners, t Those who fail will find it a great help 0Taj. to help stiffen the bow with a piece of ^ftu _____ - in t] jjjj*1 S' WAIST. in 3 ? ? weal e buckram, wire or crinoline, which lives t shows off tho ribbon to advantage, fort e and makes it appear richer, besides ro.yc saving endless trouble in attempting She to make the loops stand erect. neat w winl 1 Sunflower stalks are now converted ?^' e into paper. I iESTINU IN A BIG CHIMNEY. usands of Swallows Choose a Queer Lodging House. a g. yriads of chimney swallows at- ( t considerable attention every hei it in Kansas City when they are rj ing ready to retire for the night. y make their home in a tall, un- " I chimney, and the process of pet- -1 into the place is both interesting *in impressive. At a quarter to 7 the "le lows begin to gather. As the min- 1 pass birds come from all direc- abl p, nntil the shy is black with them. "P y skim about in an aimless way < 1 about 7 o'clock ; then, with no th( went leadership, they form and -^a; In to circle about in the air in a j e oval directly above the chimney an ae northeast corner of the Tine- j I Building. Other birds, coming ^ V"??* ^^ ^ is^e j ^ r ^ j 1 1 Da: I || U ' -vN litt I E MAD TVHIRIi OP TETE SWALLOTV3. trai join the circle, until thousands of ce^ a are in the mad whirl. At 7.15, Chi ? i ? 1 *i- r> by t no appureui oigu?j, muj u?^iu -? our into the chimney liUe water J 1 a pitcher. Down they tumble, om i sands of them, until one wonders bra here is an underground outlet to fen jhimney, which hardly seems large fiv( igh to hold them all. In a few j, ntes they are out of sight. fter all are in, come a few strag- jjaB s who attempt to enter the chim- eve also. The3e are driven away by birds inside. Then the straggler* ^ lp until they reach the spot where general whirl commenced, and ~ r, too, fly around the circle several 5( ;s and then dive into the ehimney. T ' here are always a number of curi- ./e people in front of the building , e jhinj? the birds. One old colored ra i is there every evening. He says ^ las watched the birds for several s in this great act of chimney till- 1?? They always choose a dead chim- eri] somewhere about the city for d?c r lodging house. Last year they ^as ipied a large brick chimney on n street. I wh: The Youthful King ot Spain. Me Ifonso XIII., King of Spain, was grc l in Madrid, and proclaimed King pot day 17, 1886, about six months ver r the death of his father, Alfonso me: , who died at El Pardo, a royal pla ?*? "Jnl'nifii ftf Aladrill flTl Uffi let 1U 1U UUO T1U1UL M J V4 -- -r ember 25, 1885. The young King, se portrait is here given, is well vn for his age, and in good health. ^ s fond of-outdoor sportrf, rides and .. i well, is an expert bicyclist, and iod gymnast. ? rhile at Madrid, during the winter iths, he takes long walks and drives . ind the hills of El Pardo and its uresque avenues. The summer in . ed with his mother at Miramar, 1D? 3h is finely situated in the beauti- en? ?y of San Sebastian, where he en- 811 hashing in the sea and the invig. I the ; had t * * >. cha 1???. .? # # - I V \ ; .. :#r #.. % .v ;n, ing k V /' '.V. ( .* - ,* th? aud | * ;! ^* *?j, wot moi ALFONSO xm., KING OF STAIN. ing breezes. DuriDg a recent trip >ii by the Royal family of Spaiu, ^ be cruiser lsla de Luzon, on the nesi t, near Biarritz, the boy King 1 off his first cannon with a sang d and decision which will no doubt Prei e him the idol of the army and sen' p\ for both of which professions he re8? ifests great enthusiasm. beii M and A (iond Turk. 60n3 see is said the Sultan of Turkey is 3ei; ressed with the idea that to him ; been confided by Allah the keys lurope, and his nervous temperat leads him to feel most acutely S responsibility of the charge. No to o works harder th.iu he. He rises the i the dawn, takes but a few hours' The p, sometime.", with pen in hand, call ing the whole night. He studies whc y question, knows nil-about every- hue g, reads everything which cen- and is his business, anil ever since the Riv rs of the Turkish Provinces have was ijjied the foreground he signs of t y document presented to him, try. i the appointment of a Governor whe lie nomination of the lowest ofiice Mai jo police.?New Orleans Picayune, the A Celebrated Gjpsy. ne of the most picturesque figures j England is Lucy Lee, the now . Ithy and celebrated gypsy, who ,fft i near Brighton. She has told the ja?c unes of all the members of the ^ il family and most of the nobility, p is remarkably intelligent, dresses ^ ^ ,ly and lives in a house during the ;er season. She is sixty-two years .. and has eleven growu-up children. f ew York World. lor CURIOUS fACTi. die glj es mouse tr<ip baa not proved access. ieorgiu ha3 3621 pensioners within bounds. Phere are no fewer than eight print; shops in Jerusalem. Phe first books printed on this conent were made in the City of xico. Daniel Webster is said to have been e to repeat the most, if not all, of aradise Lost." 3ranny Davie, who died recently in ; Connty Infirmary in Muncle, Ind., 9 said to be 104 years old. liieutenant-Colonel Craigie Halkett, English soldier, has not drunk a >p of water for twelve years. fork County, Maine, farmers are ling of a snow-white deer that has in seen in that region several times late. Three hundred years ago all the n wore baggy bloomers, only very >rt ones, coming to the middle of i thigh. The Japanese method of lacquering laid to be at least 2000 years old. ices made ten centuries ago are etill libited. 1 Che British Government has given apiece to some native Indian soldiers i reward for "conspicuous gallantry the late campaign." Lccording to the dictum of art, the jcian nose is the most beautiful; ; a fine pair of eyes will lend beauty any nose or any face. ?he heaviest man whose weight is orded authentically was Miles rden, of Tennessee. He weighed a le less than 1000 pounds. ''ully two wagon loads of straw and shwere found between the roof and ling of the old Lancaster Methodist irch, which had been carried there sparrows. ohn B. Curtis, of Portland, Me., is i of tile largest land owners in XNe.ska. He has one pasture under ce which is eight miles long and 5 miles wide. I woman with apparently lots of l6 of little valne, in Ransom, Mich., i just completed the sewing of an n 17,000 little bits of cloth into a chwork quilc. Vinderford, Klavirta and Vleckdora the names of three children of. jrge Frye, of Kansas. When asked ere he got the names of the chiln, Mr. Frye said bis wife chose m from among those of various .nds of collars. t is said that New York policemen y be swinging rubber clubs before g. The Commissioners are considag an invention of a Connecticut itor, who says that the rubber club all the stunning effects of wooden iponB and will not break heads, .litmus is produced from lichens ioh grow on the shores of the diterranean. The lichens are und, moistened and treated with ash, lime and ammonia, and conted into dough. It is tben fernted, and afterward mixed with ster of Paris, and dried and ssed. A Lifetime of Railroading. .Tiere was a certain poetic time338 in the death of Joseph Bell, ich occurred in London a few days i. He was eighty-three years old, i had spent most of his life as a omotive engineer. He was still e and hearty, and, except for failsight, might still have been in the: fine-cab. His death was caused by accidental fall. The incident o> red just after the extraordi. .*y formances of railroad trains, in >at Britain between London and jrdeen, and in America between v York and Buffalo. Between those ievements and his death there was connection; but the coincidence 1 rem'arkable and suggestive, 'or Joseph Bell's life spanned tho jle railroad history of the world, was, in his youth, the engineer of first locomotive ever constructed reorge Stephenson's famous JKocket. half a century his place was at throttle, at fir6t of the little slowng engines of the Rocket type, and ast of the monsters which outstrip whirlwind. He had seen and [ personal experience of every nge and development of the carryindustry which has revolutionized world. He heard Stephenson's acious prophccy that a locomotive lid attain a speed of tea or twelve es an hour. He ran the Rocket at rteen miles an hour on the average; [ made on one occasion the beiering "world's record" of twentye miles an hour. And he lived to trains run for hundreds of miles at re than a mile a minnte, and for rter distances at the rate of more n 112 miles an hour. t has been given to few men to with and to participate in such a transnation scene as that which began li the Rocket and ends, for the Eent, with No. 939. But what a rr nf mndopn nrncr? 3c u1 tuo auytuivj v/a i"?vo i it gives us to think of all that ag included in a single lifetime; what a field for prophecy of what ie lives, now just beginning, will if prolonged to the years of Joseph I!?New York Tribune. Manhattan. peaking of Iniliais, I should liko ,sk how many New Yorkers kno* origin of the name of this island, re used to be a nomadic triba ed the Man-u-tans, I am informed, > used to livo in Jones's Wood, ited in the forests of Central Park fished in the waters of the East er. What we now call Hell Gate . mi \_;_i 1 il 1. a terriDie wuirtpuui iuuj, ?uunu he Indians throughout all the co:t:iMan-o-tan mean: the 1 'people > live by the circling waters." The i-o-tans were evidently !i braucii ot Algonquins.?New York Press. England's First Cap ot Tea. a all probability the first cup of made in England was drank upon site of Buckingham Palace, St. aes's Park ; for the Earl of Ariing* took the first pound of tea to jland, having bought it in Holland sixty sliillinge, and at this time Earl resided at Arlington House, ch was taken down to make root* Buckingham Palace. ; <; .. j.. Highest of all in Leavening Poi ABSOLUT Blind Age Weds Youth. Joseph King, a blind veteran of the Civil "War, and a familiar figure in the streets of quaint old Chelsea, Mass., has caused a sensation by marrying yoang Miss Ada Swain, -who has piloted his unknowing footsteps through the city for ten years. The bridegroom is sixty, the bride only nineteen years old. Everybody knows the strangely as-' eociated couple, who always were accompained in their walks by a email terrier, and who were presumed to be father and daughter. The girl has lived with the blind man ever since 1 - - - CI*- - 1 ene was a CIlliu. one una ueveiupcu into one of the handsomest young women in Chelsea. She is tali, excellently proportioned and has great, sparkling black eyes. She is always attired in the height of fashion.? New York Press. nvTfc T5XTOYS Both the method and. results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the ta?te, and acts fently yet promptly on the Kidneys, 'irer and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, 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 m its effects, prepared onlv 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 50 cent 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. I)o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP COL SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. HEW YORK, fit/^V Noth i -*e wo, yg mg to < WW 1S^ l / yo y ?* ^ear^ne > against all kind a sort of supers I save so much labor must be h; Peddlers ai Beware ;&S3 you an imitation, be honest?send it back. I EVERY It O W3N By J. Hamilton Ayers, A. M, M. D Tills is a most Valua? TjIc Book lor tlie House liold, teaching: as it does the easily-distinguished c.Mttifniite nf different Diseases, the Causes and Means ol Preventing: such Diseases,and the Simplest Remedies -which will alle* viate or cure. 598 Pages, Pre The Eook is written in plain < the technical terms which render the generality of readers. -Xliis of Service in the FainlJ understood by all. ONLY 60 CEH (The low price only being made posi Not only does this Book cont: Disease, but very properly gives pertaining to Courtship, Ma lion and Rearing ol X TOGET Valuable Recipes and Pr? Botanical Practice, Corn New Edition, Revised & En) Willi this Book in the house there is emergency. Don't wait until you have i end at once ior this valuable volume. ONLY GO OBNr Send postal notes or po?tage stamps of: JL 134 L E " The Best is, Aye, the Ghe; and Subsi vj ver.?Latest U. S, Gov't Report Baking , Powder 'ELY PURE m Tour Hair Cut by Electricity. A new electrical bair catting and singeing apparatus seems to be a great success in New York City. It consists of a tomb, the teeth of which are covered with a platinum wire, and a simple contrivance by means of which this wire is raised to a bright heat. Then, by moving the comb through the hair, it cuts tbe hair smoothly and evenly. ? Broke the Record lor Club Swingiag. L. B. Bax, of Wellington, Australia, recently beat the record, for swinging two pound clubs. The conditions were that he was never to stop, and relays of members of tha ' gymnastic club attended during tho . whole time. Bax kept going for twenty-six ho"^s, thus beating the i-ooni-d Viv nnt AOUr. CONSERVATIVE-RESPONSIBLE. ,:f Have you money in bank earning: bat 4 per ceatf Put a little of It In flflflf) fi TAP II ft anddurin? the next six tlUUU O I UbAO moatlu ?ou may make many timet that amount of Interest. \ 3 seldom have so good a market to trade In. and alvantages I possess should enable me to make a great .< deal of money for my customers during: the n?xs year. Send for references and full information. y .r J HOWARD BLADE. T4 Broadway, N.Y. City. > V N C~<3 Raphael, Angelo. Rnbeas, Ta? . The ' * LINEinJ " are the Beat and Most Zeonomi- i ' </' cal Collars and Cnffn von: they are ir.nds of flM ~ - doth, both sides finished alike, and belny revezaV* ble, one collar la equal to two of any other rind. They tit well, wear well and loot well. A box at / ,r, Ten Collars or Five Pair* of Cuffs for Twenty-fire Cents. A Sample Collar and Pair of Cuffs by maU fee lis Cents. Name style and size. Address REVEBSIPLE COLLAR COMPANY, 77Franklin 8t., Kew York. ft Kllby St., Boitoa. , 0 PoeiTivicLY Viirn i i-^T RUPTDR* WfcMfflFWIPjy Worn night and day. Baa an Adjustable Pad which llr^TIr M can made larger or V- Ht V jff smaller to suit changta* V'i condition of RUPTUKfc sealad b/Q.V^Honae Mfg. C^ffiBro^ way, ?yCU? fa i Q A DAY SURE.m sf *n %P l/and xe wUJ show 70a how (? % iif inujte $3 a d?i ab?oIut*ly mrei m fut nlsh too work and teach you free ycm v?b. work In the locality where too ?w send uj roar ?ddre<a and we wul explain |KlIBjU 'be burin ess fully; rsmemKr we *11*1* WvHHr *nt?ea clearprollt of JJ torererycayli 'v :> * ^ work: absolntely sure: writs *1 nafc BOTAL jLXl'FlCTt Kiae COimi, B?z LB, BHnU, 114 f j GOLD D16 01N GS o ^CAPE HORN A Study of Life In TIerra del Foejo and Patagonl?. BY JOHN B. SPEAKS, of the New York Sud. I11 Press for Immediate Publication. Price #2. Any Book SU re will order It. , ,i>i G. P. PUTNAM'8 SON*4, ' .?? g7-29 West Twenty-third Street. Nsw York. r|E*iie I AftlJOHN W.mOBKIS, lclvdiuiv Washlncton, D.O. 3yrslul*st war, 15?dJudlcaUugcIalms, attytfncfc ing to complain of man who uses Pearline. Noth:omplain of in the washing and cleaning line, anyway. And irtainly the proprietors of ; Pearline cant complain. If . u only knew how many women, : J ry day, are making up their v;|| that the old, wearing, tearing, >me way of washing doesn t ; : <y bigger than ever?the success though it has to fight not only s of poor imitations, but against . || tition that anything which can > - .'5 armful in some way. ,, vf -J id some unscrupulous grocers will tell jot, t good as * or "the same as Pearline." IT*3 carline is never peddled: if your grocer sends 480 JAMES WL% New York. IAN F DOCTOR (fusely Illustrated^ every-day English, and is free from most Doctor Books so valueless to Book is Intended to be Vj and is so worded as to be readily TS POST-PAID. =ib!e by the immsns: edition printed.) ain so much Information Relative to a Complete Analysis of everything irriage and the producfealtliv Families: ' HER WITH iscriptions, Explanation of "<y ect use of Ordinary Kcrhs. * I-?- I larcjefl witn lompi^ie muu. no excuse ior not knov.what to do in an illness m your family before order, but Vj?f rs POST-PAID. mv denomination not larger than 5 cents. >UB. HOUSE, :ONARD STREET. N. Y. City. ipsst." Avoid Imitations cf ifiifes for - <M